206 
BIRDS OF PENNSYLVANIA. 
Length of male about 7.25 inches ; extent about 12.25 inches. Female averages a 
little smaller. 
Habitat. —Eastern North America to the great plains ; north to southern Canada ; 
south in winter to the West Indies and South America. Breeds from the Middle 
States northward, and winters south of the United States. 
Bobolinks are known by a variety of common names. The terms 
“Bobolink” and “Meadow Wink” are applied in imitation of its voice; 
the appellation “ Skunk-blackbird,” notes, as Dr. Coues remarks, the 
resemblance in color to the obnoxious quadruped. When the Bobolink 
has shed his showy dress of black, white and yellow, he frequents chiefly 
the reedy marshes of tide-rivers, and is known as “ Beed-bird;” in the 
Carolinas, Georgia and elsewhere in the south, they congregate in great 
numbers on the rice-fields, where they are called “Bice-birds.” In the 
West Indies these birds, from their excessive fatness/, are known as 
“Butterbirds.” “The name ‘Ortolan,’ applied by some gunners and 
restaurateurs to this bird, as well as to the Carolina Bail ( Porzana 
Carolina) is in either case a strange misnomer, the Ortolan being a 
fringilline bird of Europe, Emberiza hortulana, Linn.”— Coues. Notwith¬ 
standing the fact that the Beed-bird is much larger than the English 
Sparrow, many game dealers are in the habit of “bunching” the two 
species and disposing of them as “Beed-birds.” The Beed-bird, how T - 
ever, can easily be recognized by the pointed tail feathers, long legs and 
claws; the tail feathers of the sparrow are not pointed, and the legs and 
claws are short. Even when both birds are picked and their legs and 
heads cut off, the Beed-bird can mostly be distinguished by its plump, 
yellow and oily body? the carcass of a fat sparrow is never uniformly 
yellow, but is dark colored, with narrow streaks of yellow. The Bobo¬ 
links arrive in Pennsylvania, in flocks of from eight to twenty-five in¬ 
dividuals, from May 5th to 20tli. The males generally make their ap¬ 
pearance about the fields, meadows and orchards several days in advance 
of the females; they also appear to proceed much more leisurely on 
their vernal migrations, than the females. Both sexes migrate chiefly 
at night when their “ mellow metallic chink ” may be heard both in 
spring and fall. The song of the Bobolink is a peculiar, rapid, jingling,, 
indescribable medley of sounds, started first by one bird, quickly fol¬ 
lowed by another and another, until the whole flock are engaged, when, 
suddenly, without any apparent reason, they all, at the same instant, stop 
their vocal concert. When the male assumes the livery of the female he 
appears to lose his vocal powers, and is only heard to utter a sharp 
clinking note like that of the female. These birds, according to my 
experience, occur in southeastern Pennsylvania mainly as passing visi¬ 
tants * during the spring and fall when they are common. The nests 
* Nests of this species, it is said, have on one or two occasions been found in Chester county, and 
young unable to fly have once been taken in Delaware county, Pa. From numerous reports received it 
appears that the Bobolink breeds more or less regularly in nearly all parts of the state, but as a summer 
bird it is far more numerous in counties of the western and northern parts of the state than elsewhere. 
The species is common in summer in parts of Erie, Crawford, Warren. Mercer, Bradford and Susque 
lianna counties. 
