ARDEIDiE — THE HEl£ON8. 122* 



Hab. The whole of North and Middle America, excepting Arctic districts: north to 

 Hudson's Bay, "Fur Countries,' and Bitka; south to Columbia, Venezuela, and the 

 Galapagos; Bermudas, and throuKliouttlie West Indies. 



Sp. Chae. Adult: Length, about 42.00-50.00; extent, 72.00; weight, 6 to 8 pounds. 

 Forehead and central feathers of the crown pure white; sides of crown and whole of the 

 occiput, including' the long plumes, blue-black. Chin, throat, and malar region pure 

 white. Neck lavender-gray, fading gradually above into the white of cheeks and throat. 

 Foreneck with a nazTOw median series of black and ferruginous dashes mixed with white; 

 lower neck-plumes pale lavender-gray. Lateral jugular tufts uniform blue-black; breast 

 and abdomen b ack, almost uniform laterally, but the middle feathers with broad median 

 stripes of white. Under tail-coverts white, sometimes edged with rufous. Tibial leath- 

 ers deep chestnut-rufous, not growing conspicuously paler toward the body. Upper 

 parts fine slate-blue, the dorsal and scapular plumes paler, more pearl-gray— the lightness 

 of the tint proportionatt:' to the length of the plume; remiges black, the inner secondaries 

 growing gradually more slaty, so that the innermost are scarcely darker than the tertials. 

 Tail deep slar.e-blue, a shade darker than the tertials. Entire border of the wing, from the 

 armpit to the metacarpo-phalangeal joint, rich purplish rufous, scarcely mixed anywhere 

 with white, and much the widest at the bend. Bill olive above, the culmen blackish; lower 

 mandible wax- yellow, brighter terminally (sometimes wholly yellow); iris bright yellow: 

 bare loral space cobalt- blue in spring, olive-greenish or yellowish after breeding season. 

 Legs and feet dusky-black, the tibiaa paler, more olivaceous, sometimes tinged with yellow- 

 ish. Young : Above slate-gray (less bluish than in the adult), destitute of any penicillate 

 plumes; anterior lesser wing-coverts bordered terminally with light rufous; border of the 

 wing (broadly) white, more or less tinged with rufous, especially at and near the bend, 

 where this color prevails. Entire pileum, in luding all the occipital feathers, blackish- 

 sla e, with a nai-row median crest of more elongated darker-colored feathers, with pale ful- 

 vous shaft-streaks. Cheeks dark grayish; malar region, chin, and throa' only, pure white. 

 Neck dull gray, sometimes tinged with rufous, some of the feathers with indistinctly 

 lighter shaft-streaks ; foreneck with a narrow longitudinal series of black, rufous, and 

 whitish dashes, much as in the adult. Breast and abdomen broadly striped with dark 

 cinereous and white, in nearly equal amount (sometimes suffused with rufous . Tibize 

 very pale rufous, sometimes almost white; crissum white. Upper mandible black, paler, 

 or horn-color, along the tomium; lower, pale pea-green, deepening into clear horn-yellow 

 on terminal half; eyelids and horizontal space on lores light apple-green; iris gamboge 

 yellow; tibiae and soles of toes, apple-green; rest of legs and feet black. 



Wing, 17.90-19.85; tail, 7.30-8.00; culmen. 4.30-6.00; depth of bill, through middle of nos- 

 tril, 0.85-1.10; naked portion of tibiae, 3.50-5.00; tarsus, 6.00-S.OO; middle toe, 3.50-4.50. 

 [Extremes of 17 adult specimens.] 



The Great Blue Heron is a commou bird throughout the 

 State, except in localities far removed from streams or ponds 

 which furnish its food supply. It sometimes winters in the ex- 

 treme southern counties, but it is usually a migrant, returning 

 from the south in February, March, or early April, according to 

 the latitude. 



Solitary and wary, this bird may be seen standing in shallow 

 water, often in mid-stream, but it requires great caution and 

 skill on the part of the person who, with gun in hand, can ap- 

 proach within killing distance of an adult bird, the young being 



