516 ORNITHOLOGY AND OOLO(JY. 



Female. — With the head and body above, dark-brown ; tlie chin more plumbeous; 

 the lower part of neck, breast, and under parts generally, except the central region 

 (which is white), duller and lighter brown; a whitish patch in front of the eye, and 

 a rounded spot just behind the ear. 



Length, seventeen and fitly one-hundredths inches; wing, seven and seventy 

 one-hundredths; tarsus, one and forty-eight one-hundredths; commissure, one and 

 fifty-four one-hundredths inches. 



Hub. — Northern seacoast of northern hemisphere. 



The Harlequin Duck is very rare in Southern New Eng- 

 land, and is seldom met with here south of the most north- 

 ern portions on its coast. There it is pretty abundantly 

 seen as a winter visitor. It greatly resembles tlie following 

 in its general characteristics. Its nest and eggs are thus 

 described : 



" Tlie nest is composed of dry plants of various kinds, arranged 

 in a circular manner to the height of three or four inches, and lined 

 with finer grasses. The eggs are five or six, rarely more, measure 

 two inches and one-sixteenth by one inch and four and a half 

 eighths, and are of a plain greenish-yellow color. After the eggs 

 are laid, the female plucks the down from the lower parts of her 

 body, and places it beneath and aroimd them." 



HARELDA, Leach. 



" JJnreldn, Leach (1816)," Gray. (Tj-pe Anns glacialis, L.) 

 Bill shorter than the head and tarsus, tapering laterally to the end; the nail 

 verj- broad, occupying the entire tip; lateral profile of lower edge of upper mandi- 

 ble straight to near the end, then rising suddenly to the prominent decurved nail; 

 nostrils large, in the posterior half of the bill, their centre about opposite the middle 

 of the commissure; tertials long, lanceolate, and straight; tail pointed, of fourteen 

 feathers, the central feathers very long, equal to the wings; bill with almost no pos- 

 terior lateral upper angle; the feathers of the sides advancing obliquely forwards; 

 feathers of chin reaching beyond the middle of the commissure, or almost to the 

 anterior extremity of nostrils ; tail of fourteen feathers. 



HARELDA GLACIALIS. — iencA. 



The South Southerly ; Old Wife ; Long-taiL 



. Anas glacinUs, Wilson. Am. Om., VIII. (1814) 93, 96. 

 . FuUf/ula {Ilarehla) (/lacialis, Nuttall. Man., II. (18.34) 453. 

 Fuliyula glacialis, Audubon. Om. Biog., IV. (1838) 103. lb., Birds Am., VI 

 (1843) 379 



