144 BIBLIOGRAPHY OF ECONOMIC RELATIONS OF BIRDS 
Notes on the economic importance of birds with accounts 
of the examination of stomachs of the robin, various species 
of woodpeckers, cuckoos, crows, and jays; nearly all of the 
notes are apparently original. 
18G9. F. W. The Crow Blackbird a Robber. American Nat- 
uralist, v. 11, p. 32(5. 
A short article including reference to fact that crow black- 
bird has driven out martins. 
1870. Fowler, Augustus. The Golden-winged Woodpecker. 
American Naturalist, v. Ill, pp. 423-427. 
Economic status. 
1870. Orton, James. The Great Auk. American Natur- 
alist, v. Ill, pp. 539-542. 
Home; food; extinction, etc. 
1871. Glover, T. Report of the Entomologist, U. S. De- 
partment of Agriculture, 1870, pp. 90-91. 
Note on the economic value of birds in general and on the 
introduction of the English sparrow in particular, included 
in the report on Entomology. 
1872. Lockwood, Rev. Samuel. The Baltimore Oriole and 
Carpenter Bee. American Naturalist, v. II, pp. 721 — 
724. 
Oriole removes head of bee and empties honey sack. 
1872. Palmer, Frank II. The Utility of Birds to Agricul- 
ture. Massachusetts Agricultural Report, 1870- 72, 
pp. 107-120. 
An essay on economic importance of birds, special reference 
being made to some thirty New England species. 
1873. Perkins, G. H. Birds in their Relation to Agricul- 
ture. Vermont Agricultural Report, 1872, pp. 3 1 G— 
337. 
A paper read before the Vermont State Board of Agricul- 
ture, on the economic relation of birds. Abstracted in the 
report of the U. S. Department of Agriculture, 1873, p. 476. 
