SPECIES DESCRIBED SINCE l88o. 
Adult Female. — Similar to the male, except slightly smaller, 
and with the back a little less lustrous. (Allen, orig. descr., 1 . c.) 
Habitat. Andros Island. 
A GEL AI US PHCENLCE US BR le ANTI. Ridgw. 
Bahama Red-winged Blackbird. 
Agelaius phoeniceus bryanti. Ridgway, Manual N. A. Birds, 
p. 370 (1887). 
Sp. Char. — Differs very slightly, if any, in coloration from 
A. Phoeniceus , but is claimed to vary in its proportions, having the 
bill larger and the general size smaller. 
DRYOBATES VILLOSUS MAYNARD I. Ridgw. 
Maynard’s Woodpecker. 
Picus villosus. Bryant, Pr. Bost. Soc. Nat. Hist., VII., p. 106 
(1859); Cory, Bds. Bahama, I., p. 120 (1880). 
Picus insularis. Mayn., The Nat. in Florida, I., No. 4 (1885) ; 
not of Gould, 1862. 
Picus villosus insularis. Cory, List Bds. W. I., p. 19 (1885). 
Dryobates villosus maynardi. Ridgw., Man. N. A. Bds., p. 282 
(1887); Cory, Birds of the West Indies, p. 170 (1889). 
Sp. Char. Male. — Above black, with a white band down the 
middle of the back, finely lined with black ; all the quills, middle 
and larger wing-coverts with numerous spots of white ; crown 
black ; a patch over the eye, and a stripe from the mandible to the 
