General Notes. 61 



stands in -wet weather. He says there were two (probably a pair) ; that 

 their ih^ht was low, and not over a rod at a time ; but they ran, dodged, 

 skulked, and hid so quickly, that in catching the one he lost sight of the 

 other, and although the grass was short he was unable to find it again. 

 There were no signs of enlargement of the ovaries, and it being so late in 

 the season I think she must have nested, and, from her actions, had young 

 near by. I have mounted the bird, a beautiful specimen, and have it in my 

 collection. Length, 6.00 inches; stretch of wings, 10.15; wing, 3.00 ; 

 tail, 1.35 ; tarsus, .80 ; bill, .50. Iris red ; bill black ; legs and feet olive- 

 brown ; bottoms of feet grayish-white ; claws brown. — N. S. Goss, 

 Neosho Falls, Kan, 



Breedixg of Fuligula collaris in Southeastern Minnesota, 

 AND A Description of its Nest and Eggs. — On the 1st of June, 

 1876, I took a nest and nine eggs of the King-necked Duck, about eight 

 miles fi-om Minneapolis, Hennepin Co., Minn. The nest was found on 

 May 27, with its full complement of eggs, but on account of the absence of 

 the parent it had to be left for further identification. It was not until the 

 third visit that the bird was found on the nest, when she was shot as she flew 

 off, and proved to be the female King-neck. The skin is now in my col- 

 lection. This species is always sparingly represented in this locality dur- 

 ing the summer months, and I have no doubt breeds here quite regularly. 

 As I can find no account of the nest and eggs 1 give a description of these 

 before me. The situation chosen for the nest was in a narrow strip of 

 marsh bordering a large shallow pond or slough. About half-way between 

 the shore and the edge of the open water was a mass of sunken debris, 

 probably the remnants of an old muskrat house, which reached nearly or 

 quite to the surface of the water, here about eight inches deep. On this 

 foundation was the nest, a rather compact, bulky structure, built mainly of 

 fine grass with a little moss intermingled. Outside, the grass is long and 

 circularly disposed, while the bottom, inside, is composed of short broken 

 pieces, and the inside rim of fine grass bent and loosely tangled together 

 with considerable down among it. Measurements were not taken before 

 removing the nest, but in its present condition the walls and base are two 

 and a half inches thick, the diameter inside six inches, and the depth of 

 the cavity three inches. The clutch was nine eggs, which contained small 

 embryos. The eggs are perfectly smooth, and of a light greenish-white color, 

 wholly unmarked. The measurements of seven of them are as follows : 

 2.19X1.58; 2.19X1.60; 2.23X1.58; 2.27X1.60; 2.23X1.62; 2.24 

 X1.58; 2.25X1.62. The general average is 2.23 X 1.60. —Thos. S. 

 Koberts, Minneapolis, Minn. 



Notes on the Breeding Habits of some of the Water- Birds 

 OP St. Clair Flats, Michigan. — The past season I had the good 

 fortune to find two nests of the Red-head Duck (Aythya americana), con- 



