The Common Pintail 

 (Dalifa Caudacuta). 



THE Common Pintail (Dalifa caiidacuta) or Sea- 

 Pheasant, is a periodical visitant, arriving late in 

 autumn, and occurring chiefly during winter, both 

 in inland lakes and fens of the south and on the coasts of 

 England and Scotland. In Scotland, however, it is by 

 no means frequent, and it is nearly certain, as an old 

 writer correctly observes, that the long-tailed duck has 

 been mistaken for it on the Western Island and northern 

 coasts, where its presence has been regarded as more 

 frequent. 



In the male the colours are very decidedly marked : the 

 head, throat, and forepart of the upper neck are umber- 

 brown ; on the crown, with the feathers having pale tips, 

 and on the hind head and sides of the head and auriculars, 

 having a bright purple gloss ; the hind head shades gradu- 

 ally into deep greenish black, forming a dark nuchal 

 stripe joining with the grey plumage of the upper parts; 

 the fore part of the neck, breast, and belly are white, that 

 colour running up in a narrow lateral stripe between the 

 umber-brown throat and dark nape; on the belly and sides 

 the feathers are minutely freckled with grey ; the vent and 

 upper tail-covers black ; the lateral covers edged with 

 white. On the upper surface the lower part of the neck, 

 back, and part of the scapulars are marked with zigzag- 

 bars of black and yellowish-white, giving a grey tone to 

 the whole. 



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