OWLS 313 
have been captured alive by persons walking up and taking them in 
their hands. On this account the Eskimo in Alaska have given it the 
name of ‘blind one.’ “The song of this Owl, according to Dr. Merriam 
(Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club., VII, 1882, p. 237), is a low liquid note that resem- 
bles the sound produced by water slowly dropping from a height” 
(Fisher). 
372. Cryptoglaux acadica acadica (Gmel.). Saw-wHEeT Own. Ads.— 
Upperparts dark cinnamon-brown, the head finely streaked, the back spotted 
with white; tail with three or four imperfect white bars; underparts white, 
heavily streaked with cinnamon-brown or dark rufous; legs and feet feath- 
ered, buffy white, unbarred; eyes yellow. Im. __Upperparts as in the ad., 
but head and back with little or no, white; breast like the back; belly ochra- 
ceous-buff. L., 8°00; W., 5°40; T., 2°80; B., “60 
Remarks. —Tts small’ size and absence of ‘ears’ at once distinguish this 
species from any Owl of eastern North America except C.f. richardsont, from 
which it may be known by its lighter color, streaked instead of spotted ‘head, 
and unbarred legs and feet. 
Range.—N. A. Breeds from cen. and e. B. C., Alberta, Man., Que., N. B., 
and N.S. s. to cen. Ariz., s. Nebr., n. Ind., Pa., ‘and Md. (in mts.); winters 
s. to s. Calif., La., Va. (casually to the Carolinas), and Maine; casual or 
accidental in Mex. and Guatemala. 
Washington, rare W. V., Oct.-Mch. Ossining, rather rare W. V., Oct. 
28-Jan. 13. Cambridge, not uncommon, W. V., Nov.-Mch. N. Ohio, 
rare P. R. SE. Minn., uncommon, P 
Nest, in a hole i in a tree; frequently a Woodpecker’s, sometimes a Squir- 
rel’s deserted nest. Eggs, white, 3-5, 1:19 x 1:00. Date, Trenton Falls, 
N. Y., Mch. 31; Farmington, Maine, May 21; se. Minn., May 9 (hatching). 
“This species is not migratory, but is more or less of an irregular 
wanderer in its search for food during the fall and winter. It may 
be quite common in a locality and then not be seen again for several 
years. It is nocturnal, seldom moving about in the daytime, but pass- 
ing the time in sleeping in some dark retreat. So soundly does it sleep 
that oftentimes it may be captured alive. .. . 
“During the day it frequents the thick evergreen woods, though 
sometimes it is found in comparatively open groves, but always in 
dense trees. . . . The note of this species is peculiar and has a 
rasping character, resembling the sound made when a large-toothed 
saw is being filed; hence the name. It is more often heard during March 
and early April, though occasionally it is heard at other times of the 
year. 
“The flight resembles that of the Woodcock very closely—so much 
so, in fact, that the writer once killed a specimen as it was flying over 
the alders, and not until the dog pointed the dead bird was he aware 
of his mistake. . . . 
“Of 22 stomachs examined, 17 contained mice; 1, a bird; 1, an insect; 
and 3 were empty” (Fisher). 
1911. Taverner, P. A., and Swatzs, B. H., Auk, XXVIII, 329-334 
(migration). 
373. Otus asio asio (Linn.). ScrEEcH Owt. Size small; ear-tufts con- 
spicuous, about an inch in length. Ads, rufous phase.—Upperparts bright 
