The Oologist. 



VOL. XVIII. NO. 11. ALBION. N. Y., NOVEMBER, 1901. Whole No. 182 



The Oologist. 



A Monthly Publication Devoted to 



OOLOGY, ORNITHOLOGY AND 

 TAXIDERMY. 



FRANK H. LATTIN, Editor and Publisher, 

 ALBION, N. Y. 



Correspondence and Items of Interest to the 

 student of Birds, their Nests and Eggs, solicited 

 from all. 



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ENTERED AT P. O. , ALBION, N. Y. AS SECOND-CLASS MATTER. 



The Spotted Owl. 



[Syrnium occidentals.) 

 By Harry H. Dunn, Fullerton, Cal. 



Of this owl, probably the rarest 

 North American species of its genus, 

 very little appears to be known. At 



least, when, a year or two aj?i^, I at- 

 tempted to gather together a little in- 

 formation on the genus Syrnium, I 

 met with very mea;?er results concern- 

 ing this particular bird Of its occur- 

 rence in Southern California I was then 

 quite well assured as I had seen 

 feathers, which I supposed belonged 

 to this species, on the ground under 

 trees which were evidently the nightly 

 "hunting boxes" of some owl. But it 

 was not until this season that I became 

 thoroughly acquainted with this large, 

 dark colored bird in its summer home 

 and as I h.:ve tak«n three sets of two, 

 three and fouv eggs respectively, I feel 

 warrNDted in inflicting myself upon 

 suih readers as I may have with a short 

 description of bird and nesting habits. 

 The country round about my home, 

 here on the north western border of 

 Orange cour.iy, is extremely hilly and 

 given over to small and precipitous 

 cliffs The hills are not what would in 

 the east or middle west be called "well 

 wooded," but in some of the more 

 protected canyons a heavy growth of 

 oak and sycamore with now and then a 

 cottonwocd may be found. On March 

 26th of the present yesr, I was making 

 my way up one of the larger of these 

 canyons kweping a sharp lookout for 

 Western Red tails and Pacific Horned 

 Owls, whch the la ter frequently occu- 

 py old Jnawk'd nests, when my atten- 

 tion was drawn to an old oak stump 

 some fifty yards up one of the sides of 

 the canyon, by the actions of a pair of 

 Desert Sparrow Hawks. I was morally 

 cert=>in that the little Hawks were not 

 nesting at so early a date, but I had 

 just taken two sets of Western Red- 

 tails, each consisting of four eggs, so I 

 was ready for any old chance that hap- 

 pened to come along. I clambered up 



