FALCONS, HAWKS, EAGLES, ETC. 201 



note of the Red-tail is a long-drawn " squealing " whistle, which to 

 my ear suggests the sound produced by escaping steam. 



" Of 502 stomachs examined, 54 contained poultry or game birds ; 

 51, other birds; 278, mice; 131, other mammals; 37, batrachians or 

 reptiles ; 47, insects ; 8, crawfish ; 1, centiped ; 13, offal ; and 89 were 

 empty " (Fisher). 



337a. B. b. kriderii Hoopes. Krider's Hawk. — Similar to Buteo 

 iorealis, but with much more white in the plumage ; the head sometimes 

 almost entirely white ; the under parts only lightly streaked, and with the 

 band on tlie belly sometimes obsolete ; the tail in the ad. pale rufous, gen- 

 erally without a terminal black band ; in the im., pale rufous, or white washed 

 with rufous, and with numerous blackish bars. 6 W., 15'00 ; T., 9'50. 



^art^e.—" Great plains of the United States, from Minnesota to Texas; 

 east irregularly or casually to Iowa and northern Illinois " (Bendire). 



337d. B* b. harlani (Aud.). Harlan's Hawk. Ad. — Upper parts 

 dark sooty fuscous, the bases of the feathers more or less barred with gray- 

 ish ; tail closely mottled with black, fuscous, rufous, and whitish ; under parts 

 varying from white more or less spotted across the belly to sooty fuscous. 

 I7n. — Similar, but the tail barred with blackish, grayish, rufous, or whitish, 

 tipped with white. 6 L., about 19*00; VV., 15-50; T., 8-25. $ L., about 21.00- 

 W., 17-00; T., 9-25. 



Range.— ^^^ Gulf States and lower Mississippi Valley ; north (casually) to 

 Kansas, Iowa, Illinois, and Pennsylvania; east to Georgia and Florida" (Ben- 

 dire). 



Br. William L. Ralph, in Captain Bendire's Life Histories of North 

 American Birds (p. 218), reports this species as not uncommon during 

 the winter in St. John's and Putnam Counties, Florida. He writes : 

 '' They are exactly like the Red-tailed Hawks except in color, and their 

 call-note is the same, only being longer drawn out. The call of the 

 latter bird, as already stated, sounds like the squealing of a pig, or 

 * kee-ee-e,^ and that of Harlan's Hawk like ' kee-ee-ee-e-e-ee.' ' 



The Western Eedtail {S37h. B. h. calurns) has been recorded from Illi- 

 nois, and one specimen of the European Buzzard {8S6. Bvteo buteo) is said to 

 have been taken in Michigan. 



339. Buteo lineatus ( Gmel.). Eed-shouldered Hawk ; Hen Hawk ; 

 Chicken Hawk. Ad. — Upper parts dark grayish fuscous-brown, more or less 

 odeed with rufous, ochraceous - buff, and whitish; four outer primaries 

 "notched," all barred with black and white; lesser wing-coverts rt/fous, 

 forming a conspicuous "shoulder" patch; tall black or fuscous, with four or 

 five white cross-bars and a white tip ; throat streaked with blackish ; rest of 

 under parts rufous or ochraceous- buff, everywhere barred with white or 

 whitish. /?/i.— Upper parts much as in the adult; basal part of the primaries 

 mostly ochraceous-buf, fading to whitish on the inner web, with broken bars 

 of fuscous; lesser wing-coverts conspicuously mara-ined with rufous or rufous- 

 chestnut: tail dark grayish brown, indistinctly barred with fuscous, and on 



