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Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (December 1971) 39(4) Dec 1971

Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (December 1971) 39(4)

Nebraska Bird Review

TABLE OF CONTENTS

A Comparison of Nesting Cover Utilized by Pheasants and Waterfowl .................66

First Specimen of Poor-will from Lancaster County A Summary of Poor-will Migration .................70

1971 Fall Field Day................. 71

The Dalton, Harrisburg, Kimball Triangle................. 72

Breeding Record of the Long-billed Marsh Wren from Lancaster County .................74

Revised Status of the Caspian Tern in Nebraska - A Summer Occurrence Record for Lancaster County .................75

Notes .................76

Index of Volume XXXIX .................78


Second Specimen Of Oryzomys Dimidiatus, Hugh H. Genoways, J. Knox Jones Jr. Nov 1971

Second Specimen Of Oryzomys Dimidiatus, Hugh H. Genoways, J. Knox Jones Jr.

University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers

The species Oryzomys dimidiatus was originally named and described by Thomas (Annals of the Museum of Natural History, series 7, 15: 584-591, 1905) as a member of the genus Nectomys on the basis of a single specimen from the Rio Escondido, 7 miles below Rama, Nicaragua (approximately 1 km. S and 8½ km. E Ranla, 20 m, Zelaya), obtained by W. G. Palmer on November 5, 1904. Although there has been speculation on the relationships of this taxon (currently regarded as the only member of the subgenus Micronectmays, genus Oryzomys--see Hershkovitz, Journal of Mammalogy, 51: 789-794, 1970, …


Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (September 1971) 39(3) Sep 1971

Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (September 1971) 39(3)

Nebraska Bird Review

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Status of the Common Loon in Nebraska: A Summer Occurrence in Lancaster County................. 42

1971 (Forty-sixth Spring Migration and Occurrence Report................. 45

Some Interesting Summer Bird Records for Lancaster County in 1970 .................58

Activities of the Yellow-bellied Sapsucker in the Kearney, Nebraska Area .................60

Notes................. 62

In Memoriam .................64


Notes On The Biology Of The Central American Squirrel, Sciurus Richmondi, J. Knox Jones Jr., Hugh H. Genoways Jul 1971

Notes On The Biology Of The Central American Squirrel, Sciurus Richmondi, J. Knox Jones Jr., Hugh H. Genoways

University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers

Additional specimens of Sciurus richmondi are reported, along with comments on variation, distribution, reproduction and molt in this little known squirrel. As presently understood, S. richmondi occurs only in the Caribbean rain forests of Nicaragua. Significant secondary sexual variation in adults was found only in zygomatic breadth, in which females are the larger. Available evidence reveals that the breeding season extends at least from February to September, and suggests two seasonal molts annually.


A New Species Of Spiny Pocket Mouse (Genus Liomys) From Jalisco, Mexico, Hugh H. Genoways Jun 1971

A New Species Of Spiny Pocket Mouse (Genus Liomys) From Jalisco, Mexico, Hugh H. Genoways

University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers

In the course of a systematic revision of the spiny pocket mice of the genus Liomys, a series of large, brightly colored mice from several localities in southeastern Jalisco was studied. Individuals in this series appeared to be morphologically distinct from mice typical of Liomys pictus plantinarensis Merriam. 1902, taken in the same traplines at several localities, and from specimens of Liomys irroratus jaliscensis (J. A. Allen, 1906), a taxon that also occurs in southeastern Jalisco. The current studies now have progressed to the point where the large and distinctively colored mice from Jalisco can be defined as a …


Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (June 1971) 39(2) Jun 1971

Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (June 1971) 39(2)

Nebraska Bird Review

Table of Contents

Turkey Vulture Nesting Records for Nebraska - A New Record for Sheridan County ................19

A Lancaster County Record for the Surf Scoter ................21

1970 (Thirteenth) Fall Occurrence Report................22

The Seventieth Annual Meeting................ 36

Notes ................37

Book Review ................40


Systematics Of Southern Banner-Tailed Kangaroo Rats Of The Dipodomys Phillipsii Group, Hugh H. Genoways, J. Knox Jones Jr. May 1971

Systematics Of Southern Banner-Tailed Kangaroo Rats Of The Dipodomys Phillipsii Group, Hugh H. Genoways, J. Knox Jones Jr.

University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers

Both nongeographic and geographic variation was assessed in southern banner-tailed kangaroo rats of the nominal species Dipodomys phillipsii and D. ornatus . Univariate and multivariate analyses were employed in consideration of geographic variation. D. ornatus is arranged as a subspecies of D. phillipsii, in which four races (phillipsii, ornatus, perotensis, and oaxacae) are recognized. Some observations on natural history also are included.


Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (March 1971) 39(1) Mar 1971

Whole Issue Nebraska Bird Review (March 1971) 39(1)

Nebraska Bird Review

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Treasurer's Report ....................2

Pileated Woodpecker in Otoe County ....................3

1970 Christmas Count ....................4

Winter Meeting ....................9

1970 Nebraska Nesting Survey ....................10

Notes ....................15

In Memoriam ....................16


Morphological Variation In Stenoderma Rufum, J, Knox Jones Jr., Hugh H. Genoways, Robert J. Baker Feb 1971

Morphological Variation In Stenoderma Rufum, J, Knox Jones Jr., Hugh H. Genoways, Robert J. Baker

University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers

For more than 100 years, the red fruit-eating bat, Stenoderma rufum Desmarest, 1820, was known only by a specimen of unknown geographic provenience. Anthony ( 1918, 1925) rediscovered Stenoderma in Puerto Rican cave deposits, but the first living specimens to be reported since the original description were taken on St. John in the Virgin Islands (Hall and Bee, 1960). Subsequently, Tamsitt and Valdivieso (1966) recorded living representatives from Puerto Rico-from a population later named and described as a distinctive subspecies, Stenoderma rufum darioi, by Hall and Tamsitt (1968). The latter authors also reported a specimen of S. r. rufum …


Bacula Of Some Neotropical Bats, Randall E. Brown, Hugh H. Genoways, J. Knox Jones Jr. Jan 1971

Bacula Of Some Neotropical Bats, Randall E. Brown, Hugh H. Genoways, J. Knox Jones Jr.

University of Nebraska State Museum: Mammalogy Papers

Neotropical bats representing 56 species of five families were examined for presence or absence of a baculum. Members of the families Noctilionidae and Phyllostomatidae (sensu lato) have no os penis, but the bone was found in all species studied of Emballonuridae, Natalidae, and Vespertilionidae. The bacula of seven emballonurids, one natalid, and seven vespertilionids are briefly described and figured.