The Canada Grouse 153 



Richardson's grouse 



(/?. o. richardsoni) 



The chief difference between this race and D. 

 obscurus is found in the tail, which in Richardson's 

 grouse is square at the tip and lacking the con- 

 spicuous gray band. It, too, is a mountain dweller, 

 being found along the eastern slopes of the Rockies 

 from central Montana northward through the moun- 

 tain region of Canada, and has no peculiarities of 

 habits to distinguish it from its near relatives. 



THE CANADA GROUSE 

 {Canachites canadensis) 



Adult male — Upper parts, gray, barred with black; wings, lighter 

 gray mottled and barred with black, and brown tips ; scapulars, 

 with central white streaks, widening at tips ; under parts, black, 

 with border of mixed black and white to the throat, many of the 

 feathers tipped with white ; flanks, pale brown, with irregular, 

 longitudinal black lines, and white streaks along the shafts, 

 broadening at the tips ; under tail-coverts, black, tipped with 

 white ; upper tail-coverts, black, mottled with brown and tipped 

 with gray. Bill, black. Total length, about 14J inches ; wing, 

 7 ; taU, 5. 



Adult female — Upper parts, barred with gray, buff, and black, the 

 gray most conspicuous on lower back and rump ; sides of breast 

 and flanks, strongly tinged with bulF; flank-feathers, with cen- 

 tral streak of white, broadening at tips. Abdomen, black, 

 feathers tipped with white; under tail-coverts, black, barred 

 with buff, and tipped with white ; median tail-feathers, barred 

 with buff and black ; remainder, black, with irregular, narrow, 

 bufBsh lines and tipped with same color. No noticeable differ- 

 ence in the size of the sexes. The downy young are yellow with 

 dark markings above. A black line through the eye to the 

 nape. 



