TERNS 171 
To one who associates all Terns with sandy beaches, it is a novel 
experience, when driving over the prairies, to be surrounded by an 
active flock of these birds, darting eagerly here and there in pursuit of 
the insects flushed by one’s team from the grass. When on their nest- 
ing-grounds in the interior, Black Terns, indeed, appear to feed largely 
on insects, but when migrating southward along our coasts in late 
summer and autumn, in habits, and doubtless in food also, they more 
nearly resemble the coast-breeding members of their family. 
It is difficult to recognize in the silent bird of this season the excit- 
able, noisy Tern of June, which with its frequently repeated, sharp peek 
protests loudly against trespass on its haunts whether or not it has 
a nest there. 
H. K. Job found ‘‘scores and scores” of Black Terns in full breeding 
plumage on an island at the mouth of Chesapeake Bay in late June, 
but there appears to be no record of their breeding on the Atlantic 
coast, where they are rarely seen before the fall migration. 
1908. CHapman, F. M., Camps and Cruises, 324-329 (nesting). 
The WuItE-wincEep BLack Tern (78. Hydrochelidon leucoptera), an Old 
World species, has been taken once in America—at Lake Koshkonong, Wisc., 
July 5, 1873 (Kumlien and Hollister, Bull., Wisc. Nat. Soc., III, 14). 
79. Anotis stolidus (Linn.). Novpy. Ads.—Top of head silvery 
whitish, lores black; rest of plumage dark sooty brown; tail rounded, the 
central ‘tail- feathers longest. Im.—Similar, but top of head like rest of 
phar oT oor be appears as a line from bill to above eye. L., 15°00; 
fenee — Tropical coasts. Breeds on the Tortugas, on the coast of La., 
and in the Bahamas and W. Indies; winters s. to Brazil and Tristan da 
Cunha Island. 
Nest, of sticks, grasses, etc., on a bush, or low tree, sometimes on the 
ground or in crevices of rocks. Egg, 1, pale buffy wie sparingly marked 
with rufous, 2°05 x 1°35. Date, Tortugas, Fla., May 4 
In our Atlantic states the Noddy is known to nest only on Bird 
Key in the Tortugas of Florida, where, in 1907, Watson found about 
seven hundred pairs. 
According to this author, whose exceptionally important paper on 
the habits of the Noddy and Sooty Terns should be read by every one 
interested in bird psychology, it arrives late in April and remains until 
September. The period of incubation is from thirty-two to thirty-five 
days, and the young, according to Thompson, are dependent upon 
their parents ‘until they are over three months old.” 
The Noddy’s exceptional tameness is apparently temperamental 
rather than the result of ignorance of man, since the Sooty and Bridled 
Terns, with which it often breeds, are far more shy. 
As the only Tern with a rounded tail, the Noddy, as might be ex- 
pected, differs widely in flight from other members of its subfamily. 
In the air it suggests a light-bodied Pigeon with long wings and tail. 
It flies rapidly and does not hover over its nesting-ground, as do the 
