I 
BIRDS OF PENNSYLVANIA. 305 
trees, hedg’e-rows, etc. The eg-g*s, usually five in number, are pale green- 
ish-blue, spotted and blotched with different shades of brown. These 
birds feed largely on coleopterous insects, larvae and other insects, and 
they also eat various kinds of small berries. 
Genus GALEOSOOPTES Cabanis. 
Galeoscoptes carolinensis (Linn.). 
Catbird. 
Description (Plate 72). 
Length about 9 ; extent about lU inches; bill and feet black; iris brown; pre- 
vailing color dark slate, somewhat lighter beneath ; top of liead and tail black ; 
under tail-coverts chestnut. The adult female is rather smaller than the male, and 
the young are duller in color, with little or no black on crown ; under parts paler ; 
under tail-coverts dull reddish. 
Habitat . — Eastern United States and British provinces, west to and including the 
Kocky mountains ; occasional on the Pacific coast. Winters in the Southern States, 
Cuba and middle America to Panama ; accidental in Europe. 
This well-known bird is a common summer resident from the last 
week in April to about November 1. The Catbird frequents all locali- 
ties, but is probably most numerous in briery thickets and tangled un- 
dergrowth near streams and ponds. Its bulky nest, constructed of 
dead twigs, roots, to which are often added dried leaves or grasses, is 
built mostly in bushes. The eggs, usually four, are deep greenish-blue 
and unspotted. They measure a little less than an inch long, and a 
trifle under three-quarters wide. These birds, like some other members 
of the family, subsist largely on different kinds of small fruits and ber- 
ries. In the early summer the Catbird feeds on cherries and strawber- 
ries ; later in the season, mulberries, blackberries and raspberries. Late 
in the summer and in the autumn he subsists mainly on berries of the 
spicewood and poke-plant, and also different varieties of both cultivated 
and wild grapes. This species, in the spring, especially in May, and 
also when breeding, feeds to a considerable extent on various “ worms,” 
beetles, flies, spiders, etc. The Catbird, so called because its sharp and 
petulant cry which is not unlike the mewing of a cat, is one of our most 
gifted and delightful songsters. 
Genus HARPORHYNCHUS Cabanis. 
Harporhynbhus rufus (Linn.). 
Brown Thrasher ; Brown Thrush. 
Description (Plate 4 . 4 .). 
Length about 11| inches ; extent about 13 inches ; tail 5 or 6 inches ; bill black with 
base of lower mandible yellow ; legs pale brown ; iris of adult yellow ; ins of young 
20 Birds. 
