762 
U. S. P. R. R. EXP. AND SURVEYS-ZOOLOGY-GENERAL REPORT. 
The white forehead is very conspicuous. Another specimen goes to the opposite extreme in 
having the breast and belly continuously black, with only an occasional blotch of gray. 
It is quite possible that this continent possesses two species of white fronted geese, but in 
the specimen before me I am unable to detect any constant differences of importance. 
The difference between the European and American white fronted geese, according to Hart- 
laub, consists in the much larger bill of the latter. This in A. gambelii measures over two 
inches, instead of 1.50, as in A. albifrons. 
List of specimens. 
Catal. 
No. 
Locality. 
When col¬ 
lected. 
Whence obtained. 
Collected by— 
Remarks. 
4517 
Washington, D. C_ 
S. F. Baird.... 
1963 
Missouri river_... 
10463 
Frontera, Texas___ 
Major Emory_ 
J. H. Clark. 
9967 
Rio Grande_ 
_do_ 
A. Schott_ 
10406 
Salt Lake_ 
Captain 8 tan shiny ....._ 
10405 
California___ 
United States Ex. Exp__ 
10462 
Shoalwater bay_ 
Nov., 1854 
Governor Stevens_..... 
Dr. Cooper___ 
Iris brown ; bill 
flesh color. 
ANSER FRONTALIS, Baird. 
Sp. Ch. —Bill apparently red; the nail blackish. The head and neck brown, darker above, and the space round the base of 
the bill much darker than elsewhere, instead of being white. The scapular region and wing coverts are purer and darker brown 
than the head, each feather edged with paler, excepting the lesser coverts, which are more ashy. The greater coverts are 
broadly tipped with whitish. The low’er back, tail, primary, and secondary quills, are very dark brow'n; the tail narrowly 
tipped with white; the exposed portion of the primaries dark ashy. The sides of the rump, the upper and under tail coverts, 
and the region about the anus are whitish; the rest of the under parts are also whitish, each feather being brown and edged with 
this whitish color. The sides are continuously dark brown, but edged with the paler color of the head. The inside of wings 
and axillars are dark slate. Length about 26.00; wing, 16.75 ; tarsus, 2.92; commissure, 2.12. 
Hab .—Interior of North America. 
This goose is very similar to the common American white fronted goose in general appearance, 
the principal difference being the replacing of the white round the base of the bill by a brown, 
darker than that of the head, and the absence of black irregular blotches beneath, each feather 
having instead a dusky centre. The wings are precisely the same. The dusky nail of the bill 
instead of a white one appears to be characteristic. 
I have not met with any indication of this goose in any American writer, and I am inclined 
to believe it a distinct and undescribed species. The young white fronted goose is said to have 
the white front indicated by a few white feathers ; the under plumage plain gray. An Anser 
temminckii (A. minutus , Naum.) from Europe is much smaller than the European albifrons , with 
a dark nail, but the front is white. Anser bruchii of Brelim, (A. medius of Bruch,) likewise 
European, has the forehead uniform with the rest of the head, not darker; the breast is dusky; 
the nail of the bill is dark colored, as in the present bird ; the size appears smaller. 
For the present, therefore, I have no other alternative but to impose a new name on the 
