32 U. S. p. R. R. EXP. AND SURVEYS — ROUTE TO CALIFORNIA. 



BUTEO INSIGNATUS, Cassin .—Brown Hawk. 



Buleo insignatus, Cassin's Birds of Texas and California, p. 102. — Ib. p. 198, pi. .31. — Ib. Gen. Rep. IX, 23. 



T first remarked this species at the crossing of Graysonville ferry on the San Joaquin river 

 and continued to meet with it occasionally, until we had crossed Kern river. Owing to the 

 lateness of the season, I was ahle to ascertain hut little regarding its propagation, the only 

 nests which were found having heen forsaken for some time previously by the young. These 

 nests, composed externally of coarse sticks and lined with roots, were built in the topmost 

 branches of oaks, which grow abundantly on the banks of the large water courses. This bird, 

 like the rest of its genus, appears sluggish in its habits, perching for hours in a quiescent state 

 on some tall tree and permitting the hunter to approach without any signs of fear. This 

 apparent stolidity, however, may be owing to the fact that it is seldom molested and has not 

 yet learned to mistrust a gun, as do the birds of prey in more settled portions of the country. 



BUTEO ELEGANS, Cassin.— "Western Eed-shouldered Hawk. 



£iUeo ekgans, Cassin, Pr. A. N. Sc. VII, 281.— Ib. Gen. Rep. IX, 28. 



Abundant, and extending from northern California to the edge of the Colorado desert. 

 BUTEO MONTANUS, N u 1 1 .—Western Red Tail. 



Buleo montanus, Nott. Man. I, 1841), 112. — Is. Cassin, Gen. Rep. IX, 26. 

 Abundant in northern California, and rare in no part of the country. I met with this bird 

 likewise in New Mexico and Texas. 



ARCHIBUTEO FEERUGINEUS, L i c h t .—The Western Rough-legged Buzzard. 



Butco ferrugintus. Light. Trans. Berlin Acad. 1838, p. 428. 



Archill uteo fcrrngineus, Cassin"s B. of Tex. and Cal. p. In9, pi. 26. — Ib. Gen. Rep. IX, 34. 



Archibutco regalis, Gray, Genera of Birds, vol. I, pi. 6. 



During a previous visit to California I found this species in the valley of the Sacramento, and 

 had considered it rare in that section of country ; but during the recent survey in the southern 

 part of the State I found it very abundant, having seen on one occasion in the mountains, about 

 sixty miles from San Diego, five or six of these birds at the same moment. It is there much 

 more numerous than the Buteo borealis. Large tracts of land in the southern portion of the 

 State being totally destitute of trees, this bird alights on the ground, or, taking a position on 

 some slightly elevated tuft of grass or stone, will sit patiently for hours watching for its prey. 

 Its food, on dissection, proved to consist of mice, ground squirrels, and other small animals. 

 In plumage it appears to vary as much as its closely allied species, Archihuteo sancli-johannis, 

 (Gmelin ;) and in a specimen shot by one of the men, but so badly mutilated that it could not 

 be prepared, the tail was strongly tinged with the red color peculiar to the Buteo borealis. I 

 several times noticed a bird sailing over the prairies, of about the same size as this species, but 

 entirely black and of heavy continuous flight. It was, I think, of this genus ; but never having 

 procured one, I am undecided whether it be the adult bird of the species under consideration 

 (the A. sancli-johannis) or a new bird to be added to this group. I discovered in 1851, on the 

 Cosumnes river, the eggs and nest of this bird. While climbing a tree to examine some 

 magpies' nests, the hawk in flying from her own betrayed her retreat. It was placed in the 



