TERNS. 83 



chusetts to the arctic regions, and wintering southward to Virginia and Cali- 

 fornia" (A. O. U.). 



Long Island, rare in summer. 



Eggs^ three to four, not distinguishable with certainty from those of the 

 preceding, 1'62 x 1-15. 



Comparing the notes of this bird with those of the Common Tern, 

 Mr. Brewster writes : •' Their notes are similar, but several of them 

 can be distinguished. The usual cry of S. macrura [= paradiscea] cor- 

 responds to the tearr of S. hiruiido, but is shriller, ending in a rising 

 inflection, and sounding very like the squeal of a pig. The bird also 

 has a short, harsh note similar to that of Forster's Tern. At any dis- 

 tance within fair gun-range I could usually separate it from Wilson's 

 [= Common] Tern by its longer tail, and by the uniform and deeper 

 color of the bill. In flight and habits the two seemed to me identical " 

 (Birds Observed on the Gulf of St. Lawrence, Proc. Bost. Soc. Nat. 

 Hist., xxii, 1883, p. 402). 



72. Sterna dougalli Montag. Eoseate Tern. Ad. in summer. — 

 Top of head blaelv ; back and wings pearl-gray; outer web of outer pri- 

 maries and shaft part of the inner web slaty black (Fig. 61, 6) ; under parts 

 white, generally delicately tinted with pinkish; tvi\l pure white; bill black, 

 the base reddish ; feet red. Ad. in winter. — Similar to the above, but front 

 of the head white, more or less streaked or spotted with black ; under parts 

 pure white, hn.., first plumage. — " Pileum and nape pale buft'y grayish, finely 

 mottled or sprinkled with darker, and streaked, especially on the crown, with 

 dusky ; orbital and auricular regions dusky blackish ; remainder of the head, 

 extreme lower part of the nape, and entire lower parts white, the nape, and 

 sometimes the breast, finely mottled with bully gray ; back, scapulars, wing- 

 coverts, rump, upper tail-coverts, and tail pale peai-1-blue, the back and scapu- 

 lars overlaid with pale buff irregularly mottled with dusky, each feather with 

 a submarginal dusky V-shaped mark ; primary coverts and primaries dark 

 bluish-gray edged with paler, the inner webs of the latter broadly edged with 

 white; tail-feathers marked near their ends much like the longer scapulars, 

 their outer webs rather dark grayish ; bill brownish dusky ; feet dusky." L., 

 15-50 ; W., 9-50 ; T., 7-50 ; B., 1-50 (B., B., and R). 



Range. — Temperate and tropical regions ; in America apparently confined 

 to the Atlantic coast, breeding from Florida northward to Maine; compara- 

 tively rare north of southern New Jersey ; winters south of the United States. 



Long Island, uncommon but regular S. K., May through Sept. 



Eggs.^ three, not distinguishable with certainty from those of S.forsteri or 

 S. hirundo^ but averaging paler and less heavily marked, l'G5 x 1-20. 



This species is found associated with colonies of Common Terns, 

 apparently making its nest among theirs. It is a less excitable, wilder 

 bird than hirnndo, and its single harsh note, cack, may be distinctly 

 heard above the uproar of Common Terns, as it hovers somewhat in 



