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Nebraska Bird Review (July-December 1945) 13(2), Whole Issue Jul 1945

Nebraska Bird Review (July-December 1945) 13(2), Whole Issue

Nebraska Bird Review

Contents

General Notes ..................................................... 49

Annual Spring Field Days Held During May, 1945 .................... 53

N. O. U. Cooperative Bird Migration and Occurrence List For First Half of 1945 ...................... 58

Recent Changes in Nomenclature and Subspecific Status of Nebraska Birds ......................................... 65

Membership Roll of the Nebraska Ornithologists' Union ............ 67

List of Subscribers to the Nebraska Bird Review .......................... 71

Current Exchanges ............................72


Electric Chick Brooding Studies, F. D. Yung, F. E. Mussehl Mar 1945

Electric Chick Brooding Studies, F. D. Yung, F. E. Mussehl

Nebraska Agricultural Experiment Station: Historical Circulars

Perhaps one of the most valuable lessons to be learned from a study of chick brooding is that good results can often be obtained in more ways than one. In carrying on work with electric brooders at the Nebraska Agricultural Experiment Station, special attention has been given to such factors as insulation and to other details of design which effect economy of operation and ease of construction. Low cost rather than "cheapness" has been the ideal. The work has been cooperative between the Agricultural Engineering Department and the Poultry Husbandry Department of the University of Nebraska.


Poultry Progress: Our Egg Marketing Job, F. E. Mussehl, H. C. Filley Feb 1945

Poultry Progress: Our Egg Marketing Job, F. E. Mussehl, H. C. Filley

Nebraska Agricultural Experiment Station: Historical Circulars

Eggs are one of the products which Nebraska farm families exchange for the necessities and comforts of life. Although values are measured in dollars and cents, the interest of the producers centers in the amount of useful goods and services that the eggs will buy rather than in the price per dozen or per case. Farmers are interested in a fair exchange value because they wish better homes, better schools, better churches, and better communities in general. In the typical Nebraska community, not only farmers but physicians, merchants, mechanics and school teachers are dependent for their income, either directly or …


Nebraska Bird Review (January-June 1945) 13(1), Whole Issue Jan 1945

Nebraska Bird Review (January-June 1945) 13(1), Whole Issue

Nebraska Bird Review

Contents

Check-List of the Birds of Nebraska,
By F. W. Haecker, R. Allyn Moser, and Jane B. Swenk .............1

Hammond's Flycatcher in Nebraska, By John T. Zimmer ...................41

Collectors, Birds, and Parasites, By Doris Gates............41

General Notes.............43


Index To Volume Xiii, Wilson Tout Jan 1945

Index To Volume Xiii, Wilson Tout

Nebraska Bird Review

Adams County 52

Anas discors 43; acuta tzitzihoa 43; platyrhynchos platyrhynchos 43

Announcements 46, 73

Ardea herodias 44

Avocet 44

. . .

Warbler, Alaska Myrtle 2; Cape May 44; Chestnut-sided 50; Hooded 45; Mourning 50; Newfoundland Yellow 1; Prothonotary 44, 51; Wilson's 50

Washington County 50

Waxwing, Cedar 50

Weakly, Harry E. 43, 45

Widgeon, European 44

Wiley, Arthur 50

Wilson, Lincoln E. 50, 51

Wilsonia citrini 45

Wren, Carolina 52; Texas 2; Winter 44

Woodpecker, Downy 53; Western Red-headed 1

Zimmer, John T. 41