THE HAWKS, EAGLES. KITES, AM) \ I LTl IIKS. 



•211 



of the presence of the quail, robin, oriole, swilt, bluebird, 

 downy woodpecker, flicker, cow-bird, mocking-bird, cat-bird, 

 oven-bird, herniit-thrnsh, mourning-dove, chickadee, snow- 

 birds, and various wrens, warblers, buntings, and s})arrows, 

 including the English variety of tlie latter. No bird witli such 

 a record deserves protection. 



Cooper's Hawk may be considered a larger type of I he 

 sharp-shinned species. It measures from fourteen to tweiily 

 inches in length, is found 

 throughout North iVmer- 

 ica as far north as the 

 British Provinces, mi- 

 grates south to spend the 

 winter, and is an invet- 

 erate enemy to poultry, 

 game and other birds. 

 Of ninety-four food- 

 containing stomachs ex- 

 amined by Dr. Fislier 

 poultry or game-birds 

 were found in thirty- four 

 and other birds in fifty- 

 two stomachs. Small 

 mammals, including two 

 mice, one cotton-rat, 

 three chipmunks, one 

 red squirrel, one gray 

 squirrel, one ground- 

 squirrel, and one rabbit, 

 had been eaten by eleven of the hawks. Two others had taken 

 insects, one a frog, and three had eaten lizards. The game- 

 birds destroyed included pigeons, quail, and niO'ed grouse, and 

 on the list of other birds one finds the cliewink, purple grackle, 

 meadow-lark, flicker, inithalch, hermil-thrnsli. dove, robin, 

 snow-bird, nioiiniiiig-dovc, and \ari(nis warblei's and sparrows. 



COOPER'S HAWK. 



(Afh-r r.iohxjiral Snrreii.) 



