

NE8T8 AND 





Tbe eggs are said to range from two to six in number, dull white in color, rounded- 

 oval In shape, and average in their long diameter 1.53 and in their short diameter 

 1.26. A set of five eggs is in Mr. C. W. Crandall's collection. They were collected by 

 Mr. Edward Arnold at Fishing Lakes, Assiniboia, British America, May 26, 1895. 

 Tbe nest was in a maple tree, fifteen feet from the ground; it was composed of large 

 and small sticks, lined with grass, moss, rabbit-fur and rubbish. While taking 

 these eggs the parent bird proved to be very pugnacious. The eggs measure as fol- 

 lows: 1.59x1.23. 1.54x1.24, 1.58x1.24, 1.53x1.25, 1.58x1.25. 



378. BURROWING OWL. N/>rof///o nnnrularia hyimytni (Bonap.) Geog. 

 Dist. Western United States, from the Great Plains to the Pacific, south to Guate- 

 mala. Accidental In New England. 



The Burrowing Owl, made famous by popular stories of its living in burrows 

 and holes of the ground with rattlesnakes, gophers and prairie dogs, inhabits the 



UUKKOWING OWL (From BrehmV 



8 regions of Western North America, from the plains to the Pacific. It is 

 found In all suitable places in Kansas, Colorado, Utah, Nevada, Nebraska, India* 

 Territory, Wyoming, Dakota, Montana, New Mexico, Arizona, Washington, Oregom 

 and California. They are usually abundant, and congregate in large com- 

 unitien. breeding in deserted burrows of quadrupeds, such as the prairie dog, 

 toodger or jropher. and there is no truth in the statements made by travelers that the 



