284 BIEDS OF ONTARIO. 



Genus STURNELLA Vieillot. 

 STURNELLA MAGNA (Linn.). 



205. Meadowlark. (501) 



Above, the prevailing aspect brown. Each feather of the back blackish, 

 with a tenninal reddish-brown area, and shai-p brownish-yellow borders ; 

 neck similar, the pattern smaller ; crown, streaked with black and brown, and 

 with a pale median and superciliary stripe ; a blackish line behind eye ; 

 several lateral tail feathers white, the others with the inner quills and wing- 

 coverts barred or scolloped with black and brown or graj- ; edge of wing, spot 

 over eye, and imder parts generally, bright yellow ; the sides and crissum, 

 flaxen brown, with numerous sharp blackish streaks ; the breast, with a large 

 black crescent (obscure in the young) ; bill, horn color ; feet, light brown. 

 Length, 10-11 ; mng, 5 ; tail, 3* ; bill, IJ. Feirude : — Similar, smaller, 9^. 



Hab. — Eastern United States and Southern Canada to the Plains. 



Nest, on the ground, at the foot of a tuft of grass or weeds, lined with dry 

 grass, and sometimes partly arched over. 



Eggs, four to six, white, dotted and sprinkled with reddish-brown. 



The Meadowlark is found in all suitable districts throughoijt 

 Ontario, apparently preferring the south-west. In the southern 

 portion of the Province, it is generally distributed throughout the 

 agricultural districts, where its loud, clear, liquid notes are always 

 associated in our minds with fields of clover and new-mown hay. 

 Here it may be considered migratory, the greater number leaving us 

 in October to return again in April, but it is no uncommon thing to 

 find one or two remaining during the winter in sheltered situations. 

 On the 7th of February, 1885, when the cold was intense and snow 

 covered the ground, I noticed an individual of this species digging 

 vigorously into a manure heap at Hamilton Beach. When examined 

 he was found to be in very poor condition, and looked altogether as 

 if he had been having a hard time. The present species is found 

 north to Manitoba, where it is replaced bj' the Western Meadowlark, 

 which resembles our eastern form so closely that it is doubtful if any 

 one, judging by appearance only, could separate them with certainty. 

 The song of the birds is so entirely different that, chiefly on this 

 account, the western bird has been recorded as a sub-species under 

 the name of Stumella magna neglecta, or Western Meadowlark, the 

 dry central plains forming the boundary between the two habitats. 



