556. 
557. 
558. 
TETRA ONIDA—TETRAONINA: GROUSE. 579 
below, and orange tail-end. Length usually 16.00-17.00; wing 7.00; tail 5.50. Hen rather 
smaller. No continuous black below, where white and tawny, latter particularly on breast, 
nearly everywhere pretty regularly wavy-barred with blackish. Above, more like the male, but 
browner. End of tail more narrowly orange. 
Pullets resemble the hen. N. Am., E. of the 
R. Mts., northerly, in woodland. N. uearly or 
quite to the limit of trees; N. W. to Alaska. 
8. into the northern tier of States, especially 
Maine, Michigan, and Minnesota; casually to 
Massachusetts. It is a very hardy bird, enduring 
the rigors of sub-arctie winters, and not properly 
inigratory. Eggs numerous, 1.68 X 1.20, rather 
pointed, buff-colored, dotted, spotted, and boldly 
splashed with rich chestnut. Shape and pattern 
of eggs more like those of ptarmigan than of the Fie. 397. —Canada Grouse, nat. size. (Ad nat. 
prairie grouse. Hele TOs) 
C. ce. frank/lini. (To Sir John Franklin.) FRANKLIN’s SPRUCE GROUSE. Size, shape, and 
whole appearance of the foregoing. Tail rather longer, more nearly even, with broader feathers ; 
lacking the terminal orange bar; tipped narrowly with white, its upper coverts tipped with 
white, making the upper side of the tail conspicuously spotty. Rocky and Cascade Mts., 
northerly, in U. S., and northward about sources of the Saskatchewan, Athabasca, and 
McKenzie Rivers. A mere variety of C. canadensis: the variation parallel with that of C. 
richardsont as compared with C. obscura. 
C. obscura, (Lat. obscura, dark.) Dusky Grouse. BLuE GROUSE. GRAY GROUSE. 
Pine Grousg. Old cock: Back and wings blackish-brown, finely waved and vermiculated - 
in zigzag with slate-gray, mixed with more or less ochrey-brown and some white on the seapu- 
lars. Long feathers of the sides with white ends and shaft stripes; other under parts fine 
bluish-gray or light slate color, varied with white, especially on the lower belly, flanks, and 
vent-feathers. Cheeks black; chin and throat finely speckled with black and white. Though 
the lateral feathers of the neck are smooth and simple, forming no decided tufts as in Cupidonia 
or Bonasa, they are somewhat enlarged, covering a rudimentary tympanum: these feathers 
with snowy white bases and black tips. Tail brownish-black, veined and marbled with gray, 
and with a broad slate-gray terminal bar ; of 20 feathers, broad to their very ends, the tail as 
a whole slightly rounded. Bill black; iris brown-orange; comb over eye. Size very variable; 
well-grown cocks usually 20, or 22 inches, sometimes up to 2 feet long; extent of wings about 
30 inches; wing 9 or 10; tail 7 or 8. Hen smaller, and more motley, lighter colored and more 
extensively varied with white and tawny; but showing the distinctive slate-gray of the under 
parts, and the slate bar at end of the tail. Pullets like the hen, but the upper parts with ham- 
mer-headed white shaft-lines. Tail with white shaft-lines enlarged at the end, also marked on 
some of the feathers with wavy blackish crossbars. Rocky and other Mts., U. S., to the Pacific. 
A species of general dispersion in elevated and wooded, especially coniferous, regions of the West. 
S. to New Mexico, and in the White Mts. in Arizona; in the R. Mts. northerly shading into 
var. richardson. A large cumbrous bird, usually displaying stolidity or indifference to the 
presence of man, taking to trees when disturbed, and very easily slaughtered. Eggs larger, 
more elongated, and less heavily colored than those of spruce grouse and ptarmigan ; creamy- 
buff, finely freckled all over with chocolate-brown, seldom with any large spots: 2.00 x 1.50. 
C. o. rich/ardsoni. (To Sir John Richardson.) RicHarpson’s Dusky Grouse. Size, 
shape, and whole appearance of the foregoing. Tail rather longer, more nearly even, with 
broader feathers, having the terminal slate bar reduced or wanting: general color more uni- 
formly darker, black of throat more extensive. Rocky Mts., northerly, U. S. and northward. 
