FRINGILLIDZA!: FINCHES, BUNTINGS, SPARROWS, ETC. 591 
Analysis of Species. 
¢ rich blue, intense red and golden-green; @ greenish and yellow. Southern ...... . . ciris 292 
¢ purplish-blue, dusky and reddish. Q brown. Southwestern ........, versicolor 293 
¢ lazuli-blue and white, the breast brown; Q brown and whitish. Western ..... . . ame@na 294 
Priindico-Hines: Oubrowntay Masten) mash meen tmrie es eytae s Slise sa). oGe, Sie, a0 dase ea epleyentecm 2an 
92. P.ci/ris. (Gr. xeipis, keiris, name of a bird into which Seylla, daughter of Nisus, was trans- 
93. 
94. 
95. 
formed.) Parnrep Fincu. Painrep BunTING. NonpAREIL. Pope. @, adult: Crown and 
hind neck and sides of head and neck rich blue; back and scapulars beautiful golden-green ; 
eyelids, rump, and entire under parts intense vermilion-red; wings dusky, glossed with green 
and reddish ; tail dusky reddish. Bill dark horn-color; feet dark brown. Size of C. amaena; 
wing 2.75 ; tail 2.25, a little emarginate. 9: Above, plain yellowish-green, nearly uniform, this 
color glossing the dusky wings and tail; below, yellowish; bill brownish, pale below; thus 
quite different from the brown 9 2 of all the following species. Young ¢ at first like 9; 
acquiring the red and blue with every possible gradation between the colors of the two sexes. 
South Atlantic and Gulf States, abundant; up the coast to Carolina, and in the interior to 
Illinois; Texas and Mexico. An exquisite little creature of matchless hues, well nained the 
““incomparable”; a fair songster, and a favorite cage-bird in Louisiana. Nest in bushes, 
hedges and low trees; eggs pearly white, speckled with reddish and purplish browns. 
P. versi/color. (Lat. versicolor, various in color; verto, I turn; color, color.) PURPLE 
PAINTED FINCH. VARIED BUNTING. WESTERN NONPAREIL. PrusiIANo. , adult: Hind 
head, throat, and fore breast brownish-red or claret-color, the former sometimes scarlet ; hind 
neck and middle of back similar, but more obscured; fore-part of crown purplish-red ; rump and 
upper tail-coverts purplish-blue ; below, from the breast, and the wings and tail, dusky, tinged 
or glossed with purplish ; concealed white in feathers of side of rump; lores and cireumrostral 
feathers black. Bill horn-bluish, paler below, stouter than in the other species, with very 
convex culmen and concave cutting edge of upper mandible. Feet dark. The versicoloration 
is difficult to describe ; the general aspect is that of a purplish-dusky bird, redder or bluer here 
and there. Size of the others. Q plain brown above, whitey-brown below, like amena and 
cyanea; no whitish wing-bars; no black stripe on gonys ; concealed white on sides of rump ; 
bill stout. Lower California and Mexico, N. to U. 8. border, especially in the Rio Grande 
Valley, where common in some localities. (Accidental in Michigan.) 
P. ame’na, (Lat. amend, delightful, charming, dressy.) Lazuti PAINTED Fincu. 4, 
adult: Head and neck all around, entire upper parts, and lining of wings, rich azure or lapis~ 
lazuli blue, more or less obscured on the middle of the back; the lores black. Below, from the 
blue neck, chestnut-brown, changing to white on the belly and crissum. A firm white wing- 
bar across ends of the median coverts, and usually another weaker one across tips of greater 
coverts. Wings and tail dusky, glossed with blue. Bill and feet bluish-black. Length 5.25- 
5.50; extent 8.00-8.50; wing 2.75-3.00; tail 2.25-2.50; bill 0.37; tarsus 0.65. 9, adult: 
Above, flaxen-brown, nearly uniform, but with slightly darker centres of the feathers, and some- 
times a faint bluish gloss. Below, buffy or brownish-white, most colored on the breast, palest 
on throat and belly. Wings and tail fusecous, with faint bluish edgings usually, crossed with two 
decided brownish-white bars, — the chief distinction from 9 cyanea. 2, young: Like the 9 ; 
when changing, patched with brown and blue; when very young, ¢ 2 somewhat streaky, 
especially on under parts. Replacing P. cyanea from the Plains to the Pacific, common in 
suitable places ; habits, nest, and eggs the same. 
P. cya’nea. (Lat. cyanea, Gr. kvaveos, kwaneos, dark blue. Fig. 253.) Inpico PAINTED 
Fincu. Inpico-pirp. Adult ¢: Indigo-blue, intense and constant on the head, glancing 
greenish with different lights on other parts; wings and tail blackish, glossed with greenish- 
blue; feathers around base of bill black ; bill dark above, rather paler below, with a curious 
black stripe along the gonys. 92: Above, plain warm brown, below whitey-brown, obsoletely . 
streaky on the breast and sides; wing-coverts and inner quills pale-edged, but not whitish; 
