234 



LAND-BIRDS. 



in Watertown, Mass., March 25tli, 1874." * $ , black ; $ , 

 browner. Lower breast, etc., white. Back and wing-edgings, 

 " dull reddish brown " ; sides, paler. 



XVin. PIPILO. 



A. EKTTHROPHTHALMUS. Towhee Buntiug. " Towhee." 

 ^"■Chewink." '■'■ Ground Eohin." '■'■ Marsh RoMn." '■^ Swamp 

 Hohin."^ A common summer resident in Massachusetts, 

 but not common to the northward of this State, f 



Kg. 10. Towhee Bunting. (J) 



a. 8-8J inches long. (Iris, in the summer season red, ex- 

 cept in the young ; otherwise, white or nearly so. J) ^ , black ; 

 lower breast, belly, and nearly the whole of the outermost tail- 

 feathers, white. A conspicuous patch on the side of the breast, 

 chestnut (with paler traces of it behind). Wings and tail 

 with some white, besides that mentioned. $ , of a deep, warm 

 brown where^ the male is black. 



6. The nest, which near Boston is generally finished in the 

 last week of May, is to be found in the " scrub " and low wet 



* On Te-examination this hird proTes 

 to he a typical example of Junco hye- 

 malia shufeldti Coale, a form very 

 closely related to the true oregorms, 

 from whioh it was separated some time 

 after the original determination of the 

 Watertown specimen was made. — 

 W. B. 



^ This name has been applied indis- 

 criminately to several different birds. 



t A common summer resident of 



southern New England, breeding also 

 sparingly and somewhat locally in the 

 less elevated and older settled portions 

 of northern New England. There is a 

 record of a specimen taken in January 

 at Portland, Connecticut. — W. B. 



X This is incorrect. The iris is 

 whitish in a southern form (alleni), but 

 in true erythraphthcUmus it is red in old 

 birds at all seasons, and dark ashy or 

 light brown in the young. — W. B. 



