LIFE-HISTORIES OF BIRDS 



it is vastly destructive to insects. Building close 

 to the barn-yard, it meets a ready supply of its 

 favorite articles of diet, which consists of the larvae 

 and images of Musca domestica, mature forms of 

 Tabanus lineola, T. cinctus, and the blood-sucking 

 Stomoxys, which delight in such places. In the 

 adjoining fields it destroys vast numbers of Pen- 

 thina pomonella, Anisopteryx vemata, Eujltchia 

 ribearia, and many of the Noctuidce and Tortricida 

 among lepidoptera; besides the young of (Edipoda 

 sulphured and CE. nebulosa, for which it affects a 

 peculiar fondness. 



Nidification commences during the last week 

 of May or the beginning of v June. Both birds 

 assist each other in constructing a nest; the prin- 

 cipal part of the labor depends upon the male 

 under the supervision of his partner. It has been 

 affirmed that in large colonies it is a common 

 occurrence to find several females engaged in 

 incubation upon the same nest. We have never 

 observed a similar circumstance, but do not doubt 

 its authenticity. The mutual good-will which 

 prevails in a colony would lead us to suspect the 

 occasional existence of such a state of affairs. 



The nest is hemispherical in shape, with a small 

 opening at the side just large enough to admit 

 the passage of the female. The retort-like figure, 

 characteristic of the primitive form of structure, 

 has never been observed by us. The exterior of 

 the nest is composed of divers kinds of earth, pro- 

 cured from puddles and low shallow streams. 



