The Wilson Bulletin, Объемы 28-29Wilson Ornithological Society, 1916 |
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... respects than one , notably the vast number of buffalo skulls lying about on the prairie . For the ornithologist , wishing to do any field work , the opportunities are so favorable , that subsequent visits to other sections LIBRARY.
... respects than one , notably the vast number of buffalo skulls lying about on the prairie . For the ornithologist , wishing to do any field work , the opportunities are so favorable , that subsequent visits to other sections LIBRARY.
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... prairie heights . Pinnated and Prairie Sharp - tail Grouse abound in many places , which clearly illustrates the temperament of the Dakota settlers , who allow such splendid resident game birds as those to thrive and propagate in ...
... prairie heights . Pinnated and Prairie Sharp - tail Grouse abound in many places , which clearly illustrates the temperament of the Dakota settlers , who allow such splendid resident game birds as those to thrive and propagate in ...
Стр. 3
... prairie , Mallards , Shovellers and Pintail retire to nest . The Gadwalls , Baldpates and White- winged Scoters may be startled from their nest among rose bushes , buck brush , etc. , usually near a fair sized lake . The Scoters appear ...
... prairie , Mallards , Shovellers and Pintail retire to nest . The Gadwalls , Baldpates and White- winged Scoters may be startled from their nest among rose bushes , buck brush , etc. , usually near a fair sized lake . The Scoters appear ...
Стр. 4
... prairie , full of hummocks . This was the one place where Baird's Sparrow was common . A dozen " trilling " males in a space of forty acres . Descending from this table land , we see and hear the little Clay - colored Spar- row , where ...
... prairie , full of hummocks . This was the one place where Baird's Sparrow was common . A dozen " trilling " males in a space of forty acres . Descending from this table land , we see and hear the little Clay - colored Spar- row , where ...
Стр. 5
... prairie ponds or sloughs . It is their bird life that will be treated in this paper . Three of these ponds are located in the writer's tramping ground and are within five miles of Charleston , Coles County , Illinois . Another one ...
... prairie ponds or sloughs . It is their bird life that will be treated in this paper . Three of these ponds are located in the writer's tramping ground and are within five miles of Charleston , Coles County , Illinois . Another one ...
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April Assoc Barn Swallow birds Black Blackbird blue berries Bluebird breeding Brown Thrasher cage Catbird Charles City Cheesman Park Chicago Chimney Swift Chipping Sparrow City Park Coll Creek Crow December Dendroica Downy Woodpecker Duck eggs feathers feet female field Field Sparrow flew Flicker flock Flycatcher flying Forest and Stream Goldfinch Goosepond Grackle Grosbeak Gull Hawk Heron Hickman Horned Lark House Wren Iowa island July Junco June Killdeer male March Marsh Meadowlark migration miles Nebraska nest noted Nuthatch Oberlin observed Ohio Oriole Ornithologists parent Plover ponds prairie rare records Red-headed Woodpecker reported river Robin roost Sandpiper second bird seen Sept September Shores Smith collection species specimen spring Suffield summer taken Tanager Thrush Tree Swallow trees Vireo Wall lake Wallops Id Warbler Warbling Vireo Waxwing Wilson Bulletin Wilson Ornithological Club wings winter Wood Woodpecker young birds
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Стр. 111 - For, lo, the winter is past, The rain is over and gone; The flowers appear on the earth; The time of the singing of birds is come, And the voice of the turtle is heard in our land; The fig tree putteth forth her green figs, And the vines with the tender grape give a good smell, Arise, my love, my fair one, and come away.
Стр. 111 - lo, the winter is past, the rain is 'over and gone. The " flowers appear on the earth, the time of the singing of " birds is come, and the voice of the turtle is heard in our " land. The fig-tree putteth forth her green figs; and the " vines, with their tender grape, give a good smell.
Стр. 102 - BuLL. 13. Biological Series 5. The double-crested Cormorant (Phalacrocorax Auritus) and its relation to the salmon industries on the Gulf of St. Lawrence, 1915— by PA Taverner.
Стр. 90 - Birds'-Nesting : A Handbook of Instruction in Gathering and Preserving the Nests and Eggs of Birds for the Purposes of Study.
Стр. 106 - Cabanis. 339- (731)- Balophus bicolor (Linn.). Tufted Titmouse. The Tufted Titmouse is a rather rare resident in southern Iowa, seldom reaching the northern part of the state, although it has been occasionally taken in the extreme southern counties of Minnesota. County records: Blackhawk — " Have seen persons who have collected them occasionally in the vicinity of Cedar Falls, Iowa" (Hatch, Birds of Minn., 1892, p.
Стр. 172 - One bird will approach another with an indescribable squeaking sound, bowing all the time. If the other bird feels like performing, which Is usually the case, he bows in return. They cross bills very rapidly several times. Then one bird turns its head and lifts one wing in such a manner that the primaries point directly out at the side. In the meantime the other bird keeps up a loud noise that sounds somewhat like the neighing of a horse. The bird taking the lead then walks around his partner, stepping...
Стр. 86 - WF Henninger (1916) gives the following account of an unusual flight behavior that he noted near New Bremen, Ohio, on October 11, 1911 : "In the dry tops of two large trees about 17 meters apart from one another, there were two specimens of this species. While the one sat perfectly motionless preening its feathers occasionally, the other one began to fly upward in very short spirals and then to descend in a number of jerky drops with quickly expanded and closed wings. After doing this a number of...
Стр. 172 - ... meantime the other bird keeps up a loud noise that sounds somewhat like the neighing of a horse. The bird taking the lead then walks around his partner, stepping high, like a negro cakewalker. This part of the procedure is usually closed by one or both birds pointing their beaks straight up in the air, rising on their toes, puffing out their breasts, and uttering a longdrawn groan. The same thing is repeated many times with slight variations.
Стр. 38 - In the absence of the president and vice-president, the meeting was called to order by the secretary, and Chief Hoagland of Lincoln was elected president pro tern.
Стр. 40 - ... glades or prairies, in search of strawberries, and subsequently of dewberries, blackberries and grasshoppers, thus obtaining abundant food, and enjoying the beneficial influence of the sun's rays. They roll themselves in deserted ants' nests, to clear their growing feathers of the loose scales, and prevent ticks and other vermin from attacking them, these insects being unable to bear the odour of the earth in which ants have been.