It is not a consolidated statement. A consolidated statement is something that you get a from a brokerage account in which you have multiple investements. Ex. If you have a fidelity account with 4 investments, they will send you a consolidated statement for all of those investments. Then, you don't have to list each one separately on your taxes.
There are three types of gains: capital gains (ex. when you sell a share of stock at a higher price than what you paid), dividends (some companies pay you money just for owning their stock), and regular income. Interest from a bank, money market accound, CD, etc. is all classified as regular income. I don't know what kind of bond you sold, but if you just got your original investment back along with the accrued interest, I am 99% sure that is just classified as regular income.
Schedule D is for capital gains.