240 BUBONIDJi 



Iris dusky or black ; bill white, yellowish at base ; legs and 

 toes dirty yellow. 



Length 155 ; wing 12'25 ; tail 4-55 ; culmen I-IO ; tarsus 2'90. 



A younger bird has the facial disc tinged with red, a stronger 

 buffy wash on the under parts and marked traces of transverse 

 bands on the tail. 



Distribution. — The Grass Owl is rather a rare bird, found chiefly 

 in the eastern and southern half of South Africa, and extending 

 beyond our limits to Angola and Nyasaland. 



The following are recorded localities : Cape Colony — Cape divi- 

 sion (Smith and Layard), George division (Atmore), Knysna (Marais 

 and S. A. Mus.) ; Natal — Ifafa (Woodward), Umgeni river, near 

 Durban (Shelley), Eichmond Eoad (Eeid), Newcastle (Butler) ; 

 Basutoland — Maseru (Bowker) ; Transvaal — Sandspruit in Wak- 

 kerstroom district (Gates), Potchefstroom (Ayres). 



Habits. — This Owl is almost invariably found in the grass and 

 rushes along streams or vleis ; here during the day it sleeps on the 

 ground and is sometimes put up by dogs ; it appears to be nowhere 

 plentiful. Mr. Atmore found a nest containing three fully fledged 

 young birds in the Palmiet swamps at Blanco in the George dis- 

 trict in May ; no other information in regard to its breeding habits 

 is available. 



Fig. 81.— Sternum of Bubo maailosics, shov/ingthediouhle posterior notch, x 



Family II. BUBONID^. 



Skull short and comparatively broad ; sternum with two deep 

 notches on both sides posteriorly ; furcula entirely free from the 

 keel of the sternum ; second joint of the third toe equal to the 



