BIRDS FOUND ALONG THE BEACHES 75 



The young bird has a well-developed but straight bill 

 more than an inch long when hatched ; he runs about on 

 strong legs withiu an hour of his emancipation from the 

 shell. 



265. HUDSONIAN CURLEW, OR JACK CURLEW- 



Numenius hudsonicus. 



Family : The Snipes and Sandpipers. 



Length: 16.50-18.00. 



Adults : Upper parts mottled and barred with pale 

 cinnamon-brown and blackish ; line through the 

 crbwn buffy, bordered with two brown stripes ; under 

 parts buff, narrowly streaked with blackish. 

 Downy Young: Buffy brown above, merging to lemon- 

 yellow below ; upper parts indistinctly mottled with dusky. 

 Geographical Distribution : Nearly the whole of North and 

 South America; south in winter. 

 Breeding Range : Arctic regions. 

 Breeding Season: June 15 to July 15. 

 Nest : A slight hollow, scantily lined with grasses. 

 ^^ Eggs : 4 ; pear-shaped, grayish yellow, coarsely scrawled 



^— "-"- 



265. Hudsonian 

 Curlew. 



When alighting." 



of Alaska. 



The Hudsonian Curlew occurs 

 throughout North America, breed- 

 ing at the ponds and lakes of the 

 arctic regions and in all parts 

 In California it is abundant as 

 a spring and fall migrant, and is found 

 on the coast in company with the long- 

 billed curlew and the jack-snipe. Like 

 the others, it is a conspicuous bird on the beach or 

 flying in triangular flocks over the edge of the water ; 

 like the long-billed curlew, it drops its feet and raises 



