STORKS 219 
wade dull fuscous-brown; back with greenish reflections. L., 24°00; 
1°50; Tar., 3°10; B., 5°00. 
Te —Tropical and subtropical regions, mainly of E. Hemisphere. 
Rare and local in se. U. 8. from La. to Fla., and in the West Indies; casual 
n. to Mo., Wisc., Mich., Ont., and N. 8. 
Washington, two records. Long Island, two records. Cambridge, one 
record, May. 
Nest, of rushes, plant stems, etc., in reedy swamps or low bushes. Eggs, 
3, rather deep, dull blue, 2°01 x 1°47. Date, Orange Lake, Fla., Apl 
Of this once doubtless widely distributed species comparatively 
few individuals remain, and in the New World it is of rare and i irregu- 
lar occurrence. 
The Wurrz-racep Guossy Isis (187. Plegadis guarauna), a locally com- 
mon species from Texas westward and southward, has been recorded but once 
from east of the Mississippi, viz., at or near Lake Washington, Florida, where 
a female was shot on a nest containing three eggs (Brewster, Awk, III, 1886, 
482). This species resembles the Glossy Ibis, but adults have the region 
about the base of the bill white. 
19. Faminy Ciconnupa#. StTorxs 
The nineteen known species of this family are distributed through- 
out the world, but only three are found in the Western Hemisphere, 
and of these but one occurs north of Mexico. The Common Stork 
(Ciconia ciconia) of Europe, the Adjutant (Leptoptilus dubius) of 
India, and Marabou (ZL. crumeniferus) of Africa are the best known 
of the Old World species. The Marabou feathers of commerce are from 
the last-named species. 
While terrestrial in feeding habit, Storks usually nest some distance 
above the ground. They perch readily in trees and in this respect differ 
from Cranes, with which, however, they agree in flying with the neck 
fully extended. The young are hatched with but a scanty covering 
of down and are reared in the nest, Storks, in this respect, resembling 
Herons rather than Cranes. They are essentially voiceless. 
188. Mycteria americana Linn. Woop Ipis. Ads.—Head and neck 
bare; primaries, secondaries and tail glossy greenish black, rest of plumage 
white. Im.—Head more or less feathered; head and neck grayish brown, 
blacker on the nape; rest of plumage as in the adult, but more or less marked 
with grayish; wings and tail less greenish. L., 40°00; W., 18°00; Tar., 7°60; 
B. from N., 8°00. 
Range.—Temperate and tropical Am. from s. Calif., Ariz., Tex., Ohio 
Valley, and S. C., s. to Argentina; casual n. to Mont., Wisc., N. Y. and Vt. 
Washington, casual in July. Long Island, one record. 
Nesi, in colonies, a platform of sticks in trees. Eggs, 2-3, dull white with 
a soft calcareous deposit, 2°75 x 1°75. Date, Brevard Co., Fla., Mch. 14. 
This is a locally common species in Florida. 
20. Famity ARDEIDa. Herons anp Bitrerns. (Fig. 36.) 
This family contains about one hundred species distributed in most 
parts of the globe, but more numerously in the intertropical regions. 
