846. 
335. 
847. 
794 SYSTEMATIC SYNOPSIS. — PYGOPODES. 
claw, all about 3.00; gape of bill 3.60; i. at base 0.50. Western U. S., common. 
As here described, the bird is given in its purest character; but it grades in size directly into 
the next, and some of the larger individuals have a mostly yellow and somewhat recurved bill, 
with white lores. 
E, o, clark'i. (To J. H. Clark.) Cuarx’s Gress. Bill about as long as head, shorter than 
tarsus, slightly recurved, extremely slender and acute ; culmen a little concave; under outline 
almost one unbroken curve from base to tip. Adult in breeding plunage: Under mandible, 
and tip and cutting edges of the upper, chrome-yellow, in marked contrast to black of culmen. 
Loral bare strip leaden-blue. Crown, occiput, and hind-neck deep grayish-black; almost 
pure black on the hind-head, fading gradually along the neck into the lighter blackish-gray 
of the upper parts generally. Lores broadly pure white, as are the entire under parts, with 
a sharp line of demarcation along the sides of the head and neck. A decided occipital crest, 
the feathers about an inch long and quite filiform, but not colored apart from the general 
coloration. No decided ruffs —no colored ruffs at all; but the white feathers of the sides 
of the head behind and across the throat are longer and fuller than elsewhere — about as in 
griseigena. Wings and general coloration (except the white lores) exactly as in occidentalis. 
Winter dress not materially different. Dimensions: length about 22.00 inches; extent 28.50; 
wing 7.00; bill along culmen 2.30; along gape 2.75; height at nostrils 0.40; tarsus and 
middle toe with claw, each about 2.75. Thence grading up to occidentalis. With only 
extremes before us of the two varieties, one might well consider them distinct species; but 
other specimens show the intergradation ; we frequently find specimens as small as typical 
clarki, and with equally slender bill, yet with the color of the bill wholly olivaceous and the 
lores ashy, as in typical occidentalis. Western U. S. 
PODI/CIPES. (Lat. podex, gen. podicis, the rump; pes, foot.) GREBES. Bill moderately 
stout, usually more or less compressed, equalling or shorter than the head or tarsus. Tarsus 
obviously shorter than the middle toe and claw. Outer lateral toe a little longer than the 
middle. Head in the breeding season with lengthened colored crests or ruffs, or both. 
Nore. — Believing P. cristatus may have been hastily eliminated from our fauna, I analyze and describe it 
with the rest, without number assigned. 
Analysis of Species (adults). 
Large: length over 15 inches. Bill more or less nearly equalling the head or tarsus in length. 
Crests, and especially ruffs, long and conspicuous. Neck without red or gray in front; under parts 
pure silky-white. Tarsus averaging equal to the middle toe without itsclaw . . . . . cristatus 
Crests moderate; ruffs inconspicuous. Neck with red or gray in front; under parts watered with 
dusky (sometimes but slightly). Tarsus averaging less than the middle toe and claw . . holbelli 847 
Small: length under 15 inches. Bill much shorter than head; little over half the tarsus. 
Bill compressed, higher than broad at the nostrils. Crests and rufts very conspicuous ; neck red in 
front . vt aged ONDA SIR er Mee etree, Peel the? Sh faiietec: fe. cel.. Se eheehe peed - cornutus 848 
Bill depressed, broader than high at the nostrils. Crests in form of auricular tufts; neck black in 
ATONE ces ols Wo. SeMOUUeeMuciers nce eic(er t= 5) cer os: [/om soy \%p) citen MOCUMULU SHEL Om ORMGCILG7. 07 MECTIS mm 
P. crista/tus. (Lat. cristatus, crested.) CRESTED GREBE. Adult, breeding plumage: Crown and long 
occipital crests glossy black; end of ruff the same, the rest reddish-brown, fading into silky-white of throat and 
sides of head. Neck behind and upper parts dark brown, the feathers with gray margins. Primaries chocolate- 
brown, with black shafts, the tips of the inner ones white, as are all the secondaries and tertiaries, excepting a 
little of the outer webs of the former; greater wing-coverts white on inner webs. Under parts pure silky white, 
without a trace of dusky mottling, the sides of the neck and body tinged with reddish, and on the flanks mixed 
with dusky, where the feathers have dark shaft-lines, Length about 24.00; extent 33.00; wing 7.00; bill 2.00, 
the gape 2.70; tarsus 2.50. Europe, etc. N. Am. ? 
P. griseige/na holbeelli. (Low Lat. griseus, gray ; gena, cheeks. ToC. Holbdéll.) AMERICAN 
RED-NECKED GREBE. Adult, breeding plumage: Crests short, and ruffs scarcely apparent. 
Iris carmine. Bill black, the tomia of upper mandible at base and most of lower mandible 
yellowish. Crown and occiput glossy greenish-black ; back of neck the same, less intense, 
and upper parts generally the same, with grayish edgings of the feathers. Wing-coverts and 
