30 Rid GW ay on Birds new to the Fauna of Illinois. 
36. CEdemia americana. American Black* Scoter. — A speci- 
men recorded in Am. Nat. (Merritt). 
37. Querquedula crecca. English Teal. — Specimen in the Mu- 
seum at Nice, France (Merritt). 
38. Stercorarius parasiticus. Richardson’s Jaeger. — Nau- 
mann mentions (Naturgesch. der Vogel Deutschl., Vol. X, p. 518) speci- 
mens having single white feathers or spots of white feathers mixed with 
the usual brown color. 
39. Fratercula arctica glacialis. Large-billed Puffin. — Speci- 
men mentioned in the “ Zoologist ” (Merrill). 
MELANISTIC PHASE. 
1. Passer domestica. English Sparrow. — In Naumann’s work 
(Vol. IV, p. 458), he says : “ Finally there is still a black variety, Fringilla 
domestica nigra , which is wholly coal-black or brownish-black.” Three 
specimens in this dark phase are in the Museum at Munich, Germany 
(Merritt). 
2. Anas boschas. Mallard. — Naumann (Vol. II, p. 589) says : 
‘‘ A very beautiful and very rare variety is black.” He mentions a male 
in high breeding plumage, in which the whole plumage is so dark that it 
appears as though one saw the usual coloration through a pretty thick 
black veil. 
ON SIX SPECIES OF BIRDS NEW TO THE FAUNA OF 
ILLINOIS, WITH NOTES ON OTHER RARE ILLINOIS 
BIRDS. 
BY ROBERT RIDGWAY. 
The already large list of Illinois birds is materially increased by 
the addition of the following six species, which brings the number 
up to 346, not including several species of doubtful occurrence. 
1. Zonotrichia querula. Harris’s Finch. — Under date of Decem- 
ber 4, 1879, Mr. W. H. Garman, of the Illinois State Laboratory of Nat- 
ural History, at Normal, writes as follows: “I desire to call your atten- 
tion to the fact that there are in the collection of this Laboratory two 
specimens of Zonotrichia querula taken by the writer, one in the spring of 
1877, near Bloomington, Illinois, the other on the 14th of November, 1879, 
near this place, and in company with Z. leucophrys” The species was 
included by Mr. Nelson in his list of the birds of Northeastern Illinois, on 
the strength of a specimen being taken at Racine, Wisconsin, by Dr. Hoy. 
