7V//; AW: ration M.. 



IH>HU/./.\K. 





TlIK Ki i \MI \Viun:-- ii 

 uii the western j-ortiou >f th 



Hi. 



v. KIIII:I> 



found Kclush !v 



Tin YKI.I.OM in M.I n HI.A. Kiuitn ^ Xnnthocepkalu* icttroccpkalu*) is a large species, 

 Inhal'ltim: the reiri'-n from Illinois to Texas, and thence to the Pa< uc the pnnriem, 



Dr. Cooper states that the only song this )>ir.| lias consists of a few hoarse . lm. klm M..I. , 

 an.l coniiculsqueakingH, uttered as if it were a great effort to make any noittu at all Its voice 

 is regarded as the harshest of any known l.inl. It is very abundant in California. It walks on 

 th- cronnd much in the same steady manner of the Cow Binl. 



l'> " "f the American birds ore better known than the RICE TBOOPIAI.. which is familiar 

 over the greater part of that continent 



No American loologiM ..mit* a notice of the Rice Troopial, and there are few writers 

 on country life who do not mention this little 

 bin! un.I-r one of the many names by which it 

 is known. In some parts of the States it is called 

 th- KICK HIKII. in another the Un.n Hum. in 



'M >t In i id.- I; ; UKKH !' -. : i .... -A hil< it* 



more familiar title, by which it is called through- 

 out the greater jmrt of Am.-ii.a, is BOBOLINK, or 

 Bon Li .\K m. It also occasionally visits Jamaica, 

 where it gets very fat, and is in consequence called 

 the BI-TLEB BIRD. Its title of Rice Troopial is 

 earned by the depredations which it annually 

 makes upon the rice crops, though its food is by 

 no means restricted to that seed, but consists in a 

 very large degree of insects, grubs, and various 

 wild grasses. 



Like the preceding (060168, it is a migratory 

 binl, residing during the winter months in the 

 sou them parts of America ami the \\'.-t Indian 

 Islands, and passim; in vast Hocks northwards at 

 the commencement of the spring. rVw birds June 

 so extensive a range as the Rice Troopial, for it 

 is equally able to exist in the warm climates of 

 tropical America and the adjacent islands, and 

 in the northerly regions of the shores of the St. 

 Lawrence. 



According to Wilson, their course of migra- 

 tion is as follows: "In the month of April, or 

 very early in May. the Rice Buntings, male and 

 female, arrive within the southern boundaries 

 of the United States, and are seen around the 

 town of Savannah, in Georgia, about the fourth 



of May, sometimes in separate parties of moles and females, but more generally promiscuously. 

 They remain there but a short time, and atx>ut the twelfth of May make their appearance 

 in the lower part of Pennsylvania as they <li<l in Savannah. While here, the males are 

 extremely gay and full of song, frequenting meadows, newly ploughed fields, sides of creeks, 

 rivers, and watery places, feeding on mayflies and caterpillar-, of which t hey destroy great 

 quantities. ( n their passage, however, through Virginia at this season, they do great damage 

 to the early wheat and barley while in its milky state. About the 20th of May. they dis- 

 appear on their way to the north. Nearly at the same time they arrive in the State of 

 New York, spread over the whole New England States, as far as the river St. Lawrence, from 

 Lake Ontario to the sea, in all of which places, north of Pennsylvania, they remain during the 

 summer, building and rearing their young." 



V- 



TBOOPIAL, OB BOM>UNE.-JMb4.*r 



