404 SYSTEMATIC SYNOl^SIS. —PASSEBES — OSCINES. 



Analysis of Specli^s and Varieties- 



Middle wiug-coveiis buff, bordering Ike bright red patcb phmniceus 316 



Middle wiiig-coverls biiti', but black-tipped, usually leaving red patch without buff border . gubeniator 317 

 Middle wing-coverts white, bordering the dark red patch tricolor 318 



316. A. phoeni'ceus. (C<r. (poii^Ueos, pltoinikeos, Lat. phceniceus, rcil, of a color introduced iu Greece 

 by the Phrenieiaus. Fig. 2.J9.) Blackbird. Marsh Blackbird. Red-winged Black- 

 bird. Red-and-biifp-siiouldeeed Marsh Blackbird. $ : Lesser wing-coverts scai-lef, 

 like arterial blood, broadly bordered by brownish-yellow, or brownish -white, the middle row of 

 coverts being entirely of this color ; sometimes the greater row, likewise, are mostly similai', 

 producing a patch on the wing nearly as large as the red one ; occasionally, there arc traces of 

 red on the edge of the wing and behiw; in some specimens the bordering is almost pure white, 

 instead of buff. Extremes: <?, length 8.25-9.85; extent 13.60-15.30; wing 4.35-5.00; tail 

 3.12-3.90; bill 0.75-1.00; average: Length 9.00; extent 14.50; wing 4.G5 ; tail 3.60. ?, 

 length 7.35-8.55 ; extent 11.85-13.55 ; wing 3.6.5-4.25; tail 2.65-3.20 ; bill 0.70-0.80 ; aver- 

 age : Length 7.65 ; extent 12.35 ; wing 3.85 ; tail 3.00 ; bill 0.75. Tlie extremes here given 

 not often seen. Southern-bred birds are much smaller as well as glossier. Temperate N. Am., 

 but cliiefly E. of the Rocky Mts. ; breeding anywhere in its range, wintering from about 35° 

 southward. From its general dispersion in low or wet thickets or fields, swamps, and marshes, 

 the blackbird collects in August and September in immense flocks, thronging the extensive 

 tracts of wild oats and otlier aquatic plants in marshes and along water courses, alsf> visiting and 

 doing much damage to grain-fields. Thousands are destroyed by b(5ys and pot-hunters, but the 

 hosts scarcely diminish, and every known artifice fails to protect the crops from the invasion of 

 the dusky hordes. At other seasons the " maize-thief" is innocuous, if not positively beneficial, 

 as it destroys its share of insects. Nest usually in reeds or bushes near the ground, or in a 

 tussock of grass, or on the ground ; occasionally in small trees, vines, and shrubbery ; a bulky 

 structure of coarse fibrous materials, usually strips of rushes, sedges or marsh grass, lined with 

 finer grasses; eggs 4-6, 1.00 X 0.75, May and July, pale blue, fantastically dotted, blotched, 

 clouded, and scrawled over with dark or even blackish-bro^ra, and paler or purplish shell-marks. 

 The usual note is a guttui-al chuck; in the breeding season the " creaking chorus" makes an 

 indescribable medley. 



317 A. p. guberna'tor. (Lat. guhernator, a governor, allading to the red epaulettes, as if a sign of 

 rank or command.) Red-shouldered Marsh Blackbird. Lesser wing-coverts scarlet, as 

 before, narrowly or not at all bordered with buff, the next row having bliick tips for all or most 

 of their exposed portion, so that the brownish-yellow of their bases does not show much, if any. 

 Pacific Coast, U. S. and British Columbia. Scarcely different; 9 indistinguishable from 9 

 phosniceus. 



318. A. trl'color. (Lat. tricolor, three-colored ; red, white, and black.) Red-and-wiiite- 

 siiouldeeed Marsh Blackbird. Lesser wing-coverts dark red (like venous blood), bor- 

 dered with pure white. Besides this obvious distinction from phaniceus, the bill is usually slen- 

 derer and the tail is less rounded ; the gloss of the plumage is bluish, not greenish (aiipreciably 

 so in the 9 as well as in tlie $1). 9 with median wing-coverts white-edged. California tind 

 Oregon, especially coastwise ; resident or scarcely migratory. General habits the same ; iiest 

 and eggs indistinguishable. 



101. XANTHOCE'PHALUS. (Gr. ^avdos, xanthos, yeWow; Kecj>a\rj, keiihale, head.) Yellow- 

 Headed Blackbirds. General characters of Agelmus; claws more developed, tlie lateral 

 reaching much beyond base of the middle. Tail more nearly even, with narrower feathers. 

 Wings bnig and pointed; tip formed by outer 3 cjuills. Colors black, white, and yellow. 



319. X. icteroce'phalus. (Gr. iKrepos, ikteros, Lat. icterus, yellow. Fig. 260.) Yellow-iieadei) 

 Blackbird. (J: Black, including lores ^md small space around eye and bill ; whole Jicail 

 otherwise, with the neck and breast, rich yellow, orange in high feather, the color extending 



