FBINGILLIDyJJ : FINCHES, BUNTINGS, SPARROWS, ETC. 



5G3 



221. P. s. sava'na. (Spanish satana or samna, a ineadou". Fig. 227.) Common Savanna Spar- 

 row. ^ 9 , adult, in spring : Thickly streaked everywhere above, ou sides, and across breast ; 

 a superciliary line, and edge of the wing, yellowish; lesser wing-coverts not chestnut; legs flesh- 

 color; bill rather slender and acute; tail nearly even, its outer feathers not white; longest 

 secondary nearly as long as the primaries in the closed wing. Above, brownish-gray, streaked 

 with blackish, whitish-gray and pale bay, the streaks largest on interscapulars, smallest on 

 cervix, the crown divided by an obscure whitish line ; sometimes an obscure yellowish suffusion 

 about head besides the streak over the eye. Below, white, pure or with faint buffy sliade, 

 tliickly streaked, as just stated, with dusky — the individual spots edged with brown, mostly 

 arrow-shaped, running in chains along the sides, and often agsn-aated in an obscure blotch on 

 the breast. Wings dusky, the coverts and 

 inner secondaries black -edged and tipped 

 with bright bay ; tail-feathers rather nar- 

 row and pointed, dusky, not noticeably 

 marked. Extreme dimensions of both 

 sexes: Length 5.20-6.00; extent 8.50- 

 10.00! AA-ing 2.40-3.00; tail 1.75-2.25; 

 tarsus 0.75-0.88 ; but such figures are rare. 

 Average of both sexes 5.25; extent 8.75; 

 wing 2.60 ; tail 2.00 ; tarsus 0.84. <J usu- 

 ally 5.30-5.60; extent 9.00-9.50; wing 

 2.67-2.75; 9 usually 5.00-5.30; extent 

 8.75-9.00; wing 2.50-2.67. Ordinarily, 

 bill about 0.40 ; tarsus, middle toe and claw 

 together 1.50. Fall and winter specimens 

 much more brightly colored than spring 

 and summer ones ; the young particularly 

 having much ochrey or bufi"y suffusion, in- Pa^d del. Nichols sc.) 



stead of clean colors, more brown and bay, instead of dusky and gray. It is not easy for an un- 

 practised person to discriminate the small sparrows, and so variable a one as this offers special 

 diflBculty ; attention to the points oiform as well as of color is requisite. North Amer. at large, 

 chiefly Eastern, very abundant everywhere in fields, on plains, by the wayside, and along the 

 sea-shore ; a thoroughly terrestrial bird, migratory, and in the fall somewhat gregarious. Has 

 an agreeable though weak song in the spring. Winters at least from Middle States southward, 

 and breeds at least from New England to highest latitudes. Nest sunken in ground flush 

 with surfiice, of a few grasses and weed-stalks; eggs 4-6, 0.70 X 0.50, varying interminably 

 in their motley coloring ; usually heavily clouded and blotched with dark brown ; most like 

 those of Pocecetes, but smaller. 



329. P. s. alaudi'nus. (Lat. alaiidinns, lark-like ; no applicability.) Lark Savanna Sparrow. 

 So similar to the last as only to be distinguished by rather duller and paler coloraticm on an 

 average, and weaker bill, about 0.35 long by 0.20 deep at the base. If the "savanna spar- 

 row" be split into several races, this may possibly be allowed with the rest. Western U. S. 



228. P. s. anthi'nus. (Lat. anthinus, pipit-like ; no applicability.) PiPiT Savanna Sparrow. 

 A form from the Pacific marshes, especially the coast of Cala., better marked than tlio last. 

 Bill as long as in savana, but slenderer ; under parts more sharply, ch)sely, darkly and 

 extensively streaked. Yellow eyebrow and bend of wing quite as well marked as in savana^ 

 and therefore contrasting with the paler and grayer alaudinus with which it is associated. 



230. P. rostra'tus. (Lat. rostratus, beaked; rostrum, beak.) Braked Savanna Sparrow. 

 San Diego Savanna Sparrow. Sea-shore Sparrow. With the form of a Savanna, but 

 the liill elongated as in Ammodramus, yet very stout and turgid, with decidedly convex 



Fig. 227. — Common Savanna Sparrow, reduced. (Shep- 



