. Life histories of North American petrels and pelicans and their allies; order Tubinares and order Steganopodes . da, among the Florida Keys, and in the great bird reservationsof the Louisiana coast, where food fish are abundant and where theyspend their leisure season in the congenial, if not always friendly,companionship of the royal terns, laughing gulls, man-o-war-birds,and Florida cormorants. DISTRIBUTION. Breeding range.—Mainly on south Atlantic and Gulf coasts of theUnited States, from South Carolina (Bulls Bay) to southern Texas(Padre Island). Probably breeds among the Greater Antille


. Life histories of North American petrels and pelicans and their allies; order Tubinares and order Steganopodes . da, among the Florida Keys, and in the great bird reservationsof the Louisiana coast, where food fish are abundant and where theyspend their leisure season in the congenial, if not always friendly,companionship of the royal terns, laughing gulls, man-o-war-birds,and Florida cormorants. DISTRIBUTION. Breeding range.—Mainly on south Atlantic and Gulf coasts of theUnited States, from South Carolina (Bulls Bay) to southern Texas(Padre Island). Probably breeds among the Greater Antilles (Cuba,Jamaica, and Porto Rico). Said to breed in the Bahamas and on thecoasts of Central and South America, as far south as Brazil. Breed-ing grounds protected in the following reservations: In Florida,Pelican Island; and in Louisiana, Breton Island, and East Timbalier. Winter range.—From the Bahamas, Florida, and the Gulf coastof the United States southward, including all the West Indies andthe eastern coasts of Central and South America, as far south asBrazil. U. S. NATIONAL MUSEUM BULLETIN 121 PL. 63. Pelican Island, Florida.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, booksubjectbirdsno, bookyear1922