PASSERES — FRINGILLID.E — PITYLUS. 171 



GENUS PITYLUS. Cuvier. 



Bill short, very robust, much higher than broad, tapering to a point, arched above, with a 

 salient angle at the middle of the edge of the upper mandible. Nostrils covered with the 

 frontlet-feathers ; bristles at the base. Feathers of the head elongate and erectile. Tail 

 long and rounded. 



THE CARDINAL GROSBEAK. 



PlTYLITS CARDINALIS. 



PLATE LXII. FIG. 143 (Male, -winter dress). 



(STATE COLLECTION.) 



Loxia cardinalis. Linnius, Syst. Nat. p. 300. Pennant, Arct. Zool. Vol. 2, p. 349. Wilson, Am. Orn. Vol. 



2, p. 33, pi. 11, fig. 1 and 2 (male and female). 

 Pityius id. Cuvier, Regne Animal. 



F. (Coccothraustes) id. Bonaparte, Ann. Lye. N. Y. Vol 2, p. 113. Audubon, fol.pl. 159. 

 Red-bird. Nuttall, Man. Orn. Vol. 1, p. 519. 

 Cardinalis virginianus. Bonaparte, Geog. and Comp. List, p. 35. Kirtland, Ohio Rep. p. 184. Peabody, Mass. 



Rep. p. 329. 

 Pityius id. Audubon, B. of A. Vol. 3, p. 198, pi. 203. Giracd, Birds of Long island, p. 132. 



Characteristics. Red; beneath brighter. Frontlet and chin black : bill red. Female and 

 young, drab, tinged with reddish beneath ; tip of the crest, wings and 

 tail tinged with red. Length, 8 inches. 



Description. Third, fourth and fifth primaries subequal, longest. Feathers of the crown 

 long and pointed. Tail long, straight, rounded, 2' 8 longer than the tips of the closed wings. 



Color. The outer webs of the quills red ; the inner brown towards the tips, and margined 

 with red towards their bases. Forehead, lores, chin and upper part of the throat black. 

 Female, crested ; greyish brown above ; frontlet; and chin brownish black ; breast reddish 

 drab ; belly mixed with grey ; outer webs of the first six primaries whitish ; the tail not as 

 long as in the male. 



Length, 8' 0-8*5. Alar spread, 1 1 • - 1 1 ■ 5. 



This beautiful bird is seen every year, during the heats of summer, in the Atlantic dis- 

 trict of this State. I have also seen them in Delaware and Chenango counties. They 

 doubtless breed with us, as they are known to do in the neighboring States of New-Jersey 

 and Massachusetts, but I have never met with their nests. The eggs are dusky white, spotted 

 with olive brown. On account of the beauty of their plumage and their notes, they are often 

 reared, and breed in cages. A constant resident from Maryland to Mexico. In the summer, 

 ranges and breeds to the 42d parallel. A constant resident in Ohio, where it is yearly be- 

 coming more abundant. Feeds on fruits and berries, and the seeds of corn and grasses. 

 Known in this State under the names of Red-bird and Crested Red-bird. ' 



22* 



