489 



LAPLAND FINCH. 



(Fringilla lapponica.) 



Fr. capite-fiigro, corpore) griseo nigroque, superciliis albis, rectri~ 



cibus extimis macula alba cuneiformi. 

 Finch with a black head, body black and grey, supercilia white, 



and outer tail-feathers with a white wedge-shaped spot. 

 Fringilla lapponica. Lin. Syst. Nat. 1. 31 7. 1. — Lin. Faun. 



Suec. 235, — Gmel. Syst. Nat. 1. 900. — Lath. Ind. Orn. 1. 



440. 18. 



Fringilla montana. Bris. 3. 16O. 38. 



Le grand Montain. Buff. Hist. Nat. Ois. 5. 134. 



Greater Brambling. Albin. 3. 63. 



Lapland Finch. Penn. Arct. Zool. 2. 259.—- Lath, Gen. Syn. 

 3. 263. 14. 



The Lapland Finch is larger than the Chaf- 

 finch, being six inches and a half in length : beak 

 horn-colour, tipped with black : head blackish, 

 spotted with reddish white : upper part of the 

 neck, back, and body, rufous, with brown spots : 

 behind each eye a white lunulated spot : lesser 

 wing-coverts pale rufous ; middle ones black, with 

 yellow margins, and white tips, forming a bar of 

 that colour on the w T ing: quills black, edged with 

 pale yellowish green : throat, fore-part of the 

 neck, and breast, pale rufous : belly, thighs, and 

 vent, white : tail black, edged with pale greenish 

 yellow, and slightly forked : legs black : female 

 paler than the male. 



This species is a native of Lapland, and part of 

 Siberia, and occasionally the fields of the inner 



