314 FIELD MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY ZOOLOGY, VOL. IX. 



Adult in breeding plumage: Neck, chestnut brown; head and line 

 at the base of the pouch, yellowish white; upper parts, ashy gray, 

 some of the feathers edged with brownish; bill, brownish white, 

 marked with red in spots; pouch, dark greenish black; bare space in 

 front of the eye, bluish; tail, consists of twenty-two feathers. The 

 immature bird has the head and neck brownish gray. 



Length, 50; wing, 20; tarsus, 2.90; bill, u. 



"The Brown Pelican has a somewhat doubtful claim to be in- 

 cluded among the birds of Illinois. Apparently the only record is 

 that given by Mr. Chas. K. Worthen in a letter to Prof. Ridgway, 

 who writes: "Saw a specimen of this bird flying over Lima Lake, 

 a large, shallow body of water ten miles below here (Warsaw, Illinois), 

 in October, 1873. The bird was not over a hundred yards from myself 

 and two or three others and we watched it for several minutes. * * * 

 It had the color, bill, and size of that species." (Ridgway, Bull. 

 Nutt. Orn. Club, 1880, p. 31.) 



Family FREGATID^. Man-of-war Birds. 



The Fregatidae are a family of maritime and pelagic birds, com- 

 prising one genus and only two known species, inhabiting the warmer 

 portions of the globe. 



Genus FREGATA Lacepede. 



36. Fregata aquila (LINN.). 

 MAN-OF-WAR BIRD. 



Distr.: Tropical and subtropical coasts and islands. In America 

 north to Florida and Texas, and casually to Nova Scotia, Wisconsin, 

 Indiana, etc. 



Adult male: Entire plumage, brownish black, showing a greenish 

 reflection on the head, and purplish upon the back; tail, forked and 

 composed of twelve feathers; gular sac, pale orange; iris, brown. 



Adult female: Differs from the male by having a white patch on 

 the breast, which extends along the sides of the neck and around it 

 near the middle. 



Length, 43; wing, 25; tail, 19; tarsus, i; bill, 6. 



Stragglers of this strictly maritime species have been recorded 

 from various localities in the interior. Specimens have been taken 

 in Kansas, Ohio, and Indiana (2). 



