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Zhi

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SAY’S FLYCATCHER.

Muscicapa Saya, Bonap.


PLATE CCCLIX. Male and Female.

This species was first discovered by Titian Peale, Esq. of


Philadelphia, and named after Mr Thomas Say by Bonaparte, who
described and figured it in his continuation of Wilson’s American
Ornithology. It appears to range over a very extensive portion of
country, lying between Mexico and the settlements of the British Fur
Companies, a pair having been procured at Carlton House, as
mentioned by Dr Richardson. Little is yet known of the habits of this
species, but it would seem, from Mr Nuttall’s remarks, to be a
rupestrine Flycatcher, and not strictly arboreal, as supposed by Mr
Swainson.
“We first observed this bird,” says Mr Nuttall, “in our route
westward, about the 14th of June, within the first range of the Rocky
Mountains called the Black Hills, and in the vicinity of that northern
branch of the Platte known by the name of Larimie’s Fork. At the
time, we saw a pair perched as usual on masses of rocks, from
which, like the Pewee, though occasionally alighted, they flew after
passing insects, without uttering any note that we heard; and from
their predilection, it is probable they inhabit among broken hills and
barren rocks, where we have scarcely a doubt, from their behaviour,
they had at this time a brood in a nest among these granite cliffs.
They appeared very timorous on our approach, and seemed very
limited in their range. Except among the Blue Mountains of the
Columbia, we scarcely ever saw them again. Their manners appear
to be very much like those of the Common Pewee; but they are
much more silent and shy.”

Muscicapa Saya, Ch. Bonaparte, Synopsis of Birds of United States, p. 67.—


Amer. Ornith. vol. i. p. 20, pl. 2, fig. 3.
Tyrannula Saya, Richards. and Swains. Fauna Bor.-Amer. vol. ii. p. 142.

Adult Male. Plate CCCLIX. Fig. 4.


Bill of moderate length, rather slender, broader than high at the base,
straight; upper mandible with its dorsal outline nearly straight and
declinate, to near the tip, which is deflected, slender, compressed,
and acute, the edges sharp and overlapping, with a slight notch
close to the tip; lower mandible with the angle short and rounded, the
back broad, the dorsal line ascending and almost straight, the edges
sharp, the tip acute. Nostrils basal, elliptical, partly covered by the
bristly feathers.
Head of moderate size, ovate; neck of moderate length; body
slender. Feet short; tarsus with six very broad anterior scutella; toes
free, slender; the first stout, the lateral equal; claws long, arched,
slender, much compressed, very acute.
Plumage soft and blended. Bristles at the base of the upper
mandible slender. Wings rather long, rounded; primaries tapering,
rounded, the outer not sinuated on the inner web, the first half an
inch shorter than the second, which is half a twelfth shorter than the
third, the fourth about the same length as the second, the rest
moderately graduated; secondaries long, broad, rounded. Tail rather
long, very slightly divaricate and emarginate, of twelve rounded
feathers.
Bill and feet black, basal margin of lower mandible yellow. Iris hazel.
Upper parts brownish-grey, the head more tinged with brown; upper
tail-coverts and tail brownish-black; wings of a darker tint than the
back, the feathers margined with greyish-white; a dusky spot before
the eye; fore part and sides of neck light brownish-grey, shaded into
pale brownish-red on the breast and abdomen; lower wing-coverts
reddish-white.
Length to end of tail 7 inches, to end of wings 5 8/12; wing from
1/2
flexure 4 2/12; tail 3 1/4; bill along the ridge 7 /12, along the edge of
1/ 1/
lower mandible 10 /12; tarsus 9
2 2/12; hind toe 3/12, its claw 4/12;
1/ 1/
middle toe 5 /12, its claw 3
2 /12.
2
WINTER WREN.

Troglodytes hyemalis, Vieill.


PLATE CCCLX. Male, Female, and Young.

The extent of the migratory movements of this diminutive bird, is certainly the most
remarkable fact connected with its history. At the approach of winter it leaves its
northern retreats, perhaps in Labrador or Newfoundland, crosses the inlets of the Gulf
of St Lawrence on tiny concave wings, and betakes itself to warmer regions, where it
remains until the beginning of spring. Playfully and with alacrity it performs the task,
hopping from one stump or fallen log to another, flitting from twig to twig, from bush to
bush, here and there flying a few yards; feeding, singing, and bustling on, as if quite
careless as to time or distance. It has reached the shore of some broad stream, and
here a person ignorant of its habits might suppose it would be stopped; but no, it
spreads its wings, and glides over like a meteor.
I have found the Winter Wren in the lower parts of Louisiana, and in the Floridas, in
December and January, but never saw one there after the end of the latter month.
Their stay in those parts rarely exceeds three months; two more are employed in
forming a nest and rearing their broods; and as they leave Labrador by the middle of
August at the latest, they probably spend more than half of the year in travelling. It
would be interesting to know whether those which breed along the Columbia River,
near the Pacific Ocean, visit the shores of our Atlantic States. My friend Thomas
Nuttall informs me that he occasionally saw the Winter Wren feeding its young in
the woods, along the north-west coast.
At Eastport, in Maine, when on my way to Labrador, I found this species in full song,
and extremely abundant, although the air was chill, and icicles hung from every rock,
it being then the 9th of May. On the 11th of June, I found it equally plentiful in the
Magdalene Islands, and wondered how it could have made its way there, but was
assured by the inhabitants that none were ever seen in winter. On the 20th of July, I
met with it at Labrador, and again asked myself, how it could possibly have reached
those remote and rugged shores? Was it by following the course of the St Lawrence,
or by flying from one island to another across the Gulf? I have seen it in almost every
State of the Union, but only twice found it breeding there, once near the Mohawk
River in New York, and again in the Great Pine Swamp in Pennsylvania. It breeds
abundantly in Maine, and probably in Massachusetts, but few spend the winter even
in the latter State.
The song of the Winter Wren excels that of any other bird of its size with which I am
acquainted. It is truly musical, lull of cadence, energetic, and melodious; its very
continuance is surprising, and dull indeed must be the ear that thrills not on hearing it.
When emitted, as it often is, from the dark depths of the unwholesome swamp, it
operates so powerfully on the mind, that it by contrast inspires a feeling of wonder and
delight, and on such occasions has usually impressed me with a sense of the
goodness of the Almighty Creator, who has rendered every spot of earth in some way
subservient to the welfare if his creatures.
Once when travelling through a portion of the most gloomy part of a thick and tangled
wood, in the Great Pine Forest, not far from Maunchunk in Pennsylvania, at a time
when I was intent on guarding myself against the venomous reptiles which I expected
to encounter, the sweet song of this Wren came suddenly on my ear, and with so
cheering an effect, that I instantly lost all apprehension of danger, and pressed
forward through the rank briars and stiff laurels, in pursuit of the bird, which I hoped
was not far from its nest. But he, as if bent on puzzling me, rambled here and there
among the thickest bushes with uncommon cunning, now singing in one spot not far
distant, and presently in another in a different direction. After much exertion and
considerable fatigue, I at last saw it alight on the side of a large tree, close to the
roots, and heard it warble a few notes, which I thought exceeded any it had previously
uttered. Suddenly another Wren appeared by its side, but darted off in a moment, and
the bird itself which I had followed disappeared. I soon reached the spot, without
having for an instant removed my eyes from it, and observed a protuberance covered
with moss and lichens, resembling those excrescences which are often seen on our
forest trees, with this difference, that the aperture was perfectly rounded, clean, and
quite smooth. I put a finger into it, and felt the pecking of a bird’s bill, while a
querulous cry was emitted. In a word, I had, the first time in my life, found the nest of
our Winter Wren. Having gently forced the tenant from his premises, I drew out the
eggs with a sort of scoop which I formed. I expected to find them numerous, but there
were not more than six, and the same number I afterwards found in the only other
nest of this species ever discovered by me. The little bird called upon its mate, and
their united clamour induced me to determine upon leaving their treasures with them;
but just as I was about going off, it struck me that I ought to take a description of the
nest, as I might not again have such an opportunity. I hope, Reader, you will believe
that when I resolved to sacrifice this nest, it was quite as much on your account as my
own. Externally it measured seven inches in length, four and a half in breadth; the
thickness of its walls, composed of moss and lichen, was nearly two inches; and thus
it presented internally the appearance of a narrow bag, the wall, however, being
reduced to a few lines where it was in contact with the bark of the tree. The lower half
of the cavity was compactly lined with the fur of the American Hare, and in the bottom
or bed of the nest there lay over this about half a dozen of the large downy abdominal
feathers of our Common Grous, Tetrao Umbellus. The eggs were of a delicate blush-
colour, somewhat resembling the paler leaves of a partially decayed rose, and marked
with dots of reddish-brown, more numerous towards the larger end.
The nest which I found near the Mohawk was discovered by mere accident. One day
in the beginning of June, and about noon, feeling fatigued, I sat down on a rock
overhanging the water, where, while resting, I might have the pleasure of watching the
motions of some fishes in sight. The damp of the place produced a sudden chillness,
and caused me to sneeze aloud, when from beneath my feet there flew off a Winter
Wren. The nest, which I soon found, was attached to the lower parts of the rock, and
presented the same form and structure as that already described; but it was smaller,
the eggs, six in number, contained young far advanced.
The motions of this interesting bird are performed with great rapidity and decision.
While searching for food it hops, creeps, and leaps about from one spot to another, as
if it derived pleasure from exercise. At each movement it bends its breast downward,
so as almost to touch the object on which it stands, and by a sudden extension of its
strong feet, aided by the action of its half drooping concave wings, jerks itself forward,
keeping its tail elevated all the while. Now through a hollow log it passes like a mouse,
now it clings to the surface in various attitudes, suddenly disappears, but presently
shews itself by your side; at times it chirrups in a querulous rolling tone, then emits
single clear sharp chirps resembling the syllables tshick, tshick, and again remains
silent for a time. It will now and then reach the upper branches of a small tree or a
bush, by hopping and leaping from twig to twig; in the course of this transit it will
present its opposite sides to you a score of times; and when at length it has gained
the summit, it will salute you with its delicate melody, and then dash headlong and be
out of sight in a moment. This is almost constantly observed during the spring season,
when more than ever its alertness is displayed. On all such occasions however, whilst
in the act of singing, its tail is seen to be depressed. In winter, when it takes
possession of the wood-pile, close to the husbandman’s dwelling, it will challenge the
cat in querulous tones, and peeping out here and there, as it frisks in security, wear
out Grimalkin’s patience.
The food of the Winter Wren consists chiefly of spiders, caterpillars, and small moths,
as well as larvæ. Towards autumn it eats small juicy berries.
Having lately spent a winter, at Charleston in South Carolina, with my worthy friend
John Bachman, I observed that this little Wren made its appearance in that city and
its suburbs in December. On the 1st January I heard it in full song in the garden of my
friend, who informed me that in that State it does not appear regularly every winter,
but is sure to be found during very cold weather.
With the view of enabling you to compare the habits of our Winter Wren and the
Common Wren of Europe, the manners of birds being a subject on which, as you are
well aware, I have always bestowed particular attention, I here present you with those
of the latter bird, as observed in Britain, by my learned friend, William Macgillivray:
—“With us the Wren is not migratory, but is found during winter in the most northern
parts of the island, as well as in the Hebrides. Its flight is effected by a rapid and
continuous motion of the wings, and therefore is not undulated, but direct; nor is it
usually sustained, for the bird merely flits from one bush to another, or from stone to
stone. It is most frequently met with along stone-walls, among fragments of rocks, in
thickets of gorse, and by hedges, where it attracts notice by the liveliness of its
motions, and frequently by its loud chirring noise. When standing, it keeps its tail
nearly erect, and jerks its whole body; then hops about with alacrity, using its wings at
the same time, and continually enunciating its rapid chit. In spring and summer, the
male has a very pleasing, full, rich, and mellow song, which it repeats at intervals; and
even in autumn and on fine days in winter, it may often be heard hurrying over its ditty,
the loudness and clearness of which, as proceeding from so diminutive a creature, is
apt to excite surprise, even after it has been long familiar.
“During the breeding season, Wrens keep in pairs, often in unfrequented parts, such
as bushy dells, mossy woods, the banks of streams, and stony places overgrown with
brambles, sloes, and other shrubs; but they are also to be found in shrubberies,
gardens, and hedges in the immediate vicinity of human habitations, to which the
wilder individuals also approach in winter. They are not properly speaking shy, as they
conceive themselves to be secure at the distance of twenty or thirty yards; but on the
approach of a person, they conceal themselves in holes among stones, or the roots of
bushes.
“I know not a more pleasant object to look at than the Wren; it is always so smart and
cheerful. In gloomy weather, other birds often seem melancholy, and in rain the
Sparrows and Finches stand silent on the twigs, with drooping wings and ruffled
plumage. But to the Wren all weathers are alike. The big drops of the thunder-shower
no more wet it than the drizzle of an easterly haar; and as it peeps from beneath the
bramble, or glances from a hole in the wall, it seems as snug as a kitten frisking on
the parlour rug.
“It is amusing to watch the motions of a young family of Wrens just come abroad.
Walking among furze, or broom, or juniper, you are attracted to some bush by hearing
issue from it a lively and frequent repetition of a sound which resembles the syllable
chit. On going up you perceive an old Wren flitting about the twigs, and presently a
young one flies off, uttering a stiffled chirr, to conceal itself among the bushes. Several
follow in succession, while the parents continue to flutter about, in great alarm,
uttering their loud chit, chit, chit, with indications of varied degrees of excitement. On
open ground a young Wren might easily be run down, and I have heard it asserted
that an old one may soon be tired out in time of snow, when it cannot easily conceal
itself. And yet, even in such a case, it is by no means easy to keep it in sight, for on
the side of a bank, or by a wall, or in a thicket, it will find a hole where one least
expected it, and creeping in some crevice beneath the snow, reappear at a
considerable distance.
“The food of birds can be determined only by opening their crops or stomachs, or by
observation directed to living individuals, the former, however, being the only sure
method. The Wrens which I have opened generally contained remains of insects of
various kinds, with larvæ, and sometimes pupæ; but I have also found in them seeds,
and Mr Neville Wood states that they sometimes eat red currants. In the stomach of
an individual examined in December 1830, I found many small hard seeds, an entire
pupæ, and numerous fragments of the shells of pupæ, and elytra of coleopterous
insects. So small a bird having so slender a bill, might doubtless be taken for a typical
entomophagist; but it is probable that no species of this order confines itself
exclusively to insects.
“The Wren pairs about the middle of spring, and begins early in April to construct its
nest, which varies much in form and composition, according to the locality. One
brought me by my son is of astonishing size compared with that of its architect, its
greatest diameter being seven inches, and its height five. Having been placed on a
flat surface under a bank, its base is of a corresponding form, and is composed of
layers of decayed ferns and other plants, mixed with twigs of herbaceous and woody
vegetables. Similar materials have been employed in raising the outer wall of the nest
itself, of which the interior is spherical, and three inches in diameter. The wall is
composed of mosses of several species, quite fresh and green, and it is arched over
with fern leaves and straws. The mosses are curiously interwoven with fibrous roots
and hair of various animals, and the inner surface is even and compact, like coarse
felt. To the height of two inches there is a copious lining of large soft feathers, chiefly
of the Wood Pigeon, but also of the Pheasant and Domestic Duck, with a few of the
Blackbird. The aperture, which is in front, and in the form of a low arch, two inches in
breadth at the base, and an inch and a half in height, has its lower edge formed of
slender twigs, strong herbaceous stalks, and stems of grasses, the lowest being felted
in the usual manner. It contained five eggs of an elongated oval form, averaging eight
lines in length, and six lines in breadth, pure white, with some scattered dots of light
red at the larger end, one of them with scarcely any, and another with a great number.
Of three nests presented to me by my friend Thomas Durham Weir, Esq. one is
extremely beautiful, being composed entirely of fresh green hypna, without any
internal layer, although, no eggs having been found in it, it possibly had not been
completed. It is of an oblong form, seven inches in length, and four in its transverse
diameter. The mouth measures an inch and eight-twelfths across, an inch and a
twelfth in height. Its lower part is formed of small twigs of larch laid across and
interwoven, so as to present a firm pediment. The longitudinal diameter of the interior
is three inches and a half. Another, formed on a decayed tuft of Aira cæspitosa, is
globular, six inches in diameter, and composed of moss, with a lining of hair and
feathers, chiefly of the domestic fowl. The third is globular, and externally formed
almost entirely of ferns, like that described above. In all the nests of this species which
I have seen, the lower part of the mouth was composed of twigs of trees, or stems of
herbaceous plants laid across, and kept together with moss and hair.
“The nests are found in a great variety of situations: very often in a recess overhung
by a bank, sometimes in a crevice among stones, in the hole of a wall, or of a tree,
among the thatch of a cottage or outhouse, on the top of a shed or barn, the branch of
a tree, whether growing along a wall, or standing free, among ivy, honeysuckle,
clematis, or other climbing plants. When the nest is on the ground, its base is
generally formed of leaves, twigs, and straws, and its exterior is often similar; but
when otherwise, the outer surface is generally smooth and chiefly composed of moss.
“The number of eggs which it lays has been variously stated by authors. Mr Weir
says that, although it is commonly seven or eight, so many as sixteen or seventeen
have been found in its nest. Robert Smith, weaver in Bathgate, told me, that a few
years ago, he saw in a nest, which was built on the bank of a rivulet about two miles
from Linlithgow, seventeen eggs; and James D. Baillie, Esq. informed me, that in
June last, he took out of one which he discovered in a spruce tree, near Polkemmet
House, sixteen eggs.”
My friend Thomas M’Culloch of Pictou has presented me with the following curious
account of a European individual of this species.
“During my residence at Spring Vale in the vicinity of Hammersmith, I was amusing
myself one afternoon with the movements of a pair of Water-hens, which were flirting
about the edge of the tall reeds so abundant in that neighbourhood, when my
attention was arrested by a Wren, carrying a straw, darting into a small hedge directly
beneath the window at which I stood. In a few minutes the bird reappeared, and flew
to a piece of old thatch which was lying near, and having disengaged another straw
he immediately returned with it to the place in which the first had been deposited. For
about two hours this operation was continued by the bird with the greatest diligence.
He then abandoned his task, and ascending the highest twig of the hedge, he poured
forth his sweet and merry notes, until driven away by some person passing near. For
the remainder of the evening I saw no more of the little architect, but on the following
morning, being drawn to the window by his song, I observed him leave his favourite
perch and resume with ardour the employment of the previous day. During the
forenoon I was not able to pay much attention to the movements of the Wren, but from
an occasional glance I observed that his task, with the exception of a few intervals of
relaxation, when his merry warble fell upon the ear, was plied with a degree of bustling
activity which was worthy of the important undertaking. On examining his labours at
the close of the second day, I observed that the exterior of a large spherical nest was
nearly finished, and that from the old thatch, though exceedingly moist and black from
decay, all the materials had been obtained. By the afternoon of the ensuing day his
visits to the thatch were discontinued, and he kept bustling and flirting about the spot.
He seemed from his lengthened intervals of song rather to be exulting in the progress,
than to be making any addition to the work. In the evening I inspected the nest, and
found the exterior complete, and by carefully inserting my finger, I ascertained that no
lining had yet been applied, in consequence most probably of the moisture which still
remained in the straw. Returning to the spot in about half an hour afterwards, with one
of my cousins, to look at the nest, I observed with no small surprise that the little bird
had not only resented the intrusion by closing up the aperture, but also had opened
another passage from the opposite side of the hedge. The aperture was closed with
pieces of the old thatch, and the work was so neatly executed that no traces of the
former entrance were perceptible. The nest was altogether the work of one bird, and
during the time he spent in building we never observed another Wren in his company.
In the choice of the materials, as well as in the situation of the nest, there was
something exceedingly curious. Though the bottom and sides of the garden were
enclosed by a thick hedge, in which he could have built in perfect security, and where,
from the vicinity of the stables, abundance of fresh materials could have been easily
obtained, yet the old thatch and the hedge at the head of the garden were preferred.
This part of the hedge was young and thin, and separated from the buildings by a
narrow path, which was constantly frequented by the servants of the establishment.
Interruptions from this source, however, he did not seem to mind, for though often
driven from his task he returned the next moment with as much confidence as if he
had never been disturbed. Even when his nest was destroyed by the wantonness of a
stranger, he did not abandon the place, but continued to carry straws from the old
thatch with as much diligence as before. From the extreme caution, however, which
he subsequently displayed, and the circuitous routes which he took, I never could
discover the spot which he selected for his second nest.”
The Winter Wren so closely resembles the European Wren, that I was long persuaded
of their identity; but a careful comparison of a great number of specimens, has
convinced me that permanent differences in colouring may be pointed out, although
still, I am not by any means persuaded that they are specifically different.

Troglodytes Hyemalis, Vieill. Encyl. Meth., ii. p. 470.


Troglodytes europæus, Ch. Bonaparte, Synopsis of Birds of United States, p. 93.
Winter Wren, Sylvia Troglodytes, Wils. Amer. Ornith. vol. i. p. 139, pl. 8, fig. 6.
Troglodytes Hyemalis, Winter Wren, Richards. and Swains. Fauna Bor.-Amer. vol. ii. p. 318.
Winter Wren, Nuttall, Manual, vol. i. p. 427.
Adult Male. Plate CCCLX. Fig 1.
Bill rather long, slender, tapering, acute, nearly straight, subtrigonal at the base,
compressed towards the end. Upper mandible with the dorsal outline slightly arched,
the ridge narrow, the sides sloping at the base, towards the end slightly convex and
erect, the edges sharp, direct, without notæ; lower mandible with the angle narrow
and rather acute, the dorsal outline straight, the back narrow, the edges sharp, and
inflected, the tip very narrow; the gape-line very slightly arched. Nostrils linear-oblong,
basal.
Head ovate, of moderate size, neck short; body ovate. Feet of ordinary length; tarsus
compressed, with seven anterior scutella, of which the upper are indistinct; toes rather
large compressed; first large, and much longer than the two lateral which are equal,
the third much longer; the third and fourth coherent as far as the second joint of the
latter. Claws long, arched, extremely compressed, laterally grooved, acute.
Plumage soft and blended; no bristle-feathers at the base of the bill. Wing shortish,
broad, much rounded; first quill very small, being little more than half the length of the
second, which is 2 1/4 twelfths shorter than the third; the fourth longest, and exceeding
the third by half a twelfth, and the fourth by somewhat less; secondaries long,
rounded. Tail short, much rounded, of twelve slightly arched, weak rounded feathers.
Bill dusky brown, with the basal edges of the upper and two-thirds of the lower
mandible paler. Iris brown. Tarsi and toes pale greenish-brown, as are the claws. The
general colour of the upper parts is reddish-brown, darker on the head, brighter on the
tail-coverts, quills, and tail. There is a white spot near the tips of the posterior dorsal
feathers. The secondary coverts, and the first small coverts, have each a white spot at
the tip. The wing-coverts and quills banded with blackish-brown and brownish-red, the
bands of the latter colour becoming reddish-white on the outer five quills. Tail with
twelve dusky-bands. The dorsal feathers and scapulars are more faintly barred in the
same manner. A brownish-white band from the upper mandible over the eye; the
cheeks brown, spotted with brownish-white, the margins of the feathers being of the
former colour; the lower parts pale reddish-brown, the sides and abdomen barred with
brownish-black and greyish-white; the fore neck and breast more faintly barred; the
lower wing-coverts and axillars greyish-white, barred with dusky; the lower tail-coverts
brownish-red, barred with dusky and having the tip white.
Length to end of tail 3 7/8 inches, to end of wings 3 1/8, to end of claws 4 3/8; extent of
wings 6 1 1/2/8; wing from flexure 1 7/8; tail 1 5/12; bill along the ridge 5/12; tarsus 8/12;
hind toe 4/12, its claw 4/12; middle toe 6/12, its claw 2 3/4/12. Weight 6 dr.

Female. Plate CCCLX. Fig. 2.


The Female is somewhat smaller than the male.
Length to end of tail 3 5/8 inches, to end of wings 3, to end of claws 4 2/8; extent of
wings 5 3/8; wing from flexure 1 7/8; tail 1 4/12. Weight 4 dr.

Young in Autumn. Plate CCCLX. Fig. 3.


The upper parts are much darker than in the adult; the lower parts of a deeper tint.
Length to end of tail 3 1/2 inches, to end of wings 3 1/8, to end of claws 4 1/8; extent of
wings 5 3/8; wing from flexure 1 5 1/2/8.

The young bird just ready to fly, has the bill bright yellow, excepting the ridge of the
upper mandible, which is brown; the feet yellowish-brown. The upper parts are
reddish-brown, faintly barred with dusky; the wings as in the adult, but the secondary
coverts with only a very small dull white spot at the tip, and the first row of coverts with
a line of the same colour along the shaft. The lower parts are dull greyish-brown, with
the terminal margin of each feather darker, and the sides and hind parts barred with
dusky.
On comparing numerous specimens of American and European birds, it is found that
the proportions of the parts are nearly the same, and the colours generally similar. But
the American birds generally have the lower parts more tinged with red, their general
colour being pale reddish-brown, whereas those of the European birds are pale
greyish-brown; in the former the bars on the sides and hind parts are much darker,
advance farther on the breast, and in some specimens are seen even on the neck; in
the latter the bars are dusky, and never appear on the middle of the breast, much less
on the neck. In old European birds, the axillars and lower wing-coverts are greyish-
white, without spots; in old American birds, even those of which the neck is unbarred,
the axillars and lower wing-coverts are always barred with dusky. As to the two rows
of white spots on the wings, they seem to be quite similar in the birds of both
continents, and in those of each exhibit variations in form, sometimes being short and
somewhat triangular, sometimes also extending along the shaft. The tarsi, toes, and
claws are precisely similar, as are the wings, and it does not appear that in the
American bird the claws are larger, or the wings longer, as might be supposed by a
person desirous of proving the one to be more scansorial and migratory than the
other. Perhaps the European bird is somewhat larger, and it certainly differs a little in
colour. After one has studied the differences, he can easily select from a promiscuous
assemblage of skins the European or the American specimens. But, after all, the
differences are very slight, and certainly not such as to form good essential
characters. Were the two species to be comparatively characterized, they might be
described as follows.
T. europæa. In the male the upper parts reddish-brown, faintly barred with dusky, the
lower parts pale greyish-brown, the sides and abdomen barred with dusky and
greyish-white, the fore neck and breast without bars, the lower wing-coverts and
axillars greyish-white.
T. hyemalis. In the male the upper parts reddish-brown, faintly barred with dusky, the
lower parts pale reddish-brown, the sides and abdomen barred with brownish-black
and greyish-white, the fore neck and breast more faintly barred, the lower wing-
coverts and axillars greyish-white, barred with dusky.
The following is a comparative view of the measurements of several American and
European birds.

American. European.
M. M. F. M. M. F.
Length to end of tail, 3 7/8 3 11/12 3 5/
8 4 4 1/4 3 6/
8
................................wings, 3 1/8 — 3 1/
8 3 1/
4 — 3 1/
8
................................claws, 4 3/8 — 4 2/
8 4 1/
2 — 4 1/
4
Extent of wings, 6 1 1/2/8 — 5 3/
8 5 7/
8 6 1/2 5 3/
4
Wing from flexure, 1 7/8 1 11/12 1 7/
8 1 7/
8 1 11/12 1 7/
8
Tail, 1 5/8 1 3/12 1 4/
12 1 5 1/2/12 1 1/2 1 4/
12
Bill, 5/
12
5/
12 4 3/4/12 5/
12 5 1/2/12 5/
12
Tarsus, 8/
12 8 1/2/12 8/
12
8/
12
8/
12
8/
12
Hind toe, 4/12 4 1/2/12 4/
12
4/
12 4 1/2/12 4/
12
Its claw, 4/
12 3 1/2/12 3/
12 3 1/2/12 4/
12
3/
12
Middle toe, 6/12 6 1/2/12 5 3/4/12 6/
12 6 1/2/12 6/
12
Its claw, 2 3/4/12 2 1/2/12 2/
12 2 1/2/12 2 1/4/12 2 1/4/12

In a male shot at Charleston in January, the upper mandible has a prominent median
line beneath, the palate is flat, the mouth 2 3/4 twelfths in breadth. The tongue is 5
twelfths long, emarginate and papillate at the base, slender, flattened, very narrow,
tapering to a lacerated point. The œsophagus, a, b, c, is 1 1/2 inch long, of uniform
diameter, being 1 1/2 twelfths in breadth. The stomach, d, e, is oblong, 5 twelfths in
length, 3 1/2 twelfths in breadth, its muscles of moderate strength, the lower not
distinct from the right; the cuticular lining longitudinally rugous, and of a dark brown
colour. The intestine, f, g, h, is 8 inches long, the duodenum 2 twelfths in diameter; the
cœca 1 twelfth long, 1 1/4 twelfth broad; the neck 9 twelfths long; the cloaca large,
globular, 3 twelfths in diameter.

The trachea is 1 inch 3 twelfths long, of nearly uniform diameter, 1 1/2 twelfths broad;
the lateral muscles strong, sterno-tracheal, and four pairs of inferior laryngeal
muscles; the rings ossified.
ROCK WREN.

Troglodytes obsoletus, Say.


PLATE CCCLX. Adult Female.

This species was discovered by some of Major Long’s exploring


party, and first described by Mr Thomas Say. My friend Thomas
Nuttall, who had opportunities of studying its habits, during his
recent journey in company with Dr Townsend, has assured me that
they are very similar to those of the other Wrens. The figure in the
plate was taken from an adult female, given to me by Mr Nuttall;
and I have since then obtained two males. In my drawing the bird
was represented on a stone, but for the reasons mentioned in my
Introduction, my son Victor Gifford attached it to the drawing of
the Winter Wren, so that it now appears perched on a twig, which,
however, is not a common practice with this species.
“On the 21st of June,” says Mr Nuttall, “on the ledges of the bluffs
which border the bottom of Hare’s Fork of the Siskadee (or Colorado
of the West), I heard, and at length saw this curious Mountain Wren.
Its actions are those of the Carolina species, Troglodytes
ludovicianus. The old female (as I supposed) sat upon a ledge of
rock at the head of a high ravine in the bluff, cocking her tail, and
balancing herself, at the same time uttering a tshurr, tshurr, and té
aigh, with a strong guttural accent, and now and then, when
approached, like the common Short-billed Marsh Wren, Troglodytes
brevirostris, a quick guttural tshe de de. It has also a shrill call at
times, as it perches on a stone on the summit of some hill, again
similar to the note of the Carolina Wren, occasionally interrupted by
a tshurr. Among these arid and bare hills of the central table-land
they were quite common. The old ones were feeding and watching a
brood of four or five young, which, though fully grown, were
protected and cherished with the querulous assiduity so
characteristic of the other Wrens. They breed under the rocky ledges
where we so constantly observed them, under which they skulk at
once when surprised, and pertinaciously hide in security, like so
many rats. Indeed so suddenly do they disappear among the rocks,
and remain so silent in their retreat, that it is scarcely possible to
believe them beneath your feet till after a lapse of a few minutes you
begin to hear a low cautious chirp, and the next moment, at the head
of the ravine, the old female probably again appears, scolding and
jerking in the most angry attitudes she is capable of assuming. In the
same rocky retreats they are commonly accompanied by a kind of
small striped Ground Squirrel, like that of the eastern coast in many
respects, but much smaller. These little animals, which are
numerous, the White-chinned Buzzard, Buteo vulgaris of
Richardson and Swainson, and the Raven frequently hover over
and pounce upon. We met with this species as far west as the lowest
falls of the Columbia, or within a few miles of Fort Van Couver, but
among rocks and cliffs as usual.”

Troglodytes obsoleta, Say.


Myothera obsoleta, Ch. Bonap. Amer. Ornith vol. i. p. 6, pl. 1, fig. 2.
Rocky Mountain Wren, Nuttall, Manual, vol. i. p. 435.

Adult Female. Plate CCCLX Fig. 4.


Bill nearly as long as the head, slender, slightly arched, compressed
toward the end; upper mandible with the sides convex towards the
end, flat and declinate at the base, the edges sharp and overlapping,
with a very slight notch close to the declinate tip; lower mandible with
the angle long and narrow, the dorsal line very slightly concave, the
sides sloping outwards and concave, the tip narrow. Nostrils oblong,
basal, with a cartilaginous operculum, open and bare.
Head oblong; neck short; body slender. Legs of ordinary length;
tarsus longer than the middle toe, compressed, with eight anterior
distinct scutella, and two lateral plates forming a sharp edge behind.
Toes of moderate size, the third and fourth united at the base, the
first large, the outer considerably longer than the inner. Claws rather
long, moderately arched, much compressed, with an abruptly
tapering, very acute tip.
Plumage soft and loose. Wings of moderate length, convex, broad
and rounded; the first quill very short, the second a quarter of an inch
shorter than the third; the fourth longest, but scarcely exceeding the
third and fifth. Tail rather long, much rounded, of twelve broad,
rounded feathers.
Bill dusky, with the edges pale yellow. Iris hazel. Feet dusky. Upper
parts light dull yellowish-brown, and, excepting the rump,
transversely barred with greyish-brown; the wings barred in the
same manner, excepting the primaries, which are plain; the
secondary coverts with a small white spot near the tip. Tail-coverts
barred like the back, as are the two middle tail-feathers; the others
broadly tipped with pale yellowish-red, undulated with dusky; behind
which is a broad band of brownish-black; the remaining or basal part
banded like the central feathers, the outer feather with four reddish-
white spots or bars on the outer web, the intervals being brownish-
black, and a spot of white on the inner web. The lower parts are
greyish-white, tinged with sienna, the sides inclining to yellowish-red.
The lower tail-coverts are barred with brownish-black.
Length to end of tail 6 inches, wing from flexure 2 11/12; tail 2 1/4; bill
1/2 1/2 1/2
along the ridge 9 /12; tarsus 9 /12; hind toe 4/12, its claw 3 /12;
1/
middle toe 6/12, its claw 2 /12.
4
DUSKY GROUS.

Tetrao obscurus, Say.


PLATE CCCLXI. Male and Female.

As I have never seen this species in its native haunts, I am obliged


to have recourse to the observations of those who have had
opportunities of studying its habits. The only accounts that can be
depended upon are those of Dr Richardson, Dr Townsend, and Mr
Nuttall, which I here give in order, beginning with what is stated
respecting it in the Fauna Boreali-Americana by the first of these
naturalists.
“This large Grous inhabits the Rocky Mountains from latitude 40° to
60°, and perhaps to a greater extent, for the limits of its range either
northward or southward have not been ascertained. It has been
known to the fur-traders for nearly thirty years; but it was first
introduced to the scientific world by Mr Say, who, in 1820,
accompanied Major Long to the source of the Missouri; and a
female specimen, deposited by him in the Philadelphia Museum, has
lately been figured by the Prince of Musignano in his continuation of
Wilson’s Ornithology. I had no opportunity of observing the habits of
this bird myself, but was informed by Mr Drummond that, in the
mornings during pairing time, usual station of the male is on some
rocky eminence or large stone, where he sits swelling out the sides
of his neck, spreading his tail, and repeating the cry of “Coombe,
Coombe,” in a soft hollow tone. Its food consists of various berries,
and its flesh is very palatable. Mr Alexander Stewart, a chief-
factor of the Hudson’s Bay Company, who has often crossed the
mountains, informs me that the males of this species fight each other
with such animosity, that a man may take one of them up in his hand
before it will quit its antagonist.”
Dr Richardson adds in a note, that “the description and figure of Mr
Say’s specimen agree so completely with our younger female
specimens, that there can be no doubt of their specific identity; but it
is proper to observe that there is some discrepancy in the
dimensions. The Prince of Musignano states the total length of the
bird to be eighteen inches, that of the wing nine inches and a half.
The wing of the largest of our males is scarcely so long; while the
biggest of our females, measuring twenty-one inches in total length,
has a wing barely eight inches long. This, perhaps, merely indicates
the uncertainty of measurements taken from prepared specimens.
Mr Douglas’s specimens in the Edinburgh Museum are of younger
birds than ours, but evidently the same species.” These remarks
correspond with what I have so often repeated, that age, sex, and
different states of moult, produce disparities in individuals of the
same species.
Dr Townsend, in the notes with which he has favoured me, has the
following observations:—“Dusky Grous, Tetrao obscurus. Qul-al-
lalleun of the Chinooks. First found in the Blue Mountains, near
Wallah Wallah, in large flocks, in September. Keep in pine woods
altogether, never found on the plains; they perch on the trees.
Afterwards found on the Columbia River in pairs in May. The eggs
are numerous, of a cinereous brown colour, blunt at both ends, and
small for the size of the bird. The actions of the female, when the
young are following her, are precisely the same as the Ruffed Grous,
using all the arts of that bird in counterfeiting lameness, &c. Female
smaller than the male, lighter coloured, and wants the yellow warty
skin upon the sides of the neck.”

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