THE BIRDS
WILSON PHALAROPE. Steganopus tricolor Vieillot
Field characters.Larger
than Northern Phalarope; size of Robin or Killdeer, but with slender
head and neck, and very slender black bill. Upper surface chiefly dark
brown, with some black and cinnamon red at side of neck of female; a
conspicuous patch of white above base of tail, shown especially in
flight; under surface white except for tawny or gray area on fore neck.
Swims lightly, as does the Northern Phalarope, but not so
habitually.
Occurrence.Summer
visitant along east base of Sierra Nevada; dates of record at or near
Mono Lake: May 6 and 20, and June 23, 1916. Frequents marshy meadows and
margins of ponds.
The Wilson Phalarope probably nests in wet meadows at
Mono Lake and south of Williams Butte; for a female collected there on
May 6, 1916, contained an egg ready to be laid. Moreover; two male birds
observed by Mr. Dixon at Farrington's Ranch on June 23, 1916, acted as
if there were nests near by. Since the male of the phalarope is the sex
which does most or all of the work of brooding and of caring for the
young, it seems likely that the concern exhibited by these birds meant
that they actually were nesting in the vicinity.
Unlike the Northern Phalarope, this larger species
gleans most of its forage when wading rather than when swimming.
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