BLACKBIRDS, ORIOLES, ETC. 297 



edged with yellowish. Adult female : under parts plain canary yellow : 

 upper parts olive green, grayish hrown across back ; wings brownish, with 

 white bars and edgings. Malr in st-cond year : like adult female, but lores 

 aiid throat black. The rest of the black and the chestnut appear in increas- 

 ingly large patches till the adult plumage is reached. Youny in first plum- 

 age : similar to female, but lighter wing- markings tipped with buff. 

 Sl.ile : length (skins) 5.80-r>.:>(>. wing- LMM-:-}.!'.'). tail 2.50-2.95, bill .59-.G9. 

 Female : length (skins) ;j.!)U-U.:-JO. wing- 2.70-3.05. tail 2.50-2.90. bill .60- 



.68. 



Distribution. Breeds in Upper and Lower Soiioran zones from the east- 

 ern United States, west to the Rocky Mountains, and Texas ; migrates to 

 Cuba and South America. 



Nest. Basket-like, sometimes pensile, woven of fresh grass and placed 

 in bushes or trees usually 12 to 20 feet from the ground. Egys : usually 4 

 to 0. bluish white, marked most heavily about the larger end with blotches 

 and scrawls of browns and purples. 



Food. - - Mainly small beetles, plant lice, flies, hairless caterpillars, cab- 

 bage worms, grasshoppers, rose bugs, and larva?. 



Ill the prairie states. Major Bendire says, the orchard oriole is 

 found mainly in trees and shrubbery along streams. When living in 

 orchards and gardens it makes itself most useful by destroying the 

 insects with which the fruit and vegetable grower have to contend. 



Subgenus Yphantes. 



T 



507. Icterus galbula (Linn.). BALTIMORE ORIOLE. 



Adult male in spring and summer. Under parts and hinder part of 

 back bright orange or orange red ; head. neck, and fore parts of back black : 

 wings with yellow shoulder patch and 

 white wing bar ; tail black with 

 yellow corners. Adult male in u-inter : 

 like summer male, but scapulars and 

 interscapulars edged with dull orange ; 

 orange of rump and upper tail coverts 

 more or less obscured with olive : 

 white wing edgings broader. Adult 

 female in summer: under parts orange 

 or brownish yellow, varying- from 

 almost unmarked to the black color 

 pattern of male in duller, less uni- 

 form style : upper parrs yellowish Fig. 3G4. 

 olive, streaked more or less with 



black, if not with solid black of male : rump yellowish, tail greenish 

 yellow ; wings brownish, with whitish wing bars. Adult female in ic inter : 

 like summer female, but plumage softer and back tinged with gray. Im- 

 mature male : varying between adult male and female or indistinguishable 

 from female. Young in first fall and u-inter : similar to adult females, which 

 are without black on throat. Young, first plumage : like lighter colored fe- 

 male, but upper parts grayer and under parts with softer colors. Male: 

 length (skins) 

 male : length 



Distribution. Breeds in Transition zone of eastern North America from 

 latitude 55 in Saskatchewan to Texas, west to the Rocky Mountains : 

 migrates through eastern Mexico to Panama. 



