BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ECONOMIC RELATIONS OF BIRDS 
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1885. 
1885. 
1885. 
1885. 
1885. 
1886. 
1886. 
1886. 
Hayward, R. Curious Food of the Kingfisher. Auk, 
v. II, p. 311. 
Found in stomach, fragments of various beetles belonging 
to the families Carabidse, Dytiscidae, and Scarabmidae. 
Noble, G. Destructive Electric Light Towers. Forest 
and Stream, v. XXV, Nov. 12, p. 305. 
During a rainy night in October 105 birds were picked up 
under one light tower in Savannah, Ga. 
® ’ > 
Noe, Fletcher M. The Value of Birds as Insect 
Destroyers. Indiana Farmer, Jan. 17, 1885. (Ab- 
stract of paper before State Board of Agriculture.) 
Warren, B. II. Blackbird’s Food. Facts from the 
diary of a field-working naturalist, showing the piscivo- 
rous habit of two species of the genus Quiscalus. 
Agriculture of Pennsylvania, Report for 1885, pp. 157— 
151). 
Statistics of examinations of stomachs of numerous speci- 
mens of Quiscalus pur pur eus and Quiscalus major. 
Warren, H. II. Birds’ Food. Agriculture of Penn- 
sylvania, pp. 150-156. 
On the food of robin and catbird. 
X. Foreign Game Birds in America. Forest and 
Stream, v. XXV, September 3, pp. 103, 104. 
An important historical paper on the subject. 
Amery, Ciias. F. That Thieving Rice Bird. Forest 
and Stream, v. XXVII, No. 15, November 4, pp. 283, 
284. 
On its probable utility as well as destructiveness. 
Bowles, E. 1). English Sparrow as Egg Robber. For- 
est and Stream, v. XXVI, p. 5, Jan. 28, 1886. 
Butler, A. W. The Periodical Cicada in Southeastern 
Indiana. U. S. Department of Agriculture, Division 
of Entomology, Bulletin No. 12, pp. 24-31. 
Refers to birds known to eat cicadas. 
