BBTOID-E— THp IBISES. 108* 



tain extent in color also, that the question has been raised,^ 

 whether they are not really offshoots from a common ances- 

 tral stock, which, like a species of eastern Asia {Ibis mpjpon) 

 and certain herons, was at one time "dichromatic." 



Guara alba (Linn.) 



WmiE IBIS. 



Fopniar synonyms. White Curle-w; Spanish Curlew (Tldrlda); Gray Ibis, Brown Ibis 

 (young); Oooo(Guba); Ibis bianco (Mexico). 



Scolopax albaliiss. S.N. i, ed. 10, 1768, 1«. 



Tantalus albus Gmel. S. N. i, 1788, CSl.— WiLS. Am. Orn. viii, 1814, 43, pi. 6C. 



Ibis alba ViElLli.'Nouv. Diet xvi, 1817, IB.-v-Nutt. Man. ii, 1834, 86.— AuD. Orn. Biog. iii, 



1835,178; v, 1839, 598, pi. 222; Synop. 1839. 257; B. Am. vi, 1843, 54, pi. 360.— Cass, in 



Baird's B. N. Am. 1858, 684.— Baibd, Oat. N. Am. B. 1859, No. 499>.— Cotjbs, Check List, 



1873, No. 446. 



Eudocimus albus Wagi. lais, 1832. 1232.— BiDGW. Nom. N. Am. B. 1881, No.'501.— CouES, 



Check List, 2d ed. 1882, No. 651. 

 Guara alba Stbjn. Stand. Nat. Hist, iv, 1885. 9.— A. O. 0. Check List. 1886, No. 184.— 



EiDGW. Man. N. Am. B. 13, 1887, 123. 

 Tantalus alber Linn. S. N. i. 1766. 242. 

 Tantalus coco Jacq. Beitr. 1784, 13. 

 Tantalus griseus Gmel. S. N. i, 1788, 653 (younsr). . 

 Eudocvmus longirostris Wagi. Isls, 1829, 760. 



Hab. Warm-temperate eastern North America, West Indies, Middle America, and 

 tropical South America; north to Connecticut, eastern Pennsylvania, Illinois, and Great 

 BaltLake, Utah; south to Brazil. 



8p. Chab. Adult: Terminal portion (beyond the emargination) of three to five' outer 

 primaries, glossy greenish black, with a bright metallic green lustre. Best of the plumage 

 entirely pure white. Bill, bare skin of the head, legs and feet, bright carmine in the breed- 

 ing season; at other times paler, or orange-red; iris fine pearly blue (Attdubon).' End of 



> See The Auk. vol. i, 1884, pp. 239, 240. 



* According to Audubon, ' 'There is a curious, though not altogether general, difference 

 between the sexes of this species as to plumage,— the male has five of its primaries tipped 

 with glossy black for several inches, while the female, which is very .Uttle smaller than the 

 male, has only four marked in this manner. On examining more than a hundred indivld- 

 uala of each sex, I found only four exceptions,'whioh occurred in females that were very 

 old birds, and which, as happens in some other species, might perhaps have been under- 

 going the curious change exhibited by Ducks, Pheasants, and some other birds, the females 

 of which, when old, sometimes assume the livery of the males." This supposed sexual 

 difference we have been unable to verify with the series before us, though it is very pos- 

 sible that some specimens may not have the sex correctly determined. 



'"Bare parts of the head [in the adult male] light orange-red; bill the same, but towards 

 the tip dusky. Iris of a fine pearly blue. Legs and toes paler than the bill; claws dusky, 

 tipped with horn color. 



"Aftertheflrstmoult, the bill is pale yellowish orange, toward the base greenish; the 

 naked parts of the head are pale orange yellow, inclining to flesh-Color; the eye dark 

 brown; the feet pale blue. 



■'The change in the coloring of the bill, legs, and feet of this bird, that takes place in 

 the breeding season, is worthy of remark, the bill being then of a deep orange-red, and 

 the legs and feet of a red nearly amounting to carmine. The males at this season have the 

 gular pouch of a rich orange oolor, and somewhat resembUng in shape that of the Frigate 

 Pelican, although proportionally less. During winter these parts are of a dull flesh color. 

 The irides also lose much of their clear blue, and resume in some degree the umber oolor 

 of the young birds. I am thus particular i^ these matters, because it is doubtful if any one 

 else has ever paid attention to them." (Audubon.) 



