13. 
40. 
41. 
264 SYSTEMATIC SYNOPSIS. —PASSERES — OSCINES. 
long, soft, and loose, without bright colors or well-marked changes according to sex, age, or 
season (excepting Auriparus). 
There may be about seventy-five good species of the Parine, thus restricted, most of 
them falling in the genus Parus, or in its "dike neighborhood. With few exceptions 
they are birds of the northern hemisphere, abounding in Europe, Asia, and North America. 
The larger proportion of the genera and species inhabit the Old World. All those of the New 
W orld oeeur within our limits. 
Analysis of Genera. 
Crested. 
Wings and tail rounded, of about equal lengths. Noredoryellow. ........ Lophophanes 13 
Not crested. 
Wings and tail rounded, of about equal lengths. Noredoryellow ........ .. 4Parus 14 
Wings rounded, shorter than the graduated tail. Noredoryellow ........ Psaltriparus 15 
Wings pointed, longer than the even tail. Head yellow: bend ofwingred . ..... Auriparus 16 
LOPHO/PHANES. (Gr. Aodos, lophos, a crest; aivw, phaino, I appear.) CRESTED T1T- 
MICE. Head crested. Wings and tail rounded, of about equal lengths, and about as long as 
the body. Bill conoid-compressed, with upper and under outlines both convex. No yellow on 
head nor red on wing. Plumage lax, much the same in both sexes at all ages and seasons. 
Average size of the species at a maximum for Paring. Nests excavated in trees; eggs spotted. 
Analysis of Species. 
Frontlet black; sides washed withrusty. Eastern... ...2.2.2...~-..... =... bicolor 40 
Crest like rest of upper parts ; no rusty on sides. Southwestern .......... . . mornatus 41 
Crest entirely black; rusty onsides. Texan. . .......2. 2.4.2.4... + « . atrocristatus 42 
Head with several black stripes ; no rusty on sides. Southwestern... . « ets « « « wWollwebert 43 
L. bicolor. (Lat. bis, twice; color, color. Fig. 136.) Turrep Tirmousr. ¢ 9, adult: 
Entire upper parts ashy, the back usually with a slight 
olivaceous shade, the wings and tail rather purer and darker 
plumbeous, the latter sometimes showing obsolete transverse 
bars. Sides of the head and entire under parts dull whitish, 
washed with chestnut-brown on the sides. A black frontlet 
at the base of the crest. Bill plumbeous-blackish ; feet plum- 
beous. Length 6.00-6.50 inches; extent 9.75-10.75; wing 
and tail 3.00-3.25; bill 0.40; tarsus 0.80; middle toe and 
claw 0.75. @ smaller than g. Young: The crest less devel- 
oped; little if any trace of the black frontlet; sides scarcely 
washed with rusty. Eastern U. S8., rather southerly ; scarcely 
N. to New England; resident, abundant in woodland and 
‘ shrubbery. Nest in holes; eggs 6 or 8, 0.75 X 0.56, white, 
Fic. 136.— Tufted Titmouse, : ; 5 
nat. size. (Ad nat. del. E. C.) dotted with reddish-brown and lilae. 
L. inorna/tus. (Lat. in, as signifying negation, and ornatus, adorned ; orno, I ornament.) 
Puan Tirmouse. @ 9, adult: Entire upper parts dull leaden-gray, with a slight olive 
shade ; the wings and tail rather purer and darker. Below, dull ashy-whitish, without any 
rusty wash on the sides. No black on the head. Extreme forehead and sides of the head 
obscurely speckled with whitish. No decided markings anywhere. In size rather less than 
L. bicolor; length usually under 6.00 ; wing and tail under 3.00. Young quite like the adults, 
which closely resemble the young of L. bicolor; but in the latter there are traces at least of the 
reddish of the sides or black of the frontlet, or both ; the general coloration is purer, with more 
distinction between the upper and under parts, and the size is rather greater. The speckled 
appearance of the sides of the head and lores of LZ. inornatus is peculiar. Southwestern United 
States, abundant, resident. The typical form Californian ; a rather larger, stouter-billed form, 
lighter leaden-gray with scarcely any olive shade, from Utah, Arizona, ete., is L. 7. griseus, 
Ridgw., Pr. U. S. Nat. Mus., v., 1882, p. 344. 
