12 



TYRANNID^ : FLYCATCHERS. 



SWALLOW-TAILED FLYCATCHER. 



MiLVULUS FORFICATUS {Gni.) Sw. 



Chars. Tail much longer than the body, deeply forficate. First 

 primary emarginate. Crown with a flame-colored patch. Gen- 

 eral color hoary-ash, paler or white below, with patches of 

 scarlet or bloody-red on the sides, and other parts of the body 

 tinged with the same or a paler shade of red. Tail black, several 

 of the feathers extensively white or rosy. Wing about 4.50; tail 

 nearly a foot long when fully developed. 



This very elegant and grace- 

 ful bird of the southwestern 

 United States, abundant and 

 conspicuous in Texas, is one of 

 the three Flycatchers which 

 have accidentally occurred in 

 New England, each in a sifigle 

 instance. A specimen was 

 taken by Mr. Carpenter, at 

 Wauregan, Conn., about April 

 27, 1876 (Purdie, Bull. Nutt. 

 Club, ii, 1877, p. 21 ; Merriam, 

 B. Conn., 1877, p. 50). An- 

 other equally exceptional case 

 is that recorded by Dr. C. C. 

 Abbott (Am. Nat., vi, 1872, p. 

 367), a specimen having been 

 secured at Trenton, N. J., 

 April 15, 1872. Drs. Coues 

 and Prentiss include the spe- 

 cies in their list of the birds 

 t7,^ -. . ,. r ■ • • of the District of Columbia ; 



Fig. I. — Emargination of primaries in ' 



Tyrannidce.A,Milviilus: forficatus;\)yx'l that rCCOrd being prOp- 



b, Tyrannus caroliiiensis ; 

 veriicalis ; d. T. vociferans. 



T. 



erly open to doubt, the above 



