46 BIRDS OF PREY. 
HARRIS’S HAWK. 
PARABUTEO UNICINCTUS HARRISI. 
Cuar. Prevailing color black, sometimes chocolate brown, tinged with 
chestnut on the rump; shoulders and lining of wings chestnut ; tail-coverts, 
base of tail, and terminal band, white. Length about 20 inches. 
West. Ona cliff or in a tree, — usually the latter; a mere platform of 
twigs and roots, lined with grass. 
Eggs. 2-5 (usually 3); white, tinged with yellow, sometimes marked 
with brown or lavender, or both, 2.15 X 1.65. 
Harris’s Hawk is abundant in parts of Texas and in Mexico, 
and occurs in small numbers in the southern part of Mississippi. 
It is usually represented as a rather sluggish bird, associating with 
the Vultures and joining in their feasts of carrion, but sometimes 
preying upon the small reptiles that infest the banks of streams 
and pools. Mr. Sennett, however, describes those he saw along 
the lower Rio Grande as more active, feeding chiefly on birds, 
mice, and gophers. 
RED-TAILED HAWK. 
BUTEO BOREALIS. 
Cuar. Above, dull brown streaked with rufous and grayish; below, 
whitish or tawny streaked with brown; tail chestnut above and gray 
beneath, with a band of black near the end and tipped with white. In 
the young the tail is grayish brown crossed by some nine dark bars, 
and the underparts are white with brown streaks. Length 1914 to 23 
inches. , 
Nest. In a high tree; of sticks, lined with grass, sometimes with 
feathers. 
£gegs. 2-4; whitish or bluish white, usually heavily spotted or blotched 
with reddish brown; 2 30 X 1.80. 
This beautiful Buzzard inhabits most parts of the United 
States, being observed from Canada to Florida; also, far 
westward up the Missouri, and even on the coasts of the 
northern Pacific Ocean, by Lewis and Clarke. Wilson found 
the young to be fully grown in the month of May, about 
latitude 31° on the banks of the Mississippi; at this period 
they were very noisy and clamorous, keeping up an inces- 
sant squealing. It also occasionally nests and breeds in large 
