IvMi'oirr OF STATK (KOUM;IST. 



.MirA TKTRAOMN.K. (iKorsK. 

 ir,. &BNUS P.ONASA STKPHKNS. 



121. (o<>0). Bonasa umbellus (LINN.). 



Buffed Grouse. 



llt>;nl of Huffed Gmu^, natural size. 



. I dult Male. Variegated reddish or grayish-brown; the back, with 

 numerous oblong, pale, black-edged spots; neck-tufts, glossy-black; 

 below, whitish, barred with brown; tail, varying from gray to rufous, 

 with a broad subterminal black zone, and tipped with gray. Fe- 

 male. Similar, but neck-tufts very small. 



Length, 15.50-19.00; wing, 7.00-7.50; tail, 5.50-7.00. 



II'ANGE. Eastern United States west to Great Plains, from South 

 Carolina and Arkansas to Minnesota, Vermont and Ontario. 



Xi'sl. a hollow in ground, lined with leaves or grass, fiygs, 8-14; 

 milky-white to pinkish-bull', often with round spots of pale reddish- 

 brown or drab; 1.58 by 1.18. 



Uesident. l>reeds. The UuflVd (J rouse is found in varying abun- 

 dance throughout ihe Slate. It is a bird of the forest. Where there 

 is the most forest, oilier things being equal, are to be found the most 

 (J rouse. Some places, where the woods are permitted to remain, they 

 are common. The rougher, less fertile, and the wet, poorly-drained 

 portions of the State are where the most timber is to be found, and 

 there they are the most numerous. In the lower Whitewater Valley 

 they are still to be found in some numbers. 



The rougher hills covered, with dense woods and underbrush are 

 the places where they live. Mr. L. If. Havmond thinks they are 

 nowhere to be met with in such numbers as in northern Indiana, 

 northern Ohio, Michigan and Wisconsin. While they prefer the dense 

 covert, they are occasionally found in buckwheat stubble, in the 



