226 
ZOOLOGY. 
which passes hack along the side of the crown ; within this white, anteriorly and laterally, is a hlack suffusion. The vertex 
and occiput light brown. Chin and throat black, margined laterally and behind by a white band, beginning behind the eye. 
Belly pale buff anteriorly, an orange brown rounded patch in the middle, and white laterally, the feathers all margined 
abruptly with black. The feathers on the sides of body like the back, streaked centrally with white. Feathers of top and 
sides of neck with the margins and shafts black. Under tail coverts buff, broadly streaked centrally with brown. 
Female similar, without the white and black of the head ; the feathers of the throat brownish yellow, streaked with brown. 
The buff and orange brown of the belly wanting. The crest short. 
Length, 9.50 inches; wing, 4.32; tail, 4.12. 
Hab .—Plains and lowlands of California and Oregon towards the coast. Mohave river. Puget Sound, W. T. (Introduced.) 
I have some doubts whether the quail found at Fort Vancouver do not belong to this species; 
never having examined birds from that locality, I can throw no light on the subject. 
The present species, however, does exist on the prairies near Puget Sound , but has only been 
resident there since the spring of 1857, at which time, through the commendable liberality of 
Gov. Charles H. Mason, and of Hugh Allen Goldsborough, esq., two lots were imported from 
San Francisco and turned loose upon the gravelly plains near Olympia, the capital of the 
Territory. 
I have heard subsequently only concerning the Goldsborough flock, which, consisting 
originally of nine individuals, of whom but four were females, had increased by the next 
winter to a covey of nearly a hundred individuals. 
Note.— Mr. Geo. Gibbs writes: ‘‘The crested quail cannot be considered as an inhabitant of 
Washington Territory, as they are very rarely seen north of the Columbia river, and then, I 
believe, only at Fort Vancouver. I have never seen any east of the Cascade mountains. I 
met great numbers of the common California species ( L. californica ) on Russian river in 1851, 
and saw them again on the Klamath in 1852. They were very tame, and took to the bushes 
when disturbed, perching on the limbs. Like the sharp-tailed grouse they gather in large flocks. 
This is the case even when young, and it has been doubted whether several females do not 
belong to one male, and with their broods all run together.—S. 
