48 LIFE-HISTORIES OF BIRDS 



Stomoxys calcitrans, Scatophago furcata, and 

 the smaller dipterous forms which swarm in the 

 atmosphere and in humid situations; the small 

 Noctidds which welcome returning spring the first, 

 and which delight in waste cr round and thickets; 



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the 7 orlricids and Tineids together with the larvae 

 of Eujltchia ribearia, Anisopteryx veniata, Gorlyna 

 zees, liarrisina Americana, many of the Agroii 

 or Cut-worms, Pieris rapes, Colias pJiilodice, and 

 others. 



For two weeks after its arrival it frequents the 

 borders of thickets and waste fields. Its habits 

 are then terrestrial and gregarious. But as the 



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season advances and the trees become clothed in 

 beautiful green foliage, it deserts its former haunts 

 for the habitations of man. The change is 

 evidently determined by the question of food.* 



The flight of the Blue Bird is low, less firm than 

 the Robin's, and but slightly sustained. 



The exceptional nest to which we referred 

 above, is composed externally of a few leaves, 

 fragments of tendrils of the vine, stems of grasses 

 and of a species ofSmafits, and horse hair, variously 

 intermingled. Internally there was noticeable, 

 stems of Chenopodium, slender grasses, stems of 

 a species of Poet with the seeds attached, and an 

 intermixture of wool. 



An interesting episode in the life of this 

 species cannot be out of place. A friend having 

 placed a tomato-can upon an upright post to 

 attract some passing avis, was amply rewarded by 



