BIRDS — ANSERINAE — ANSER GAJIBELII. 



761 



T Toung. Head and upper iiiirt of neck vf bite ; lower part of neck to the wings diirk brown, paasing on the sides of body into a 

 more ashy shade; rest of under parts, concealed portions of the buck, rump, and iippiT ooverls, white. The entire scapuliir and 

 scapular region is ashy brown, each feather with faint reddish brown margin. The upper sutlnceof the wing is of a clear silvi-ry 

 ash, hut passing into dark brown on the ends of the quills. The coverts, secondaries, tertials, and scapulars, edged with white. 



Length about 3(1 inches; wing, 1(5.40; tarsus, 3.1'J; commissure, 2.10. 



Hub. — Whcde of North America. 



It is quite probable that, as Mr. Cassin suggests, the supposed young bird, as described above, 

 is really distinct from the white bird, but in the absence of positive facts in the case I do not 

 feel at liberty to separate the two, especially as Mr. Audubon asserts positively that a gray or 

 bluish specimen in possession of Dr. Bachman became white. 



I have not the means of testing the validity of Mr. Cassin's new Anser albatus, which is said 

 to differ from the common species in smaller size, shorter bill, &c. In the very great variations 

 of size and proportions in the geese I can scarcely believe that the grounds of distinction as 

 announced are sufficient in the present case to make two species. 



The name caeruleacens has priority of date over hyperboreus, and if the species are the same 

 should be used, but for the fact that the adult bird is not bluish, but white, thus conveying a 

 false impression respecting it. 



List of specimens. 



Catal. Ko. 



1211 



4527 



9968 



10403 



1970 



Locality. 



Whence ohtained. 



WHITE. 



1 nited States 



.S;m Francisco 



I'uget's Sound 



Nortliwcst coast of America 



BLCISa, 



Missouri river 



S. F. Baird 



Lieut. Williamson 



Dr. Suckley 



United States E.\ploring Expedition. 



S. F. Baird . 



Collected by — 



Dr. Ncwbenv. 



J. .J. Audubon . 



ANSEE GAMBELII, Hartlaub. 



White Fronted Goo.oe; Ijanghing Goose. 



Anser albi/rotu, Sw. F. B. A. 11, 1831, 456. Not of Gmelin.— Nutt. Man. II, 310.— Aui>. Om. Biog. HI, 1835, 568; 



pl. 260.— Ib. Syn. 272.— Ib. Birds Amer. VI, 1843, 209; pi. 380. 

 Anser gambdii, Hartlaub, Rev. et Mag. Zool. 1852, 7. 



Sp. Ch. — Tail of sixteen feathers. Bill and legs red. Along sides of bill and forehead white, margined behind with blackish 

 brown. Rest of head and neck grayish brown, becomit)g pale on the jugulum. Back bluish gray, the feathers anteriorly 

 tipped with brown; the sides similarly colored. The breast and belly grayish white, blotched irregularly with black; the anal 

 region, sides behind, and beneath the tail, with the upper coverts, white. The secondary quills and ends of primaries are dark 

 brown ; the remaining portion of primaries and the covert silvery ash. The shafts of quills white. Greater coverts edged with 

 white. Tail feathers brown, tipped with white. A-xillars and under surface of wings ashy plumbeous. Length 28 inches ; wing, 

 16.30 ; tarsus, 2.88 ; commissure, 2.04. 



llab. — Whole of North America. 



A specimen from New Mexico is smaller, with the nail of bill narrower. Another from El 

 Paso (10463) has the under parts grayish, with only a trace of black in three or four feathers. 

 August 12, 1838. 



96 b 



