BIRDS OF INDIANA. 559 



liirds found at Como Lake, Wyoming. He says: "The nests were in a 

 narrow strip of rushes growing in water eighteen inches deep, and 

 ahout one hundred and thirty feet from the shore. 

 I collected the eggs from two nests, five in each; and counted from 

 where I stood over twenty nests with from one to five eggs each. Quite 

 a number of others were completed, but without eggs, and still others 

 were building. The floating nests were made of old broken rushes, 

 weeds and debris from the bottom, and were partially filled in and 

 around the standing, growing rushes. There were no feathers or other 

 kind of lining. They were from five to ten inches in diameter; the 

 outei edge or rim was from two to three inches above the water. The 

 eggs in several touched the water, and were more or less stained, in 

 their wet beds. The color of the eggs when fresh was white, with a 

 slight bluish shade. The average measurements of the ten eggs waa 

 1.81 by 1.20 inches." The same careful observer notes that in leaving 

 their nests the birds would dive and come up quite a distance away out 

 in the open lake and, when returning to their nests, would dive out in 

 the lake and come up among the rushes. He says in no instance did 

 he see them swim to or from their nests, but adds, they may do so 

 when not disturbed. 



2. GKNUS PODILYMBUS LESSON. 

 a 1 . Wing 5.0 or less. P. podiceps (Linn.) 4 



*4. (6.) Podilymbus podiceps (LINN.) 



Pied-billed Grebe. 



Synonyms, WATER WITCH, DABCHICK, DIDAPPER, DIDIPPBR, DIPPER, HELL- 

 DIVER. 



Adult in Summer. Above, dusky grayish brown, top of the head 

 darker; sides of head lighter; inner webs of the secondaries tipped 

 with white; below, grayish white, everywhere spotted with dusky; 

 chin, throat and a spot at the base of the mandible, black; bill, white, 

 a black band around it at the middle. Adult in Winter and Imma- 

 ture. Similar, but lacking the black throat patch, and the distinctive 

 marks on the bill. Downy Young. Head and neck with black anl 

 white stripes. 



Length, 12.00-15.00; wing, 4.50-5.00. 



RANGE. America, from Argentine Republic and Chili to Hudson 

 Bay and Great Slave Lake. Breeds from Florida northward. Winters 

 from southern Missouri, southern Illinois and New Jersey southward. 



