156 



THE HAWKS AND OWLS OF THE UNITED STATES. 



Table showing the results of examinations of 109 stomachs of the Barred Owl 

 (Syrnium nebulosum) — Continued. 



Locality. 



Kalamazoo, Mich 

 ,Fla 



Stratford, Conn 



Toronto, Ontario 



Do 



Sandy Sprin g, Md 



Orange County, N. Y. 

 Bay St. Louis. Miss . . 



Sandy Spring, Md 



Portland, Conn 



Date. 



Do, 

 Do 



Do 



Sandy Spring, Md. 



Do 



Morristown, N. J. . 



Do 

 Do 



Columbus, Ohio 



East on, Md 



Lancaster County, Pa. 



Meriden; Conn 



"Washington, D. C 



Oct. 17, 

 Summer. 

 Dec. 18, 

 Jan. 24, 

 Jan. 29, 

 April 23, 

 Oct. 23, 

 Aug. 30, 

 Nov. 6, 

 Oct. 16, 



Oct. 18, 

 Oct. 25, 



Nov. 1, 

 Nov. 30, 

 ....do .. 

 Oct. 4, 



1888 

 1890 

 1890 

 1890 

 1876 

 1890 

 1890 

 1890 



Poultry 



or game 



birds. 



Other birds. 



Mammals. 



Miscellaneous. 



Red squirrel 

 I Small birds Mice 



Screech owl 



Mole 



Rat 



2 meadow mice - 



1890 



1890 



2 meadow mice.. 

 2 meadow mice, 



1 white-footed 



mouse. 



Snail, beetle. 

 Empty. 



Beetle remains. 

 Beetle. 



Larva. 



3 meadow mice, 

 1 rat. 



~Nov. 4, 

 Nov. 17, 



Oct. 1, 

 Feb. 22, 

 Nov. 30, 

 Mch. 20, 

 April 5, 



1890 



1890 

 1890 



1890 

 1891 

 1890 

 1891 

 1892 



Fowl . . . 

 Ruffed 

 grouse. 



Screech owl j Meadow mouse. 



| 2 meadow mice . . 



I Short-tailed 



shrew. 

 |. ...do 



Empty. 



Chipmunk • 2 snails. 1 beetle. 



Meadow mouse.! 



! Empty. 



I Do. 



i Do. 



Summary. — Of 109 stomachs examined, 5 contained poultry or game; 13, other birds; 46, mice; 18, 

 other mammals; 4, frogs; 1, a lizard; 2, iish; 14, insects; 2, spiders; 9, crawfish, and 20 were empty. 



SPOTTED OWL. 



Symium occidentale. 



The Spotted Owl, which may be considered a western representative 

 of the Barred Owl, inhabits the highlands of Mexico, New Mexico, 

 Arizona, Colorado, California, and Lower California. It was discovered 

 by Xantus near Fort Tejon, Cal., March 6, 1858, and described by him in 

 1859 in the proceedings of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Phila- 

 delphia. Not until 1872 was the bird again met with, when Capt. 

 Bendire found it in the southern part of Arizona, where on April 17, 

 1872, he found a nest and one egg, 9 miles west of Tucson. " The nest 

 appears to have been built by the birds themselves. It was composed 

 of small sticks and twigs and lined with dry grasses, pieces of bark, and 

 a few feathers, placed close to the trunk of a large cottonwood tree, 

 about 30 feet from the ground and easily seen from below. One of the 

 parents was sitting on the nest and shot with a rifle after flying off, 

 but not preserved. * * * The specimen sent to Mr. Eidgway was 

 shot some time subsequently to my finding this nest, as I noticed on a 

 critical examination of this bird that it differed from the Barred Owl 

 in its markings." (Ornithologist and Oologist, vol. vn, 1882, p. 99.) 



Mr. L. Belding secured a pair at Big Trees, Calaveras County, Cal., 

 in the summer of 1880. He says : " Its call resembles the barking of a 



