PRrNGlLLlDiE — THE FINCHES. 257 



and heard singing at Ball's Cross Roads, in Virginia, about two 

 miles nearer the District than the other locality. Besides the char- 

 acteristic note of see-icick, they have quite a song, which may fairly 

 be represented by the syllables sis-r-r-rit-srit-srit, with the accent on 

 the tu-st and last parts. This song is often uttered while the ba-d 

 takes a short flight upward; it then drops down again into the 

 tangled weeds and grasses, where it is almost impossible to follow 

 it." 



Ammodramus leconteii (Aud.) 



LECONTE'S SPAEEOW. 



Popular synonyms. Leeonte's Bunting; Yellow Sparruw (Manitoba). 

 Eniberiia leconteii Aud. B. Am. viii, 1843,338 pi. 488. 

 Coturniculus lecnnlii Bp. 1850.— Baihd, B. N. Am. 1858 481; Cat. N. Am. B. 1859. No. 31il.— 



CouES, Key, 1872.137; Cheek List. 1873, No. 164; 2d ed. 1882, No. 237.— B. N. W. 1874. 



135.— B. B. & R. Hist. N. Am. B. i, 1874, 552, pi. 25, llg. fi.-I'.IDGW. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881. 



No. 200. 



Hab. Eastern portion of the Great Plains of the United States, from Manitoba (in sum- 

 mer) to central Texas (in winter). In winter migrating through the prairie districts of 

 the Mississippi Valley to South Carolina, Alabama, and Florida. 



Sp. Chak. Bill much more slender than C,'. hensloici. First quill longest, the rest 

 diminished rapidly. Tail emarginate and rounded, with the feathers acute. Upper parts 

 light yellowish red, streaked with brownish black; the margins of the feathers and scapu- 

 lars pale yellowish white. Tail-feathers dusky, margined with light yellowish. Lower 

 parts, with the cheeks and abroad band over the eyes, fine buff. Medial line yellowish 

 anteriorly, nearly white behind. The buff extending to the femorals and along the sides, 

 streaked with brownish black. Throat, neck, and upper parts of the breast, without any 

 streaks, and plain bu(T. 



JdT(7( ;/iaZc (No. 65,815, U. !?. Nat. Mus.). Ground-color of the head white, tinged with 

 buff on the maxilhp.and with ash on the auriculars; crown with two broad black stripes, 

 sepjirated by a narrow medial one of whitish; nuchal fe.athers bright rufous, edged with 

 ashy white, and shafted with black; dor.sal feathers black, broadly edged exteriorly with 

 white, and interiorly narrowly skirted with rufous. Beneath entirely white, tinged on the 

 throat with buff, and streaked on the sides— from the breast to the flanks— with black. 

 Length. 5.00; extent, 7.10; wing, 2.10; tail, 2.00; eulmen. .42; tarsus, .08. (August 19; plumage 

 much worn and faded.) 



Adult female (No. (JS,814, U. S. Nat. Mus.). Resembling the male. but. being in less 

 abraded plumage, the colors more pronounced. The band is deep buff (lUst as in .-1 inmo- 

 droHiHs caHdac»/us), the auriculars and lores distinctly grayish white, and the medial 

 stripe of the crown ashy white, except the anterior third, which is buff. On the lower 

 parts, the whole lower side of the head, and the entire breast, sides, flanks, and tibi;e, are 

 deep buff, the sides sharply streaked wi h black. The abdomen anal region and crissum 

 are pure white, in marked contrast. Length, 5.00; extent. 7.00; wing. 2.00; tail, 2.10; eulmen, 

 .45; tarsus, .70. 



Young. Ground-color above dull buff, below white; the pattern of the old birds seen 

 in the markings, which, however, are pure black, all reddish and brown tints being absent 

 —except on the wings and tail, which are nearly as in the adult. 



In its unspotted breast, the rufous feathers of the hind-neck, the 

 absence of submalar stripes, and apparently in the markings of the 

 wings, it is most like C. passerinus. Although the middle tail-feathers 

 -17 



