CORVID^ — GABRULIN^ : JAYS. 423 



eg^s 5-6. 1.25 to 1.35 X 0.80 to 0.90, pale bluish-green, profusely spotted and blotched with 

 dark olive-brown and ligliter brown. 

 112. APIIELO'COMA. (Gr. acptXfjs, apheles, smooth, sleok ; nonrj, home, hair: alluding to the 

 lack of crest.) Crestless Blue Jays. Generally as in C'^a«oaWa. Head uncrested. Tail 

 longer or shorter than wings, instead of about equal, graduated (in some extralimital forms 

 about equal to the wing and even). Tarsus rather longer than middle toe and claw. Wings 

 and tail blue, without black bars, and blue the chi(;f body-color ; whitish underneath, with 

 (usually) or without a gray patch on the back. All Southern and Southwestern. 



Analysis of Species and Varieties. 



Tail longer than wings, graduated. Above blue, with gray dorsal area; belly dingy whitish; a super- 

 ciliary stripe, and the throat streaky. 



Forehead hoary-white; superciliary stripe not well-defined. Dorsal patch well-defined. Crissum 

 blue, contrasting with grayish under parts Jloridana 354 



Forehead blue ; superciliary stripe distinct. Dorsal patch ill-defined, spreading and bluish. Crissum 

 bluish, but not well contrasted with dingy under parts woodhousli 365 



Forehead blue; superciliary stripe distinct. Dorsal patch well-defined. Crissum whitish like other 



under parts californica 356 



Tail rather shorter than wing, rounded. Blue, without definite dorsal area, or pectoral or superciliary 



streaks arizonce. 3S7 



354. A. florida'na. (Of Florida.) Florida Jay. $ <i : Blue ; back with a small well-defined 

 .gray patch not invading scapulars ; belly and sides pale grayish ; under tail-coverts and tibiae 

 blue in marked contrast ; much hoary whitish on forehead and sides of crown, but no shai-p white 

 superciliary stripe; chin, throat, and middle of brea.5t vague streaky whitish and bluish; ear- 

 coverts dusky; the blue that seems to encircle the head and neck -well defined against the gray 

 of back and breast. Bill comparatively short, very stout at the base. Length 11.00-12.50, 

 average 11.75; extent 13.50-15.00, average 14.50; wing 4.00-4.75, average 4.40; tail 4.50- 

 5.50, average 5.00, always longer than wing ; bill about 1.00. Florida (and Gulf States?), 

 abundant. Very local, and not authentic as occurring outside of Florida. Usual habits of 

 jays. Nest a fiat structure, in bushes, of twigs lined with fibres. Eggs 4-5, bluish-green, 

 sparingly speckled, chiefly at larger end, with brown, 1.00 X 0.80. 



355. A. f. woodhou'sii. (To S. W. Woodhouse.) Woodhouse's Jay. The dorsal patch dark, 

 glossed with blue, shading into the blue of sun-ounding parts ; under parts rather darker than 

 in C. floridana, somewhat bluish-gray ; the under tail-coverts bluish but not contrasted ; on 

 the breast the blue and gray shading into each other, the gular and pectoral streal?s whitish 

 and well-defined, the superciliary line definite white, but no hoary on forehead ; bill slenderer. 

 (J 9 , adult : General color blue, rich and pure on the wings, tail, rump, crown, back and sides 

 of neck, and on the breast surrounding the streaky white area. Middle of back and scapulars 

 dark gray much tinged with blue, shading insensibly into the surrounding blue. Upper and 

 under tail-coverts blue. Under parts from the breast gray, with blue tinge (in californica 

 nearly white). Chin, throat, and breast with a series of whitish blue-edged streaks, enclosed 

 in surrounding blue. Lores, orbits, and auriculars dusky. A series of sharp white^ streaks 

 over and behind eye. Wings and tail blue ; the inner webs of most of the quills, and' the tail 

 viewed from below, dusky. The inner secondaries and tail-feathers, closely examined, show 

 obsolete barring, like that which becomes pronounced in C)/anodtta, but the traces are faint, 

 and the feathers maybe properly' called plain. Iris brown ; bill and feet black. Length of ^, 

 about 12.00: extent 1G.50; wing 5.00; tail 6.00; bill 1.12; tarsus 1.50; middle toe and claw 

 1.33. 9 smaller: average 11.25 ; extent 15.50, etc. Young : Wings and tail as in the adult; 

 upper parts mostly gray : under parts grayish-white, with little or no blue on the breast, the 

 pectoral streaks undefined, as are those over the eye. Rocky Mt. region, from Wyoming and 

 Idaho southward. Habits, nest and eggs as in other species. The eggs in this genus usually 

 dificr from those of Cyanocitta, by more greenish ground color and bolder marking, especially 



