ae New York State College of Agriculture At Gornell University Sthaca, N.Y. Library oo University Library ina mann NATURAL HISTORY SURVEY OF ILLINOIS, . _ STATE LABORATORY OF NATURAL HISTORY, S. A. FORBES, Director. SR NIToOLOeY, PART I, -DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE, BY ROBERT RIDGWAY. VOLUME II. _ PART I. Published by Authority of the State Legislature. _ SPRINGFIELD, ILL. . H. W. Rozxer, PRINTER AND BINDER, 1895. — CONTENTS. ‘Order GALLINE—The Gallinaceous Birds..............00.5 Waleetata(oINat allot te'eis’chicra’siainie Siciainvansicnarcreta 3 Suborder Phasiana, 3.~Family Phasianide (The Pheasants), 8. Family Tetraonide (The Grouse, Partridges, and Quails), 6. Order Limicoua—The Shore Birds............qeeee0+ je SiniSie'S eislalsinnsinja'aisisin Sle a sloula siniaviisnaidiaisiewae 18 Family Aphrizide (The Turnstones), 20.— - Faritly Charadriidw (The Plovers), 22,— Family Scolopacide (The Snipe Family), 32—Family Recurvirostridz (The Av- ocets and Stilts), 74.—Family Phalaropodidaw (The Phalaropes), 7, ‘Order ALEcTORIDES—The Orgnes, Courlans, Rails, Gallinules, and Coota..............04+ 82 ’ Suborder Ralli, 83. -Fumily Rallide (The Rails, Gallinules, and Coots), 83.—Family " Gruide (The Cranes), 98. ‘Order HnropionEs—The Herons, Storks, [hises, Ote....sccccscccsccesecceeesseseneees soeeeelO1* Suborder Ibides (The Spoonbills and lbises), 101* Family Plataleid# (The Spoon- bills), 102*,—Family Ibididz (The Ibises), 106*. Suborder Ciconiw (The Storks and Wood Ibises), 118*.—Family Ciconiide (The Storks and Wood Ibiges), 113*. Suborder Herodii (The Herons and Boatbills), 116*.—Family Ardeidz (The Herons), 117*, 7 Order ANSERES—The Lamellirostral SWIMMETS...........cccccceneeeeneeeeeeeacs eeudwmewameie 102 Family Anatide (The Swans, Geese, and Ducks), 103. Order STEGANOPODES—The Totipalmate SwimmerS..........0cceeecreseeenes ee ee 193 Family Pelecanida (The Pelicans), 195.—Family Phalacrocoracide (The Cormorants), 202.—Family Anhingide (The Anhingas), 207. Order LoNerrENNES—The Long-winged Swimmers ..........s:scseeseee0e acsipra setsonateietniets 210 Family Stercorariidz (The Skuas and Jaegers), 211.—Family Laride (The Gulls and Terns), 219. Order PraopopErs—The Diving Birds........... Lu recene re 251 Family Urinatoridas (The Loons', 252,—Family Podicipida (The Grebes), 258, PART. I. (CoNCLUDED.) A DESCRIPTIVE CATALOGUE OF THE BIRDS OF [LLINOIS. BY ROBERT RIDGWAY. ORDER GALLINE—THE GALLINACEOUS BIRDS. 3 Orpen GALLIN.4A.—Tase GaALuINAceous Birps. The following families of Gallénw are represented in Illinois: A. Tarsi spurred, and head partly naked. 1. Phasianide, B. Tarsi without spurs, and head entirely feathered, except, sometimes, a bare space over eyes. 2. Tetraonide, SUBORDER PHASIANI. FamMity PHASIANID2£5. ae PHEASANTS. CHar. Hind toe short and elevated, as in Tetraonide. Tarsi spurred. Head partly naked. Tail often vaulted or arched. Two subfamilies of Phasianide are represented in the Illinois fauna, one of them (Phasianinw), however, only by introduced species. ‘Their characters are as follows: Phasianinw, Head mostly feathered, except round eyes. Tail elongated, graduated. arched, or vaulted. Plumage of sexes widely different, the female much smaller than the male and without brilliant coloring. (Introduced species only.) Meleagrine, Head entirely naked, or else with only small hair-like feathers or short tufts of imperfect feathers. Tail moderate as to length, fiat, rounded, the feathers broad and nearly truncated at tips. Sexes essentially alike in plumage but females duller’ in color than males. i SUBFAMILY MELEAGRIN24&.—Tue TurKeEys. CHAR. Head unfeathered, the skin wrinkled and often warted, the forehead witha more or less developed extensile fleshy appendage (smaller in females). Nasal fossz bare, Tail moderately lengthened, rounded at end, not vaulted nor arched, the feathers (more than twelve) broad and nearly truncated at tips. Hind toe elevated; tarsus armed with spurs inthe male. Plumage of the'sexes essentially alike, but females somewhat duller in color than males. The subfamily dfeleagrinw, or Turkeys, belongs to that branch or section of the great gallinaceous Order (Galline) to which Professor Huxley has given the name of Alectoropodes, and which have been later named Gallinw Alectoropodes by Messrs. 4 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Sclater and Salvin. To the same suborder belong the common domestic fowl, the Guinea-fowl (Vumida meleagris), the Old World Phasianidew, or Pheasants, and all of the Grouse and Partridge families (Zetraonide and Perdicide). To the other suborder (known as Gallinw Peristeropodes) belong the tropical American Oracide (Curassows, Guans, and Chachalacas) and the Australian Megapodidw (Mound-Fowl or Brush-Turkeys). The Meleagrine, as at present known, include a single genus, Meleagris, which is‘ peculiar to eastern and southeastern North America, its southern limit being the Peten district of Gua- temala and parts of British Honduras, where ‘(as also in Yuca- tan) occurs the Jf ocellata (the Ocellated or Honduras Tur- key)—a magnificent bird, almost rivaling the Impeyan Pheasant and Peacock in the brilliancy of its colors. Genus MELEAGRIS Linnzvus. Meleagris Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. 10, 1758, 156. Type, Meleagris gallopavo Linn. Gun. Cuan. Legs with transverse scutella before and behind; reticulated laterally. Tarsi with spurs. Tail rounded, rather long, usually of eighteen feathers. Forehead with a depending fleshy cone. Head and the upper half of the neck without feathers. Breast of male in one species with a long tuft of bristles. The two species of this genus (one of them with two very strongly marked geographical races) may be distinguished as follows: 1, M. gallopavo. Breast of the male with a tuft of long, coarse, hair-like black bristles. Tail bright umber- or dull ferruginous-brown, narrowly barred with black, and crossed near the end with a broad subterminal band of biack. Spurs moderately developed. Female much smaller and duller colored than the male. Q@. gallopavo. Tip of tail and all of the upper tail-coverts dark chestnut; prevailing hue of metallic reflections coppery. Hab. Eastern United States and Canada. Bp . mexicana. Tip of tail and all of the upper tail-coverts white or pale buff;* prevail- ing hue of metallic reflections greenish, Hab. The common domesticated bird, derived from the wild Mexican race; the latter ranging from southern Mexico north ‘to mountains of Arizona, New Mexico, southern Colorado, and western Texas. 2. M. ocellata, Breast of male without tuft of bristles. Tail ash-gray, narrowly barred ' with black, broadly tipped with refulgent copper-bronze, and ornamented with large subterminal eye-spots or ocelle of brilliantly metallic steel-blue, bordered with velvety black; longer upper tail-coverts similarly adorned, and body barred with richly lus- trous golden-bronze, steel-blue, green, ete., and velvety black. Spurs greatly devel- oped and very sharp in the male. Female decidedly smaller than the male but scarcely less brilliant. Hab. Yucatan, Peten district of Guatemala, and adjoining portions of British Honduras. : * Some varieties, due to domestication, are wholly black, cream-colored, or tawny. PHASIANIDZ— THE PHIASANTS, 5 Meleagris gallopavo (Linn.) WILD TURKEY. Meleagris gallopavo Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 156; ed. 12, i, 1766, 268.—AuD. Orn. Biog. i, 1831, 1, pls. 1, 6; v, 1839, 559; Synop. 1839, 194; B. Am. v, 1842, 42, pls. 287, 288.—~—Nurr. Man. i, 1832, 630.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 651; Cat. N. Am. B. 1839, No. 457.—B. B. & BR. Hist. N. Am. B. iii, 1874, 404—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 310._R1rpGw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 207, i Meleagris americana Banrtr. Travels, 1791, 290. / Meleagri< gallopavo var. americana Couns, Key, 1872, 232; Check List, 1874, No. 379 a; B. N. W. 1874, 391. Meleagris gallopavo americana Ripaw. Nom. N. Am. 1881, No. 470 a.—Cours, 24 Check List, 1882, No. 554, . Has. Eastern United States, north to southern Minnesota and Dakota, Ontario, ete.— formerly to Massachusetts and Vermont, but now extinct in most parts of the northeast- ern States; south to the Gulf coast (including Florida); west to Iowa, eastern Kansas, In- dian Territory, and eastern Texas. _ §Sp.CHar. The naked skin of the head and neck is blue; the excrescences purplish red and whitish. The legs dull red. The feathers of the neck and body generally are very broad, abruptly truncate, and each one well defined and scale-like; the exposed portion coppery bronze, with a bright coppery reflection in some lights, most brilliant on the under parts. Each feather is abruptly margined with velvety black, the bronze assuming a greenish or purplish shade near the line of junction, and the bronze itself sometimes with @ greenish reflection in some lights. The black is opaque, except along the extreme tip, where there is a metallic: gloss. The feathers of the lower back and rump are black, with little or no coppery gloss. The feathers of the sides behind, and the coverts, upper and under, are of a very dark purplish chestnut, with purplish metallic reflections near the end, and a subterminal bar of black; the tips are of the opaque purplish chestnut referred to. The concealed portion of the coverts is dark chestnut, barred rather finely with black, the black wider than the interspaces. The tail feathers are dark brownish chestnut, with nu- merous bars of black, which, when most distinct, are about a quarter of aninch wide and about double their interspaces; the extreme tip for about half an inch is plain chestnut, lighter than the general color; and there is a broad subterminal bar of black about two inches wide on the outer feathers, and narrowing to about three quarters of an inch to the central ones. The innermost pair scarcely show this band, and the others are all much broken and confused. In addition to the black bars on each feather, the chestnut inter- spaces are sprinkled with black. The black bands are all most distinct on the inner webs; the interspaces are considerably lighter below than above. There are no whitish tips whatever to the tail or its coverts. The feathers on the middle of the belly are downy, opaque, and tipped obscurely with rusty whitish. The wing-coverts are like the back; the quills, however, are blackish brown, with numer- ous transverse bars of white, half the width of the interspaces. The exposed surfaces of the wing, however, and most of the inner secondaries, are tinged with brownish rusty, the uppermost ones with a dull copper or greenish gloss. : The female differs in smaller size, less brilliant colors, absence generally of bristles on the breast and of spur, and a much smaller flesiiy process above the base of the bill. Male. Length, 48.00 to 50.00; extent, 60.00; wing, 21.00; tail, 18.50. Weight, 16 to 40 Ibs. Female. Weight, about 12 lbs.; measurements smaller in proportion. Once abundant throughout the State, the Wild Turkey is now exterminated in some sections and reduced in numbers elsewhere. In some densely wooded districts of the extreme southern coun- ties it is still common, but is becoming less so,every year. 6 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Famity TETRAONIDA.—Tue Grouse, PAarrTripcEs, AND QUAILS. CHAR. Hind toe small (much less than half as long as lateral toes), and inserted above the level of the anterior toes. Tarsi without spurs. Head entirely feathered (in American species) except, sometimes, over eyes. Tail not vaulted or arched, The following subfamilies of Tetraonide have usually been given full family rank, but almost without doubt are more closely related. Tetraonine. Tarsi with at least the upper half feathered; sides of toes, with decidu- ous comb- like pectinations (falling off in summer). Perdicine. Tarsi entirely naked, and toes without pectinations at any season. ‘ SuBFAMILyY TETRAONIN Al.—Tue Grouse. CuHag. Gallinaceous birds with the margins of the toes distinctly pectinated*, the tarsi at least half feathered, the nasal fosse densely filled with feathers (so as to completely en- elose and partially conceal the nostril). Sides of neck often with an inflatable air-sac. A bare (usually red or yellow) space over eyes. The ‘Tetraonine are very strongly characterized among galli- naceous birds by the peculiarities of structure named in the above diagnosis. In addition, the following characters (not always present) may be mentioned. The superciliary region is usually more or less bare, and some- times (notably in the Ptarmigans) adorned with a comb-like, or ciliated, erectile process, of a brilliant red or yellow color during the breeding season. The tail is extremely variable in development and form, and may be either short and rounded (as in Zympanuchus and Lagopus), rather lengthened and fan- shaped (as in Dendragapus and Bonasa), very short and grad- uated, with the middle feathers lengthened and nearly truncate ( Pediocetes), or considerably lengthened and much graduated, with the feathers acute (Centrocercus). Some genera have an in- flatable air-sac on the side of the.neck, while ornamental tufts of feathers on the neck are possessed by others, Tympanuchus and Bonasa. «These pectinations, however, are wanting in summer. TETRAONIDE—THE GROUSE, ETC. 7 The subfamily is most numerously developed in North America, its other representatives belonging to the colder portions of Europe and Asia. Of the genera included in the following ana- lytical table all but one are to be found either within or very near to the geographical field of the present work. A. Legs feathered to and on the basal membrane of the toes, which are bare. No ruff on the side of the neck, which, however, has an extensible bare space. Dendragapus. Tail broad, nearly evon, or truncate, and rounded laterally, two thirds the wing. Nasal fosse searcely half the culmen. Centrocercus. Tail excessively lengthened and cuneate; longer than the wings, the’ feathers acuminate. Nasal fossa two thirds the culmen. Shafts of feathers on the lower throat very spinous in the male. Pediocetes. Tai] very short, but graduated, and with the two middle feathers (per- haps tail-coverts) lengthened beyond the rest, and two thirds as long as the wing; the next longest half the wing. Nasal foss@ not half the length of culmen. Shafts of throat feathers normal. , B. Legs feathered to the lower end of tarsus. Tympanuchus. Tail very short, truncate, but laterally graduated; half as long as the wings. Sides of neck with long, narrow, and rather stiff feathers. Nasal fosse scarcely one third the culmen. ‘ ; C. Legs feathered to the claws. Lagopus. Tail about two thirds the wing, truncate, of sixteen to eighteen feathers. Most species becoming white in winter; none of the other genera exhibiting this peculiarity. ; i : D. Lower half of tarsi bare, with two rows of scutellz anteriorly. Bonasa. Sides of neck with ruff of broad, truncate, soft feathers. Tail very broad, square or slightly rounded, as long as the wings. Genus BONASA STEPHENS. Bonasa StrpxeEns, Shaw’s Gen. Zodl, xi, 1819,298. Type, Tetrao bonasia LINN. Tetrastes Krys. & Bias, Wirb. Europ. 1840, p. Lxiv. Gen. CHAR. Tail fan-shaped, its feathers very broad, soft, as long as the wings; eighteen in number. Tarsi naked for the lower half; covered with two rows of hexagonal scales anteriorly. Sides of toes strongly pectinated. Side of neck with a tuft of very broad soft feathers. Portion of culmen between the nasal fosse about one third the total length. Top of head with soft crest. Although but one species of this genus has been detected in North America, this has a very extensive range, embracing nearly the entire continent; all the wooded portions, in fact, excepting, perhaps, the extreme southern parts. As is often the case with birds whose range covers a large extent of territory, this species varies remarkably in color in the different portions of its habi- tat; northern specimens and those from the Rocky Mountains having almost invariably ash-gray tails, with the whole plumage of a decidedly grayish cast, while specimens from the grandly tim- bered and’ reekingly moist region of the northwest coast (Oregon to Sitka) have the tails dark ferruginous, while rich rusty 8 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. , and chestnut tints prevail in the plumage. Specimens from the more southern districts of the eastern United States, where the rainfall is abundant and the country (formerly at least) thickly forest-clad, are much, like those from the last-mentioned region, having always rufous tails, but the general coloration is decid- edly paler. As we proceed: northward (to New England and the British Provinces), and also in the mountain districts of the Middle States, the birds become gradually grayer (many New England specimens having distinctly gray tails) until finally, in the interior provinces of British America the extreme gray type (B. umbelloides Doug.) is reached. A single species of this genus, the Hazel Grouse (2. bonasia), ‘inhabits the northern portions of the Old World, from western Europe to Japan. It bears a general resemblance to B. wmbel- lus, but is decidedly smaller, lacks the conspicuous neck-tufts (which, however, appear to .be present in a rudimentary condi- tion), and has the throat black. Bonasa umbellus (Linn.) RUFFED GROUSE. Popular synonyms, “Partridge” (in New England); “Pheasant” (in southern and western States); Ruffled Grouse; Drumming Grouse. Tetrao umbellus Linn. 8. N. ed. 12, i, 1766, 275.—Wiis. Am. Orn, vi, 1812, 46, pl. 49.—Nurr. Mana. i, 1882, 657.—AuD. Orn. Biog. i, 1881, 211; v, 1839, 560, pl. 41; Synop. 1839, 202; B. Am. 'v, 1842, 72, pl. 293. Bonasawmbellus StePu. Gen. Zool. xi, 1819,300.—Bargp. B. N. Am. 1858, 680; Cat, N. Am. B. 1859, No. 465,—Covuus, Key, 1872, 232; Check List, 1874, No. 85; 2d ed. 1882, No. 565; B. N. W. 1874, 420.—B. B. & R. Hist. N. Am. B. iii, 1874, 448, pl. 61, figs. 8, 9.—Riwew, Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 473; Man. N, Am. B. 1887, 197A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 300. Has. Eastern United States, south to the Gulf coast (?). [Replaced from Manitoba, northwestward, and also in the Rocky Mountains, by a gray race, B. umbellus umbelloides (Doug).), and on coast of Oregon, Washington, and British Columbia by the dark rusty B. umbellus sabini (Dougl.)] Sr. Cuan. Above ochraceous-brown finely mottled with grayish; the scapulars and wing-coverts with pale shaft-streaks, the rump and upper tail-coverts with median cordate spots of pale grayish. Tail ochraceous-rufous, narrowly barred with black, crossed termi- nally with a narrow band of pale ash; then a broader one of black, this preceded by another ashy one. (In specimens from the Alleghany Mountains and New England States, the tail usually more or less grayish to the base, sometimes entirely destitute of rufqus tinge.) Throat and foreneck ochraceous. Lower parts white (ochraceous beneath the surface), with broad transverse bars of dilute brown, these mostly concealed on the abdomen. Low- er tail-coverts pale ochraceous, each with a terminal deltoid apot of white, bordered with dusky. Neck-tufts brown or black. Length, 18.00; wing, 7.20; tail, 7.00. Female smaller, and with the neck-tufts less developed, but colors ‘similar. Young (No. 39,161, St, Stephen's TETRAONIDE—THE GROUSE, ETC. 9 N.B.; G. A. Boardman): Brown above, and dingy white beneath; a rufous tinge on the scapulars. Feathérs of the jugulum, back, scapulars, and wing-coverts with broad median streaks of light ochraceous, and black spots on the webs; jugulum with a strong buff tinge. Secondaries and wing coverts strongly mottled transversely. Head dingy buff, the upper part more rusty; a postocular or auricular dusky patch, and a tuft of dusky ‘feathers on the vertex. Chick: Above light rufous, beneath rusty white; uniform above and below; a dusky postocular streak inclining downwards across the auriculars. Bill whitish.” (Hist. N. Am. B.) The Ruffed Grouse or ‘‘Pheasant”’ as it is popularly known, is found throughout the State in wooded districts, becoming more rare southward. It is uncommon in the vicinity of Mount Carmel, and is growing less so as the woods become cleared. — ; The Ruffed Grouse is a constant resident in the districts where it occurs, and, as a general rule, is in no sense migratory, though it is stated by; Audubon that in some regions where they are very abundant they perform partial sorties at the ap- proach of autumn. These only occur in mountainous regions, in which during the winter months there is an insufficiency of food. “The flight of this Grouse is low, straightforward, and rarely protracted more than a few hundred yards at a time. It is ‘somewhat stiff, and performed with frequent, almost continual, beatings of the wings. When it is flushed from the nest, or is suddenly startled from the ground by a dog, it rises with a long whirring sound, which noise, however, is not made when the bird rises of its own accord. Its movements on the ground are very stately and graceful, except when it is approached too near, when it runs in a rapid manner, lowers its head and spreads its tail, and either seeks shelter or takes to flight. When it hides in the bushes, it usually squats and remains ‘close.’ (BREWER.) . On few matters pertaining to our birds has there been greater difference of opinion than as to the manner in which the drum- ming sound of this species is produced. In the American Sports- man for February 21, 1874, the writer gave a general review of what had been published on the sybject, supplemented by some original information received: from Mr. H. W. Henshaw, which were to the effect that the sound was produced by hard strokes of the wings, both downward and forward, but without touching the body of the bird. —~2 10 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Genus LAGOPUS Brisson. Lagopus Briss. Orn, i, 1760, 181. Type, Tetrao lagopus LINN. Gen. CHAR. Nasal groove densely clothed with feathers. Tail of sixteen or eighteen feathers. Legs closely feathered to the claws. Plumage snow-white in winter. ‘The Ptarmigans inhabit the northern regions of both hemi- spheres, and with the Arctic fox and hares, the lemmings, and a few other species, characterize the Arctic zone. They are of rare occurrence within the limits of the United States, though farther north they become abundant. The species all change to white in winter, except Z. scoticus, which is permanently dark rusty brown, and inhabits the uplands of Scotland and England. Lagopus lagopus (Linn.) WILLOW PTARMIGAN. Popular synonyms, White Ptarmigan; Willow Grouse. Tetrao lagopus Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758 159. Lagopus lagopus Srxsn. Proc. U. 8. Nat Mus. viii, 1885, 20. ~A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 301.-Ripew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 199. Tetrao albus Gu. 8. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 750. Lagopus albus Aup. Synop. 1839, 207; B. Am. v, 1842, 114—Nurr. Man. 2d ed. i, 1840, 816.— Barrp, Cat. N. Am. B, 1859, No. 467.—Cougs, Key, 1872, 235; Cheek List, 1874, No. 386; 2d ed. 1882, No. 568; B. N. W. 1874, 429.—B. B. & R. Hist. N. Am. B. iii, 1874, 457, pl. 62, figs, 1, 2, 3—Rrpaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 474. : Tetrao saliceti Tamm. Man. ii, 1820, 474.—AuD. Orn. Biog. ii, 1884, 528, pl. 191. Haz. Northern North America, south, in winter, to northern border of United States (northern New York, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin, northern Illinois?, ete.). Also found in northern parts of the Old World. Sp. Cuan. Bill very stout; high as the distance from the nasal groove to itstip. Tail always black, narrowly tipped with white; wing (except upper coverts) pure white. “Summer. Male (No. 48,505, Fort Anderson, September 8; R. MacFarlane): Head, neck, and jugulum deep ¢innamon-rufous: whole upper parts (except wings) paler, more fulvoud brown, broadly and closely barred with black. Top of head spotted with black, and the jugulum and neck with scattered bars of the same, Wing, 7.50; bill, .40 from nostril, and .35 deep. Female (No. 53,526, Fort Anderson, June, 1865; R. MacFarlane): Entire plumage (ex- cept wings, tail, and legs) fulvous-buff, heavily spotted and barred with black. Wing, 7.20; bill, .40 by .40. “Winter. Entire plumage, except the tail (whichis black with white tip), immaculate snowy-white; shafts of primaries black. Male (No. 34,968, Northwest R., Labrador; D. Smith): Wing, 7.50; bill, 42 by 45. Female (No. 50,060, Nulato, Lower Yukon, April 12, 1867; W.H. Dall): Wing. 7.50; bill, .42 by.42, “Chick (No. 2,648, Fort Anderson, July, 1864), Prevailing color greenish buff, tinged with sulphur-yellow on the throat and abdomen, and washed with fulvous on the upper parts. A largé oval vertical patch of chestnut-rufous, bordered all round by a black line, which, from the occiput, is continued down the nape in a broad distinot stripe of black. On the upper part of the back this stripe bifurcates, and continues in two broad parallel stripes to the lower part of rump, where they again unite. A black stripe across the wing and one through the eye and auriculars.” (Hist. N. Am. B.) 4 TETRAONIDE—THE GROUSE, ETC. 11 The propriety of including this species in the fauna of Illinois, is exceedingly doubtful. Mr. Kennicott gave it in his list of the birds of Cook county, with the remark that it was “sometimes found in the timber along Jake Michigan”; but Mr. Nelson thinks that this note was based ‘‘upon the capture of two specimens, December, 1846, near Racine, [Wisconsin] as ‘noted by Dr. Hoy (Wis. Agr. Rep., 1852).” Grnus TYMPANUCHUS GLoceEr. Tympanuchus GLOGER, Handb. Vog. Deutschl., 1842. Type, Tetrao cupido LINN. Cupidonia Retcu. Av. Syst. Nat. 1850, p. xxix. Same type. ‘Gen. Cuan. Tail of eighteen feathers, short, half the length of wings; the feathers stiffened and more or less graduated. Bare inflatable air-sac of the neck concealed by a tuft of long, stiff, lanceolate feathers; an inconspicuous crest on the vertex. ‘Tarsi feathered only to near the base, the lower joint scutellate. Culmen between the nasal fosse scarcely one third the whole length. The genus, so far as known, is entirely peculiar to North America, where there are three species, all confined to the eastern water-shed of the United States. The two occurring west of the Alleghanies may be distinguished as follows: Common CHARACTERS. Ground-color above yellowish brown, tinged with grayish and reddish; beneath white; whole upper and lower parts variegated with tran.verse bands,— those beneath regular, broad, sharply defined, and plain grayish brown, or dusky, those above more broken, broader, and deep black. Head buff, with a broad vertical stripe, a broad one beneath the eye from bill to ears,and a patch on lower side of auriculars, brown- ish black. JT. americanus, Tarsi clothed with long hair-like feathers, the bare posterior face entirely hidden, Dark bars above, .80 or more in width, deep black; those beneath, about .20 wide, and dark brown. Top of head nearly uniformly blackish; ‘face-stripes dusky- black. Bill, .40 deep, .50 long; wing, 9.00. Hab. Prairies of the Mississippi Valley; south to Louisiana and eastern Texas. T. pallidicinctus. Tarsi clothed with short feathers, the bare posterior face conspicu- ously exposed. Dark bars above lass than .20 in width, dark grayish brown; those beneath about .10 wide, and pale grayish brown. Top of head with only a slight spotting of black- ish; face-markings reddish brown. Bill, .35 deep, .55 long, from nostril; wing, 830. Hab. Southwestern prairies (middle and western Texas, ete.). , Tympanuchus americanus (Reich.) PRAIRIE HEN. Popular synonyms. Prairie Chicken; Chicken (in prairie districts); Pinnated Grouse. Tetrao cupido Wiis. Am. Orn. iii, 1811, 104, pl. 27 (nec Linn.)—NurrT. Man. i, 1882, 662.— Aub. Orn. Biog. ii, 1834, 490; v, 1839, 559, pl. 186; Synop. 1839, 204; B. Am. v, 1842, 23, pl. 296. Cupidonia cupido Barrgp, B. N. Am. 1838, 628; Cat. N. Am.B.1859, No. 464.—Cougs, Key, 1872, 234; Check List, 1874, No. 384; 2d ed. 1882, No. 563; B.. N. W. 1874, 419.—B. B. & R. Hist. N. Am. B. iii, 1874, 440, pl. 61, figs. 1, 7.-Ripew. Nom. N, Am. B. 1881, No. 477. Cupidonia americanus Reticu. Syst. Av. 1852, p. xxix. Tympanuchus americanus Ripew. Auk, Jan. 1886, 133; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 203.—A. O U. Check List, 1886, No. 305. / Cupidonia pinnata Brewster, Auk, ii, Jan. 1885, 82. 12 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Haz. Prairies and open cultivated districts of the Mississippi Valley. “Sp, Cuan. Male (No. 10,006, Tremont, Illinois; W. I. Shaw): Ground-color above ochra- ‘ceous-brown, tinged with grayish; beneath white, the feathers of the jugulum dark rusty- chestnut beneath the surface. Head mostly deep buff. Upper parts much broken by broad . transverse spots, or irregular bars of deep black,this color predominating largely over the lighter tints. Primaries and tail plain dusky; the former with roundish spots of pale ochra- ceous on outer webs, the latter very narrowly tipped with white. Lower parts with regular, continuous, sharply defined broad bars, or narrow bands, of clear dusky brown. : {A broad stripe of plain brownish black on side of head, beneath the eye, from rictus to end of auriculars; a blotch of the same beneath the middle of the auriculars, and the top of the head mostly blackish, leaving a broad superciliary and maxillary strive, and the whole throat immaculate buff. Ne.k-tufts 3.50 inches long, deep black; the longer ones uniform, the shorter with only the edge black, the whole middle portion pale buff, shading into deep reddish rusty next to the black. Wing, 9.00; tail, 4.50; bil!, .40 deep by .50 long, from nostril; tarsus, 2.10; middle toe, 1.85. Female similar, but with shorter and inconspicuous cervical tufts. Young (No. 25,998, Rockford, Illinois; Blackman): Above, including tail, yellowish brown; feathers with conspicuous white shaft-streaks and large blotches of deep black. Outer webs of primaries with whitish spots. Top of head rusty-brown with a black vertical and dusky auricular patch. Lower parts yellowish white, with irregularly defined transverse, grayish brown broad bars; anteriorly more spotted, the jugulum tinged with brown. , : “Chick (No. 25,989, Rockford, Hl.). Bright lemon-buff, tinged on sides and jugulum with reddish; upper parts much washed withrusty. A narrow auricular streak, blotches on the vertex and occiput, a stripe across the shoulder, and blotches down the middle of the back and rump, deep black.” (Hist. N. Am. B.) To describe in a work intended especially fer Illinois readers the habits of the Prairie Chicken, seems almost as superfluous a proceeding as “carrying coals to Newcastle;’”’ hence’ we omit further reference to this species than the following brief account of its nesting, from History of North American Birds. “This bird nests, according to the locality in which it is met with, from the beginning of April to the last of May. In Ken- tucky Audubon has found their nests with eggs early in April, but the average period there was the first of May. Their nests he describes as somewhat carelessly formed of dry leaves and grasses, interwoven in a tolerably neat manner, and always very carefully placed among the tall grass of some large tuft in the open ground of the prairies, or in barren lands at the foot of a small bush.” Genus PEDIOC.RTES Barrv. ‘i Pediocetes Batrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 625. ‘Type, Tetrao phasianellus LINN. “Gun. CHAR. Tail short, graduated; exclusive of the much lengthened middle part, ‘where are two feathers (perhaps tail-coverts) with parallel edges and truncated ends, half the fullrounded wing. Tarsi densely feathered to the toes and between their bases. Neck without pecular feathers. Culmen between nasal fosse not half the total length.” TETRAONIDE—THE GROUSE, ETC. 138 Pediocetes phasianellus campestris Ridgw. PRAIRIE SHARP-TAILED GROUSE. Popular synonyms, Spike-tail, Pin-tail, or Sprig-tail Prairie Chicken. * Pediocetes columbianus Exirot, Proc. Phila, Acad. 1862, 403,and Monogr. Tetraon. (part). Pediocetes phasianellus var. columbianus, part, Auct. (all reference to specimens from east of the Rocky Mountains within the United States). Tetrao phasianeilus (nec LINN.) AUD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 569, pl. 382; Synop. 1839, 205; B. Am. v, 1842, 110, pl. 298. Pediocetes phasianellus Barrp, B: N. Am. 1858, 626 (part). Pediocetes phasianellus campestris Ripew. Proc. Biol. Soc. Wash. ii, Apr. 10, 1884, 98; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 204.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 308, Has. Plains of the United States, from eastern'slope of Rocky Mountains, in Montana, _Wyoming, and Colorado, to the prairies of the Missouri Valley, and more sparingly, into ‘Wisconsin, southern Michigan, and northern Illinois. Supsp. Cuan. Differing from P. phasianellus columbianus in rather lighter and much more ochraceous coloration above, with the black bars narrower and less regular, and hav- ing the V-shaped markings of the lower parts much less distinct (never deep black), Types, Nos. 76,748, male ad., Illinois, and 19,173, female ad., Rosebud Creek, Montana. In the Bujletin of the Nuttall Ornithological Club for October, 1882, p. 233, Mr. Brewster alludes to differences between specimens of the Sharp-tailed Grouse from Fort Walla Walla, Washington, and others from eastern localities, but concludes that the differ- ences noted “probably have only a local significance.” This was formerly my opinion also; but many additional specimens subsequently received at the National Museum show con- elusively that two very different styles of this bird inhabit the regions west and east of the- Rocky Mountains, respectively. P. phasianellus columbianus is represented in the collec- tion by specimens from Washington, Oregon, northern California, and Nevada; and P. phasianellus campestris by examples from Montana (east of the mountains), eastern Wyoming and Colorado, Nebraska, Dakota, and Illinois. P. phasianeltlus campestris is the form described and figured by Audubon (B. Am. v, p. 112, pl. 298), under the name Tetrao phasianellus. This species, so much like the Prairie Chicken in its appear- ance and habits as to be quite generally confounded with it, is apparently confined to the northern portion of the State, where it seems to be of rather uncommon occurrence, at the present time at least. Mr. Nelson (p. 121 of his list) says; “Tf this species now occurs it is extremely rare. Mr. Kennicott notes it as ‘not uncommon formerly.’ At present it is re- stricted to the northwestern portion of the State. The last record of its occurrence in this vicinity is furnished by my friend Mr. T. H. Douglas, who informs me that in the fall of 1863 or 1864, while two gentlemen were shooting prairie chickens near Waukegan, they found and secured a covey of these birds, num- bering fourteen individuals. These had, in all probability, been raised in the immediate vicinity.” 14. BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Regarding: its former occurrence in considerable numbers, we find in Forest and Stream for October 9, 1879, p. 705, the fol- lowing confirmation of Mr. Kennicott’s record: “HABITAT OF (SHARP-TAILED GrousE.— Marietta, Ga., Septem- ber 29. Your correspondent in the issue of September 25, writ- — ing of the sharp-tailed grouse, thinks that it has never been ‘found south of latitude 43°. “In 1840-’45 this specie swas abundant in southern Wisconsin and northern Illinois as far south as Chicago (latitude 42°), always frequenting the timber, which gave it the local name of burr-oak grouse. We used to consider its flesh of finer flavor than that of its congener, the prairie hen.” SuBFAMILY PERDICIN24®.—TuHeE PARTRIDGES. Cuaz. Tarsi and toes entirely naked, nasal fosse unfeathered, protecte@ by a naked seale, Sides of toes without pectinations at any season. Sides of neck without an inflatable air-sac, and no bare space over eyes. The Partridges differ from the Grouse in the bare legs, and naked nasal fosse. They are-much smaller in size and more abundant in species. They are widely distributed over the sur- face of the globe, a large number belonging to America, where ‘the subfamilies have no Old World representatives whatever. The head seldom, if ever, shows the naked space around and above the eye; so common in the Zetraoninw; and the sides of the toes do not exhibit the peculiar pectination formed by a succession of small scales or points. Group Odontophorese. Cuar. Bill stout, the lower mandible more or less biden tate on each side near the end. ‘The Ortyginw of Bonaparte, or Odontophorine of other au- thors, are characterized as a group by the bidentation on either side of the edge of lower mandible, usually concealed in the closed mouth, and sometimes scarcely appreciable. The bill is short, and rather high at base; stouter and shorter than what is usually seen in Old World Partridges. The culmen is curved from the base; the tip of the bill broad, and overlapping the end of the lower mandible. The nasal groove is short. The tail is usually rather broad and long. TETRAONIDE—THE GROUSE, ETC. 15. Four genera are found in the United States, but only one of these occurs east of the Mississippi River, the remainder belong- ing to the southwestern border and the Pacific coast. Some of the western species are strikingly elegant birds, especially the Mountain Quail (Oreortyxz pictus) and Valley Quail (Lophortyx californicus) of the Pacific coast. The genera Callipepla and Cyrtonyx belong to Mexico and ‘contiguous border of the United States, each having a single species within our limits. GENUS COLINUS Lesson. Ortyx SrepHEns, Shaw's Gen, Zool. xi, 1819. Preoccupied. Type, Tetrao, virginianus Linn. Colinus Less. Man. ii, 1828, 190. Same type. Grn. OnAR. Bill stout. Head without crest. Tail short, scarcely more than half the wing, composed of moderately soft feathers. Wings normal. Legs distinct, well developed, the toes reaching considerably beyond the tip of the tail; the lateral toes short, equal, their claws falling decidedly short of the base of the middle claw. The genus Colinus embraces numerous species, all more or less resembling the well-known Bob-white of the United States. They are chiefly confined to Mexico, Central America, and ‘the Greater Antilles. North America and the West India Islands contain but one species, and this is so variable in plumage that it is only at extreme points of its range that differences acquire sufficient constancy to be considered worthy of special no- tice. The regions of its extremes of variation are the north- eastern, southeastern, and southwestern limits of its range: the modifications attaining’ in Cuba and in Texas sufficient value to have been deemed of specific importance. But comparing even the three extremes of plumage, the differences are found to consist only in a varying amount of the several colors, specimens from intervening regions forming the connecting links. Colinus virginianus (Linn.) BOB-WHITE. Popular‘synonyms. “Quail” (in New England and most portions of the Mississippi Val- ley); “Partridge” (in southern States and parts of the interior); American Quail; Virginia Quail; Partridge or Colin, ; Tetrao virginianus Linn. 8S. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 161; ed. 12, i, 1766, 277. Perdix virginiana Lata. 1790.—Wixs. Am. Orn. vi, 1812, 21, pl. 47.—Aupb. Orn. Biog. i, 1831, 888; v, 1839, 564, pl. 76.—NuTr. Man. i, 1832, 646. 16 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Ortyx virginianus Janp.—Avup. Synop. 1839, 199; B. Am. v. 1842, 59, pl. 289.—Barro. B. N. Am. 1858, 640; Cat, N. Am. B. 1859, No. 47L—Covuszs, Key, 1872, 286; Check List, 1874, oN o. 389; 2d ed. 1882, No. 571; B. N. W. 1874, 431.—B. B. & R. Hist. N. Am. B. iii, 1874, 468, pl. 68, figs. 1, 2.—Rrpew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 480. Colinus virginianus Stesn. Auk, Jan, 1885, 45.—A. O. U. Check Liat, 1886, No. 289,—RIDGW. Man. N. Am. B, 1887, 188. Has. Eastern United States, north to Massachusetts and Ontario, south to Georgia, Ala- bama, Louisiana,.and eastern Texas (?), west to the edge of the Great Plains. Replaced in Florida by the smaller and much darker C. virginianus floridanus Coues, and in central Texas, north to western Indian Territory by the much lightér colored C. virginianus tex- anus (Lawr.). e Sp. Cuan. Adult male: Pileum and stripe on side of head mixed black and rusty, the former prevailing; broad and distinct superciliary stripe, chin and throat white. Upper parts mottled rusty and grayish, the scapulars and tertials spotted with black, the latter with inner webs broadly edged with ochraceous. Jugulum mixed rusty, black, and white; abdomen white, with irregular V-shaped bars of black; sides rusty, streaked with black and white. Adult female: Similar to the male, but superciliary stripe and throat ochraceous and piléum, together with stripe on side of head, mostly rusty. Young: Pileum and auricu- lars dull dark grayish; superciliary stripe and throat dull dirty whitish; jugulum and breast dull grayish brown, with whitish shaft-streaks, abdomen plain dull white. Backrusty brownish, with whitish shaft-streaks and black spots. Downy young: Head dingy buff, with an elongated dusky auricular spot; and on the crown an oblong patch of chestnut- rufous. " Total length (fresh specimens) 9.50-10.50; extent, 14. 00-15.50. The common Quail or Partridge, as this fine bird is variously known in our State, is a bird of very general distribution, and its habits are so familiar that any detailed description is here unnecessary. The farmer has no better friend than this species, which devours “‘ bugs”’ of all sorts in large quantities, and is par- ticularly fond of the Colorado potato beetle. During severe win- ters farmers would do well, only their own interests being consid- ered, to feed the quail on their farms to prevent their dying of starvavion, This species can be easily tamed, and breeds very readily in confinement. (See Forest and Stream, Vol. XIX., Nos. 9 and 10, September 28 and October 5, 1882, pp. 164, 165, 185, and 186.) In former publications we have given C. virginianus floridanus as an inhabitant of southern Illinois, and Mr. Nelson, coincided in this opinion. Under this name, Mr. Nelson (in Bull. Essex Inst. UX., 1877, p. 43), says: . “The prevailing form in the bottoms, where the typical »/r- guvianus is comparatively rare. The specimens obtained are typical of the variety, some having even larger bills than any Florida examples seen, while the other proportions are equally small, and the colors fully as dark. A remarkable characteristic TETRAONIDE—THE GROUSE, ETC. 17 of this form in southern Illinois is its arboreal habits. The males are repeatedly found uttering their song from the tops of tall trees in densely wooded portions of the bottoms, and when a flock becomes scattered its members would almost invariably take to the trees, and soon their call notes, would resound through the forest. Mr. Ridgway’s observations regarding the habits of this form in the vicinity of Mt. Carmel coincide with mine, and in his collection also are extremes of the var. flori- danus.” Subsequent consideration of the matter, in the light of much new material, has convinced us that these small, deep-colored, and large-billed quail cannot properly be referred to the Florida. form. It is, true that some specimens are, as stated above, equally small, as dark colored, and with even larger bills than the typical Florida birds; but the latter are constantly differ- ent in their much less rusty color above, and some other minor particulars as regards plumage. Were the small, dark-colored ‘birds the prevailing form in southern Illinois, they might with propriety be separated from both the typical virginianus and the fioridanus type; but the average style is apparently. so nearly intermediate between the two that such separation seems quite unnecessary. 18 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. ORDER LIMICOL.Z.—TueE SuHORE-Binps. Cuaracrers. Precocial wading birds, usually of small size; distinguished from the Hero- diones by prascocial habits and many striking differences of structure, and from the Paludi- cole (Cranes and Rails) by their lengthened, usually pointed, wings and small or rudimentary hind toe, the latter member being sometimes wanting. The Limicole constitute the large assemblage of small waders known to sportsmen as “‘shore-birds’’, and include the different groups distinguished (or, rather, confused) in popular nomen- clature by the terms snipe, plover, curlew, etc. ; The clear definition of the several families composing the order is a matter of some difficulty, the variations of structure within each family being very great. The following, however, may answer for the separation of those occurring in North America. A. Bill much longer than tarsus, excessively compressed, deepest through the middle portion. Hematopodide. No hind toe; a well-developed web between outer and middle toes at the base; front of tarsus covered with hexagonal scales. Size very large. B. Bill about equal to or shorter than the tarsus, moderately compressed, deepest through the base. Aphrizide. A well-developed hind toe, with claw; no trace of web between outer and middle toes; front of tarsus covered by a row of transverse scutelle. Size small. . Cc. Bill variable, but never longer than the tarsus; more or less depressed in the middle portion, the terminal portion of the culmen being more or less arched; never ex- panded laterally to the end. Hind toe usually absent. Cheradriide. Size largeto very small. Billslender or small, straight, always shorter than ‘the tarsus. : D. Characters much the same as given for section “C,” but toes, including the hallux, exceedingly lengthened, the claws also very much lengthened; scutellation of legs much asin the Rallide. Jacanide, Size medium or rather small. Olaws very long and compressed, nearly straight, that of the hallux equal to or longer than its digit, linear, and slightly recurved. Bend of the wing (head of metarcapus) armed with a sharp conical horny spur. E. Bill exceedingly variable,—short or long, straight, slightly recurved or decidedly de- curved, but more or less expanded laterally at the end, which is more or less sensitive, Hind toe usually present, rarely absent. Scolopacide. Tarsus rounded in front, where clothed with a single row of transverse scutelle. LIMICOLZ—THE SHORE-BIRDS. 19 F. Bill subulate (except in Crymophilus), Toes either partly webbed, or fringed by a lateral, usually lobed, margin. Plumage peculiarly soft and compact for this order, resembling greatly in.this respect that of the Longipennes. Tarsi compressed, the anterior edge sharp. Phalaropodide, Size small; tarsi and bill rather short, or but moderately lengthened; toes edged with a lateral, usually scalloped, margin. Reourvirostride, Size large; tarsiand bill very long; toes partly webbed, and without sealloped margin. 20 BIRDS OF ILLINOIs. Famity APHRIZIDA1.—THE TURNSTONES. Cuar. Ruther small, plover-like birds, differing from the true Plovers (Charadriide) chiefly in the more robust feet, without trace of web between the toes, the well-developed _ hind toe, and the strong claws; the toes with a lateral matgin, forming a broad flat under- surface (especially in Aphriza); the bill of one genus (Arenaria) peculiar. The two genera may be distinguished by the following characters: Arenaria, Bill compressed and pointed terminally, somewhat upturned at the end, the cul- men straight or even slightly concave; tarsus not longer than the bill; tail slightly rounded. Aphriza. Bill slightly swollen terminally, the terminal portion of the culmen decidedly convex; tarsus decidedly longer than the bill; tail slightly emarginated. Genus ARENARIA Baisson. Arenaria Briss. Orn. v, 1760, 182. Type, Tringa interpres Linn. Strepsilas Inu1crR, Prodromus, 1811,268. Same type. OxnaR. Form robust, the head small, neck short, wings long and pointed, feet stout. Bill straight along the culmen (or else slightly concave above), somewhat upturned termi- nally, compressed toward the end and pointed. Wings reaching beyond the tail, the first primary longest, the tertials not reaching to the end of the primaries. Tail slightly rounded. Tarsus decidedly longer than the middle toe, the latter shorter than the bill. Arenaria interpres (Linn.) TURNSTONE, Popular synonyms. Calico-back; Brant Bird; Chicaric (Plymouth Bay, Mass.). Tringa interpres LINN. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 148; ed. 12, i, 1766, 248.—Wrns. Am. Orn. vil, 1818, 32, pl. vii. Strepsilas interpres Iie. Prodr. 1811, 263.—Swarns. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 371.—Nurr. Man. Water Birds, 1834, 30.—AuD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 31, pl. 304; Synop. 1839, 227; Birds Am. v, 1842, 831, pl. 328.—Barep, B. N. Am. 1858, 701; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 515.—Covss, Key, 1872. 246; Check List, 1874, No. 406; 2d ed. 1882, No. 598.—_Ripew. Nom. N. Am. B 1881, No. 509.-B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 119, Arenaria interpres VIRILL. Gal. Ois. ii, 1834, 102.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No, 288,— Ripaw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 180. Morinella interpres StHIN. Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus. iv, 1882, 82. Tringa morinellus Linn. 8. N. i, 1766, 249 (young). Strepsilas collaris Trmm. Man. ii, 1820, 558. “Charadrius cinclus Pauuas” (BAIRD, |. ¢.) Has. Sea-coasts of nearly all countries; in America, from Greenland and Alaske to Chili and Brazil; in the interior, more or less common along the shores of the Great Lakes and larger rivers. APHRIZIDE—THE TURNSTONES. 21 Sp. Coan. Adult: Chin and throat, a large loral patch, another covering terminal half of the auriculars, border of the pileum, and large transverse patch on each side of the jugu- ‘lum, white; stripe from the frontlet to the eye, squarish patch beneath the eye, malar stripe, side of the neck, jugulum, and sides of the breast uniform black, all these markings confluent and sharply defined. Remainder of the lower parts, upper part of the rump, upper tail-coverts, and ends of secondaries, pure white. ,Breeding plumage: Upper parts dusky blackish, the wing-coverts lighter, more brownish gray, the feathers showing darker centres; back and scapulars little, if at all, varied with rufous; crown dusky, uniform, or streaked. Spring (or winter) plumage: Upper parts mixed black and bright rufous, the latter color ocoupying chiefly the middle of the back (longitudinally) and the wing-coverts; the scapulars and tertials mixed black and rufous. Pileum more streaked with white, and markings about the head and neck more sharply defined than in the summer dress. “Bill black; iris hazel; feet deep orange-red, claws black.” (AuDUBON.) Young: Head chiefly mottled grayish, without well-defined markings; black of the jugulum and breast indicated by mottled dusky, occupying the same area, but not sharply defined; upper parts grayish dusky, the feathers bordered terminally with buff or whitish. Total length, about 9 inches: wing, 6.00; tail, 2.50; culmen, .80-.90; tarsus, 1.00; middle toe, .75. The Turnstone occurs in Illinois only as a migrant, and is chiefly confined to the shores of Lake Michigan. There, accord- ing to Mr. Nelson (pp. 128, 124 of his list), it arrives “May. 15th in full breeding plumage and is found until the first week in June. Returns early in August, still in breeding plumage, which is exchanged for that of winter during the last of the month. Departs about the 20th of September. While here they are generally found in company with flocks of the smaller species of sandpipers.”’ 22 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. FAMILY CHARADRIID AL. — THE PLOVERS. CHar. Small or medium-sized shore-birds (scarcely waders), with rather short, some- what pigeon-like bill, large round head, short neck, long and pointed wings, and moder- ately lengthened legs, the hind toe usually absent. ie The Plovers are quite distinct in their structural characters from the Sandpipes and other Scolopacidw, being more nearly related to the Turnstones and Oyster-catchers, notwithstanding the fact that the latter are so different in appearance. Instead of wading about in the shallow ponds or the margins of streams, as is the custom of the Scolopacide, they frequent meadows and sandy tracts, where they run swiftly along the ground, in a peculiarly graceful manner. The North American genera may be distinguished as follows: A. Size large (wing more than eight inches); head more or less crested; plumage more or less metallic abové. Occiput with a slender recurved crest; a well-de- veloped hind toe, with claw; wing rounded, first quill shorter than fourth. 1, Vanellus. Wing unarmed, or with rudimentary spur; tarsus not more than twice as long as the middle toe. B. Size medium or small (wing less than eight inches); head without crest, and plumage without metallic gloss above. c. Wing more than six inches; plumage much speckled or spotted above; lower parts chiefly black in summer. 2. Charadrius. A well-developed hind toe, without claw....°... Subgenus Squatarola 8.’ No trace of hind toe; otherwise very similar to Squatarola, but smaller and _ more SIONGOL: sacs isisndcaianammrcedawenestee ih Wi sess teclaatisntc@atens Subgenus Charadrius, d. Wing less than six inches; plumage nearly or quite uniform grayish or brownish above (the rump ochraceous in subgenus Oxyechus), the lower parts chiefly or entirely white at all stages. 4, Hgialitis. e\, Tail very long (half as long as the wing, or more), extending half its length beyond tips of closed wings; rump and upper tail-coverts pale rufous or ochraceous in the American species. Bill slender, about equal in length to the middie toe; tarsus decidedly less than twice as long as middle toe; rump and upper tail-coverts rufous or ochraceous (except in 0, tricollaris) ........ Subgenus Ozyechus. e*, Tail short (less than half as long as the wing), reaching little, if any, be- yond ends of closed wings: rump concolor with the back. Bill variable, but usually shorter than middle toe, or, if longer, very slender; tarsus less than twice as long as middle toe. Subgenus Apialitis, CHARADRIIDE—THE PLOVERS. 23 Bill very large (as long as, or longer than middle toe), the terminal half of the culmen much arched, the base of the gonys forming a decided angle; tarsus about one and one half times to nearly twice as long as middle £OO cesuins saennews ten nein 4 Heenan feet ee nena nee ee ees Subgenus Ochthodromus Bill slender, wide at base, much longer than middie toe; tarsus more than twice as long aS Middle tO0....... ccc ces e cee et eee eeneeeeeee Subgenus Podasocys. Genus CHARADRIUS Linn us, SuspcEnvs Squatarola CUVIER. Squatarola CuvisER, Rég. Anim. i, 1817, 467. Type, Tringa squatarola LINN. Cuar. A rudimentary hind toe. Legs reticulated with clongated hexagons anteriorly, of which there are five or six in a transverse row; fewer behind. First primary longest. Tail slightly rounded. But a single species of this subgenus is known, this being the well-known ‘‘Beetle-head” or ‘“Bull-head”’ Plover of eastern gunners, a bird of nearly cosmopolitan distribution. Charadrius squatarola (Linn.) BLACK-BELLIED PLOVER. : Popular synonyms, Beetle-head or Bull-head; Plover of eastern gunners and sportsmen; Bottle-head; Black-breast. Tringa squatarola Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, 1758, 149; ed. 12, 1766, 252. Charadrius squatarola Naum. Vog. Deutsch. vii, 1834, 250.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 270.—Ripew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 173. Tringa helvetica Linn. 8. N. ed. 12, 1766, 250. ; Squatarola helvetica Cuv.—Cass. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 697.—Bargp, Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 510.—Couks, Key, 1872, 248; Check List, 1874, No. 395; 2d ed. 1882, No. 580; Birds N. W. 1874, 448.—Ripew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 518.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 132. Charadrius helveticus Licur.—Nutr. Man. ii, 1834, 26. AuD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 280, pl. 884; Synop. 1839, 221; Birds Am. v, 1842 199, pl. 315. Charadrius apricarius WILson, Am. Orn. vii, 1813, 41. Has. Nearly cosmopolitan, but chiefly the northern hemisphere; breeding in the ex- treme northern parts of its range, migrating in winter to southern portions, ex!ending, in America, as far as Brazil and Colombia. Bermudas, and throughout the West Indies. Sp. Cuan. Bill and legs strong; wings long; a very small rudimentary hind toe. Sum- mer plumage: Around the base of the bill to the eyes, neck before, and under parts of body, black; upper parts grayish white, nearly pure and unspotted on the forehead; sides of the neck and rump tinged with ashy, and having irregular transverse spots of brownish black on the back,scapulars, and wing-coverts; the brownish black frequently predomi- nating on those parts, and the rump also frequently with transverse bars of the same. Lower part of the abdomen, tibia, and under tail-coverts, white. Quills brownish black, lighter on their inner webs, with a middle portion of their shafts white, and a narrow longi- tudinal stripe of white frequently on the shorter primaries and secondaries, Tail white, with transverse imperfect narrow bands of black. The black color of the under parts gen- erally with a faint bronzed or coppery lustre, and presenting a scale-like appearance; the brownish black of the upper parts with a greenish lustre. Bill and legs black; iris brown. Younger.and winter plumage: Entire upper parts dark brown, with circular and irregular small spots of white, and frequently of yellow, most numerous on the wing-coverts; upper 24 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. tail-coverts white. Under parts white, with short Jongitudinal lines and spots of dark brownish cinereous on the neck and breast; quills brownish black, with a large longitudi- nal space of white on their inner webs and also on the outer webs of the shorter pri- maries. Young: Upper parts lighter, and with the white spots more irregular or scarcely assuming a circular shape; narrow lines on the neck and breast more numerous, : Total length about 11.50 inches; wing, 7.50; tail, 3.00: culmen, about 1.10; tarsus, 1.95; middle toe, 1.15. ‘ In general coloration this species resembles very closely the Golden Plover (Charadrius dominicus), but, besides being much larger and stouter. built, may always be distinguished by the blackish axillars, these feathers being smoky gray in the Golden. Plover. This species, the largest of our Plovers, is more or less com- mon during the migrations. In Cook county, according to Mr. Nélson, it “arrives in full breeding plumage the last of May and after lingering a few days the majority pass north. A few re- main during the summer and undoubtedly breed. Returning early in September in fall plumage, they remain until well into October. While with us in the migrations this species is gen- erally solitary, sometimes a half dozen individuals joining com- pany, or a single specimen will be found leading a miscellaneous company of sandpipes and small plovers.” SuBGENvus Charadrius Linnzvs. Charadrius Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, 1758, 150; ed. 12, 1766, 253. Type, C. apricarius LINN. Cuaz. Similar to Squatarola, but without any trace of hind toe. Plumage also very similar, but form rather more slender. Only two species of Charadrius proper are known; one peculiar to the Palxarctic Region, but occurring accidentally in Greenland; the other spread over the remaining portions of the world, including the greater part of America, the islands throughout the Pacific, and the coasts of Asia. They differ chiefly in the color of the axillary feathers and the lining of the wings, which are white in C. apricarius, smoky gray in C. dominicus. Charadrius dominicus (Miill.) AMERICAN GOLDEN PLOVER. Popular synonyms. Green Plover; Squeeler (Plymouth Bay, Mass.). Charadrius dominious MULLER. Syst. Nat. Suppl. 1776, 116,—Rrew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881 No. 515; Man, N. Am. B., 1887, 174.~Covns, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 581.—B _ B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 139.—A. O. U., Cheok List, 1886, No. 272. Charadrius pluvialis Wzuson, Am. Orn, vii, 1813, 71, pl. 50, fig. 6. (neo Linn.)—Swarns. & Ricu. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 369.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1884, 16.—Avup. Orn. Biog. iii, 1885, 628. Charadrius virginicus “BOBCKHAUSEN and Buoustutn,” Licut. Verz. Doubl. 1823, No. 729.—Cass. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 690.—Barrp, Oat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 508, CHARADRIDE—THE PLOVERS. 25 * Charadrius fulvuus var. virginicus Cougs, Key, 1872, 243; Check List, 1874,No! 826; Birds 'N. W. 1874, 449 (synonymy). Charadrius marmoratus WaGu.—AuD. Orn. Biog. v, 1839, 575, pl. 300; Synop. 1839, 222;~ Birds Am. v, 1842, 208, pl. 316. Has. America in general, from the Arctic coast (including Greenland) to Paraguay and Ohili; breeding in the arctic and subarctic districts, winter migrant to southern localities. “Sp. Cuan. Bill rather short, legs moderate, wings long, no hind toe, tarsus covered be- fore and behind with small circular or hexagonal scales. Summer plumage: Upper parts brownish black, With numerous small circular and irregular spots of golden yellow, most numerous on the back and rump, and on the upper tail-coverts assuming the form of trans- verse bands generally; also with some spots of ashy white. Entire under parts black, with a brownish or bronzed lustre, underttail-coverts mixed or barred with white. Forehead, border of the black of the neck, under tail-coverts, and tibiz, white; axillary feathers cinere- ous; quills dark brown; middle portion of the shafts white, frequently extending slightly to the webs and forming longitudinal stripes on the shorter quills; tail dark brown, with numerous irregular bands of ashy white, and: frequently tinged with golden yellow; bill black; legs dark bluish brown. Winter plumage (young and adult): Under parts dull ashy, spotted with brownish on the neck and breast,-frequently more or less mixed with black; many spots of the upper parts dull ashy white; other spots, especially on the rump, golden yellow. ; “Total length, 9.50 inches; wing, 7.00; tail, 2.50; culmen, .92; tarsus, 1.70; middle toe, 90. “Specimens vary in the relative amount of the black and golden on the upper parts, in the width of the white on the forehead, and other details of coloration. Careful measure- ments of twenty-six specimens afford the iollowing results:—Hleven specimens in summer plumage: Wing, 6.80-7.35, average, 7.11; culmen, .85-1.00; average, .91; tarsus, .60-1.85, average, 1.73; middle toe, .85-1.05, average, .91. Six adults in changing plumagé: Wing, 6.90- 7,30, average, 7.12; culmen, .90-1.00, average, . 96; tarsus, 1.65-1.82, average, 1.70; middle toe, .80-.95, average, .90. Seven specimens in winter plumage (mostly young): Wing, 6.80-7.20, average, 7.08; culmen, .80-1.00, average, “91; tarsus, 1.55-1.75, average, 1.66; middle toe, .85-.95, average, .87. Average of the whole series: Wing, 7.09; culmen, .91; tarsus, 1. 0; middle toe, 90.” (Water B. N. Am) Neg In Cook county, this species is, ‘according to Mr. Nelson, “a very abundant migrant,” arriving ‘in large flocks early in ‘April, and at this time the black of the breeding plumage has just be- gun to mottle their white breasts. Frequents wet praries until the last of the month, when it generally departs. Sometimes a few remain as late as May 5, and are then in perfect breeding dress. Returning early in September, with the fall plumage just appearing, it remains until October.” Genus ZEGIALITIS Bow. . SuBGENUs Oxyechus REICHENBACH. Oxyechus Retcu., Av. Syst. 1853, Introd. p. xviii. Type, Charadrius vociferus LINN. Caz. Bill small, slender, about equal'to the middle toe (without nail); tarsus nearly twice as long as middle toe; tail long (about two thirds as long as the wings), reaching half its length beyond the ends of the primaries, graduated, the lateral feathers about .75 shorter than the middle pair; rump different in color from the back. 26 , BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. q The single North American species of this subgenus differs con- spicuously from the-Plovers usually included together under Aigialitis in the broad,. lengthened tail, and, so far as coloration is concerned, in the ochraceops rump.and the pair of black bands aeross ‘the breast. It may be remarked, however, that coloration alone is of slight importance as a character in this group. , The Old World species appear to belong here rather than with true Ayialitis, namely, Charadrius tricollaris Vir1uu., of South Africa, and C. négrifons Cuvier, of Australia. The former is much like a miniature Killdeer Plover, having two black pec- teral bands, like O. vociferus (though their relative width is reversed, the posterior one being broader); the proportions and details of form are quite the same, but the ramp and upper tail-coverts are concolor with the back. The Australian species agrees essentially with the above in size and proportions, but has broader and acuminate rectrices, and the tail is more nearly even, , While the plumage is handsomer and more varied than in any other species of the group, the scapular region being adorned with a patch. of rich maroon-chestnut, the upper tail-coverts rufous-chestnut, etc. + 4Egialitis vocifera (Linn.) KILLDEER, Popular synonyms, Kill-dee; Killdeer Plover. Charadrius vociferus Linn. 8, N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 150; ed. 12,1, 1766, 253.~Wius. Am. Orn. vii, 1813, 78, pl. 59, fig. 6—Nutr. Man. ii,.1834, 22.—Aup. Orn. Biog. iii, 1885, 191; v, 1839, 577, pl. 225; Synop. 1899, 222; B. Am. v, 1842, 207, pl. 317. Aigialtis’vo:iferus Bonap. 1838.—Cass. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 692,— Barry, Cat. N. Am, B. 1859, "No, 504.—Covgs, Key, 1872, 244; Check List, 1874, No. 397; 2d ed, 1882, No. 584. ‘ 4igialitis vocifera A. 0. U. Check List, 1886, No. 273. Rrpaw, Man. N.’Am. B. 1887, 174. Oxuyechus vociferus Rztcn.—Rwew. Nom. N. Am. B, 1881, No, 516.—B.B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 148, Haz. The whole of temperate North America, migrating in winter into tropical Amer- ica as far as Colombia; West Indies in general; Bermudas; River Avon, England (fide Scx., ‘This, 1862, 275; one specimen taken April, 1857). Sp. Onan. Adult. Pileum and upper parts generally, grayish brown, inclining to umber; rump and upper tail-coverte ochraceous-rufous, lighter on the latter. Forehead and broad superciliary strine, throat, nuchal collar,and lower parts, white. Fore part of the crown, loral stripe, continued toward occiput, collar round neck, and band across breast, black. Primaries dusky, the inner quills marked on outer webs with white. Tail chiefly pale ochraceous-rufous, variegated with white, dusky, and grayish, chiefly toward the end. Bill black; iris dark brown; eyelids (in life) orange-red or scarlet; legs and feet pale pinkish grayish, or pale grayish yellow. CHARADRIIDE—THE PLOVERS. 27 “Young. Similar to adult, but feathers of the upper parts more or less conspicuously . margined with pale rusty or fulvous. : “Downy Young. Upper parts generally, including pileum, light grayish brown, the two areas of this color bounded all around by black, a wide collar of which crosses the jugulum, and, extending across the nape beneath a broad white collar, completely encircles the neck; a broad bar of velvety black down the middle of the humeral region, and a narrow, more interrupted stripe of the same down the rump. Forehead, throat, lower parts gener- ally, “hand-wing,” and posterior border of the humerus, pure white, the flanks and crissum more isabella-color; a narrow black line running from. the rictus to the eye. Total length, about 10 inches; extent of wings, 20.50; wing, 6.50; tail, 3.50. This common and well-known bird is found throughout the State, and is decidedly the most numerous member of its fam- ily except during the season of migration. It is a great nui- sance to the gunner, being usually the first .to take alarm at his approach, and starting up all birds in the vicinity by its loud cries. “Like most of its race, this Plover passes much of its time on the ground, over which it moves with ‘great, rapidity. It can run with such swiftness that—according to Audubon—to run “like a Kildeer’ has in some parts of the country passed into a proverbial phrase. The bird is also equally active on the wing, and mounts at pleasure to a great height in the air with a strong and rapid flight, which can be continued for a long distance. Sometimes it skims quite low over the ground, and at other times mounts to a great height; and during the love seasons it is said to perform various kinds of evolutions while on the wing. “Its note consists of two syllables, resembling in sound éiii- dee, rapidly enunciated; and occasionally, when the bird is much excited, only the last syllable is repeated after the first utterance of the double note. Generally it is sounded in a loud, clear tone, and asa signal of alarm. It not’ unfrequentlv startles other birds and puts them on their guard, this habit rendering the Kildeer an object of dislike to the gunner. Dur- ing the summer—especially when it is breeding, and afterward, even when its young are fully grown—the Kildeer is a noisy and restless bird, and is disturbed -by the near approach of man. It will often squat until one is close upon it, and will then suddenly fly up or run off, startling the unwary intruder by a loud and clear cry. According to Audubon, during the 28 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. winter it is an unusually silent bird. At this season it is found dispersed over the cultivated fields in Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas, and other Southern States, diligently searching for food.” (BREWER.) 1 SupcEenus Adgialitis Bolr.. Agialitis Born, Isis, 1822, 558. Type, Charadrius hiaticula LINN. Cuan. Similar to Oxyechus, but the species of smaller size, with shorter and less gradu- ated tail (less than half as long as the wing), and rump concolor with the back (grayish). The numerous species of this subgenus vary greatly among themselves inthe details of structure, although there is a general similarity of coloration throughout the group. Thé North American species may be distinguished as follows: A. Nape crossed by a more or less distinct white collar. a. Bill decidedly shorter than middle toe, very stout (except in 4f. dubia), the basal half light colored (orange or yellow) in adults, except in 4. dubia. a’, A distinct web between base of inner and middle toes." : 1. #, semipalmata. Above, grayish brown; forehead, ring round neck, and lower parts white. In summer, fore part of crown, lores, and broad pectoral collar {continued round back of neck, below the white nuchal collar) black or dusky. In winter, these black markings replaced by grayish brown, like the back, ete. Young, like winter adults, but bill wholly black, and feathers of upper parts margined narrowly with buff. Wing, about 4.50-4.75; culmen, .45-.50; depth of bill at base, .20; tarsus, .95; middle toe, .65-.70. Hab. Nearly the whole of America. a’’, No web between base of inner and middle toes. 2. A. biatioula, Similar to 7. semipalmata, but pectoral band broader. Wing, about 5.00; culmen, .50-.55; depth of bill at base, -20-.22; tarsus, 1.00; middle toe, .60-.65. Hab. Palearctic region and portions of Arctic America. 3. Hi. dubia... Similar to 7. hiaticula, but smaller and much more slender, espe- cially the bill, which is entirely black; middle of crown crossed by amore or less distinct whitish bar, immediately behind the black patch. Wing, 4.35~4.70: cul- men, .50-.52; depth of bill at base, .15-.18; tarsus, 1.00-1.05; middle toe, .55-.60. Hab. Palearctic region generally; accidental in California and Alaska. 4, 28, meloda, Above, pale brownish gray; forehead, lores, nuchal collar, and lowbr parts whité. In summer, w band across fore part of crown, and one across each side of breast (the latter sometimes connected, so as to form a con- tinuous pectoral band), black or dusky. Jn winter, these black markings replaced by light brownich gray, and the bill almost entirely, or wholly, black. Young, like the winter plumage, but feathers of upper surface with distinctly paler terminal margins. Wing, 4.50-4.80: culmen, .45-.50; depth of bill at base, .20-.22; tarsus, .85-1.00; middle toe, .55. a. meloda. Black pectoral band wholly or partially interrupted in the mid- dle portion. Hab. Atlantic coast of United States. p. cireumcincta, Black pectoral band continuous. Hab. Missouri River region of United States, straggling eastward. b. Bill much longer than the middle toe, very slender, wholly black. 5. HH, alexandrina. Above, light brownish gray; forehead superciliaries, nuchal collar, and lower parts white. In summer, fore part of the crown, a transverse patch on each side of breast (and sometimes a loral streak), black or dusky; pileum sometimes (especially in adult males) buffy or rufescent. Bill, legs,and feet, black or dusky. CHARADRIDZ—THE PLOVERS. 29 a. alexandrina. Lores always crossed by a dusky stripe. In summer, pileum brownish gray or dull buff. Wing, 4.40; culmen, .55-.60; tarsus, 1.02-1.12; middle toe, .55-.60, Hab. Europe, ete. , B - nivosa. Lores usually entirely white (never with a continuous or distinct ' , dusky streak), In summer, pileum pale brownish gray or grayish buff. Wing, 4.20-4.30; culmen, .90; tarsus, .90-1.05; middle toe, .55-.60. Hab. » estern America; Yucatan; Cuba. B. Nape without trace of white or dusky collar. a, Culmen equal to or longer than the middle toe, the bill slender. 6. HE, mongola. In summer, whole breast and nape clear cinnamon-rufous, ie top of head tinged with the same; lores, suborbital region, and auriculars black, the former bordered above by a white line, sometimes meeting over the forehead; chin, throat, foreneck, belly, and crissum pure white; upper parts brownish gray. In winter, the rufous entirely absent; forehead and lower parts white, the breast crossed by a faint grayish brown bar, darkening into a dusky patch on each side; auriculars and loral streak somewhat dusky. Wing, 5.15- 5.40. Hab. Asia in general, breeding northward; Choris Peninsula, Alaska. 4Egialitis semipalmata (Bonap.) SEMIPALMATED PLOVER. Popular synonyms. Semipalmated Ring Plover; American Ring Plover; Ring-neck; Beach Bird. ‘ Tringa héiaticula’WILsoN, Orn. vii, 1818, 65, pL 59, f. 3 (nec LInn,). Charadrius hiaticula ORD, ed. Wils. vii, 69. Charadrius semipalmatus Bonap. Comp. List. 1838, 45, Agialitis semipalmatus Cas. 1856.—Cass. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 694.—Barrp, Cat N. Am. B. 1859, No. 507.—Covgs, Key, 1872, 244; Check List, 1874, No. 399; 2d ed. 1882, No. 586.—Rripaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 517. 4igialitis semipalmata B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 154.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 274.—Rrpew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 176. Has. North America in general, breeding in the arctic and subarctic districts, migrat- ing south in winter throughout the tropical regions, as far as Brazil and Peru. Bermudas; whole of West Indies; Galapagos. “Sp. Cuan. Small; wings long; toes connected'at base, especially the outer to the middie toe. Front, throat, ring around the neck, and entire under par!s white:'a band of deep black across the breast, extending around the back of the neck below the white ring. Band from the base of the bill, under the eye, and wide frontal band above the white pand, black. Upper parts ashy brown; quills brownish black, with their shafts white in middle portion, and occasionally a lanceolate white spot along the shafts of the shorter pri- maries; shorter tertiaries edged with white; greater coverts tipped with white. Middle feathers of the tail ashy brown, with a wide subterminal band of brownish black, and nar- rowly tipped with white; two outer tail feathers white, others intermediate, like the mid- dle, but widely tipped with white. Bill orange-yellow at base, black terminally; legs pale flesh color. Female'similar, but rather lighter colored. Young with the black replaced by ashy brown, the feathers of the upper parts bordered with paler. Downy young. Above, pale grayish brown, mottled with black; a frontal crescent, broad nuchal collar, and entire lower parts white. “Total length, about 7 inches; wing, 4.75; tail, 2.25.” 6 “Common during the migrations, generally in small floéks. In spring the migrations extend from April 25th to May 30th, and in fall from July 31st to the last of October. The 2d of July, 1873, I obtained several specimens of this species near Chicago. & 30 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. | From the condition of the abdomen and ovaries of one speci- men, and the presence of several recently fledged young, I came to the conclusion that they had nested in the vicinity. It is barely possible however, that these birds were unusually early arrivals from more northern breeding grounds, although the arrivals from the north generally begin about the last of the month. My suspicions that the species either breed in this'state, or at no far distant point, were strengthened the following sea- son when several females examined the last of May contained eggs which would have been deposited within a short time.” (NELSON. ) \ ; 4Hgialitis meloda circumcincta Ridgw. ‘ BELTED PIPING PLOVER. Popular synonyms, Ringed Piping Plover; White Ring-neck. Algialitis melodus var. circumcinctus Ripew. Am. Nat. viii, 1874, 109. Aigialitis meloda var. circumcincta ‘Cougs. Check List, 1874, App. p. 138, No. 400a; Birds N. W. 1874, 455. Algialitis melodus ciroewncinctus Ripaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 520a.—CovEs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 588, igialitis meloda, b. var. circumcincta B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i,1884,160. Algialitis meloda cireumcincta A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 277 a.-Ripaw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 178. ‘ a Has. Chiefly the Missouri River region, but also contiguous parts of the interior of North America. “Sp. CHar. About the size of 4. semipalmata; bill short, strong. Adult male: Fore- head, ring around the back of the neck, and entire under parts, white; a band of black in front above the band of white; band encircling the neck before and behind, black, imme- diately below the ring of white on the neck behind. Head above and upper parts of body light brownish cinereous; rump and upper tail-coverts lighter, and often nearly white; quills dark brown, with a large portion of their inner webs and shafts white; shorter pri- maries with a large portion of their outer webs white; tail at base white, and with the outer feathers white; middle feathers with a wide subterminal band of brownish black, and tipped with white. Bill orange at base, tipped with black; legs orange-yellow. Femaie: Similar to the male, but with the dark colors lighter and less i in extent. Young: No black band in front; collar around the neck ashy brown. “Total length, about 7 inches; wing, 4.50; tail, 2 inches.” (Water B. N. Am.) ‘Very common summer resident along the lake shore, breed- ing on the flat, pebbly beach between the sand dunes and shore. Arrives the middle of April and proceeds at once to breeding. “From a specimen shot the 24th of April, 1876, at Wauke- gan, I obtained a perfect egg, and the abdomen of: several females obtained the same day exhibited unmistakable signs that they were already breeding, as did, also, the actions of the birds. Some thirty pairs were breeding along the beach at CHARADRIIDE—THE PLOVERS. 31 this place, within a space of two miles, and I afterwards found the birds as numerous at several points along the shore. Every effort was made to discover their nests but without suc- cess, although the birds were continually circling about or standing at a short distance uttering an occasional note of alarm. The first of July, the year previous, Dr. Velie obtained young but a very few days old at this same locality, showing that there is considerable variation in the time of breeding. This was also shown by specimens obtained the last of May,— which I think were later arrivals than those found breeding in April,—having the ova just approaching maturity. “Departs the last of September. The larger portion of the specimens examined show the complete ring of ¢irewmcineta, while others exhibit but little more black than in, meloda, or » have the complete ring of the former indicated by.faint black ~ tips to the feathers across the breast.” (NELSON.) 32 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. 1 FAMiny SCOLOPACID2:.—Tue SNIPE Fami.y. The characters of the family Scolopacide having been given in sufficient detail on p. 18, in the analysis of the families of Limi- cole, it is unnecessary to repeat them here. The Scolopacide are among the most widely dispersed of birds, a large propor- tion of the genera being nearly cosmopolitan. They embrace a very great variety of forms, from the diminutive ‘ Peeps”’ (Actodromas and Ereunetes), smaller than a Sparrow, to the large Curlews,, of Ibis-like stature and appearance. The bill may be either straight, bent upward, as in the Avocets (é. g. Limosa and Terekia), or strongly decurved -like a sickle; nar- rowed at the end, or widely expanded into a paddle-shaped . form (Hurynorhynchus). The legs may be short and stout (as in Arguatella, Calidris, etc.), or of almost stilt-like length (as in- Micropalama, Totanus, etc.). Between these wide extremes of form, however, there are others possessing characters interme- diate in almost every conceivable ‘degree—so much so as to render it extremely difficult to tabulate the characters of the numerous genera. The following is an attempt at a diagnostic table of the North American genera.* A. Bill longer than the tarsus and middle toe, straight. ; B. Bill shorter than the tarsus and middle toe, straight or slightly curved (either up or down); wing lengthened, pointed, : C. | Bill widely expanded laterally at the end. « D. Bill much longer than tarsus, decidedly decurved or arched. ‘A. (Scolopacina.) u. Tibize completely feathered. : * 1., Seolopax. Outer quill longest, broad, like the others. 2. Philohela, Outer quillshorter than the sixth, the three outer primaries abruptly much narrower than tlie rest. b. Tibiw partly naked. i. 4 8. Gallinago, Toes all cleft.to the base. 2 4, Macrorhamphus. A well-developed web between anterior toes, at base. B. (Tringine,) a, Feathers of the forehead not reaching to the nostril; anterior toes all webbed at the base. * ‘There are but two additional genera of this family in South America; viz., Phegornis Gray (type Leptopus mitchelli Fraser), and Rhynchea, © SCOLOPACIDZ-——THE SNIPE FAMILY. 5. Miocropalama, Bill and legs much elongated, the former much com- pressed, except at ond; tarsus twice as longas middletoe: size medium; 6. Ereunetes, Bill and legs moderately elongated, or rather short, the former scarcely, if at all, compressed; tarsus much less than twice the middle toe; size small. bo. Feathers on the forehead not reaching to the nostril; anterior toes all cleft to the base. : §. A well-developed hind toe. %. Tringa. . Tarsus one third its length longer than the middle toe and claw; toes stout, the middle about half as long as the bill; bill stout, straight. Middle pair of rectrices not longer than the rest. Size rather large ' 33 ‘ (wing more than 6.00) ........... ewe maentelsgmambadontensaenetivas . Subgenus Tring. Tarsus shorter than the middle toe and claw; toes slender, the middle two thirds or three fourths as long as the bill; bill slender, much com- pressed, straight, or very slightly decurved at the end; size medium (Wing less than 6.00) .......cccceeseceeeceeeceeeneeeneaues tines Subgenus Arquatelia. Tarsus about equal to the bill; bill straight, moderately slender; toes slender, the middle one decidedly shorter than the tarsus; size medium GO VOry SmMall.........ccceececessececeetecsceeceessssesesesssbubgenus Actodromas. Bill very long (nearly as long as the tarsus and the middle toe), decid- edly devurved terminally; toes slender, the middle one decidedly shorter than the tarAuwsc ese sescsuws sa 05 ce neeawnvans Subgenera Pelidna and Ancylocheilus. §§. No hind toe. 8. Calidris, Size rather small; bill short, straight, expanded at end. v. Feathers of forehead not reaching to nostril; a web between outer and middle toes at base (between allin Symphemia). 1.’ Gape-not extending back of the culmen. 9, Limosa. Size large (wing 8.00 or more); bill much longer than tarsus, tapering toward the end, where slightly but decidedly upturned, the lateral groove extending nearly to the tip. 1.” Gape extending decidedly back of the base of the culmen. 2.’ Lateral groove of the maxilla extending scarcely more than half way to end of bill. 3.'. Back of tarsus covered with transverse scutelle, as in front. 10. Totanus. No web between inner and middle toes; size medium to large (but wing always less than 8 inches). Middle toe not more than half as long as tarsuS.............6. Subgenus Totanus. Midale toe nearly as long as tarsus .......6...ceeeeseaeeee Subgenus Helodromas. Il, Symphemia, A well-developed web between base of inner and middle toes; a large white patch on base of primaries; size large (wing more than 8 inches). 3." Back of tarsus covered with small roundish séales. 12. Heteractitis, No web between base of inner and middle toes; size medium (wing less than eight inches). 2.” Lateral groove of maxilla extending nearly to tip of bill. 13. Pavoneella. Size large (wing 7 inches or more); tail short (less than half the wing), rounded. Adult male with the neck ruffet! and anterior por- tion of head bare. 14. Bartramia. Size large (wing nearly 7 inches); tail lengthened (more than half the wing), graduated. Adult male without ruff, the anterior part of the head normally feathered. 15. ttled darker brown, bounded irregularly with blackish; a black line over ears, not reach- ing to the eye; throat and rest of head light tawny-fulvous; rest of lower parts white, be- coming grayish posteriorly. Total length, about 7.00 inches; wing, 4.00-4.45; culmen, .80-.90; tarsus, .75-.85; middle toe, -65-.75. This species, which is a rather rare migrant in Illinois, is es- sentially similar in its habits and distribution to the Red Phal- arope. Mr. Nelson’s-record concerning it is as follows: “Rather rare migrant the first of May, and the last of Sep- tember and first of October. Frequents slow streams or marshy pools, where, swimming gracefully from one patch of floating weeds to another, it obtains its food. It is quite gentle and unsuspicious, and I have approached in a boat within five yards of ‘one without its showing the least concern.” .SusGENus Steganopus VIEILLoT. Steganopus ViEILL. Nouv. Dict. dHist. Nat. xxxii,1819, 186, Type, S. tricolor VIETLL. Cuar. Bill slender and subulate, with strictly basal nostrils, as in Phalaropus ; web be- tween outer and middle toes not reaching to second joint, the lateral membrane of all the toes narrow and scarcely scalloped. ‘ Phalaropus tricolor (Vieill.) WILSON'S PHALAROPE. . Phalaropus lobatus Wis. Am. Orn. ix, 1825, 72, pl. 73, fig. 3 (mec Tringa lobata Linn). Phalaropus wilsonit SaBInE, App: Frankl. Journ. 1823, 691.—Sw. & Rica. F. B.-A. ii, 1832, 405, p). 69.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 245.—Aub. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 400, pl. 254.—Cass. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 705.—Barrp, Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 519. Phalaropus (Holopodius) wilsoni Bonar. Synop. 1828, 342.—Nutr. Man, ii, 1834, 245. Lobipes wilsoni Aub. Synop. 1839, 241; B. Am. v, 1842, 299, pl. 341. 80 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Steganopus wilsoni Couns, Ibis, Apr. 1865, 158; Key, 1872, 248; Check List, 1874, No. 409; 2d ed. 1882, No. 602; B. N. W. 1874, 467.—Ripaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 565.—B. B. & ‘BR. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 335. Steganopus tricolor Viz1uu. Nouv. Dict. xxxii, 1819, 136. Phalaropus tricolor Sturn. AUK, ii, 1885, 183,—A. 0. U. Check List, 1886, No. 224.—Ripcw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 145. Has. Temperate North America, chiefly inland; north to eastern Oregon; Saskatche- wan, and Nova Scotia; south, in winter, to Brazil and Patagonia. (Not recorded from the Pacific coast of North America.) Sp. Onan. Adult female in summer: Forehead and crown pale pearl-gray, the former with a blackish line on each side; occiput and nape white, changing to plumbeous- gray onthe back and scapulars. Stripe on side of head (chiefly bazk of the eye), and con- tinued down sides of neck, deep black, changing on lower part of the neck into rich dark chestnut, which extends backward, somewhat interruptedly, on each side of the interscapu- lar region; outermost scapulars marked witha similar stripe. A short stripe above the lores and eyes (not reaching to the bill), cheeks, chin, and throat, pure white; foreneck and chest soft buffy-cinnamon, deepest laterally and posteriorly, and fading gradually into ': ereamy buff on the breast; remaining lower parts white. Wings brownish gray, the coverts and tertials margined with paler; rump brownish gray; upper tail-coverts pure white. Adult male in summer: Smaller and much duller in color than the female, with the beautiful markings of the latter usually but faintly indicated. Adult and young in winter: Above plain light ash-gray; upper tail-coverts, superciliary stripe, and lower parts, white, the chest and sides of breast faintly tinged with pale ashy. Young: Crown, back, and scapulars blackish dusky, the feathers conspicuously margined with buffy; upper tail-coverts, superciliary stripe, and lower parts white, the neck tinged with buff. Downy young: General color bright tawny, or tawny-brown, paler beneath, the belly nearly white; occiput and nape with a distinct median streak of black, on the former branching lJaterally into two narrower, somewhat zig-zag lines; lower back and rump with three broad black stripes; flanks with a black spot, and caudal region crossed by a wide sub- terminal bar of black. Female. Length, about 9.40-10.00 inches; wing, 5.20-5.30; culmen, 1.30-1.35; tarsus, 1.30- 1.35; middle toe, .90-1.00. Male. Length, about 8.25-9.00; wing, 4.75-4.80; culmen, 1.25; tarsus, 1.20-1.25; middle toe, .90. a This beautiful bird, the adult female of which is by far the handsomest of our small Waders, is a common summer resi- _dent in the prairie districts of Illinois. Mr. Nelson publishes an interesting account of the peculiari- ties, or characteristics, of this species, in his catalogue of: the Birds of Northeastern Illinois (p. 124), which is as follows: “Very common summer resident in this vicinity. Found in abundance about damp prairies and on grassy marshes. Arrives about the middle of May and remains until into August. I have found its nest from the 25th of May to June 25th. The young usually appear about the middle of June and commence to fly the first of July. The breeding plumage of the female of this species is much brighter and richer than that of the male, as has been recently announced by Mr. A. L. Kumlein (Field and Forest. July, 1876). The male builds the nest and attends exclusively to the duties of incubation, it alone possessing the PHALAROPODIDE—THE PHALAROPES. 81 naked abdomen during the breeding season.. The female always remains near, and shows great solicitude upon the nests’ being approached. The first: plumage of the young, described by Dr. Coues on page 467, ‘‘Birds of the Northwest,” is retained until they depart for the south, the last of July or early in August. The adults assume the winter plumage during July. This plum- age is much like the breeding plumage of the male, except that there is a hoary cast over the back and neck caused by grayish tips to the feathers, and the female has a greater amount of dull chestnut on the sides of the neck. * * * ‘The nest is a simple structure of fine grass. blades placed in a small saucer-shaped depression, generally in a perfectly open situation, where but slight concealment is afforded by the few surrounding grass blades. Sometimes the eggs are deposited directly upon the ground, without any nest other than the slight hollow. The eggs usually number four and are very’ dark. Their general appearance is much like that of a small killdeer’s egg, with an unusual amount of dark markings.”’ 82 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. OrpER ALECTORIDES.—TuE CRANES, CoURLANS, RaILs, GAL- LINULES, AND Coors. The Alectorides are a tolerably well-defined group of birds, related somewhat closely to the Limicolw, but very distinct from the Herodiones, to which some of the forms (more: es- pecially ‘the Gruidw) bear a teleological resemblance. Typical families of this Order are the Gruzde (Cranes), Aramida (Cour- lans), and Rallide (Rails), all represented in North America. In addition to these families, South America possesses several others which have been placed here, but whether rightly or not, we cannot say: These extralimital families are the Hurypygide (Sun Bitterns), Cariamide (Cariamas), and Psophiide (Trum- peters). . The typical members of the group are precocial and ptilopeedic. The North American families. are the following: A. Size smali or medium; head normally feathered or with a frontal shield; middle toe nearly as long as the tarsus; hallux well developed (nearly as long as the first joint of the middle toe), nearly incumbent. (Ralii.) Rallide. Size medium to very small; outer primary longer than the sixth, very broad; second nearly or quite equal to the longest. Rectrices almost rudimentary, soft, nearly hidden by the coverts. Bill not curved to one side at tip (usually shorter than the tarsus). Sramide, Size medium or rather large; outer primary shorter than seventh, the inner ' web very narrow, except at end; second quill much shorter than the longest (fifth), Reotrices well developed, firm, twelve in number. Bill curved to one side at tip, equal to or longer than the tarsus;-inner secondaries broad, reaching to end of primaries, their webs partially decomposed. B. Size large; head partly naked (except in young), or with ornamental plumes; middle toe less than half the tarsus; hallux small, much elevated. (G@rues.) ‘ Gruide. [Characters asabove.] RALLIDA—THE RAILS, GALLINULES, AND COOTS. 83 SUBORDER RALLI. Famity RALLIDA.—Tue Raius, GALLINULES, AND Coors. Cuar. Small or medium-sized wading. or swimming birds, with compressed body, very long toes, which are sometimes (in the Coots) lobed along the edges, short, rounded, concaye wings, and very muscular thighs. The brief diagnosis given above is sufficient to distinguish the Rails, of whatever subfamily, from the Courlans and Cranes, their only near allies. The typical Rails (Ralline) are of very small to medium size, the typical genus, Rallus, being charac- terized particularly by a lengthened slender bill, while other gen- era, as Porzana and Crex, have this member comparatively short and thick. The Coots and Gallinules have the base of the culmen continued upon the forehead, where it widens out into a more or less gibbous or expanded plate or frontal shield. The Coots, however, are peculiar in having the toes fringed with scalloped flaps or lateral lobes. The three subfamilies occurring in North America may’ be thus distinguished: Rallinew. No frontal process; toes without lateral lobes ; size variable ;-bill sometimes much elongated. \ Gallinuline. A frontal process, as in Fulicine ; toes without lateral lobes; size large. Fulicine, A frontal process, as in Gallinuline; toes witha lateral lobed margin; size "large. . / The several subfamilies having thus been defined, the North American genera may be characterized as follows: SUBFAMILY RALLIN.ZE&.—TuxeE Raltzs. A. Bill slender, equal to or longer than the tarsus. lL. Rallus. (Page 89.) : B. Biil stout, not more than two thirds the tarsus (usually much less). 2. Porzana, Middle toe about equal to or slightly longer than tarsus; base of gonys not forming a decided angle; middle of culmen decidedly depressed or concave. (Page 92.) 8. Crex. Middle toe shorter than tarsus; base of gonys forming a decided angle; middle of culmen scarcely appreciably depressed. (Not yetfound in Illinois.) SuspraMILy GALLINULIN.2A.—TsHE GALLINULES. 4. Ionornis, Nostril small, oval; middle toe shorter than tarsus; toes without trace of lateral membrane; inner posterior face of tarsus with a single row of large quadrate scutella. Q 5. Gallinula. Nostril elongated, slit-like: middle toe longer than tarsus; toes with a decided indication of lateral membrane; inner posterior face of tarsus covered with several irregular rows of small hexagonal scales. 84 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. SUBFAMILY FULICIN.Z.—TuHeE Coors. ¥ \ 6. Fulica, Nostrils,and proportionate length of toes and tarsus, as in Gallinula; toes bordered with a very wide, scalloped, lateral membrane; inner posterior face of tarsus covered with small scales, as in Gallinula.! . SuBFAMILY FULICIN.2&. Genus FULICA Linnzvs: Fulica Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, 1758, 152; ed. 12, i, 1766, 257. Type, F. atra Linn. Cuan. Very similar to Gallinula, but the toes margined by a broad, deeply scalloped lateral membrane. Bill shorter than the head, straight, strong, compressed, and advancing into the feathers of the forehead, where it frequently forms a wide and somewhat project- ing frontal plate; nostrils ima groove, with a large membrane, near the middle of the bill. Wings rather short, second and third quills usually longest; tail very short; tarsus robust, shorter than the middle toe, with very distinct transverse scales: toes long, each having semi-circular lobes, larger on the inner side; hind toe rather long, lobed. | Almost the only difference between Fulica and Gallinula consists in the single character of the toes, as pointed out above. The two genera are, however, quite distinct, since there appears to be no species known that is intermediate in the character of the feet. Fulica americana Gmel. . ‘ AMERICAN COOT. . Popular synonyms. Mud-hen; White- billed, or Ivory-billed, Mud-hen; Crow Duck. _ Pulica americana GME. 8. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 704.—Sw. & Riow. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 404.—Nurt. Man. ii, 1834, 229.—AuD. Orn.,Biog. iii, 1885, 291; -v, 1839, 568;,Synop. 1839, 212; B. Am, v, 1842, 138, pl. 8305.—Cass. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 751.—Barrp, Cat. N. Am. B 1859, No. 659.—Cougs, Key, 1872, 275; Check List, 1873, No. 474; 2d ed. 1982, No. 686: Birds N. W. 1874, 541.—Ripew. Nom. N. A. B. 1881, No. 580; Man. N. Am, B. 1887, 142,— A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 221. Fulica wilsoni StrpHens, Shaw’s Gen. Zodl. xii, 1824, 236. Fulica atra Wits. Am. Orn. ix, 1825, pl. 78, fig. 1 (nec- LENN.). Has. The whole of North América, Middle America, and West Indies; north to Green- Jand and Alaska, south to Veragua and Trinidad. Sp. Cuan. Adult: General color uniform slate-color or slaty plumbeous, the head and neck and anterior central portion of the crissum black; lateral and posterior portions ‘of the erissum, edge of wing, and tips of secondaries white. (In winter the belly suffused with whitish.) Bill milk-white, more bluish terminally, each mandible with a spot of dark brown near the end, bordered anteriorly with a more or less distinct bar of reddish chestnut; frontal shield dark chestnut, or liver-brown, the culmen just in front of this tinged with greenish yellow; iris bright crimson; legs bright yellowish green, the tibis tinged behind and above with orange-red; toes light bluish gray, tinged with yellowish green on scutellw of basal phalanges. Young: Similar, but lower parts more gray, and much suffused. 1A South American genus, Porphyriops PucHERan, belonging to the Gallinulina, is much like Gallinula, but has the lateral margin to the toes more decidedly developed the gonys very short, and much ascending terminally, the culmen very straight and the front- al shield emall and very pointed. 2 Fresh colors of an adult male killed at Wheatland, Indiana, April 15, 1881. RALLIDE—THE, RAILS, GALLINULES, AND COOTS. 85 with whitish, especially on the throat and belly; bill dull flesh-color, tinged with olive- greenish, the frontal shield rudimentary; iris brown. Downy young: Prevailing color blackish plumbeous; head, neck, and upper parts relieved by numerous crisp, elongated, somewhat filamentous bristles, these sparse, light orange-buff and white on the upper parts, but dense and deep salmon-orange on the head and neck where the dark plumbeous down is almost or quite concealed; these colored filaments entirely absent from the whole pileum, which is mostly bald toward the occiput, elsewhere covered with closely appressed black bristles; lores densely covered with short, stamen-like, orange-red papille. Bill orange-red, the tip of the maxilla black; feet dusky (in skin). Total length, about 14 inches; wing, 7.25-7.60; culmen (to commencement of -frontal shield), 1.25-1.50; tarsus, 2.00-2.20; middle toe, 2.45-2.65. i The Coot is an exceedingly abundant summer resident in the more northern portions of the State. Mr. Nelson, in his list of the birds of Cook and adjacent‘ counties (Bull. Lissex Inst. VIIL., 1876, pp. 135, 136), says the following concerning it: ‘‘Eixceedingly abundant. Summer resident in large marshes, and it is far from rare in any marshy situation. Arrives the last of April and remains until the last of November. Nests at the same time as the Florida Gallinule, but shows a greater preference for reed patches, in which its nests are usually located, often in from two to four feet of water. The nests are gener- ally larger than those of gallinules, and rarely composed. of other material than the dry stalks of reeds. Dr. Coues’s descrip- tion of the nidification of this species will answer for most of the cases I have observed, and J have examined a large number of nests. (See ‘Birds of the Northwest,” p. 542.) As winter approaches, and the marshes and shallow pools become covered — with ice, these birds congregate in immense flocks on the rivers and small lakes, and remain until the cold weather closes the streams. “This bird has a curious habit when approached by a boat in a stream, rising often before the boat is within gunshot, and flying directly by the boatman, generally so near that it may be easily brought down. The abundance of ducks and other game birds has caused the birds of this family to be but little molested, until within a few years, when the amateur sportsmen from Chicago, finding the ducks difficult to obtain, and ‘“ mud- hens,” as coots and gallinules are called, conveniently tame, have turned their batteries upon them and have caused a dimi- nution in their numbers about the Calumet Marshes. But in the more retired marshes they still breed:in undiminished num- bers.” 86 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. - SUBFAMILY GALLINULINZE. Genus GALLINULA Brisson. Gallinula Briss. Orn. vi, 1760,3. Type, Pulica chloropus Linn. Cuan. Bill shorter than head, compressed, its vertical outlines convex terminally, straight or slightly concave opposite the nostril; nostril elongated, longitudinal, slit-like; forehead covered by ah extension of the horny covering of the bill (rudimentary in the young). Middle toe longer than the tarsus; toes with a slight lateral membrane or margin. The above characters will, serve readily to distinguish the species of this genus from the American genera, Jonornis and Porphyriops, the former having the nostril small-and oval, the middle toe shorter than the tarsus, and the toes without trace of lateral membrane, while the latter (an exclusively South American genus) has the frontal shield small and conical, and . is, moreover, composed of birds of, small size. Two American species of Gallénila are known,-one of them (G. garmant ALLEN) peculiar to the basin of Lake Titicaca, Peru. Both are more nearly allied to the G. chloropus of Europe than to any other species, but are very distinct from that, as well as from each other. ‘ Gallinula galeata (Licht.) FLORIDA GALLINULE, Popular synonyms. American Gallinule; Scarlet-fronted Gallinule; Red-billed Mud-hen. Crex galeata Licut. Verz. Doubl. 1823, 80, No. 826. Gallinula galeata Bonap. Am. Orn. iv, 1832, 128.—NuTT. Man. ii, 1834, 221.—Cass. in Bairds B. N. Am, 1858, 752.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1859, No. 560.—Couss, K ey, 1872, 275; Check List, 1873, No.-472; 2d ed. 1882, No. 684; Birds N. W. 1874, 540.—Ripaw. Nom. N, Am. B. 1881, No. 579; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 141.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 219, Gallinula chloropus Bonar. Synop. 1828, 336 (nee Latg.).—Aupb. Orn. Biog.’ iii, 1835, 380, pl. 224; Synop. 1839, 210; B. Am. v, 1842, 132, pl. 304, Haz, The whole of tropical and temperate America, from Canada to Brazil and Chili. Sp. Cuan. Adult: Frontal plate largé, obovate, truncated or slightly convex posteri- orly, flat and smooth, or tumid and corrugated. Bill shorter than the head, rather thick, . compressed. Head, neck,.and entire lower parts dark plumbeous, with a bluish cinereous cast, frequently nearly black on the head and neck, and generally lighter (in autumnai and winter specimens quite white) on the abdomen. ‘ Crissum white, the middle feathers black; feathers of the flanks widely edged with white, producing broad stripes; edge of the wing and edge of outer primary white. Upper parts dark russet, or sepia-brown, darker on the rump. Bill and frontal shield bright vermilion in life, the end of the former greenish yellow or bright yellow; iris brown; legs and feet yellowish green, the joints ashy blue; upper RALLIDE—THE RAILS, GALLINULES, AND COOTS. 87 part of the naked tibies scarlet. Young: Similar, but frontal shield rudimentary, the bill brownish, paler atthe tip: the whole lower parts suffused with whitish, and the head mixed with the same, particularly the throat, which is sometimes wholly white. Stripes on the flanks less distinct or nearly obsolete. Downy Young: Glossy black, the median lower parts fuliginous; throat and cheeks interspersed with silvery white hairs; bill yel- lowish (red in life?) crossed about the middle by a dusky bar. Total length, about 12.00-13.00 inches; extent, 20.00 to 21.00; wing, 6.85-7.25; culmen (to end of frontal shield) 1.70-1.85; tarsus, 2.10-2.30; middle toe, 2.50-2.60. This species much resembles the Moor-hen, Water-hen, or Gal- linule of Europe (G. chloropus), but is larger, has the frontal shield truncated instead of pointed posteriorly, and is other- wise different. It likewise resembles other exotic species, par- ticularly G. garmanz of the Peruvian Andes, but is quite dis- tinct. Specimens vary a great deal in the size and shape of the frontal shield, and in the amount of whité on the abdomen. These variations are by no means dependent on locality, how- ever, but upon the individual, having doubtless some connec- tion with age and season, the white on the abdomen being more marked on winter specimens. Although in most places less numerous than the Coot (Fw lica americana), the Florida Gallinule is, in favorable localities, a common summer resident throughout the State. Mr. Nelson bears witness to its abundance in Cook county, and in his ex- cellent list gives us the following information concerning it: “Abundant summer resident everywhere in marshes and the larger prairie sloughs. Arrives the last of April or the first of May. Generally has a full set of eggs, numbering from seven to twelve, the first week of June. Its nests are placed wherever fancy dictates; on low ridges a rod or more from the’ water; in perfectly bare situations on the borders of marshes, or in the midst of bulrushes or wild. rice growing in several feet of water. The material used varies with the situation, from fine grasses to the coarsest rushes and fragments of wild rice stalks. In the latter case the nest often floats in the water and is held in place by the, surrounding reeds. The young possess the usual black down and disproportionate feet of members of this family at an early age, but the basal two thirds of the bill is bright red, the tip only being yellow. I have placed eggs under a hen, but the young, unless removed as soon as hatched, would scramble out-and manage to get away, At this age they have a clear metallic peep, quite unlike that of a chicken.” 88 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Genus IONORNIS ReEIcHENBACH. ? Porphyrula Buytu, Cat. B. Asiat. Soc. 1849, 288. Type, P. chloronotus BLYTH. } ZTonornis REIOHENB. Syst. Av. 1853; p. xxi. Type, Fulica martinica Linn. CuaR. Similar to Gallinula but form more slender, nostrils small and, oval, middle toe" shorter than the tarsus, and the toes without trace of lateral membrane. Colors very hand, some (chiefly opaque blue, purple, and green). Whether the American species, to which the generic name adopted above is properly applicable, is congeneric with the old world species (Porphyrio chloronotus BLYTH, nec \VIEILL.), which is the type of the genus Porphyrula BuyTH, is at present un- certain. [Cf D. G. Exuiot: “The Genus Porphyrio and its Species;” separate pamphlet, from “Stray Feathers,” pp. 1-20.] Ionornis martinica (Linn.) PURPLE GALLINULE. Popular synonyms. Blue Coot; Blue Peter; Blue Mud-hen. Fulica martinica Linn. 8. N. i, 1766, 259, Gallinula martinica LatTu. 1790.—Nutr. Man. ii, 1834, 221.—AuD. Orn. Biog. iv. 1838, 37, pl, 305; Synop. 1839, 210; B. Am. v, 1842, 128, pl. 303.—Case. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 758.—BAIRD, Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 561. Porphyrio martinica Gosss, Birds Jam. 1847, 877. —Couszs, ‘Key, 1872, 275; Check List, 1873, No. 473. Tonornis martinica RutcH. Av. Syst. 1853. 21, ~Ripew. Proc. U. 8. Nat, Mus. iii, 1881, 202, 227; Nom. N. Am. B.188], No.578; Man. N.Am. B. 1887, 141.—Cougrs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 685; A. O. U. Check List 1886, No. 218, Gaullinula porphyrio W1us. Am, Orn. ix, 1824, 69, pl. 78. Has. The whole of tropical and warm-temperate America, south to Brazil; north, cas- ually, to Massachusetts, Maine, New York, Ohio, Wisconsin, Mlinois, and Missouri. Ber- mudas and throughout West Indies. Not recorded from any part of the United States west of the Rocky Mountains. Sp.CHar. Adult: Head,neck, and Jower parts slaty bluish purple, darker (sometimes nearly black) on abdomen and tibia; crissum pure white; upper parts bright olive-green, changing to bright verditer-blue toward the purple of the lower parts, the sides and lining of wing also greenish blue; wings brighter green than the back,and shaded with bright ver- diter-blue, Frontal shield bright blue in life (greenish or olivaceous in dried skin); bill bright red, tipped with yellow; iris crimson; legs and feet yellowish. Young: Above, light fulvous- brown, tinged with greenish on wings; beneath, fulvous or buffy, the belly whitish; frontal shield smaller than in adult, dusky (in skins); bill dull yellowish. Downy young: “Entirely black,” (AuDUBON). Total length about 12.50 inches; wing, 7.00-7.50; culmen (in- cluding frontal shield), 1.85~-1.95; tarsus, 2.25-2.50; middle toe, 2.25-2.35, , Specimens vary remarkably in the size and form of the frontal plate. In 36,785 Ceara, Brazil, it is broader than long, and its posterior margin rounded; usually it is longer than broad, and its posterior extremity an angle—sometimes acute. There is also much difference among individuals in the intensity of the colors. 1 The interrogation mark here implies the doubt as to whether the Indian bird is con- generic with the American species. Should such prove tobe the case, which we do not re- gard probable, our bird would stand as Porphyrula martinica. RALLIDE—THE RAILS, GALLINULES, AND COOTS. 89 All these variations appear, however, to be purely individual (perhaps partially seasonal), or at least entirely independent of locality. This essentially southern species is comparatively a rare bird in Illinois, though it may be more common than the records show. According to Mr. Nelson, a male specimen was taken in May, 1886, by Mr. C. N. Holden, Jr., near Chicago, and he was informed by Dr. Hoy that a specimen had been captured at Racine. Its general habits are much like those of the Florida Gallinule (Gallinula galeata). SUBFAMILY RALLINAN. ‘Genus RALLUS Linnzuvs. Rallus Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, 1758, 153; ed 12, 1766, 261. Type, R. aquaticus LINN. Cuan. Bill longer than the head, rather slender, compressed; upper mandible slightly eurved; nostrils in a long groove, and with a large membrane: wings short; tertiary quills long, frequently longer than the primaries; tail very short; legs moderate; tarsus shorter than the middle toe, and covered on all sides with transverse scales; toes long and rather slender; inner toe rather shorter than the outer; hind toe short and weak. This genus contains numerous species, inhabiting all the tem- perate countries of the world. They are very similar in their habits, and frequently in appearance. Their long toes enable them to run over and climb amongst aquatic plants with great facility. , Synopsis of the North American Species. Common CuaractErs. Above olive or ashy, with more or less distinct broad longitudi- nal stripes of darker; beneath concolored anteriorly, variegated with bars on the flanks and crissum. Breast more or less reddish; flanks and crissum with brown and white transverse bars; a supraloral light stripe. Wing-coverts usually more rufescent than back. A. Size large (wing more than five inches). a. Axillars and flanks dusky, with wide white bars (bars about .15 of an inch wide on flanks). 1, R. elegans. Back and scapulars ochraceous-olive or yellowish drab, sharply and conspicuously striped with black; breast deep cinnamon. Wing, 5.90-6.80; cul- men, 2.10-2.50; least depth of bill, .22-.35; tarsus, 1.90-2.40; middle toe, 1.70-2.10. Hab. Fresh-water marshes of eastern North America. do. Afillars and flanks brownish gray, with narrow white bars (bars about .10 of an inch wide on flanks). ” 2. RB, crepitans. Back and ‘scapulars brownish gray or ashy, obsoletely striped with brown (in Gulf coast specimens distinetly striped with dusky); breast pale buff (in Gulf coast specimens dull cinnamon). Wing, 5.20-6.00; culmen, 2.05-2.50; least depth of bill, .22-.35; tarsus, 1.85-2.10; middle toe, 1.75-2.00. Hab. Salt-water marshes of eastern United States. B. Size small (wing less than 4.50 inches), %. BR. virginianus. Similar to R. elegans, but rather more deeply colored. Hab. North and Middle America. —12 90 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Rallus elegans Aud. KING RAIL. Popular synonyms, Red-breasted Rail: Great Red-breasted Rail; Marsh Hen; Sedge Hen; Mud-hen. Rallus crepitans Wr. Am. Orn. vii, 1813, pl. 62, fig, 2 (fig. but not deser. Not R. crepitans Gmzu.).—(?) ALLEN, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zodl. iii, 1872, 182 (Great Salt Lake, Utah).1 Rallus elegans AupD, Orn. Biog. iti, 1835, 27, pl. 203; Synop. 1839, 215; B. Am. v, 1842, 160, pl, 309.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 746; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 552.—Covzs, Key, 1872, 273; Check List, 1878, No. 466; 2d ed. ‘g82, No. 676; Birds N. W. 1874, 535.—Ripew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 569; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 188.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 208. ‘ Has. Fresh-water marshes of the Eastern Province of the United States, north, casu- ally, to Massachusetts, Maine, and Ontario, regularly to the Middle States and northern _ ,Allinois; west to Kansas (Great Salt Lake, ALLEN??). Replaced in the salt marshes along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts by representative forms of R. crepitans. Sp. CHar. Adult: Above, yellowish olive or ochraceous-drab, very conspicuously and sharply striped with black; crown dark brown; asupraloral streak of brownish white, con- tinued to the occiput in a broader stripe of brownish gray; lores and suborbital region brownish gray or dull brownish; chin and throat white; remainder of head and neck, in-— cluding chest and breast, light cinnamon; flanks and sides dark brownish or blackish dusky, barred with white, the white bars averaging about .10-.15 of an inch in width, the in- terspaces more than twice as wide; crissum mixed dusky and white, the lateral feathers ‘ almost immaculate white; middle of the abdomen considerably lighter than the breast, sometimes quite white; axillars and lining of the wing similar to the flanks, but white bars narrower, and less distinet. Wing-coverts rusty brownish, sometimes inclining to chest- nut, and not infrequently more or less barred with reddish white; tertials widely striped, like the seapulars: remiges plain umber brown; rectrices raw-umber, witha dusky medial stripe. “Lower mandible and edges of upper brownish yellow; ridge of upper, and tips ot both, deep brown; iris bright red; feet yellowish brown, tinged with olive; claws of the samecolor” (AUDUBON). Downy young: Uniform glossy black; bill dusky, the end, andin-. complete wide band near the base (enclosing the nosiril), pale yellowish or whitish (in the akin); legs and feet brownish (in skin). : Total length, about 17 inches; wing, 5.90-6.80: culmen, 2.12-2.50; depth of bill in middle, .27-.35; tarsus, 2.20-2.40; middle toe, 1.80-2.10. ‘ The individual variation in this species is very considerable, both as regards coloration and the proportions; but it may always be readily distinguished from the allied forms by the characters pointed. out above, the very conspicuous, sharply- defined, and broad black stripes above, upon an ochrey brown or yellowish olivaceous ground-color, combined with the cinna- mon breast and dark flanks, being the prominent distinctive features. The chief variation in colors contists in the degree of ' ashiness on the side of the head (some examples being distinctly ashy, as in most specimens of (2. crepitans), and in the precise shade of the ground-color of the upper parts, which, however, is never ashy. , 1 May possibly be R, oblsoletus. + : 2 No specimens seen: may possibly be K. obsoletus. ‘ . RALLIDE—THE RAILS, GALLINULES, AND COOTS. 91 This fine bird, the largest of the American true Rails, is a common summer resident, in suitable localities, throughout the State. In Cook county it arriyes, according to Mr. Nelson, “the last of April and departs in October.” Rallus virginianus Linn. VIRGINIA RAIL. Rallus virginianus Linn. 8.N. ed. 12, i, 1766, 268,—WILs. Am. Orn. vii, 1818, 109, pl. 62, ,fig.1.— Norv. Man. ii, 1834, 205; Aup. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 41; v, 1839, 573, pl, 205; B, Am. v, 1842, 174, pl. 311.—Barrp, B. N, Am. 1858, 748; Cat. N, Am. B, 1859, No. 554.—Cours, Key, 1872, 273; Check List, 1873, No. 467; 2d ed. 1882, No. 677; Birds N. W. 1874, 536.—Ripa@w. Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, No. 3, 1880, 140; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 572; Man. N. Am. B, 1887, 188.— A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No, 212. Haz. The whole of temperate North America as far as the British Provinces, south to Guatemala and Cuba; winters almost to the northern limit of its range.! Sp. CHar. Adult: :A miniature of R. elegans, but more deeply colored. Above oliva- ceous, heavily striped with black; wing-coverts chestnut-rufous; remiges plain dusky; crown and nape dusky, sometimes uniform, usually indistinctly streaked with olive; a brownish white supraloral line; side of head uniform plumbeous (sometimes obscured with a brownish wash); malar region, foreneck, chest, breast, sides, and abdomen, some- times throat also, cinnamon, the middle of the belly lighter (sometimes whitish); flanks (not sides) and axillars dusky, barred with white; lining of wing dusky, the feathers tipped and bordered with white. Downy young: Glossy black; bill scarlet or orange-red in life (whitish or pale yellowish in the skin), slightly marked with blackish in front of the nostril and on the base of mandible. Young (first plumage): “Top and sides of head, neck behind, back anteriorly, rump, breast, and sides, dull dead black. Interscapular region black, with a few of the feathers margined with brownish olive. Wing-coverts and wings nearly as in adult, a little duller and darker, perhaps. Superciliary line obscure ashy. Throat ashy white, finely spotted with black. Central region of lower breast and abdomen, with a few of the feathers on the sides, tinged with white. Anal region and crissum dull reddish chestnut. In my cabinet, from Cambridge, Mass., August, 1875. Several other specimens of corresponding ages agree closely with the one above described. A male, however (Cam- bridge, Aug. 9, 1875), differs in having a faint reddish wash over the white on the breast and abdomen.” (BREWSTER, Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, Jan, 1879, p. 45). Total length, about 7.50 inches; wing, 3.90-4.25; culmen, 1.45-1.60; tarsus, 1.30-1.40; middle toe, 1.20-1.40. “Bill dark brown, the lower mandible and edges of upper yellowish brown; iris bright red; feet yellowish brown tinged with olive; ‘claws more dusky.” (AU- DUBON.) This species is very much like &. elegans in miniature, being exceedingly similar to that species in coloration. Close exam- ination, however, reveals several important differences, the more obvious of which are the following: The whole’ plumage is darker; the sides of the head more uniformly and distinctly plumbeous; the sides and abdomen are cinnamon, like the breast, instead of being respectively barred, like the flanks, and 1A specimen was sent by Captain Bendire to the National Museum from Walla Walla, Washington, which was shot Jan. 16, 1879, when the snow was more thana foot deep! 92 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. u plain buff or whitish; the lining of the wings is not barred like the flanks, but has dusky and white irregularly mixed, the latter color being on the margins and tips of the feathers. There is apparently more of individual variation in this species than in any of the larger species, scarcely two examples being closely alike. The chin and throat may be distinctly white, or the cin- namon may extend forward entirely to the bill; some specimens have the lores decidedly dusky, others, clear plumbeous, like | the auriculars; the crissum is sometimes plain cinnamon, the concealed bases of the feathers dusky, but oftener is white,. tinged with cinnamon. Almost the same general remarks will apply to this miniature of the King Rail (2. elegans) as to its larger relation. It is a common summer resident in Illinois, especially northward. In Cook county, Mr. Nelson says it arrives and departs with the &. elegans. He adds: ‘I have obtained nests with eggs from the 6th of May until the middle of June. This species is found in almost any place where it can find suitable food. I have often flushed it in thickets when looking for woodcock, as well as from the midst of large marshes. The nest can rarely be distinguished from that of the Carolina Rail in form or struct- ure, and is generally placed in a similar location, with the ex- ception that the préseit species shows a greater preference for dense tufts of grass. I have never seen more than nine eggs in a nest of this species.” . Genus PORZANA VIEILLOT. Porzana Vint. Analyse, 1816,61. Type, Rallus porzana Linn.—Oassa. in Baird’s B.N. Am. 1858, 748, Oreciscus CaBan, Jour. far. Orn. 1856, 428. Type, Rallus jamaicensis GMEL. Coturnicops Bonar. “Compt. Rend. xliii, 1856, 599.” Type, Fulica noveboracensis Guu. Cuar. Bill shorter than the head, compressed, straight; nostrilsina wide groove, with a large membrane; wings moderate; primaries longer than tertials; tail short; tarsus about the length of the middle toe; toes long; inner toe slightly shorter than the outer. General form compressed and slender; legs rather robust. This genus contains ‘very numerous species, inhabiting both temperate and tropical regions, frequenting marshes and bor- ders of rivers. In the spring and autumn several species migrate in large numbers. RALLIDE—THE RAILS, GALLINULES, AND COOTS. 93 We have not at hand the required material for defining the exact limits of the genus’ Porzana, so far as its American repre- sentatives are concerned. Without, therefore, considering any of the extralimital species, it may suffice to say that of the three which occur in North America, one (P. carolina) is a very near relative of the type of the genus (P..porzana of Kurope), while the other two are perhaps sufficiently different to justify generic separation. The three species which occur in eastern North America may be distinguished as follows: A. Above russet-olive, with black blotches and irregular, partly longitudinal, streaks of white. (Porzana.) 1. P. carolina. Neck and breast without white specks; throat blackish, and sides of head and neck plumbeous in adult; throat white, sides of head and neck, with chest and breast, fulvous-olive, in young; flanks broadly barred with white and slate-color. Wing, 4.15-4.30; culmen, .75-.90; tarsus, 1.25-1.35; middle toe, 1.30- 1.45. Hab. North and Middle America. B. Above ochraceous, with broad black stripes and narrow transverse white bars; sec- ,ondaries white, forming a conspicuous patch on the extended wing. (Coturni- cops.) A 2. P. noveboracensis. Head, neck, and breast ochraceous; flanks dusky, barred with whitish; crissum cinnamon; lining of wing and axillars white. Wing, 3.00-3.60; culmen, .50-.60; tarsus, .95-1.00; middle foe, .90-1.00. Hab. North America, GC. Above blackish brown, speckled with white. (Creciseus.) 3. BP, jamaicensis, Nape dusky chestnut or sepia-brown; lower parts slate-color or dark plumbeous (the throat sometimes whitish), the posterior portions narrowly barred with white. Wing, 2.50-3.20; culmen, .50-.60; tarsus, .75-.90; miiddle toe, .85-.95. Hab. Temperate and tropical America. Porzana carolina (Linn.) SORA. Popular synonyms. Sora Rail; Carolina Rail; Common Rail; Ortolan (Potomac River). Rallus carolinus Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 153; ed. 12, 1, 1766, 268.—Sw. & Riou. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 403.—AuD. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 251; v, 1839, 572, pl. 233. Rallus (Crex) carolinus Bonap. Obs. Wils. 1825, No. 230.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 209. Ortygometra carolina BonaP. List, 1838, 53.—AUuD. Synop. 1839, 218; B. Am. v, 1842, 145, pl. 306. 2 Porzana carolina Cass. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 749.—Barrp, Cat. N. Am. B. No. 555, Cougs, Key, 1872, 273; Check List, 1873, No. 468; 2d ed. 1882, No. 679; Birds N. W. 1874, 538.—Rirpew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 574; Man. N. Am. B., 1887, 139.— A. O. U., Check List, 1886, No. 214. Has. The whole of temperate North America, but most common in the Eastern Prov- ince; West Indies in general; whole of Middle America, south to Colombia and Venezuela; accidental in Greenland and Europe; Bermudas (numerous in migrations). Breeds chiefly in the northern parts of its range. ‘ 94 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. s \Sp. Coan. Adult: Above bright olive-brown, with longitudinal spots of black, some of the feathers edged with white; top of head with a long Jongitudinal stripe of black; ante- rior portion of head, with chin and throat, black; sides of head and neck (except as de- scribed), chest, and breast light plumbeous; abdomen white; anal region and crissum ereamy white or pale buff; flanks sharply barred with white and slate-color. Young: Similar, but lores and superciliary stripe brownish, the chin and throat whitish; rest of neck, with chest and breast, light brownish, Bill greenish yellow (more orange, espe- eia‘ly at base, in summer adults); iris brown; legs and feet greenish. “Downy stage—chick afew days old: Billshort, exceedingly depressed, high at base, rapidly tapering, the tip deflected. The whole body densely covered with dull black down, beyond which are produced abundant long, glossy, black hair-like filaments. Upon the throat is a tuft of stiff, coarse bristle-like feathers of a bright orange-color. These are directed forward, and give the bird a most singular appearance. (From a specimen in my cabinet collected at Cam- bridge, Mass., June 24, 1874.) This bird, although the only specimen ofthe kind now at hand, is one of a large brood which was attended by the female parent. Several of the others were distinctly seen and closely examined at the time. Allhada similar orange tuft upon the throat.” ([BRewstTER, in Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, January 1879, p. 48.] « The most abundant and most universally known bird of its genus inhabiting the United States, and variously known as the “Rail,” “Sora,” ‘or “Ortolan,” according to locality. It is especially numerous along the creeks and rivers on the Atlantic ‘during the autumnal migration, when excursions for obtaining it are a favorite amusement of gunners and sportsmen. It appears to inhabit the entire temperate regions of North America. There is apparently little, if any, geographical varia- tion noticeable in a large series of specimens, and the principal individual variation consists in the extent of the black on the throat, which in some examples extends back as far as the middle of the abdomen. Mr. Nelson thus describes the nesting habits of the Sora: “Exceedingly abundant summer resident in all marshy situa- tions. Arrives the first of May and departs in October. Nests along the borders of prairie sloughs and marshes, depositing from eight to fourteen eggs. Their nest may often be discovered at’a distance by the appearance of the surrounding grass, the blades of which are in many cases interwoven over the nest, apparently to shield the bird from the fierce rays of the sun, which are felt with redoubled force on the marshes. The nests are sometimes built on a solitary tussock of grass, growing in the. water, but not often. The usual position is in the soft, dense grass growing close to the edge of the slough, and rarely in grass over eight inches high. The next is a thick matted platform of marsh grasses, with a medium-sized depression for the eggs.” RALLIDE THE~RAILS, GALLINULES, AND COOTS. 95 Porzana noveboracensis (Gmel.) YELLOW RAIL. Popular synonym. Little Yellow Rail. Fulica novebdoracensis GMEL. 8S. N.i,pt. ii, 1788, 701. Ortygometra noveboracensis STEPHENS, 1824.—AuD. Synop. 1839, 218; B, Am. v, 1842, 152, pl. 307. Rallus noveboracensis BonaP. 1827; Am. Orn. iv, 1832, 186, pl. 27, fig. 2.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1884, 215.—Sw. & Ricu. F, B. A. ii, 1831, 402.—Aup. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 251, pl. 29. Porzana noveboracensis Cass. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 750.—Barrp, Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 557.—Cougs, Key, 1872, 274; Check List, 1878,No. 469; 2d ed. 1882, No. 680; Birds N. W. 1874, 539.—Ripew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 575; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 140,— A.. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 215. “Porzana jamaicensis (?)” (error) Ripew. Orn. 40th Par, Exp. 1877, 613 (Nevada and Utah).2 ; Has. Eastern North America, north to Hudson’s Bay, Nova Scotia, west to Utah and Nevada. No extralimital record except Cuba and the Bermudas. Sp. Coan. Adult. Yellowish ochraceous, very glossy above, where broadly striped with black, the black intersected by narrow bars of white; belly whitish; flanks dusky narrowly barred with white; crissum light cinnamon; axillars, lining of wing, and exposed portion of secondaries, white. “Bill greenish black, with the base dull yellowish orange; iris hazel; feet and claws light flesh-cdlor” (AuDUBON). Total length about 6.00 inches; wing 3.00-3.50; culmen, .50.55; tarsus, .90-1.00; middle toe, .90. There is' considerable individual variation, both in size and markings, even among specimens from the same locality. Although very rarely seen, on account of its skulking habits and extreme reluctance to take wing, the little Yellow Rail is , not an uncommon bird-in Illinois. Mr. Nelson gives it as ‘not very rare’ in Cook county, where it. arrives early in May. Sev- eral specimens, he says, are taken each spring, before the grass becomes sufficiently high to effectually conceal: them. The ; National ‘Museum possesses its eggs from Winnebago, taken by Mr. J. W. Tolman, thus proving that it breeds in the northern part of the State. 1The small Rail referred by me, with great hesitation, to P. jamaicensis, in my “Report of the Ornithology of the Fortieth Parallel Expedition” (Vol. IV., Pt. ii, p. 613),, was undoubtcdly this species, which is the only one showing white along the hinder margin of the wing—a peculiarity noted of the birds observed. The apparently “blackish color” was due to imperfect observation. . 96 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Porzana jamaicensis (Gmel.) BLACK RAIL. Popular synomym. Little Black Rail.. Rallus jamaicensis Gur. 8. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 718—AuD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 359, pl. 349. Ortygometra jamnaicensis “SterHens, Shaw's Gen. Zo6l."—AupD. Synop. 1839, 214; B. Am. v, 1842, 157, pl. 308. * Porzana jamaicensis Cass. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858,749.—Bargp, Cat. N. Am, B. 1859, No- 556.—-Cours, Key, 1872, 247; Check List, 1873, No. 470; 2d ed. 1882, No. 681; Birds N. W. 1874, 539.—Ripaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 576; Man. N. Am. B: 1887, 140.+A. 0. U. Check List, 1886, No. 216. Has. Temperate North America, north to Massachusetts, northera Illinois (breeding), Utah, Nevada, and California; south through wesfern South America to Chili; Cuba; Jamaica; Bermudas. Sr. Coan. Smaller than P. noveboracensis, and the smallest of North American Ral- lide. Adult: Head, neck, and lower parts dark plumbeous or slate-color, darkest, and often nearly black, on the pileum; abdomen and crissum brownish black, marked with transverse bars of white; nape and back dark chestnut or reddish sepia-brown, the other upper parts brownish black, with small dots and irregular transverse bars of white; prima- ries immaculate dusky, or with small spots of white. Young: Similar, but lower parts dull ashy, the throat inclining to white, and the crown tinged with reddish brown. Downy young: “Entirely bluish black” (Cassrn). Bill black; iris red; “feet bright yellowish green” (AUDUBON), Total length, about 5.00 inches; wing 2.50-3.20; culmen, -50-.60; tarsus, 85-.90; middle toe, 80-1.00. ; Like its relative, the Yellow Rail, the present species is much more numerous than one not familiar with its habits would suppose. Mr. Nelson’s memoranda concerning it (Budd. Essex Inst., VII., 1876, pp. 184, 135) are as follows: ‘Like the preceding, of not very rare occurence. Breeds, Dur- ing the spring of 1875 I saw three specimens in the Calumet Marshes. The first was observed early in May. On the 19th of June, the same season, while collecting with me near the Calumet River, Mr. Frank DeWitt, of Chicago, was fortunate enough to discover a nest of this species containing ten freshly laid eggs. The nest was placed in a deep cup-shaped depression in a per- fectly open situation on the border of a marshy spot, and its only concealment was such as a few straggling carices afforded. It is composed of soft grass blades loosely interwoven in a cir- cular manner. The nest, in shape and construction, looks'much like that of a meadow lark. The following are its dimensions in inches: Inside depth, 2.50; inside diameter, -3.25: outside depth, 3.50; outside diameter, 4.50. The eggs are a cream-white 1 Inan adult male, killed June 6, 1879, near Washington, D. 0.,the fresh colors of the “soft parts” were as follows: Bill entirely deep black; iris bright brick-red; legs and feet brown, much the same color as the wing-coverts. RALLIDE—THE RAILS, GALLINULES, AND COOTS: 97 instead of clear white, as I stated in a recent article (Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, Vol. 1., p. 48), and average 1.00 by .81 inches. They are nearly perfectly oval, and are thinly sprinkled with fine . reddish-brown dots, which become larger and more numerous at one end. Minute shell markings in the form of dots are also visible. Owing to the small diameter of the nest, the eggs were in two layers.” 98 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Famity GRUIDAL.~-THE CRANES. The diagnosis of this family has already been given on page 82. The species are all of very large size, and inhabit grassy plains, as well as marshes. The bill is moderately long; the nostrils broad and pervious, the nasal groove extending but little beyond them. The legs are long, but the toes are short; the hind toe is very short and much elevated, the claw scarcely touching the ground. The genera are few in number, but one, Grus, belonging to North America. Genus GRUS PALuas. Grus Pauw. Mise. Zool. 1766, 66. Type, Ardea grus LINN. Cuan. Bill lengthened, straight, the upper mandible only slightly decurved at the ex- treme tip; the commissure and other outlines straight. Nasal groove very Jarge and open, extending over the basal two thirds of the bill. Nostrils broadly open, pervious; the ante- rior extremity half way from the tip of bill to eye. The upper half of the head naked, warty, put with short hairs. Legs much lengthened; toes short, hardly more than one third the tarsus. Inner toe rather longer, its claw much larger than the outer. Hind too elevated, short. Toes con- nected at base by membrane. Tarsi broadly scutellate anteriorly. Tertials longer than primaries, decurved: first quill not much shorter than second. Tailof twelve feathers. - Synopsis of Species. A. Adult plumage white, the primaries black;cheeks naked. Bill very thick, the gonys strongly convex. 1. G@, americana. B, Adult plumage grayish or plumbeous, the primaries slate-color; cheeks always feath- ered. Bill slender, longer than middle toe; gonys straight. 2. G. canadensis. Wing, 17.75-19.00 inches; culmen, 2.90-3.70; tarsus, 6.70-8.00; middle toe 2.80-2.95. Hab. Alaska to New Mexico and Texas, breeding (exclusively?) far . northward. 8. G. mexicana. Wing, 22.00 inches; culmen, 5.00-6.00; tarsus, 10.00; middle toe, 3.50 or more. Hab. Western United States and Gulf States from Washington to Florida. GRUIDE—-THE CRANES. 99 Grus americana (Linn.) WHOOPING CRANE. Popular synonym. Great White Crane. Ardea americana Linn. 8. N. ed. 12, i, 1766, 234. Wrxs. Am. Orn, viii, 1814, 20, pl. 64, fig. 3. Grus americana Sw. & Riou. F. B.-A, ii, 1831, 872—NutTr. Man. 1884, 34—Avup. Orn, Biog. iii, 1835, 202, pl. 226; Synop. 1839, 219; B. Am. v, 1842, 188, pl. 313.—Barep, B. N. Am. 1858, 654; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 478.—Couss, Key, 1872, 271; Check List, 1878, No. 462; ed. 2, 1882, No. 668; Birds N. W. 1874, 530. Ripaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 582; Man. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 582.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 204. Grus hoyanus, DuDLEY, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. vii, 1854. 64 rere Mem. Chicago Acad. i, 1868, 129, pl. 19, Has. The interior of North America from Texas and Florida to the Fur Sannin and from Colorado to Ohio; south to Guanajuato, Central Mexico?! Formerly found, casually, in the Atlantic States. Sp. Caan. Aduli: Whole crown and occiput covered by a warty or granulated skin almost bare on the occiput. but covered anteriorly by black hair-like bristles; the color of this skin reddish in life. Lores and malar region. including a narrow angular strip extending from the latter down each side of the throat, also naked, and similarly bristled, the bristles denser anteriorly. Color entirely pure white, excepting the primaries and thir coverts, which are uniform slate-black, and a patch of plumbeous on the upper part of the nape, adjoining the bare skin of the occiput and extending downward for the distance of about two inches. “Bill wax-yellow; iris gamboge-yellow; bare skin of head dull orange-color; legs blue-black.” (Sw. & Ricw. 1. c.) Young: Head completely feathered. Generaleolor white, with large patches here-and there, espécially above, of light cinnamon, the head and neck almost continuously of this color. The primaries and their coverts uniform dull black, as in the adult, Bill dull wax-yellow, the terminal portion blackish; legs and feet blackish. Zmmature: Bare portions of the head indicated by feathers of a harsher texture and darker color than elsewhere, occupying the areas which are naked in the fully adult. Plumage much stained with pale cinnamon, as in the first plumage. Total length, about 52.00 inches; extent, 92.00; wing, 24.00; culmen, 5.35; tarsus, 12.00; middle toe, 4.25. 1 Once an abundant migrant, and in some localities a common summer resident; this grand bird is now rare in most parts of the State, and is becoming yearly more so. Mr. Nelson remarks of it: “Along the Illinois River and more thinly settled portions of the State it is still common during the migrations, and a few pairs breed upon the large marshes in central Illinois.” Grus mexicana (Miill.) SAND HILL CRANE, Popular synomym. Brown Crane. Ardea (grus) mevicana Miuw. 8. N. Suppl. 1776, 110 (ex Briss. Orn. v, 380). Grus canadensis, 8. mexicana B, B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 407. Grus mexicana Ripew. Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus. viii, 1885, 356; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 185.— A.O.U. Check List, 1886, No. 206. 1 Fide Professor A. Dugés, in epist. 100 _ BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Ardea canadensis, var. 8. Lats. Ind. Orn, ii, 1790, 676 (Mexico). Grus pratensis Bartz. Travels, 1791, 144, 218,—Couns, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 670. Grus fusca (part) Vieux. Nouv. Dict. xiii, 1817, 558. Grus canadensis Nur. Man. ii, 1834, 38 (nec Ardea canadensis LINN.).—Bargp, B. N. Am. 1858, 655; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 479.—Cougs, Key, 1872,271; Check List, 1873, No. 463; B.N. W. 1874, 532.-Hensu. Zool. Wheeler's Exp. 1875, 467. —hew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 611; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 583% Grus americana (supposed young) AUD. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 441, pl. 261; Synop. 1839, 219; B. Am. v, 1842, 188, pl. 314. Haz. Southern half of North America, but now very rare along Atlantic coast north of Georgia; south to central Mexico; breeding in Florida and-Cuba, and from the States im- mediately west of the Mississippi River to the Pacific coast; winters in the Gulf States and ‘in Megico. ‘ : Sp. Cuan. Adult: Entire pileum, including lores, covered with a bare, granulated skin (reddish in life), interspersed with scattered fine blackish hairs; the posterior margin of this bare skin divided medially, on the occiput, by an angular projection of the feathers on. the upper part of the nape. Genera) color of the ; lumage continuous and nearly uniform slaty gray, this frequently stained or overlaid in places, by a rusty wash, the primaries slate-colored, with whitish shafts. Cheeks and throat sometimes distinctly whitish. Legs and feet blackish; bill blackish, paler at tin; iris crimson? Young: Head entirely feath- ered. Plumage much as in the adult, but of a lighter and more brownish gray, and always conspicyously stained, especially on upper parts, with tawny-cinnamon or rusty. ‘Sandhill Cranes usually arrive in [linois on their way north- ward during the latter half of March, and return in October or ‘November. Formerly, large numbers remained within the State to breed, but so thickly has the country become settled, that those which now do so are very few indeed—at least in com- parison with former years. .\s long ago as 1876, Mr.. Nelson stated that, while formerly nesting abundantly on all the large marshes, but few then bred except on one or two large marshes in the central part of the State, where he was informed they were “still quite numerous”. Just where the large marshes in question are located, Mr. Nelson has not told us. During their, migrations they pass high in the air, often be- yond, the limits of sight, but making their presence known by their sonorous, rattling, trumpet-like notes, which have been aptly compared to the sound taade by the blocks and ropes when hoisting sail on a vessel’ Unlike the Great Blue Heron, which usually passes under the name of ‘crane’ or ‘blue crane,” the Sandhill Crane feeds more in meadows, prairies, and plowed fields than in marshes, and its food, instead ‘of being. chiefly frogs, crayfish, and fishes, con- sists largely of field-mice.and other small mammals, grasshop- pers; succulent roots, seeds, etc., potatoes, and especially sweet ' ' GRUIDE—THE CRANES. 101 potatoes, being greatly relished. In fact, it is practically om- nivorous; and when domesticated will devour almost anything eatable that is presented to it. Like the heron, however, it is extremely wary, and cautious indeed must be the hunter who approaches within gunshot. The nest of the Sandhill Crane is placed on the ground among vegetation, which conceals it, sometimes in a marsh, but often on dry spots. The eggs are ustially two in number, their average size being about 3.98 by 2.44 inches, and their color some shade of pale olive-brown, or drab, spotted with darker brown, red- dish brown, and purplish gray. The young are at first covered with a soft dense down, bright rusty on ‘the upper parts and pale grayish on the lower, and are said to be unable to fly until they become nearly as large at their parents, whom they follow about until able to take wing, before which time they elude pur- suit by swiftly running and then hiding among the grass and weeds. Taken when quite small, they are very easily domesti- cated and become most amusing pets; but are somewhat dan- gerous on account of their propensity to use their sharp bills, thus endangering the eyesight of persons who allow them to become too familiar, =A, ‘LOL* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS, x ORDER HERODIONES.—Tue Herons, Srorks, Inises, ETC. CHaracters. Altricial ptilopedie Grallatores, with the hallux lengthened ‘and nearly or quite incumbent; palate desmognathous; carotids double; habits more or less arboreal, * The Order Herodiones includes several distinct groups, which may a, a, a, a, be defined as follows: Sides of upper mandible with a deep narrow groove extending uninterruptedly from the nostrils to the tip....c.cccsssccseesee nec eenecccenosesen neces .- Suborder Ibides. Sides of upper mandible without any groove. 01, Hind toe inserted above the level of the anterior toes: claws broad and flat, resting on a heavy pad or shoe, the middle one not pectinated. . Suborder Ciconia. 63, Hind toe inserted on the same level as the anterior toes; claws narrow, arched, the under surface free, and the middle one with its inner edge POCHID ALC... cseevecccevecsececcccvccvcsccccesensseserseseesees HULOrder Herodii. SuBORDER ITBIDES.—TueE SPOONBILLS AND IBISES. Families. Bill very broad and excessively flattened, greatly widened toward end, only the ex- trome tip COGUrVed........cccssccseeueeeevecvene we ercvasvecccccccccccscssnses Plataleide. Bill slender, nearly cylindrical, or even narrower than deep toward end, gradually but decidedly decurved for nearly Whole length,.....scscescescescsseeseeces LDidide, ‘ PLATALEIDE—THE SPOONBILLS. 102* / Famity PLATALEIDA.—Tue SPOONBILLS. \ Cuan. Large-sized Ibis-like birds, with the bill greatly flattened and expanded term- inally. Bill deep through the base (the culmen ascending), but immediately flattened; nar- rowest across the middle portion, the end widely expanded, the tip rounded and decurved. Nostrils superior, longitudinal, without surrounding or overhanging membrane; nasal fossee prolonged forward in a narrow, continuous groove to the extreme tip of the bill (as in the Ibises), its course nearly (or in some genera quite) parallel with the lateral outline of the maxilla; approximate surfaces of maxilla and mandible with one or two rows of more or less prominent tooth-like papilla along each side. Tarsus longer than middle toe, and with small longitudinal héxagonal scales in front; outer toe decidedly longer than inner, its claw reaching to the base of the middle claw; hallux nearly incumbent, about. equal to the basal phalanx of the inner toe; bare portion of tibia longer than outer toe; web between inner and middle toes well developed. Wings ample, reaching about to the end of the tail, the primaries a little longer than the tertials. Tail short, even, of twelve stiff, broad, round-ended feathers. The Spoonbills. are closely related to the Ibises, but differ con- spicuously in the flattened, paddle-shaped bill, as well as in some other minor characters. They belong chiefly to the east- ern hemisphere, where six or seven species, representing three genera, occur, the western hemisphere, possessing but a single species, of different generic type from those of the Old World. Genus AJAJA REICHENBACH. Afaja Betowene. Handb. 1851, xvi. Type, Platalea afafa Laxn. Grn. Cran. Biil much expanded and excessively’ depressed terminally, the tip de- eurved, much broader than deep at the base, the middle portion contracted to considerably less than one half the width of the terminal “disk.” Nostrils sub-basal, superior, near to- gether, longitudinal, and without adjacent membrane. Head completely bald in the adult (feathered almost to the billin the young). Legs comparatively short, the tarsus but little longer than the middle toe, covered in front, as well as all round, with small, longitudinal, hexagonal seales. Plumage of the neck short, downy.) 1A special modification of the trachea further distinguishes the genus Ajaja from Platalea, according to Professor GaRRop (P, Z. 8. 1875, p. 299, fig. 2), who describes this organ as “simple, straight, of uniform calibre, and peculiarly short, extending only twe thirds the neck, where the uncomplicated syrinx is situated,and the bifurcation of the bronchi occurs.” In Platalea, on the other hand, the trachea is “convoluted within the thorax,” ete. (See YARRELL, Hist. Brit, B. vol. ii, p. 504.) 103* BIRDS OF ILLINOtS. Ajaja ajaja (Linn.). ROSEATE SPOONBILL. Popular synonym. Pink Curlew (Florida). Platalea ajaja Linn. 8. N, ed. 10, 1758, 140 (ox SLOANE, B. Jam. fi, 316; Marncer.; Ray); ed. 12, i, 1766, 281.—Wis. Am. Orn, vii, 1818, 123, pl. 62 (immature).—Nutr. Man. ii, 1834, 79.—AupD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 188; B. Am. vi, 1843, 72, pl. 362 (adult).—Cass.. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 686.-Barrp, Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 501.—Covuzs, Key, 1872, 264; Check List, 1873, No. 448. 3 Ajaja ajaja Bouo. Cat. Av. 1876, 54.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 183.—Ripaw. Man, N. Am. B. 1887, 123. y Platea mexicana (“WiruLovGHBY”) Gams. Jour. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. Ser. 2, 1, 1849, 222 ("Ban Francisco”). Ajaja rosea (ex Platea rosea Briss.) Rercu. “Nat. Syst. 16’.—Ripaw. Nom, N. Am. B, 1881, No, 605.—Coves, 2d Check List, 1882, No. 653. —B. B. & B. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 102, Has. Whole of tropical and subtropical America; north regularly to Gulf coast of the United States; formerly ranging northward in Mississippi Valley to southern Illinois. Sp. CHar. Adult: Head entirely bare. Neck, back, and breast, white; tail orange-buff, the shafts of the feathers deep pink, the inner webs inclining to pale pink. Rest of the plumage pale rose-pink, the lesser wing-coverts' region, and upper and lower tail-coverts, brilliant, tntense carmine. Chest with a tuft of light carmine, somewhat twisted, or curled, narrow plumes, Sides of the breast, at base of the wings (concealed by the latter), pale creamy buff. “Bill yellowish gray at the base, mottled with brownish black, in the rest of its extent pale greenish blue, light on the margins; base of margin of lower mandible greenish yellow; iris bright carmine; feet pale lake; claws brownish black; head yellowish green; space around the eye and the gular sac orpiment-orange; a band of black from the lower mandible to the occiput” (AUDUBON). Immature: Like the adult, but lacking the brilliant carmine of the lesser wing-coverts’ region, tail-coverts, etc., these portions being pale peach-blossom pink. Tail delicate peach-blossom pink, instead of orange-buff. Nuchal and pectoral colored tufts absent. Young: Head completely feathered, except im- mediately around the base of the bill. Head, neck, back, and anterior lower parts white, in some specimens more or less tinged, especially above, with orange-buff;! wings, tail, and posterior part of the body delicate pale peach-blossom pink, the shafts'of the remiges and rectrices deeper pink. Outer webs of alulz, outer primary-coverts, and wide borders to outer primaries (principally on outer webs), clear snuff-brown. [Notr. We have not seen the young in down, nor when first feathered. The latter is described by Audubon as follows: “Thé young, . . . whenabletofiy, . . are grayish white. The billis then quite smooth, of a yellowish green color, as are the legs and feet,.as well as the skin on part of the head. Young birds in their second year have the wings and the lower wing-coverts of a pale roseate tint, the bill more richly colored, and the legs and feet dark brownish red or purplish. At this age they are unadorned with the curling feathers on the breast; but in the third spring the bird is perfect, although it i ule creases in size for several seasons after.”] Length, about 28,06-35,00 inches; expanse of wings, 48.00-53.00; wing, 14.10-15.30; fait 4.20-5,20; culmen, 6.20-7.15; width of bill, 2.0U-2.20; tarsus, 3.75-4.65; middle toe, 2.95-3.35; bare portion of tibia, 2.80-3. 20, Although, like the Carolina Parrakeet and Ivory-billed Wood- pecker, the Roseate Spoonbill may not now be found in Illinois, I was informed, in 1879, by a taxidermist? whom I have every ‘Qu. Anaccideéntal stain? 4 Mr. Alexander Wolle, Sr., of Baltlmore.Md. (See Bull. Nutt. Orn. Olub, v, Jan. 1880, p.31.) ‘ PLATALEIDE—THE SPOONBILLS. 104* reason to believe reliable, that some twenty years previously, or about 1859, he shot several specimens about some ponds in the Mississippi Bottoms, below St. Louis. More recently, I have received a letter from Mr. R. E. Kirkman, of Richmond, Indiana, giving the information that a specimen was shot in Jay Co., that state, July 14th, 1889. “According to Audubon the Roseate Spoonbill is to be met with, for the most part, along the marshy or muddy borders of estuaries, the mouths of rivers, on sea islands, or keys par- tially overgrown with bushes, and still more abundantly along the shores of the salt-water bayous so common within a mile or two of the shore. There it can reside,and breed, with almost complete security, in the midst of an abundance of food. It is said to be gregarious at all seasons, and that seldom less than half a dozen may be seen together, unless they have been dis- persed by a tempest, At the approach of the breeding-season these small flocks collect together, forming immense collections, after the manner of the Ibis, and resort to their former bréed- ing-places, to which they almost invariably return. Their moult takes place late in May; during this time the young of the pre- vious year conceal themselves among the mangroves, there spending the day, and returning at night to their feeding-grounds, but keeping apart from the old birds, which last have passed through their spring moult early in March. Like the severai species of Ibis, this bird is said occasionally to rise suddenly on the wing, and ascend gradually, in a spiral manner, to a great height. It flies with its neck stretched forward to its full length, and its legs and feet extended behind. It moves in the manner of a Heron, with easy flappings, until just. as it is about to alight, when it sails over the spot with expanded wing, and comes gradually to the ground. It flies in a confused manner, except when on one of its extended movements. “J¢ is usually found in the company of different Herons, whose vigilance apprises it of any danger. It can usually be ap- proached, when feeding, with proper care. When one is wounded in the wing it usually makes for deep water, and swims for some distance without attempting to dive. If the wing is un- injured, this bird, even though mortally wounded, will fly until it drops dead. It is as nocturnal as the Night Heron, and its ‘ 105* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. principal feeding time is from near sunset until daylight. In procuring its food the Spoonbill usually wades. up to the tibee, immerses its bill in the soft mud, with the head, and even the whole neck, beneath the surface, moving its partially opened mandibles to and fro laterally, munching the small fry—insects or shell-fish—before it swallows them. Where many are together, one usually acts.as a sentinel. He did not see it feeding in fresh water, though he was told that it does so occasionally. j “It can alight on a tree and walk on the large branches with all the facility of a Heron.” ( Water Birds of North America, Vol. I., pp. 105, 106. IBIDIDZ—THE IBISES. 106* Famity IBIDID.A.—TaE Isises. Cuan. Wading birds of medium to rather large size, the bill much elongated, more or fess attenuated toward the end, and bent downward, more or less decidedly, in sickle- fashion, like that of the Curlews (Numenius). Nostrils sub-basal, latero-superior, with more or less of a membrane above and behind; nasal foss~ continued forward to the very extremity of the maxilla in the form of a deep, narrow, continuous groove. Hallux almost incumbent; claws slender, projecting far beyond the ends of the toes. The true Ibises form an eminently natural group of wading birds, distinguished from their nearest allies by the above char- acters. The species are moderately numerous (about twenty-six being known), and are dispersed over the warmer regions of the the earth—America possessing a larger number than any other country (ten species, all but one of which are peculiar, or more than one third of those known). Of the exotic species, Africa possesses about nine (two of them in common with south- ern Europe), Asia five, and Australia two. A very great diver- sity of form and plumage is to be seen among the various species, some being trim and graceful in their build, and others uncouth, with Vulture-like head and neck—some plain in colors, while others are among the most brilliant of birds. The scarlet plumage of Guara rubra is not surpassed in nature for pureness and intensity of color, and the beautiful decomposed tertial plumes of Zs ethiopica are scarcely excelled in gracefulness. The species of Molybdophanes, Theristicus, and Cercibis, however, possess but little beauty. The family is divisible into two well-defined sections, which may be termed subfamilies, distinguished mainly by the character of the tarsal scutellation. They may be defined as follows: Subfamily Ibidine. Front of the tarsus covered with hexagonal scales. Subfamily Guarine. Front of the tarsus with largo transverse scutell~, arranged in a more or less continuous single series, 107* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Both of the above subfamilies are represented in America, but only the latter in the northern continent. The North American genera may be recognized by the following characters: SuspramMiLy GUARIN.ZE. Guara, Head of adult wholly naked anteriorly. Feathers ofthe pileum short, close, and blended, and those of the neck not distinctly lanceolate. Colors plain white or red, with black wing-tips, in adults; dull gray and white in young. Plegadis, Head of adult wholly feathered, except the lores; feathers of the pileum distinctly lanceolate and slightly elongated, forming a slightly rounded crest when erected. Colors highly metallic, of varied tints; motallic greenish, bronze or purple above; neck and under parts chestnut in adults; neck streaked with white and under parts grayish: brown in young. Genus GUARA REICHENBACH. Eudocimus Waa. Isis, 1882, 1232 (nec Hudocima BILLBERG, 1820). Type, Scolopar rubra LINN. ; Quara REIcH. Syst. Av. 1852, p. xiv. Type, Scolopax rubra Linn. Leucibis Rerow. Syst. Av. 1862, p. xiv. Type, Scolopax alba LINN. ‘Grn. CHaz. Bill moderately slender, attenuated toward the end, strongly decurved; bare portion of the tibia equal to or rather shorter than the outer toe; middle toe, with claw, shorter than the tarsus; Inner toe (without claw) reaching to or alittle beyond the sub- terminal articulation of the middle toe; outer toe reaching to or beyond the middle of the subterminal phalanx of the middle toe; hallux about equal to the basal phalanx of the inner toe; claws short, moderately curved, that of the middle toe more or less bent outwardly to- ward the tip, its inner projecting edge convex. Anterior half of the héad bare (in the adult) including the forehead, lores, orbital and malar regions, chin, and more or less of the throat; in the young, this bare skin more restricted. Foathers of the head and neck dense but rather soft, with rather distinct outlines, but with somewhat truncated tips. Primaries ex- tending alittle beyond the tertials, the second and third quills longest and nearly equal, first a little shorter than the fourth; inner webs of outer four slightly sinuated toward their ends. Adults with the plumage entirely uniform white or searlet, except tips of the longer quills, which are;glossy black. Young,'uniform dark brownish gray, the belly white, Species. ; @, Adult, pure intense searlet, the tips of the longer primaries glossy blue-black. Young, dark brownish gray, With belly Whit© ....scecsccsscccnccncsccccescsesccceevess: FUDIB. @. Adult, pure white (sometimes tinged with pink in the breeding season or in freshly killed specimens), the tips of longer primaries glossy greenish black. Young, gray- ish brown, the rump, tail-coverts, base of tail, and under parts white.........@. alba. Both the Scarlet and the White Ibises are peculiar to the warmer parts of America. They are in a measure complementary to one another in their distribution, for, while their respective ranges overlap in Central America the former is found chiefly in the northern parts of South America and the latter in the more southern United States and in Mexico. So similar are these spe- cies in size, proportions, and pattern of coloration, and to a cer- EBIDIDE—THE IBISES, 108* tain extent in color also, that the question has been raised,! whether they are not really offshoots from a common ances- tral stock, which, like a species of eastern Asia (ds nippon) and certain herons, was at one time ‘‘dichromatic.” Guara alba (Linn.) WHITE IBIS, Popular synonyms. White Curlew; Spanish Curlew (Florida); Gray Ibis, Brown Ibis (young); Coco (Cuba); Ibis blanco (Mexico). Scolopaz alba Linn. 8. N. i, ed. 10, 1758, 145. Tantalus albus Guxw. 8. N. i, 1788, 651.—WiLs. Am, Orn. viii, 1814, 43, pl. 66. Ibis alba Vint. Nouv. Dict. xvi, 1817, 16..-Nurr, Man. ti, 1884, 86.—AuD. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 178; v, 1839, 598, pl. 222; Synop. 1839, 257; B. Am, vi, 1843, 54, pl. 360.—Cass. in Baird's B. N. Am. 1858, 684—Barep, Cat.'N. Am. B. 1859, No. 499:—~Covss, Check List, 1873, No. 446. Eudocimus albus Waat. Isis, 1882, 1282.—Rrpew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 501.—Covsgs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 651. Guara alba Sten. Stand. Nat. Hist. iv, 1885, 9—A. O. 0. Check List, 1886, No. 184.— Ripaw. Man. N. Am. B. 18, 1887, 123. Tantalus alber Linn. 8. N.i, 1766. 242. Tantalus coco Jacq. Beitr. 1784, 13. Tantalus griseus Gmun. 8. N. i, 1788, 653 (young). . fudocimus longirostris WaGu. Isis, 1829, 760. Has. Warm-temperate eastern North America, West Indies, Middle America, and tropical South America; north to Connecticut, eastern Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Great Salt Lake, Utah; south to Brazil. , ; Sp.CHar. Adult: Terminal portion (beyond the emargination) of three to five? outer primaries, glossy greenish black, with a bright metallic green lustre. Reést of the plumage entirely pure white. Bill, bare skin of the head, legs and feet, bright carmine in the breed- ing season; at other times paler, or orange-red; iris fine pearly blue (AUDUBON).2 End of 1 See The Auk, vol. i, 1884, pp. 289, 240, *'According to Audubon, ‘‘There is a curious, though not altogether general, difference between the sexes of this species as to plumage, —the male has five of its primaries tipped with glossy black for several inches, while the female, which is very little smaller than the male, has only four markedin this manner. On examining more thana hundred individ- uals of each sex, I found only four exceptions,-~which occurred in females that were very old birds, and which, as happens in some other species, might perhaps, have been under- going the curious change exhibited by Ducks, Pheasants, and some other birds, the females of which, when old, sometimes assume the livery of the males.” This supposed sexual difference we have been unable to verify with the series before us, though it is very pos- sible that some specimens may not have the sex correctly determined. 8“Bare parts of the head [in the adult male] light orange-red; bill the same, but towards the tip dusky. Iris of a fine pearly blue. Legs and toes paler than the bill; claws dusky, tipped with horn color. “after the first moult, the bill is pale yellowish orange, toward the base greenish; the naked parts of the head are pale orange yellow, inclining to flesh-color; the eye dark brown; the feet pale blue. “The change in the coloring of the bill, legs, and feet of this bird, that takes place in the breeding season, is worthy of remark, the bill being then of a deep orange-red, and the legs and feet of a red nearly amounting to carmine. The males at this season have the gular pouch of a rich orange color, and somewhat resembling in shape that of the Frigate Pelican, although proportionally less. During winter-these parts are of a dull flesh color. The irides alsolose much of their clear blue, and resume in some degree the umber color of the young birds. I am thus particular it these matters, because it is doubtful if any one else has ever paid attention to them.” (AUDUBON.) —B. 109* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. the bill sometimes blackish. Young: Uniform, rather dark, grayish brown, the rump, upper tail-coverts, basal half of tail, and entire lower parts, including axillars and tining of the wing, continuous white; head and neck streaked with dusky or grayish brown on & grayish or dull whitish ground-color. Feathering of the head extending forward almost to the bill. Length, about 24.00-26.00; expanse, about 40.00; wing, 10.30-11.75; tail, 4.00-5.00; culmen, 4.15-6.80; depth of bill, .60-.72; tarsus, 3.10-4.00; middle toe, 2.15-2.70; bare portion of tibia, 2,00-2.80. Downy young. ‘‘The young birds are at first covered with a thick down of a dark gray color.” (AUDUBON.) Immature specimens show, according to age, all possible stages of plumage intermediate between the pure white adult and gray young. I have very little information respecting the White Ibis in Illinois, having observed it but once, a flock of seven or eight examples, all in the gray plumage, haying been seen by Mr. William Brewster and myself about the 8th of May, 1878, fly- ing along the Wabash River, at Mt. Carmel. Genus PLEGADIS Kavp, “*Faleinellus Brcust.” AUCT. (nec BECHSTHIN). Plegadis Kaup, 8kizz. Entw. Gesch. 1829, 82. Type, Tantalus falcinellus LINN. + Tantalides Wacu. Isis, 1832, 1231. Type, Tantalus falcinellus Linn. i Gen. Cuan. Bill shallow through tho base, moderately tapering, and gently curved; the base not turgid, and the ‘basal outline of the maxilla deeply concave: bare portion of tibia equal to or longer than outertoe; middle toe about three fourths the tarsus; inner toe reaching past the subterminal articulation of the middle toe; hallux about equal to the basal phalanx of the inner toe. Forehead and orbital, malar, and gular regions completely feathered, the lores and ixterramal space only being naked, the feathering on the chin forming an acute angle which advances to as far as the middle of the nostrils; feathers of the pileum elongated, lanceolate, and distinct, forming, whon erected, a sort of full, round- ed’crest; those of the occiput and nape, and upper half of the neck all round, also distinct and lanceolate. Plumage chiefly metallic green above: the adults with head and upper part of neck chestnut, and lower parts chestnut (autwmnalis and guarauna) or violet- blackish (ridgwayi); the young with head and‘upper part of neck streaked grayish brown and white, the lower parts grayish brown (autwmnqlis and guarauna) or violet-dusky (ridgwayi). ‘ ? This genus differs conspicuously from Guara in the complete feathering of the head (excepting only the lores and tho space between the mandibular rami) and in the brilliantly metallic plumage. — There are two species in North America, one, P. autumnalis, inhabiting the eastern portion, and identical, apparently, with the Old World species, the other, P. guarauna, replacing it ‘in the western parts of the United States and southward through IBIDIDZ—THE IBISES. 110* Mexico and Central America and over the greater part of South America. A third species, P. ridgwayi (ALLEN!) inhabits the highlands of Peru. The two North American species are almost exactly alike in plumage, and probably cannot be distinguished with certainty in the immature stage. When fully adult, however, they may readily be recognized by the following characters: a\, Feathers around base of bill blackish; lores greenish in life, and bill and legs green- ish, or at least not red....... palsies sey ere a wistate we sie sieiwrare ers seeveeececeecveeeds Butummnalis. -a?, Feathers around base of bill white; lores lake-red in life; bill more or less reddish, + and legs lake-red...cccccescectsccceecnscccscetsaccecetenssccces sasesessesese+be SUALAUDA™, P. guarama very likely occurs occasionally in Illinois, having been taken in Nebraska, Kansas, and other States immediately west of the Missouri River; but so far as I know it has not been detected within our limits. Plegadis autumnalis (Hasselq.) GLOSSY IBIS. ‘ Popular synomyms. Bay Ibis; Green Ibis (young); Black Curlew. Tringa autumnalis Hassuxa. Reise nach Palast. Deutsche Ausg. 1762, 306. Plegadis autumnalis StHIN. Stand. Nat. Hist. iv, 1885, 160.—A. O, U. Check List, 1886, No. 186.—Ripe@w. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 124.: Tantalus faleinellus Linn. 8. N. ed. 12, i, 1766, 241. bis faleincellus Viniuy. N. D. xiv, 1817, 23.—Bonap. Obs. W118, 1825, No. 19.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 88.—AuUD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 608, pl. 387; Synop. 1889, 257; B. Am. vi, : 1843, 50, pl. 358 (adult). ' Plegadis falcinellus “KavuP.” Frirsou, Vig. Eur. 1869, Taf. 43, fig. 3, p.878—Rivew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 608.—Covzs, 2d Check List, 1882, No. 649.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 94, Tantalus castaneus Mutu. 8. N. Suppl. 1766, 112 (adult), - Tantalus viridis Guru. 8: N. i, 1788, 648 (young). Tantalus igneus Gust. 8. N. i, 1788, 649 (adult). Falcinellus igneus Gray, Gen. B, ed. 2, 1841, 87.—Exxrot, P. Z. 8. 1877, 503. Tantalus mexicanus (nec GMEL.) ORD., Journ. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. i, 1817, 52. Ibis ordit Bonar. Comp. List, 1838, 49.—Cass. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 685 (part).—Barrp, Cat. N. Am. 1859, No. 500. Ibis falcinellus, var. ordit Couns, Key, 1872, 263; Check List, 1878, No. 445; B. N. W. 1874, 517, 1Faleinellus ridgwayi ALLEN, Bull. Mus. Comp. Zool. iti, July, 1876, 855 (vicinity of Lake Titicaca, Peru).—Plegadis ridgwayi B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 94, 2£Scolopax guarauna Linn. 8. N. ed. 12, i, 1766, 242.—Plegadis guarauna RIPGW. Pros, U. 8. Nat. Mus. i, Oct. 2, 1878, 163. 111* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Idts guarauna (nee LINN.) OaBot, Proc, Bost. Soe, ii, 1850, 313, 332, Mumenius longirostris (nec Wiis.) Gossx, B. Jam. 1847, 348. Tantalus bengalensis “Licut.” BonaP. Oonsp. ii, 1855, 158. Dvis peregrina “Miu.” Bonap. Consp. ti, 1855, 159. Has. Warmer parts of the eastern hemisphere; West Indies, and eastern United States. Of irregular distribution and only locally abundant in America. Sp. Coan. Adult. Feathers bordering the base of the bill all round, blackish, Pileum, cheeks, and chin glossy greenish black, with purplish reflections. Hinder part of head, whole neck, anterior portion of back, and anterior half of lesser wing-covert tract rich reddish chestnut, darkest on back. Lower parts, except under tail-coverts, axillars, and under wing-coverts, uniform bright reddish chestnut, lighter, brighter, and less purplish ‘than neck. Upper parts (except as described), under wing-coverts,axillars, and under tail- coverts, glossy metallic dark purple, green, and bronze; the posterior portion of back, pos- ‘terior scapulars, wing-coverts, tertials, rump, upper tail-coverts, and tail nearly uniform ‘dull violet-purple, changing to bottle-green in certain lights; alulw, primary-coverts, pri- maries, and lower secondaries brighter bronze-green; upper secondaries more bronzy, with a purple shade in certain lights. Under surface of wings and tail more burnished, metallic green, bronze, and purple, the tint varying with the inclination to the light; axillars less shining, and more violaceous; crissum violet-purple and green, like the rump. Bill black: ‘hare loral space greenish or bluish; legs and feet greenish blackish.’ i Young (changing from first to second plumage): Head and neck distinctly streaked , with dusky brown and white, the dusky streaks wider and more blackish on the pileum, 'the whitish streaks gradually becoming more‘indistinct below. Entire lower parts plain ‘snuff-brown, with a soft purplish tinge, especially on the breast and tibie; crissum, metal- Nic green and violet. Upper parts dark, metallic violet-purple, green and bronze, the first ‘largely predominating, the last in traces; the back darkest and most uniform, the rump in- ‘terspersed with bright dark green feathers. A few dark-chestnut feathers interspersed over the anterior portion of the lesser wing-covert region (No. 57,008, Greece). Young ehanging from second to third plumage): In genera] appearance much like the preceding, ibut breast, abdomen, and tibia mostly reddish chestnut, and the anterior portion of the ‘back and scapulars mixed with many feathers of the same color; head and neck much tinged with chestnut, the streaks indistinct (No. 17,498, female, Hungary). INorn. The Tantalus viridis of Gmuxin (Byst. Nat. ii, pt. i, p. 648, No. 8, based on Green ‘Ibis of Laruam, Synopsis, ili, pt. i, p. 114, No. 183) seems to be this species in incomplete first ‘plumage, or still retaining the downy covering of the head and neck.) Length, about 25 inches; expanse, 42; wing, 10.20-11.85; tail, 4.80-4.50; culmen, 4,30-5.45; depth of bill, .60-.60; tarsus, 2.90-4.30; middle toe, 2.10-2.80; bare portion of tibia, 1.70-8.10. The young of P. autwmnalis closely resembles that of P. guarauna, but is rather darker colored, the upper parts being much more violaeeous, and the lower parts less grayish. The Glossy Ibis, like its white relative, is an irregular sum- mer visitor to Illinois, and is not known to breed within our limits. Mr. Julius Hurter, of St. Louis, Mo., took one speci- 1 Audubon says: “Bil black; bare part of head grayish blue; iris hazel; feet grayish black, claws brown.” 1BIDIDE—THE IBISES. 112* _men and saw two others at a small lake in Madison Co., seven miles from St. Louis, on February 27, 1880.1 ‘ See Bull. Nutt. Orn. Clud, vi, April, 1881, p. 124. This specimen was kindly sub- mnitted to me for examination by Mr. Hurter, and I identified it as P. autumnalis in immature plumage, but I now fear that my identification is open to.question. I have just re-read a letter from Mr. Hurter (dated April 12, 1881), in which he describes the fresh colors of the soft parts as follows: ‘Iris reddish; bill slate-color with a very slight reddish tint; legs slate with also a reddish tint'on the upper parts; bare skin in front of the eye brownish red.” (Italics my own.) The presence of a reddish tint to the soft parts point rather.to P. guarauna, and the specimen should be carefully re-examined, 113* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. SUBORDER CICONLA.—Tae SrorKs AND Woop Isiszs. Famizy CICONIIDAi.—Tue Storxs AND Woop IBI8E8. Cuaz. Large, Heron-like birds, with bill much longer than the head, thick through the . base, and more or less elongate-conical; the nostrils sub-basal, more or less superior, and bored into tho bony substance of the bill, without overhanging or surrounding membrane; maxilla without any lateral groove. Legs covered with small, longitudinally hexagonal scales; claws short, depressed, their ends broad and convex, resting upon horny, crescentic “shoes;” hallux with its base elevated decidedly above the base of the anterior toes. The above characters are sufficient to define this family, which is related to the Ibises (Jdédidw) and Spoonbills (Plataleide) as well as to the Herons. There are two well-marked subfamilies, with the following characters: Subfamily Ciconiine, Bill elongate-conica), acute, compressed, the end not decurved, though sometimes recurved. Nostrils rather lateral than superior. Toes very short, the middle one much less than half the tarsus (only a little more than one third); lateral toes nearly equal; claws short, broad, nail-like. Subfamily Tantaline, Bill elongated, subconical, subcylindrical, the end attenuated and decurved, with the tip rounded; nostrils decidedly superior; toes long, the middle toe one half or mote the longth of the tarsus; lateral toes unequal, the outer decidedly longer than the inner; claws normal, moderately lengthened, rather narrow. Svusramiiy TANTALIN.2®.—TuE Woop Isises, 4 Genus TANTALUS Linnzts. Tantalus Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 140; od. 12, i, 1766, 240. Type, 7. loewlator Lunn. ~. Tantalides Re1cHENB. Hand-b. 1851, p. xiv. Same type. (Not of WaGLER, 1892,—Plegadie Kaur.) ' Tantalops Couxus, Key, 2d ed. 1882, 653. Same type. Gen. Coan. Large, Stork-like birds, with long legs, neck, and beak, the latter attenu- ated and decurved terminally, much as in the true Ibises. Bill much thickened at the base, both vertically and laterally, much attenuated terminally, where almost abruptly, but no greatly, decurved. Nostrils bored directly into the bony substance of the bill, the maxilla destitute of any trace’of a nasal groove. Legs covered with small longitudinally hexagonal scales. Toes long, very slender, the middie one about, or a little more than, half the length of the tarsus, the outer one reaching to the middle of the subterminal phalanx of the middle toe, the inner much shorter, not reaching the subterminal articulation of the middle toe; CICONIUD4i—THE STORKS AND WOOD IBISES. 1Li4d* hallux about equal to the inner toe and claw: bare portion of the tibia longer than the mid- dle toe, the upper third, or more, without scales, and smooth; web between inner and mid- dle toes well developed, but smaller than the outer web. Plumage compact above, loose below, the feathers of the neck small, their webs somewhat decomposed. Remiges well developed, the tertials reaching to the end of the primaries, the latter hard, concave be- neath, the outer four with their inner webs deeply sinuated at or anterior to the middle portion; second, third, and fourth quills nearly equal, or longest. Tail short (shorter than. bill or tarsus), even, of 12 broad, stiff feathers. Adult, with the whole head and upper half of hind neck bare, covered with a hard, scurfy, and more or less corrugated skin. Young, with the whole head and neck, except the chin and forehead, feathered. , Tantalus loculator Linn. ‘WOOD IBIS. Popular synonyms. Wood Pelican; Gannet (Florida); Colorado Turkey (Arizona); Sowewies, Negroscopes (Brit. Guiana); Tagarote, Galambas, Garzon (Mexico). Tantalus loculator Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 140, No. 1 (ex KuErn, 127; CarEssy, i, 81); ed. 12, 1766, i, 241, No. 1.—Wius. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 39, pl. 66, fig. 1.~NutTzr. Man. ii, 1834, 82.— Aup. Orn. Biog. iti, 1835,128, pl. 216; Synop. 1839, 259; Birds Am. vi, 1848, 64, pl. 361 (adult).—Cass. in Baird’s B. N. Am. 1858, 682.—Barrp, Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 497. Couss, Key, 1872, 262; Check List, 1873, No. 444; 2d ed. 1882, No. 648; Birds N. W. 1874, 513.—Ripaw. Nom. N. Am. B, 1881, No. 500; Man. N. Am. B. 1887,125.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No, 188. Tantalus plumicollis Sprx, Av. Bras. pl. 85 (young). “Ibis nandasson; I. nandapoa, VIEILL.” ' (GRAY & BONAP.) Wood Pelican CarvusBy, Carolina, pl. 81. : Le Ouriaca de Cayenne Burr, Pi, Enl. 1770-84, pl. 868 (adult). Wood Ibis Penn. Arct. Zodl. ii, 1785, 458, No. 360. Tantalus ichthyophagus, the Gannet, BARTRAM, Travels, 1791, 293, Has. The whole of tropical and most of warm-temperate America; north to New York (casual), Ohio, Indiana, Wisconsin, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, and Oalifornia; south to Eeua- dor and Argentine Republic. Sp, Onan. Adult: Head and upper half of the neck naked, and covered with a hard, scurfy skin, of'a dusky color; the vertex covered by a somewhat shield-shaped horny plate, of a lighter color, the neck with transverse, somewhat ovate, bark-like, rugose scales. Plum- age in general uniform white, the primary-coverts, remiges, and rectrices black, with me- tallic purple, bronze, and green reflections. Under wing-coverts pale rose-pink in breed- ing season. “Bill dusky yellowish brown, the edges yellow; sides of the head dark bluish purple, upper part of the head horn-color, or dull grayish yellow, the rest of the bare skin of the same tint, many of the scales anteriorly blue; iris deep brown, ata distance seeming black: tibia and tarsus indigo- -blue; toes above black, on the lateral and hind toes, however, many of the scutella bluish gray, the webs pale yellowish flesh-color; claws black” (AuDU- son). Young; Head and neck covered with rather scant, somewhat “woolly,” feathers, ex- cepting the forehead, anterior part of the crown, lores, anterior portion of malar region, cbin, and anterior part of throat, which are covered with a smooth skin. Head and neck grayish brown, darkest on the occiput (where dark sooty), growing gradually paler below. Rest of the plumage as in the adult, but the black feathers of wings and tail less metallic.} Immature: Head bare and corrugated, as in the adult; neck feathered, as in the young. Total length, about 35.00-45,00 inches; extent of wings, 62.00-70.00; wing, 17.60-19.50; tail,6.10- 7.30; culmen, 7.55-9.80; depth of bill through nostril, 1.55-1.90; tarsus, 7.00-8.50; middle toe, 8,85-4,30; bare part of tibia, 5.00-6.25;? weight ‘1134 lbs. 1 According to Audubon, “the young are dusky gray all over, the quills and tail brownish black; the head all covered with down, excepting just at the base of the bill. After the first moult, the bare space extends over the head and cheeks; the downy feathers of the hind head and neck are dusky; the general color of the plumage is white, the quills and tail as in the adult, but with less gloss.” Ten adults measured, ‘ 115* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. 4 This remarkable bird is an irregular summer visitor to IlIli- nois, particularly the more southern counties, where it occurs, usually in small flocks, about the secluded, forest-hemmed ponds and sloughs. It probably breeds in the extreme southern portion, though oftenest seen’ during the latter part of summer, when small companies, composed chiefly of young birds, straggle northward. As described by Bartram, it may often be seen stand- ing listless and alone on the topmost limb of some tall dead cypress, its neck drawn in upon its shoulders, and its enormous bill resting, like a scythe, upon its breast. The writer has fre- quently seen it soaring majestically in broad circles over the Wabash River, at Mt. Carmel, its large size and pure white color rendering it at such times very conspicuous. Audubon describes its flight as heavy on rising frem the ground; its neck is then deeply curved downward, its wings flap heavily, and its legs are not stretched out behind until it has proceeded several yards. It then ascends with preat celerity, generally in a spiral diréction, in silence unless atarmed; if frightened, it utters a rough guttural croaking note. It pro- ceeds in a direct flight, with alternate flapping and sailing, the latter being more prolonged. It alights on trees with more ease than the heron, and either stands erect, or crouches on the branch in the manner of a wild turkey. When at rest it places its bill against its breast, while the neck seems to shrink be- tween the shoulders. In this position one may sometinies see fifty on the same tree. In the spring months it collects in large flocks before returning to its breeding-place. When a breeding- place has been once chosen, it: is resorted to for many years in succession, and the birds are with difficulty made to abandon it. The Wood Ibis feeds largely on fishes, but also devours frogs, young alligators, wood-rats, various kinds of young birds, crabs, snakes, turtles, and the like. It is very tenacious of life, and if wounded resists vigorously, and is dangerous to approach. It is very tough and oily, and unfit for food. THE HERONS AND BOATBILLS, 116” SusorpDER Heropn.—_HERONS AND BOATBILLS. The Herod contain two families, distinguished by the follow- characters: ’ a. Bill lance-shaped, or compressed, narrow, and pointed, its lateral outlines ‘nearly straight, the gonys several times longer than the width of the under mandi- DlO sscstceswmectestiesss Setsiveres chen ei sfatate Bi sia S eiaTale atatelaws ale Sa cna ORDER TER Se IO eis an Ardeidee, a.2 Bill shaped like a broad inverted boat; its lateral outlines much bowed, and the gonys not longer than width of under Mandible.........cscseceeerscereseserecers Cochleariida, The Cochleariide are not represented in our fauna, being peculiar to tropical America. 1 117* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS, . Faminy ARDEID2.—Tue HEnons. Cuan. Altricial waders having the bill compressed, pointed, all the outlines nearly straight; the lores and orbits naked: the rest of the head (except, sometimes, the malar region, or part of the throat) feathered, the occiput, also lower foreneck, back, or scapu- lars, frequently with ornamental plumes. Plumage generally handsome and variegated. Two to three pairs of powder-down tracts. Other characters variable. The Herons are among the most widely diffused of birds, one species, the common Night Heron (Mycticorax nycticoram) being nearly cosmopolitan. Many of the Old World forms have not been examined in the present connection, but there is good reason for believing that the number of ‘subfamilies here recog- nized-as represented in America can be consistently increased. Ardeine, Tail-feathers 12, more lengthened, and decidedly more stiff than the coverts; outer toe as long as or decidedly longer than the inner; claws comparatively sho:t and strongly curved. Botaurine, Tail-feathers 10, very short, scarcely more stiff than the coverts; outer toe de- cidedly shorter than the inner; claws lengthened, slightly curved. SUBFAMILY ARDEIN.24.—TuE True HERons AND EGRETS. ANALYSIS OF GENERA, a a.) Billcomparatively long and narrow, the culmen longer than the tarsus, and equal te at least five times the greatest depth of the bill; plumage of the young not conspicu- ously different in pattern from that of the adult.........ccccoesecsserseccesesces ATCA, a2 Bill comparatively short and thick, the culmen not longer than the tarsus, and equal to not more than four times the greatest depth of the bill; plumage of the young con- spicuously different in pattern from that of the adult ...sscorsevescceseces NYGtiCorax, ARDEIDA—THE HERONS. 118* Genus ARDEA Linyezvs. Ardea Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 141. Type, by elimination, A. cinerea LINN. ANALYSIS OF SUBGENERA a) Culmen decidedly shorter than tarsus, the latter more than ono and a half times as long as the middle toe, without claw. o! Tarsus much less than twice as long as middle toe, without claw. ec) Wing more than 13 inches. @ Wing more than 17 inches. Adults with scapular plumes narrowly lanceolate, with compact webs; head crested, the occiput, during pairing season, with two or more long, slender, compactly webbed plumes: plumes of lower neck stiffened, narrowly lanceolate, or acictlar.........ss.eee: Ardea. @ Wing less than 17 inches. Adults in nuptial plumage with the scapular plumes excessively elongated, reaching far beyond the tail, their shafts thick and stiffened, their webs decomposed; head without crest or plumes, and feathers of lower neck (in American species) soft, broad, and not lengthene; color, always wholly pure white..............+...Merodias. ce? Wing less than 11 inches. @' Adults with occipital, jugular, and scapular plumes greatly developed, with much decomposed webs (occipital and jugular plumes with compact webs in exotic species); the scapular plumes extending to or beyond end of tail and recurved at tips; color of plumage always wholly pure white, Garzetta. @ Aduits with jugular and scapular plumes much elongated; the former nar- rowly lanceolate, with compact webs, the Jatter also narrow, but more # loosely webbed, and often extending far beyond the tail;.color of plumage - varying from uniform dark slate-blue, with maroon-colored head and neck (in most adults), to pure white with only the tips of some primaries bluish (in young); adults sometimes mixed white and bluish....... Florida. 6? Tarsus twice as long as middle toe, without claw. Adults with feathers of entire head and neck, except throat and upper foreneck, elongated and narrowly lanceolate, especially on occiput and lower foreneck; scapular plumes much elongated, extending beyond end of tail, with shafts straight and stiffened, and webs decomposed, but the hair-like fibrillz rather alose together; color of plum- , age uniform bluish and reddish, uniform white, or pied.......... Dichromanassa. a? Culmen equal to or lenger than tarsus, the latter less than one-and a half times as long as middle toe without claw. | Wing more th-n 8 inches; culmen and tarsus more thanSinches. Adults with an occipital tuft of several moderately lengthened, lanceolate, compactly webbed feathers; jugular plumes broadly lanceolate, with compact webs; scapular plumes greatly elongated, extending to beyond end of tail, straight, hair-like; color of plumage mixed grayish or,bluish and white, never entirely white. Hydranassa. t Wing not more than 8 inches; culmen and tarsus less than3inches. Adults with seapular plumes and feathers on top of head moderately lengthened, lanceolate, with compact webs; jugular plumes broad, soft, and blended; color of plumage more or less metallic, in adults, on upper patts, grayish or rusty beneath; never WL baiweans goes heii os siseis cis cinsiasiersae simerinceaew sansels sammetine seememdenemesee ss UbOFUOS, = 119* , BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Seyeral of the above are unquestionably good genera; but having announced my determination: to follow the A. O. U. classification and nomenclature in this work I am obliged to do so in-this case. With the exception of Dichromanassa and Hydranassa (which are related most nearly to Demiegretta, of south- eastern Asia, Polynesia, etc.) and /lorida, all the groups are cosmopolitan, being represented in different regions by distinct species, all agreeing minutely in structural characters. Butorides, for example, has, besides the North American species, one in Cuba, another in South America, a third in the Galapagos Archi- pelago, and several others in various parts of the eastern hem- isphere. Suscenvs Ardea Linnzvs. ’ Ardea Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 141. Type, by elimjnation, A. cinerea Linn. SvusBcEN. CHar. Herons of largest size (of Stork-like stature), the adults distinguished by lengthened, narrowly-lanceolate, acute jugular and scapular plumes (the former rather rigid, the latter overhanging the wings and rump); a tuft of broad feathers on each side the breast (having a different color from adjacent parts), and, in the breeding season, by the presence of two or three extremely lengthened, narrow, pendant, ¢ccipital plumes. Culmen almost straight; gonys ascending, slightly convex, about equal in length to , the mandibular rami; upper and lower outlines of the bill parallel for the basal half. Mental apex anterior to half-way between point of bill and anterior angle of the eye; frontal apex a little posterior to the nostrils and a little anterior to the malar apex.* Middle toe more than half the tarsus, and about equal to bare portion of tibia; outer toe reaching to abous the middle of the, penultimate phalanx of the middle toe; inner toe decidedly shorter, __ reaching only to the second articulation of the middle toe: hallux a little longer than the basal phalanx of the outer toe; claws rather short, strongly curved. Front of tarsus with broad, transverse scutella, in single series, for upper half. Pileum crested, the feathers of the crown and occiput being elongated, lanceolate, and decurved. Primaries reaching de- cidedly beyond tertiale. Second, third, and fourth quills nearly equal, and longest; first longer than fifth; inner webs of outer three slightly sinuated near ends. _ Synopsis of Species. a, Color of plumage entirely pure white. Hab. Southern Florida..........A, oceidentalis. a, Odlor of plumage chiefly bluish or grayish. 01. Adult with head entirely white, except (usually) black or dusky streaks on fore- head, or (rarely), a blackish patch on sides of crown or pcciput, beneath edge of erest; more white on under parts, edge of wing, ete. Hab. Southern Florida: accidental in southern Illinois ........sscesccnccecncesccssenes +»... A. wuerdemannii. b?, Adult with top of head, including occipital plumes, black, with a large white patch covering forehead and center of crown; more black on lower parts and more rufous on edge of wing. cl, Larger, with legs and feet yellowish brown or olive-yeliowish ; total length, about 48 to 54 inches; wing, 19.50-21.00; exposed culmen, 5.90-6.90; tarsus, 7.85-8.40. Hab. FIOridae .cecenescsvecrenccsceccesccccacssecgeesssescecerccecessccssesde Wardi, * The terms “mental apex”, “malar apex”, and "frontal apex” are here employed to de- note the apices, or points of the feathering of the head at the base of the bill. ARDEWE—THE HERONS. 120* c%. Smaller, with legs and feet black or dusky, only the tibie yellowish; total length about 40 to 48 inches; wing, 18.00-19.50; exposed culmen, 5. 455.95; tarsus, 6.75- 7.85. Hab. Whole of temperate North America and parts of tropical Amer- 8) AG Bs ciiesic Sia cleeegiae sisinscis sivinie cshssdealeinlnilisivinib Siiniopagatasa'a a:eiaaoe alacejeinis/ne Bietaajarsielayad “A. herodias, The relationship between these four species or races is very puzzling, and no one, apparently, fully understands the case- While each of the four forms is easily recognized by the char- acter given above, and while a large majority of specimens are typically either one or the other of them, intermediate examples not unfrequently occur. The only apparent difference between A. herodias and A. wardi consists in general dimensions and in the color of the legs; but in both respects there seems to be a complete intergradation among Florida specimens. On the other hand, A. wardi, A. wuerdemannii, and A. occidentalis agree minutely in measurements and in the color of the legs; and the first two unquestionably intergrade. The writer has already expressed the hypothesis that A. wuerdemannii and A. occidentalis . are merely dichromatic phases of one species, corresponding to the colored and white phases of the Reddish Egret (A. rufescens and A. “peale’’). This hypothesis he would now modify by sug- gesting that A. wardi is the perfect colored phase of .A. occi- dentalis, and that A. wuerdemannii is merely an intermediate phase,—a suggestion prompted by the circumstance that A. wuerdemannié varies more in coloration than either of the others, the variations moreover tending toward both A. ward and A. occidentalis. Whether the intergradation between A. ward: and A. herodias is the result of hybridization or an evidence of their specific identity remains to be determined, if it be possible to. determine it: The whole question is indeed so complicated that much patient research will be necessary before we can hope to know more about it. Ardea wuerdemannii PDaird. WUERDEMANN’S HERON. Ardea wirdemannti Barry, B. N. Am. 1858, 669, ed. 1860, atl. pl. 86; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 488.—Couzs, Key, 1872, 267; Check List, 1878, No. 450.—NExs. Bull. Essex Inst. Dec, 1876, 151. Ardea wuerdemannii A.O.U. Check List, 1886, 351 (“Hypothetical List,” No. 9).—Ripew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 128, 583; Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus. x, 1887, 112-115 (critical).—Soorr, Auk. Jan. 1889, 16-17 (deseription, etc.). 121* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Ardea occidentalis (supposed colored phase) Ripew. Bull. U. 8. Geol. & Geog. Surv. Terr. iv, No.1, Feb. 5, 1881, 227-287 (descriptive and critical); Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 486 (part)—Couns, 2d Check List, 1882, No. 656; 2d Key, 1884, 658,—B, B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 6. Has. Seuthern Florida; Cuba; Jamaica; accidental in southern Illinois, Sp. CHAR, Adult: Entire head, including occipital crest, pure white; the forehead streaked with black (the feathers edged with black, the median stripe being white). Abdo- men and under tail-coverts pure white,‘the former sparsely streaked with black (these streaks on the inner edge of the feathers, and broader anteriorly), the latter immaculate. Neck deep viclacequs-drab (darker and more violaceous than in A. herodias,and ending almost abruptly against the white of the head); the throat witha narrow series of black and rufous dashes on a white ground; plumes of the lower neck white, most of them edged with black, but the longer without grayish tinge. Lateral jugular tufts blue-black, with wide median stripes of pure white, Upper parts exactly as in A. herodias, except that the outermost wing-coverts have conspicuous median streaks of white, while the edge of the wing from the carpus back is white, tinged with rufous, instead of wholly rufous. Tibial feathers paler rufous than in 4. herodias, growing almost white next the body on the in- ner side. Naked tibize yellow; under side of toes yellow; rest of legs and feet yellowish olive. Young: Similar to young of 4. herodias, but lesser wing-coverts widely tipped with bright ferruginous, producing thereby a conspicuous spotting of this color; all the more exterior wing-coverts, large and small, with a large, terminal, wedge-shaped spot of white. Forehead and crown dusky slate-color, most of the feathers with whitish shafts; occipital plumes all whitish at the base, only the ends being dusky. Total length, about 48 to 54 inches; wing, 18.75-21.00; tail, 6.25-8.00; exposed culmen, 5,75-6.70; tarsus, 7.30-8.75; middle toe, 4,20-5.20, The habits of this bird are essentially the same as those of the Great Blue Heron. Its right to a place in the Illinois fauna may seem questionable, in view of the southern location and restricted area of its proper range, but a single specimen was seen on several occasions by the writer from September 11 to 22, inclusive, in the Wabash River, at the Grand Rapids, near Mt. Carmel. Even at a distance which rendered it secure from gunshot, it could:at once be distinguished, by its white head and greater size, from individuals of the common species, from which it kept aloof. Unfortunately it could not be eacdned: Ardea herodias Linn. THE GREAT BLUE HERON, Ardea herodias Linn, 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 143; ed. 12, i, 1766, 237.—Wrus. Am. Orn. vili, 1814, 98, pl. 65, fig. 5.—Bw. & Rion, F. B.-A. ii, 1881, 873—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 42—Avup. Orn. Biog. it, 1835, 87; v, 1839, 599, pl. 211; Synop. 1839, 265; B. Am. vi, 1848, 12, pl. 869.—Barrp B. N. Am. 1858, 668; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 487.—-Cours, Key, 1872, 267; 2d ed. 1881; Check List, 1873, No. 449; 2d ed. 1882, No. 655; Birds N. W. 1874, 517.— Ripew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 487; Man. N. Am. B., 1887, 129.—B. B. & R. Water B.N. Am, i, 1884, 18.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 194, Ardea hudsonias Linn. 8, N. ed. 12, i, 1766, 238, Ardea lessoni WAGL. Isis, 1831, 631—REroHEN. J. f, O,, 1877, 265, ARDEIDA—THE HERONS. 122* Has. The whole of North and Middle Amorica, excepting Arctic districts; north to Hudson's Bay, “Fur Countries,” and Sitka; south to Colombia, Venezuela, and the Galapagos; Bermudas, and throughout the West Indies. Sp.CHar. Adult: Length, about 42.00-50,.00; extent, 72.00; weight, 5 to 8 pounds. Forehead and central feathers of the crown pure white; sides of crown and whole of the occiput, including the long plumes, blue-black. Chin, throat, and malar region pure white. Neck lavender-gray, fading gradually above into the white of cheeks and throat. Foreneck with a narrow median series of black and ferruginous dashes mixed with white; lower neck-plumes pale lavender-gray. Lateral jugular tufts uniform blue-black; breast’ and abdomen black, almost uniform laterally, but the middle feathers with broad median stripes of white. Under tail-coverts white, sometimes edged with rufous. Tibial teath- ers deep chestnut-rafous, not growing conspicuously paler toward the body. Upper parts fine slate-blue, the dorsal and scapular plumes paler, more pearl-gray—the lightness of the tint proportionate to the length of the plume; remiges black, the inner secondaries growing gradually more slaty, so that the innermost are scarcely darker than the tertials. Tail deep slate-blue, a shade darker than the tertials. Entire border of the wing, from the armpit to the metacarpo-phalangeal joint, rich purplish rufous, scarcely mixed anywhere with white, and much the widest at the bend. Bill olive above, the culmen blackish; lower mandible wax-yellow, brighter terminally (sometimes wholly yellow); iris bright yellow: bare loral space cobalt-blue in spring, olive-greenish or yellowish after breeding season. Lege and feet dusky-black, the tibia paler, more olivaceous, sometimes tinged with yellow- ish. Young: Above slate-gray (less bluish thax in the adult), destitute of any penicillate plumes; anterior lesser wing-coverts bordered terminally with light rufous; border of the wing (broadly) white, more or less tinged with rufous, especially at and near the bend, where this color prevails. Entire pileoum, including all the occipitat feathers, blackish- sla:e, with a narrow median crest of more elongated darker-colored feathers, with pale ful- ’ vous shaft-streaks. Cheeks dark grayish; malar region, chin, and throat only, pure white. Neck dull gray, sometimes tinged with rufous, some of the feathers with indistinctly lighter shaft-streaks; foreneck with a narrow longitudinal series of black, rufous, and whitish dashes, much as in the adult. Breast and abdomen broadly striped with dark cinereous and white, in nearly equal amount (sometimes suffused with rufous’. Tibiz very pale rufous, sometimes almost white; crissum white. Upper mandible black, paler, or horn-color, along the tomium; lower, pale pea-green, deepening into clear horn-yellow on terminal half; eyelids and horizontal space on lores light apple-green; iris gamboge yellow; tibiz and soles of toes, apple-green; rest of legs and feet black. Wing, 17.90-19.85; tail, 7.30-8.00; culmen, 4.30-6.00; depth of bill, through middle of nos- tril, 0.85-1.10; naked portion of tibia, 3.50-5.00; tarsus, 6.00-8.00; middle toe, 3,504.50. (Extremes of 17. adult specimens.] The Great Blue Heron is a common bird throughout the State, except in localities far removed from streams or ponds which furnish its food supply. It sometimes winters in the ex- treme southern counties, but it is usually a migrant, returning from the south in February, March, or early April, according to the latitude. Solitary and wary, this bird may be seen standing in shallow water, often in mid-stream, but it requires great caution and skill on the part of the person who, with gun in hand, can ap- proach within killing distance of an adult bird, the young being 123* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. more easily stalked. More often the heron first sees the in- truder, and startles him by its harsh squawking cries as it flies from its feeding place. Breeding colonies of this species were formerly common in many parts of the state, but they are becoming scarce in con- sequence of wanton persecution by squirrel hunters and others. They usually select the largest trees and build their bulky nests of sticks on the highest branches, a dozen or more nests some- times being built in one tree. The food of this bird consists of fishes, frogs, crawfish, etc., large quantities of which must be sacrificed to appease its voracious appetite, as many as ten “good-sized” fishes, having been disgorged at one time by a heron that was in haste to get away. SuspcEenvs Herodias Bor. Herodias Bots, Isis, 1822, 559. Type, by elimination, Ardea egretia LINN. Suscen. Coan. White Herons of large size, and without plumes, except in the breed- ing season, when ornamented simply (in most species) by a long train of straight feathers, with thick shafts, and long, sparse, decomposed, slender barbs, which growfrom the dorsal region and overhang the tail. Bill moderately slender, the upper and lower outlines al- most parallel to near the end, where gently curved, the culmen more abruptly so than the gonys, though the curve is quite gradual. Mental apex reaching a point about midway be- tween the tip of the billand the eye; malar apex decidedly anterior to the frontal apex, and extending to beneath the posterior end of the nostrils. Toes very long, the middle one about two thirds the tarsus, the hallux much less than one half the former. Tibia bare for about one half their length, or for about the length of the middle toe. Anterior scutelle of tarsus large, distinct, and nearly quadrate. Nuptial plumes confined to the anterior part of the back, whence spring numerous long, straight, and thick shafts, reaching, when fully developed, to considerably beyond the end of the tail, each stem having along each side very long, slender, and distant fibrilla. Taileven, of twelve broad feathers. Lower hind neck well feathered. Plumage entirely pure white at all stages and seasons, This subgenus, like Ardea, Garzetta, etc., is nearly cosmopoli- tan, being wanting only in the islands. of the South Pacific and in the colder latitudes of other regions. It contains but a single American species, which has a more extensive range than any other of the American herons, excepting only the Night Heron, its regular habitat extending from the United States to Patagonia. ARDEIDE—THE HERONS, 124* Ardea egretta Gmel. THE AMERICAN EGRET. Popular synomyms, Great White Egret; White “Crane;” Garza blanca grande (Mexico). La Grande Aigrette d'A merique Burr. Pl. Enl. 1770-86, pl. 925. Great White Heron Laru. Synop. iii, 1785, 91. Great Egret Lavu. t. c. 89 (based on Pl. Enl. 925). Ardea egretta Gut. 8. N. i, 1788, 629, No, 34 (based on Pl, Enl. 925, and Lath. t. ¢.).—W1ns Am. Orn. vii, 1813, 106, pl. 61, fig. 4.—NuTT. Man. ii, 1834, 47.-AuD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 600, pl. 886; Synop. 1839, 265; B. Am. vi, 1843, 182, pl. 370.—Couzs, Key, 1872, 267;, Cheek List, 1873, No. 452; Birds N. W. 1874,519.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 196.— Ripew. Man. N. Am, B. 1887, 180. Herodias egretta GRay, Gen. B. iii, 1849.—Barep, B. N. Am. 1858, 666; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 486.—Ripeaw. Orn. 40th par. 1877, -—-.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am, i, 1881, 23.— Cougs. Check List, ed. 2, 1882, No. 658. Herodias alba, var. egretta, Ripew. Ann. Lyc. N. Y. Jan. 1874, 386. Berodias alba egretta Ripew. Bull. Essex Inst, Oct. 1874, 171; Nom, N. Am. B. 1881, No. 489. Herodias eoretta, var. californica Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 667; Cat. N. Am: B. 1859, No. 486 a. Arden leuce “InticsR,” Licut. Verz, Doubl. 1823, No. 793. Ardea alba, subspec. galatea, ReicHENnow, J. f. O. 1877, 272. Has. The whole of temperate and tropical America, from Nova Scotia, Ontario, Minnesota, and Oregon, to Patagonia; throughout the West Indies. Sp. Cuan. Length, about 87.00-39.00; extent, about 55.00-57.00; wing, 14.10-16.80; tail, 5.60-7.380; culmen, 4,20-4.90; depth of bill, .70-.80; tarsus, 5.50-6.80; middle toe, 3.50-4.30; naked portion of tibia, 3.50-4.50; weight, about 2% lbs. Color entirely pure white at all seasons and at allages. Bill and lores rich chrome-yellow (the latter sometimes tinged with light green), the culmen usually black near the tip, sometimes nearly the entire maxilla black; iris naples-yellow; legs and feet entirely deep black. Having specimens before us'from all parts of its range, we are unable to detect in this speties any variations of a geograph- ical nature. The chief difference between individuals consists in the amount of black on the maxilla, this being sometimes al- most nil, while again the maxilla may be entirely black. That this variation has no relation to season is shown by the fact that in a considerable series shot from one “‘rookery”’ in Florida, and all bearing the nuptial train, the extremes are presented by different individuals, others being variously intermediate. The Great White Egret is either a summer resident or visitant in almost every portion of the State. While no doubt breeding in many localities it: usually occurs as a visitor late in summer, in August and September, when it may be seen, either singly or in small groups, sometimes in large numbers, wading. about in shoal places in the rivers or ponds. Professor Forbes informs me that it is abundant all summer on the Illinois River as far north as Peoria; but he does not state whether it is known tg ‘breed there. —D, 125* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Suscenus Garzetta Kaur. Garzetta Kaup, Nat. Syst. Eur. Thierw. 1829, 76.—Bonap. Consp. ii, 1855, 118. Type, Ardea garzetta LINN. SUBGEN. CHar, Small white Herons, crested at all ages and seasons, and inthe nuptial season adorned with jugular and dorsal plumes. Bill slender, very little compressed, the culmen decidedly curved for the terminal half, somewhat depressed for the basal half, the gonys nearly straight, but ascending; the lower edge of the mandibular rami straight or appreciably concave. Mental apex falling far short of reaching half-way from the middle of the eye to the point of the bill; malar apex reaching just as far as the frontal apex, and falling far short of the posterior end of the nostrils. Toes short, the middle one but little more than one half the tarsus, the hallux about one half its length; bare portion of , tibia nearly three fourths as long as the tarsus. Targal scutella as in Herodias. Nuptial plumes adorning the occiput, jugulum, and back; these, in the American species, all of similar structure, having decomposed webs; butin the Old World species, those of the occiput and jugulum narrow and with compact webs. Dorsal plumes (in all. species) reaching but little beyond the tail, and strongly recurved at ends, ’ Ardea candidissima Gmel. THE SNOWY HERON. Popular synonyms. Little Egret; White-crested Egret; White Poke; Black-legged Gaulin , Wamaica); Garza blanca chica (Mexico), Ardea nivea Jaca. Beitr. 1784, 18, No. 13 (not. of 8. G. Gmel. 1770-1774),—Lara. Ind. Orn. ii, 1790, 696 (part). Little White Heron Lats, Synop. iii, 1785, 93. Little Egret Lata. Synop. iii, 1785, 90 (part; includes also G. nivea). Ardea candidissima GMRL. 8..N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 683, No. 45.—Wins. Am. Orn. vii; 1818, 120, p! 62, fig. 4.—Nurt. Man. ij, 1834, 49.—Aup. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 817; v, 1889, 606, pl. 242; Synop. 1839, 267; Birds Am. vi, 1843, 163, pl. 374.—Couns, Key, 1872, 267; 2d ed. 1884; Check List, 1873, 89, No. 453; Birds N. W. 1874, 521.—REICHENOW, J. f. O. 1877, 273.— A. O, U. Check List, 1886, No. 197.—Ripcw. Man. N. Am. B, 1887, 180. Garzetia candidissima Bonap. Consp. ii, 1855, 119.—Barep, Birds N. Am. 1858, 665; Cat. ‘N. Am. B. 1859, No. 485.—Rrpev. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 490.—Covgs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 659.—B. B.& R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 28, Ardea oula Gunz, 8. N. i, pt. it, 1788, 633 (Chili). Ardea thula Latx. Ind. Orn. if, 1791. 688. Ardea carolinensis ORD, ed. Wils. vii, 1825, 125. Ardea lactea “Cov.” Less. Traité, i, 1831, 575 (Cayenne), Haz. The whole of temperate and tropical America, from the northern United States to, Chili and Argentine Republic; summer or autumnal visitant only at the northern and southern oxtremes of its range. West Indies. Sp. Cuan. Plumage entirely pure white, at all ages and seasons. Bill black, the basal portion of the under mandible (sometimes one half) yellow or otherwise pale-colored; lores, iris, and eyelids yellow or orange-yellow; tibia and tarsi. black, the lower portion of the latter, with the toes, yellow; claws blackish, Nuptial plumes slender-shafted and loose-fibred, those of the back reaching to or slightly beyond the end of the tail, and, normally, recurved terminally; those of the occiput sometimes exceeding the bill in length; those of the jugulum slightly less developed. In the young theso are all absent, except on the occiput, where they are but slightly de- veloped; in the adults the occipital] plumes appear to be permanent, the others assumed only during the breeding season, ARDEIDE—THE HERONS. 126* , Total length, about 20.00-27.25; expanse of wings, about 36.00-40. 00; wing, 8,20-10,50; tail, 3.00-4.80; culmen, 2.08-3.65; depth of bill, .40-.55; tarsus, 3.15~4.50; middle toe, 2.20-8.20; bare portion of tibia, 1.70-2.75; weight, about 10-14 ounces. This beautiful egret occurs during’ summer in various parts of the State, but probably not abundantly ‘except in the more | southern portions. Suscenus Dichromanassa Ripeway. Dichromanassa Ripew. Bull. U. 8. Geol. & Geog, Survey, Terr. iv, No. 1, Feb. 5, 1878, 246. Type, Ardea rufa Bodd., =A. rufescens GMEL. SusBGEN. CHar. Medium-sized Herons, of uniform white or plumbeous plumage, with (adult) or without (young) cinnamon-colored head and neck; the form slender, the toes very short, and the legs very long; the adults with the entire head and neck (except throat and foreneck) covered with long, narrowly lanceolate, compactly webbed feathers, which on the occiput form an ample crest, the feathers of which are very narrowly lanceolate and decurved. Bill much longer than the middle toe (about two thirds the tarsus), the upper and lower outlines almost precisely similar in contour, being nearly parallel along the middle portion, where slightly approximated; the termina! portion of both culmen and gonys gently and about equally curved. Mental apex extending to alittle more than one third the distance from the middle of the eye to the tip of the bill, or to about even with the anterior end of the nostril; malar apex about even with that of the frontal feathers. Toes very short, the middle one less than half the tarsus, the hallux less than half the middle toe; bare portion of tibia more than half as long as tarsus; scutellation of tarsus, ete., as in Herodias, Gar- zetta, and allied subgenera. ; Plumes of the adult consisting of a more or less lengthened train of fastigiate, stiff. shafted feathers, with long, loose, and straight plumules, and extending beyond the tail; in addition to this train, the scapulars and the feathers of the whole head and neck, except the throat and forenesk, are long and narrow, distinctly lanceolate, and acuminate, with com- pact webs, and on the occiput are developed into an ample decurved crest. There is only one species belonging to this subgenus, the di- chromatic Ardea rufescens GMEL., the white phase of which was formerly considered a distinct species, under the name of Peale’s Egret (Ardea peales BONAP.). Ardea rufescens Gmel. REDDISH EGRET, « Popular synonyms. Russet Egret; Peale’s Egret. a. Colored Phase, L Aigrette rousse, de la Louisiane Burr. P]. Eni, 1777-1784, pl. 902 (adult). Ardea rufa Bopp. (nee Scop. 1769) Tabl. P. E. 1788, 54 (based on Pl. Enl. 902).—Covegs, Key, 1872, 268; Check List, 1873, No. 455.—-REICHENOW, J. f. O. 1877, 269.—A. O. U. Gheck List, 1886, No. 198.—Ripaw. Man. N. Am, B. 1887, 131. Demiegretta rufa BarIrD, Birds N. Am. 1858,662; Cat, N. Am. B. 1859, No. 483. 127" BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. 4 Dichromanassa rufa Ripew. Bull. U. 8. Geol. & Geog. Surv. Terr. iv, No. 1; 1878, 236 (in text); Nom. N. Am, B, 1881, No. 491.—Covxs,Check List, 2d ed, 1882, No. 661.—B, B. & RB. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 38. Reddish Egret Laru. Synop. iii, 1785, 88 (quotes Pl. En. 902). Areda rufescens Gut. 8. N. i, pt. 11,1788, 628, No. 33 (based on Pl. Enl, 902).—Aup. Orn, Biog. iii, 1835, 411; v, 1889, 604, pl. 256; Birds Am. vi, 1843, 139, pl. 371 (adult: both phases).— Rrpew. Man. N. Am. B, 1887,131. Ardea cubensis “GuNDL. MSS.” Lems. Aves de Cuba, 1850, 84, pl. 18, fig. 1 (young). b. White phase, Ardea vealei Bonar. Ann. Lye. N. Y. ii, 1826, 154.-Nurv. Man. ii, 1834, 49.—Ripew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 131. . Demiegretia pealei Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 661; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 182. Ardea rufa, var. pealei, REICHENOW, J. f, O. 1877, 270. Ardea (Dichromanassa) pealet A. O. U, Check List, 1886, 352 (hypothet. list, No. 10). Has. Warm-temperate and tropical North America, south to antennal in the United States, apparently restricted to the Eastern Province, but in Mexico occurring on both coasts; north to southern Illinois; Jamaica; Cuba. Colored phase. Adult. Plumage in general uniform slate-gray, darker on the back, a little lighter be- neath; entire head and neck rich vinaceous-cinnamon, ending abruptly below: the penicil- late tips of some of the longer.feathers, particularly on the occiput, lighter; train similar to the back anteriorly, but passing into a more brownish tint towards the end, the tips some- times whitish. Terminal half of the. bill black; basal half, including the lores and eyelids, pale flesh-color or pale grayish (according to season); iris yellow or white; legs and feet black, or (in breeding season) ultramarine blue, the scutell~@ and claws black. (AUDUBON.) Young. No train on the back,and no lanceolate feathers on head or neck, except some- times (in older individuals) on the occiput or lower neck. Prevailing color dull bluish ashy, tinged here and there with reddish cinnamon, principally on the throat and lower neck, White phase. Adult. Plumage entirely pure white, the plumes exactly as in the adult of the colored phase. Iris white; color of bill, lores, and eyelids in life also similar; but legs and feet sometimes “dark olive-green, the soles greenish yellow.” (AUDUBON.) Young. Entirely pure white, and destitute of the plumes and train of the adult. Total length, a' ou’ 27,00-32.00; expanse, about 45.00-50,00; weight, about 14 pounds, (AUDUBON. Wing, 11.90+18,60; tail, 4.10-5.00; culmen, 3.80-4.00; depth of bill, .55-.70: tarsus, 4.90-5.75; middle toe, 2.50-2:85; bare portion of tibia, 2.60-3.75. _ The inclusion of this southern species of heron in the Illinois fauna rests on the statement of Mr. BE. W. Nelson, in his paper on the birds of southern Illinois,* that he found it “quite com- mon in the vicinity of Cairo during the last ‘week in August, 1875,” the unusually high water of that season having caused a much larger number of herons than usual to make their ap. pearance. He observed that “although Ardea egretta and A. - cerulea—both of which were seen by the hundred daily—were quite unsuspicious, A. rufa was so exceedingly shy that it was ‘almost impossible to get within gunshot of one.” *Builletin Nuttall Ornithological Club, I, 1876, p. 40. ARDEIDE—-THE HERONS. 128* According to Dr. Brewer, the flight of this species is said to be more elevated and regular than that of the smaller herons. It is peculiarly graceful during the mating season, especially when one unmated male is pursuing another. It is said to pass through the air with great celerity, turning and cutting, about in curious curves and zigzags, the pursuing bird frequently erecting its beautiful crest and uttering a ery at the moment it is about to give a thrust at the other. When travelling to and from their feeding-grounds, it propels itself with the usual regular flapping, and in the customary manner of flight of other herons. On approaching a landing-place, it performs several circumvolutions, as if to satisfy itself that all is safe before alighting. It is much more shy and wary than the smaller herons; and after the breeding season is.over it is almost im- possible to shoot one, except when it is taken by surprise, or when flying overhead among the mangroves. — ¢ SuBGENUs Florida Bairp. Florida Barry, B. N. Am, 1858, 671. Type, Ardea cerulea LINN, Gen. CHar. Small Herons, dark plumbeous, with maroon-colored necks; pure white, with bluish tips to some of the primaries; or with the plumage variously intermediate be- tween these extremes. Bill slender, appreciably curved toward the tip, the culmen some- what depressed just above the anterior end of the nostril; lower edge of the mandibular rami slightly concave, the gonys nearly straight, but ascending; anterior point of tho malar feathers reaching just about as far forward as that of the frontal feathers, and very far posterior to the posterior end of the nostril; anterior point of chin feathers almost di rectly beneath the anterior end of the nostril, and a little over two thirds the distance from the middle of the eye to the point of tho bill. Toes long, the middle one two thirds, or more, as long as the tarsus, the hallux a little less than half its length; bare portion of tibia considerably less than middle toe. Tarsal scutelle as in Garzetia and Herodias. Nuptial plumes (occipital, jugular, and scapular) long, slenderly lanceolate, the webs rather compact, especially those of the dorsal region, the longer scapulars, however, loose- webbed, those of the back reaching, when fully developed, far beyond the tail. This subgenus also is peculiar to America, and contains a single species, the Little Blue Heron (Ardea cewrulea Linn.), the adults of which are usually dark slaty blue with maroon-chest- nut head and neck and the young pure white with bluish tips to some of the longer primary quills. 129* BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Ardea ceerulea Linn. LITTLE BLUE HERON, Popular synomyms. Blue Egret; Little White Heron (young); Booby (parts of Florida); Garza azul (Mexico). Ardéa cerulea CaTEsBy, Carolina, i, 1731, pl. 76 (blue adult). 8 Héron bleudire de Cayenne Burr. Pl. Enl, 1770-84, pl. 849 (blue adult). Ardea cerulea LINN. 8S. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 143, No. 13 (ex Brown, Jam. 478; Catesby, J. c.), 1, 1766, 238, No. 17.—Wius. Am. Orn.:vii, 1818, 117, pl. 62.—Nutr. Man. ii, 1834, 58.—Aup. Orn. Biog. iv, 1888, 58, pl. 307; Synop. 1839, 266; B. Am. vi, 1848, 148, pl. 872.—Covgs, Key, 1872, 268; Check List, 1873, No. 456.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 200.—Ripaw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 130, Florida cerulea Barrp, Birds N. Am. 1858, 671; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 490.—Ripew,. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 493.—Couss, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 662.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 43. : Blue Heron, var. A. Latx. Synop. iii, 1785, 79 (blue adult. Quotes Pl. Enl. 349). Ardea cerulescens Lat. Ind. Orn. ii, 1790, 690, No. 49 (based on the above). Le Orabier bleu & cou brun BUFF. Ois. vii, 399 (blue adult). Blue Heron Latu. Synop. tii, 1785, 78 (quotes Ardea caerulea, LINN.) ? Little White Heron, yar. B. Lars. Synop. iii, 1785, 94 (Mexico. Probably young white bird). Ardea ardesiacea Luss. Traité, i, 1831,575 (Cayenne. Individual in pied amie: Herodias poucheti BonaP. Consp. ii, 1855, 123 (blue adult). “Eoretta nivea” Gossz, Birds Jam. 1847, 834; Illustr. B. Jam. pl. 90 (young white bird). Ardea cerulea, var. alba, REICHENOW, J. f. O. July, 1877, 264 (white phase). , Ardea cerulea; var. cyanopus, REICHENOW, | le. (intefmediate, or pied, phase. Ex Ar dea cyanopus Guu, 8. N. i. pt. ii, 1788, 644), Ardea mexicana cinerea Briss. Orn. v, 1760, 404 (intermediate phase). Ardea americana cinerea BRISS. t. c. 406. Ardea cancrophagus brasiliensis Briss. t. ¢. 479. Ardea chalybea STepuens, Shaw's Gen. Zodl. xi, il, 1819, 582. Ardea cristata MULL, 8. N. Suppl. 1766, 111 (based on PL. Enl, 349), Has. Warm-temperate eastern North America, the whole of the West Indies and Mid- dle America, and northern South America; north to Massachusetts (accidentally to. Maine), Illinois, Kansas, etc.; south to Colombia and Guiana, Colored phase, Adult: Head and neck rich purplish maroon, with a glaucous cast, the feathers more chestnut beneath the surface; rest of the plumage uniform dark bluish plumbeous, the plumes with a glaucous cast, the maroon and plumbeous gradually blended. In breeding season, bill ultramarine-blue at the base, the end black; lores, eyelids, and base of bill, ultramarine-blue; iris pale yellow); tibe, tarsi,and toes black (AUDUBON). In autumn, bill light plumbeous on the basal half, the terminal half black; lores and eyelids very pale dull greenish; iris sulphur-yellow; legs and feet uniform pea-green, darker at the joints?, Young: Similar in color to the adult, but with less developed plumes, or with none at all; the head and neck more plumbeous. 1 According to Mr. W. E. D. Scott (Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, vi, 1880, p. 20), the color of the iris in specimens collected March 20, when they had just begun to breed, at Clearwater, Florida, was “deep lead-color” in eleven and “brown or hazel” in another. 2 From a fresh specimen killed August 6, near Washington, D. O, ARDEIDE—THE HERONS, 1380* White phase, Adult: Prevailing color white, with the ends of several outer primaries plumbeous, the plumage tinged here and there (in quantity varying with the individual) with delicate pale bluish pearl-gray. Colors of the soft parts as in the blue adult. Young: Similar to the adult, but with the plumes absent or but slightly developed. Bill pale lilaceous, becoming gradually black on terminal third, the lores, orbits, and base of under mandible pale apple- green; legs and feet uniform pea-green, lighter and brighter than in the blue phase; iris Naples yellow}, Pied, or intermediate, phase. The plumage mixed white and plumbeous, in proportion varying with the individual, forming a series connecting unbrokenly the two extremes described above, Total length, about 20 0-25.00 inches; expanse, 40.00-42.00; wing, 9.00-10.60; tail, 8.60~4.70; culmen, 2.70-3.30; depth of bill, .45-.55; targus, 3.15-4.00; middle toe, 2.35-4.60; bare portion of tibia, 2.00-2.90. Weight, about 11-16 ounces. While there is eyidently such a thing as an intermediate phase among fully adult birds, specimens representing it appear to be excessively rare. The young in blue plumage seems to be equally uncommon. It may be, however, that a// birds become. blue at some time of their existence, and it is quite certain that a very great majority of the young are white, only one unques- tionably young bird in blue plumage having come under my notice. The Little Blue Heron is a common bird during the latter part of summer, particularly during August, when (in 1875) Mr. E. W. Nelson found it exceedingly abundant near Cairo. Considerable numbers make their appearance along the Wabash River, at least as far north as Mt. Carmel, and doubtless it Occurs generally throughout the State. 4 ‘ Suspcenvs Butorides BLYTH Butorides “Buytx, 1849,” Bonap. Consp. ii, 1855, 128. Type, Ardea javanica Honsy. Oniscus CaBAN. J. f. O. iv, 1856, 343, Type, Ardea virescens LINN. Gen. Cuan. Small Herons, of darkish, more‘or less variegated, aelors, the pileum and occiput crested. Bill rather stout, decidedly longer than the tarsus. Mental apex reach- ing toa little less than half-way (in B. brunnescens exactly half-way) from the middle of the eye to the point of the bill, and td decidedly beyond the anterior end of the nostril; malar apex about even with the frontal, and decidedly posterior to the hinder end of the nostril (in B. brunnes’cens this point falls considerably short of the frontal one). Middle toe very nearly or quite equal to the tarsus (equal to it in B. javanicus, a little shorter in the American forms, the difference being most marked in B. virescens); outer toe scarcely or not at all longer than the inner (except in B. brunnescens); hallux about half the length of the middle toe; bare portion of tibia equal to or shorter than the hallux. “i ; 1 Fresh colors of a specimen killed August 6, near Washington, D. C, 131* ; BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Pileum with a full crest of broadly lanceolate, compactly webbed feathers, these longer and more narrowly lanceolate on the occiput. Scapulars and interscapulars elongated and lanceolate in.the adult, but not reaching the end of the tail (very much as in Ardea), Ardea virescens Linn. GREEN HERON. Popular synonyms, “Schytepoke;” “Sauawk;” Fly-up-the- Creek; Booby (parts of Florida); Crab-catcher (Jamaica); Martineta cangrejero (Mexico). Ardea stellaris minimaCatEssy, Carolina, i, 1754, pl. 80 (adult). Ardea virescens Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, 1758, 144, No. 15 (based, in part, on the above); ed. 12, 1766, i, 238, No. 20.—Wrus. Am. Orn. vii, 1818, 97, pl. 61.—-NuTr. Man. if, 1834, 68.—AuD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1888, 247, pl, 883; Synop. 1839, 264; Birds Am. vi, 1848, 105, pl. 367.—Covuzs, Key, 1872, 268; Check List, 1873, No. 457; Birds N. W. 1874, 522.-REICHENOW, J. f. O. 1877, 255.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 201—Ripew. Man. N. Am. B.-1887, 182, Butorides virescens Bonar. Consp. ii, 1855, 128.—Bargp, Birds N. Am. 1858, 676; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 498.—Rrpaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 494.-Covgs, Check List, 2d. ed, 1882, No, 663.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1834, 50, Orabier, de la Louisiane Burr. Pl. Enl. 1770-84, pl. 909 (adult). Crabier tacheté, de la Martinique Bu¥E. Pl. Enl. 912 (young). Green Heron Lau. Synop. tii, 1785, 68. Louisiana Heron LaTH. t. ¢. 81. Ardea ludoviciana Guu. 8. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 680, No. 39 (based on PI. Eni. 909), ? Blue Heron, var. B. Lats. Synop. iii, 1785, 75 (Queen Charlotte's Sound). Ardea chloroptera Bonn. Tabl. P. E. 1783, pl. 909. Cancroma maculata Bonp. t. ¢. pl. 912. '? Ardea virgata, GMEL 8S. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 643. Has. The whole of temperate North America, West Indies, Middle America, and northern South America, to Venezuela; north to Ontario and Oregon; abundant both in the Pacific States and Eastern Province, but apparently wanting in the Middle Province; Ber- mudas. 7 Sp. CHar. Adult: Entire pileum, including oscipital crest, glossy dark metallic bottle- green; rest of the head and neck, except throat and fordéneck, rich chestnut, varying from a Ginnamon shade to a fine purplish maroon; bare orbital space bordered posteriorly with greenish black, from the lower part of which projects backward, from the rictus, a short stripe of the same; below this, along the upper edge of the malar region, a narrow stripe of white, the lower malar feathers being mixed black and rufous, forming another stripe; th: oat and foreneck, from chin to chest, white, marked with broad longitudinal dashes of-dusky. Lower parts ash-gray, the lining of the wing somewhat spotted, and distinctly bordered, outwardly, with creamy white. Scapular plumes glaucous-plumbeous, with a green reflection in certain lights, the shafts white. Wing-coverts and rectrices brilliant metallic bottle-green, the former distinctly bordered, narrowly, with fulvous-white; these borders on the lesser-coverts, more rusty or fulvous; rectrices immaculate bottle-green; remiges and primary-coverts plumbeous, with a green reflection, the inner primaries and adjoining secondaries with narrow crescentic tips of white, the coverts with terminal del- toid spots of the same. Bill deep black, the lower mandible sometimes partly- yellowish or greenish; lores and orbits varying from olive-green to bright yellow: iris gamboge- yellow; legs and feet olive-greeh or olive-yellow, the scutella more greenish; claws horn-coler. Young: Pileum, including crest, as in the adult, but usually streaked with dark rusty an- teriorly; sides of the head and neck dull dark rusty, indistinctly streaked with light ochra- ceous, or buff; lower parts white, tinged with buff, and striped with dusky. Back, scapu- pts. and rump uniform dull dusky-green, some of the feathers indistinctly bordered with ARDEIDE—THE HERONS. 132* rusty; wings and tail as in the adult, but light borders to larger wing-coverts more ochra- ceous,and the two or three middie rows marked with median wedge-shaped dashes of the same. Bill lighter colored than in the adult, dull greenish prevailing, only the culmen dusky, the lower mandible mostly pale yellowish: legs and feet dull greenish yellow or olivaceous. Length, about 15.00-22.50; expanse, 25.00-27.00, Weight, 6% ounces (AUDUBON). Wing, 6.50-8.00; tail, 2.40-3.40; culmen, 2.00-2.55; depth of bill, .40-.60; tarsus, 1.75-2.15; middle toe. 1,65-1.95; bare portion of tibia, .70-.90. This small and very handsome heron is perhaps the most generally distributed species of the family, being found along all streams which pass through or near wooded tracts. It comes from the south in April, and departs in September or October. . According to: Mr. N. B. Moore (as quoted by Dr. Brewer in the Water Birds of North America), “this heron has its own pe- cullar manner of searching for its food, which, in some respects, differs from that of all the other kinds. It fishes from the shore or from a log, root, snag, or shelving rock, preferring not to wade into the water or to stand in it; still, on seeing a tempt- ing morsel, it will quit its point of observation and walk into the water towards it, Its approach at such times is peculiar; though the Louisiana Heron seems occasionally to copy its style, except that the latter is constantly in the water at the time of fishing. The Green Heron, however, on seeing a fish, crouches low on its legs, draws back its head, crooks its neck, creeps slyly along, laying its tarsi almost down on the rock or the ground, carries the bill level with the top of the back, and, when near enough, darts the bill forward towards it, sometimes with such force as to topple forward a step or two. It seldom immerses its head in fishing, is always disposed to steal upon its prey in a sly, cat-like, crouching manner, remaining quite motionless for a long time, and often advancing so slowly and stealthily that even a keen-eyed observer would hardly perceive the motion. Its antipathy to and jealousy of its own species at the feeding-grounds is decided.” GENUS NYCTICORAX STEPHENS. Nycticorax SrerHens, Shaw’s Gen. Zod6l..xi, 1819, 608. Type, Ardea nycticorax LINN, Gen. Cuan. Bill comparatively short and thick, the culmen not longer than the tarsus, and equal to not more than four times the greatest depth of the bill; plumage of the young aonspicuously different from that of the adult, —kK. 133* _ BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. There are two strongly marked subgenera, which may be dis- tinguished as follows: a, Culmen about as long as the tarsus; gonys nearly straight, and lateral outlines of the bill slightly concave; tarsus but little longer than middle toe; scapulars normal (i. e. broad and blended) ........scssseveeeceeeees scawewxoneet Re aceuceceostuands ‘....Nycticorax. _ a4, Culmen much shorter than tarsus (only a little longer than middle toe); gonys convex, and lateral outlines of bill straight, or sometimes even perceptibiy convex; tarsus much longer than middle toe; scapulars elongated, narrow (but not pointed), some- What 100S0-WODDEd .......csecccsessesscneserecaccensaneecscevessascessessssso NY OCANABER. Suscenus Nycticorax STEPHENS. Nycticoray StepHEns, Shaw's Gen. Zod). xi, 1819, 608. Type, Ardea nyctiecrax LINN. WNyctiardea Swans. Classif. B. fi, 1837, 354. Same type. SusBGEN. CHak, Medium-sized Herons of very short thick build, large,’thick heads, and short tarsi. The plumage exceedingly different in the adult and young, but the sexes sim- ilar, Adults with two or three exceedingly long, thread-like, white occipital plumes. Bill very stout. the depth through the base being more than one fourth the culmen; the latter nearly straight for the basal two thirds, then gently curved to thetip; lower edge of the mandibular rami nearly straight; gonys nearly straight, very slightly ascending; maxillary tomium decidedly concave, with a very convex outline just forward of the rictus. Mental apex reaching more than half-way from the centre of the eye to the point of the bill, and to beyond the anterior end of the nostril; malar apex falling a little short of{the frontal apex. Tarsi a little longer than the middle toe, its seutelle hexagonal in front; lateral toes nearly equal, but the outer the longer; hallux less than half the middle toe; bare portion of tibia shorter than the hallux. Inner webs of two outer primaries distinctly emarginated near the end. Tail of twelve broad, moderately hard, feathers, as in the typ- ical herons, : ' > Nycticorax nycticorax nevius (Bodd.) BLACK-CROWNED NIGHT HERON. Popular synonyms. American Black-crowned Night Heron; Quok; Quaéwk; Quak; Qua Bird; Inanite pinto elote (Mexico). Ardea nevia Bonn. Tabl. P. E. 1783, 56 (ex Pl. Enl, 989). . Nyctiardea grisea var. nevia ALLEN,’ Bull, Mus. Comp. Zodl. iii, 1872, 182—CovuEs, Key, 1872, 269; Check List, 1873, No. 458; B. N. W. 1874, 523, Nyctiardea grisea. 8 nevia Rrpew. Orn. 40th Par, 1877. Nyctiardea grisea navia Ripcw. Nom. N, Am. B. 1881, No. 495.—Cowzs, 2d Check List, 1882, No. 664, Nycticoraz griseus nevius B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 55. Nycticoraz nycticorax nevius ZeuED. Proc, U. 8. Nat. Mus. viii, 1885, 118.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 202.—Rip@w. Man. N. Am. B, 1887,133, ‘Ardea hoactle Guu. 8. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 680. Ardea cana Gmzn, t. ¢, 643, Ardea gardeni Guru. t. oc. 615 (based on Gardentan Night Heron of Pannant and LatHam™), ; Nyctiardea gardeni Barrp, B. N, Am. 1858, 678; Oat. N. Am. B. 1859, No, 495, Ardea disgolor Nyry. Man, ti, 1834, 4, ARDEIDE—THE HERONS, 134* Nycticorax americanus Bonar. Comp. List, 1838, 48. Nycticorax vulgaris D’ORB. Ois. Cuba, 1839, 208, Nyctieorax griseus (part) RercHen. J.f. O. 1877, 287. Has. The whole of temperate and tropical America, from British America to Chili and the Falkland Islands. Part of the West Indies; Bermudas. Sp. Cuan. Adult: Pileum, scapulars,and interscapulars, glossy blackish bottle-green; forehead, postocular, malar, and gular regions,and median lower parts, white; lateral lower parts and neck, except in front, pale ash-gray, with a slight lilaceons tinge; wings, rump, upper tail-coverts and tail, deeper ash-gray. Occipital plumes pure white. Bill black; lores‘ and orbits yellowish green; iris bright red; legs and feet yellow, claws brown. (AuDUBON.)! Immature: Similar to the adult, but scapulars and interscapulars like the wings, and the white of the forehead obseured by the blackish of the crown; the colors generally more sombre, with neck and lower parts more decidedly ashy. Young: Above, grayish brown, with more or less of a cinnamon cast, especially on the remiges, each feather marked with a median tear-shaped or wedge-shaped strine of ‘white, the remives with small white terminal spots; rectrices plain ash-gray. Sides of the head and neck, and entire lower parts, striped longitudinally with grayish brown and dull white; chin and throat plain white medially. Bill light apple-green, the upper half of the maxilla blackish, the mandible with a tinge of the same near the end; lores light apple-green: eyelids simi- la-, but lighter, more yellowish, their inner edge black; iris dark. chrome-yellow or dull orange; legs and feet light yellowish apple-green;:claws grayish horn-color.? Length about 24,00-26.00; expanse, 44.00. Weight, 1]b.140z.(AuDUBON). Wing, 11.00- 12-80; tail, 4.20-5.30; qulmen, 2.80-3.10; depth of bill, .70.-85; tarsus, $.10-3,40; middle toe, 2.65-3,10; bare portion of tibia. .90-1.40.8 Suscenus Nyctanassa -STeJNEGER. Nyctherodius Rzron. Syst. Av. 1852, p. xvi (neo Nycterodius MACGILLIV. 1842). Type, Ardea violacea LINN, Nyctanassa Steyn. Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus.x,sig. 19, Aug. 3,1887,295, foot-note. Same type. SuBGEN. Coan. Medium-sized Herons, of short, thick build; the bill extremely thick and stout, with both outlines strongly convex; the legs long and slender; the dorsal plumes much elongated and very narrow, reaching beyond the tail; the occiput (in adult) with several extremely long, linear white feathers. Bill short and very stout, the culmen curved regularly from the base, the gonys de- cidedly convex and very much ascending: maxillary tomium almosi perfectly straight throughout, but appreciably concave anteriorly, with a barely perceptible convexity toward the base; mandibular tomium nearly straight, but perceptibly concave anteriorly.6 Mental 1A captive specimen had the iris and legs colored as follows, from the last of March to June 30th, the only portion of the year when it was under observation: Iris, deep Chi- nese orange; legs and feet uniform light buffy flesh-color or pale salmon, not very different from the (evanescent) color of sides of neck, without the slightest tinge of olive or yellow. 3 From a specimen killed August 13, 1879, near Washington, D. C. 8 Extremes of thirteen examples from North and Middle America. * The lower outline of the bill is, in fact, more decidedly convex than the upper. 5 We find cohsiderable variation among individuals in respect to the qutlines; thus, a specimen (female adult, No. 2759, Mus. R. RB.) from Illinois has the mandibular tomium ex- actly straight to near the end, where it gradually ascends to the tip, thereby producing a very slight subterminal concavity; in No. 2758, another adult female from the same locality, it is decidedly convex in the middle portion; while in an adult male, from Mazatlan (No, 58811), it is decidedly concave at the same place—so much so, in fact, that aspace is left be- tween it and the upper tonifum, on each side, when the billis closed tight! These discrep- ancies, however, do not affect the general form of the bill, whichis eminently character- istic. 135* . BIRDS Of ILLINOIS. apex less than half-way from centre of eye to end of bill, and about even with anterior end of nostril; apex of malar region a little posterior to the fronta] apex. Tarsi long and slender, exceeding the middle toe by more than half ;the length of the latter; outer toe de-’ eidedly- longer than inner; hallux slightly longer than: the first phalanx of the middle toe; bare portion of tibia as long as the outer toe; tarsal scutellze with a tendency to form trans- verse plates on the upper half, in front; claws exceedingly short, strongly curved, and blunt. Inne: we 3 of two outer primaries emarginated near the end; tail of twelve broad, moderately huru feathers; interscapular plumes greatly elongated (extending beyond the tail), narrow, the plumule thread-like and soft, and separated outwardly. Occipital plumes linear, flattened, longer than the head and bill, when fully developed, half a dozen or more in number, and graduated in length. ; Nycticorax violaceus (Linn.) YELLOW-CROWNED NIGHT HERON. Popular synonyms. White-crowned Night Heron; Pedrete de mareara (Mexico), Ardea stellaris cristata americana CaTESBY, Carolina, 1754, pl. 79 (adult). Bihoreau de Cayenne Burr. P1}. Enl. 1770-84, pl. 899 (adult). Ardea violacea Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 143, No. 12 (ex Catesby, J. ¢.); ed. 12. 1, 1766, 238, No.. 16.—WILs. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 26, pl. 65.—NurrT. Man. ii, 1834, 52.—AupD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 290, pl. 336; Synop. 1839, 262; Birds Am. vi, 1843, 89, pl. 364 (adult and young). Nyctiardea violacea Swans. Olassif. B. ii, 1837, 354.—Couxs, Key, 1872, 269; Check List, 1873, No. 459. Nyctherodius violaceus REICHENB. Syst. Av. 1851, p. xvii—_BarRpD, Birds N. Am, 1858, 679; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No, 496.—Ripaw. Nom, N. Am. B. 1831, No. 496.—Covurs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 665 (Vycterodius).—B. B. & R. Water B. N, Am. i, 1884, 61. Nycticorax violaceus Vie. Z6ol. Jour. iii, 1827, 4464.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 203.— ” Ripew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 133. ' Cayenne Night Heron Latu. Synop. iii, 1785, 56 (quotes Pl. Enl. 899). Yellow-crowned Night Heron Lata. t. e. 80. Ardea cayennensis Guet. 8. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 626, No. 31 (based on Pl. Enl. 899), Ardea sexsetacea V1rsiLu. Enc. Meth. iii, 1823, 1130 (Reichenow). Ardea callocephala Wacu. Syst. Av. 1827, Ardea, sp. 34. Has. Warm-temperate eastern North America, West Indies, Middle America, and northern South America, breeding north to southern Illinois and Indiana. On Atlantic coast north to Pennsylvania (rare). West to Colorado, south to western Ecuador and the Amazonian regions. Bermudas. Sp, Cuan. Adult. Forehead, middle of the crown, long occipital plumes, and a large longitudinal patch from the rictus to the ears, pure white;): rest of the head deep In living and freshly killed specimens the forehead is a delicate creamy sulphur- yellow color; but this fades perceptibly in a very short time after death, and finally disap- appears entirely. Audubon (Birds of America, Vol. VI., p. 91) says, however, that this is characteristic of the breeding season, and “disappears at the approach of autumn, when the pird might with all propriety be named the White-crowned Heron.” In view of the fact that this beautiful yellow color is seldom if ever to be seen in dried skins, the term “yellow- crowned” is a decided misnomer; and since it is thus calculated to mislead the student, we prefer the name “white-crowned,” and have, on previous occasions, adopted the latter in this work, In many skins the white of the forehead is tinged more or Jess with ochrace- ous, or cinnamon-brown; but this is without much doubt an actual stain caused by contact with the slimy coating of leaves of aquatic plants, ferruginous mud, ete, ARDEIDE—THE HERONS. . 136* black. Plumage in general, clear bluish gray, or cinereous, lighter beneath (the de- gree of blueness probably depending on the age of the bird); all the feathers of the upper surface marked with a median stripe of black; the secondaries and rectrices dark plumbe- ous, bordered with a lighter shade of the same; primaries plain bluish plumbeous. Bill deep black, the lower basal portion of the mandible, in some specimens, greenish yellow; lores and eyelids greenish ‘yellow: iris pale orange; legs dull yellowish green, the large scutella and the claws dusky.! f Young. Above, dark sooty grayish brown, sometimes of a slightly olive cast, the feathers of the pileum and wings (in youngest individuals the entire upper surface?) marked with median streaks of white or pale buff; these streaks assuming on the wing. coverts a narrowly cuneate form. Lower parts soiled whitish, striped with brownish gray. “Bill greenish black, the lower and basal part of the lower mandible greenish yellow, as are the eyelids and bare space before the eye. Iris pale orange. Legs and feet dull yellowish green, the scutella and scales in front, as well as the claws, dusky.” (AUDUBON.) Length, about 23.00-25.00; expanse, 40.00-45.00; weight, 1 1b. 7 oz. to 1 lb. 9 oz. (AUDUBON,) Wing, 10.59- 12.65; tail, 4.20-5.10; culmen, 2.50-3.00; depth of bill, .70-.92; tarsus, 3.10-4.20; middle toe, 2.20- 2.55; bare portion of tibia, 1.60-2.40, The Yellow-crowned Night Heron occurs during summer throughout at least the southern third of Illinois, though of course only in such localities as are suited to it. These consist of timbered swamps, where the principal food of the species, consisting of crawfish, frogs, and the smaller reptiles, is to be found in abundance. It first became known to the writer as an Illinois bird through Mr. Samuel Turner, of Mt. Carmel, who obtained specimens of the bird and its eggs in the Coffee Flats, a few miles south of that place. At Monteur’s Pond, about eight miles east of Vincennes, Indiana, the writer found it to be much the most numerous species of heron, far outnumbering all other kinds together, during several visits there, in different years. Many nests were found, but all inaccessible except by special and in most cases extraordinary effort, being built not only high up in the tallest sweet gum and oak trees but far out upon the branches. 1 In an adult female shot from the nest, at Wheatland, Indiana, April 27, 1881, the bill and naked lores were wholly slate-black, the eyelids similar, but tinged with green anteriorly; iris Mars-orange; legs pale olive-buff, the large scutelle of tarsus and toes deep brownish. In the adult male in spring, according to Audubon, the unfeathered parts are colored as follows: “Bill black. Iris reddish-orange; margins of eyelids and bare space in front of the eye dull yellowish green. ‘Tibia, upper part of the tarsus, its hind part and the’ soles, bright yellow; the scutelle and scales, the fore part of the tarsus, the toes, and the claws, black.” 137° ; ' BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. SusFramMity BOTAURIN AN.—TuHE Birrerns. Genus BOTAURUS HERMANN. Botaurus Hermann, Tabl Affin. Anim. 1783, 135. Type, Ardea stellaris LINN. Gen. Cua. ’ Tail-feathers ten, very short and soft; outer toe shorter than inner; claws iengthened, slightly curved. Two really distinct genera are comprised in the so-called genus Botawrus, as above defined, but in order to be consistent in the classification and nomenclature’ of this work we are compelled to follow the A. O. U. Check List and call them subgenera. They may be distinguished by the following char- acters: a. Size large (wing more than 9.50 inches); sexes alike in coloration, and young not ob- viously different in color from adults.............ceseeeecreeeerens aise asiutealvaeelees Botaurus. a; Size very small. (wing less than 6.00 inches); sexes more or less different in color. (in North American species, at least), and young obviously different from AOULES siitavveivenseveseccaatecdesseeeetesiteetecees vedsevecewe vedeaeseceee cecesesvesssARdotta, Suscenvs Botaurus HERMANN. Botaurus HERMANN, Tabi. Affin. Anim. 1783, 185. Type, Ardea stellaris Linn. Butor Swatns. Classif. B. ii, 1837, 354. Same type. Gun. CHAR. Medium-sized, or rather large, Herons, with the plumage much mottled or striped with different shades of brown and ochraceous (the plumage essentially the same in both sexes and at all seasons); the plumage, particularly of the lower neck in front, exceedingly soft and full, and destitute of any ornamental plumes; the bill comparatively small and short (shorter than the middle toe); the tibia almost completely feathered, and the claws very long and but slightly curved. Tail, of ten short, soft feathers, slightly rounded or nearly even. _ Bill gradually tapering from the base to the point, the upper outline more convex than the lower, the gonys very slightly convex and gently ascending, the lower edge of the max- Wary rami perfectly straight; mental apex extending forward about half-way from the centre of the eye to the point of the bill, and slightly in advance of the anterior end of the nostril; malar apex falling far short of that of the frontal feathers. Toes very long, the middle one considerably exceeding the billand almost equaling the tarsus; inner toe decid- edly longer than the outer; hallux about half the middle toe; claws very long(that of the hallux nearly equal to its digit), and but slightly curved; bare portion of the tibia shorter than the hallux. Tarsi with large regular scutelle in front, ‘ 1 ARDEIDE—THE HERONS. 138* Botaurus lentiginosus (Montag.) AMERICAN BITTERN. Popular synonyms, Stake-driver; Post-driver; Thunder-pump: Water-belcher; Bog-bull; Bog-bumper; Mire-drum; Look-up; Indian hen; Indian pullet, ete. , Ardea mugitans Bantr. Travels, 1792, (nomen nudum), Botaurus mugtians Cougs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 666. Ardea lentiginosa MontaGugE, Orn, Dict. Suppl. 1813.—Sw. & Rrow. FP. B.-A. ii, 1831, 871.— Nurr. Man. ii, 1831, 60.—AuD: Synop. 1839, 268; Birds Am. vi, 1813, 94, pl. 365 Botaurus lentiginosus SrepHens, Shaw’s.Gen. Zo6l. xii, 1819, 596.—Barrp, Birds N. Am, 1858, 674; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 492.—REIcHENow, J f. O. 1877, 218—Ripew. Nom. Am. B. 1881, No. 497; Man. 1887, 126.,—A, O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 190. Ardea hudsonias Menem, Ersch. Grub. Ency. v, 1820, 175. Ardea minor Wiis. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 35, pl. 65, fig. 3. Botaurus minor Bors, Isis, 1826, 979. —Covss, Key, 1872, 269; Check List, 1873, No. 460; Birds N. W. 1874, 523. Butor americanus Swatns. Classif. B. ii, 1837, 854, Ardea mokoko ViE1uu. Nouv. Dict. xiv, 1817, 440. Botaurus adspersus “CaB.,” Bonap. Consp. ii, 1857, 156. Ardea stellaris canadensis Epwarps, Nat. Hist. pl. 136. Le Butor de la Baye de Hudson EpwanpDs, 1. ¢. Botaurus Freti-Hudsonis Briss. Orn. v, 1760, 450, pl. 37, fig. 1. Ardea stellaris Varietas Forst. Philos. Trans. lxii, 1772, 410, No. 38 (Severn R.). Bittern *Var. A. LatH. Synop. iii, 1785, 58. Ardea stellaris B. Lata. Ind. Orn. ii, 1790, 680, No. 18 B. (ex Edwards, pl. 136). Has, The whole of temperate and tropical North America, north to’ latitude about 60°, south to Guatemala. Cuba; Jamaica; Bermudas. Occasionalin Europe (1s British records). Sp. Cuan. Adult; Ground-color ofthe plumage ochraceous-buff; but this densly mot- tled and finely sprinkled above with reddish brown and blackish, the latter color prevailing on the dorsal and scapular regions, where the feathers have lighter edges, the buff prevail- ing on the wing-coverts, where the variegation consists of a finer and sparser sprinkling of the dusky and brown; on the tertials and ends of the secondaries, the reddish (a sort of cin- namon ghade) forms the ground-color, and is thickly sprinkled with irregular dusky dot- tings and zigzags; pectoral tufts nearly uniform dark brown, the feathers with’broad tateral borders of clear yellowish ochraceous. Pileum rusty brown, darker anteriorly, changing gradually backward into thé greenish olive-gray of the nape; sides of the head and néck’ yellowish ochraceous; a malar stripe of dark rusty, changing posteriorly into a very conspicuous stripe of blue-black (or in some specimens dull grayish) down each side of the neck; chin and throat white, with a very narrow median dusky streak, suffused with ochra-, ceous; foreneck pale buff, with sharply defined stripes of cinnamon-brown edged with a black line; lower parts pale buff, with narrower brownish stripes; tibia and crissum plain lightcreamy buff; primary- -coverts and primaries dark slate, tipped with pale reddish , ochraceous, finely, but not densely, sprinkled with dusky. Upper mandible clivaceous-— black, the tomium (broadly) lemon-yellow; lower mandible pale lemon- yellow, deeper basally, with a stripe of dusky brownish along the posterior part of the tomium; lores and eyelids lemon-yellow, the former divided longitudinally by a median stripe of dusky olive, from the eye to the base of the upper mandible; iris clear, light sulphur-yellow next the pupil, shading exteriorly into orange-brownish, this encircled narrowly with black; legs and feet bright yellowish green; claws pale brown, dusky toward points.1 Young: Similar to the adult, but more reddish, the mottling coarser, and with a tendency to form ragged transverse bars, especially on the posterior upper parts. 1 Colors of fresh specimens (male and female) killed along the Truckee River, Nevada, Nov. 18, and Dee. 11, 1867. 1389*° BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Length, about 24,00-28,00 expanse, 37.00-45.00; weight about 1% Ib&. (AUDUBON); wing, 9.80- , 12.00; tail, 3.10-4.40; culmen, 2.50-3.20; depth of bill. .50-.65; tarsus, 3,10-3.85; middle toe, 2.90-3.60; bare portion of tibia, 1.00-1.35,. ‘ SuBGENus Ardetta Gray. 1 Ardeola Bonap. Synopsis, 1828 (teste Gray, Gen. & Subg. 1855, 113). Type, Ardea exilis GmMeEu. (Not of Boie, 1822!) : Ardetia Grav, List of Genéra, App. 1812,13. Type, Ardea minuta Linn. Erodiscus GLOGER, Handb. i, 1842, 410.. Same type. “Ardeiralia” (1855) VERREAUX (teste Harry. Orn. Westafr. p. 224). Type, Ardea sturmi Waa. , SuBGEn Cuar. Extremely small (the smallest of) herons, or miniature bitterns; dif- fering from the true bitterns chiefly in their diminutive size, and in the fact that the sexes differ in color.? ‘ ‘ i Although only two species of Ardetta are known to occur in North America (with one additional species in South America), there are various species in other parts of the. world. . t. - The two North American species differ as follows: a, Primaries tipped with cinnamon-rufous or pale cinnamon; adults with a distinct nar- row stripe of buff along each side Of Dack..........ccsesereeeeesevees Lodkavousey B. exilis, a2, Primaries without rufous or cinnamon tips; adults without trace of lighter stripe along sides of back..... ssandedea ayuibisieovbublovashtees Sialelale ab tardisia dnSivcalesa ow Siete: serosa ete dees ....B, neoxenus,? This species, which was originally discovered in southern Florida, has also been taken in Ontario, Canada, and may possibly occur in Illinois. Itis very different in color from B. exilis, the prevailing colors being black and rich chestnut. Botaurus exilis (Gmel.) LEAST BITTERN. Popular synonyms. American Least Bittern; Tortoise-shell Bird, or Tortoise-shell Bittern (Jamaica); Little Yellow Bittern; Ardeola and Pescadora (Mexico). Little Bittern Pann, Arct, Zodl. ii, 1785, 453, No. 359 (part). Minute Bittern Lara. Synop. iii, 1785, 66 (Jamaica); = female ad.). Ardea exilis GmeEw. 8, N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 645, No. 83 (based on the Minute Bittern of Lata. t. ¢.). Wis. Am. Orn, viii, 1814, 87, pl. 65, flg. 4.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 66.—Aup. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 77; v, 1839, 606, pl. 210; Synop. 1839, 263; Birds Am. vi, 1848, 100, pl. 366. Z Ardetta exilis GuNDL. J. f. O. 1856, 345.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 678; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 491.—-Ripaw. Nom, N. Am. B. 1881, No. 498.—Cougs, Check List 2d ed. 1882, No. 667. Botaurus exilis REIOHEN. J. f. O. 1877, 244.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 184.—Rrpew. Man, 1887, 127. ?Ardea spadicea GMEL. t. c. 641 (Reichenow). 1 From measurements of twenty-five adult specimens, 2 We can find no other difference in form or proportion between Botaurusand Ardetia, In the sexed specimens of A. involueris which we have been able to examine there is no sexual difference of plumage. The sex of the single supposed female, however, may have been incorrectly determined. ® Ardetta neoxena Oony, Auk, if!, Apr. 1886, 262—Botaurus neoxenus Ripaw. Man. N, Am. B. 1887, 127. ARDEIDA—THE HERONS. 140* Has. The whole of temperate North America, north to the British Provinces; West Indies, Middle America, and northern Eouth America, to Brazil. Bermudas. Sp. CHAR. Adult male: Pileum, including slight occipital crest, with entire back, scapu- lars, rump and tail, glossy greenish black, the outer webs of the outermost row of scapu- lars edged with pale buff, forming a narrow longitudinal stripe. Sides of the head and neck bright ochraceous, deepening into reddish chestnut on the nape; chin, throat, and foreneck paler, the first sometimes whitish, with a median series of dusky and yellowish batf dashes; the foreneck and chest faintly striped with white and pale orange-buff, the latter pre- dominating; on each side the breast a patch of maroon-dusky, the feathers tipped with paler and suffused with blackish, forming tufts of large loose feathers, partly concealed by ‘the large feathers of the chest; Jower parts whitish, washed with palo creamy-buff. Carpal region, greater wing-coverts, lower webs of tertials and tips of primary-coverts, second- aries, and innermost primaries, rich cinnamon-rufous; large area covering middle wing- covert region, pale ochraceous or buff; remiges and primary-coverts blackish slate, except at tips. “Bill dark olive-brown above, edge of upper mandible and bare frontal space yel- low: lower mandible pale yellow, inclining to flesh color; iris yellow: feet dull greenish yel- low; claws brown.” (AuDUBON.) Adult female: Similar to adult male, but the greénish- black replaced by brown (varying from umber-drab to cinnamon; the pileum darker, usu- ally quite dusky); the buff stripe along outer edge of scapular region much broader, and the stripes on the foreneck usvally more distinct. Young: Similar to the adult female, but feathers of the back and scapulars tipped with buff, and stripes on foreneck usually still more distinct. Downy young: Above uniform buff, or brownish buff, beneath dull white. Total length, about 12.00-13.50 inches; extent of wings, 17.00-18,00; wing, 4.80-5.25; tail, 1.60- 2.10; culmen, 1.60-1.90; depth of bill at base, .28-.35; tarsus, 1.50-1.75; middle toe, 1.40-1.60; bare portion of tibia, .45-.50. The Least Bittern, although comparatively seldom seen, is an abundant summer resident in marshy localities throughout -Tllinois, but keeps well hidden among the tall sedges, cat-tails, and other aquatic plants among which it dwells, often permit- ‘ting itself to be almost brushed against before it will take wing. Mr. Nelson says it breeds abundantly in the marshes and sloughs of the northeastern counties, where it arrives about May 1, and breeds in June. He always found its nest sup- ported, at from two to three feet above the water, by the surrounding rushes, and describes it as a very frail structure—a thin platform from one to three inches thick, with scarcely de- pression enough in the center to prevent the eggs from rolling out. Small dry pieces of reeds are used in building it. The eggs are usually from two to six in number. If approached ‘while on the nest, the female generally steps quietly to one side; but if suddenly surprised, takes to flight. Each nest is usually placed by. itself, but sometimes six or eight may be found in close proximity. 103 BIRDS OF ILLANOIS. Orprr ANSERES,—rTHe LAMELLIROSTRAL SWIMMERS., y Cuaracters. Lamellirostral swimming birds, with straight bills, short legs (always shorter than the wing), the tibizw usually completely feathered, and searcely free from the body; hallux well developed, though usually small, neverabsent, Reproduction precocial, and young ptilopedic; eggs numerous and unmarked, with a hard, usually very smooth, sheil. Bill flattened terminally, and provided at the tip with a more or less hooked nail or “anguis”, and along the edges with distinct vertical lamelle or strainers (more tooth-like in the subfamily M erging). The Order Anseres is composed mainly of a single family (Anat- ide), which, however, includes very numerous genera, and species. The order is represented in every portion'of the globe, but most numerously in the northern hemisphere. It is allied most nearly to the orders Phenicopteri (Flamingoes) and Palamedew (Screamers), the former Tropicopolitan, the latter confined to the central portion of the Neotropical Region. 1Extralimital families are (1) Anserantide (Semipalmated Geese), and () Cereopsica {Cape Barren Geese), both peculiar td Australia. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 108 Famity ANATID.24.—TuHeE Swans, GEESE, AND Ducks. CHARACTERS. The same as those of the Order. (See Volume I, page 45.) ~The family Anatidw, which includes all the North American Anseres, constitutes so well-marked and natural a group of birds as to need no further definition than has already been given. The species, being very numerous, naturally fall into several more or less well-defined groups, which have been accorded the rank of subfamilies. These, however, grade so insensibly into one another that it is extremely doubtful whether this rank can be maintained for them. Birds of this family are found in every known part of the world; but they abound most'in the northern hemisphere, particularly in boreal regions. The North American representatives may, for convenience of classification, be divided into four tolerably well-defined groups, as follows: a Cygnine. Neck extremely long (as long as or longer than the body); size very large; bill long as or longer than the head, the edges parallel, the nail small; tarsi shorter than middle toe ;lores naked; tail-feathers 20-24; color chiefly or entirely white (except in ' Ohenopis atrata, the Black Swan, of Australia), Anserine. Neck moderately long (shorter than the body); size variable (usually medi- um, never very large); bill not longer than the head, tapering to the end, which is chiefly occupied by the large, broad nail; tarsus longer than the middle toe; lores feathered; tail-feathers 14-20; color extremely variable. Anatine. Neck moderately long (shorter than the body); size variable (usually small or medium); bill extremely variable; tarsus shorter than the middle toe; lores usually feathered; tail-feathers 14-18; color extremely variable. Merging, Similar tothe Anatine, but bill narrow, with tooth-like processes instead of fine lamelle. The genera which have representatiyes within our limits may be distinguished by the following characters: 1°"The whole family Anatide forms, as to structural features, a very homogeneous group, and interm ediate links are everywhere to be found. Thus it is very difficult to de- fine the subfamilies anatomically, and to give the structural differences by which they are to be separated, so that I And it not improbable that an exact investigation, based ona more abundant material than I can at present procure, will reduce the subfamilies to groups of lower rank.” StTeyNEGER, in Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus., Vol. 5, 1882, pp. 174, 175. ‘ 104 ‘BIRDS OF ILLINOIS, SuBFAMILY CYGNIN.AS.—TuHE Swans. 1. Olor.’ |The [largest of the American 4 natide (total length more than three feet); color of the plumage entirely pure white in adults, grayish in young. (Page 105.) SuBFAMILY ANSERIN 24.—THE GEESE. A. Serrations on cutting-edge of upper mandible visible from the outside through a con- spicuous “grinning space;” bill and feet light colored. 2. Chen. Bill very stout, its depth through the base equal to much more than half the length of the culmen; color of adults white, with blackish primaries, or else with head and part of neck white, the wing-coverts bluish gray. (Page 110.) 8. Anser, Bill weaker and more depressed, its depth through the base less than half the length of the culmen; color never white, nor with white head, nor with bluish gray wing-coverts. (Page 115.) B. Serrations on edge of upper mandible visible only near the angle of the mouth, the sides of the bill without “grinning space;” bill and feet blackish. 4, Branta. Head partly or wholly black; upper and under tail-coverts white. (Page 118.) : SUBFAMILY ANATIN.4S.—TuHE Ducks. A. Lores densely feathered. .a. Tail normal. b. Hind toe without a distinct membranous lobe or “flap.” e. Bill not spatulate. d. Tail-feathers narrow and pointed at tip. e. Tail graduated for less than one third its total length (or else consist- ing of only 14 feathers) and culmen shorter than middle toe without claw. & Anas, (Page 126.) el, Tail graduated for more than one third its total length, consisting of 16 feathers, and culmen longer than middle toe, without claw. . 6. Dafila, (Page 146.) d', Tail-feathers broad and rounded at tips. « 7, Aix, (Page 152.) ce}, Bill spatulate (much widened toward the end). 8. Spatula, (Page 150.) b!, Hind toe with a broad membranous lobe or “flap.” c. Feathering onlores or forehead not reaching beyond posterior border of nostril. d. Graduation of tail less than length of bill from nostril. 9. Aythya. (Page 156.) d@, Graduation of tail much more than length of bill from nostril. e. Distance from tip of bill to loral feathering less than graduation of tail. f. Distance from anterior end of nostril to loral feathers equal to or greater than width of bill at base. g. Distance from anterior end of nostril to tip of bill much leas than from same point toloral feathers; tail less than twice as long as tarsus. , 10. Glaucionetta, (Page 165.) ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 105 g!. Distance from anterior end of nostril to tip of billmuch greater than from same point to loral feathers; tail more than twice as long as tarsus. ll. Charitonetta. (Page 170.) Jf. Distance from anterior end of nostril to loral feathering much less than width of bill at base. g. Distance from posterior end of nostril to loral feathers equal to or greater than length of nostril; anterior outline of loral feathering strongly convex. 12. Histrionicus. (Page 171.) g'. Distance from anterior end of nostril to loral feathers less than half the length of the nostril; anterior outline of loral feather- ing forming a nearly straight line, running obliquely backward and downward from near nostril to corner of mouth. , 18. Clangula., (Page 173.) el. Distance from tip of bill to loral feathers greater than graduation of tail. 14. Oidemia, (Page 179.) ec}, Feathering of forehead or lores reaching anteriorly to or beyond posterior end of nostril. 15. Somateria. (Page 175.) a, Tail abnormal, its feathers narrow, with very stiff shafts, their base scarcely-hidden by the very short coverts. 16. Erismatura, (Page 184.) SUBFAMILY MERGIN.2.—THE MERGANSERS. A. Serrations of mandible conspicuously tooth-like, and strongly inclined backward at tips. 17. Merganser. (Page 187.) B. Scerrations of mandible short, blunt, and not distinctly inclined backward at tips. 18. Lophodytes. (Page 190.) SUBFAMILY CYGNIN.2Z.—THE Swans. Genus OLOR WaGLer. Olor Wat. Isis, 1882, 1234. Type, Anas cygnus LINN. Gen. Cuan. Neck very long (longer than the body); bill longer than the head (com- missure longer than the tarsus), widening slightly to the end, the edges straight; basal por- tion of the bill covered by a soft skin extending over the lores to the eye, the upper outline running nearly straight back from the forehead tothe upper eyelid, the lower running from the eye obliquely downward, in a nearly straight line, to the rictus. Nostrils situated alittle posterior to the middle of the maxilla, and quite near the culmen; no trace of a knob or carunele at base of the bill. Lower portion of the tibia bare; tarsus much shorter than the middle toe (but little longer than the inner), much compressed, covered with hexagonal scales which become smaller on the sides and behind. Hind toe small, much elevated, the Jobe narrow. ‘Tail very short, rounded or graduated, of 20 to 24 feathers. Wings rounded, the second and third quills longest; primaries scarcely reaching beyond the ends of the secondaries. Color entirely white, the sexes alike; young pale grayish. The two North American species of Olor may be eadily dis- tinguished by the following characters: —14 A 106 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Common CaRactERs. Adulis with whole plumage pure white, the head often stained with rusty; bill either entirely black, or black and yellow; iris dark brown; feet blackish. Young ashy, sometimes tinged with brownish, the bill flesh-color (or at least partly of this color) and feet grayish or whitish. , 1. 0, columbianus, Tail-feathers usually 20; bill not longer than the head, the anterior end of the nostrils considerably anterior to the middle of the maxilla; naked loral skin usually with a yellowish oblong spot. ; 2. 0. buccinator. _Tail-feathers usually 24; billlonger than the head, the anterior end of the nostrils reaching to about the middle of the maxilla; naked loral skin entirely black. Size considerably larger. They are both found, at one time or another, entirely across the continent, though 0. duccinator is rare on the Atlantic coast. Olor buccinator (Rich.) TRUMPETER SWAN. Cygnus buccinator Ricu. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 464 (Hudson Bay).—Nurt. Man. ii, 1834, 370.— AvupD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1888, 586; v, 1889,114, pls. 406, 876; Synop. 1839, 74; B. Am. vi, 1848, 219, pl. 382, 388.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 758; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 562—Covgs, Key, 1872, 281; Check List, 1878, No. 476; 2d ed. 1882, No. 688; Birds N. W. 1874, 544.— Roew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 619. Olor buccinator WaGt. Isis, 1782, 1234.—Ripew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 589; Man. N, Am, B. 1887, 120; Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus. iii, 1882, 216.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Ami 1884, 430,—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 181. Cygnus pasmorei H1ncxs, Proc. Linn. Soc. viii, 1864,1 (Toronto); P. Z. 8. 1868, 211.—Moorsz, P, Z. 8. 1867, 8 (critical). Haz. Chiefly the interior of North America, from the Gulf coast to the Fur Countries, breeding from Iowa and Dakota northward; west to the Pacific coast, but rare or casual on the Atlantic. Accidental in England. Sp. Cuar. Tail usually of 24 feathers; bill longer than the head. Adult: Plumage entirely pure white, the head, sometimes the neck also, or even the entire lower parts, tinged ‘with rusty. Bill, naked lores, legs, and feet, uniform deep black, the “outer lamel- late edges of the lower mandible and the inside of the mouth flesh-color,” (AUDUBON); iris brown. Young: “In the winter the young has the bill black, with the middle portion of the ridge, to the length of an inch and a half, light flesh-color, and a large elongated patch of light dull: purple on each side; the edge of the lower mandible and the tongue dull yellowish flesh-tolor. The eye is dark brown. The feet are dull yellowish brown, tinged with olive; the claws brownish black, the webs blackish brown. The upper part of the head and the cheeks are light reddish brown, each feather having toward its ex- tremity a small oblong whitish spot, narrowly margined with dusky ; the throat nearly white, as well as the edge of the lower eyelid. The general color of the upper parts is grayish white, slightly tinged with yellow ; the upper part of the neck marked with spots similar to those on the head.” (AUDUBON.) Total length, about: 58.50 to 68.00 inches ; extent, about 8.00 to nearly 10.00 feet ; wing, 21.00-27.25 inches ; culmen (from frontal feathers) 4.34-4.70 ; tarsus, 4.54-4.92; middle toe 6,00-6.50 ; weight, of adults, about 28 to nearly 40 Ibs, The arrangement of the trachea in this species is very different from that in 0. columbianus, in having, besides the horizontal bend, a vertical flexure, occupying a prominent protuberance on the anterior portion of the dorsal aspect of the sternum. The Trumpeter Swan is chiefly a transient visitor to Dk- nois, but undoubtedly once bred within the State, since it ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 107 is now known to do so in Iowa. It is said to occasionally winter in the southern counties, where migrating flocks arrive from the South about, or a little after, the middle of March, and return from the North about the last of October. Tt is a grand bird, weighing often as much as thirty pounds and sometimes nearly forty, with a spread of wings of eight: to nearly ten feet—much greater than any other American bird excepting only the Condor and the California Vulture, both of which are considerably inferior in weight. Its eggs, averag- ing about 4.46 by nearly 3.00 inches in size, are so large that one of them is said to be a sufficient meal for a moderate man. Although so large, it is very swift of wing, and Hearne states that in his opinion it is more difficult to shoot when flying than any other bird. The name “Trumpeter” is derived from its ringing note, much more sonorous than that of the common species (0. colwm- bianus), and said to resemble a blast upon a French horn. Olor columbianus (Ord). WHISTLING SWAN. ~ Popular synomym. American Swan. Cygnus musicus BonaP. Synop. 1828, 379 (nec BECHST. 1809). OCuvgnus bewicki Sw. & Ric. F. B.-A. ii, 1881, 465 (mec YarR.),—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 72, Cygnus ferus Nutr. Man. ii, 1834, 366 (nec LEACH, 1816). Cygnus americanus SHARPLESS, Doughty's Cab. N. H. i, 1880, 185, pl. 16.—Aud. Orn. Biog. v, 1839, 133, pl. 411; Synop. 1839, 274; B, Am. vi, 1843, 226, pl. 384.—Barrp, B. N. Am, 1858, 758; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 56la.—Covugs, Key, 1872, 281; Check List, 1873, No. 477; B. N. W. 1874, 545. Olor americanus GRay, Cat. Brit. Mus. 1844, 131.—-Bonap, Compt. Rend. xliii, 1856.— Riwew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 558. Anas columbianus Orb, Guthrie's Geog. 2d Am. ed. 1815. 319. Cygnus columbianus Couzs, Bull. U. 8. Geol. and Geogr. Surv. Terr. 2d series, No. 6, 1876, 444; Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 689. Olor columbianus StxsNn. Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus. v, 1882. 210.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 425.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 180.—Rrpaw. Man.N. Am. B. 1887, 120, Has. The whole of North America, breeding far north; aceidental in Scotland. Sp. Coan. Tail usually of twenty feathers; bill not longer than the head. Aduli: En- tire plumage pure white, the head, sometimes the neck, or even entire under parts, tinged with rusty. Bill, and bare loral space black, the latter usually marked by an oblong spot of orange or yellow (dull-pale reddish, yellowish, or whitish in the skin); iris brown; legs and feet slate-black or dark slate-color. Young: Light ashy gray, paler beneath, the fore part and top of the head tinged with reddish brown. Bill reddish flesh-color, dusky at the tip; feet dull yellowish flesh color, or grayish. Total length, about 53.00-55.50 inches; extent about 7.00 feet; wing, 21.50-22.00 inches; eulmen, 3,82-4,20; tarsus, 1.06-4,32; middle toe, 5.40-5.90. Weight of adults about 18 to 25 Ibs- 108 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. The common American or Whistling Swan is a more northern species, as to its breeding range, than the Trumpeter, but at the ‘same time it is a more abundant or at least more widely distributed species, and therefore better known. It does not, apparently, breed within the limits of the United States, but betakes itself. during summer to the desolate lands near and beyond the Arctic circle, where it rears its young in compara- tive security. It is said to occasionally winter in southern Nlinois, but ordinarily its principal winter residence is the Gulf and south Atlantic coasts, including their various bays and estuaries. The best account of the habits of this species is that furnished by Dr. Sharpless, of Philadelphia, to Mr. Audubon, supple- mented by articles, presumably of the same writer, in ‘‘Doughty’s Cabinet.” Dr. Sharpless states that in its migrations south- ward it collects in flocks of twenty or thirty, and moves only when the wind is not opposed to the direction of its flight. It mounts high in the air, forms an elongated wedge, and utters loud screams as it departs, these cries being occasionally re- peated as the bird moves on its way. When flying, the wings seem almost without movement, and their sweep is very unlike the semicircular movements of geese. He estimates that this bird travels at the rate of at least a hundred miles an hour when at a high elevation and with a moderate wind in its favor. Its flight is estimated to be twice as rapid as that of the Wild Goose. In traveling from its summer abode to its winter resi- dence it keeps far inland, mounted above the highest peaks of the Alleghany, and rarely follows the watercourses. It usually arrives at its regular feeding-grounds at night,.and signalizes its coming by loud and vociferous screaming, with which the shores ring for several hours. In the spring these birds again assemble, as early as March, and after many preparations by incessant washings and dressings, meanwhile disturbing the neighborhood with their noise, they depart for the north with a general clamor of unmusical screams. In the Chesapeake they collect in flocks of from one to five hundred on the flats near the western shores, from the mouth of the Susquehanna almost to the Rip Raps. When alarmed. they become instantly silent, and they depend much more on swimming than on flying for effect- ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 109 ing an escape. When feeding, or dressing their plumage, this Swan is usually very noisy, and at night these clamors may be heard to the distance of several miles. Their notes are varied, some resembling the lower ones made by the common tin horn, others runuing through the various modulations of the notes of the clarionet. The differences are presumed to be dependent upon age. i Regarding the edible qualities of the swan, there is great di- versity of opinion among persons who have eaten its flesh, but it is probable that due allowance has not been made for the remarkable difference which exists between the tender, juicy flesh of a young bird, and the tough, dry meat of a very old one. A writer in ‘“Doughty’s Cabinet,” above mentioned, (probably Dr. Sharpless), referring to swans on Chesapeake Bay, says that this bird, when less than five years-old, is by far the finest eat- ing of any of the waterfowl found on that bay. It possesses the flavor of the finest goose, and is far more tender. The length of time that its flesh can be preserved untainted is also mentioned as remarkable, this same writer having seen one still perfectly sweet four weeks after its death, no other method of preservation than an exposure to air having been employed. The age of this swan may be known by the color of the feathers, the yearling being of a deep leaden tint, with a deli- cate red bill. In the second year it has a lighter color, and a white bill. In the third season the bill has become jet black, and about one third of the plumage is still tipped with gray; and until it is fully five years old an occasional feather will pre- sent this tint of youth. This bird is supposed to live to a great age, and its flesh becomes exceedingly tough and tasteless. In consequence of this, the more experienced hunters of the Chesa- peake usually allow the patriarchs of the flock, who lead in their flight, to pass unharmed. These old leaders have a note thought to resemble in a remarkable degree the sound of a common tin horn; and the unmusical character of their cries increases in in- tensity with their age. 110 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. SuBFaMILY ANSERIN.2Z.—THE GEESE. \ Genus CHEN Bois. Chen Born, Isis, 1822, 568. Type, Anser hyperboreus Pauwas. Ezanthemops Euxtot, Proc. Phila. Acad. 1868. Type, Anser rossii BAIRD. Of the three North American species of this genus, two, C. hyperborea, the type, and C. caerulescens, are precisely alike in the details of form, the only difference being the coloration, which is very distinct in the two; the third species, C. rosszi, while agreeing strictly with C. Ayperborea in plumage, both in the adult and. young stages, differs decidedly in the form of the bill, which is quite peculiar. It seems unnecessary, however, to adopt the generic term xzanthemops, proposed for it by Mr. D. G. Elliot, since the difference in the character of the bill from that ‘of the typical species of the genus is hardly of generic value. The species may be distinguished as follows: Synopsis of Species. Common CHARACTERS. Adult with whole head and at least part of the neck white (in two of the three species the plumage entirely white, except quills, which are blackish); the bill dull purplish red (in life) with whitish nail, and feet purplish red. Young with head and neck grayish, the rest of the plumage either chiefly grayish brown or else striped with grayish on a whitish ground; bill and feet dusky. A. Plumage never chiefly white; the adult mainly grayish brown, with bluish-gray rump and wing-coverts, the head and part of the neck white. Young almost wholly grayish brown, including head and neck. 1, C. owrulescens. Bill very robust, the posterior lateral outline of the maxilla de- eidedly concave; commissure widely gaping, and lower outline of the mandible decidedly convex. (Page 110.) B. Plumage of the adult pure white, the primaries black,more grayish toward the base; young grayish’ white, the centres of the feathers darker gray. 2. C, hyperborea. Bill robust, and shaped like that of 0. ewrulescens. {8. C.rossii. Bill small, the posterior lateral outline of the maxilla almost perfectly straight, the tomia closely approximated, and the lower outline of the mandible scarcely convex; inolder specimens the base of the maxilla corrugated or warty. Wing, 18.75-15.50 inches; culmen, 1.50-1.70; depth maxilla at base, .83-.95; tarsus, ’ 2,80-3,00; middle toe, 1.80-2.05. Hab. Northwestern North America.) Chen ceerulescens (Linn.) BLUE-WINGED GOOSE, Popular synonyms. Blue Brant; Blue Goose; White-head; White-headed Brant, or Goose; Bald Brant;SBlue Wavey (Hudson Bay). Anas cerulescens Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 124; ed. 12, i, 1766, 198.—Gutmn. 8, N. 1, 1788, 613,—LatTH. Ind. Orn, ii, 1790, 836. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 111 Anser cerulescens ViErun. Enc. Meth. 1, 1823, 115.—-Bargp, Cat. N. Am. B, 1859, No. 564,—Oours, Key, 1872, 282; Check List, 1873, No. 479; Birds N. W. 1874, 553. — Chen cerulescens Ripaw. Proce. U. 8. Nat. Mus., iii, 1880, 202; Nom. N. Am. B, 1881, No. 590;Man. N. Am B, 1887, 115.—Couzs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 694.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 486.—A. O. U. Cheok List, 1886, p. 351, hypthet. list, No.8. Anser hyperboreus (supposed young) STEPHENS, Shaw's Gen. Zodl. xii, li, 1824, 33.— Bargyp,B.N. Am. 1858, 760. Has, Interior of North America, east of Rocky Mountains, breeding in the interior of Labrador; migrating south, in winter through the Mississippi Valley, occasionally along the Atlantic coast also. Sp..0gar. 4dgult: Head and upper half of the neck white, or mostly white, the former frequently washed with orange-rufous anteriorly: lower neck and body grayish brown, the feathers bordered terminally with paler, these pale edgings, however, nearly obsolete on the neck, where the tint is darker, and joins irregularly against the white above it. Rump and wings plain pearl-gray or bluish cinereous (the former sometimes white), in striking contrast to the deep grayish brown of the scapulars, sides, etc.; that of the rump fading into_white on the upper tail-coverts, and that of the greater eoverts edged externally with the same. Primaries black, fading basally into hoary gray; secondaries deep black,‘nar- rowly edged with white; tail deep ash-gray, the feathers distinctly bordered with white Bill reddish, the commissural space black; feet reddish, Young: Very similar, but the chin, only, white, the rest of the head and neck being uniform dark grayish brown or brown- ish slate, like the breast, only darker in shade; body more cinereous than in the adult, the pale tips to the nearly truncated contour feathers being obsolete. Rump, wings, and tail asinthe adult. Billand feet blackish. Downy young, not seen, Total length, about 30.00 inches; wing, 15.00-17.00; culmen, 2.10-2.30; tarsus, 3,00-3.30; mid- dle toe, 2.15-2.50. The chief variation in the plumage of adults of this species consists in the extent and continuity of the white of the neck. This is usually more or less broken, the dusky of the lower por- tion running upwards in irregular spots or projections; it ex- tends highest on the nape, where it sometimes reaches to the crown. The bright orange-rufous tinge to the anterior portion of the head, being an adventitious stain, is frequently entirely ab- sent. The color of the abdomen also varies from’ nearly pure white to a tint hardly paler than the breast; the rump is also sometimes, but rarely, entirely white, while occasionally white feathers are irregularly interspersed among the dark feathers of the body. ; In both the adult and young stages of this goose the plumage is so very distinct from that of C0. hyperborea that there is no occasion for confounding the two when the points of distinction are understood. We are unable, however, to find the slightest difference in the details of form or in proportions—a fact which suggests the mere possibility of their being white and colored phases of the same species, as in some Herons; but we do not 112. BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. consider this as at.all probable, although in view of their sim- ilarity of form and size, and the fact that the chief variations are a tendency toward partial albinism, the possibility of such a relationship should be borne in mind. A specimen figured in the “Transactions” of the Chicago Academy of Sciences, Vol. I., 1869, pl. 18, has the whole under | parts, posterior to the chest, pure white. We have also seen examples in which not only the abdomen, but also the rump, was white; while, as noted above, white feathers are sometimes interspersed irregularly in the dark plumage of the body. There is also something very ‘unsatisfactory’? or suspicious in the irregular, variable, and undecided way in which the white of the neck joins upon the dark color below it. Mr. E. W. Nelson, of Chicago, who has enjoyed the advantage of inspecting very numerous specimens in the markets of that great game center, writes as follows (Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, VIII., 1876, p. 187) with regard to the changes of plumage in this species: “The adults of this species invariably possess the white head and upper part of the neck, which in the younger specimens is more or less variegated with dark feathers. These disappear as the bird becomes older; and in many the head is a pure snowy white, in sharp contrast to the dark plumage of the rest of the upper parts. The young would appear at first sight to be a distinct species, so different is the pattern of coloration. The white of the head, neck, abdomen, and tail-coverts is entirely absent, and the bird is of an almost uniform ashy plumbeous, slightly darker about the’ head, and lighter on the abdomen. This plumage is retained until the second year at least, as many specimens are procured in the spring with the dark head, neck and abdomen still immaculate; and these, I think, are young of. the preceding year. At the same time specimens are found with the dark feathers about the head well mixed with white, repre- senting the second year. In birds of the third year the white predominates; but not.until the fourth or fifth year does the plumage become perfect.” The, Blue Goose is a common species in Illinois during the migrations, sometimes mixed in with flocks of the Snow Goose, but often in flocks composed entirely of its own species, In his ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEKSE, AND DUCKS. 113 paper on the birds of northern Dakota, Dr. McChesney, referring to its migrations, mentions as a singular fact that he never observed this goose during the spring migrations when the Snow Goose is so abundant. and with which it makes its ap- pearance in the fall—being aiterwards constantly found mixed with the flocks of that goose, and associating with it on terms of such familiarity as to suggest the query whether there may not be a doubt as to its distinctness from that species, and whether it may notin reality be the young, or a semi-melanotic condi- tion. He saw flocks of the Snow Goose covering acres of ground, with here and there a Blue Goose scattered through the flock, and he also saw them associated on the wing. “The case of this goose and that of the Black-bellied Plover” says he, “constitute the only exceptions falling under my notice of a migratory bird appearing in the fall. that does not pass this region during the spring migrations. This goose departs with the preceding about the end of October.” On the other hand, Prof. Cooke says that it migrates through the Mississippi Valley, and winters along the Gulf coast, in mild winters extending up to northern Mississippi and southern Illinois ;” and that “during migration it was noticed at Burling- ton, Iowa, where bulk arrived March 20, 1884’’—thus showing that, nearer the Mississippi River at least, it does pass north- ward in the spring. The breeding ground of the Blue Goose is not known with cer- tainty, but, according to Mr. Barnston, the Indians of the Hud- son’s Bay district report that it is the country lying in the interior from the northeast point of Labrador, where extensive swamps and impenetrable bogs prevail, and where these geese nest on the more solid tufts interspersed through the morass, safe from man or any other than winged enemies. Chen hyperborea (Pall.) LESSER SNOW GOOSE, Povular synonyms. Lesser Snow Goose; White Brant. Anser hyperboreus PAu, Spice. Zool. viii, 1767, 25, pl. 65 (Hastern Siberia); Zoog. Rosso-As. ii, 1826, 227.-Sw. & Ricu. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 46,—Nurv. Man. ii, 1834, 844.—Aup. Orn. Biog. iv, 1888, 562, pl..381; Synop. 1839, 273; B. Am. vi, 1843, 212, pl. 381.—Barrp, B. N. Am, 1858, 760; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 563.—Covss, Key, 1872,-282; Check List, 1878, No. 480;, Birds N. W. 1874, 548.—HENsw. Zool. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 470. —15 114 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Anas hyuperboreus Gust. 8. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 504.—Wius. Am, Orn. viii, 1814, 76, pl. 68, £. 8. Chen hyperboreus Rripaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 591.—Cougs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No, 695.—B. B. & R. Water B. N, Am, i, 1884, 439. Chen hyperbdorea Bots, Isis, 1822, 563.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 169.—Ripaw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 115. Anser albatus Oass. Proc, Phila. Acad, 1856, 41.—BAIRD, B. N. Am. 1858, 925; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 568a.—-Rip@w. Orn. 40th Par, 1877, 619. Chen albatus Exxror7, Illust. Am. B. ii, 1869, pl. 42. Anser hyperboreus, var. albatus Cours, Key, 1872, 282; Check List, 1873, No. 480a. Anser hyperboreus, b. albatus Couns, Birds N. W. 1874, 549. Chen hyperboreus albatus Rripew. Proc. U. 8S. Nat. Mus. 1880. 202; Nom, N..Am. B. 1881, No. 591a.—Couns, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 696. Snow Goose PENN. Arct. Zool. ii, 1790, 479.—LatTH. Synop. vi, 1885, 445. Has. Northern Asia (as far west as European Russia) and western North America, breeding in the Arctic districts (Alaska, etc.), migrating south in winter to southern Cali- fornia, Mexico, and the Gulf coast; occasional on the Atlantic coast during migrations, in Asia, as far south as Japan in winter; casual in various parts of Europe, including Ireland. Sp, Coan. Adult: Entire plumage, except the primaries, snow-white, the head some- times stained with orange-rufous anteriorly; primaries deep black, fading basally into grayish, the primary coverts and alula being hoary ash. Bill purplish red or flesh-color, the nail whitish, and the intertomial space black; iris dark brown; eyelids whitish or flesh- color; feet purple- or orange-red, the soles dingy yellowish. Young: Above, including the head and neck, pale ashy, the feathers of the dorsalregion more whitish on their edges; wing-coverts and tertials dark ashy or slate-grayish centrally, their edges broadly pure white; secondaries mottled ashy, edged with white; primaries as in the adult. Rump, upper tail-coverts, tail, and lower parts, immaculate pure white, the tail and breast tinged with pale ash. Head usually more or less tinged with orange-rufous, this deepest anteriorly. Billand feet dusky. Downy young not seen. Total length, about 23,00 to 28.00 inches; wing, 14.50-17.00 (average, 16.36); culmen 1,95- 2.80 (2.15); tarsus, 2.80-3.25 (8.01); middle toe, 2.00-2,50 (2.34).’ The Snow Goose, more commonly known as the ‘‘ White Brant,” is an abundant migrant in Illinois, coming south in October and returning in January to March, according to the character of the season. According to Mr. Nelson it visits us in large, flocks, either composed entirely of its own species or mixed with indi- viduals of the larger race (Chen hyperborea nivalis) and the Blue Goose, and in the central portion of the State frequents corn- fields. The summer home of the Snow Goose includes the vast extent of territory stretching from the ‘“‘barren-grounds” of middle Arctic America to Bering’s Strait, and also a considerable por- tion of northern Asia, which it traverses until the eastern portion of European Russia is reached. Chen hyperborea nivalis (Forst.) GREATER SNOW GOOSE. Popular svnonyms. Wavey, or Common Wavey (Hudson's Bay); Mexican Goose (Rhode Island): Red Goose (New Jersey); Texas Goose (New Jersey). Anas nivalis Forst, Philos. Trans. lxii, 1772, 418 (Severn R.). ANATIDE—THE SWANS,’ GEESE, AND DUCKS. 115 Chen hyperborea nivalis Rrpaw. Proc. Biol. Soo. Wash. ii, 1884, 107; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 115.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 169a. Tadorna nivea BREUM, Vég. Deutschl. 1881, 854. Has. Eastern North, America; breeding grounds unknown, but probably region be- tween McKenzie River and Hudson’s Bay; migrating south in winter through oastern United States, including Mississippi Valley, to the Gulf coast, even reaching Cuba; occa- sional or accidental in the Bermudas. Sugpsp. Cuar. Entirely similar to C. hyperborea except in size, being considerably larger; young somewhat darker in color than in true C. hynerborea? Total length, about 30.00-88.00; wing, 17.35-17.50 (17.42); culmen, 2.55-2.70 (2.63); tarsus, 8.15- 8,50 (3.28); middle toe, 2.60-2,80 (2.70). ‘This is simply a larger race of the Snow Goose, and occurs with the smaller form throughout the Mississippi Valley during its migrations. Mr. Nelson is of the opinion that in Illinois the two occur in about equal numbers. Farther eastward, however, particularly along the Atlantic coast, the larger form is decidedly the prevailing one, while west of the Rocky Mountains it prob- ably does not occur at all, though the smaller race is abundant there. According to Mr. Boardman, it is common during migration in eastern Maine, and it is said to be more or less common, according to the locality and other circumstances, at various points along the coast farther south. GEnus ANSER Brisson. Anser Briss. Orn. i, 1760, 261. Type, Anas anser LINN.,=A. cinereus MEYER. Gen. CHa. Bill much weaker or Jess swollen than in Chen (depth through base less than half the length of the culmen); plumage never white,* nor with white head, nor bluish wing-coverts. This genus differs from Chen chiefly in the form of ‘the bill, which is much less robust, more depressed terminally, the nails thinner and less arched, the tomia less divergent, etc. In fact, the bill of some species is quite identical in form with that of larger species of Branta (canadensis and hutchinsii). The type of the genus, however, A. (cinereus Meyer), has the bill decid- edly approximating to that of Chen, the commissure gaping quite widely. Only one species occurs in America, the common White-fronted Goose (Anser gambeli Hartuaus). The same species occurs also in Europe in a representative form—the A. albifrons GMEL. The difference between them is chiefly one of size, the American bird being decidedly the larger. Another. *Except sometimes in species which have been long domesticated. 116 5 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. European species or race resembling A. albifrons, but much smaller, seems to bear to the latter about the same relation which Branta hutchinsii.or B. minima do to B. canadensis. Anser albifrons gambeli (Hartl.) AMERICAN WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE. Popular synonyms. Brant; Speckle-belly; Laughing’Goose; Pied Brant; Speckled Brant; Gray Brant; Harlequin Brant; Prairie Brant or Goose; Yellow-legged Brant or Goose; Ansar salvage (Mexico). Anser albifrons Bonap. Synop. 1828, 376.—Sw. & Ricu. F. B.-A. ii. 1831, 466.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 346.—AuD. Orn. Biog. iii, 1885, 568, pl. 286; Synop. 1839, 272; B. Am. vi, 1848, 209, pl. 380, 3 Anser gambeli HanrTLaus, Rev, et Mag. Zool. 1852, 7.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 761; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 565. Anser albifrons, var. gambeli Couss, Key, 1872, 282; Check List, 1873, No. 487; B. N. W. ' 1874, 546, Anseralbifrons b. gambeli B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 448. Anser albifrons gambeli Rripew. Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus. 1880, 203; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No, .5983 a; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 116.—Covums, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 693.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 171 a. Anser erythropus Bargp, Stansbury’s Rep. 1852, 321 ‘nec Linn.). Anser frontalis Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 562 (= young; New Mexico); Cat. N. Am, B. 1859, No. 566. Haz. The whole of North Amerioa, breeding far northward; Cuba. £ Sp. Cuan. Adult: Prevailing color brownish gray, this uniform on the head and neck, and becoming much darker on the flanks; feathers of mantle, wings, sides, and flanks dis- tinctly bordered terminally with pale brownish gray (sometimes approaching grayish white); uppbr edges of the upper layer of flank-feathers pure white, producing a conspicu- ous white stripe when the feathers are properly adjusted. Breast and abdomen grayish white, mixed more or less with irregular spots and patches of black, sometimes scattered and isolated, but often more or less confluent. Anal region, crissum, and upper tail-coverts immaculate pure white; ramp brownish slate; greater wing-coverts glaucous gray tipped with white; secondaries black, their edges narrowly white; primaries slaty black, growing ashy basally; primary-coverts glaucous-gray. Tail brownish slate, broadly tipped with white, the feathers narrowly edged with the same. Front of the head, from the base of the bill to about half way across the lores and ‘forehead, including the anterior border of the chin, white, bordered behind by brownish black, which gradually fades into the grayish brawn of the head and neck. Bill reddish (waxy-yellow, fide NELSON), the nail white; feet reddish.* Young (=A. frontalis Barrp): Nearly similar to the adult, but the anterior portion of the head dark brown, instead of white; wing-coverts less glaucous; black blotches of the under surface absent. Nail of the bill black. Downy young: Above, olive- green; beneath, dingy greenish yellow, deepest yellow on the abdomen. (Hardly distin- guishable trom young of Branta canadensis, but apparently more deeply colored, and with greater contrast between color of upper and lower surfaces). Total length, about 27.00—80,00 inches; extent, about 60.00; wing, 14.25—17.50; culmen, 1.40— 2.35; tarsus. 2,60—8.20; middle toe, 2.35—2.70. Tail-feathers 16 to 18, usually the former. The principal variation among individuals of this species is in the amount of the black blotching on the lower parts. In *“Qolor of bill varying with different specimens, from flesh-color and yellowish, to darker and more reddish tint; the nail at end white or nearly so. Legs and feet orange, the webs lighter, and claws white.” (GurpoN TRUMBULL, Names and Portraits of Birds, p. 11. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 117 some specimens (as No. 10,463, Frontera, Texas), there are only two or three small spots, while in others (as No. 16,788, Hudson’s Bay Territory) the black predominates over the lower parts, being continuous on the abdomen, and only broken on the breast by the admixture of a few pale grayish feathers. In No. 4,517, Washington, D. C., the whitish gray of the lower parts is strongly tinged with ochraceous-rufous—without doubt merely an adventitious stain-from ferruginous matter. There is also a slight range of variation in the shade of the brownish tints of the body, some specimens inclining to ashy and others ap- proaching a decided brownish hue. The smallest specimen (see measurements above) is No. 10,463, Frontera, Texas; the larg- est is No. 16,788, Washington, D.C. In No. 20,138, Fort Reso- lution, the white of the forehead is more extended than in any others, reaching as far as the middle of the eye, and sending back a stripe over the eye to its posterior angle, and another on each side the throat. ss / The variations of plumage in this species are thus discusse by Mr. E. W. Nelson, in the “Bulletin of the Essex Institute,” Vol. VUI. (4876), pp. 136, 137: “The individual variation in this species is very great. A large majority have the ordinary white frontal band and the under parts plentifully mottled with black. In others the black grad- ually decreases, until some specimens do not show the least trace of dark on the abdomen; in such instances the frontal white band is usually present. The young exhibited a dark brown frontal band in place of white, but with more or less dark spots on the abdomen. In very high plumage the abdomen becomes almost entirely black, only a few rusty-colored feathers being interspersed through the black. The white nail on the bill is generally crossed by one or more longitudinal stripes of dark horn-color. In spring, as the breeding season approaches, the bill becomes a clear waxy yellow. There is also much varia- tion in size among adults of this species. I have examined a number of specimens, which by correct comparison were at least one fourth smaller than the average.” The White-fronted Goose is another species which visits Illi- nois only during its migrations, coming some time in October or early in November, and returning in March or April. 118 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. During its sojourn in this State it frequents chiefly open prairies, or wheat fields, where it nibbles the young and tender blades, and corn-fields, where it feeds upon the scattered grains. In California, it is so numerous in winter as to be very destruc- tive to the growing wheat crop, and it is said that in the Sac- ramento and San Joaquin valleys farmers often find it neces- sary to employ men by the month to hunt and drive them from the fields. This is most successfully accomplished by means of brush hiding-places, or “blinds,” or by approaching the flocks on horseback, by the side of an ox which has been trained for the purpose. J ; The present species is greatly esteemed for the excellent qual- ity of its flesh, which, by those who have learned to appreciate it, is generally considered superior to that of any other goose. Genus BRANTA Scopo.t. Branta Scop. Ann. i, Hist. Nat. 1769, 67. Type, Anas bernicla Linn. Bernicla Srepuzns, Gen. Zool. xii, ii, 1824, 45. Type, Anas bernicla LINN. Leucopareia Rricu. Syst. Av. 1858, pl. ix. Type, Anser leucopsis BrcusT. Leucoblepharon Barn, B. N. Am. 1858, 763, Type, Anas canadensis Linn. Gen. Cuan. Serrations on edge of upper mandible visible (from the outside) only near angle of the mouth, the edge (fomiwm) itself very slightly or not at all sinuated; otherwise much like Anger, but bill and feet always black, and the head and neck also chiefly black. With much the same form throughout as thespecies of Anser, the birds belonging to the genus Branta are distinguished by the darker plumage, with the head and neck chiefly black, and the bill and feet entirely deep black, at all ages. All the known species occur in North America, and all but two of them in Tlinois: Our species may be distinguished by the following characters: A. Head and neck black, with a somewhat triangular patch of white on each cheek, usu- ally confluent underneath the head, but sometimes separated by a black stripe or “isthmus” along the throat; in some specimens a white collar around the lower neck. Tail, rump, and primaries brownish black; upper tail-coverts, crissum, and anal region white; rest of the plumage grayish brown, lighter below, the feathers tipped with paler. a, Lower parts light brownish gray; white cheek-patches usually confluent on the throat; white collar round lower neck usually wanting, rarely distinct. 1. B, canadensis (proper). Larger (wing usually more than 16.00 inches, culmen more than 1.75); tail-feathers usually 18-20; length about 35.00-43.00; wing 15.60- 21.00; culmen 1.55-2.70; tarsus 2.45~3.70. 2, B, canadensis hutchinsii, Smaller (wing usually less than 16.00 inches ;culmen less than 1.75); tail-feathers usually 14-16; length about 25.00-34.00; wing 14.75-17.75; culmen 1,20-1.90; tarsus 2, 25-3, 20, ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 119 b. Lower parts deep grayish brown or brownish gray (often but little paler than up- per parts), abruptly contrasted with white of anal region; white cheek-pateches usually separated by a black throat-stripe; white collarround lower neck usually very distinct. 3. B. canadensis minima. Smallest (wing less than 16.00 inches, culmen less than 1,25); tail-feathers 14-16; length about 23.00-25.00; wing 18.60-14.50; culmen 0.95-1.15; tarsus 2. 40-2. 75, B. Head, neck, and chest black, the middle of the neck with a white patch on each side, or a wide collar of the same, interrupted behind. 4. B, bernicla, Wing, 12.30-13.60 inches; culmen, 1.20-1.50; tarsus, 2.10-2.40; middle toe 1.70-2.10. White of the neck confined to two broken (streaked) patches on each side. Above, brownish gray, the feathers narrowly tipped with grayish white; wing-coverts nearly uniform, more bluish gray; remiges, rump, middle upper tail-coverts, and rectrices, brownish black;: terminal and lateral upper tail-coverts, crissum, and anal region white; lower parts pale gray, the feathers tipped with grayish white, abrubtly and strongly contrasted with the black of the chest and fading insensibly into the white of the anal region. There is probably no more perplexing problem in North American ornithology than the relationship of the three forms which are named above as races of B. canadensis. Comparing a very large true B. canadensis with a small B. minima, no one probably would for a moment think of considering them the same species; yet in a large series of specimens so many exam- ples occur which seem to connect both these extremes with the middle-sized &. hutchinse’, that the chain appears to be com- plete; not only is the size thus variable, but every character of coloration also appears to be unreliable. It may be that these intermediate specimens are hybrids, but whether such is the true explanation or not cannot now be determined. Branta canadensis (Linn.) CANADA GOOSE, Popular synonyms. Common Wild Goose; Big Wild Goose; Honker; Reef Goose (North Carolina); Bay Goose (Texas); Cravat Goose. Anas canadensis Linn. S.N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 123; ed. 12, i, 1766, 198.—Wius. Am. Orn, viii, 1814, 52, 67, f. 4. Anser canadensis VistuL. Enc. Meth. 1828, 114.—Sw. & Rica. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 468.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834,349.—AUD. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 1; v, 1839, 607, pl, 201; Synop. 1839, 270; B. Am. vi, 1848, 178. pl. 376. Bernicla canadensis Bok, Isis, 1826, 991.—Baird, B. N. Am, 1858, xlix, 764; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 567.—Ripaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 594.—Couzs, Key, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 702. Branta canadensis BANNIsT. Prog, Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1870, 181.—Cousgs, Key, 1872, 283; Check List, 1873, No, 485; Birds N. W. 1874, 554—Hensg. Zool. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 471.~A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 172.—Rrpew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 620; Man. N, Am. B, 1887, 117. ‘120 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Bernicla canadensis a. canadensis B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 455, 457, ? Bernicla barnstoni Koss, Canad. Nat. vii, Apr. 1862, 152. Has. Temperate North America in general, breeding chiefly within the United States, Canada, Newfoundland, etc. 8p.CHar. Adult: Head and neck deep black, the former with a white patch covering the throat and extending up over the cheeks to behind the eyes, growing gradually nar- rower above, the upper outline usually more or less truncated; this white patch, however, sometimes interrupted on the throat by a narrow black stripe or isthmus. Very raxely, a broad white band, more or less distinctly indicated, crosses the forehead between the eyes. Black of neck frequently bordered below by a white collar, more or less distinct. Upper surface grayish brown, each feather bordered terminally by a paler shade; lower parts with the exposed surface of about the same shade as the tips of the feathers of the upper parts, the concealed portion of the feathers of the shade of the prevailing color above—this much exposed along the sides and on the flanks. Primaries and their coverts plain dusky, the former growing nearly black terminally. Anal region. crissum, and lower tail-coverts im- maculate white. Tail plain deep black; rump plain blackish slate. Bill and feet deep black. Young: Similar to the adult, but the colors duller, the markings less sharply defined; black of the neck passing gradually below into the grayish of the chest; white cheek- patches usually finely speckled with dusky; light-colored tips to the contour-feathers broader. Downy young: Above, including an occipital patch, golden olive-green; beneath pale greenish ochre, the head rather deeper. Total length,'about 35.00-43. inches; wing, 15,60-21.00; culmen, 1.55-2.70; tarsus, 2.45-3.70. According to Professor Cooke,* the Canada Goose “winters in the southern half of the United States; and breeds on both sides of our northern boundary. It breeds regularly at Heron Lake, Minn., and has been known to breed in southern Illinois (Nel- sony.” This statement of course applies to the present time, its former breeding range being undoubtedly far more exten- sive, and including a large portion of the United States to the southward, where the settlement of the country has driven it “to more secluded haunts. Even yet a few pairs seem to linger in the more retired spots of its former range. Mr. Nelson’s rec- ord for Union Co., Illinois (vicinity of Anna), is one case'in point, while the more recent record of its breeding at Reelfoot Lake, Tennessee (L. O. Pindar, in Zhe Auk, for October, 1886, p. 481) is another. The general habits of this species are so well known that it is scarcely necessary to speak of them here at any length. It may be mentioned, however, thatin certain portions of the ‘“‘North- west,” especially in parts of Montana and Dakota, the Canada Goose is said to sometimes nest in trees, possession being taken of a deserted nest of a Fish Hawk or some other large bird of prey. *Bird Migration in the Mississippi Valley, p. 75. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 121 This circumstance, mentioned by Dr. Coues and Dr. Merrill has, however, been discredited by Dr. Agersborg, who says* that he has “several times been shown nests in trees, claimed by the settlers to be the nests of geese; but the “geese” have invari- ably turned out to be cormorants (Phalacrocorax dilophus). Of the few nests of the Canada Geese fourid, the majority have been far away from any water, far out on the prairie; but one nest was built among some large boulders, two feet from the water’s edge * * * May not many, if not all of the nests.seen in trees by other observers have belonged to the shag?”’ The following interesting notes on domesticated Canada Geese are given by Mr..Wm. Dutcher, in Zhe Auk, for January, 1885, p. 111: , During the last week in May, 1879, I saw some goslings, just hatched, belonging to Capt. Lane, of Shinnecock Bay, Long Island, N. Y. August 16, I saw them again and was unable to distinguish them from the rest of the’ flock by their size or plumage. The present season Capt.. Lane raised nineteen geese. I saw the flock daily from June 26 to July 25, and during the ’ latter part of the time the young birds were hardly distinguish- able from the old ones, except by the solicitude the parents dis- played for the safety of their progeny. Capt. Lane has had re- markable success in breeding Canada Geese in confinement, and has kindly furnished me with the following information regard- ing their habits during the incubating season: “They make their nests of dried grass, raising them about twelve inches from the ground. They feather them when they begin to lay, which is about May 1. None lay until three years old; the first season four eggs are laid, five the second season, and when older six and seven. A goose never has more than one mate. The gander never sits on the nest, but while the goose is sitting never leaves her. The time of incubation is four weeks. The young when hatched are strong enough to take care of themselves, that is, they eat grass and walk and swim as soon as they get dry. They will eat meal on the second day. They are in the down four weeks, and are fully grown in six weeks, When swimming, the gander goes ahead, the young next, and the goose follows, invariably.” * The Auk, ii, 1885, pp. 287-288. —16 122 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Branta canadensis hutchinsii (Sw. & Rich.) HUTCHINS'S GOOSE. Popular synonyms. Lesser Canada Goose; Small Gray Goose; Little Wild Goose; Eskimo Goose; Mud Goose (Long Igland); Marsh Goose (North Carolina); Prairie Goose; Bay Goose (Texas). Anas bernicla, var. 6b. Ricu. App. Parry’s Voy. 368. Anser hutchinsii Sw. & Rich. F. B.-A, ii, 1831, 470.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 362.—AUD. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 226, pl. 277; Synop. 1839,271; B. Am. vi, 1843, 198, pl. 377. Bernicla hutchineii Woops. Sitgr. Exp. 1853, 102.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, pp. xlix, 766; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 569. Branta hutchinsii Bannist. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. 1870, 131.—Ripew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 620. Branta canadensis, var. hutchinsii Cours, Key, 1872, 284; Cheek List, 1873, No, 4850. Branta canadensis, ¢. hutchinsti'Cousns, B .N. W. 1874, 554. Bernicla canadensis hutchinsii, Ripaw. Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus. iii, 1880, 203; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No, 594a.—Covgrs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 704. Bernicla canadensis Y. hutchinsi B.B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 455, 458. Brania canadensis hutchinsii A.O. U. Check List, 1886, No, 172a.—Ripaw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 117. Anser leucopareius BRANDT, Bull, 8c. Ac. St. Petersb. i, 1836, 37. Has. North America in general, breeding in the ‘Arctic districts, and migrating south in winter, chiefly through the western United States and Mississippi Valley; northeastern Asia. SusspP. Cuar, Exactly like B. canadensis in plumage, but considerably smaller, and tail-feathers usually 14 or 16. Total length about 25.00-35.00 inches; wing, 14.75-17.75; culmen, 1.20-1.90; tarsus, 2.25-3,20. In a large series of specimens, the following variations are noted: The ashy beneath varies from a pale tint: of canadensis to the dark shades of minima and occidentalis, but is usually about intermediate between the two extremes; the white collar round the neck, at the lower edge of the-black, is seen only in autumnal or winter specimens. The white of the head is usually uninterrupted on the throat, even in very dark-plumaged ex- amples, but occasionally is separated into two patches by a black throat-stripe, as in minima and occidentalis, the plumage other- wise being light colored. This small form of the Canada (ioose is abundant in Dlinois during its migrations, and has little to distinguish it from the larger kind beyond its smaller size, proportionally smaller bill, and the possession, ordinarily, of fewer tail-feathers (one or two pairs less). ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 123 Branta canadensis minima Ridgw. CACKLING OOOSE. Popular synonyms, Little Cackling Goose; Little White-cheeked Goose; Chornie Goose (Prybilov Islands). Bernicla leucopareia Caas. Ilustr. B. Oal. Tex., etc., 1853, 272, pl. 45, nec Anser leucopareius Branpt. (California) Branta canadensis var. leucopareia Cougs, in Elliott’s “Affairs in Alaska,” 1875, 190; not of Key, 1872, p. 284, which = B. occidentalis Barry. (Prybilov Islands.) Bernicia canadensis leucopareia Ripew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 5940, —Covurns, 2d Check List, 1882, No. 703; 2d Key, 1884, No. 689. Bernicla canadensis, 0. leucopareia B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 456, 459, Branta hutechinsi, fp. leucoparia Ripew, Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. i, 1878, 445. (Stockton, Cal.) Branta canadensis, b. leucopareia Cougs, B. N. W. 1874, 554. Branta minima Rinew. Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus, viii, Apr. 20, 1885, 23.—Srmsn. Orn. Expl. Kamtsch. 1885, 147 (in text). , Branta canadensis minima Ripew. Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus, viii, 1885, 355; Man. N, Am. B. 1887, 117.—TURNER, Contr. Nat. Hist. Alaska, 1886, 189 (habits).—A. O. U. Check List, 1887, No. 172c.—NELson, Rep. -Nat. Hist. Alaska, 1887, 86 (habits). Branta canadensis ELuiort, Monog. Seal Islands, 1882, 130, Has. Pacific coast of North America, breeding abundantly about the Yukon delta and contiguous shores of Norton Sound, and migrating south in winter to California; occasional migrant to Mississippi Valley (Wisconsin, Michigan, Illinois, ete.). SupsP. CHar. Similar to B. canadensis occidentalis, Baird, but very much smaller. Differing from B. canadensis hutchinsti in smaller size, especially the bill, and much darker coloration. White cheek-patches usually separated by a black stripe or spotting on the throat, and lower part of neck encircled by a more or less distinct white collar. Lower parts dark grayish brown, abruptly defined against the white of the anal region. Total length, about 22. 00-25.00 inches; wing, 13.60-14.50; culmen, 0.95-1.35; depth of bill at base, .60- .%; width, .52-.60; tarsus, 2,40-2.75; middle toe, 1.90-2.80; tail-feathers, 14 or 16. Adult (No. 68,526, male ad., St. Paul's Island, Alaska, May 14, 1872: H. W.ExizoTtT), Throat with a black “isthmus” .75 of an inch broad, separating widely the white cheek-patches. A distinct white collar between the black of the neck and dark brownish gray of the chest, this about .75 of an inch wide in front, and extending completely around, though much narrower, and some- what interrupted, behind.’ Lower parts dark brownish gray, abruptly defined against the white of the crissum. Wing, 14.25 inches; culmen, 1.80; depth of maxilla at base, .75; width, .65; tarsus, 2.55; middle toe, 2.80; tail-feathers, 14. , Other specimens in the collection are chiefly in summer, plumage, having paler lower parts and less conspicuous white collar; but nearly all have the two cheek-patches com- pletely separated by a broad black isthmus on the throat. With only two exceptions, the specimens are fromthe Pacific coast, chiefly the northern portion. Young (No. 9,956, North Red River, Manitoba, September: R. Kennicott). Much like the adult, but the black of the neck fades gradually into the smoky gray of the chest, with- out being separated by the usual white collar; the white cheek-patches are thickly, though minutely, speckled with black; the feathers of the lower parts, and also the upper tail- coverts, have blackigh shafts. It measures as follows: Wing, 13.70: culmen, 1.25; tarsus, 2.60; middle toe, 2.10. ‘i 124 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. The smallest examples seen are the following: 9 9 a 4 pie lgeigel i | els i we Det ae ¢ e Sa ‘ : or oF ‘ o No. Locality. Date. : 3 ro lig] * 2 128 : to | is oo ee. rE] re ; 3 8 : 8 3 ° seeses Fort Klamath, Or......Js...66.-.-..] 14.20 95 60 «55 2.5 1.90) 16 77164|Btockton, Cal .......... December 13.60 1.10, 60 52 2.60 1.90) 15 70066| Andalusia, Ill ..........)...c..ee00 0s 14,25 1.25. 70), -65 2.10 1.80 16 73136|St. Michael's, Alaska ..|Sept.13..:] 14°15 1.05' 60 55 2.60 1.90) 72744| Washoe Lake, Nev....|Nov.12....| 14.25 1.12 70) 55 2,4 1.95 16 There are others but slightly larger. Any of the above could stand, in a natural atti- . tude, beneath the breast of some of the larger examples of the true Canada Goose. This diminutive goose, hardly larger than a Mallard Duck, is rare in Illinois, being chiefly a bird of the western portions of the continent. It is very abundant during winter in, California, where it is known as the “Cackling Goose,” on account of its peculiar notes. . ; Mr.- Nelson informs us* that it ‘is the most common and gen- erally distributed goose found breeding along the Alaskan coast of Bering Sea,” and that its breeding grounds extend along the courses of the great rivers far into the interior. “‘As May advances and one by one the ponds open.........the flocks come cleaving their way from afar, and as they draw near their sum- ‘mer homes raise,a chorus of loud notes in a high-pitched tone like the syllable ‘lik,’ rapidly repeated, and a reply rises upon all sides, until the whole marsh re-echoes with the din, and the new-comers circle slowly up to the edge of a pond amid a per- fect chorus raised by all the geese about, as if in congratula- tion.” Mr. Turner says} that this is the first of the geese to visit the vicinity of St. Michael’s, where it arrives about the first of May, or even earlier. He states that it is the commonest of all the geese that abound there, and that while it. breeds all along the coast of the Yukon district it is reported. to be rare in the in- terior, where it is replaced by Hutchins’s Goose. em. . *Report upon Natural History Collections in Alaska, 1887, p. 86. + Contributions to the Natural History of Alaska, 1886, pp, 189-141, ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 125 Branta bernicla (Linn.) BRANT. Povular synomyms. Brant Goose; Brent Goose; Common Brant.. Anas bernicla Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 124; ed. 12, i, 1766, 198— Wins. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, pl. 72, fig. 1. Anser bernicia Inuia. Prodr. 1811, 277.—Sw. & Rion, fF. B.-A. ii, 1831, 4649.—Nutr. Man. il, 1834, 359.—AuD. Orn. Biog, v. 1889, 24, 610, pl. 39: ynhop. 1839, 272; B. Am. vi, 1848, 203, pl. 379. : : Branta bernicla Scopout, Ann. I. Hist. Nat. 1769, 67.—BANNist. Proc. Acad. Nat. Sei. Phila. 1870, 131.—Couns, Key, 1872, 284; Check List, 1873, No. 484; B. N. W. 1874, 556.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 173.—Ripew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 118. Anser brenta PaLu. Zoog. Rosso.-As. ii, 1826, 228. Bernicla brenta STEPHENS, Gen. Zo6l. xii, pt. ii, 1824, 46.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 767; Cat. N. Am. B.. 1859. No. 570.—Ripew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 595.—Covugs, Check List, 2d ed.-1882, No. 700.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 467. Anser torquata FRiscH, Vog. Deutsch. ii, pl. 156. Bernicla melanopis Mace1Lu. Man. Orn. ii, 1842, 151. Has. Eastern North America in general, but chiefly the Atlantic coast; rare in the in- terior, or away from salt water; breeds in hyperborean latitudes. Palearctie Region. Sp. CHAR. Adult (No. 63,616, New York market: J. H. Barty). Head, neck, and chest eontinuous black, the anterior portion of the head having a brownish cast; posterior out- line of the black on the chest very regular and sharply-defindd against the brownish gray of the breast. Middle of the neck with a transverse crescentic patch of white on each ‘side, formed of white tips and sub-tips of the feathers, the black showing through in places so as to form oblique lines. Above, smoky-slate, the fea'hers distincly bordered termi- nally with a much paler and more brownish shade. Wings like the back, but with a some- what less brownish cast, the paler margins nearly obsolete. Sceondaries blackish brown; , primaries brownish black. Tail uniform black, but almost concealed by the snow-white lengthened coverts, the upper of which, however, are invaded by a median stripe of black- ish brown from the rump. Breast, abdomen, sides, and flanks much like the upper parts, but the light tips to the feathers whiter, broader, and more conspicuous; anal region and erissum immaculate pure white. Wing, 12.30 inches; culmen, 1.20; tarsus, 2.05; middle toe, 1.70, Young (No. 12,786, Washington, D. C., December, 1858: C. DREXLER). Similar to the adult, but the wing-coverts and secondaries broadly tipped with pure white, forming very conspicuous bars. Lower parts paler and more uniform; white on middle of the neck re- duced to small specks. The Brant is chiefly a salt-water speciesp and therefore not often seen in the interior, though, as Professor Cooke, in his “Bird Migration in the Mississippi Valley”’ (p. 78) has correctly stated, ‘“‘there is much uncertainty in using the records concern. ing this species, because it is so commonly confounded with the Snow Goose, which is locally known as Brant all through the West. From the few records that can be depended on it would seem to have migrated at about the same time as Branta can- adensis.” : Professor Cooke says that ‘during the winter of 1883-84 this species was represented from Illinois southward by a few rare 126 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. visitants. In the spring it was rare south of Minnesota, but by the time it reached that State its numbers had been in-, creased by recruits from the southeast, and it became almost common.” SusramMity ANATIN.A.—Tue Ducks. Genus ANAS Linnzvs. Anas Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 122; ed. 12, i, 1766, 194. Type, by elimination, A. boschas - LINN. GEN. CHar. Hind toe without a membranous lobe, or “flap”; bill not spatulate; tail- feathers 14, narrow and pointed at the tip, but the middle pair not conspicuously elongated, the graduation amounting to less than one third its total length; culmen shorter than mid- dle toe without tarsus. ’ ' Having in the introduction to this work stated my intention to follow the classification and nomenclature of the American Ornithologists’ Union’s “Check List of North American Birds’’, I find myself obliged to group several very strongly marked and obviously distinct generic types under the generic name ‘Anas, these groups being admitted to merely subgeneric rank in the scheme referred to. These so-called subgenera are char- acterized as follows: , A. Culmen longer than middle toe without claw. a. Width of upper mandible near tip more than one third the culmen, the upper and lateral outlines more or less convex for the terminal half. 1, Anas. Wing more than 8.00 inches; scapulars and tertials in adult males broad, and without light-colored median stripes. 2. Querquedula, Wing less than 8.00 inches; scapulars and tertials in adult males lan- ceolate, and marked with buffy or whitish median stripes. d. Width of upper mandible near tip less than one third the length of the culmen, the upper and lateral outlines straight for the terminal half.| (Wing less than 8.00 inches,) 8. Nettion. . B. Culmen shorter than middle toe without claw. ’ 4, Chaulelasmus. Distance from anterior border of nostril to tip of upper mandible more than three times the distance from the same point to nearest loral feathers; lamelle fine and very numerous (more than 30 visible from the outside); tail- feathers 16. 5. Mareca. Distance from anterior border of nostril to tip of upper mandible less than three times the distance from the same point to nearest loral feathers; lamel- le coarser and less numerous (fewer than 15 visible from the outside); tail-feathers . 14, the tail much graduated. For the greater convenience of the reader, keys to the species are given under the separate subgeneric headings, which follow. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 127 Suspcenus ANAS Linyaus. Anas Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 122: ed. 12, i, 1766, 194. Type, by elimination, A. bos- chas LINN. Supe@en. Coan. Usually rather large-sized ducks (wing, in North American species, 10 inches or more), with the bill a little longer than the head or foot, rather broad, de- pressed, the edges parallel, the end rounded; speculum metallic green, blue, or violet, in both sexes, usually bordered posteriorly by a black band, this generally succeeded by a white one. ’ The two species which are known to occur in Illinois are characterized as follows: A. Adult male, except in breeding season, very different from the female, the plumage varied and brilliant; secondaries tipped with white, and greater coverts crossed by a subterminal bar of the same. | 1. A.boschas. Adulé male: Four middle tail-feathers strongly recurved; head and neck brilliant velvety green; chest rich chestnut, with a white collar between it and the green of the neck; speculum rich metallic violet, bounded anteriorly by a black bar, this preceded by a white one, and posteriorly by a black subterminal and white terminal band. adult female and mal: in breeding season: Wings as in the above; elsewhere variegated with dusky and ochraceous, the former on the centres of the feathers, and predominating on the upper parts, the latter on the borders, and prevailing beneath. , B. Sexes alike, at all ages and seasons; no white on the outer surface of the wing. 2. A. obscura, Prevailing color dusky, the feathers bordered with dull ochraceous; head and neck dull buff, everywhere streaked with dusky; no black at base of the bill; speculum usually deep violet. t Anas boschas Linn. MALLARD. Popular synonyms. Green-head; Wild Drake; Wild Duck; English Duck (Florida); French Duck (Louisiana); Gray Duck; Gray Mallard. | Anas boschas Linn. 8. N. ed, 10, i, 1758, 127; ed. 12, i, 1766, 205—Wius. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 112, pl. 70, f, 7—AupD. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 164, pl. 221; Synop. 1839, 276; B. Am. vi, 1843, 236, pl, 385.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 774; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 576,— Cougs, Key, 1872, 285; Check List, 1873, 488; B. N. W. 1874, 559.--B. B: & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 491—HinsH. Zool. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 472.—-A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 182.—Ripew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 621; Man, N. Am. B. 1887, 91. Anas boscas WHARTON, Ibis, 1879, 453.—Ripaw. Nom. N. Am, B. 1881, No. 601.—Couzs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 707. Anas domestica Guru. 8. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 538. Anas (Bochas) domestica Sw. & Rica. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 442.—Nutr Man. ii, 1834, 378. Anas fera “Briss.”—Lzeacu, Cat. Brit. Mus. 1816, 30. Anas adunca Linn. 8. N. ed. 12, i, 1766, 206.-—Gmex. 8. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 538. Has. Northern hemisphere; in North America, generaliy distributed, migrating south in winter to Panama, Cuba, and Bahamas. , Sp. Cuan. Adult male in fall, winter, and spring: Head and neck continuous soft bril- liant metallic green, showing purple and golden-bronze: reflections in different lights. A ring of pure white round the lower part of the neck interrupted behind; chest and tk ae 128 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. upper part of the breast rich dark chestnut. Interscapulars brownish gray, finely waved with grayish white; scapulars and lower parts grayish white, delicately waved with dark ash. Outer webs of tertials dark umber-brown, this also tinging the adjoining scapulars; wing-coverts uniform deep brownish gray, the last row tipped with opaque velvety black, and with a subterminal bar of pure white; speculum rich metallic violet, with a subterminal velvety black, and terminal pure white bar; primaries plain brownish gray. Rump, upper tail-coverts, and crissum, intense velvety black, showing faint reflections of bluish green. Tail white, the feathers grayish centrally. Two middle feathers black, slightly recurved; the two longer upper tail-coverts greatly recurved. Bill olive-yellow or ochraceous-olive (in life), the nail black; iris dark brown; farsi and toes fine rich orange-red (changing to yellowish in dried skin). Length, about 24.00 inches; extent, 38; wing, 11.00-11.85; culmen, 2.10-2.40; tarsus, 1.60-1.80; middle toe, 2.00-2.15. Adult male in summer: “Closely resembling the female, being merely somewhat darker incolor. This plumage is donned by degrees early in June; and in August the full rich winter dress is again resumed” (SHARPE & Dresses). Adult female: Wing as in the male. Above, brownish dusky, much varie- gated by broad pale ochraceous edges to the feathers; beneath pale ochraceous, the feathers dusky centrally, producing a thickly spotted or striped appearance. On the top of the head the dusky predominates, as it also does in a loral and auricular line, form- ing a lighter superciliary stripe between this and the crown. Bill dark olive-greenish, becoming olivaceous-yellow along edges; feet lighter, orange-red thanin male. Length, about 20.00-21.50 inches; wing, 10.25-11.50; culmen, 2.00-2.35; tarsus, 1.50-1.80; middle toe, 1.90-2.05. Downy young: Above, deep olivaceous, relieved by two pairs of yellowish buff spots, the first pair on the back, just behind the wings, the. second at the base of the tail, the first not confluent with the buff of the lower parts; wings deep olivaceous, varied on both edges with dull greenish yellow; pileum and nape olivaceous, darker on the occi- put, lighter on the forehead; a broad superciliary stripe, including the sides of the fore- head, sides of the head and neck, and entire lower parts, yellowish buff, deepest on the head, paler on the anal region and crissum; sides more grayish, and crossed, between the wings and thighs, by two wide patches of dark olive projecting from that of the back. Side of the head marked by a narrow but very distinct stripe of dark brown from the upper basal angle of the maxilla to the eye, thence back to and confluent with the oliva- ceous of the occiput; berieath the latter, almost directly over the ear, an isolated spot of the same. . _ The adult males in winter plumage vary chiefly in the extent and richness of the chest- nut of the chest. Sometimes this is restricted to the chest, but occasionally it spreads over the breast, as in No. 12,718, Washington, D. C, (December), in which the entire lower parts, except the sides, are tinged with rich cream-color. The Mallard is probably the best known of all our wild ducks, being both plentiful and conspicuous on account of its size. Although chiefly a migrant, a few sometimes remain during mild winters,in the southern portion of the State, and isolated pairs undoubtedly breed in a few of the more secluded localities, where they are reasonably free from danger of molestation. “ Marshy. places, the margins of ponds and streams, pools and ditches, are its favorite resorts. It walks with ease, and can even run with considerable speed, or dive, if forced to do so; but never dives in order to feed. Its food consists chiefly of the seeds of grasses, fibrous roots of plants, worms, mollusks, and insects. In feeding in shallow water it keeps the hind part of its body erect, while it searches the muddy bottom with its bill. When a ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 129 alarmed and made to fly, it utters a loud quack, the cry of the female being the louder. It feeds silently; but after hunger is appeased, it amuses itself with various jabberings, swims about, moves its head backward and forward, throws the water over its back, shoots along the surface, half flying, half running, and seems quite playful. If alarmed, it springs up at once with a bound, rises obliquely to a considerable height, and flies off with great speed, the wings préducing a whistling sound. It flies by repeated flaps, without sailing or undulations; and when in full flight its speed is hardly less than a hundred miles in an hour. “The Mallard pairs early in the spring, and soon disperses, each pair seeking its breeding-place, and nesting on the ground, in the midst of marshes or among water plants, occasionally on higher ground, but always in the vicinity of water. Its nest is usually large, and rudely constructed of sedges and coarse grasses, rarely lined with down or feathers. It has been known in rare instances to nest in a tree; in such cases occupying the deserted nest of a Hawk, Crow, or other large bird. The eggs, usually six or eight in number, are pale dull green or eeeuee white, and measure 2.25 inches by 1.60 inches. ‘The female alone incubates, the male leaving her to undergo his annual moult. The female sits very closely, and will some- times even allow herself to be taken on the nest, or permit the eggs to be removed while she is sitting. When she leaves the nest she conceals the eggs. with hay, down, or any convenient material. The period of incubation is four weeks. The young, when hatched, immediately follow their mother to the water, where she attends them devotedly, aids them in procuring food, and warns them of the approach of danger. While they are at- tempting, to escape, she feigns lameness, to attract to herself the attention of the enemy. The young are extremely active, dive with surprising celerity, and remain under water with only the bill above the surface. When the young are full grown, the male rejoins the brood; and several families unite to form a small flock.” (Water Birds of North America.) * 130 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. = Anas obscura Gmel. DUSKY DUCK. Popular synonyms. Black Mallard; Black Duck; Black English Duck (Florida)! Anas obscura GMEL. 8. N. i, pt. fi, 1788, 541.—Wins. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 141, pl. 72, fig.5.—Nurr Man. ji, 1834, 392,—A uD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1888, 15, pl. 302; Synop. 1839,276; B. Am. vi, 1843, 244,p]. 386.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 775; Cat. N. Am. B, 1859, No. 577.—Cougs, Key, 1872, 285; Check List, 1873, No. 489; 2d ed, 1882, No. 708; B. N. W, 1874, 560.—Ripew. Nom. N. Am.'B. 1881, No. 602; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 91.—-B. B. & RB. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 499. —A. 0. U. Check List, 1886, No. 133. Haz. Eastern North America, west to the Mississippi Valley, north to Labrador and Fort Anderson and York Factory; breeding from Long Island, northern Illinois, and Iowa, northward. ' Sp. Coan. Adult. Prevailing color brownish black or dusky, the feathers edged, more or less distinctly, with pale grayish fulvous. Head and neck about equally streaked with grayish white (more ochraceous near the bill) and dusky; pileum nearly uniform dusky, and a dusky stripe back from the eye. Speculum violet, changing to green in some lights, narrowly tipped with white, and witha broad subterminal bar of velvety black; last row of coverts dusky brownish, broadly tipped with black, Sexes alike.. “Bill yellowish green, the unguis dusky; iris dark brown; feet orange-red, the webs dusky” (AUDUBON). Wing, 10,50-11.50 inches; culmen, 2.00-2.35; tarsus, 1.70-1.80; middle toe, 1.90-2. 10. Downy young. Above olivaceous-brown, faintly relieved by six inconspicuous mark- ings of light brownish buff, situated as follows: one on the posterior border of each arm- wing; one (small and sometimes nearly obsolete) on each side of the back, behind the wings, and one, more distinct, on each side the rump, near the base of the tail, Pileum and hind neck (longitudinally) brown, like the back; rest of the head and neck, with lower parts, ‘light dingy brownish buff, paler on the abdomen; side of head marked witha narrow dusky stripe running from the upper basal angle of the maxilla to the eye, thence back toward the occiput, but scarcely confluent with the brown on the latter; an indistinct spot on the auricular region, with a still less distinct dusky mark extending back from this to the nape. A summer specimen from Moose Factory, Hudson's Bay Territory (No. 17,971, Jonn Mc- KeEnz1x), differs from fall, winter, and spring examples from the United States in having the pale edges of the feathers nearly all worn off, so that the plumage appears to be almost uniform black, while the lower parts are strongly tinged with rusty, this approaching a bright ferruginous tint on the breast. Some examples have a slight tinge of metallic green on the sides of the head, behind the eye. The Dusky Duck is chiefly an eastern species, and reaches nearly the western limit of its range in Illinois. Just how far to the west and southwest it extends is unknown, but Col. N. S. Goss is convinced that it does not occur in Kansas, where a quite distinct though a somewhat similar species, Anas fulvigula maculosa (Senn.), replaces it. It has been recorded from Utah Lake, Utah, but in view of what we now know the record in question doubtless refers to the species just mentioned. Professor Cooke says that “though principally a bird of the Eastern States, the Black Duck is not rare in the northern part of the Mississippi Valley,” and that it breeds in Iowa and IIli- nois, but he does not give particulars as to its breeding in the latter State. ANATIDH—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 131 SuscEnvus Querquedula STEPHENS. ; Querquedula SterHens, Shaw's Gen. Zool. xii, pt. ii, 1824,142. Type, Anas querquedula Linn. Cyanopterus Eyton, Mon. Anat. 1838, 38. Type? (Not of Halliday, 1835.) Pterocyanea Bonap. Cat, Met. 1842, 71. Type? : Supcen. Cuan. Size small (wing less than 8 inches). Bill slightly longer than the -head, the edges nearly parallel, the maxillary tomium sinuated, so as to distinctly ex- pose the lamella for the basal half, and the terminal half of the culmen slightly but dis- tinetly arched. Otherwise much like Wettion. ‘ The two North American species of Querquedula agree very closely in the details of form, in which respect they scarcely differ from the type of the genus, the Q. querquedula of Europe. The coloration of the wing, which is almost exactly that of Spatula, is also essentially the same in these three species. The females are very different from the mmaleg, excépt in the colors of the wing, being much duller. The following are the main differential characteristics of the North American species: 1. A. discors. Adult male: Head and neck dull plumbeous, with a faint lavender- purple gloss on the sides of the occiput; pileum blackish; a large white, some- what crescent-shaped, mark before the eye, entirely across fore part of the head; lower parts pale reddish, spotted with black. 2, A. cyanoptera. Adult male: Head, neck, and lower parts rich uniform chestnut, the abdomen duller (sometimes dusky), the pileum blackish. ~— Anas discors Linn. THE BLUE-WINGED TEAL. Popular synonyms. Blue-wing; White-face, or eee Teal; Summer ‘Teal; Cer- eeta comun (Mexico). Anas discors Linn. 8. N. ed. 12, i, 1766, 205.—W1us. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 74, pl. 68, fig. 4,—AuD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1888, 11], pl. 313; Synop. 1839, 282; B. Am. vi, 1843, 287, pl. 398.—-A. O. U. Oheck List, 1886, No. 140.—Ripaw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 93. Anas (Boschas) discors Sw. & Riou. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 444.-Nutr. Man. ii, 1834, 397. Querquedula discors SrtmpHeEns, Shaw's Gen. Zool. xii, pt. ii,1824, 149.—Barrp,B. N. Am. 1858, 779; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 581.—Covugs, Key, 1872, 287; Check List, 18738, No. 496; 2d ed. 1882, No. 716; Birds N. W. 1874, 566.—HENsH. Zo6l. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 476.—Ripew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 623; Nom.N. Am. B. 1881, No. 609.— B. B. & R, Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 531. 'Sarcella male de Cayenne, dite le Soucrourou, Burr. Pl. Enl. 966 (male ad.). ‘Has. North America in general, but chiefly the Kastern Province; north to Alaska, south in winter throughout West Indies, Central America, and northern South America as far as Ecuador. Accidental in Europe. , Sp. Cuan. Adult male: Head and neck dull plumbeous, slightly glossed with laven- der-purple on the side of the occiput and nape, dnd ,marked in front of the eyes by a large, somewhat crescéntic, patch of white, extending entirely across the anterior por- tion of the head; pileum, chin, and feathers bordering the white patches, blackish; lower parts pale chestnut, or reddish buffy, thickly spotted with black, the crissum uni- form black, Back and anterior scapulars dusky, marked with concentric or U-shaped bars of pale reddish buff; lesser wing-coverts and outer webs of some of the longer scapulars pale blue; middle coverts white for the exposed portion, forming a bar across the wing; speculum bronzy green, dusky terminally, witha very narrow white tip; ter- 182 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. . tials black, with a central stripe of buff; a white patch at the base of the tail on each side; axillars immaculate pure white. Bill uniform black; iris brown; feet yellowish, with dusky webs. Adult female: Wings, only, as in the male; upper parts dusky, the feathers bordered with dull buff, the pileum and nape finely streaked; rest of head and neck, and lower parts generally, brownish white, the head and neck streaked with dusky, except on the chin and upper part of the throat, the streaks more dense immediately before and behind the eye; thus forming an indistinct stripe on the side of the head; feathers of the lower parts generally with dusky grayish brown centres, forming spots when exposed, less distinct on the abdomen, where sometimes obsolete. Total length, about 16 inches; extent, about 25; wing, 7.00-7.50; culmen, 1.40-1. &; tar- gus, 1.20-1.30; middle toe, 1.40-1.45. The Blue-winged Teal is probably the most numerous of our smaller ducks, and, though by far the larger number occur only during the migrations, individuals may be found at all times of the year under favorable circumstances of locality and weather. The bulk of the species, however, winter in the Gulf States and southward, while the breeding range is difficult to make out, owing to the fact that it is not gregarious during the breeding season, but occurs scatteringly in isolated localities where it is most likely to escape observation. “The flight of this duck is extremely rapid, fully as swift as that ‘of the Passenger Pigeon. When advancing against a stiff breeze it shows alternately its upper and lower surface. During its flight it utters a soft, lisping note, which it also emits when apprehensive of danger., It swims buoyantly, and when in a flock so closely together that the individuals nearly touch each other. In consequence of this habit hunters are able to make a frightful havoc among these birds on their first appearance in the fall, when they are easily approached. Audubon has seen as many as eighty-four killed by a single discharge of a double- barelled gun. “Tt may readily be kept in confinement, soon becomes very. docile, feeds readily on coarse corn-meal, and might easily be domesticated. Professor Kumlien, however, has made several unsuccessful attempts to raise this duck by placing its eggs under a domestic hen. He informs me that this species is the latest duck to arrive in the spring. It is very common, and breeds abundantly, in southern Wisconsin, especially on the borders of Lake Koshkonong. It nests on the ground among the reeds and coarse herbage, generally near the water, but he has met with its nest at least half a mile from the nearest water, though always on low land. The nest is simply an accumula- ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 183 tion of reeds and rushes lined in the middle with down and feathers. This duck prefers the dryer marshes near creeks. He has always found its nests well lined with down, and when the female leaves her nest she always covers her eggs with down, and draws the grass, of which the outside of the nest is com- posed, over the top. He does not think that she ever lays more than twelve eggs, the usual number being eight to twelve. These are of a clear ivory white, without even the slightest tinge of green. They range from 1.80 to 1.95 inches in length, and 1.25 to 1.35 in breadth.” ( Water Birds of North America.) Anas cyanoptera Vieill. CINNAMON TEAL. Popular synonyms. Red-breasted Teal; Red Teal; Red Duck; Cerceta café (Mexico). Anas cyanoptera Vrettu. Nouv. Dict. v, 1816, 104.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 141.—Ripaw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 98. ‘ Querquedula cyanoptera Cass. U. 8.N. Astr. Exp. ii, 1855, 202 (Chili); Illustr. B. Cal. Tex. etc. 1855, 82, pl. 15.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 780; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 582.—Couns, Key, 1872, 288; Check List, 1873, No. 497; 2d ed. 1882, No. 717; B. N. W. 1874, 567.—Hensu. Zod]. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 477.—Rrpew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 623; Nom, N. Am. B. 1881, No. 610.—B. B. & BR. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 585, Anas raffiesit Kine, Zo6l. Jour. iv, 1828, 87; Suppl. pl. 29 (Straits of Mageilan). Pterocyanea ceruleata “LicHt.” Guay, Gen. B. iii, 1849, 617. Has. Western America, from the Columbia River to Chili,the Argentine Republic, and Falkland Islands. Casual in Eastern North America (Louisiana, Illinois, Florida?). Sp. Coan. Adult male: Head, neck, and lower parts rich purplish chestnut, duller —sometimes quite dusky—on the abdomen; pileum and crissum black; scapulars and part of the back chestnut, marked with U-shaped bars of black, the middle of the back more dusky; tertials black, with a central stripe of buff; longer scapulars similar, the outermost feathers with the outer webs light blue; lesser wing-coverts plain light blue; middle coverts dusky, tipped with white; speculum uniform green, varying from metallic grass-green to bronze; primaries and primary-coverts dusky; upper tail-coverts dusky, edged with pale fulvous; rectrices dusky, edged with brownish white or pale brownish gray; axillars immaculate pure white. Bill deep black; iris orange; feet orange, joints and webs blackish. Adult female: Similar to that of A. discors, but larger and deeper colored, only the upper part of the throat (sometimes only the chin) unstreaked, the ab- domen usually distinctly spotted; chest deeply tinged with light brown. Bill dusky, paler beneath and along edge; iris brown; legs and feet ochreous-drab. Young male: Similar to the adult female, but markings on the lower parts all distinctly longitudinal or streak-like. Downy young: Above dark olivaceous, relieved by a longitudinal ob- long oblique spot of deep greenish buff on each side the back (behind the wings), and a similar spot of clearer yellowish on each side of the base of the tail; the anterior spots confluent with the yellow of the sides, the posterior ones isolated by the exten- sion beneath them of the olivaceous of the tail. Pileum and hind neck similar to the back, but darker; forehead, broad superciliary stripe, and rest of the head'and neck, except as described, ‘with entire lower parts, deep yellowish buff, the side of the head marked with a distinct narrow stripe of dark brown extending from the upper base ‘of the max- illa to the eye, and thence back to the occiput. . 134 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Total length (adult), about 15.50-16.50 inches; extent, 24. 00-24, 50; wing, 7.20-7.75; cul- men, 1.65-1.85; tarsus, 1.25-1.35; middle toe, 1.40-1.50. Examples from Chili and the Argentine Republic are larger and more richly colored than those from the United States; the white bar across the end of the middle coverts narrower, and nearly con- cealed by the overlying last row of lesser coverts. The differ- ences, however, may not prove constant. i The female of this species is very difficult to distinguish from that of A. discors, and it is probably not possible always to separate them with certainty. The present species averages considerably larger, ‘however; the wings in the adult female ranging from 7.20 to 7.50 inches, the culmen 1.70 to 1.75, _ against 6.70 to 7.00, and 1.40 to 1.50, as in A. discors. The colors are also deeper, nearly the whole throat being. streaked, the breast deeply tinged with light brown, and the abdomen almost always distinctly spotted. This western representation of the Blue-winged Teal, is com- mon as far east as middle Kansas, where, according to Col. N. 8. Goss, it probably breeds, but nearer the Mississippi River it is of irregular and uncertain occurrence, having been only once or twice taken in Illinois. Its habits are very similar to those of the Blue-wing. s Suscenus Nettion Kaup. Nettion Kaup, Entw. Eur. Thierw. 1829, 95, 196. Type, Anas crecca LINN. Susaen. Cuan. Bill shorter than head, narrow, depressed (except at base), the edges parallel; tarsus shorter than bill or middle toe; nape with a smail mane-like tuft; rec- trices more or less acuminate, the middle pair longest. This subgenus is very readily distinguished from Querquedula by the conspicuously different form of the bill, which is far more like that of Dajila, though much smaller, being conspicuously more depressed terminally and proportionally deeper through the base than in Querquedula, while the lower edge or maxillary tomium is either gently convex throughout (as in the southern species), - or straight anteriorly and decidedly convex posteriorly (as in the northern forms), the lamelle being thus completely hidden. In Querqueduia, on the other hand, the terminal portion of the tomium is strongly convex, and the posterior half cut away, as ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 135 it were, so as to fully expose the lamelle. Through the forms occurring in the southern hemisphere, this genus leads directly to Pucilonetia, which in turn is intermediate between Vettion and Dafila. The two species of JVettion occurring in the northern hemi- sphere are much alike, the males being very handsome in plumage. They may be distinguished as follows: Common CHARACTERS. Adult males: Head and upper half of the neck chestnut-rufous, marked with a large patch of metallic green on each side of the head, behind the eye; chin and upper part of throat dull black; nuchal tuft blue-black; lower part of the neck, upper part of the back, scapulars, and lateral parts of the’body beneath, undulated with black and white; outer scapulars marked with black and white; speculum bright metallic green, the lower feathers black, tipped with white; crissum black centrally, creamy buff laterally. Adult females: Wing, only, as in the males; elsewhere varied with dusky. and brownish white, the former prevailing above, the latter beneath; ahs abdomen nearly or quite immaculate. 1, A. carolinensis, A broad white bar across side of breast, before the wing; inner webs of outer scapulars vermiculated with dusky and brownish white, the outer webs marked with a longitudinal lanceolate spot of black, bordered internally with a@ white line. 2 (2. A. erecca. No white bar on side of breast; inner web of outer scapulars wholly, and outer web partly, white, the exposed surface of outer webs almost entirely black: undulations of sides, etc., much coarser than in A. carolinensis. Hab, Palearctic Region, occasional in eastern North America.] A. crecca, the common teal of Europe, has several times been taken in the Atlantic States, but has not ‘yet been detected in Illinois. Anas carolinensis Gmel. GREEN-WINGED TEAL. Popular synonyms. Green-wing; American Green-winged Teal; Red-headed Teal; Mud Teal (Maine); Winter Teal (Long Island); Cerceta de listo verde (Mexico). Anas erecca, var. Forst. Philos. Trans. bxii, 1772, 383, 419. Anas (Boschas) crecca, var. Sw. & Rrow. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 443,—Nurr. Man. ii, 1835, 400, Anas crecca Wius. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 101, pl. 60, fig. 1 (mot of Linn.).—AvupD. Orn, Biog. iii, 1835, 218; v, 1839, 616, pl, 228. Anas carolinensis GMEL. S. N. i, pt. ii, 1878, 538. —AuD. Synop. 1839, 281; B. Am. vi, 1843, 281, pl. 392.—A. O. U. Check Suist, 1886, No. 139.—RipGw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 94. Querquedula carolinensis StePHEns, Shaw's Gen. Zodl. xii, pt. ii, 1824, 128.—Covns, Key,, 1872, 287; Check List, 1878, No. 495; 2d ed. 1882, No. 715; B. N. W. 1874, 565.—H=N- sHAw, Zo6l. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 475." ; Nettion carolinensis Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 777; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 879.— Ripew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 623; Nom. N. Am. B, 1881, No. 612.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. ‘Am. ii, 1884, 2. Anas americana Vint. Enc. Meth. 1823, 155. “Anas sylvatica VIETLL. ?” 136 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Haz. North America in general, breeding chiefly north of the United States, migrat- ing south as far as Honduras and Cuba. Greenland. Sp. CHar. Adult male: Head and neck rich chestnut-rufous, inclosing a broad patch of soft dark metallic green on each side of the occiput, from the eye (which it sur- rounds) down the sides of the nape; where the two areas of the opposite sides touch a short nuchal crest of bluish-black. The green patch bordered anteriorly and beneath by a yellowish white line, and a less distinct line of the same bordering the base of the upper mandible, extending thence back to, and indistinctly following, for a short dis- tance, the upper anterior portion of the green patch. Chin and upper part of theethroat dull black. Front of the chest deep pinkish cream-color, with roundish and transverse- ly ovate spots of black. Collar round the lower neck, sides of the chest, sides, and flanks, very delicately and beautifully waved with black upon a white ground; outer scap- ulars similarly waved. Sides ofthe breast with a large transverse bar of plain white. Cris- sum tich deep cream-color, bounded anteriorly, and divided medially, with velvety black: post-femoral region waved like fhe flanks: rest of lower parts plain white, sometimes tinged with cream-color. Back, scapulars, rump, wing-coverts, primaries, and tail, plain slate- grayish. Outer row of scapulars with their outer webs about half velvety black bordered interiorly with a white line. Last row of coverts broadly tipped with deep ochraceous ; speculum opaque black, narrowly tipped with white, the four or five upper feathers with their outer webs richly brilliant soft metallic green, varying from golden to violaceous, ac- cording to the light. Bill black; iris brown; feet light fleshy (horn-color when dried). Adult female: Wing as in the male, but duller. Above grayish dusky, variegated with edgings and transverse bars of ochraceous-white. Ground-color of the head, neck, and yower parts, dingy whitish, more or less tinged with ochraceous ; head and neck speckled with dusky, the spots enlarged and aggregated on the pileum, so as to form the prevailing color, and also along the upper border of the ear-coverts, producing astripe behind the eye. Chest, sides, and flanks more heavily spotted with dusky. Abdomen sometimes plain, but usually speckled. Bill brownish; iris brown; feet pale brown (fleshy in life) Young male: Similar to the adult female, but entire abdomen and sides immaculate white. Downy young:* Above grayish brown, with a light. grayish-buff spot on each side the back, and a similar pair on the rump; wings crossed near the end by a light grayish- buff bar. Head, neck, and lower parts light dull buff ; crown and occiput covered by an elongated patch of grayish brown (darker than the back), this searcely reaching the fore- head, but continued down the hind neck to the brown of the back; a dusky streak behind the eye, notreaching tothe occiput; below the posterior end of this, an oblong spot of grayish brown. ; Total length, about 14 inches; extent 20.00-24.50; wing, 6.25~7.40; culmen, 1.40-1.60; tarsus, 1,25; middle toe, 1.30-1.35. Many specimens, both males and females, have the lower parts tinged with orange-rusty like the stain on the head of the swans and white geese. Sometimes this tinge pervades the whole under surface, and is occasionally so deep as to give the lower parts a uniform rusty or almost chestnut aspect. Adult females usually have the abdomen and sides thickly spotted or flecked with brown, being thereby readily distinguished from the young males, which have the whole abdomen, etc., immac- ulate white. This beautiful little duck is a common species during migra- tions, and sometimes passes the winter in the southern portions of the State. Although stated by Kennicott to breed in the ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 187 northern part, there appears to be no recent record of its doing so. Professor Cooke says that it “breeds in Manitoba and along our northern border.” “Mr. Robert Kennicott, in his notes on this species, states that it is very rare on the upper Yukon River, although he found it abundant in Oregon and in Washington Territory, and throughout British America as far north as latitude 70°; but he did not see it anywhere in the Mackenzie Region in any considerable abundance. Asit is more common in the Atlantic States than in the valley of the Mississippi, the main body breed more toward the northeast, beyond the limits of the United States in the region of Hudson’s Bay. Though arriv- ing in this country among the earliest of the migrating ducks, this species is quite late in leaving the Yukon and the Mackenzie. Mr. Kennicott saw it October 2 at ‘Fort Liard. The nests found by him were in nearly open ground, among moss, and generally far from water. In one instance he saw the nest of this duck at the foot of a small spruce in a mossy, half-barren, small dry plain, and at least forty rods from water. This nest’ was a simple depression in the moss, but thickly lined with down, and well protected by the overhanging branches of the spruce. The female fluttered slowly off along the. ground at his approach, and the nest was found to contain eight eggs. According to Mr. Dall nests of this species frequently have from sixteen to eighteen eps. “Audubon says that the food of the Green-winged Teal con- sists principally of the seeds of grasses—which are collected when floating, or while still adhering to their stalk—small acorns, fallen grapes or berries, as well as aquatic insects, worms, and small snails. It is much more particular in the selection of its food than are most ducks, and its flesh is there- fore delicious, and- probably better that that of any other of the duck tribe. Audubon adds that when this bird has fed on wild oats at Green Bay, or soaked rice in the fields of Georgia or Carolina, it is much superior to the Canvas-back in tender- ness, juiciness, and flavor. “On land it moves with more grace and ease than any other species except the Wood Duck, and it can run with considerable —18 138 = BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. speed without its feet becoming entangled. In the water also it moves with great ease and rapidity, and on the wing it is , one of the swiftest of its tribe. It rises from the water with a single spring, and so swiftly that it can only be hit by a very expert marksman; and it also dives readily when wounded. This is a fresh-water bird, and it is very rarely met with near the sea. Its migrations are over the land, and not along*the sea-shore.”’ ( Water Birds of North America.) A nest containing ten eggs was found by Mr. H. W. Henshaw, near Ft. Garland, Colorado, under a sage-bush, perhaps thirty feet from the water’s edge. A deep hollow had been scooped in the sand, and lined warmly with fine grass and down, evidently taken from the bird’s own breast, which was plucked nearly bare. The eggs were of a pale yellowish color, and averaged 1.81 in length by 1.31 in diameter. SuspcEenus Chaulelasmus Gray. Chaulelasmus GRAY, 1888, 56. Type, Anas strepera LINN. Chauliodus Swatns, F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 440. Type, Anas strepera LINN. (Not of Boca, 1801.) Chauliodes Eyton, Mon. Anat, 1838, 48, Same type. (Not of LaTREILuez, 1798.) SuBGEN. CHar. Oulmen shorter than middle toe, without claw: distance from an- terior border of nostril to tip of upper mandible more than three times the distance from the same point to the nearest loral feathers; lamella very fine and numerous, more than 30 being visible from the outside; tail-feathers 16. But two species of this subgenus are known; the common and widely diffused A. sérepera and the more recently discovered A. couesi (STREETS) of Washington Island, in the South Pacific Ocean. The latter is very similar to A. strepera, having the same form and essentially the same coloration, but is much smaller, with several differences in plumage. The sides are white, coarsely spotted with grayish, instead of finely undulated with the same, as is the case with the adult male of A. sétrepera; but this may be owing to a difference of age, the type of A. couest being an immature bird. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 189 x Anas strepera Linn. GADWALL. Popular synonyms, Gray Duck; Gray Widgeon (Savannah, Ga.); Speckle-belly ; Creek Duck ‘(Long Island); Blaten Duck (coast of New Jersey); Pato pardo de. Grupo (Mexico). Anas strepera LINN. 8, N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 125; ed. 12, 1,1766,200.— Wins. Am. Orn, viii, 1814,120, pl. 71.—Nutt. Man. ii, 1834, 883.—Aup. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 353, pl. 348; Synop. 1839, 378; B. Am., vi, 1848, 254, pl. 388.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 135. —Ripew. Man. N. Am. B 1887, 95. Anas (Chauliodus) streperus Sw. & Riou. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 440, Chaulelasmus streperus “GRAY, 1838;” List B. Br. Mus. 1844, 189.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 782; Cat. N. Am. B, 1859, No. 584.—Covss, Key, 1872, 286; Check List, 1873, No: 491; 2d ed. 1882, No. 711; Birds N. W. 1874,563.—-HENsH. Z061. Wheeler's Exp. 1875, 474.—Ripaw. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 622; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 604.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 506, : Anas strepera americana Max. Jour. tar Orn. ii, 1842, 169. “Chaulelasmus americana, Br.” (GRAY). “Anas cinerea et subuiata, 8.G. GMELIN.” (GRAY). Anas kekuschka Guru. 8. N.,i, pt. ii, 1788, 531., “Anas mail, Hopason” (GRAY). “Anas capensis, SWAINSON” (GRAY). Has. Nearly cosmopolitan (Europe, Asia, Africa, and North America). Temperate North America in general, breeding chiefly within the United States; West Indies. Sp. Coan. Adult male in fall, winter, and spring: Ground-color of the head and neck pale brown, or brownish white, thickly speckled with black; on the pileum the brown more uniform, and the specks obsolete; on the occiput, when present, they incline to the form of transverse bars. Chest marked with horseshoe-like bars, or grescents, of white and black, the bars of tHe latter wider. Lateral portions of the body beneath, back, and scapulars finely waved, in curved transverse lines, with slate-color and white. Many of the longer scapulars plain brownish gray, broadly edged with a lighter, more fulvous tint. Rump plain dull slate. Tail-coverts, above and below, intense opaque velvety black. Tai! ashy, faintly edged with white. Middle rows of wing-coverts bright chestnut, the anterior coverts brownish gray, and the posterior ones deep black; last row deep velvety black. Speculum immaculate pure white, the lower feathers ashy (some with black on outer webs, ) narrowly tipped with white; tertials. plain pale ash, the primaries a darker shade of the same. “Bill bluish black. Iris reddish hazel. Feet dull orange-yellow, claws brownish black, webs dusky” (AUDUBON). Adult male,in summer: “Crown brownish black, with a greenish tinge; an indistinct streak through the eye, dark brown; rest of the head and neck dull brownish white, marked with blackish brown, as in the previously described bird [adult,male in spring]; back, rump, and upper tail-coverts dark blackish brown, each feather margined with rusty red; wings and tail as in the bird above described; breast dull rusty red, each feather with a central black spot; flanks dark brown, broadly marked and margined with dull rufous; the rest of the under parts dull white, each feather having a central blackish brown drop-shaped mark”. (SHaRPs & DRESSER.) Adult female: Colors chiefly brownish dusky and brownish white, in longitudinal streaks on the head and neck, and in-irregular transverse spots and bars on other portions. On the upper surface the dusky prevails, and on the lower parts the whitish predominates. Wing nearly as in the male, but the chestnut usually absent, the black less extended, and the gray of the coverts generally more or less barred and tipped with white. Abdomen and lower part of the breast pure white; throat finely streaked with dusky. Downy young: “Covered with soft short down; head, nape, back, and rump, dark dull brown, on each side of the rump and back of each wing-joint a sulphur-yellow spot, the wing-joints being marked with that color; forehead, space round the eye, throat, and chest pale sulphur- yellow; abdomen white, shaded with sulphur-yellow, on the lower part sooty gray.” (SHARPE & DRESSER.) 140 BIRDS OF ILLINOW. Male. Wing, 10.25-11.00 inches; culmen, 1.60-1.75; width of bill, .60-.75; tarsus, 1.45-1.70; middle toe, 1.80-1.90. Female. Wing, 10.00-10.10; culmen, 1.55-1.65; width of bill, .60-.70; _ tarsus, 1.60; middle toe, 1.75-1.80. " : Although one of the above diagnoses will fit almost any ex- ample of this species, there is yet a very considerable extent of individual vatiation noticeable in a large series. ‘Thus, No. 17,040 (Washington, D. C., Feb. 25, 1860; C. DrexLeR) has the uniform brown of the pileum coming down over the side of the head to a line on a level with the lower eyelid, the whole upper half of the head being thus nearly free from’ specks; while that ‘portion behind the eye has a faint, but very perceptible, rose- purple reflection—this part of the head calling strongly to mind the head-pattern of A. carolinensis and A. americana. On the ‘other hand, an adult male from Philadelphia (No. 46,658, - J.. KripER) has even the top of the head, spotted. No. 9,791, adult male, Fort Steilacoom, Washington (Dr. Grorar Suck- LEY), has the pileum almost chestnut, the brown having there so deep a reddish cast; the lower neck is nearly plain pale ochraceous, abruptly defined against the darkly colored jugulum. Specimens from Cape St. Lucas and Utah present no unusual features. : All American specimens differ uniformly from the single Euro- pean pair before us, in several very tangible respects. The European male has the neck quite deeply ochraceous, while in the American ones there is seldom more than a mere tinge of this color; the chest is pervaded by a wash of a more pinkish tinge of ochraceous, while there is appreciably less regu- larity and clearness in the markings of that region. The longer scapulars are more deeply tinged with fulvous, and the finely ‘undulated portions are pervaded with a brownish wash, entirely wanting in the American series. The measurements of this specimen (No. 57,187, Europe; Schliiter Collection) are as fol- lows: Wing, 10.80 inches; culmen, 1.65; width of bill, .70; tarsus, 1.55; middle toe, 1.85. The female specimen from Eu- rope is very similar to North American examples, but. is rather more deeply colored, the dark centres to the feathers being nearly deep black. The whole throat is immaculate white. The measurements are as follows: Wing, 9.50 inches; culmen, 1.50; tarsus, 1.35; middle toe, 1.60. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 141 According to Professor Cooke,* the Gadwell ‘‘winters abun- dantly in the Gulf States and sometimes in Illinois in mild win- ters; it is also known to winter near a@ warm apring | in Wyo- - ming. It breeds locally throughout most of its range.’ ’ Supcenus Mareca STEPHENS. Mareca Stupuens, Shaw's Gen. Zod). xii, pt. ii, 1824, 180, Type, Anas penelope LInn. SuBGEN. CHAR. Bill small, shorter than the head, rather narrow, the edges parallel! to near the end, ‘where they gradually converge to a rounded tip; culmen gently concave; , lamellz of thé maxille almost concealed; feet small, the tarsus about as long as the bill. Adult male.in winter with the scapulars and tertials (in the North American species the tail-coverts and rectrices also) lanceolate. The two North American species of the subgenus Mares may be distinguished as follows: ComMoN CHARACTERS (adult males in winter dress). Forehead white; posterior half of the middle wing-covert region white, forming a large patch of this color; abdo- men immaculate white; speculum velvety black, with or without green. 1. A. penelope. Head and neck plain rufous, the forehead and part of the crown white; ground-color of the dorsal region, sides, and flanks, whitish. . 2. A. americana, Head and neck whitish, speckled with biack, and with a dark metal- lic-green space on the side of the occiput (sometimes continued down the nape); ground-color of the dorsal region, sides, and flanks. vinaceous or pinkish cinna-: mon. Anas penelope Linn. WIDGEON. Popular synonyms. Europeon Widgeon; Red-headed Widgeon. Anas penelope LInn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 126; ed. 12, i, 1766, 202.—Naum. Vaég. Deoutschl. xi, 1842, 724, pl. 305.—REINH. Ibis, iii, 1861, 12 eeenenay —A, 0. U. Check List, 1886, No. 186.—Ripew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 96. Mareca penelope SELBY, Br. Orn. ii, 324.—Barep, B. N. Am. 1858, 784; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 586.—CovEs, Proc. Essex Inst. v, 1868, 299 (New England); Key, 1872, 268; Check List, 1878, No. 492; 2d ed, 1882, No. 712; B. N. W. 1874, 564 (foot-note).—Rrpaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 606.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 517, Anas cagolea 8. G. Gwen. Reise i, 1770, 7. Mareca fistularis StrpHens, Shaw's Gen. Zool. xii, pt. ii, 1824, 181, pl. 50. Wigeon, Yarr. Brit. B. ed. 2, iii, 286; ed. 3, iii, 287, fig. } Has. Northern hemisphere in general, but less uniformly distributed in North Amer- ica, where, however, occurring not uncommonly in New York, Pennsylvania, Maryland, Virginia, North Carolina, Florida, Illinois, Wisconsin, California, ete.; breeding in the Aleutian Islands, Alaska. * Bird Migration in the Mississippi Valley, p. 65. 142 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Sp. CHar. Adult male in winter. Head and neck plain cinnamon rufous, abruptly de- fined below, and becoming paler next the bill; forehead and pileum medially immacu- late white; a few blackish feathers around the eyelids. Chest and sides of the bréast pinkish vinaceous, the tips of the feathers paler. Sides, flanks, and entire dorsal surface delicately waved with transversé zigzag bars of black and pure white, the bars of the latter rather the narrower. Wing-coverts immaculate pure white, except the anterior portion of the lesser-covert region, which is deep ashy; last row of coverts tipped with velvety black; tertials velvety black, saafted and edged with pure white, the lower one with the entire lower web pure white. Speculum soft metallic green on the anterior half or two thirds, the terminal portion velvety black. Primaries plain slate-grayish. Tail-coverts (both upper and lower) deep black, with’ a very faint bluish gloss; rest of the lower parts immaculate white. Tail-feathers dark ashy, edged with ashy white. Bill ‘ight grayish blue, with the tip, including the urguis, black;” iris ‘‘hazel brown;” legs and feet “light grayish blue.” (MACGILLIVRAY.) Wing, 10.00-11.00 inches; culmen, 1.35~1.45; tarsus, 1, 45-160; middle toe, 1.65-1.75. Adult female. “Much smaller and differently colored. The bill, iris, and feet, how- ever, are as in the male. The head and upper neck are yellowish red, with small green- ish black spots, the feathers being barred with that color, of which there is more on the upper part of the head. The feathers of the upper parts in general are dusky brown, edged with brownish red or whitish, and barred with the same. The wings are dusky gray; the coverts in the part which is white in the male tipped with that color, the secondary coverts with an indication of a dark terminal bar: the spéculum grayish, without lustre; the inner secondaries marked somewhat as in the male, but with dark gray in place of gray. The tail-feathers brownish gray, edged with brownish white. On the lower forepart and sides of the neck the feathers are obscurely barred with reddish brown and brownish gray; the sides are similar; the breast and abdomen white; the feathers under the tail white, barred with brown, as are the smaller lower wing- coverts; the larger pale gray.” (MACGILLIVRAY.) Length, about 19:25 inches; extent, 82,50; wing, 10.00; tail, 4.00; culmen, 1:50; tarsus, 1.50; middle toe, 1.25. Young male. Head, neck, chest, sides, and flanks, umber-brown, varying to a cinna- mon shade, the head and neck thickly streaked with black, and the feathers of the chest sides, ete., centred with dusky. Back and scapulars dusky, the feathers broadly bordered with dull fulvous; crissum irregularly streaked and spotted with dusky; rump and upper tail-coverts slaty brown, bordered with dull whitish. Wing as in the adult, except that the coverts are dull cinereous broadly bordered with white. Lower parts, except as described, pure white. An adult male from Alexandria, Va. (No. 29,519), has the rufous of the head perfectly uniform, with only a few blackish feathers immediately around the eye, and a suffusion of the same on the chin; while the pinkish of the chest joins the rufous of the neck. No. 1,271, New York market, has the sides of the head speckled minutely with greenish black, the nape and entire throat clouded with the same, and the pinkish of the chest separated from the rufous of the neck by a narrow indistinct collar of whitish, undulated with blackish. No. 10,376, from Florida, approaches still more closely to A. americana in having also the occiput spotted with black, the eye more broadly surrounded with greenish, the ground-color of the cheeks nearly white, and the sides pervaded by a tinge of the ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND’ DUCKS. 143 pinkish of the chest. No. 62,525, from St. Paul’s Island, Alaska, is most like the Alexandria specimen. A young male (No. 57,119, Europe) has the brown of the head, neck, sides, and flanks, almost chestnut; the wing as in ‘the adult, and the dorsal region mostly clothed with feathers of the adult dress. According to Dr. Brewer ( Water Birds of North America, Vol. I., p. 519), “two instances are on record” of the occurrence of the Widzeon in Illinois. Its habits are quite similar to those of the Baldpate. Anas americana Gmel. BALDPATE. Popular synonyms. American Widgeon: Green-headed Widgeon; Bald-head; Bald-face; Bald-crown; White-belly; Poacher (Detroit, Mich.); Wheat Duck (Oregon). Anas americana GMEL. 8. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 526.—Was. Ani. Orn. viii, 1814, 86, pl. 69, fig. 1.— AuD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 387, pl. 315; Synop. 1839, 279; B. Am. vi, 1843, 259, pl. 389.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 187.—Ripaw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 96. Mareca americana STEPHENS, Shaw’s Gen. Zool. xii, pt. ii, 1824, 135.—Sw. & Rica. F. B.-A. "if, 1831, 445.—Barrp, B. N. Am, 1858, 783; Cat. N. Am. B, 1859, No. 585.—Couss, Key, 1872, 286; Check List, 1873, No. 493; 2d ed. 1882, No. 713; Birds N. W. 1874, 561.—HENsH. Zool. Wheeler's Exp. 1875, 475.—Ripa@w. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 622; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 607.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 520. Mareca penelope, b., Buastus, B. Eur, 1862, 21. Has. North America in general, north to Arctic Ocean, south, in winter, to Guatemala and Cuba. Accidentalin Europe. Breeds nearly throughout its range. Sp, Caan. Adult male in winter: Forehead and middle of crown (longitudinally) white, generally immaculate; ground-color of head and neck white, sometimes more or less soiled with grayish or brown, and thickly speckled with black; a broad space of metallic blackish green on the side of the occiput, running forward to the eye, and sometimes down the nape, where the two spaces are confluent. Chest plain pinkish vinaceous; sides and flanks the same, delicately waved with black; lower tail-coverts velvety black; rest of lower parts pure white. Back and scapulars grayish-white, more or less tinged with the color of the sides, and similarly waved with black. Wing-coverts immaculate pure white, the an- terior portion of the lesser-covert region ashy, and the last row tipped with velvety black; speculum soft metallic green anteriorly, velvety black posteriorly; tertials velvety black, sharply edged with white, the lower one with its lower edge entirely pure white; primaries plain slate-grayish. Rump ashy, minutely waved on the edges of the feathers; upper tail- coverts velvety black, the inner webs mostly grayish; tail hoary grayish. Bill light grayish blue, the end black; iris brown; legs and :eet light bluish. Length, about 20.00 inches; wing, 10.25-10.75; culmen, 1.80-1.50; tarsus, 1.45-1.65; middle toe, 1.65-1.85. Adult female: Above, dusky grayish brown, with transverse, rather distant, bars of dull white or light ochraceous. Wing-coverts dark dull ashy, broadly tipped and bordered with white; speculum dull black. Head and neck streaked with blackish upon a dull whitish ground, the former color pre- vailing on the nape and behind the eye. Chest pale grayish vinaceous, the feathers darker beneath the surface: sides and flanks deeper vinaceous; lower tail-coverts transversely spotted with brown; rest of lower parts pure white. Somewhat smaller than the male (length about 18.00 inches). Young male: Similar to the adult female, but the colors more pronounced and the pattern better defined, especially on the wing. Downy young: Above, 144 ‘BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. x dark olive, with a sepia tinge; a spot of pale greenish fulvous on the posterior half ‘of the wing, one on each side of the back, and one on each side of the rump. Lower parts, ‘inelud- ing head and neck, pale fulvous: a distinct blackish olive stripe from bill to and back from the eye, with a wide and conspicuous superciliary stripe of fulvous above it. The chief variation in the plumage of adult males of this spe- cies consists in the extent of the green patch and the amout of black spotting on the head, the pureness of the white on, the forehead, and the extent of the white patch on the wing-coverts, The green patch on the sides of the occiput is usually poorly de- fined, and broken up by lighter spotting; but in No. 21,426, _Washington, D. C., and No. 84,712, from southern Ohio (Dr. F. - W. Lanepon), it is as conspicuous as in the adult male of A. carolinensis, and of very similar extent and form. Anteriorly it ‘surrounds the eye, and posteriorly it-passes down the nape, where the two opposite spaces are confluent for the entire length of the neck); its outlines are firm throughout, and its surface is entirely unbroken by admixture of, white. ‘In the former speci-. men the black spotting is so aggregated on the throat that the “gular region is almost uniformly dusky, while the spots at the lower end of the white portion of the neck are so large as al- most to blend into a collar, uniting the green of the nape with the black of the throat. All the other characters of the species - are very much exaggerated in this specimen. Younger speci- mens, just possessed of the adult dress, are usually distinguished by having the white wing-covert patch clouded with ash, the green of the head poorly defined, and the white of the forehead more or less speckled. “The Baldpate ranges over the whole of North America. In winter it is common in the Gulf States and lower part of the Misissippi Valley. It breeds chiefly in the North, but is known to breed in Manitoba, Dakota, Minnesota, Nebraska, Kansas, Illinois, and Texas. Its movements in migration resemble those of the Gadwall.”’ (CooKE.) “The Widgeon breeds rather abundantly throughout the whole of British America, as far north as the Arctic Ocean, but only. rarely in the extreme northern parts of the United States, both east and west of the Rocky Mountains. In October and April it visits in large numbers the rivers and marshes, as well as both sea-coasts, of the northern United States, and is much sought by hunters, its flesh being excellent, and the bird generally in good ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. _ 145 condition. It winters in the Southern States, Mexico, and the West Indies. Though in winter the Widgeon collects in very ‘large flocks, it passes over the northern parts of the Mississippi Valley in small bands, ‘and usually arrives at the Mackenzie and the Yukon in pairs, or in small parties of three or four together. It reaches Slave Lake and the Yukon early in May, and begins to nest about the middle of that month, though some do not do so till the early part of June. It is rather more common west of the mountains than in the Mackenzie region, and con- siderable numbers are found in the breeding season on Lake Winnipeg, where several were obtained by Mr. Donald Gunn. In the north the Widgeon exhibits a greater preference for rivers and open lakes than most of the other fresh-water ducks, which ‘prefer the grassy lakes and marshes. Most of the nests which Mr. Kennicott observed were near rivers in places not frequented by other ducks, except sometimes by the Mallard. The favorite situation for the nest is remarkable; for while the other ducks— except, perhaps, the teal—choose the immediate vicinity of water, he. found the Widgeon always breeding at some consider- able distance from it. Several of the nests obtained on the Yukon were fully half a mile from the river—the nearest water. He invariably found the nesf among dry leaves, upon high, dry ground, either under large trees or in thick groves of small ones— frequently among thick spruces. The nest is rather small—simply a depression among the leaves—but thickly lined with down, with which, after incubation is begun, the eggs are covered when left by the parent. The nest is usually placed at.the foot of a _ tree or bush, with generally no attempt at concealment. The female, when started from her nest, rises silently into the air, and usually flies to the nearest water, though sometimes she will alight on the ground a few rods distant. The males remain more or less in the vicinity for some time after the females begin to incubate; but when the time of moulting arrives they retire to the grassy marshes and edges of lakes for concealment, lead- ing a solitary life. The young, while unable to fly, are frequently found seeking the shelter of grassy lakes. As soon, however, as they can fly they return to their favorite river-shores and open feeding places, where they obtain aquatic insects, a few small shells, and the seeds and roots of various plants. In the fall —19 r 146 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. the broods often separate before leaving for the South; this they do about the middle of September. Mr. Kennicott several times found perfect eggs of this speties—though never of any. other’ duck—dropped along the shores of rivers, at their feeding-places. This bird is said to make its first es on the Chesapeake about the last of October. ‘“‘While the Canvas-backs and. the Black-heads diss and pull up by the roots the Vallisneria grass, the Bald-pates manage to ob- tain their full share of it, and at times succeed in robbing them ‘of the whole. At this time the flavor of the Bald-pate is con- sidered preferable to that of even the far-famed, Canvas-backs. Of all the ducks that are found in the Chesapeake, the Widgeon is said to be one of the most difficult to attract to the shore by the process known as ‘tolling.’ In wing-shooting it is regarded by the hunters as a great nuisance. It is not only so shy that it avoids the points of land, but by its whistlmg and confused manner of flight it alarms the other species. During its stay in those waters it is the constant companion of the Canvas-backs, upon whose superiority in diving it depends in a large degree for its food, stealing from them, as they rise to the surface of the water, the tender roots of the plant of which both are so fond. When in good condition the flesh of the Bald-pate cannot easily be distinguished from that of the Canvas-back. It is also thought that birds killed on other waters, though excellent eating, are far inferior to those from the flats of the Chesapeake. The Bald- pate is said to visit the rice-fields of the South during the winter in considerable numbers.” (Water Birds of North America.) Genus DAFILA STErHENs. i Dafila Stzpuens, Shaw's Gen. Zool. xii, pt. ii, 1824, 126. Type, Anas acuta Linn. Phasianurus Waau. Isis, 1832, 1235. Same type. Gun. Cuar. Bill longer than the head, narrow, the edges parallel, deep through the ‘pase, but otherwise much depressed, the basal portion of the culmen much ascending. In the male, the scapulars, tertials, and middle rectrices lanceolate, the latter elongated considerably beyond the other tail-feathers. The adult male in winter plumage very different from the adult female, but the sexes much alike in summer. As defined above, the genus Dajila includes but a single species, the D. acuta, or common Pin-tail, of the northern hem- isphere. Several South American species have been referred to it; but they all differ in having the sexes alike, in the dull (much ANATIDA—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 147 spotted) coloration, and in the very slight elongation of the middle rectrices. They constitute a group somewhat interme- diate between Dajila and Wettion, and are again directly con- nected with the latter by several small ducks of the southern hemisphere, usually referred to the genus Querquedula (e. g. Jiavirostris, of South America, and eatoni, of Kerguelen Island). The genus Pwcetlonetta (type, Anas bahamensis Linn.) was proposed for this group by Kaup, and should probably be retained for it. Dafila acuta (Linn.) PINTAIL. Popular synomyns. Sprig-tail; Spike-tail; Pike-tail; Picket-tail; Pheasant Duck; Sea Pheasant, Water Pheasant; Smee, Smees, or Smethe (New Jersey); Long-neck; Pato golondrino (Mexico).* Anas acuta Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 126; ed, 12, i, 1766, 202.—Wins. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, pl. 68, fig. 3—Nutt. Man. ii, 1834, 886.—AuD. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835,214; v, 1839,615, pl. 227; Synop. 1839,279; Birds Am. vi, 1843,266, pl. 390. . Dafila acuta Bonar. Comp. List, 1838, 56—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 776; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 578.—Cours, Key, 1872, 286; Check List, 1878, No. 490; ed. 1882, No. 710; Birds N. W. 1874, 561.—HmnsH. Zod]. Wheeler's Exp. 1875, 473.—Ripe@w. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 622; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 605; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 98.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, 511.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 143, “Anas alan@ica SPARRM. Mus. Carls. iii, pl. 60.” Anas sparrmanni Lat. Ind. Orn. ii, 1790, 876. Anas caudacuta Panu. Zoog. Rosso-As. ii, 1826, 280. Anas longicauda Briss. Orn. vi, 1760, 366, pl. $4, fig. 1, 2. Anas caudata BREHM, Vog. Deutschl. 869. Dafila acuta, var. americana BonaP. Compt. Rend. xlili, 1856. Has. Nearly the entire northern hemisphere, breeding chiefly far northward; in North America migrating south in winter as far as Panama and Cuba. Sp. Coan. Adult male in fall, winter, and spring: Head and upper half of the neck hair-brown or grayish umber, the upper surface darker, often inclining to deep sepia-brown; all the feathers (usually) appreciably darker centrally, producing an indistinctly and minutely speckled appearance; on each side of the occiput the brown has a metallic gloss of dull green, showing a faint purple reflection in some lights. Nape opaque intense blaek, separated from the brown of the upper neck by an upward extension of the white of the lower neck nearly to the occiput. Stripe on each side of the nape (as described above), lower half of the neck frontally and laterally, breast, and abdomen immaculate white. Lower hind neck, with entire dorsal region and lateral lower parts, finely waved with trans- verse, rather zigzag, lines of white and black of nearly equal width. Longer scapulars opaque velvety black centrally, edged broadly with grayish white; outer seapulars with exposed ends of their outer webs entirely velvety black. Tertials silvery gray, with a median stripe of intense velvety black. Speculum dull green, varying to dull bronzy ‘purple, with a subterminial bar of velvety black and atip of white. Wing-coverts uni- form brownish gray, the last row broadly tipped with cinnamon-rufous. Primaries dull slaty. Upper tail-coverts with outer webs black, the inner webs grayish white: lower tail-coverts deep opaque velvety black, the exterior row with their outer webs white; post- femoralspace delicate cream-color. Tail-feathers dark ashy edged with white, the elon- * For many of the local names of game and water birds I am indebted to Mr. Gurdon Trombull’s Names and Portraits of Birds, (Harper Brothers, New York,)a most useful work, which should be in the hands of every sportsman. 148 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. \ gated middle pair uniform deep black. Bill plumbeous-blue, the ungui, base, and stripe along culmen, black; iris brown; feet dusky. Adult male in summer: “Head, neck, and under parts generally as in the adult female, except that the abdomen is duller in color and less marked; back dull dark brown, each feather having one or two irregular dirty-white bars, and some being irregularly vermiculated with that color; ramp washed with gray; tail similar in color to that of the bird last deseribed [i.e. adult male in winter], but the two central feathers are but slightly elongated; wings also asin the last described stage of plumage, but the elongated secondaries and scapulars are shorter and blunter, and in color dark gray, black along the centre, some of the latter being marked like the back; flanks grayish brown, every feather having broad yellowish-white bars; under tail-coverts as in the female.” (Suanrz & DRESSER.) Adult female: Above slate-dusky, variegated trans- versely with yellowish white or pale ochraceous; these markings sémetimes irregularly. bar-like, but oftener of U-shaped form, one on the edge, and one in the middle portion of each feather. Wing muchas in the male, but metallic color of the speculum duller, the ochraceous bar anterior to it paler, and the white terminal bar tinged with buff; wing- coverts narrowly tipped with whitish. Upper tail-covérts broadly edged with whitish, and more or less marked with irregular, usually V-shaped, lines of the same. Tail-feathers dusky, edged with whitish, and with more or less distinct indications of distant bars of the same. Head and neck dingy whitish, tinged with brown on the superior surface, which is heavily streaked with blackish, the other portions more finely and thinly streaked, the throat being nearly immaculate. Rest of the lower parts dingy white, the feathers more grayish beneath the surface; crissum and flanks stfeaked with dusky, but abdomen. etc., usually immaculate. Young male: Similar to the female, but markings on upper parts more bar-like, and lower parts sometimes almost wholly streaked. Young female (No. 54,633 Kadiak, Alaska, Aug, 1, 1868; F. BiscHorr): Speculum pale .broceoli-brown, marbled toward base of feathers with dusky. All the feathers of the upper parts conspicuously and broadly bordered with buffy white, lower parts everywhere densely streaked with dusky. Downy young: Above grayish brown, with a white stripe along each side of the back,a white space on the wing, and a white superciliary stripe. Beneath grayish white, witha very faint yellowish tinge; a brown stripe behind the eye, and an indistinct space of the same over the ears. y ; Male, total length about 26.00-28.00 inches; extent, 36.00: wing, 10.25-11.10; tail 7.25-9.50; culmen 1.85-2.15; width of bill, .70-.80; tarsus, 1.55-1.85; middle toe, 1.70-2.10. Female, wing, 9.60-10.10; tail, 4.50-5.00; culmen 1.80-2.10; width of bill .65-.75; tarsus, 1.65; middle toe, 1.80. The range of individual variation. of the colors in this species is very slight, consisting of differences that are scarcely worthy of mention. European specimens, however, differ very apprecia- bly from North American ones in narrower speculum, but not, in other respects. Two males measure as follows: Wing, 10.30- 11.00 inches; tail (elongated middle feathers), 8.50; culmen, 1.85-1.95; width of bill, .70-.75; tarsus, 1.40-1.60; middle toe, 1,85-1.90.1 ; “Breeds in Manitoba and the northern tier of States, and, like the other river ducks, is common during: the winter in the Gulf States, and occasionally as far north as Illinois, but it also goes much farther south. It is one of the earliest ducks. to migrate and was one of the most abundant of those which so 1 Sharpe & Dresser (“History of the Birds of Europe," Part xix) give the dimensions of the European Pin-tail as follows: “Total length 2 feet, culmen 2.2 inches; wing 11.2 inches; tail. 7.5; tarsus, 1.6.” ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 149 strenuously endeavored to work northward during February, in 1884. .~. . . A few ducks of this species spent most of the winter of 1884-’85 at-Shawneetown, II],’ The only record of their wintering farther north than Shawneetown was received from Mr, W. B. Hull, of Milwaukee, Wis. Mr. Hull writes: “For about a week the whole bay was frozen over, with ice from 12 to 14 inches thick. During this time the pot-hunters butchered numbers of Pintail Ducks. The ducks were half starved, and would allow a man to approach within 20 feet of them. Ice-men were cutting ice close to the shore, and ducks came right among them to get to the open water. A friend who was on the ship Oneida during her twenty-five days in the ice, said that the ducks (Pintails mostly, but a few ‘northern’ ducks, he did not recognize) were ‘frozen in.” When walking on the ice near the boat, he saw hundreds of ducks in a solid casing of ice. In the winter of 1873-’74, they were killed in the ' same way.” (COOKE.*) “The following valuable notes relative to the summer distri- bution and breeding of this duck are abridged from the papers of my late esteemed friend, Robert Kennicott: In America the summer home of the Pintailis within the Arctic regions, farther to the northward than that of any other of our fresh-water ducks, comparatively few breeding south of Great Slave Lake. . In their spring migrations to the northward they move in im- mense flocks, which only disperse upon their arrival at their breeding-grounds. A few reach that lake about May 1; but the main body arrive about a week or so later, and mostly pass directly on across the lake to the northward. On the Yukon the first: specimens were seen in the latter part of April; and before the 10th of May they had arrived in immense flocks, which remained some time together in that vicinity before pass- ing farther north or separating to’ breed. At this time the birds were fat, and their flesh delicious, much superior to that of any other duck, except the Widegon. At the Yukon the Pin- tails are the latest in nesting of any of the fresh-water ducks, and generally hatch a week or two after the Mallard. He found them breeding in the same grounds, and at about the same time, with Pulix afinis, though they do not associate with that * Bird Migration in the Mississippi Valley, pp. 68,69. ‘ 150 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. : species. He always found their nest in low but dry ground, under the shelter of trees or bushes, though never among thick large trees, and not more than two or three rods from water. They never build on hummocks in the water, nor on high land, but always just upon the edge of a marsh or lake. “The nest is usually placed at the foot of a willow, among grass, rather than leaves or moss, and is extremely simple, be- ing’ composed of merely a few bits of broken dry grass and sticks, but well lined with down. “In observing the breeding habits of these ducks, Mr. Kenni- cott was struck with the remarkable persistence in the individ- uals of each species in always choosing precisely similar locali- ties for their nests, so far as possible; and he was therefore somewhat particular in describing minutely the peculiar nesting- place chosen by each. “The eggs are from seven. to nine in number, and rather small in size. At the Yukon the young are mostly. hatched in the early part of July. The old males moult before this time, and the females somewhat later, During the summer and fall, as in the spring, the flesh of this species is superior to that of any other duck in that region. It leaves the Yukon and Mac- kenzie River region a little later than the other fresh-water ducks, except the Widgeon. It does not collect in such large flocks in autumn as on its arrival in the spring. (Dr. T. M. BREWER, in Water Birds of North America.) Genus SPATULA Borg. Spatula Bors, Isis, 1822, 564. Type, Anas clypeata LINN. Rhynchaspis “LEacu,” STEPHENS, Shaw’s Gen. Zo6l. xii, pt. ii, 1824, 114. Same type. Gen. Cuaz. Billlonger than the head, much expanded, or almost spatulate, terminally, where about twice as wide as at the compressed base; maxillary lamella very thin, length- ened, almost completely exposed posteriorly, where resembling the teeth of a fine comb. Tail short, the feathers acute. - Of this very curious and well-marked genus, in which, however, there is little that is peculiar except in the form of the bill, about five species are known; one occurring throughout the northern hemisphere, the others peculiar to South America, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand. In the two American species and 1 ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS, 151 that from Australia there is a very close resemblance in the coloy- ation of the wing to certain species of Querquedula (e. g. discors and cyanoptera); while in the Australian species (S. rhynchotis) this curious analogy is carried still farther, the coloration of the head, including the white crescentic bar across the lores, being almost exactly as in Q. descors. ' Spatula clypeata (Linn.) SHOVELLER. Popular synonyms. Spoon-bill; Shovel-bill; Broady; Butter Duck; Cow-frog (North Carolina); Mud-shoveller (Florida). Anas clypeata LINN. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 124; ed. 12, i, 1766, 200.— Wins. Am. Orn. vill, 1814, 65, | pl. 67, fig, 7.—Sw. & Ricu. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 439.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 375.—Aup. Orn. Biog. iv, 1888, 241, pl. 327; Synop. 1839, 288;°B. Am. vi, 1848, 293, pl. 394, Spatula clypeata Born, Isis, 1822, 564.—Barrp, B. N, Am. 1858, 781; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 583.—Covuss, Key, 1872, 288; Check List, 1873, No. 498; 2d ed. 1881, No. 718; B.N. W. 1874, 570.—_HENsu. Zo6l. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 478.—Ripaw. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 624; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 608; Man. N. Am. B, 1887, 97.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. i, 1884, . 5296.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 142. Anas rubens Gut. 8. N. i, ii, 1788, 419, - ? Anas mexicana Lara. Ind. Orn. ii, 1790, 857. ‘Clypeata macrorhynchos, platyrhynchos, pomarina, brachyrhynchos, BREHM, Vog. Deutschl. 876, 877,878, 879. Has. The whole of the Northern Hemisphere; in North America, breeding from Texas to Alaska; wintering as far south as Guatemala, Cuba, and Jamaica; Australia. Sp. Coan. Adult male, in winter: Head and neck dark metallic bluish green, much duller than in Anas boschas; chest and outer scapulars white, the former sometimes spotted with dusky; entire abdomen and sides uniform chestnut; crissum dark metallic bluish green, bounded anteriorly by a band of finely waved grayish white. Back and inner seapulars dusky, the feathers sometimes bordered with white; longer lanceolate scapulars marked with a mesial lanceolate stripe of white; wing-coverts light grayish blue, the last row tipped with white, forming a narrow band across the wing; speculum bright metallic green, very narrowly tipped, with white; tertials dusky black, with faint green refiections, and marked toward the end with an indistinct mesial stripe of grayish white: primaries and their coverts dull slate-gray; rump and upper tail-coverts black, the former with faint, the latter with bright, green reflections; rectrices chiefly grayish white, the middle ones dark gray, edged with white. Bill deep black; iris bright yellow; legs and feet beautiful orange-red. Adult female: Wings as in the male, but colors rather duller. Other parts grayish brown above, varied with brownish white; brownish white below, the head and neck streaked, the breast, abdomen, etc., spotted with grayish brown. Bill brown, man- dible orange; iris yellow and feet orangé-red, as inthe male. Young male: Similar to the adult female, but lower parts (always?) tinged with chestnut. Young female: Similar to the adult, but wing-coverts dull slate, with little, if any. blue tinge, the speculum dusky, with a very faint green reflection, and rather broadly tipped with brownish white. Downy young: Above, grayish brown, with a brownish white spot on each side of the back, and a corresponding pair on the rump; pilewm darker than the back and nape: head (except pileum) and entire lower parts pale grayish fulvous, or dirty grayish buffy white, shaded with brownish gray across the vhest; a narrow stripe of dark brown from the upper angle of the base of the bill to the eye, and continued posteriorly about half way to the occiput; 152 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. . another similar. stripe beneath the last, beginning a little behind the posterior border of the eye, and extending farther back than the one above it. Total length, about 20.00 inches; extent, 31.00 to 33.00 inches; wing, 9.00-10.00; culmen, 2.60-2.90; width of bill at end, 1.10-1.20, at base, .60; tarsus, 1.40-1.50; middle toe, 1.65-1.75. Specimens vary considerably in colors: usually the white of the chest and scapulars is nearly or quite immaculate; but not infrequently these portions are more or less spotted with dusky. The chestnut of the abdomen is sometimes immaculate, sometimes barred with dusky. fie “Winters from southern Illinois southward ; breeds abundantly in the Northern States and Manitoba, and sparingly in Texas, northern Illinois, and Kansas. Breeds in great numbers at Heron Lake, Minn. Its time of migration is one or two days behind that of the Gadwall.” (Cooxs.) The Shoveller has probably the most extensive range of any species of the duck tribe, being: found throughout the northern hemisphere as well as in Australia. Its habits presenting nothing particularly distinctive, it is unnecessary to describe them particularly here. It breeds in the northern part of the State, or at least did so formerly. Mr. B. F. Goss founda nest near Pewaukee, Wisconsin, on a small island in Horicon Lake, some five feet above the water. ‘The Mallards were all around within a few feet. As the ground was quite bare, with merely a few rocks scattered about, the birds could be seen from the water sitting on their nests. On his first approach he noticed the Spoon-bill rising with the rest; and after examining the nests, selected one that was somewhat smaller than the others, with smaller eggs, and lined with feathers of a little different shade, as the Spoon-bill’s nest. He set a small stake to mark the ' place, and retired until the birds returned to their eggs, when he again approached, watching carefully the indicated spot, and had the good fortune to kill the bird as she rose. The nest contained ten eggs, quite fresh, a little smaller than the Mal- jard’s, from which they differed somewhat in color and in shape.” ( Water Birds of North America.) Genus AIX Bors. ’ Aix Bore, Isis, 1828, 329. Type, Anas sponsa LINN. Dendrpnessa Swatrns. F. B.-A. ii, 1881, 446. Type Anas galericulata Linn. = Lampronessa WAGL. Isis, 1882, 282. Type, Anas sponsa LINN. Cosmonessa REIoH. Syst. Av. 1849, pl. 9. Type, Anas sponsa Linn. (Nec Cosmonetia Kaur, 1829.) « ey ANATIDE~THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 153 Gen. CHAR. Bill small, much shorter than the head, all the lateral outlines gradually converging toward the end, the nail very large, broad. and prominent, forming the tip of the bill; lamelle completely hidden. Adult male with the’ head crested, the colors rich and varied, and the markings clegant; tertials exceedingly broad, truncate. The above characters are framed so as to include the Chinese Mandarin Duck,(Aiz galericulata),) the only other known species of the genus. This duck is quite similar to our Wood Duck in style of coloration and in general appearance, but differs in many external characters, and if not generically distinct should at least be considered the type of a different subgenus. Aix sponsa (Linn.) WOOD DUCK. Popular synonyms. Summer Duck; Bridal Duck: Wood Widgeon (Connecticut); Acorn Duck; Tree Duck. Anas sponsa Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 128; ed. 12, i, 1766, 207.—Wris. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 97, pl. 70, fig. 3—Nurt, Man. ii, 1884, 394.—Aup. Orn. Biog. iti, 1835, 52; v, 1839, 618, pl. 206; Synop. 1839, 280; B. Am. vi, 1848, 271, pl. 391. Aix sponsa Bonap. Comp, List, 1838, 57.—BarrD, B. N. Am, 1858, 785; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 587.—Couxs, Key, 1872, 288; Check List, 1873, No. 499; 2d ed. 1882, No. 719; B. N. W. 1874, 571.—Ripew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 624; Nom, N. Am. B. 1881, No. 618; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 99.—A. O. U. Obeck List, 1886, No. 144.—B. B. & R. Water _ BLN. Am. ii, 188, 11. Dendronessa sponsa Sw. & Riou. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 446. Has. Whole of temperate North America, north to the Fur Countries; breeding throughout its range. Cuba. Accidental in Europe. . 8p. CHaR. Adult male: Chin, throat, and foreneck pure white, sending off laterally two branches,—the first across the cheeks, back of, and nearly to, the posterior angle of the eye, the second across the lower part of the neck, almost to the nape; both bars tapering toward the end, and somewhat curved or faleate in shape; a narrow white line begins at the point of the maxillary angle, and is continued backward on each side of the crown, wid- ening considerably on the side of the crest; a second white line commences about half an inch behind the eye, and nearly the same distance above the end of the white cheek-bar, and follows the lower edge of the'crest, where considerably wider posteriorly; remainder of the head silky metallic green, violet, and purple, as follows: cheeks and space behind the white cheek-bar soft violaceous-black, in the latter region extending up to the lower white stripe, but in the anterior area bounded above and anteriorly by dark metallic green; the orbital region and anterior half of the crest between the white lines metallic reddish-pur- ple; forehead, crown, and posterior portion of the crest metallic green; terminal portion of the crest, above, laterally, and beneath, dark metallic violet. Chest rich purplish chest- nut, with a metallic-purple gloss laterally, the front and lower part marked with deltoid spots of white, growing larger toward the breast; breast and abdomen immaculate white; sides of the breast with a broad white transverse bar, and a wide black one immediately behind it; sides and flanks pale fulvous-buff delicately waved with black, each of the broad feathers forming the upper border beautifully marked with two black crescentic bars, in- closing a white one; crissum dull black, fading gradually into dull rusty-fulvous on the analregion, Back, lesser wing-coverts, and rump dark slaty brownish, very faintly glossed with bronze, the wing-coverts more slaty, the rump much darker, and gradually deepening into black toward the upper tail-coverts, which, with the tail, are deep black, the latter with bronze-green reflections in certain lights; a somewhat ovate patch (pointed posteriorly) of rich dark metallic maroon-purple on each side of the rump, immediately behind the flanks; lAix galericulata Linn. 8. N. ed: 10, i, 1758, 1283.—Aix galericulata Bork, Isis, 1828, 329. S —20 154 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. just behind this, the two or three elongated lateral upper tail-coverts are marked with a central stripe of deep fulvous, falling gracefully over the sides of the crissum. Tertials and posterior scapulars intense black, with rich velvety reflections of blue, green, and purple (chiefly the first), in certain lights; the longest tertial tipped with a wide bar of white, the next black to the end, the third much shorter, much narrower than the rest, pointed, and of a dull greenish-bronze color;! middle and greater wing-coverts steel-blue, narrowly tipped with black; secondaries (“speculum”) purplish steel-blue, narrowly tipped with white, and with a narrow.sub-terminal black bar; primary-coverts slate-color; primaries with the exposed ends uf the inner webs steel-blue, the ends of the outer webs grayish or glaucous-white, becoming slate-color basally; lining of the wing spotted with slate-color and white. Sagittate longitudinal space on the culmen, and terminal “nail” of the bill deep polished black; an oblong space of milk-white from nostril to the ‘nail;” a line or border of gamboge-yellow following the basal outline of the bill; rest of bill dark purplish red, deepening into scarlet just behind the nostril. Iris bright orange-red; eyelids deep ver- milion; legs and feet dull chrome-yellow, the webs and joints dusky.2 Total length, about 19.00 inches; extent, 29.00; wing, 9.00-9.50; culmen, 1.40; tarsus, 1.40; middle toe, 1.70. Adult female: Feathers bordering the base of the bill all round, a space on side of the head sur- rounding the eyes and extending backward in a point toward the occiput, chin, and whole throat white; remainder of the head plumbeous or slate-gray, the crown and slight occip- ital crest glossed with metallic green; chest brownish, the feathers marked centrally with fulvous-buff, those toward the breast tipped with white; remaining lower parts white, the crissum freckled with dusky grayish, the sides and flanks raw-umber brown, spotted with brownish white; back, rump, and upper tail-coverts hair-brown, glossed, in certain lights, with bronze and reddish purple; tail brightly glossed with greenish bronze; scapularsand tertials olive-brown, richly glossed with reddish purple and bronze; wings as in the adult male, but secondaries more widely tipped with white, and the four upper greater- coverts rich metallic reddish purple, more bluish in the centre, bronzy toward the edge and base, and narrowly tipped with velvety black. Bill dark plumbeous, the nail and lon- gitudinal space on the culmen black; eyelids chrome-yellow; ‘iris raw-sienna; legs and feet yellowish brown. Total length, about 17.75 inches; extent, 28.00; wing, 8.50; culmen, 1.30; tarsus, 1.35; middle toe, 1.60. Downy young: Above, deep hair-brown, darker, or clove-brown, on the pileum and tail; a dingy whitish bar along the posterior border of the, arm-wing, and a roundish spot of the same on each side of therump. Lores, superoiliary stripe extending back nearly to the occiput, with lateral and under parts of the head gen- erally, bright sulphury-buff, crossed by a wide stripe of blackish brown extonding from the occiput forward to the eye; remaining lower parts dingy white, the sides brownish. this crossed on the flanks by an indistinct whitish bar.* 1 There is in this species a very strange and probably altogether peculiar arrangement of the tertials, longer scapulars, and inner secondaries, both as to form and colors. The exposed surface of the first appears continuously intense black, as described above; but upon lifting.the feathers it is seen that between each two there is a concealed one of differ- ent form and Golor—narrow and pointed, instead of broad and nearly truncated, and dull bronzy, instead of deep black. “Of these bronzy feathers, only the last (or the longest seap- ular) bas its tip exposed; the innermost secondary is the longest, and is entirely intense black to the tip; the next is very much (nearly an inch) shorter, entirely concealed, and also wholly black; the third is little, if any, shorter than the first, but is marked at the end by abroad bar of pure white; the fourth is a little shorter, without any white at the tip, and the outer web chiefly reddish purple; this, like the third, has the outer web much widened terminally. 2 Fresh colors of a specimen killed October 19, at Mount Carmel, Il. 8 Fresh colors of a specimen killed October 14, at Mount Carmel, Ill. * Described from No. 84,725, obtained at Mount Carmel, JIL, July 17, 1871. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 155 The exquisitely beautiful Wood Duck, or Summer Duck, is very generally distributed throughout the timbered portions of Illinois, its favorite haunts being wooded bottom-lands, where it frequents the streams and ponds, and nests in hollows of the largest trees. It usually comes from the south very early in the spring (February or March, according to the latitude and the character of the season), departing again in September or Oc- tober. Sometimes, however, it may be found during mild win- ters in the southern parts: of the state. ‘Wilson narrates that on the 18th of May he visited a tree containing a nest of a Summer Duck, on the banks of Tuckahoe River, New Jersey. This tree stood on a declivity twenty yards from the water; and in its hollow and broken top, about six feet down, on the soft decayed wood, were thirteen eggs covered with down from the mother’s breast. The eggs were of an ex- act oval shape, the surface finely polished and fine grained, of a yellowish color, resembling old polished ivory, and measured 2.12 by 1.50 inches. This tree had been occupied by the same pair, during the breeding-time, for four successive years. Wil- son’s informant, who lived within twenty yards of the tree, had seen the female, the spring preceding, carry down thirteen young, one by one in less than ten minutes. She caught them in her bill by the wing or the back of the neck, and landed them safely at the foot of the tree, and finally led them to the water. In evidence of the unwillingness of this species to abandon its breeding-place, Wilson mentions that under this tree a large sloop lay on the,stocks, its deck not more than ten feet distant from the nest. Notwithstanding the presence and noise of the work- men, the Ducks would not abandon their old home, but contin- ued to pass out and in, as if no person were near. While the female was laying, and afterward, when she was setting, the male usually perched on an adjoining limb, and kept watch. The common note of the drake was peet-peet, and when, stand- ing sentinel, he apprehended danger, he made a noise not unlike the crowing of a young cock, o¢-ceh, “The Wood Duck, has been repeatedly tamed and partially domesticated, and of this statement there are many well-at- tested cases on record. My own attempts to effect this, how- ever, have been unsuccessful, the old birds remaining wild, and 156 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. : not breeding. Wilson was informed of an instance where a resi- dent near Gunpowder Creek had a yard swarming with Wood Ducks which were completely domesticated. Audubon also gives “an interesting account of his attempts to tame and domesticate this duck, in which he so far. succeeded that the birds bred with- in his grounds, in boxes. The wild ducklings when taken were put in the bottom of empty flour-barrels; but he soon found that they could raise themselves from the bottom to the brim by moving a few inches at a time up the side, lifting foot after foot, by means of their diminutive hooked claws, when they would tumble over, and run in every direction. They fed freely on corn-meal soaked in water, and, as they grew, caught flies with great expertness.” ( Water Birds of North America.) Genus AYTHYA Bor. Aythya Borr, Isis, 1822, 564. Type, by elimination, Anas ferina LINN. GEN. CHAR. Hind toe witha broad membranous lobe, or “flap”: feathering on lores or forehead not reaching beyond posterior border of nostril; graduation of tail less than length of bill from nostril; loral feathering with a decidedly convex anterior outline; width of nail less than one third the width of the bill across middle portion. Adult males with the head and part of the neck uniform chestnut or black, the lower neck uniform black (ex- ceptin afew exotic species); back and scapulars waved with white and black; speculum bluish gray, or white tipped with black; lower parts white. Aduli females with head. neck, chest, and upper parts plain brownish, the head paler, or whitish, next the bill; specu- Tum as in the male. The American species of this genus are ranged under three sub- genera, as follows: A. Culmen longer than inner toe, with claw; bill not wider near end than at base; head and neck reddish in adult males. 1, Aythya. Bill much shorter than middle toe, without claw, its greatest width nearly half the length of He culmen, the end moderately depressed, and the nail decidedly hooked. 2, Aristonetta. Culmen as long as middle toe, without claw, its greatest width not more than one third the length of the culmen; the end much flattened, and nail very slightly hooked. B. Culmen as long as outer toe, with claw, pill wider at end than at base; head and neck black in adult males, 3. Fuligula, ; _ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 157 Suscenus Aythya Boir, Aythya Bors, Isis, 1822, 564. Type, by elimination, Anas ferina LINN. SuBGEn. Cuaz. Culmen longer than inner toe, with claw; bill not wider near end than at base, much shorter than middle toe without claw, its greatest width nearly half the length of the culmen, the end moderately depressed, and the nail decidedly hooked. oe males with the head and upper neck reddish. Only one American species, the common Red-head .(A. ameri- cana), belongs to this subgenus. It is a near relative of, but is decidedly distinct from, the Pochard, of Europe, A. ferina (Linn.). . Aythya americana (Eyt.) RED-HEAD, Popular synomyms, Red-headed Duck; American Pashands Red-headed Broad-bill: Red- headed Raft Duck, Anas ferina Wiis. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 110, pl. 70 fig. 6 (not LInn.). Fuliguia ferina Bonap. Synop. 1828, 392.—Sw. & R1cw, F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 452.—-Nurr. Man. il, 1834, 434.—AuD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 198, pl. 322; Synop. 1839, 287; B. Am. vi, 1848, 311, pl. 396. Fuligula americana Eyton, Mon. Anat. 1838, 155. Aythya ferina 0 americana Bonar. Compt. Rend. xliii, Sept. 1856, 651. Aythya americana Barry, B. N. Am, 1858, 798; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 591.—Ripew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 624; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 101—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 146. Hihyia americana Scu. & Satv. Nom. Neotr. 1873.—Ripaw. Nom. B. 1881, No. 618. —B. B. & R. Water B. N. am. ii, 1884, 36., 5 Aythya ferina, var. americana ALLEN, Bull. M.'C. Z. iii, 1872, 188. Fuligula ferina, var. americana Couss, Key, 1872, 289; Check List, 1873, No. 503; B. N. W. 1874, 575.—-HENs#. Z061 Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 480. Fuligula ferina americana Cours, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 723. Aythya erythrocephala BonaPp. Comp. List, 1838, 58, Has, The whole of North America, breeding from central California, Minnesota, nor- thern Iowa, Wisconsin, Michigan, and Maine, to the Fur Countries; Bahamas, Central America, ete., in winter. i Sp. CuaRr. Bill much shorter than the middle toe (without claw), broad, the end mod- erately depressed, and with the nail decidedly decurved, the culmen about two and a half times the greatest width of the maxilla, and decidedly concave. Adult male: Head and upper half, or more, of the neck rich reddish chestnut, the latter glossed with reddish pur- ple; lower part of the neck, chest, anterior part of the back, lower part of the rump, upper tail-coverts, and crissum, black; back, scapulars, sides, and flanks, densely vermiculated with white and dusky in about equal proportion: anal region similarly, but more faintly, marked; entire abdomen immaculate white; wing-coverts deep plumbeous-gray, faintly and minutely sprinkled with white; secondaries (“‘speeculum”) pale bluish gray, the upper feathers edged with black, the others narrowly tipped with white; primaries dusky, the in- ner quills slate-gray, except at ends; tail dusky. Bill pale blue, the end black; iris bright yel- low: feet light gray. Adult female: Head and neck grayish brown, darkest above; tho anterior part of the head lighter, almost white on the chin and upper part of the throat; chest, sides, and flanks dull grayish brown, the feathers tipped with fulvous; wings as in the male, but the coverts plain slate-color; back and scapulars grayish brown, the feathers with paler 158 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. .tips; rump, upper tail-coverts, and tail dusky grayish brown; anal region paler; lower tail- coverts whitish. Billgrayish, the end black; iris yellow; feet grayish. Downy young: Above, ochreous olive-brown, indistinctly relieved by an oiive-yellow spot back of each wing, one on the hind border of each arm-wing, and one on each side of the rump; entire head and neck (except pileum and nape), with whole lower parts deep, buff-yellow, paler and less yellow on abdomen and anal region. No dark markings whatever on side of head. Bill and feet light colored (brownish in dried skin). Total length, about 20.00-21.00 inches; extent, 33.00; wing, about 8.50; culmen, 2. em 25; greatest width of bill, .75-.85; tarsus, 1.60-1.65; middle toe, 2.30-2. 40. The Red-heads arriye in Iinois from the south in March, and continue northward to their breeding grounds, which, extend’ * from Wisconsin, Michigan, and others of the “northern tier” of States, to the Fur Countries. They return in October. Where it can obtain the same food, the Red-head is quite as good eating as the celebrated Canvas-back (A. vallisneria), though it never commands so high a price in the markets. In short, it is more the costly character of the latter, together . with its high reputation, than any real superiority of its flesh, that creates the greater demand for it. The Red-head was found nesting on the St. Clair flats, Michi- gan, by Mr. W. H. Collins, who thus describes some of its breeding habits :1 “The past season I had the good fortune to find two nests of the Red-head Duck (Aythya americana), containing respec- tively seven and eight eggs. The first was placed on some drifted rushes on a sunken.log, and was composed of flags and. rushes evidently taken from the pile of drift upon the log, as they were short pieces, so short, in’ fact, that the nest when lifted with the hands fell in pieces. The nest was about four inches deep, and lined with down from the female. This nest contained seven fresh eggs of a creamy color, and [se] varied in measurements from ‘2.30X1.75 to 2.22X1.66 ‘inches, and were of a uniform oval shape, very little smaller at one end. The other nest was built similar to a Coot’s nest, that is, of flags and grass interwoven at the base of a bunch of flags, growing in water three or four feet deep. It was built in such a way that the nest would rise and fall with the water. This nest also contained down and eight fresh eggs, uniform in size, shape, and color with the others. The birds, male and female, were flying around, and often came quite close to me. The cry of the 1 Bulletin of the Nuttall Ornithological Club, v, 1880, pp. 61-62. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 159 female resembled the cry of the Mallard so nearly that, had I heard and not seen the bird, I should have supposed it to be the Mallard.” Suspcenvus Aristonetta Bairp. Aristonetta Barry, B. N. Am. 1858, 793, in text. Type, Anas vallisneria WILS. Suspcen,. Cuan. Culmen nearly or auite as long as middle toe, without claw, and’ equal to three times the greatest width of the bill; end of bill much flattened, and nail very slightly hooked. Otherwise like Aythya, the coloration, in particular, very similar. This subgenus contains only one species, the celebrated Canvas- back of wide range but local fame. Aythya vallisneria (Wils.) CANVAS-BACK, t Popular synonyms. Canvas-back Duck; White-back; Canard Cheval (New Orleans); Bull- neck; Red-headed Bull-neck. Anas vallisneria WILs. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 103, pl. 7, fig. 3. . \ Tuligula vallisneria STEPHENS, Shaw’s Gen. ZoOl. xii, pt. ii, 1824,196.-Sw. & Ricw. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 451.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 480.—AuD. Orn. Biog. iv,'1838, 1, pl. 301; Synop. 1839, 285; B. Am. vi, 1843, 299, pl. 895.—CouEs, Key, 1872, 290; Check List, 1878, No. 504; ed. 2, 1882, No. 724; B. N. W. 1874, 575. Aythya vallisneria Born, Isis, 1826, 980.—-Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 794; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 592.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 147.—Rrp¢w. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 625; Man. N. Am, B. 1887, 102. Aithyia vallisneria Sou. & Sauv. Nom. Neotr. 1873.—Ripew. Nom. N. Am, B. 1881, No. 617.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884. 30, Aristonetta vallisneria BAIRD, B. N. Am. 1858, 793 (in text). Has. Nearly the whole of North America, breeding from the northwestern States northward to Alaska; south in winter to Guatemala. Sp. Caaz. Bill long and narrow, the end much depressed, with the nail scarcely de- curved, the base high, with the culmen gradually sloping and scarcely concave; culmen nearly as long as the middle toe (without claw),and about three times the greatest width of the maxilla.’ Adult male: Head and neck chestnut-rufous, the former brownish dusky (sometimes quite blackish) anteriorly and on top; chest and anterior part of the back, lower part of ‘rump, upper tail-coverts, and posterior part of crissum black; back, seapulars, flanks, sides, and anal region white, finely and delicately vermiculated with dusky; breast and abdomen immaculate white. Wing-coverts deep ash-gray, finely sprinkled with white; secondaries (“speculum”) lighter, more bluish, gray, the upper feathers edged with black; tertials like the longer seapulars; primaries slate-color, the inner quills more ashy, except at ends, where dusky; taildusky. Bill entirely greenish black; iris carmine-red; feet bluish gray. Adulé female: Head, neck, chest, and anterior part of, back raw-umber brown, a postocular space and the foreneck whitish, the chin, throat, and cheeks tinged with fulvous; wings as in the male, but coverts almogt or quite uniform gray; back, scap- ulars, sides, and flanks with only the exposed ends of the feathers vermiculated with white and dusky, the remainder being grayish brown. Bill greenish black; iris brownish red; feet grayish. 160 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Total length, about 20.00 to 22.00 inches; extent, 30.00 to 33.00; wing, 8.75-9.25; culmen, 2.10-2.50; greatest width of bill, .75-.80; tarsus, 1.70; middle toe, 2.60-2.65. Many persons experience difficulty in distinguishing the Can- vas-back from, the Red-head. An examination of the bill alone, however, is sufficient to distinguish them with absolute cer- tainty, this member being radically distinct in shape in the two birds, as shown by the diagnostic character of the subgenera which they respectively represent, on page 156. The plum- age of the adult males, while somewhat similar, will be seen on comparison to be really quite different. The Canvas-back has the front part of the head dusky, or blackish, the rest of the head, with the whole neck, being rusty chestnut. The Red- head, on the other hand, has the whole head, and only the upper half of the neck, a much brighter reddish chestnut, with purple gloss. The back and scapulars are much whiter in the Canvas-back, and this species has a wholly blackish bill and “red eyes, while the Red-head has a leaden-blue, black-tipped bill and yellow eyes. The famous Canvas-back, so higly prized by eastern epicures, is an abundant migrant in [linois, as indeed it is entirely across the continent. It breeds from Minnesota northward, and winters in the Southern States, chiefly along the South Atlantic and Gulf coasts, thoygh it has been known to occur in mild winters in the southern part of Illinois. Whatever the cause may be, the opinion held as to the edi- ble qualities of this species varies greatly in different parts of the country. Nowhere has it so high a reputation as in the vicinity of Chesapeake Bay, where the alleged superior quality of its flesh is ascribed to the circumstance that it there feeds ‘chiefly on the “water celery” ( Vallisneria spiralis). That this supposed explanation is wholly fallacious, however, is evident “from the fact that the same plant grows in far greater abund- ance in the upper Mississippi Valley, where, also, the Canvas- back feeds on it. Hence it is highly probable that fashion and imagination, or perhaps a superior style of cooking and serving, play a very important part in the case. In California, however, where the Vadlisneria does not grow, the Canvas-back is considered a very inferior bird for the table. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 161 “This species,” says Dr. Brewer, “in and around Chesapeake Bay, has long been regarded as preéminent for the richness and delicacy of the flavor of its flesh; and it is claimed by many that no wild-fowl in any part of the world can vie in this re- spect with the Canvas-back of these waters. It has been hunted on the Chesapeake and its tributaries with unrelenting greed, until its numbers have been greatly reduced, and many have been driven to more southern regions. This bird always com- mands a ready sale; and even when seut to the market by thousands, always brings a high price. While a few Canvas- backs are met with in the waters of the Hudson, the Delaware, .and in other eastern rivers, by far the larger portion of them resort to Chesapeake Bay and adjacent waters. Of late years, its numbers have greatly increased along the short rivers of North Carolina. It is also found in abundance on the western lakes, and is particularly numerous on Lake Koskonong, in southern Wisconsin. In March I have seen the markets of Chicago well supplied with this duck; and although they are in no wise superior to the Mallard, the Pin-tail, the Teals, and other ducks, yet commanding twice the market price of any other species.”’ t Suscenus FULIGULA STEPuHEns. Fuligula STEPHENS, Gen. Zo6l. xii, pt. ii, 1824, 187. Type, by elimination, Anas fuligula Linn. Fulix Sunpev. Kong. Vet. Ak. Hand, 1835, 129. (No type designated, but restricted to the group of which Anas marila Linn. is typical, by Professor Bargp, in B. N. Am. 1858, 790.) $ Marila Bonar. Compt. Rend. xliii. Sept. 1856, 651. (Not of RrricHENBACK, 1852.) Nettarion Baran, B. N. Am. 1858, 790 (in text). Type, Anas marila, Linn. SUBGEN. CHar. Bill longer than the tarsus (about as long as the head), very broad and much depressed for the terminal half, the edges nearly parallel or slightly divergent termi- nally; lower edge of the maxilla strongly convex, concealing all of the mandible except the basal portion. Colors chiefly black and white (the head, neck, and chest black, lower parts white) in the adult male; the black replaced by brownish in the female. The North American species, all of which occur in Illinois, may be distinguished as follows:. A. Speculum white, tipped with black. 1. A, marila nearctica, Flanks usually immaculate white; length 18.00—20, oulmen 1.85-2.20; black of head glossed with green. —21 162 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. 2, A, affinis, Flanks vermiculated or zigzageed with blackish. Similar to A. marila nearctica (including absence of distinct white spaces on six inner quills), but black of head in male glossed with purplish, instead of green; length 15.00-16.50, culmen 1.58-1.90, B. Speculum bluish gray. 3. A, collaris, Aythya marila nearctica Stejn. AMERICAN SCAUP DUCK, Popular synonyms. Big Black-head; Big Blue-bill; Lake Blue-bill; Broad-bill; Bay Broad-bill; Raft Duck (Virginia); Big Fall Duck (Huds. Bay Terr.); Shuffler; Bay Shuffler; Troop Duck; Flock'Duck (Maryland); Bull-neck. ?Anas marila Wiis. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 84, pl. 69, fig. 3 (may be F. affinis). Fuliguia marila Sw. & Ricw. F. B.-A. ii, 1881, 453 (part; includes F. affinis).—Nutt. Man. ii, 1834, 437 (do.).—AuD. B. Am. vii, 1843, 355, pl. 498 (not of vi, 1843 316, pl. 397, nor of his earlier works, which = F. affinis).—_Couzns, Key, 1872, 289; Check List, 1873, No. 500; ed. 2, 1882, No, 720; B. N. W. 1874, 573.—Hunsu. Zool. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 479. Fuliz marila Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 791; Cat. N. Am, B. 1859, No. 588—Rxrpew. Orn. 40th Par, 1877, 625; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 614.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii,- 1884. 18. Aythya marila nearctica SteIN. Orn. Expl. Kamtsch. 1885, 161—A..O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 148.—Rrpaw. Man, N. Am. B. 1887, 103. Has. North America in general, breeding far north; in winter, as far south as Central America and the West Indies. Se. CHarn. Adult male: Head, neck, and chest black, the first with a greenish gloss; back and scapulars white, irregularly waved or vermiculated with zigzag lines of black; wing-coverts dusky, finely grizzled with grayish white; secondaries white, tipped, and sometimes narrowly edged, with black; tertials black, with a very faint bottle-green reflec- tion; primary-coverts dusky black; primaries similar, but the inner quills pale grayish on outer webs, except at ends, the gray growing whiter on the shorter feathers; rump, upper tail-coverts, tail, and crissum, dull black. Lower parts between the ehest and crissum white, the posterior portion (and sometimes the sides and flanks) zigzagged with dusky. Bill pale blue (or bluish white) in life, the nail black; iris bright yellow; legs and feet pale slate. Adult female: Head and neck sepia-brown, the anterior portion of the former, allround the base of the bill, white; chest, anal region, and crissum, pale grayish brown, fading gradually into the white of the breast and abdomen; sides and flanks deeper brown; above, brownish dusky, the back and scapulars but faintly or not at all grizzled with white; wings much as in the male. . Total length, about 18 to 20 inches; extent: 29.50 to 35.00; wing, 8.25-9.00; culmen, 1.85- 2.20; width of bill near end, .85-1.05, at base, .70-.90; tarsus, 1.40-1.60; middle toe, 2.25-2.45, While usually, perhaps, only a transient migrant, the Big Black-head not unfrequently jpasses the winter in the southern portions of Illinois. Its breeding range extends from Manitoba to the Arctic coast. Like the Canvas-back, the Black-head is very fond of the roots of the “water celery” (Vallisneria spiralis), and, accord- ing to Dr. Brewer, is one of the very few ducks that are able to dive and pull up these roots. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 163 Aythya affinis (Eyt.) LESSER SCAUP DUCK. Popular synonyms. Little Black-head; Little Blue-bill; River Blue-bill; March Blue- bill; Mud Blue-bill; Broad-bill; Creek Broad-bill (Long Island); pato boludo de + cabeza café (Mexico); River Shuifler. Fuligula marila Aup, Orn. Biog, iii, 1885, 226; v. 1839, 614, pl. 229; Synop, 1839, 286; B. Am. vi, 1843, 816, pl. 897. ‘ Fuligula affinis Eyton, Mon. Anat, 1888, 157.—Covuis, Key, 1872, 289; Check List, 1873, No. 501; 2d ed. 1882, No. 721; B. N. W. 1874, 573. Fuliz afinis Barry, B. N. Am. 1858, 791; Cat. N. Am. B, 1859, No. 589.—Rrpew. Orn. 40th ‘Par. 1877, 625; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 615.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884, 22. Aythya afinis Sram. Orn. Expl. Kamtsch. 1885, 161.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 149.— Ripew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 103, Fuligula minor BEuL, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila. i, 1842, 141.-GrRraup, B. Long. i, 1844, 323. Has. The whole of North America, south to Guatemala and the West Indies; breeds chiefly north of the United States. Sp. CHar. Similarto A. marila nearctica, but considerably smaller; adult male with the head less glossy and the gloss usually purplish instead of green; flanks waved or zig- zagged with blackish. Total length, about 15.00-17.00 inches; extent, 26.00-27.75; wing, 7.50- 8.25 (average 7.81); culmen, 1.58-1.90 (1.75); greatest width of bill, .80-.95 (.89); least width of pill .60-.78 (.69); tarsus, 1.15-1.50; middle toe, 2.00-2,25, In addition to the characters of coloration mentioned above, the lower part of the neck is usually dull brownish and quite lustreless, in many examples forming as distinct a collar as in some specimens of / collaris, though the color is never so rufescent as in the latter species. a. The Little Black-head has much the same range and essen- tially the same habits as its larger relative (A. marila neqrctica), though, as Dr. Brewer has truly said, it is extremely difficult, if not at present quite impossible, to state just wherein the two differ in these respects, in consequence of the confusion of their history resulting from the great similarity of their appearance. Dr. Brewer further states that so far as his own observations go, he is inclined to agree with Dr. Cooper in regarding the present species as a much more decided frequenter of the land than the other, and adds that “it is quite probable that much that has been written by Audubon and others in regard to the Scaup Duck, as seen on our rivers and lakes, may have had reference only to this species.” ‘A careful examination,” says he, “of Audubon’s account of the habits of the Scaup Duck clearly indicates that nearly all he says of it belongs in reality to this species; and this supposition is strengthened by the fact 164 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. that he figures and describes the afinis rather than the larger Black-head. He speaks of observing the Scaup Duck by the thousand on the Ohio, the Missouri, and the Mississippi, from Pittsburg to New Orleans, where it occurred in such bands that it was generally known as the ‘Flocking Fowl.’ These ducks were seldom seen close together, and rarely associated with birds of other species. They seemed fond of large eddies bélow projecting points of land, frequently diving to a considerable distance in search of food, In such situations they might easily be approached and shot; and when danger was near they seemed to prefer to escape by swimming ard diving rather than by flight, and they rose with some difficulty from the water. Audubon noted that these ducks differed greatly in size, but does not seem to have been led from this to suspect that they really belonged to two distinct species.” Aythya collaris (Donov.) RING-NECKED DUCK. Popular synonyms, Ring-billed Black-head; Ring-bill; Ring-billed Shuffler; Ring-necked Scaup Duck, or Blue-bill; Bastard Broad-bilJ (Long Ishaud); Fall Duck (Minnesota); Black Jack (Illinois); Moon-bill (South Carolina); Pato boludo prieto (Mexico). Anas collaris Donovan, Br. Birds, vi, 1809, pl. 147 (England). Fuligula collaris Bonar. List B. Bur. 1842, 78.—Covuzs, Key, 1872, 289; Check List, 1873, No. 502; 2d ed. 1882, No, 722; B. N. W. 1874, 574.—Hineu. Zool. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 479. Fuliz collaris Barry, B. N. Am. 1858, 792; N. Am. Cat. B. 1859, No. 590.—Ripew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 625; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 616.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am, ii, 1884, 25. Aythya collaris Rrpew. Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus. vili, 1885, 356; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 104.—A. , O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 150. Anas fuliguia Wrus. Am. Orn, viii, 1814, 66, pl. 67, flg. 5 (not of Linn. 1766). Anas (Fuligula) rufitorques Bonap. Jour. Phila. Acad. iii, 1824, 381. Fuligula rufitorques BonAp. Synop. 1828, 393.—Sw. & Riou. F. B.-A. ii, 1881, 454—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 439.—AvuD. Orn. ‘Biog. iii, 1835, 259, pl. 284; Synop, 1889, 287; B. Am. vi, 1848, 820, pl. 398, Has. The whole of North America, south to Guatemala and the West Indies; breeding from Iowa, southern Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Maine northward. Accidental in Europe. Sp. CHar. Adult male: Head, neck, chest, crissum, and upper parts generally, black, the head and neck with a faint violet gloss, the wing-coverts inclining to slate; secondaries (“speculum”) bluish gray, darker sub-terminally, and very narrowly tipped with white; primaries slaté-gray, the outer quills and ends of the others dusky. A triangular spot of white on the chin, and a more or less distinct collar of chestnut round the lower neck; breast and abdomen white, abruptly, defined anteriorly against the black of the chest, but changing insensibly into the black on the crissum, througha graduated barring or trans- verse mottling of white and dusky; sides white, delicately waved with grayish dusky. Axillars and lining of the wing immaculate white, Bill lead-color, with a narrow basa) and broad sub-terminal band of bluish white, the end black;. iris bright yellow; legs and feet ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 165 pale slaty. Adult female: Crown and nape dull dark brown, becoming gradually lighter below; rest of the head paler and grayer, the anterior half of the lores, the chin, throat, and foreneck nearly or quite white; chest, sides, and flanks, deep fulvous or raw-umber brown; breast and abdomen white; anal region dull brown, longer feathers of the crissum whitish; wings as in the male; remaining upper parts dull dark brown, the feathers of the back nar- nowly tipped with fulvous. Bands on the bill narrower and less distinct than in the male; iris yellow; feet slaty. Total length, about 16 to 18 inches; extent, 24-27; culmen, 1.75-2.00; tarsus, 1.30-145; middle toe, 2.00-2,15. Downy young: Above, grayish umber-brown, relieved by seven spots of light buff, as follows: A small and inconspicuous spot in the middle of the back, bétween, and a little anterior to, the wings; a large patch on each side the back; another on each side the rump, at the base of the tail; and a bar across the posterior border of each wing. Crown, occiput, and nape crossed longitudinally by a wide stripe of deep grayish umber; a roundish isolated spot of light grayish brown directly over the ears; remainder of the head, including the forehead, and lower parts generally, light dingy buff, the flanks crossed by a brown transverse stripe from the rump to the tibia. Side of the head without any longi- tudinal stripes. The chief variation in the plumage of this species consists in the distinctness of the chestnut collar in the male. In some ex- amples this is scarcely more conspicuous than in A. afinis, being dull brown instead of reddish; but usually the color is a well- defined chestnut, particularly in front. The female of this species resembles very closely in coloration that of the Red-head (A. americana), but may be readily dis- tinguished by the very different proportions, the average measurements of the two being about as follows: A, americana, Wing 8:50, culmen 1,90, greatest width of bill .85, least width .75, tarsus 1.60, ~ middle toe 2.30. A. collaris. Wing 7.50, culmen 1.80, greatest width of bill .85, least width .65, tarsus 1.35, middle toe 2.00. There is very little in the habits of this species to distinguish it from the other “black-heads.”” Like them, it usually asso- ciates in small flocks, and its flesh is excellent, being fat, tender, and juicy. It often passes the winter in the southern portions of Iinois. Genus GLAUCIONETTA STEINEGER. Clangula Firm. Philos. Jour. ii, 1822, 260. Type, Anas clangula Linn. (Nec Lwacg, 1819.) Glaucion Kaup, Ent. Eur. Thierw. 1829, 58. Same type. (Nec OKEN 1816.) Glaucionetta STEIN. Proc. U.S. Nat. Mus. viii, Sept. 14, 1885, 409, Same type. Gen. Cuar. Bill much shorter than the head, deep through the base, the lateral out- lines converging toward the tip, which is rather pointed than rounded; lamelle completely hidden by the overhanging edge of the maxilla; nostrils situated about midway between 166 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. the base and end of the bill; tarsus longer than the culmen; tail rather long (about half the wing), of sixteen feathers. Colors, pied white and black in the male, brown and white in the female. Adulimales have the head and upper neck black, glossed with green, blue, or violet, and relieved by a white patch between billand eye; upper parts pied black and white, lower parts entirely white, the flanks streaked with black. Females with head and upper neck brown, chest and part of upper surface grayish, collar round neck and most of lower parts white; wing dusky, with white:on wing-coverts and secondaries. Young males similar to adult females, but white loral spot of adult more or less distinctly indicated, and gray of chest less extensive (sometimes quite obsolete). Males in post-nuptial plumage are similar to young male, but wing-coverts more continuously white. Two species are known, ‘both of which occur in North America, though one of them is ‘here represented by a race or sub-species distinguished from the Old World typical form by its large size. The two species may be distinguished as follows: 1. G. clangula americana, Height of upper mandible at base, measured from extremity of frontal angle to nearest point on cutting edge, less than distance from anterior point of loral feathering to anterior end of ,nostril; and usually little if any greater than distance from the latter point to tip of upper mandible. % G, islandica, Height of upper mandible at ase, measured from extremity of frontal angle to nearest point on cutting edge, equal to distance from anterior point of loral feathering to anterior end of nostril, and much greater than distance from the latter point to tip of upper mandible. Glaucionetta clangula americana (Bonap.) AMERICAN GOLDEN-EYE, Popular synonyms. Whistler; Whistle-wing; Great Head; Brass-eye; Merry-wing; Cob- head or Cub-head; Iron-head. , Anas clangula Wiis. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 62, pl, 67, fig.5. (Wee Linn.) Fuligula clangula Bonar. Synop. 1828, 393.—Nurf. Man. ii, 1834, 441.—Avup. Orn, Biog. iv, 1838, 318, pl. 342; Synop. 1839, 292; B. Am. vi, 1848, 362, pl. 406 (includes islandica).. Bucephala clangula Couzs, Key, 1872, 290; Check List, 1878, No. 505; B. N. W. 1874, 576,— HensH. Z061. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 480. Clangula glauecitum Cougs, Check List. 2d ed. 1882, No, 725. Clangula vulgaris Sw. & Rrouw. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 456. ‘Clangula americana Bonap. Comp. List, 1888, 58. Bucephala americana Bargp, B. N. Am. 1858, 796; Cat. N. Am, B. 1859, No. 593. Olangula giaucium americana Ripew. Proce. U. 8. Nat. Mus. iii, 1880, 204; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No, 620.—B. B. & R. Water B.N. Am. ii, 1884, 44, Bucephala clangula b. americana Rivew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 626. QGlaucionetia clangula americana STEIN. Proc, U. 8, Nat. Mus. viii, 1885, 409.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 151.—Rrpew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 105, Has. The whole of North America, breeding from Maine and the British Provinces northward; south to Cuba in winter. Sp. Onan. Adult male: Head and upper half of neck black, glossed with dark green, varying to violet; a roundish white spot between the rictus and the eye, but not reaching to the latter; back, inner scapulars, tertials, rump, and upper tail-coverts, deep black; lower half of the neck (all round), lower parts, outer scapulars, posterior lesser, middle, and greater ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS: 167 wing-coverts, and secondaries, pure white; anterior lesser wing-coverts, and outer edges of scapulars and flank feathers, and concealed portion of greater coverts, deep black; pri- maries blackish dusky; tail dull slate; sides of the anal region behind the flanks clouded with grayish. Bill black; iris bright yellow: feet orange-yellow, with dusky webs. Adylt female: Similar to that of G. islandica, but head and neck hair-brown or grayish brown, rather than purplish sepia or snuff-brown; and white on the wing usually not interrupted by a distinct black bar. Downy young. Upper parts generally, including the whole upper half of the head, to the rictus, and considerably below the eyes, the chest, sides, and thighs deep sdoty brown, lighter and more grayish on the chest; the brown of the upper parts relieved by about eight spots of grayish white, as follows: one on the posterior border (secondary region) of each wing; one on each side the back; one on each side the rump, at the base of the tail; and one on each flank just before the brown of the thighs. Chin, throat, and cheeks pure white, in abrupt and decided contrast to the brown, which entirely surrounds it; remaining lower parts grayish white. Bill brownish; nail yellowish. Adult male: ‘otal length, about 18.50 to 20.00 inches; extent 31.00; wing, about 9.25; length of bill, from tip to end of basal angle, 1.85; depth at base, 1.00; width, .85; tarsus, 1 60; middle toe, 2.50. Adult female: Total length, 16.50; extent, 26.75; wing, 8.25; culmen, 1.60; depth of bill at base, .90; width, .70; tarsus, 1.40; middle toe, 2.20. | As stated under the head of G. tslandica (p. 169), we are un- able to discover, in the material at our command (consisting of upward of twenty specimens, including six unquestionable G. aslandica and many more equally undoubted G@. clangula americana) positive points of distinction between the female of the common and that of Barrow’s Golden-eye. All specimens, however, pos- sessing no dusky ~bar across the ends of the greater wing- coverts, interrupting the white wing-patch, should probably be referred to the present species. The females of both species are so variable in every character we have tested that it is quite impossible to say to which some examples should be referred. Upon comparing a series of two males and as many females of the European Golden-eye (@. clangula). with a very large number of American specimens, we are unable to detect any dif- ference in coloration. The difference in size, however, is so great, and, moreover, constant, as fully to justify their separation as distinct races. The Golden-eye is a winter visitant to Illinois, its breeding: range extending, “from the the 42d parallel northward” (BREWER), while its winter home is from about the same lat- itude southward. “On Long Island, as Mr. Giraud states, the Golden-eye is better known among the hunters as the ‘Whistler,’ from the peculiar noise produced by its wings when flying. By others it is also called the ‘‘Great-head,”’ from its beautifully rich and thickly crested head. On that island it is said to be a not very 168 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. ¥ abundant species, arriving therein company with other migra- tory ducks. He met with it in the fall and spring on the Del- aware and in Chesapeake Bay, as well as at Ege Harbor and on Long Island. In the interior it is said to be much more’ common. Its food seems to consist of small shell and other fish, which it procures by diving. In the fall its flesh is said‘to be about equal or even.superior to that of the Scaup Duck. It is very shy, and is decoyed with great difficulty. In stormy weather it often takes shelter in the coves with the Scaup Duck, and there it may be more readily killed. It usually flies. very high, and the whistling sound produced by the action of its wings is the only noise that it makes as it proceeds. “Audubon found the Golden-eye abundant in South Carolina during the winter, where at times it frequented the preserves of the rice-planters. He also met with it at that season on the water-courses of Florida. In the Ohio River he found it prefer- ring the eddies and rapids, and there it was in the habit of diving for its food. Naturally the Golden-eye is chiefly seen in company with the Buffle-head, the Merganser, and other species that are expert divers like itself. When wounded, unless badly hurt, its power of diving and of remaining under water is so remarkable that it cannot be taken.”’ (Water Birds of North America. ) , Glaucionetta islandica (Gmel.) BARROW’S GOLDEN-EYE. Popular synonyms. Rocky Mountain Golden-eye; Rocky Mountain Garrot. Anas islandica GMEL. B.N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 541. Bucephala islandica Barrp, B.N. Am. 1858, 796; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 594.—Covuzs, Key, 1872, 290; Check List, 1873, No. 506; Birds N. W. 1874, 577, -Clangula islandica Bonap. Cat. Met. Uec. Eur. 1842, 74—Ripew, Nom. N, Am. B. 1881, No. 619.—Covzs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 726.—B. B.'& R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884, 41, Glaucionetta islandica Stusn. Proc. U. §. Nat. Mus. viii, 1885, 409.—A. O. U. Cheok List, 1886, No. 152.—Ripaw. Man, N. Am. B, 1887, 105. Clangula barrovtt Sw. & Rion. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 456 pl. 70 (male), Fuligula barrovit Nur. Man. ii, 1834, 444, Clangula scapularis Bream, Vog. Deutschl. 1831, 932, Fuligula clangula, var. AUD. Orn. Biog. v, 1839, 105, pl. 403; Synop. 1839, 292 (part); B. Am. vii, 1848, 362 (part; describes the species as supposed summer plumage of B, clangula). Has. Northern North America, south in winter to New York, Illinois, Utah, ete.; breeding in high north, and south in the Rocky Mountains to Colorado. Greenland; Ice- land; accidental in Europe. ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS, 169 Sp. Coan. Adult male: Head and upper half of the neck glossy blue-black, with re- flections of green, blue, and violet, according to the light; a somewhat wedge-shaped ver tical patch of white across the anterior half of the lores, bordering the lateral base of the bill, the upper part forming an-acute angle on each side of the forehead, the lower part rounded. Upper parts velvety black, with a soft bluish violet tings; outer row of scapulars marked with a mesial cuneate stripe of satiny white, the greater portion of the stripes con- cealed, so that the exposed portion forms roundish or oblong spots; middle wing-coverts white, producing a broad bar; exposed terminal half of greater coverts, with the whole of the exposed portion of the five or six inner secondaries, white, forming a large, somewhat cuneate, patch. Outer feathers of the sides and flanks widely edged exteriorly with deep black; femoral region and sides of crissum dull black. Lower half of neck (aljl round) and entire lower parts (except as described) pure white. Bill black (in skin); iris bright yellow; legs and feet pale. Adult female: . Head and upper half of the neck dark sepia-brown, considerably darker and somewhat more purplish than in the female G. clangula ameri- cana; lower part of the neck, all round, white, sometimes tinged with gray on the nape. Upper parts dark grayish brown, the scapulars, interscapulars, and smaller wing-coverts tipped with lighter ash-gray; last two or three rows of middle wing-coverts tipped with white, forming a broken, rather narrow, transverse patch; greater coverts with the ter- minal half of their exposed portion white, as in the male, but distinctly tippped with black- ish, forming a conspicuous dusky bar between the white of the coverts and that of the in- ner secondaries. Chest and sides ash-gray, the feathers darker and more uniform, the flanks darker; other lower parts pure white. Bill usually parti-colored (black and yellow), but sometimes wholly black. Adult male: Wing, 9.00-9.40 inches: culmen, 1.65-1.80; depth of bil at base, 95~1.10, width, .75-.85; tarsus, 1.50-1.60; middle toe, 2.45-2.50. Adult female: Wing, 8.25-8.75 inches: cul- men, 1.40-1.60; depth of bill, .85~.90; width, .70; tarsus, 1.30-1.60; middle toe, 2.15-2.20. Bearing in mind the salient points of difference, as given above and on page 166, there need be no difficulty in distinguishing the adult male of this very distinct species from that of the com- mon Golden-eye. With the female, however, the case is very dif- ferent; the two species being so much alike that, with the series at our command (about twenty specimens, including six un- questionably referable to G. islandica), we must acknowledge our inability to give infallible points of distinction. The ex_ amples which are known to represent (. éslandica differ from the positively determined: females of G. clangula americana in the following respects: (1) The color of the head and upper “half of the neck is considerably darker, being a rich sepia- or snufi-brown, rather than grayish brown; (2) the greater wing- coverts are distinctly tipped with black, forming a conspicuous dusky stripe between the two larger white areas of the wing, which in G. clangula americana are (usually, at least) merged ‘into one continuous space. Further than these we find no dis- tinction, while indeed some examples are so decidedly inter- mediate in both respects as to render it quite uncertain to —22 170. BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. which species they belong. Of the two characters named, how- ever, the color of the head seems far the more constant, and may, perhaps, be found quite distinctive. : All that can at present be said of Barrow’s Golden-eye as a bird of Ilinois is that it is a rare winter visitant, reaching here about the southern limit of its distribution. Comparatively little is known as to its habits, which, doubtless, in the main, closely resemble those of the common species. Genus CHARITONETTA SresNEGER. Charitonetta 8tusn. Orn. ‘Expl. Kamtsch. 1885, 163. Type, Anas albeola Lrxn. Gen. CHAR. Similar to Glaucionetta, but nostril narrower and situated much farther back, being behind the middle of the upper mandible instead of slightly anterior to the middle; lamella hidden behind the edge of the maxilla; outer toe, with claw, decidedly longer than middle toe, and tip of inner toe, without claw, reaching only to second joint of middle toe; tail more than.twice as long as tarsus, reaching beyond the folded wings by nearly twice the length of the culmen. This genus contains a single species, the beautiful little But- ter-ball or Buffle-head (C. albeola). - Charitonetta albeola (Linn.) BUFFLE-HEAD. Popular synonyms, Butter-ball; Butter-box; Butter Duck; Spirit Duck; Dipper, or Di-« dipper, or Di-dapper; Marionette (New Orleans); Robin Dipper: Scotch Dipper, Seoteh Duck, Scotch Tegl, or Scotchman (North Carolina); Wool-head (Currituck Sound, N. C.). é Anas albeola Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 124; ed. 12, i, 1766, 199.—Wius. Am. Orn, viii, 1814, 51, pl. 62, figs. 2,3. Fuliguia albeola BonaP. Synop. 1828, 394.—NutT. Man. ii. 1884, 445.—Aup. Orn. Biog. iv, 1837, 217, p]. 225; Synop. 1889, 293; B. Am. vi, 1848, 369, pl. 408, ' Clangula albeola StuPHENS, Shaw’s Gen. Zod, xii, ii, 1824, 184.—8w. & Ricw. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 458.—Ripaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1831, No. 621.—Couzs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 727.—B. B. & R. Water B.'N. Am. ii, 1884, 48, Bucephaia albeola Barrp, B, N. Am. 1858, 797; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 595.—-Cousrs, Key, 1872, 290; Check List, 1873, No. 507; Birds, N. W. 1874, 577—HEnsu. Zool. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 482,—Ripew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 626. ; Charitonetia albeola Stzsn. Orn, Expl. Kamtsch. 1885, 166.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 153.—Ripew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 106. Anas bucephala Linn. 8, N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 125; ed. 12, 1, 1766, 200 (male). Anas rustica Linn. |, o., 201 (female). Has. North America, ‘breeding from Iowa (?) and Minnesota northward; wintering from United States south to Cuba and Mexico. Sp. Onan. Adult male: Head and upper half of the neck rich silky metallic green, violet-purple and greenish bronze, the last prevailing onthe lower part of the neck, the green on the anterior part of the head, the purple on the cheeks and crown; 9 large. patch ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 171 of pure white on the side of the head, extending from the eye backward to and around the occiput; lower half of the neck, lower parts generally, wing-coverts, secondaries, and outer scapulars pure white, the latter narrowly, and the feathers of the flanks more widely, edged with black; posterior parts of the body beneath tinged with pale ash-gray; upper tail-cov- erts light hoary gray; tail slate-gray,the shafts black. Bill bluish plumbeous, dusky on the nail and at base; iris very dark brown; legs and feet pinkish, or lilaceous, white. Total length, about 14.50 inches; extent, 24.50; wing, 6.75-6.90; culmen, 1.10-1.15; tarsus, 1.80; mid- dle toe, 1.90-2.00. Adult female:, Head, neck, and upper parts generally dusky grayish brown; an oblong or somewhat ovate white longitudinal patch on the auricular region, and the inner secondaries (sometimes also the greater wing-coverts, except at ends), white; lower parts white, tinged with brownish gray posteriorly, anteriorly, and laterally. Bill dusky, inclining to plumbeous at end and along commissure; iris very dark brown; legs and toes dilute lilac-pink, the webs and joints darker. Length, about 12.50 inches; extent, 21.00; wing, 5.90-6.00; culmen, .95-1.00; tarsus, 1.15-1.20; middle toe, 1.75. There is very little variation among the males of this species. The females vary in the markings of the wing, some having the greater coverts white, tipped with dusky; while in others only the inner secondaries are white. This very beautiful little duck is a winter resident in the southern portions of Illinois, its summer home being chiefly to the northward of the United States. Audubon ‘niet with it, during extremely cold weather, on the Ohio, when the river was thickly covered with floating ice, among: which it was seen diving, almost constantly, in search of food. When the river was frozen over, these birds sought the headwaters of rapid streams, and’ in their turbulent eddies found an abundance of food. Apparently feeling secure in the rapidity with which they can dive, they allow a very near approach; but at the first snap of the gun dive with the quickness of thought, and often as quickly rise again within a few yards of the same spot.” ‘GENUS HISTRIONICUS LEsson. Histrionicus Luss. Man. ii. 1828, 415. Type, Anas histrionica LINN. Cosmonessa Kaup, Entw. Europ. Thierw. 1829, 46. Sane type. Cosmonetia Kaup. 1. ¢., 196. Phylaconetta BRANDT, Mem. Ac. St. Petersb. vi, 1849, 4. Same type. Gen. Cuar. Most like Glaucionetia, Bill very small (shorter than the tarsus), the lateral outlines converging rapidly to the tip, which is occupied entirely by the very large nail; depth of the maxilla at the base about equal to its width; lamella entirely hidden by the overhanging maxillary tomium; upper basal portion of the maxilla forming a decided angle, inserted between the feathering of the forehead and that of the lores, the former reaching rather farther forward; a slight membranous lobe at the lower base of the maxilla, overhanging the rietus. Tail-rather long (more than half the wing), much gradu- ated, consisting of fourtecn feathers. Plumage of the sexes very different, the male very handsomely marked, the {. inale very sombre. * 172 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. But a single species of this well-marked genusis known. This, the Harlequin Duck, is common to both continents of the north- ern hemisphere, where it inhabits chiefly high latitudes. Histrionicus histrionicus (Linn). HARLEQUIN DUCK. Popular synomyms. Lord and Lady (Maine, New Brunswick, ¢fc.); Painted Duck and Mountain Duck (Hudson's Bay); Rock Duck (Nova Scotia); Squeuler (Maine). Anas histrionica Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 127; ed. 12, i, 1766, 204.—Wrus. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 139, pl. 72 fig. 4. a 2 Fuligula (Clangula) histrionica Bonap. Synop. 1828, 394.—NurTv. Man. ii, 1834, 448, Fuligula histrionica AupD. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 612; v, 1839, 617; Synop. 1839, 617; B. Am. vi, 1848, 874, pl. 409. Histrionicus histrionicus Bouc. Cat. Av. 1876, 60.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 155.— Ripaw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 107. Clangula torquata BREHM, Vogelf. 1855, 385. 4 Histrionicus torquatus BonaP. Comp. Rend. xliii, 1856.~Barrp, B. N. Am, 1858, 798; Cat. N. Am. B, 1859, No. 596.—Covus, Key, 1872, 291; Check List, 1873, No. 510; B. N. W. 1874, 578. Anas minuta Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 127; ed. 12, i, 1766, 204 (female.) Histrionicus minutus Drzsser, Birds of Europe (in text).—Cours, Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, v, Apr. 1880, 101; Check List, 2d ed, 1882, No. 730.—Ripaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 622.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884, 52. Has. Northern North America, Europe.and Asia; south in winter to the Middle States, Illinois, Missouri, California, etc.; breeding south to Newfoundland, the Northern Rocky Mountains, and in the Sierra Nevada to lat. 38° or farther; Iceland; Eastegn Asia. Sr.CuaR. Adult male: Entire loral region, continued backward from its upper part in a stripe on each side of the crown, an oval spot over the ears, a stripe of a little more than an inch in length down each side of the nape, a narrow collar ‘completely Sneircling the lower neck, a broad bar across each side of the breast, the middle portion (longitudinally) of the outer scapulars, the greater part of the tertials,a spot near the tip of the greater wing-coverts, and a small spot on each side of the crissum, at the base of the tail, white. A broad longitudinal stripe on each side of the crown and occiput, with entire sides and flanks, bright rufous. Head and neck, except as described, dark plumbeous, with a faint violaceous cast, becoming gradually black along the border of the white markings; piloum with a median stripe of blue-black extending from the base of the culmen to the occiput. _Back, chest, and sides of the breast bluish plumbeous, the white collar and the white bar on the sides of the breast bordered on each side by deep blue-black; rump, upper tail- coverts, and crissum deep blue-black; abdomen dark sooty grayish, blending insensibly into the plumbeous of the breast and the black of the crissum, but distinctly defined against the rufous of the sides and flanks; wing-coverts plumbeous-slate; primaries and rectrices dusky black; secondaries (“speculum”) metallic dark violet-blue; tertials white, the outer webs edged with black, the inner with dark plumbeous. Bill light yellowish olive, the ex- treme tip paler; iris reddigzh brown; feet pale bluish, the webs dusky, the claws whitish, Adult male in post-nuptial plumage: Pattern of the head-markings same as in the preced- ° ing, but the plumbeous much duller, the black stripe of the pileum dusky, the rufous on the sides of the crown and occiput wanting, or but faintly indicated. Upper parts in general nearly uniform dusky grayish brown, without well-defined white anywhere, no blue-black, and the speculum dull dusky brownish gray, with little, ifany, gloss. Lower parts grayish white, each feather marked with a subterminal transverse spot of grayish brown, the sides, flanks, and crissum nearly uniform grayish brown; no rufous on sides or flanks, and col- lar round the lower neck imperfect, or only slightly indieated. Adult female: Somewhat , ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 1738 similar to the male, but the head, neck, and chest grayish brown, with a distinct white spot on the auricular region, and the lores and sides of the forehead inclining to white. Chest, sides, flanks, and crissum entirely uniform grayish brown. “Bill and feet dull bluish gray; iris brown” (AUDUBON). Young. Similar to the adult female, but ‘above browner and more uniform, the chest, sides, flanks, and crissum tinged with umber. Total length, about 17.50 inches; extent, 27.00; wing, 7.40 to nearly 8.00; culmen, 1.05-1. 10; tarsus, 1.50; middle toe, 2.10. Female slightly smaller. The Harlequin Duck is a winter visitant or resident in Ili- nois, but is probably not at any time a common species. In its summer home, which is in more northern or mountainous regions, it frequents swiftly running streams, where it delights to sport among the eddies below water falls or in the brawling rapids. Its nest is often placed in a hollow of a tree, but fre- quently in other situations. Genus CLANGULA Leacu. Clangula LEaAcH, in Ross's Voy. Dise. 1819, App. p. xlviii. Type, Anas glacialis LINN. Hareida Lraon, Steph. Gen. Zodl. xii, 1824, 174. Type, Anas glacialis Linn. Pagonetia Kaup, Ent. Europ. Thierw. 1829, 66. Same type. : Crymonessa Maca. Man. Brit. Orn. ii, 1842, 185, Same type. Melonetia Sunv. Tent. 1872, 149, Same type. Gen. Car. Bill small (much shorter than the tarsus), all its outlines tapering rapidly to the end, which is occupied entirely by the very large broad nail; lower edge of the max- illa nearly straight for the basal half, then suddenly rising to the prominently decurved nail; lamelle slightly exposed along the straight basal portion of the maxillary tomium; feathering at the base of the bill forming a nearly straight oblique line, advancing farthest forward on the forehead, and scarcely interrupted by any re-entrant angle, so prominent in most ducks. Adult male with the longer,scapulars elongated and lanceolate, the rectrices (14 in number) acute, the middle pair slender and greatly lengthened. The most important peculiarity of structure in this well- marked genus consists in the almost unique outline of the ' feathering at the base of the bill, this outline advancing grad- ually farther forward from the‘rictus to the base of the culmen, the continuity of the slightly curved line interrupted by only a very faint, sometimes scarcely perceptible, indentation at the place of the deep angle seen in most ducks. The only other genus showing an approach. to this character is Camptolaimus, which, however, has the bill and other features very different. But a single species is known, which, like estrionicus, is cir- cumpolar in its distribution, but descends to lower latitudes in winter. 174 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Clangula hyemalis (Linn.) OLD SQUAW. Popular synonyms. Old Wife; South Southerly; Long-tailed Duck; Caca-wee (Canada); Swallow-tailed Duck; Hound (Newfoundland); Old Injun (Massachusetts and Con- necticut): Old Molly; Old Billy; Coween or Cowheen (Ontario); Scolder or Scoldenore ' (New Hampshire and Massachusetts). ‘ ‘ Anas hyemalis Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 126; ed. 12, i, 1766, 202, Anas hiemalis BRoNnN. Orn. Bor. 1764, 17. Harelda hyemalis B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884, 57, Clangula hiemalis Bream, Handb. Vog. Deutsch], 1831, 933. COlangula hyemalis A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 154.—Ripaw. Man, N. Am. B. 1887, 106. Anas glacialis Linn. 8. N. ed. 12, 1, 1766, 203.— Wars. Am. Orn, viii, 1814, 93, 96, pl. 70. Harelda glacialis “Leach,” STEPHENS, Shaw's Gen. Zo6l. xii, pt. ii,1824,175, pL 58.—Sw. & Rion. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 460.—Barep, B. N. Am. 1858, 800; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 597,~ Couss, Key, 1872, 291; Check List, 1873, No. 508; 2d ed. 1882, No. 728; B. N. W. 1874, 579.— Rrpaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 623. Fuligula (Harelda) glacialis Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 453, Fuligula glacialis Aup. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 408, pl. 312; Synop. 1889, 295; B. Am. vi, 1843, 379, pl. 410. ‘ Anus miclonia Bopp. Tabl. P. E. 1783,-58. Anas longicauda LEac#, Syst. Cat. Mam-and Birds Brit. Mus. 1816, 37. Anas brachyrhynchos BESEKRE, VOg. Kurl. 1792, 50. - Platypus faberi Bream, Lerb. Eur. Vog. ii, 1824, 1004. Clangula Saberi, megauros, musica, brachyrhynchos BREuM, V. D. 1831, 935, 986, 937, 988. Has. Northern hemisphere; in America, south in winter to nearly the southern bor- . der of the United States. : Sp. CHar.. Adult male in winter: - Forehead, crown, occiput, nape, chin, throat, lower part of the neck (all round), and upper part of the chest and back, white; lores, cheeks, and orbital region light mouse-gray, the eyelids white; a large oblong space cover- ing the sides of the neck, black, becoming light grayish brown in its lower portion. Middle of the back, rump, upper tail-coverts, tail, wings, lower part of the chest, whole breast, and upper part of the abdomen, black; the pectoral area very abruptly defined both anteriorly and posteriorly—the latter with a strongly convex outline. Scapulars glaucous-white or very pale pearl-gray; posterior lower parts white, the sides strongly shaded with pearl- gray. Basal half of the bill black, the terminal portion orange-yellow or pinkish, with the nail bluish gray; iris bright carmine; feet light plumbeous, the webs dusky, and claws black. “The outer half of the bill rich orange-yellow, that color extending to the base along the ridged, the unguis and the basal half black, as well as the ungnis and edges of the lower mandible” (AUDUBON), Adult male, in summer: Lores, cheeks, and sides of the forehead, pale mouse-gray; eyelids, and a postocular longitudinal space, white; rest of the head, whole neck, and upper parts generally sooty-black; upper part of the back more or less variegated with fulvous; scapulars widely edged with the same,’ varying on some feathers to ochraceous and pale puff. Breast and upper part of the abdomen dark sooty- grayish, abruptly defined behind with a semicircular outline, as in the winter plumage: re- maining lower parts white, shaded on the sides with pale pearl-gray. Bill black, crossed, in front of the nostrils, by a wide band of orange; iris yellowish brown; feet bluish black, the joints and under surface of the webs black. Adult female, in winter: Head, neck, and lower parts, chiefly white; forehead, medially, and crown, dusky; auricular region, chin, and throat, tinged with the same; chest light dingy gray. Upper parts dusky brown, the scapulars bordered with grayish fulvous or light raw-umber brown, some of the feathers tipped with pale ashy. Adult female, insummer: Head and neck dark grayish brown, with a large space surrounding the eye, and another on the side of the neck, gray- ish white; upper parts as inthe winter plumage, but upper part of the back variegated ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 175 with light brown, the scapulars chiefly of this color, with the central portion dusky. “Bill and feet dusky green; iris yellow” (AUDUBON). Young: Somewhat similar to the winter : female, but much more uniform above, with scarcely any lighter borders to the scapulars, the head and neck light brownish gray, darker on the pileum, and indistinctly whitish be- fore and behind the eye. Downy young: ‘Above, uniform dark hair-brown, relieved only on side of head by a grayish white space on lower eyelid, a similar but smaller spot immediately above the eye, a light brownish gray loral stripe, and alight brownish gray postocular spot; brown on side of head forming a broad stripe from the rictus back to occiput. Lower parts white, interrupted by a distinct jugular collar of sooty hair-brown. Bill and feet dusky (in dried skins). ' Adult male: Total length, about 23 inches; extent, 80.00; wing, 8.50-9.00; tail, 8.00-8.50; culmen, 1.10; tarsus, 1.35; middle toe, 1.90. Female, smaller, the total length considerably less, owing chiefly to the abbreviation of the middle rectrices, The Old Squaw or ‘South-Southerly is a winter visitant to Illinois, its breeding range being far to the northward. Mr. Nel- son found it to be an abundant winter resident on Lake Michi- - gan, where the first stragglers arrived about the last of Octo- ber, the main body arriving about a month later and depart- ing about the first of April, a few lingering until about the last of the month. Farther south it is of less rerular occurrence as well as less numerous, though doubtless occurring ‘‘off and on” through the winter on the larger rivers. In its habits there is nothing particularly distinctive of this species, except the character of its notes, which are described as being loud and somewhat musical. Dr. Brewer says that its voice is one of its great peculiarities, and is very distinct, from that of any other of the ducks, being: really musical when heard from a distance, especially if there are a large number of indi- viduals joining in the refrain. The words south-south-southerly, which some have fancied to resemble its cry and which have accordingly been used as one of its local names, did not, how- ever, to his ear, in the legst resemble the sounds which the bird | makes; but he adds that the names “Old Wives” and “Old Squaws” as applied to the species are not inappropriate, since when many are assembled their notes resemble a confused gabble. Genus SOMATERIA Luacs. Somateria LEACH, in Ross’s Voy. Disc. 1819, App. p. xlviii. Type, Anas mollissima Lyn. Grn. Coar. Bill about as long as the head, narrower than deep, the tip formed by the very broad, large nail; feathers of the forehead advancing forward in a long narrow- pointed strip, between two backward extensions of the maxilla, which, intervening between 176 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. % the frontal feathers and those of the cheeks, form a distinct basal angle or lobe; maxillary tomium regular and nearly straight, the lamelle completely concealed. Head with some portions bristly feathered(in males); tertials falcate; tail small, short, and pointed, com- posed of fourteen pointed feathers. Adult males with the plumage pied black and white (the lower parts chiefly black, the upper surface mostly white), the breast more buff or cream colored, the head varied with light green, black, ete. Females and young with the plumage barred with dusky and pale fulvous or rusty, the head and neck streaked with the same. Length about 20.00-26.00 inches. The four species which compose this genus differ more or less from one another in form, but they all possess the characters defined above. Like the more or less nearly related genera Arctonetta, Eniconetta, Histrionicus, and Camptolaimus, they are birds of high northern latitudes, barely entering the warm tem- perate zone in winter, This genus includes two subgenera, the characters of which are as follows: ‘ Somateria. Frontal feathers reaching about half way from the base of the maxilliary angle or lobe to the nostril; feathering of lores extending forward to beneath the middle of the nostril; adult males with scapulars and tertials white and top of head biack. Erionetta. Frontal feathers reaching forward as far as the nostrils; feathering of the lores extending only about half way to the nostrils; adult males with scapulars and tertials black, and top of head light grayish blue. ¥ Suscenus SOMATERIA Jeacu. Somateria Lracu, in Ross’s Voy. Disc. 1819, App. p. xlviii. Type, Anas mollissima LINN. SusqEn. Cuan. Anterior point of feathering on forehead reaching only about half way from the point of the naked angle on side of forehead to nostril; feathering of lores extend- ing forward to at least beneath the posterior end of the nostril; adult males with scapulars and tertials white, the top of head chiefly black. Three species of this subgenus occur in North America, one of them being only subspecifically distinct from the European Eider (S. mollissima). One of them visits northern Tlinois dur- ing winter, while another may reasonably be expected to occur there, since farther eastward it is found not uncommonly in Massachusetts. The differential characters of these two species are as follows: S. mollissima borealis. Aduli male with lobe or angle of bill narrow and pointed, its . length, from anterior extremity of loral feathering, 1.88-1.52; width across middle, not more than .80; black of head bordered below by pure white, except at posterior extremity: Female with angle of bill 1.20-1.40, depth of upper mandibie at base 0,78-0.95. Hap. Green- land, shores of Cumberland Gulf, and northern Labrador, south in winter to Massachu- setts, ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND- DUCKS. 177 8. dresseri, Adult male with lobe or angle of bill broad and rounded at posterior ex- tremity, its length, from anterior extremity of loral feathering, 1.75-2.00; width across middle, not less than .45; black of head bordered below by pale green for nearly the whole length; female with angle of bill about 1.87x.22, depth of upper mandible at base .78. The third American species, the Pacific Eider (S. v-nigra) is a larger and finer bird than either of the eastern species. It resembles them in color but has a large \/-shaped black mark on the throat and a bright orange-colored bill. It inhabits the northwestern parts of the continent, as well as northeastern Asia. Somateria dresseri Sharpe. AMERICAN EIDER. Popular synonyms. Wamp (Connecticut); Squam Duck (Maine); Big Bea Duck (Long Island). Anas mollissima Wis. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 122, pl. 71 (nec LINN.). Fuligula (Somateria) mollissima Nutr. Man. ii, 1884, 407. | Fuligula molissima Aup. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 344; v, 1889, 611, pl. 246; Synop. 1839, 291; B. Am. vi, 1843, 349, pl. 4U5. Somateria mollissima Bonap. Comp. List, 1888, 57 (part).—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 809; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 606.—Couzs, Key, 1872, 298; Check List, 1878, No. 513, Somateria dresseri SHarpr, Ann. Mag. N. H. July, 1871, 51, figs. 1.2—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884, 76.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 160.—Rrpa@w. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 110. Somateria mollissima, var. (?) dresseri Couns, Birds N. W. 1874, 580. Somateria mollissima dresseri Ripaw. Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus. iii, 1880, 205, 222; Nom. N. Am, B. 1881, No. 627 a.—Couns, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 734. * Has. American coasts of the North Atlantic, from Maine, Newfoundland, etc., to Lab- rador; in winter, south to Long Island, Delaware, Ontario, Wisconsin, and northern Ohio and Illinois. Sp. Coan. Adult male: Similar to 8. mollissima, but the “cere” very much broader (.88 to .50 of an inch wide anteriorly), much corrugated, the posterior extremity broad and rounded; green of the head rather more extended, usually following along under- neath the black almost or quite to the bill. “Bill pale grayish yellow, the unguis lighter, the soft tumid part pale flesh-color; iris brown; feet dingy light green, the webs dusky” (AuDUBON). Adult female: Scarcely distinguishable from that of 8. mollissima, but basal angles of the maxilla deeper and broader. “Bill pale grayish green; iris and feet as in the male” (AuDUBON)*. Downy young: Not distinguishable from that of 8. mollissima(?). Total length, about 24.00 to 26.00 inches; extent, 39.00 to 42.00; wing, 11.15-11.50; culmen, 1.95-2.40; from tip of bill to end of basal angle, 2.75-8.35; greatest width et angle, .38-.59; tarsus, 2,00-2.20; middle toe, 2.50-2.70 (six examples). Though nearly related to the true Eider of Europe (8. mollis- sima), the American Eider is clearly distinct. Its habits, how- ever, are much the same. * The‘fresh color of an adult male received at the National Museum from Wood’s Holl, Massachusetts, February 24, 1888, were asfollows: Lobes of bill, as far as the nostrils, dull olay-yellowish, lighter and more tinged with olive along lower edge; nails of bill dull grayish greenish white; rest of bill horn-grayish; feet light yellowish olive, the webs grayish dusky. —23 178 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. SuBGENUs ERIONETTA CovEs. “Erionetta Couns, Kéy to N. Am. Birds, od. 2, 1884, 709. Type, Anas spectabilis Linn. SupG@en. Onan. Anterior point of feathering on forehead reaching as far forward as posterior end of nostril, the loral feathering extending on y about half as far. Adult male with scapulars and tertials black, the top of the head light bluish gray; lateral base of upper mandible, in adult male, enlarged into a very conspicuous broad lobe, the width of which at widest part exceeds the depth of upper mandible at anterior end of nostril. The single species belonging to this subgenus is the beautiful King Eider (S&. spectabilis). Somateria spectabilis (Linn.) KING EIDER. Anas spectadilia Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 123; ed. 12, i, 1766, 195. Somateria spectabilis Leacu, in Ross’s Voy. 1819, App. p. xlvili—Sw. & Riou, F. B.-A. li, 1831, 447.—~Bargp, B. N, Am. 1858,.810; Cat, N. Am. B. 1859, No. 608. Cours, Key, 1872, 298; Check List, 1873, No. 515; 2d ed. 1882, No, 736; B. N. W. 1874, 581.—Rrpew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 629; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 110.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. fi, 1884, 83,—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 162. Fuligula (Somateria) spectabilis BonaP. Synop. 1828, 889.~ Nutr. Man. ii, 1834, 414. Fuligula spectabilis Aup. Orn. Biog. fii, 1835, 523, pl. 276; Synop. 1839, 291; B. Am. vi, 1843, 347, pl. 404, Anas beringii Gu. 8. N. i, 1788, 508, Anas superba LEACH, Syst. Cat. 1816. Has. Northern part of the northern hemisphere; in America, south, in winter, to New Jersey and the Great Lakes, casually to Georgia and coast of California, _ Sp. Car. Adult male: Feathers bordering the base of the maxilla all round, a spot beneath and behind the eye, and a large V-shaped mark on the throat, black; entire top of the head and upper part of the nape delicate pearl-gray, or glaucous-blue, growing grad- ually deeper behind, where sometimes bordered by an indistinct blackish line; upper | and anterior portion of the cheeks, below the eye and immediately behind the black bordering the side of the bill, and an oblique patch on the auricular region delicate sea-green, the auricular patch abruptly defined anteriorly, but above gradually fading into white along the edge of the bluish gray of the occiput and nape; remainder of the head, neck; middle of the back, wing-coverts (except greater coverts and exterior border of lesser coverts), lining of wing, and a patch on each side of the 1ump white; breast and chest deep creamy buff. Remainder of the plumage dull black, the falcate tertials with a narrow and rather indistinct central stripe of dull brownish. “ Bill flesh-colored, the sides of the upper mandible and soft frontal lobes bright orange; iris bright yellow; feet dull orange, the webs dusky, the claws brownish black” (AupUBoN). Adult female,in summer: Pale tulvous, varied with black, the latter occupying the central portion of the feathers on the dorsal region, forming streaks on the head and neck, and bars on the chest, sides, flanks, and upper tail-coverts; abdomen and anal region nearly plain grayish brown: wing-coverts, remiges, and rectrices plain grayish dusky, the primaries darker; greater ecoverts and secondaries scarcely, if at all, tipped with white; rump nearly plain dusky. Adult female, in autumn: Rich cinnamon-rufous, varied with black much ag in the sum- mer plumage; abdomen and anal region plain brown; greater coverts and secondaries distinctly tipped with white. Young male: Head and neck plain umber-brown; upper parts dusky, the feathers bordered with fulvous, especially the scapulars; rump, greater ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 179 wing-coverts, remiges, and tail plain dusky; upper tail-coverts and lower parts barred with pale fulvous and dusky, the abdomen nearly plain grayish brown. “Bill pale green- ish gray; iris dull yellow; feet dull ochre” (AuDUBON). Young female: Similar to the young male, but head and neck grayish-buff, finely streaked with dusky. Total length, about 20.00-25.00 inches; wing, 10.50-11.25; bill, from base of frontal lobe to tip, in the male, 1.20-1.80; tarsus, 1.80-1.83; middle toe, 2.20. | The female of this species may be easily distinguished from that of S. dresser by the very different outline of the feathering at the base of the bill, as explained, page 176. This is the only one of the Eiders the range of which extends com- pletely across the northern portion of the northern hemisphere. Its habits are essentially the same as those of the other species of the same genus. It migrates south in winter to a greater or less distance, but in varying numbers, according to the character of the season. It breeds in the arctic regions. t Genus OIDEMIA FLEMING. Oidemia FueM., Philos. Zo6l. ii, 1822,260, Type, by elimination, Anas nigra Lr. Gzn. CHAR. Distance from posterior border of nostril to angle of mouth equal to or greater than distance from anterior end of nostril to tip of upper mandible. Adult males uniform black, with or without white speculum, and with or without white patches on head; bill brightly colored in life with tints of yellow, orange, or red, but partly plack. Adult fe- males plain brownish, lighter and more grayish beneath, the white head-markings of the male (if any) indistinctly indicated. This genus includes three subgenera, with the following char- acters: A. Length of commissure much less than inner toe, without claw; adult males entirely uniform black; bill of adult male much swollen on top at base; distance from anterior end of nostril to nearest feathers of forehead greater than distance from same point to tip of bill. 1. Oidemia. B. Length of commissure much more than length of inner toe without claw. au. Feathering of head advancing nearly or quite as far forward on lores as on forehead; wing with a white “speculum.” a 2. Melanitta. 7 db. Feathering of head advancing much farther forward on forehead than on lores; wing without white “speculum.” 3.. Pelionetta. 4 Supcenus OIDEMIA FLemine. Oidemia Fur, Philos. Zodl. ti, 1822,260, Type, by elimination, Anas nigra LINN. Suscen. Cuap. Feathers at the base of the maxilla forming a nearly straight oblique Jine from the forehead back to the rictus, advancing scarcely, if at all, on the forehead; bill yery deep through the base, where sometimes elevated into a roundish knob; and much de- 180 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. pressed toward the end. No white whatever on the plumage, which is deep black, the bill partly orange, in the males. Females dull grayish brown (lighter below), the bill wholly black. Two species only of this genus are known, one European, the other American. They are much alike, but may be distinguished by the shape and coloration of the bill. Oidemia americana Sw. & Rich. AMERICAN SCOTER. Popular synonyms. American Black Scoter; Butter-bill, Butter-billed Coot, Hollow- billed Coot (New England); Scoter Duck: Yellow-bill; .Copper-bill; Copper-nose; Pumpkin-blossom Coot; Smutty; Fitzy; Sleigh-bell Duck (Maine). * Anas nigra Wiis. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 135, pl. 72 (not of Linw.). Oidemia americana Sw. & Ricu. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 450.—-Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858,807; Cat. N. Am, B. 1859, No. 604.—A. O. U. Check List,1886, No. 163.~-Ripcw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 111. @demia americana Couss, Key,.1872, 298; Check List, 1873, No. 516; 2d ed. 1882. No. 787; B.N. W. 1874, 581.—Ripew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 630.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884, 89. Fuliguia (Oidemia) americana Nutt. Man. ii, 1834,422. Fuligula americana Aup. Orn. Biog. v, 1839, 117, pl. 408; Synop. 1839, 290; B. Am. vi, 1843, 348, p). 403. Has. Coasts and larger inland waters of northern North America, south in winter to the Ohio River, New Jersey, and California. Mountains of Colorado (Boulder Co., June! ; Mrs. M. A. MAXWELL). Sp. Cuan. Adult male: Entire plumage uniform deep black, the neck very faintly glossed with dull violaceous, the feathers somewhat distinctly defined; basal half of the maxilla, except a stripe along the tomium, bright orange (yellowish in the dried skin}, the remainder of the bill black; iris hazel; legs and feet dull black. “The bulging part of the upper mandible is bright orange, paler above, that color extending to alittle before the nostrils; the rest of the upper mandible, including its basal margin to the breadth of from three- to two-twelfths of an inch, black, as inthe lower mandible. Irisbrown. Feet brown- ish black” (AUDUBON). Adult female: Above, dull dark grayish brown, feathers of the back and scapulars tipped with lighter; lower parts lighter, the pale t.ps broader, though lacking on the posterior portions; lateral and lower parts of the head and neck nearly uni- form very pale grayish brown, quite abruptly defined against the uniform dark brown of the pileumand nape. Billentirelyblack. Young: Upper parts, chest, sides, and flanks, uniform dark grayish brown; sides of head and neck, chin and throat, dirty whitish, tinged with brownish gray, quite abruptly defined against the dark brown of the pileum and nape; abdomen whitish, each feather ‘ked with a dusky grayish brown bar just beneath the surface, some of these bars exposed; anal region and crissum grayish brown. the feathers tipped with white. Bill and feet black. Total length, about 17 to 19 inches; extent, 29 to 34. Male: Wing. 8.75-9.50; culmen, 1.65- 1,80; tarsus, 1.65-2.00; middle toe, 2-50-2.80. Female, slightly smaller. The Black Scoter is a northern species which visits the United States in winter. It is another of those species, usually classed as “sea ducks,” which occur more or less nuimerously on the larger waters of the interior. Professor Cooke, in his ‘Bird Of. TRuMBULL, Names and Portraits of Birds. 1 ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 181 Migration in the Mississippi’ Valley” (p. 73), states that Mr. C. W. Butler informed him that on May 2, 1883, he saw fifty of these ducks at Anna, Union county, all busily engaged in picking up millet seed that had just been sown. If no mistake. of identification. was made in this case, the observation in ques- ; tion apparently reveals a new feature in the habits of the species, which has been supposed to feed exclusively in the water and to subsist chiefly on fishes and their spawn and oe aquatic animal food. 2 SuBGENUS MELANITTA Bote. Melanitia Born, Isis, 1822, 564. Type, by elimination, Anas fusca LINN. Melanetta Gray, 1840; List Gen. 1841, 95.—Barep, B. N. Am. 1858, 805. _Maceranas Less. Man, ii, 1828, 414. Same type. Supouy. Guar. Feathers at the base of the billextending forward almost to the nostril in three prominent ang]es—one on each side of the maxilla, the other on top, at the base ofthe culmen; sides of the maxilla rather sunken orcompressed above thetomium, Colors uni- form black or brown, with a white speculum on the wings, the adult male with a white spot immediately beneath the eye. . This subgenus differs from Ozdemia and Pelonetta in the form of the bill, particularly in the outline of the feathering at the base, as defined above. Three species only are known, one peculiar to northern North America, one to northern Europe, but occurring also in Greenland, and the other to northeastern ., Asia. Oidemia deglandi Bonap. WHITE-WINGED SCOTER. Popular synomyms. American Velvet Scoter; Velvet Duck; White-winged Coot; Uncle Sam Coot; Bull Coot; Assemblyman (Maryland).” Anas fusca Wiis. Am, Orn. viii, 1814, 187, pl. 72 (not of LINN.). Fuligula (Oidemia) fusca BonaP. Synop. 1828. 890.~Nurr. Man. ii, 1884, 419. Oidemia fusca Sw. & Riou. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 449. @demia fusca Couns, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 738. Fuligula fusca AuD. Orn. Biog. iii, 1835, 454, pl. 247; Synop. 1839, 280; B. Am. vi, 1843, 332, pl, 401. ? Fuligula bimaculata HERBERT, Field Sports, 2d ed. ii, 1848, 866, fig. (young). Oidemia (Pelionetta) bimaculata Bargp, B. N. Am. 1858, 808. Oidemia velvetina Cass. Proc, Acad. Nat. Suvi. Phila. v, 1850, 126. Melanetta velwetina Bargp, B. N, Am. 1858, 805; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 601.—~Ripew. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 632.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884, 93. \ 182 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. \ Gidemia fusca, b. (7) velvetina Couns, Birds N. W. 1874, 582. @demia fusca var. (?) Cougs, Key, 1872, 294; Check List, 1873, No. 517. r Oidemia deglandi Bonar. Rev. Crit. de l’Orn, Europ. de Deg). 1850, 108.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 165.—Rzpew. Man. N, Am. B. 1887, 112. , Has. Northern North America; chiefly maritime; but occurring on various inland waters; south in winter to the Middle States, Great Lakes, Mississippi River near St, Louis, Ilinois River, and southern California. Sp.CHar. Adult male: Base of the culmen elevated into a prominent knob; lateral base of the maxilla sunken beneath the feathers of the lores. Plumage uniform brownish black. A crescentic spot beneath the eye, and extending backward for half an inch or more, secondaries, and greater wing-coverts, white. Knob of the bill, with base, and mar- gin of the maxilla, black; “sides of the bill red-lead, fading into orange;” “nail vermilion, the anterior flat portion of the upper mandible whitish;” iris “white tinged with straw-yel- low; legs scarlet, with black webs, and a tinge of black in the joints” (NuTTaLL). Young male: Dark sooty brown, the head and neck sooty black; white on wings as in the adult, but no white spot beneath the eye. Adult female: Uniform grayish fuliginous, the wings darker: white specylum as in the male, but no white about the head, or with faint indica- tions of white spot &t base of maxilla and behind the eye. In summer, feathers of the back, scapular region, and chest narrowly tipped with light brownish gray. Bill uni- form dusky; iris yellow; feet as in the male, but duller in color. Total length, about 19.75 to 22.50 inches; extent, 36.00 to 40.00; wing, 10.75-12.00; com- missure, 2.82; tarsus, 2.08. Professor Cooke records the White-winged Scoter as being “generally distributed throughout Illinois in winter, but most common on Lake Michigan.”' Like the common species (0. americana) it frequents the larger bodies of water, usually riding far out from the shore, and in general habits is very much like its relatives. ‘ Suscenus PELIONETTA Kavp. Pelionetta Kaur, Sk. Entw. Europ. Thierw. 1829, 107. Type, Anas perspicillata LINN. SuBGEN. Cuak. Feathers on the forehead extending ina broad strip nearly or quite as far as the posterior end of the nosirils, but those of the lores not advancing forward of the rictus; the lateral base of the maxillain the adult male greatly swollen, and with the basal outline convex; nail very large and broad, but narrow terminally. No white on the wing, but the head with Jarge white patches (indistinct in the female and young). Except in the form of the bill, as described above, this subgenus very closely resembles Melanitta and Oidemia, but is sufficiently distinct. Only one species is known. ANATIDZ—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 183 Oidemia perspicillata”(Linn.) SURF SCOTER. : Popular synonyms. Surf Duck; Sea Duck; Skunk-bill; ‘Skunk-head -Coot; Horse-head Coot, or Horse-head; Hollow-billed Coot (New England}; Gray?Coot; Spectac'ed Coot; Surf Coot (Long Island); Google-nose; Patch-head: Plaster-bill; Snuff- ‘taker; Morocco-jaw; Blossom-bill, etc., ete.* Anas perspicillata Linn. 8. N. ed. 10, i, 1758, 125;"ed. 12,7i, 1766, 201—Wins. Am. Orn. viii. 1824, 49, pl. 67. Oidemia perspicillata STEPHENS, Gen, Z061 xii, pt. ii, 1824, 219.—Sw.’& Krew. F.B.-A. ii, 1881, 449.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 166.—Ripcw. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 113, Fuligula (Oidemia) perspicillata Bonap. Synop. 1828, 389.—Nutt. Man. ii, 1834, 416. G@demia nerspicillata Cours, Key, 1872, 294; Check List, 1878, No. 518; 2d ed. 1882, No. 739; B. N. W. 1874, 582. d Pelionetia perspicillata Rutcu. Syst. Av. 1852, p. vill —Barep, B. N. Am. 1858, 806; Cat. N. Am. B, 1859, No. 602.—-Rrpaw. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 683.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am, ii, 1881, 98. : Fuliqula perspicillata Aub. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838,{161, pl. 317; Synop. 1839,289; B. Am. vi, 1848, 387, pl. 402. ; Pelionetta trowbridgii Barmy, B. N. Am. 1858, 806; Cat. N.:Am. B. 1859, No. 603, Gidemia perspicillata, var. trowbridgti Cours, Key, 1872, 295; Check List, 1873, No. 518 a. Gdemia perspicillata, b. trowbridgit Couns, B. N. W. 1874, 592. G@demia per: picillata trowbridgit Couxs, Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 740. Has. Coasts and larger inland waters of northern North America; south in winter to Atlantic coast of the United States,to the Ohio River, Kansas, etc., in-the interior, and Lower California, on the Pacific side; accidental in Europe. Jamaica (and other West India islands?) in winter. Sp. Coan. Adult male: General color deep black, very intense above, more sooty on the lower surface; a white patch on the forehead, the anterior outline {semicircular or somewhat angular, and reaching forward a little in advance of the {lateral base of the bill, the posterior outline almost directly transverse, and la little posterior to the middle of the eye; nape with a somewhat shield-shaped, or cuneate, longitudinal patch of pure white, having the upper outline almost directly transverse. Bill chiefly E orange-red, deeper (intense red in some spécimens) above the nostrils; swollen base of the maxilla with a large, irregularly roundish, somewhat quadrate, or trapezoid, spot of deep black, with a light-colored space (bluish white in life) in front, as far as the nos- trils; nails duller orange, or dingy grayish; iris yellowish white; feet orange-red, the webs greenish dusky; claws black. “Upper mandible with a nearly square black patch at the base, margined with orange, except in front, where there is a patch of bluish white extending to near the nostrils, prominent part over the nostrils deep reddish orange, becoming lighter toward the unguis, and shaded into rich yellow toward the margins; the unguis dingy grayish yellbw: lower mandible flesh-colored, unguis darker. Iris bright yellowish white. Tarsi and toes orange-red, with webs dusky, tinged with green; claws black” (AUDUBON). Adult female: Pilewm and nape brownish black; rest of the head ashy brown, with an indistinct whitish patch Mot always indieated) on the lower anterior portion of the lores, bordering the lateral base.of the bill; upper parts brownish dusky, the contour feathers sometimes showing paler tips; lower parts grayish brown, pecoming nearly white on the abdomen, the feathers of the breast and sides tipped with the same, the anal region and crissum uniform dusky. Bill greenish black, scarcelv swollen at the base, where the black spot of the male is slightly, if at all, indicated; iris yellowish white: “feet yellowish orange, webs grayish dusky, claws black” (AUDUBON). Young: Similar to the adult female, but head with two quite distinct whitish patches, \ *Of, TRUMBULL, Names and Portraits of Birds. 184 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. s one against the lateral base of the bill, the other over the auriculars, behind and below the eye; plumage above, more uniform than in the adult female, and feathers every- where of a softer texture. Total length, about 19.00-20.00 inches; extent, 31.00-34.00; wing, 9.25~-9.75; culmen, 1.80-1.60; from tip of bill to lateral base, 2.35-2.60; distance through base of bill horizontally, be- tween most prominent point of lateral swellings, 1.10-1.40; tarsus, 1.55-1.85; middle toe, 2.15-2.55 (twenty examples). The handsome Surf-Duck is also a winter visitant to Illinois, where, according to Professor Cooke, it occurs on all the larger streams, as well as on Lake Michigan, Mr. Nelson records it as numerous on the Calumet marshes, during the fall and winter of 1875, where it arrived the last of October and remained until toward the end of March. The following summary of its habits is given by Col. N.S. Goss, in Zhe Auk, for April, 1889, p. 123: “This species of sea duck is abundant upon both coasts, and during the breeding season is quite common ‘upon the large northern inland waters; breeding from Sitka, Alaska, and the Gulf of St. Lawrence north to the Arctic coast. Its food consists largely of shell-fish (the mussel ‘is a favorite, the shells of which appear to digest as easily as the animal within them) and . fishes, and various forms of life also help to make up the bill of fare. Its flesh is coarse, and rather rank in flavor. The birds are at home as well in the surging surf as upon the smoother waters, resting and sleeping at night far out from the shore. They rise from the surface in a running, laborious manner, but when fairly on the wing fly rapidly, and in stormy weather hug close to the water. While feeding they are very active, constantly and rapidly diving, one after the other, con- tinually disappearing and popping up.” Genus ERISMATURA Bonaparte. Oxyura Bonap. Synop. 1828, 890. Type Anas rubida Wiis. (Nec Oxyuras Swarns. 1827). Erismatura Bonar. Sageio. Distr. Met. 1892, 143. aan type. Gymnura. Nurt. Man. ii, 1834, 426. Same type. Undina GouLD, Birds Eur. v, 1836, pl. 883. Type, Anas mersa Pall=A. leucocephala Scop. Cerconectes Wacu. Isis, 1882, 282. Type, A. leucocephala Scop. Bythonessa GLOG. "Handb. 1842, 472. Type, A. leucocephala Scop. Gen. OHAR. Bill about as long as the head (much longer than the tarsus), very broad widened toward the end, elevated at the base, the nostrils very small, and situated very near the culmen; maxillary unguis very small, narrow, and linear, the terminal half bent ANATIDE—THE SWANS, ‘GEESE, AND DUCKS. 185 abruptly downward and backward, so as to be invisible from above; tail more than half as long as the wings, much graduated, consisting of eighteen very stiff, narrow feathers, with the shafts strong and rigid, and grooved underneath, toward the base; the tail-coverts extremely short, scarcely covering the base of the tail; wings very short, and very con- cave beneath, the primaries scarcely or not at all ext-nding beyond the tertials; tarsus very short, much less than one half as long as the longest toe. Only one species, the common Ruddy Duck (£! rudida) occurs .in North America. Erismatura rubida (Wils.) RUDDY DUCK. Popular synonyms. Spine-tailed Duck; Heavy-tailed Duck; Quill-tail Coot, Stiff-tail, Bristle-tail; Rook, or Rook Duck (Potomac River), Sleepy Duck, Sleepy Coot, Sleepy Brothe ; Fool Duck, Deaf Duck, Shot-pouch, Daub Duck, Stub-and-twist, Booby Coot, Batter Scoot, Biather-scoot, ete., etc.; *Pato zambullidor de pico azul (Mexico). Anas rubida Wiis. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 128, 131 pl. 71, fig. 5, 6. Fuligula (Gymnura) rubida Nutr. Man. ii, 1834, 426, Fuligula rubida Sw. & Ricu. F. B.-A ii, 1831, 455.—AuD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, $26; pl. 343; Synop. 1839, 288; B. Am. vi, 1843, 324, pl. 399. Erismatura rubida Bonar. Comp. List, 1888, 59 -Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 811; Cat. N. Am. B: 1859, No. 609.—Cougs, Key, 1872, 295: Check List, 1873, No. 519; 2d ed. 1882, No. 741; Birds N. W. 1874, 583.-HensH. Zool. Wheeler's Exp. 1875, 488.—Rrpew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 626; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 634; Man. N. Am. B, 1887, 113.— B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884, 104—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 167. Anas jamaicensis ORD, ed. Wils. viii, 1825, 188. . Has. The whole of North America, breeding nearly throughout its range, which ex- tends south to Guatemala and Colombia; Cuba and other West India islands. Sp. Coan. Adult male, full plumage: Pileum and upper half of the nape uniform black; entire side of the head, below the eyes, including the malar region and chin, pure white; rest of neck, entire upper parts, sides, and flanks, rich chestnut-rufous or purplish ferruginous; wing-coverts and middle of the rump dusky grayish brown, minutely mottled with paler; remiges dull brownish dusky; rectrices brownish black, the shafts deep black; lower parts white on the surface, but the concealed portion of all the feathers dark brown- ish gray, showing when the feathers are disarrunged, and in midsummer specimens com- pletely exposed by abrasion of the tips of the feathers; chest strongly washed with fulvous- buff, this sometimes invading the abdomen. Lower tail-coverts entirely white, to the roots of the feathers. “Bill and edge of the eyelids grayish blue: iris hazel; feet dull grayish blue, webs inclining to dusky; claws grayish brown” (AUDUBON). Adult female: Top of the head, down to below the eyes, and upper parts generally, dusky grayish brown, minutely freckled with pale grayish fulvous (more reddish on the head); remainder of, the cad dirty grayish white, crossed longitudinally by astripe of speckled dusky, running from the rictus backward across the auriculars, parallel with the lower edge of the brown of the top of the head; neck pale brownish gray, fading gradually into the white of the chin; lower parts, except sides and flanks (which are similar to the abdomen, but darker), as in the adult male. Young: Similar to the adult female. Downy young: Above, dark smoky brown, darker on the head; a whitish spot on each side the back; a brownish white stripe beneath the eye, from the bill to near the occiput; beneath this,a narrower dusky ® Also, Hickory- head, Greaser, Paddy, Noddy, Paddy-whack, Dinkey, Light-wood knot, Hard-tack, and so forth, according to the locality or the particular individual who is asked to name the species! See TRuMBULL's Names ana Portraits of Birds, —24 186 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. brown one, confluent with the brown of the nape, reaching almost or quite to the rictus Lower parts.grayish white, strongly shaded with sooty brown across the chest, Length, about 13.50-16.00; wing, 5.75-6.00; culmen, about 1.50-1.60. Although the collection of the National Museum contains nu- merous examples of this species, only a small portion of them have the sex indicated, while on a still smaller number is the date noted. It is therefore difficult to determine satisfactorily, from the material at hand, the seasonal and sexual differences of plumage. Certain it is, however, that specimens in the plumage described above as that of the adult male in full plumage occur both in summer and winter. Audubon says that the “adult female in summer” “presents the same char- acters as in the male;” but althongh this may be true, the series under examination affords no indication of it. He de scribes the “‘male one year old” as having ‘‘a similar white patch on the side of the head; upper part: of head and hind neck dull blackish brown; throat and sides of neck grayish brown, lower part of neck dull reddish brown, waved with dusky; upper parts as in the adult, but of a duller tint; lower parts grayish white.” Probably no North American duck has so extensive a breed- ing range as the present species, since it breeds as far south as Guatemala—perhaps even farther; as far north as Great Slave Lake, York Factory, and other localities in the subarctic portions of the continent, and from the Atlantic to the Pacific. According to Professor Cooke, it winters from southern Illinois southward. “Audubon noticed it in large numbers during the winter months in Florida, sometimes shooting upwards of forty in a single morning; and he was informed by Dr. Bachman that this species had been becoming more and more abundant in South ‘Carolina; yet he had never met with an example in full summer plumage. This duck seemed to be equally fond of salt, brackish, and fresh water. In the Southern States it congregates in great flocks. Its flight is rapid, with a whirring sound, occasioned by the concave form of the wings. It rises from the water with considerable difficulty, being obliged to assist itself with its broad webbed feet, and for that purpose to run on the surface for several yards. From the ground, howeyer, it can spring up at once. This duck swims with ease and grace and deeply im- ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 187 mersed, It.is also extremely expert at diving; and when wounded, often escapes by doing this, and then hiding in the grass, if there is any accessible.” ( Water Birds of North America.) Mr. Salvin found this species more easily procurable than any other of the ducks frequenting the lake of Duefias, in Guatemala, on account of a peculiarity in its powers of flight which renders its escape less easy than it would otherwise be. It can fly as well as any other when it is once fairly started, but rises with great difficulty from the water; and, in consequence of this, it can be approached within easy gunshot by sailing down upon it before the wind. Sometimes, however, it seeks safety by div- ing; and when it does this, so rapid are its motions that it is almost certain to escape. The eggs of the Ruddy Duck are remarkably large in propor- tion to the size of the bird, and are distinguished from those of every other North American ‘duck by the roughness of the shell. SUBFAMILY MERGIN.AS.—THE MERGANSERS, Genus MERGANSER Brisson. Merganser Briss. Orn. vi, 1760, 230. Type, Mergus merganser Linn. Gen. Coan. Bill longer than the head, the breadth uniformly about equal to the depth, _the serrations conical, acute, an 1 pointed backward; crest occipital, pointed, or scarcely developed and depressed. Tarsus nearly three fourths the middle toe, with claw. Tail about half the length of the wings. Bill mostly reddish. Adult males with head and upper neck greenish black, the occiput crested; ramp, upper tail-coverts, and tail, plain ash-gray; rest of upper parts mainly pied black and whitish; iower parts rich creamy white or pale salmon-color. Adult females with head and upper neck cinnamon-brownish (occiput crested, as in the mule), chin aud part of throat white; upper parts grayish, with some white on wings; lower parts buffy white. The two North American species of this genus may be readily distinguished as follows, the females alone resembling one another: 1. M. americanus. Nostrils situated near the middle of the maxilla; frontal feathers extend- ing farther forward than hose on lateral base of bill. Adult male: Head and most of the neck:greenish blazk; head slightly crested; chest and other lower parts creamy white, or pale salmon-color. Aduli female: Had and neck reddish (chin and throat white), the oveiput with a ful crest of lengthened feathers. Above, chiefly bluish gray. 2. M. serrator. Nostrils situated near the base of the maxilla: feathers on lateral base of bill extending farther forward than those onthe forehead. Adult male: Head dull greenish black, the occiput with a long pointed crest of narrow feathe. s; neck and sides of the chest dull buff, or light cinnamon, streaked with black; other lower parts 188 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. mainly white. Adult female: Very similar in color to that of M. americanus, but dis- tinguisbed by different position of the nostrils, and different outline of the feathering at base of the bill. size also smaller: Merganser americanus (Cass.) ; AMERICAN MERGANSER. Popular synonyms. Buff-breasted Merganser; Buff-breasted Sheldrake: Saw-bill; Fish Duck; Sheldrake, etc. i Mergus merganser Wins. Am. Orn. viil, 1814, 68, pi. 68 (mee Linw.).—Sw. & Riou. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 461.—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 460.—AuD. Orn. Biog. iv, 1838, 261, pL 331; Synap. 1839, 297; B. Am. vi, 1843, 387, pi. 411.—Cougs, Key, 1872, 296; Check List, 1873, No. 521; 2d ed. 1882, No. 743; Birds N. W. 1874, 583.—HEnsH. Zool. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 488. Mergus americanus Cass. Proc. Acad, Nat. Sci. Phila. vi, 1853, 187.—Barnp, B. N. Am. 1858, 813; Cat. N. Am B. 1859, No. 611. Mergus castor, a americanus BonaP. Compt. Rend, xliii, 1856, 652. Mergus merganser B . americanus Rrpew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 627. Mergus merganser americanus Rivew. Proc. U. 8. Nat. Mus. iii, 1880, 205; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No, 636.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884, 112. Merganser americanus STEIN. Orn. Expl. Kamtsch. 1885, 177.—A.O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 129.~Ripew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 89. Has. Whole of North America, breeding from northern border of United States north- ward. Sp. Cuan. Adulf male: Head and upper half (or more) of the neck deep black, the elongated feathers of the pileum and nape distinctly, other portions faintly, glossed with greenish; whole back and innermost seapulars deep black; rump, upper tai!-coverts, and tail, plain cinereous; sides of the crissum (anteriorly) and femoral region, whitish, narrowly barred with slate-color; primary-coverts, primaries, and outer secondaries, plain blackish dusky. Remainder of the plumage fine light salmon-buff in life, fading to buffy white in dried skins; innermost secondaries narrow!y skirted with black; base of the : reater cove: ts deep black, forming a distinct bur about half way across the wing; anterior border of the wing dusky grayish or blackish. Bill deep vermilion-red, the culmen and nail black; feet deepred; iriscarmine. Adult female: Head and upper hall of the neck reddish cinna- mon, ‘the pileum and occipital crest (the latter much longer than in the male) more brown, the Jores grayish; chin, throat, and malar region, white; upper parts, sides, and flanks bluish gray, the innermost secondaries while, the e»posed portion of the lower greater coverts white, tipped with dusky: outermost secondaries, primary coverts, and primaries, uniform slate-color. Lower parts, except laterally, pale creamy salmon-color, fading to nearly white in dried specimens, the feathers of the chest ash-gray beneath the surface. Bill, eyes, and feet, as in the male, but less brilliant in color. j Downy Young. Upper halt of the head, with nape, reddish brown, more reddish on the nape, where encroaching on the sides of the neck; remaining upper parts hair-brown, or grayish umber, relieved by four white spots, one on the posterior border of each wing, and one on each side the rump; lower parts white; a stripe on the lower half of th- lores, run- ning backward beneath the eye, white: below this « narrower st.ipe of deep brown, from the rictus to the auricular region; a wide stripe, occupying the upper half of the lores, from the bill to the eye, bla-kish brown, this separated from the umber of the forehead by a very indistin t streak of brownish white or pale brown." Adult male. Total length, about 27 inches, extent, 36; wing, 10.50-11.25; oulmen, 1.90-2.20; tarsus, 1.90-2.00; middle toe, 2.10-2.50. Adult female. Total length, about 24 inchés, extent, 34; wing, 9 60-9.75; culmen, 1.80-2.00; tarsus, 1.85-1.90; midd.e toe, 2.25-2. 40, * Described from No. 6,788, Bridger’s Pass, Rocky Mountains, Aug. 18, 1856; W. 8. Wood. Distinguishable with certainty from the young of M. serrator by the different position of the nostril. ANaTibA—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 189 Apparently the only difference of coloration between this spe- cies, and the European I merganser, is that adult males have the black at the. base of the greater wing-coverts exposed, so as to form a very distinct band about half way across the wing, while those of the latter have this black entirely concealed by the overlying middle coverts. There is, however, a difference in the proportions of the bill in the two forms which seems to be of specific importance. In the females, this difference in the bill: is apparently the only obvious distinguishing character. The American Merganser, more commonly known as the Shel- drake, Fish Duck, or Saw-bill, winters from Illinois and other states in the same latitude southward, and breeds from Iowa, Minnesota, etc., north to the Arctic districts. Formerly it .nested in Pennsylvania and other portions of the more eastern United States, and in the western portions it still breeds very much farther south than it is known to do on the eastern side of the Mississippi, Dr. Mearns having found it nesting along various mountain streams which are tributary to the Verdi and Salt Rivers in Arizona. . The Merganser feeds chiefly on fish, and for this reason its flesh is rank and unpalatable. Hearne says that it devours its food in such quantities that it is frequently obliged to disgorge several times before it can rise ‘from the water, and that it can swallow fishes six or seven inches in length. Its nest, like that of many other ducks, is usually p'aced in cavities of trees. Merganser serrator (Linn.) RED-BREASTED MERGANSER. Popular synonyms. Red-breasted. Goosander or Sheldrake; Gar-bill; 8ea-Robin, etc. Mergus serrator Linn.’8. N. ed. 10, i; 1758, 129; ed. 12, i, 1766, 208—Wins. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 81, pl. 69.—Sw. & Ricu. F. B.-A. ii, 1831, 462—Nurr. Man. ii, 1834, 463—AuD. Orn. Biog. v, 1839, 92, pl. 401; Synop. 1839, 298; B. Am. vi, 18/8, 895, pl. 412—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 814; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 612—Cougrs, Key, 1872, 296; .Check List, 1873, No. 522; 2d ed. 1882, No. 744; B. N. W. 1874, 581.~Hnau. Zodl, Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 484.—Ripew. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 627; Nom, N. Am. B. 1881, No. 637— B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884, 116. Merganser serrator Scudrr. Mus. Orn. 1789, 66.~A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 130.— Ripew. Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 89. Mergus cristatus BRGNN. Orn. Bor. 1764, 23. Mergus niger Gmuv. 8. N. i., pt. ii, 1788, 546. Mergua leucomelas Guru. tom. cit, 190 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. Has. Northern portions of northern hemisphere; in America migrating south, in winter, throughout the United States. Sp.CHar, Adult male: Head dull greenish black, duller and more brownish on the forehead and throat, the crest faintly glossed with purplish; neck and sides of the chest pale fawn-color or dull buff; indistinctly streaked with black, the streaks being on the edges of the feathers; a white collarsound the upper part of the neck, just below the black Lower parts pure creamy white, the sides and flanks undulated with narrow zigzag bars of black. Back and scapulars uniform black; shoulders overhung by a tuft of broad feath- - ers, broadly margined with black, the central space being white. Anterior and outermost lesser wing-coverts dark slate-gray, darker centrally; posterior lesser coverts and mid- ‘ dle coverts wholly white; greater coverts with the terminal half white, the basal half black, partly exposed, thus forming a narrow band or bar across the wing; two innermost tertials wholly black, the rest white, edged with black; innermost secondaries entirely white; outer secondaries, primary-coverts, and primaries black. Rump and upper tail-coverts dark ash-gray with black shafts, centrally, finely mottled laterally with white-and-black zigzags. Tail slate-gray, with black shafts. Bill deep carmine, the culmen black, the nail yellowish; inis carmine; feet bright red.* Adult female: Head and neck cipnamon-brown, duller or more grayish on the pileum and nape, the crest shorter than in the male; throat and lower parts white, the sides and flanks ash-gray. Upper parts dark ash-gray, the feathers with darke shafts; exposed portion of greater coverts and secondaries white, the base of the Jatter black, but seldom showing as a nurrow bar; primaries bla-k. Bill, eyes, and feet as in the male, but less intense in color. Yuung: Similar to the adult female, but chin and throat pale reddish, instead of pure white,tne lover part of the neck and chest, brown- ish white, with the feathers mouse-gray beneath the surface; black at base of the second- arie~ exposed, forming a narrow bar between two white areas, Downy young: Above, hair-brown, the posterior border of each wing, and a large spot on each side of the ramp, yell®wish white; lower parts including th» malar region, yellowish white; side of head ‘and neck reddish einnimon, paler on the lores, which ure bordered above by a dusky stripe running backwad to the anterior angle of the eye, and below by adark brown, rather indistinet, rictal stripe; lower eyelid white. ‘ Total length, about 20.00 to 25.00 inches: extent, $2.00 to vi 00; wing, 8.60-9.00; culmen, 2.50; tarsus, 1.80-1.90; middle toe, 2.40. The Red-breasted Merganser (sadly mis-named, since the breast does not even approach red in color), is a winter resi- dent throughout Illinois and breeds from the northern portion of the State northward. Its: habits are so like those of the buif-breasted species (JZ americanus) as to require no special description here. Genus LOPHODYTES RetcHEenpBacn. Lophodytes REICHENB. Syst. Av. 1852, p. ix. Type, Mergus cucullatus LINN. -GEN. CHAR. Bill shorter than the head, black; serrations compressed, low, short, inserted obliquely on the edge of the bill. Tail more than half as long as the wings. Tarsus about two thirds as long as the longest toe (with claw). Head with a full, semi- eircular, compressed crest of hair-like feathers. i *Two adult males received at the National Museum from Wood's Holl, Mass,, April 14, 1886, had the soft parts colored as follows: Lower mandible and feet rich scarlet-lake, the webs of the latter brownish, becoming neatly black on the median portion: ut per mandible blackish brown, becoming dull ‘red along edges. Total length, before skinning, 23.50 and 24 ae respectively. 7 ANATIDE—THE SWANS, GEESE, AND DUCKS. 191 The genus Lophodytes is quite distinct from Merganser in the possession of the above characters. The bill is also much more depressed terminally, and, in proportion to its length, deeper through the base. The nostrils are situated far back,.as in MM. serrator.. But one species is known, unless. the Mergus octo- setaceus of Vieillot, a South American bird, which we have not seen, be referable to this genus rather than to Vergus. Lophodytes cucullatus (Linn.) HOODED MERGANSER. Popular synonyms. Hooded Sheldrake; Fan-crest; Round-crest; Pickaxe Sheldrake; Wood Sheldrake; Wood Duck; Swamp Sheldrake; Pond Sheldrake; Cock Robin Duck; Hairy-head; Snowl (Maryland); Moss head; Tow-head; Tadpole, etc., ete. Mergus cucullatus Linn. 8. N. ed, 10, i, 1758, 129; ed. 12, i, 1766, 207—Wirs. Am. Orn. viii 1814, pl. xix, fig, 1.—Sw. & Riow. F. B.-A. ii,1831,463.—Nutvr. Man. ii, 1834, 465 —AuD. Orn. Biog. ifi, 1835, 246, pl. 2383; Synop. 1839, 299; B. Am. vi, 1843, 402, pl. 418.—Covgs, Key, 1872, 296; Check List, 1873, No. 523; 2d ed. 1882, No. 745: B. N. W. 1874, 58:1,—HensH. Zool. Wheeler’s Exp. 1875, 484. Lophodytes cucullatus Rercaens. Syst. Av. 1852, p. ix.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 816; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 618—Ripe@w. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 627; Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No. 688; Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 89.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am. ii, 1884, 121.— A. 0. U. Check List, 1886, No. 131. Has. All of North America, south to Mexico and Cuba, north to Alaska, and acci- dentally to Greenland; breeds nearly throughout its range; Bermudas in autumn; casual in Europe. Sp. CHar. Adult male: Head, neck, back, and scapulars black: crest chiefly pure white, but bordered by a distinct “rim” of black; forehead, and feathers round base of the bill, dark fuliginous, but this blending insensibly into the deep black. Wing-coverts dark gray, lighter and more ashy posteriorly; greater coverts broadly tipped with white, the base black, this exposed sufficiently to show a distinct band; inner secondaries with thir ex- posed surface (in closed wing) white, the basal portion black, showing narrowly beyond the end of the greater coverts; tertials with a central stripe of white. Primaries, primary cov- arts, rump, upper tail-coverts, and tail brownish dusky. Sides of the breastcrossed by two black crescents, projecting from the black of the back, these interdigitating with two white ones, the last crescent being black. Sides and flanks rusty cinnamon (more grayish ante- riorly), narrowly undulated with black; remaining-lower parts white, the posterior part of the crissum mottled with grayish brown. Bill deep black: iris bright yellow; legs and feet yellowish brown, the claws dusky. Adult female: Head, neck, chest, and upper parts generally, grayish brown, darker above, the crest reddish hair-brown, or dull cinnamon, smaller and of Jooser texture thaninthe male; chin, upper part of the throat, and lower parts, except sides, and posterior part of the crissum, white; middle feathers of the greater wing-coverts tipped with white: innermost secondaries with their exrosed surface white, except at the base. Maxilla black, edged with orange; mandible orange; iris hazel; feet dusky. Young: Similar to the. adult female, but crest ru- dimentary, or wanting, the sides and posterior part of the crissum more distinctly brown. Downy young: Above, deep hair-brown, darkest on the back and rump; 192 3 BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. posterior border of the arm-wing, a small spot on each side of the back (nearly con- -cealed by the closed wing), and a larger one on each side of the rump grayish -white. Lower half of the head (from about ona line with the eye) brownish buff, paler on the chin and throat; chest light dingy brownish; remaining lower parts dingy white, the sides brown, like the upper parts. —, Total length, about J7.50-19.00 inches; extent, 24.00-26.00; wing, 7.50-7.90; culmen, 1.50; tarsus, 1.25-1.30; middle toe, 1,90-1.95, ‘ The Hooded Merganser is a common summer resident itt Ili- nois, inhabiting’ wooded swamps and the dense timber along streams, where it may be seen perching high in the lofty trees, _in knot-holes and other cavities of which it makes its nest. ORDER STEGANOPODES—THE TOTIPALMATE SWIMMERS. 193 Orper STEGANOPODES.—TuE TorTipaLMaTe SWIMMERS. Cuaractrrs. Hind toe lengthened, united by a web with the inner toe; bill longer than the head, with sharp cutting edges, and usually with a curved maxillary unguis or terminal hook (wauting in Anhingide and Phaéthontide). Throat usually with a more or less distensible pouch of naked skin, sitaated between the mandibular rami (wanting in Phaéthontide).. Nostrils obsolete (except in Phaéthontide). ° Leaving out the genus Phaéthon which, if truly belonging to this order, is at least an aberrant form, the Steganopodes con- stitute a very natural group of birds, the main characters of which are as given above. So far as its external appearance goes, Phaéthon is very similar to the larger Terns, the most obvious difference being in the character of the feet. Following are the characters of the several families belonging to this order, the names of those represented in the Illinois fauna being in heavy-faced type, the others in italics: A. Bill terminated by a conspicuous, strongly curved hook. a. Tarsus excessively short, scarcely equal to the hallux, including its claw. l. Fregatide. Wings and tail excessively elongated, the latter deeply forked: middle toe much longer than the outer, its claw flattened and pectinated on the inner edge; webs very small, occupying less than half the space between the toes, bd. Tarsus moderatély lengthened, much longer than the hallux, including its claw, (sometimes more than twice as long). 2. Pelezaniim, Bill excessively elongated | (much longer than the tarsus and middle toe), greatly depressed, the gular pouch very Jarge, and greatly dis- ‘ tensible. Middle toe longer than the outer. 7 3. Phalacrocoracide, Bill moderately elongated, or rather short (shorter than the middle toe), compressed; gular pouch small, scarcely distensible. Outer toe much longer than the middle. B. Bill tapering to the point, which is without a terminal hook or unguis (very faintly indicated in Sulide). a. Nostrils obliterated; outer and middle toes nearly equal in length, and much longer than the inner; lores, orbital region, lower jaw, chin, and throat, naked. 4, Anhingide, Bill slender, heron-like, the outlines nearly straight (the culmen perfectly so); head very small, neck extremely long and slender. Tail long and fan-shaped (nearly as long as the wing), rounded, the feathers very broad, the middle rectrices transversely corrugated in the adult, . 194 ‘ BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. 5. Sulide. Bill very thick through the base, but tapering rapidly to the tip, which is very slightly curved,, with the maxillary unguis faintly indicated. Tail short (about half the wing), ra the feathers narrowed toward the end. b. Nostrils distinct (as in the Larida); lateral toes nearly equal, and nearly as long. as the middle: whole head normally feathered. 6. Phaéthontide. Bill Gonical, much compressed, the culmen curved; maxillary tomium very concave. Tail short, graduated, the central pair of rectrices linear and excessively elongated. PELECANIDZ—-THE PELICANS. 195 FAMILY PELECANID4.—TaHE PELICANS. Craractrrs, Bill greatly elongated and excessively depressed, the terminal unguis very prominent and strongly hooked; gular pouch exceedingly large and greatly distensi- ble; lores and orbital region—sometimes other parts of the head also—naked. Toes fully webbed, the outer almost as long as the middle, the inner much shorter. Tail very short, nearly even, or slightly rounded. Size usually very large. The Pelicans include about ten species, which are found mostly in the warmer parts of the world, although two of them—the common American P. erythrorhynchos and the Palearctic P. cris- pus—extend in summer to high northern latitudes. As may be seen from the synonymy of the genus Pelecanus, these birds have been divided into several genera by authors; but each species possesses so many peculiarities of external structure that it is doubtful. whether the differences between the supposed genera are of more than subgeneric importance. 1 Genus PELECANUS Linnavs. Pelecanus Linn, 8. N. ed. 10, i,1758,132; ed 12,1, 1766, 215. Type, P. onocrotalus LINN. Onocrotalus Briss. Orn. vi, 1760, 519. Type, Pelecanus onocrotalus LINN. Cyrtopelicanus REIcH. Syst. Av. 1853, p. vii. Type, Peleconus erythrorhynchos GMEL. Leptopelicanus Retcag. l.c: Type, Pelecanus fuscus LINN. Catoptropelicanus Retcu.1.c. Type, Pelecanus conspicillatus TEmMM. } The characters of this genus being the same as those given above for the Family Pélecanida, it is unnecessary to repeat them here. It is possible, however, that the genus as here used in a comprehensive sense should be subdivided, as indicated by the above synonymy. The species which occur in Illinois may be thus distinguished: A. Lower jaw densely feathered to the base of the mandible. Tail-feathers 24. (Subgenus Cur opelicanus.) 1. P.erythrorhynchos. Color white, the. primaries blacki-h. Bill and feet yellowish, Ceepening to red in the breeding-season, Wing, 22.00-25.25 inches: culmen, 11.30- 13.85. . 196 ‘BIRDS OF ILLINOIS. B. Lower jaw wholly naked. Tail-feathers 22. (Subgenus Leptopelicanus.) 2 P, fuscus, Prevailing color dusky, the upper parts silvery-striped in adults, grayish brown in the young; bill dull grayish, or purplish brown, stained with red toward end (in breeding season); pouch greenish brown, grayish, or dusky. Wing, 19.00-21.00 inches; culmen, 9.40-12.20. . Pelecanus erythrorhynchos Gmel. AMERICAN WHITE PELICAN. Popular synonym. Rough-billed Pelican. Pelecanus erythrorhynchos Gat. 8. N. i, pt. ii, 1788, 571.—Barrp, B. N. Am. 1858, 868; Cat. W. Am. B. 1859, No. 615.—Eutror, P. Z. 8. 1869,588 (monographiec).—Ripaw. Orn. 40th Par. 1877, 627 (habits, ete.); Nom. N. Am. B. 1881,640; Man. N. Am. B. 1887,82.—B. B. & R. Water B. N. Am, ii, 1884,183.—A. O. U. Check List, 1886, No. 125. Pelecanus trachyrhynchus}Lata. Ind. Orn. ti, 1790,884.—Covrs, Key 1872,300; Check List, 1878, No. 526; 2d ed. 1882, No. 748; B. N. W. 1874, 586. —BENDIRE, Proc. Bost. Soc. N. H. 1877, 146 (habits, nest and eggs, ete.) Pelecanus onocrotalus (“a variety”) Fors. Philos. Trans, Ixii, 1772, 419. Pelecanus onocrotalus Bonar. Synop. 1828, 400 (nee Linn.).—Sw. & Ric. F. B.-A. ti, 1831, 472.—\ uTT. Man. ii, 1834, 471. Pelecanus thagus Stepx. Gen. Zodl. xiii, 1826, 117 (Mexico; nec MoLmNa). Pelecanus hernandezii WaGtu. Isis, 1832, 1233 (Mexico). Pelecanus americanus AuD. Orn, Biog. iv, 1838, 88, pl. 311; Synop. fi 309, B. Am. vii, 1844, 20, pl. 422, * Pelecanus occipitalis Rrpew. Am. Sportsman, iv, 1874, 297 (N>vada). Has. The whole of North America, north in the interior to about 61°, south to Mexico and Centra] America in winter; now rare or accidental along the Atlantic coast north of Florida. ; . Sr. Cuan. Tail-feathers 24: malar region completely feathered; color chiefly white; bill, pouch, and feet yellowish or reddish. Adult, nuptial plumage: Culmen with a narrow median horny excresence, situated a little anterfor to the middle, the upper outline more or less convex, its fibres obliquely vertical, its size and exact shape variable. Plumage white, sometimes tinged with pale pinkish, the narrow le