PHAINOPEPLA. 465 



mens) ; length 6.50-7.50, wing about 3.60-3.90, tail 2.30-2.60. Eggs .87- 

 .61. Hab. Whole of temperate North America, south (in winter only?) 

 to Guatemala and West Indies. 



619. A. cedrorum (Yieill.). Cedar Waxwing. 

 a^. Tail tipped with rose-red ; tips of secondaries never with sealing-wax-like tips. 

 Greater wing-coverts dull red ; otherwise much like A. garrulus, but with- 

 out 3'ellow tips to quills, but these, as also sometimes the secondaries, 

 usually ti]3ped with rose-red. Hab. Japan. 



A. japonicus (Sieb.). Japanese Waxwing.^ 



Genus PHAINOPEPLA Sclater. (Page 463, pi. CXIII., fig. 2.) 



Species. 



Adult male : Unifox-m glossy blue-black, the inner webs of quills chiefly white ; 

 in winter, many feathers bordered with whitish. Adult female : Plain brownish 

 gray, rather paler below, the wing-coverts, secondaries, and lower tail-coverts mar- 

 gined with white ; white on inner webs of primaries more restricted and less 

 sharply defined than in male. Young : Similar to adult female. Length 7.00-7.75, 

 wing 3.60-3.80, tail 3.80-4.10. Nest saucer-shaped, compact, of plant-fibres, etc., on 

 small trees. Eggs 2-5, .87 X -63, light grayish or dull grayish white, thickly 

 speckled with neutral tint, dark brown, and blackish. Hab. Arid region of Mexico, 

 and contiguous portions of United States, from western Texas to southern Cali- 

 fornia 620. P. nitens (Swains.). Phainopepla. 



Family LANIID^.— The Shrikes. (Page 323.) 



Genera. 

 (Characters same as those given for the Family) Lanius. (Page 465.) 



Genus LANIUS Linn^us. (Page 465, pi. CXIII., fig. 3.) 



Species. 



Common Characters. — Adults plain gray above, the sides of the head, wings, 

 and tail black ; the wings with a white patch at base of quills and tail, with much 

 white on exterior feathers and tips of others ; lower parts whitish. Young essen- 

 tially similar to adults, but colors less strongly contrasted, the gray and white more 

 or less tinged with brownish, and more or less vermiculated, or "waved," with 

 narrow dusky bars ; wing-coverts tipped with dull light bufi'y. West a very bulky 

 structure, composed of sticks, dried grass-stems, wool, feathers, etc., placed in small 

 (usually thorny) trees or hedges. Eggs 4-7, dull whitish, spotted with light brown 

 or olive. 



^ Bomhicyvora japonica Siebold, Hist. Nat. Jap. Stat. 1824, No. 2. Ampelia japonica Gray, Gen. B. i. 

 1846, 278. 



69 



