140 



PR^COCIAL GRALLAT( )UES — LIMICOL^. 



adult) : Under parts dull ashy, spotted with brownish on the neck and breast, frequently more 

 or less mixed with black ; many spots of the upper parts dull ashy white ; other spots, especially 

 on the rump, golden yellow. 



Total length, about 9.50 inches ; wing, 7.00 ; tail, 2.50 ; culmen, .92 ; tarsus, 1.70 ; middle 



toe, .90. 



Specimens vary in the relative amount of the black and golden on the upper parts, in the 

 width of the white on the forehead, and other details of coloration. All the specimens in summer 



plumage from Alaska, including St. Miidiael's, Popoff Island, Kadiak, and Sitka, are apparently 

 referable to the American form ; at least we cannot distinguish them from other North Ameri- 

 can examples in the same plumage, while their measurements are decidedly those of rfiwimiiViis. 

 Twenty-six specimens in all ha\e l)een examined, these representing almost as many localities, 

 from the Arctic coast to Costa Rica. Careful measurements of this series afford the follow- 

 ing results: — Eleven specimens in summer plumarje : Wing. 6.80-7.35, average, 7.11; culmen 

 .85-1.00, average, .91 ; tarsus, 1.60-1.85, average, 1.73; middle toe, .85-1.05, average, .91. Six 

 adults in chanc/imj plumage ; Wing, 6.90-7.30, average, 7.12 ; culmen, .90-1.00, average, .96 ; 

 tarsus, 1.65-1.82, avei-age, 1.70 ; middle toe, .80-95, average, .90. Seven specimens in ■winter 

 plmnaf/e (inosthj young) : Wing, 6.80-7.20, average, 7.03 ; cuhnen, .80-1.00, average, .91 ; tar.sus, 

 1.55-1.75, average, 1.6C ; middle toe, .85-.95, average, .87. Average of the irhole series: Wing, 

 7.09 ; culmen, .91 ; tarsus, 1.70 ; middle toe, .90. 



The Green, or Golden, Plover of Xorth America is, within the limits of the United 

 States, a migratory species exchisively, and is confined, to a large extent, in its flights, 

 to the vicinity of the coast. Straggling parties, in the fall, pass south through the 

 interior ; but these are chiefly birds in an immature plumage. Their migrations 

 in the spring begin, in the more soutliern States, early in March, and continue 

 through tliat and the following month. Tlieir movement at this season is more rapid 

 than in the fall, and they make few and short pauses, their fliglits being made more 

 frequently by interior routes. x\udubon, -when in New Orleans, March 16, 1821, wit- 

 nessed an extraordinary flight of these birds near the Lake of St. John. They piassed 

 in many thousands in a northeasterly direction. He estimated the number of Plovers 

 destroyed by the sportsmen on that day at forty-eight thousand. These flights took 

 place only just after there had been several very warm days, followed by a strong 

 northeast wind. The birds were not generally in good condition. 



The late Dr. Lincecum, of Washington Co., Texas, states in his manitscript notes 

 that all through April tlie Golden Plover is passing northward tliroughoitt Texas. Only 

 very few stop on the prairie and remain all summer, and these do not breed there. 

 They do not, when they are passing north, travel in groups, but fly widely scattered, 

 chirping as they go, and seeming to try to keep in hearing of each other. They 

 appear to travel as much by night as during the day, since their peculiar call, 



