OCHTHODROMUS. 105 
doro (McGregor); Negros (Layard, Steere Exp., Bourns & Worcester, Keay) ; 
Palawan (Platen, Whitehead, Steere Exp., Bourns & Worcester, White); Sibay 
(McGregor & Worcester); Sibuyan (Bourns & Worcester); Siquijor (Steere 
Exp., Bourns & Worcester, Celestino); Sulu (Mearns); Ticao (McGregor). 
Northern Asia and Alaskan coasts of Bering Sea, south in winter to Australia 
and Polynesia. 
“Male and female in summer.—Forehead white, continued back over 
each eye as a broad supercilium and extending down the sides of neck; 
whole upper plumage black, each feather with large marginal yellow 
spots on both webs, the spots on the wing-coverts tending to white; 
primary-coverts and the greater series brown, tipped and margined with 
white ; primaries brown, the central portion of the shaft whitish ; second- 
aries brown tipped with whitish; tail blackish, irregularly barred with 
white; chin, throat, fore neck, breast, and abdomen black; vent and 
flanks black mottled with white; under tail-coverts white; axillars smoky 
brown with white tips. 
“Male and female in winter—Upper plumage black, the feathers mar- 
gined with yellow; wing-coverts margined with dull white; quills and 
tail much as in summer; forehead and sides of head fulvous, the latter 
part streaked with brown; chin and upper throat fulvous-white; lower 
throat, fore neck, and feathers under cheeks and ear-coverts rather bright 
fulvous with minute streaks of brown; breast grayish, the feathers 
broadly margined with fulvous; remainder of lower plumage pale buffy 
white; sides of body more or less marked and fringed with fulvous; 
axillars smoky brown, tipped with white as in summer. ~ Bill dark brown; 
iris dark hazel-brown; legs plumbeous; claws horn-color. Length, 254; 
tail, 63; wing, 160; tarsus, 46; bill from gape, 28. The sexes are of 
about the same size. 
“The golden plover frequents waste ground, grassy plains, and wet 
paddy-fields, and also the edges of rivers, and is generally met with in 
flocks of considerable size. It breeds in China, and also it is said in some 
parts of India, laying four eggs in a hollow lined with a few blades of 
grass. The eggs are yellowish blotched with blackish sepia.” (Oates.) 
The Eastern golden plover is found in the Philippines on migration 
and is then usually in its gray winter dress but specimens have been 
taken with numbers of black feathers from the summer plumage. 
Genus OCHTHODROMUS Reichenbach, 1852. 
This genus should be united to Agialitis from which its members 
differ only in being a little larger. 
Species. 
a. Axillars and under wing-coverts white; wing about 140 mm. 
bo barcver-sculmen more than 2S) mM geoffroyi (p. 106) 
6*. Smaller; culmen less than 20 mm......0020o0.....seeeeeeeeeeeeeeee mongolus (p. 107) 
a, Axillars and under wing-coverts smoky brown; wing about 165 mm. 
veredus (p. 108) 
