<h2><SPAN name="THE_VIRGINIA_RAIL" id="THE_VIRGINIA_RAIL"></SPAN> THE VIRGINIA RAIL.<br/> <span class="xx-smaller"><span style="font-weight:lighter;"> (<i>Rallus virginianus.</i>)</span></span></h2>
<p>THIS miniature of <i>Rallus elegans</i>
or king rail, is found throughout
the whole of temperate
North America as far as the
British Provinces, south to Guatemala
and Cuba, and winters almost to the
northern limit of its range. A specimen
was sent by Major Bendire to the
National Museum from Walla Walla,
Wash., which was taken Jan. 16, 1879,
when the snow was more than a foot
deep. Other names of the species are:
Lesser clapper rail, little red rail, and
fresh-water mud hen. The male and
female are like small king rails, are
streaked with dark-brown and yellowish
olive above, have reddish chestnut
wing coverts, are plain brown on top
of head and back of neck, have a white
eyebrow, white throat, breast and sides
bright rufous; the flanks, wing linings
and under tail coverts are broadly
barred with dark brown and white;
eyes red.</p>
<p>The name of this rail is not as appropriate
to-day as it was when Virginia
included nearly all of the territory east
of the Mississippi. It is not a local
bird, but nests from New York, Ohio,
and Illinois northward. Short of wing,
with a feeble, fluttering flight when
flushed from the marsh, into which it
quickly drops again, as if incapable of
going farther, it is said this small bird
can nevertheless migrate immense distances.
One small straggler from a
flock going southward, according to
Neltje Blanchan, fell exhausted on the
deck of a vessel off the Long Island
coast nearly a hundred miles at sea.</p>
<p>The rail frequents marshes and boggy
swamps. The nest is built in a tuft of
weeds or grasses close to the water, is
compact and slightly hollowed. The
eggs are cream or buff, sparsely spotted
with reddish-brown and obscure lilac,
from 1.20 to 1.28 inches long to .90 to
.93 broad. The number in a set varies
from six to twelve. The eggs are
hatched in June.</p>
<p>The Virginia rail is almost exclusively
a fresh-water bird. It is not
averse to salt water, but even near the
sea it is likely to find out those spots
in the bay where fresh-water springs
bubble up rather than the brackish.
These springs particularly abound in
Hempstead and Great South Bay on
the south coast of Long Island. Brewster
says the voice of the Virginia rail,
when heard at a distance of only a few
yards, has a vibrating, almost unearthly
quality, and seems to issue from the
ground directly beneath the feet. The
female, when anxious about her eggs
or young, calls <i>ki ki-ki</i> in low tones
and <i>kiu</i>, much like a flicker. The young
of both sexes in autumn give, when
startled, a short, explosive <i>kep</i> or <i>kik</i>,
closely similar to that of the Carolina
rail.</p>
<p>There is said to be more of individual
variation in this species than in
any of the larger, scarcely two examples
being closely alike. The chin and
throat may be distinctly white, or the
cinnamon may extend forward entirely
to the bill. This species is found in
almost any place where it can find suitable
food. Nelson says: "I have often
flushed it in thickets when looking for
woodcock, as well as from the midst
of large marshes. It arrives the first
of May and departs in October; nests
along the borders of prairie sloughs
and marshes, depositing from eight to
fourteen eggs. The nest may often be
discovered at a distance by the appearance
of the surrounding grass, the
blades of which are in many cases interwoven
over the nest, apparently to
shield the bird from the fierce rays of
the sun, which are felt with redoubled
force on the marshes. The nests are
sometimes built on a solitary tussock
of grass, growing in the water, but not
often. The usual position is in the
soft, dense grass growing close to the
edge of the slough, and rarely in grass
over eight inches high. The nest is
a thick, matted platform of marsh
grasses, with a medium-sized depression
for the eggs."</p>
<p>Some of the rails have such poor
wings that it has been believed by some
unthinking people that they turn to
frogs in the fall instead of migrating—a
theory parallel with that which formerly
held that swallows hibernate in
the mud of shallow ponds.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</SPAN></span></p>
<table class="sp2 mc w50" title="VIRGINIA RAIL.">
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<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">FROM COL. F. KAEMPFER.<br/>
A. W. MUMFORD, PUBLISHER, CHICAGO</td>
<td class="x-smaller ac w40">VIRGINIA RAIL.<br/>
⅝ Life-size.</td>
<td class="xx-smaller ac w30">COPYRIGHT 1900, BY<br/>
NATURE STUDY PUB. CO., CHICAGO.</td>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</SPAN></span></p>
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