THE WHIPPOOKWILL. 119 



Family CAPRIMULGID^S. The Goat-suckers. 

 Sub-Family Capkimulgin^;. 



Bill very short, triangular, the culmeu less than one-sixth the gape ; the anterloi 

 toes united at the base by a membrane; the inner anterior toe with three joints, the 

 others with four, all with distinct scutella^ above ; the toe much elongated, its middle 

 claw pectinated on the inner edge ; hind toe directed a little more than half for- 

 wards j tarsi partly feathered superiorly ; the bill more or less bristled, the nostrils 

 separated, rather nearer the commissure than the culmeu; plumage soft, lax, and 

 owl-like ; primary quills, ten ; secondaries, eleven or twelve. 



ANTROSTOMUS, Gould. 



Antrostomm, Gould. Icones Avium (1838), Agassiz. 



Bill remarkably small, with tubular nostrils, and the gape with long, stiff, some- 

 times pectinated, bristles ; wings long, somewhat rounded, second quill longest, the 

 primaries emarginated ; tail rounded ; plumage loose and soft. 



ANTEOSTOMTJS VOCIFERUS. — Bonaparte. 



The Whippoorwill. 



Caprimulgus waferus, Wilson. Am. Orn., V. (1812) 71 j Aud. Oru. Biog., 1. 

 ,1832) 443; V. 405. 



Antrostomm vociferus, Bonaparte. List, 1838. 



Description. 



Bristles without lateral filaments; wing about six and a half inches long; top of 

 ±e head ashy-brown, longitudinally streaked with black; terminal half of the tail 

 feathers (except the four central) dirty-white on both outer and inner webs ; iris dark- 

 hazel. Female, without white on the tail. 



Length, ten inches ; wing, six and a half. 



THIS familiar species is a summer inhabitant of New 

 England : it arrives from the South about the second 

 week in May. Its habits are not well known, as it is not a 

 very common species, and it inhabits the most secluded spots 

 in the deep woods ; but its song is well known to all, as are 

 its nocturnal wanderings in search for insect food. This 

 bird, as also the Night-hawk, is, to the farmer, one of the 

 most valuable among the feathered tribes : its food consists 

 almost entirely of night-flying Lepidoptera, and the number 

 of these insects destroyed is immense. 



