AKDEtDiB-HPHE HEEONS. 120* 



0*. Smaller, 'with legs and feet black or dusky, only the tibisa yellpwish ; total length 

 about il) to 48 inches; wing, 18.00-19.50; exposed oulmen, 5.45*5.95; tarsus,6. 75- 

 7.85. Hab. Whole of temoerate North America and parts of tropical Amer- 

 loa ,.'. .''.A. herodias. 



The relationship between these four species or races is very 

 puzzling, and no one, apparently, fully understands the case- 

 While each of the four forms is easily recognized by the char- 

 acter given above, and while a large majority of specimens are 

 typically either one or the other of them, intermediate examples 

 not unfrequently occur. The only apparent difference between 

 A. herodias and A. wa/rdi consists in general dimenisions and in 

 the color of the legs; but in both respects there seems to be a 

 complete intergradation among Florida specimens. On the 

 other hand, A. wa/rdA, A. wuerdemcmnii, omd A. oocidentaUs agree 

 minutely in measurements and in the color of the legs; and the 

 first two unquestionably intergrade. The writer has already 

 expressed the hypothesis that A. vmerdemamnvi a;nd A. ocddentaUs 

 are merely dichromatic phases of one species, corresponding to 

 the colored and white phases of the Eeddish Egret (A. rufescens 

 and ^. "peald"). This hypothesis he would now modify by sug- 

 gesting that A. wa/rdA is the perfect colored phase of A. ocoi- 

 dentaUs, and that A. wuerdemcmrbii is merely an intermediate 

 phase, — a suggestion prompted by the circumstance that A. 

 vmm-demannii varies more in coloration than either of the others, 

 the variations moreover tending toward both A. wa/rdi and A. 

 ooddentaUs. Whether the intergradation between A. wa/rdi and 

 A. h&rodms is the result of hybridization or an evidence of their 

 specific identity remains to be determined, if it be possible to 

 determine it. The whole question is indeed so complicated that 

 much patient research will be necessary before we can hope to 

 know more about it. 



Ardea wuerdemannii Baird. 



WTJEBSEMABN'S HEBON. 



Ardea w&rdemannWBiiBLO, B. N. Am. 1858, 669, ed. 1860, atl. pi. 86; Cat. N. Am. B. laW, 

 No. 488.-COTJBS, Key, 1872, 267; Check List, 1873, No. 460.-Nels. Bull. Essex Inst. 

 Deo. 1876, 151. 

 Ardea wueritmannU A. O. V. Check List, 1886, 361 { "Hypothetical List," No. 9).— Broow . 

 Man. N. Am. B. 1887, 11», 583; Proo. U. S. Nat. Mus. x, 1887, 112-115 (critical).— SooM, 

 Aok. Jan. 1889, 1«-17 (deaerlption, etc.). 



