218 



KEY AND DESCRIPTION 



Length, 6| ; wing, ?j\ ; tail, 2^ ; tarsus, J ; culmen, J. South Atlantic 

 and Gulf States, West Indies, and northern South America ; breeding 

 from South Carolina to Louisiana. 



9. Inca Dove (321. Scardafella Inca). — A Texas clove, with 

 a peculiar scaled appearance due to the crescent-shaped black 

 marks on most of the feathers, especially abundant on the 

 belly. The upper parts are grayish-brown, and the lower 

 parts ashy-lilac in front and ochraeeous at the back. There 



is much rich chest- 

 nut on the wings ; the 

 middle tail feathers 

 are like those of the 

 back, but the outer 

 (under) ones are 

 l)lackish, with white 

 tips. (Scaled Dove.) 



Length, 8 ; wing, o\ ; 

 tail, 4 ; tarsus, .J ; cul- 

 men, nearly I. Mexico, 

 north to Texas and Ari- 

 zona, and south to Cen- 

 tral America. 



10. Key West Quail- 

 Dove (322. Geotrf/gon 

 rhrijsia). — A rare, 

 Florida, very irides- 

 cent, wine-red dove, 

 Avith the under parts lighter and more creamy, and, toward 

 the tail, white. A plain white band below the eyes. This 

 is a ground dove found in wooded regions. 



Gronud Dove 



Length, 11; wing, 6j ; tail, 5; culmen, J. 

 found on the Florida Keys in the summer. 



A West Indian dove, 



11. Blue-headed Quail-Dove (323. Starn«nas cyanoc^phala). 

 — A rare, Florida, blue-crowned, black-throated, chocolate- 

 backed, cream-buff-bellied dove, with a white line beneath the 

 eye. This quail-dove is much like the last, both in habits and 



