156 REVIEW OF AMERICAN BIRDS. [PART I. 
The description of this species, as given in the Birds of North 
America, was taken from a type specimen received from Mr. Audu- 
bon. A second skin, collected by Capt. Blakiston on the Forks of 
the Saskatchewan, differs in having the tertials nearly as long as 
the primaries (about one-tenth of an inch shorter). The hind claw, 
too, is considerably longer, measuring .53 of an inch, instead of .46. 
In other respects the specimens appear similar. A similar discre- 
pancy in length of hind claw is seen in Anthus ludovicianus, where 
it is sometimes considerably longer than the toe alone. 
| 
Smith- | Collec: | Sex When 
sonian, tor’s | and Locality. Collected Received from Collected by 
No. No. | Age. j 
1,884 | Fort Union, Dac, 1843. S. F. Baird. J. J. Audubon. 
16,766 | Saskatchewan. 300 Capt. Blakiston. ||“) Meiers 
(1,884.) Type specimen. 
+ 
ce. Nortrocorys, Baird. 
Notiocorys, Barpp. (See page 151 of present work.) 
Anthus rufus. 
?Alauda rufa, Gm. Syst. Nat. I, 1788, 798 (based on petite Alouette de 
Buenos Ayres, Burr. pl. enl. 738, 1). 
2 Anthus rufus, Burm. Syst. Uebersicht, III, 1856, 118 (Brazil). 
Anthus rufus, LaAwkENcE, Ann. N. Y. Lyc. 1861, 322 (Panama R. R.). 
' Hab. Isthmus Panama (and eastern South America ?). \ 
(277, Lawr. coll., %.) Outer four primaries very nearly equal and longest, 
the 5th mediate between 4th and 6th. Inner secondaries nearly equal to 
primaries. Hind toe and claw nearly equal to the tarsus; the claw rather 
longer than its digit, sharp, moderately curved; outstretched toes reaching 
the end of tail. 
Above dusky brown, the feathers edged laterally with pale fulvous ; most 
so on the hind neck, least on the middle of the back. Beneath soiled white, 
with a faint tinge of yellowish; perhaps very faintly fulvous on crissum and 
on breast. A pale line over the eye; ear coverts and sides of neck as de- 
scribed on the hind neé¢k; rest of cheeks slightly specked with dusky. 
Jugulum and sides of breast, and edge of wing on the inside, with shaft 
streaks of dusky, which at the ends widen into arrow-shaped spots. Wing 
feathers edged as described, the lst primary more gray, the secondaries more 
olivaceous. Outer tail feathers white, with a streak of dusky along the edge 
of inner web for basal half, the next similar, with the dusky streak extending 
nearly to the end of the inner web, and nearly as wide as the white portion. 
(Third feather wanting in the specimen.) Bill dusky above, pale below, be- 
coming darker to the tip; legs flesh couor, 
es ee 
