218 BULLETIN 50, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



on the upper wing coverts smaller and tawnier; tarsi longer and much 

 more scantily feathered; the feathers much shorter and never extending 

 down to the base of the toes, even in front, the posterior side of the tarsus 

 always (even in winter) with a broad exposed naked strip (much the 

 greater part of the tarsus naked in summer). From the nominate form 

 this race differs in lacking the conspicuous pale terminal spots on the 

 scapulars, in having the pinnae composed of more than 10 feathers which 

 are abruptly truncated and not pointed, and in having the ventral bars 

 somewhat narrower (but nearer to T. c. cupido than to T. c. pinnaUis 

 in this respect) and considerably paler- — drab to pale bufiy brown, and 

 in having the upper breast washed with cinnamon to cinnamon-rufous. 



Juvenal. — None seen. 



Downy young. — Not certainly distinguishable from that of T. c. pin- 

 natus but apparently very slightly darker in its general tone above. 



Adult male.—Wing 202-213 (209) ; tail 84-90 (87.5) ; exposed culmen 

 18-21 (19.5) ; tarsus 50-52 (51) ; middle toe without claw 44-46 (44.7) ; 

 height of bill at base 11-12.5 (12.0 mm.).2o 



Adult female.— Wing 195-206 (202); tail 78-83 (80.8); exposed 

 culmen 17-20 (18.2) ; tarsus 47-50 (49) ; middle toe without claw 42-46 

 (43.4) ; height of bill at base 11-11.5 (11.2 mm.). 21 



Range. — Resident in the coastal prairies of southwestern Louisiana (a 

 small area in the western parts of Cameron and Calcasieu Parishes; 

 formerly east of Bayon Teche, Opelousas, and Abbeville) and in coastal 

 Texas (north to Austin, where now scarce; Refugio, Aransas, and Jeffer- 

 son Counties; to within 30 miles of the Rio Grande — Miradores Ranch). 



Type locality. — Refugio County, Tex. 



Tetrao cupido (not of Linnaeus) Woodhouse, Rep. Sitgreaves Expl. Zuni and Colo- 

 rado R., 1853, 96, part (e. Texas). 



Cupidonia cupido Baied, Rep. Pacific R. R. Surv., ix, 1858, 629, part (Calcasieu 

 Pass, La.) ; Cat. North Amer. Birds, 1859, No. 464, part. — Neheling, Bull. 

 Nuttall Orn. Club, vii, 1882, 175 (se. Texas). 



Cupidonia cupido, var. cupido Baird, Brewer, and Ridgway, Hist. North Amer. 

 Birds, iii, 1874, 440, part. 



Cupidonia cupido, var. pallidicincta (not of Ridgway, 1873) Meeriix, Proc. U. S. 

 Nat. Mus., i, 1878, 159 (prairies near coast 30 miles n. of Fort Brown, Tex.). 



Tympanuchus attwateri Bendire, Forest and Stream, xl, No. 20, 1893, 425 (Refugio 

 County, Tex.; coll. U. S. Nat. Mus.). — Elliot, Gallin. Game Birds North 

 Amer., 1897, 122. 



[Tympanuchus] attwateri Sharpe, Hand-list, i, 1899, 20. 



Tympanuchus americanus attwateri American Ornithologists' Union, Auk, xi, 

 1894, 46 ; Check-list, ed. 2, 1895, No. 30So (ex Bendire, manuscript) ; ed. 3, 1910, 

 p. 143. — Bendire, Auk, xi, 1894, 130-132 (diagnosis, measurements, etc.; Calca- 

 sieu, La.; Orange, Refugio, Aransas, and Jefferson Counties, Tex.). — Ridgway, 

 Man. North Amer. Birds, ed. 2, 1896, 589.— Carroll, Auk, xvii, 1900, 341 (Re- 



" Five specimens including the type. 

 "Five specimens. 



