368 BLACKBIRDS, ORIOLES, ETC. 
favorite resort is among the cabbage palmettos, upon the berries of 
which it feeds. 
511b. Q. q. wneus Ridgw. Bronzep Grackite. Ad. ¢.—Head, 
neck, throat, and upper breast all around varying from brilliant metallic 
purple to bluish green or steel-blue; back metallic seal-bronze, the feathers 
without iridescent bars; wings and ‘tail metallic porpieh or bluish black; 
lower breast and belly similar to the back but duller. 9.—Much duller, 
the back and belly brownish, sometimes without epniite reflections and 
never with iridescent bars. W., §'62: T., 5°04: B., 1°21, 
Range.—Central and e. N. ‘A. Breeds from Great Slave Lake, cen. Kee- 
watin, N. S., and N. F., s. to Mont., and Colo. (e. of the Rocky Mts.) s. 
to San Antonio, Tex., Gulf States, cen. La., cen. Miss., cen. Ala., W. Pa, 
cen. N. Y., and Conn. (s. of N. Y. breeds only w. of the Alleghanies); win- 
ters mainly from the Ohio Valley s. to s. Tex.; casual in migration on the 
s. Atlantic coast. 
Washington, rare T. V., between Feb. 20 and Apl. 17. Ossining, toler- 
ably common T. V., Apl.; Nov. Cambridge, abundant S. R., Mch. 10- 
Nov. 1; occasional in winter. N. Ohio, abundant S. R., Mch. 1-Nov. 15; 
rarely winters. Glen Ellyn, common 8. R., Mch. 5-Nov. 15. SE. Minn., 
common 8. R., Mch. 18—-Nov. 1; rare in winter. 
Nesting date, Cambridge, May 2; Grinnell, Iowa, May 2; se. Minn., 
Apl. 25. 
“The general habits of the Bronzed Grackle are in all respects 
identical with those of the Purple Grackle. . . . 
“From an almost equal familiarity with the two birds we are able 
to say that their notes differ decidedly, especially those of the male 
during the breeding season, the ‘song’ of the western bird being very 
much louder an had musical or metallic than that of its eastern 
relative” (Ridgway). 
513. dic sda major major (Vieill.). Boat-TaILep GRACKLE. 
Ad. ¢.—Glossy bluish black; head, throat, and breast more purplish, wings 
and tail more blackish. Ad. ¢.—Much smaller, upperparts blackish brown, 
underparts soiled ochraceous-buff. ¢ L., 16°00; W., 7°50; T., 7°00; B., 155. 
Range.—Austroriparian fauna from Chesapeake Bay to Fla., and w. 
to the e. coast of Tex. 
Nest, bulky and compact, of grasses, seaweed, etc., with a median layer 
of mud or partially decayed vegetation, in colonies in bushes. Eggs, 3-5, 
pale bluish white, frequently tinged with vinaceous-brown, singularly 
spotted, blotched, and scrawled with purplish or blackish, 1°32 x °90. Date, 
Ft. Pierce, Fla., Mch. 20; Ft. Macon, N. C., Apl. 26; Accomac Co., Va., 
Apl. 28. 
Boat-tail Grackles are rarely if ever found far from water. Shallow 
lakes or marshy lagoons grown with aquatic plants are their favorite re- 
sorts. Here they may be seen in small groups, which usually contain more 
males than females, walking or jumping from plant to plant, sometimes 
springing into the air to catch a passing insect, or wading along the shore 
in search of food. Their usual notes are hoarse, rather forced whistles; 
more rarely they utter a singular rolling call, which bears a close resem- 
blance to the sound producd by a Coot in pattering over the water. 
The Great-tailed Grackle, the larger southern form of this species, is 
unquestionably polygamous, but it is unknown whether the Boat-tail 
has more than one mate. 
