. Animate creation : popular edition of "Our living world" : a natural history. Zoology; Zoology. 494 THE SHARP-TAILED GROUSE. It is a constant resident where it has been bred, and is not, as a rule, migratory. Audu- bon, however, says, it sometimes, when gathered in considerable numbers in one locality, moves away in the autumn, probably in seairh of food. A variety called the Mountain Partridge occurs among the Rocky Mountains. It is one- third smaller than the Eastern bird ; its plumage is grayer, and the rulile shorter. It is known there as the Pine Hen. Another variety is called


. Animate creation : popular edition of "Our living world" : a natural history. Zoology; Zoology. 494 THE SHARP-TAILED GROUSE. It is a constant resident where it has been bred, and is not, as a rule, migratory. Audu- bon, however, says, it sometimes, when gathered in considerable numbers in one locality, moves away in the autumn, probably in seairh of food. A variety called the Mountain Partridge occurs among the Rocky Mountains. It is one- third smaller than the Eastern bird ; its plumage is grayer, and the rulile shorter. It is known there as the Pine Hen. Another variety is called Oregon (Irouse, and found on the Pacific coast. The same pale, gray plumage is seen in it. The nest, usually placed under a log, and lined with dried grasses, bits of moss, and feathers, has from ten to fourteen eggs. The chickens leave the nest at once, and follow the mother, who clucks and otherwise acts like the domestic hen. The mother exhibits various schemes to lure an intrutler away, always giving time for the chicks to hide, when she flies or runs off WILLOW GSXiV^K.—Lmjopm atbu«. (Summer Plumage.) The SiiARr-TMLEi) (tiioiise {PerUocetes pJuisianeUiifi) is a species resembling very closely the conunou ]irairii'chicken. Tt inhabits the British provinces, and westward to Alaska. It prefers the oi)en lowlands and thickets near lakes and rivers. At all seasons, it seems to be found in small flocks of a dozen or more. In winter it perches on trees, probably in the same manner as the other species, in a pai'tially hybernating state. It is said to have its own peculiar method of parading in the breeding season. It selects a clear space, and in numbers, a small covey, run around in a circle of about twenty feet in diameter. This is kept up so persistently a bare space is worn in the grass. If disturbed, the birds squat closely. Some run to the right and others to the left, when not disturbed, meeting and crossing each othei'. These dances continue several weeks, o


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Keywords: ., bookauthorbr, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectzoology