ANATIN.E — THE DUCKS — .ETIIYIA. 



37 



between that of JE. americana and JE. vallisneria ; its color is also different, being black, crossed 

 by a band of pale bine, instead of pale blue w ith tin- end black ; the entire abdomen is undulated 

 with gray, like the sides and flanks, only more delicately, while the back, scapulars, and sides are 

 much whiter than in AL americana. The rich chestnut-red of the neck is destitute of the metallic 

 reddish-purple gloss, while it involves the en- 

 tire neck, even tinging the anterior part of the 



back, instead of being confined to about the ...-^'-- 



upper half of the neck ; the wing-coverts are 

 also much lighter colored, and, in most speci- 

 mens, very distinctly veriniculated with white, 

 instead of nearly plain slaty gray. In general ^jL, 

 size the European species is decidedly infe- 

 rior ; the tarsus is considerably shorter, while 

 the middle toe is decidedly longer. 



The female of the Red-head resembles that 

 of the Ring-neck, or Ring-billed Black-head 

 (Fuliz collaris), so closely as to be distin- 

 guished with difficulty, except on direct com- 

 parison. The latter has all the colors darker, 

 however, the fore part of the head and the 

 throat more decidedly white, and the bill much 

 shorter and broader. The different propor- 

 tions, however, afford the surest means of dis- 

 tinguishing them, the two species comparing 

 about as follows : — Female. 



iE. americana. Wing, 8.50 inches ; culmen, 1.90; greatest width of bill, .85, least width, 



.75 ; tarsus, 1.60 ; middle toe, 2.30. 

 F. collaris. Wing, 7.50 inches ; culmen, 1.80 ; greatest width of bill, .85, least width, .65 ; 



tarsus, 1.35; middle toe, 2.00. 



The Red-head Duck has a distribution more or less general throughout North 

 America, breeding in high northern latitudes down to about 44°, and frequenting in 

 the winter the southern portions of the continent as far as Mexico. It is found both 

 on the Atlantic and the Pacific coasts. 



It was met with on the western coast id' Mexico, near Mazatlan, by Colonel Gray- 

 son, and in Northeastern Mexico and Southern Texas by Mr. Dresser. It is given as 

 occurring on the Pacific coast at Vancouver Island by Mr. E. Browne. On the coast 

 of California, according to Dr. Cooper, the Red-head is not so common as the Canvas- 

 back, but it has been obtained from San Francisco to San Diego, and throughout the 

 interior in the -winter. Dr. Heermann believes that some of these Ducks breed in 

 the marshes of the Sacramento Valley; and he mentions obtaining several females 

 there in June with their breasts denuded of feathers, as is usually the case with Ducks 

 when sitting on their eggs. Mr. J. A. Allen found this species in great abundance 

 in the valley of Great Stilt Lake, Utah. 



Richardson states that this species breeds in all parts of the Fur Countries, from 

 the fiftieth parallel to their most northern limits. Mr. Boardman informs me that 

 in the summer of 1871 he found a pair of Red-heads which were evidently breeding 

 in the vicinity of Calais, Me. This statement, coupled with that of Dr. Heermann, 

 goes to show that this species, on both the eastern and the western shores, breeds 

 much farther south than the limit assigned by Dr. Richardson. Its nest and eggs 

 were afterward, in the summer of 1874, actually found by Mr. William Bryant about 

 thirty miles north of Calais. The presence of this bird about Calais had been pre- 



