. Guide leaflet. ><■(]< of fluted Dryas leaves were Btarred with o3 J -4-3 u S X> H OJ £ 0 z £ 2 ^ 03 UJ -t-3+3 c/)3 B 0ttJ w 0 CO u SiOS O > J2 T3 G 3 o bb J3 C9 oi PQ 25. THE SAGE GROUSE IN WYOMING NEXT to the Wild Turkey, the Sage Grouse is the largest of NorthAmerican game birds. Its range is restricted to the high, sage-brush (Artemisia tridentota) plains of the West, from westernNebraska and western Dakota north to, and in places slightly beyond,the Canadian boundary, west to eastern Oregon and northeasternCalifornia, east of the Sierras, and south through Utah


. Guide leaflet. ><■(]< of fluted Dryas leaves were Btarred with o3 J -4-3 u S X> H OJ £ 0 z £ 2 ^ 03 UJ -t-3+3 c/)3 B 0ttJ w 0 CO u SiOS O > J2 T3 G 3 o bb J3 C9 oi PQ 25. THE SAGE GROUSE IN WYOMING NEXT to the Wild Turkey, the Sage Grouse is the largest of NorthAmerican game birds. Its range is restricted to the high, sage-brush (Artemisia tridentota) plains of the West, from westernNebraska and western Dakota north to, and in places slightly beyond,the Canadian boundary, west to eastern Oregon and northeasternCalifornia, east of the Sierras, and south through Utah and Nevada. Within these limits the Sage Grouse is resident, but it migrateslocally at the approach of winter from higher to lower altitudes, as thesnows deprive it of its food. This consists largely of the leave- of thesagebrush, but in summer the leaves and seeds of other plants areeaten. When feeding on sagebrush leaves, the flesh of the old bird isflavored by the nature of their food, but the birds of the year are verypalatable. The Sage Grous


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectnatural, bookyear1901