MEADOW SraGERS. 



90 



^8m 



J = 60 



vvm^ 



ftMMM^ -M^ a-##^ 



^m 



During his singing his wings are elevated at a 

 considerable angle from the body. 



Still another meadow singer is the cone-headed 

 grasshopper {Oonocephalus ensiger). This is the com- 

 monest species east of the Koeky Mountains, and the 

 most familiar bright, light 

 o-reen insect of the culti- 

 vated field, as well as 

 the salt marshes 

 near the seashore. 

 Rarely he is a 

 brownish straw 

 color, but in 

 any case his 

 narrow, point- 

 ed forehead 

 is a sufficient 

 proof of his 



identity ; he is, besides, a very long, slender grass- 

 hopper, vnih. extremely long fine feelers and a sharp, 

 rasping voice, quite unlike that of any of the other 

 meadow musicians. His note is an emphatic, sud- 

 denly loud s-szijj, s-ssip, s-szip, s-szip, continuous, 

 rapid, and penetrating beyond description. In fact, 



Conti-liLinleil Grassliu^'per. 



