. Birds of village and field: a bird book for beginners . e terms with the Owls, and, judg-ing from the old Pigeons nests, I presume thePigeons had actually nested and reared youngthere. This seems to show the food of this Owlto be almost exclusively mice and rats, and provesit to be a species of the greatest economic is interesting to know that a pair of thesebirds have for years nested at intervals in one orother of the towers of the Smithsonian Institu-tion at Washington. Snowy Owl; Nyctea nyctea.(Plate XXVII.) Geographic Distribution. — Northern part of northern hem-isphere ; bree
. Birds of village and field: a bird book for beginners . e terms with the Owls, and, judg-ing from the old Pigeons nests, I presume thePigeons had actually nested and reared youngthere. This seems to show the food of this Owlto be almost exclusively mice and rats, and provesit to be a species of the greatest economic is interesting to know that a pair of thesebirds have for years nested at intervals in one orother of the towers of the Smithsonian Institu-tion at Washington. Snowy Owl; Nyctea nyctea.(Plate XXVII.) Geographic Distribution. — Northern part of northern hem-isphere ; breeds from Labrador northward, in North Americato Arctic Ocean, and wanders southward in winter regularlyto the northern United States, and occasionally to Texas andCalifornia. A great deal of interest is excited by the ap-pearance of a Snowy Owl in the neighborhoodin winter, for it is a large bird, dressed in thewhite feathers that enable it to come unawaresupon its prey in its arctic home. Audubon givesa most interesting account of the way he saw these. Plate XXVI. — BARN OWL Upper parts yellowish brown, washed with gray ; under partswhite, washed with huffy and finely spotted with black;brownish ring around facial disk. Lengthy 18 inches. > — M^-
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1890, booksubjectbirds, bookyear1898