76 



NORTH AMERICAN F^UNA 69 



Crickets formed 43 and 40 percent by volume of the stomach 

 contents of two birds collected near Augusta, Ga., in September; 

 other major items in the two stomachs were Acrydiinae (grass- 

 hoppers), ichneumids, ants, and spiders. A stomach taken at 

 Augusta in August contained the following items: 13 insect or 

 spider eggs and the mass of silky material covering them, 16 

 ants, two ground beetles, three unidentified beetles, seven unde- 

 termined insect larvae, one caterpillar, one millipede (Diplopida), 

 one stinkbug, one rove beetle (Staphylinidae), one darkling beetle 

 (Tenebrionidae), and one beetle larva. 



Near Cienfuegos in Cuba, Eaton (1953, p. 172) collected several 

 Swainson's Warbler stomachs that contained the bones of small 

 lizards (Iguanidae). He also found such bones in the stomachs of 

 Worm-eating Warblers and Ovenbirds. 



