SCOL OP A GIB^ : G 01) WITS. 



635 



reaching nearly to end of bill; symphyseal groove less extended. Gape of moutli moderate, 

 scarcely cleft beyond base of culmen, as in Snipes aud Sandpipers, not as usual among Tattlers. 

 Wing long and pointed ; taU sliort and square. Tibia denuded below for a moderate space. 

 Tarsus longer than middle toe and claw, scutellate before and behind, reticulate on sides. Toes 

 short and stout, much flattened underneath, and widely margined; outer and middle semi- 

 palmate, inner and middle with a slight web. Size large ; general aspect ourlew-like, but 

 bill recurved, not decurved. In character of bill approaching Snipes, especially Macrorhamphus, 

 to which it is nearly related in some other respects, as seasonal clianges of plumage of most 

 species. Sexes similar. Two N. Am. species, and two others, occurring in Alaska and 

 Greenland, from Asia and Europe. 



Analysis of Species. 



Rump, tail and its upper coverts barred throughout with blackish and rufous. Lining of wings chestnut. 

 No extensive barring on under parts. No great seasonal changes of plumage ? Feathers not extend- 

 ing on side of under mandible far beyond those on upper fceda 628 



Rump, tail, and its upper coverts barred throughout with white and black. Lining of wings and axillars 



white, with dusky marks uropygialis 631 



Rump blackish, upper tail-coverts mostly white, tail black with white base and tip. Umler parts in 

 summer intense ferruginous, barred throughout. Lining of wings mostly blackish. Feathers extend- 

 ing on side of lower mandible to a point beyond those on upper kcemasiica 629 



Similar to L. hcBmastica ; rump, tail audits coverts substantially the same. Lining of wings and axillars 



white (egocephala 630 



!8. Ij. foe'da. (Lat. fceda, ugly, ungainly, unseemly. Fig. 412.) Great Marbled God-^vit. 

 Maelin. Feathers not extending on side of lower mandible to a point far beyond those on upper. 

 Ko white anywhere; rump, tail, and its coverts barred 

 througltout with blackish and the body-color. Lining 

 of wings chestnut ; axillars the same, more or less 

 baiTcd with black. General color rufous or light dull 

 cinnamon-red, uniform and nearly uninterrupted on 

 aU the under parts, richer and more chestnut on the 

 lining of the wings and axillars ; somewhat marked 

 with dusky on the sides of the breast and body ; on 

 the whole upper parts variegated mth the brownish- 

 black central field of each feather, the blackish pre- 

 dominating, leaving the rufjus chiefly as scallops and 

 tips of the feathers. This rufous very variable in in- 

 tensity ; usually paler on upper than on under parts, 

 and strongest under the wings. Primaries i-ufous, 

 successively darkening from last to first, the outer 

 webs and ends of the few outer ones blackish, the 

 shaft of the first white. Bill livid flesh-colored, 



blackish on about terminal third; legs ashy-blackish. Large: length 16.00-23.00 inches- 

 extent 30.00-10.00; wing somewhere about 9.00; taU 3,00^.00; bill 3..50-.5.50, generally 

 about 4.00; tarsus 3.00, more or less; middle toe and claw 1.50; few birds vary more in 

 size. Sexes not distinguishable ; no ashy and whitish plumage knovra. Temperate N. Am. ; 

 the largest of the "bay-birds" excepting the long-billed curlew; conspicuous by its size and 

 red color among the waders that throng the shores and muddy or sandy bars of bays and 

 estuaries during the migration. Known to breed chiefly in the upper Mississippi and Eastern 

 Missouri regions, in Iowa, Minnesota, and Dakota, to the Saskatchewan ; does not appear to 

 go far along the Atlantic coast northward. Nests anywhere on the prairie, not necessarily 

 near water ; eggs 3-4, about 2.28 X 1.60, Ught olive-drab, numerously but not very boldly 

 spotted with various umber-brown shades, and the usual stone-gray shell-spots. 

 ns. T., haenias'tlca. (Gr. a<>a<rr«o'f, haimastilios , of bloody-red c'olor.) Hudsonian Godwit. 





i^iG. 442, — Godwit, greatly redaced. (From. 

 Tenney, after Audubon.) 



