Page:Field key to the land birds .. (IA fieldkeytolandbi00knob).pdf/57

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
There was a problem when proofreading this page.
FIELD KEY TO THE LAND BIRDS
27

FIELD KEY TO THE LAND BIRDS. spring, when he iirrives in hirge, noisy flocks. fonnd in the woods.

27

Never

56. MEADOAV LARK. Sturnella magna, Length, 10| inches. Upperparts yellowish bnff and throat yellow rusty, with black bars and streaks breast and belly white Avith black marks l)ill blue Flight like outer tail-feathers conspicuously white. that of a Quail, but with a peculiar fluttering. The Meadow Lark prefers to perch on a rock or tussock rather than on bushes. It is found in dry meadows and grass land, never in the Avoods.

57.

ROBIN.

BALTIMORE

ORIOLE,

GOLDEN

Length, 7^ inches. galbula. BrigLt orange and black. Female similarly marked with dull brown, Avith a Avash of dull orange all over. Though a true tree-bird, rarely seen on the ground, the Oriole does not frequent the Avoods. It prefers Icterus

orchards and roadside trees, in settled districts, and builds its curious hanging nest suspended from a branch often directly over the road.

ORCHARD

5S. ORIOLE. Icterus spur ius. Length, 7^ inches. Similar to the Baltimore Oriole, but dark rich chestnut instead of orange, and more lightly built throughout. Female differs greatly from the male, being grayish green above and grayish