Set of 15: National Wildlife Animals
Front:
ခိုင်
RQUES
CANVASBACK
Female
Male
BLUEBIRD
Female Male
PETERSON
BULLOCK'S ORIOLE
Female
Male
SCAUP DUCK
Female Male
AQUES
16
БОВСАТ
Fred
LYNN
BOQUE
HUNT
BOB-WHITE QUAIL
Cock
Hen
111
fff
125
AMERICAN WOODCOCK
Hen
Cock
BOGUE
HUNT
COMMON TERN
Male
Female
AQUES
BLACK BEAR
WALTER A. WEBER
MOOSE
Cow Bull
W.J. Wilwarding
RUFFED GROUSE PARTRIDGE
Cock
Hea
IC
LYNN
BOGUE
HUN
تان
WHITETAIL DEER
Buck
Doe
Frço 2012
CANADA GOOS
Goose
Gander
LYNN
BOGUE
HUN
1/11
AMERICAN PINTAIL
Male
Female
Aques.
ROSE BREASTED GROSBEAK
Female
Male
PETERSON
Back:
Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 9
RESTORE
PROTECT CONSERVE
AMERICA'S
THE CANVASBACK
(Nyroca valisineria)
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WILDLIFE
RESOURCES
bers of Canvasbacks so
alarmingly that it has been a
matter of concern to many people.
Although Canvasbacks are found
throughout a large part of the United
States during migration, and along both
coasts in winter, they nest principally in
the interior and western parts of North
America, in prairie regions, from Alaska,
Saskatchewan and western Manitoba
south to Oregon, Nevada, northern New
Mexico and Minnesota.
TRADE MARK REG.S.PAT.OFF.
Canvasbacks riding the waves, their
white backs flashing and rusty heads
catching the sunlight are as handsome
as any of the waterfowl. On the wing,
heading into the wind, their long necks
and long bills give them a slender look
as if the wings were set far back.
In recent years, drought, drainage and
other agencies have reduced the num-
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 14
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AMERICA'S
RESTORE
THE BLUEBIRD
(Sialia Sialis)
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CONSERVE
In the North, the simple warbled notes
of Bluebirds are among the first spring
sounds. In the South, they can be heard
the year around.
WILDLIFE
TRADE MARK REG U.S. PAT OFF
Blue Jays have white breasts; Indigo
Buntings, blue breasts; Bluebirds, rusty-
red breasts. That is the simplest way to
tell this blue trio apart.
Bluebirds nest in cavities, in trees,
RESOURCES
old Woodpecker holes or
bird boxes. Four or five pale
blue eggs are laid. Boxes for them
should be 5" x 5" x 8" deep, with a hole
placed above center 1/2" in diameter,
small enough to keep out the Starlings.
The house should be put up on a pole
about 5' or 6' from the ground, in a
sunny open place.
The Western Bluebird is very similar
but has a chestnut patch in the center of
the back.
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 6
PROTECT
AMERICA'S
RESTORE
BULLOCK'S ORIOLE
(Icterus bullocki)
CONSERVE
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WILDLIFE
TRADE MARK REG
This is the common Oriole or "Fire Bird"
of much of the West, and it may be dis-
tinguished from other American Orioles
by the black crown and large white
wing patches.
The nest is a cup-like affair, hanging
from the tips of the branches, from 6 to
40 feet from the ground, generally in
RESOURCES
cotton woods or willows. The
three to six eggs are bluish-white
or pale buffy, lined and scrawled
with blackish. If you put out a supply of
string, yarn or floss, and cut it into ten
inch lengths, Orioles will sometimes use
it for nest-building.
In the summertime, this species
ranges as far north as southern British
Columbia and southern Saskatchewan.
It winters in Mexico.
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 7
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PROTECT
AMERICA'S
CONSERVE
WORK LIKE A BEAVER FOR RESTORATION
WILDLIFE
TRADE MARK REG.U.S.PAT. OFF.
THE SCAUP DUCK
(Nyroca marila)
The two kinds of Scaup Ducks, also
known as "Bluebills" or "Broadbills,"
are the bay Ducks that look black at both
ends and white in the middle, when sit-
ting on the water, Sometimes when they
raft in large numbers, the water fairly
boils with the diving and swimming
birds. It seems as though they must
surely collide down below.
RESOURCES
ΡΟ
The Greater Scaup and Lesser
Scaup are very much alike in
appearance, but the Greater has a
greenish-glossed head; the head of the
Lesser is glossed with purple.
Both species nest principally in Can-
ada. The Greater Scaup is the winter
Scaup of the North Atlantic coast from
southern New England to North Caro-
lina. It also winters along the Pacific
coast, and some migrate through the
interior to the Gulf of Mexico.
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 1
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PROTECT CONSERVE
AMERICA'S
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WILDLIFE
ВОВСАТ
(Lynx rufus)
The Bobcat is known by many names,
the most common being Bobcat, Wild-
Cat, Bay-Lynx and Red Lynx. The aver-
age Bobcat weighs between 15 and 25
lbs., although specimens as large as 39
lbs. have been weighed. The average
length is 30 to 35 inches and height, 17
to 20 inches.
The favorite haunts of the Bobcat are
rocky cliffs, canyons, gulches, sunlit
RESOURCES
glades, hardwood timbers and
swamps while caves and holes
among the rocks form its dens and
retreats. Because of its cleverness and
tricks in making use of its habitat, it is to
be found in large numbers close to civil-
ization as well as in the wilder sections.
Its food consists mainly of small mam-
mals and birds.
TRADE MARK REG. M.S.PAY OFF
The Bobcat usually mates from Jan-
uary to March, giving birth to from 2 to
4, most generally 3, young. The average
length of life is about 10 to 12 years.
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 2
RESTORE
PROTECT CONSERVE
AMERICA'S
BOB-WHITE QUAIL
(Colinus virginianus)
R FOR RESTORATION
RESOURCES
destroy. Bob-white needs a
combination of thicket and
open fields. In the north, sleet
Bob-white Quail, one of America's best storms that coat with ice the plants bear-
loved birds, make their homes close to ing seeds and winter berries sometimes
man, and even do well in vacant lots at wipe out the Bob-white. The name comes
the edge of cities. They have followed from the mating whistle of the male bird.
cultivation northward and westward, are Bob-white is a model father, will help
active friends of the farmer because of hatch the eggs and will rear the baby
the weed seeds and insects they Quail if they are left motherless.
WILDLIFE
TRADE MARK REG US PAY OFF
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 15
RESTORE
PROTEST-CONSERVE
AMERICA'S
WOODCOCK
(Philohela minor)
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WILDLIFE
RESOURCES
air. The female Woodcock
carries the downy young from
a place of danger, flying with them,
one at a time, between her thighs. The
Woodcock breeds in the northeastern
United States and eastern Canada, and
winters far enough south to find soft
earth for its flexible probing bill. Wood-
cock diet is almost 100 percent angle-
TRADE MARK REGS.PAT OFE
This quaintly beautiful game-bird of the
swampy thicket has mysterious ways
that scientists are studying. It is now be-
lieved that one thing needed to attract
Woodcock are dancing grounds, suitable
clearings in the thickets where the male
can perform his courting antics in the
worms.
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 3
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AMERICA'S
RESTORE
COMMON TERN
(Sterna birundo)
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WILDLIFE
RESOURCES
south on the Atlantic side of
South America to Patagonia and
on the Pacific to Ecuador.
It nests preferably on sandy or gravelly
places on islands or on shores where it
frequently makes little nest except a de-
pression in the sand. The spotted eggs
number two or three; both the eggs and
the young are difficult to see on the
sand. This harmless bird eats small fish,
crustaceans, aquatic worms and insects.
TRADE WARE RECU.S.PAY OFF
The flight of the Common Tern is strong,
graceful and erratic. This tern is found
in both the Old and New World, both
from the northern United States and the
Canadian provinces down the Atlantic
and Gulf coasts to Texas and in the Ba-
hamas. In winter it ranges from Florida
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 4
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AMERICA'S
BLACK BEAR
(Euarctos americanus)
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WILDLIFE
TRADE MARK REG.U.S.PAT.OFF
The Black Bear is found in all states that
have dense woods and swamps. The
Black Bear and the Brown or Cinnamon
Bear are the same species, just as Black
and Gray Squirrels are the same. Young
Bears are born in mid-winter while the
mother is asleep in her den, and are
RESOURCES
smaller than kittens. Twins
are common, sometimes triplets
and very seldom four cubs in a
tamily. Although a full-grown Black
Bear weighs as much as 500 pounds, in
the wild state the Black Bear is very
timid. When they become tame, begging
for food in national parks, they are some-
times a problem. A Bear's diet ranges
from fish to berries, from ants to honey.
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 5
AMERICA'S
MOOSE
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CONSERVE
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WILDLIFE
TRADE MARK REC U.S.PAY OFF
(Alces americanus)
The Moose is the largest member of the
Deer Family that ever existed. To fully
appreciate its size you must see a live
adult, 6' to 7' in height, striding like a
four-legged Colossus through the ever-
green forests of our northern states and
Canada or Alaska, swinging away at in-
credible speed from danger. Its huge head
is crowned with massive antlers spread-
RESOURCES
ing from 5 to 6 feet in width.
The Moose does not graze, like
Elk, but "browses" on bark, twigs,
and leaves of certain trees and also on
moss and lichens. It feeds upon lily pads
and stems, even poking its nose under
water seeking bulbs growing in the
muddy bottom. It loves to wade in the
water and is a powerful swimmer.
The Moose mates in the fall and the
young or "calf" is born in May. In the
winter they usually herd up in "yards."
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 11
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AMERICA'S
RESTORE
RUFFED GROUSE
(Bonasa umbellus)
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WILDLIFE
TRADE MARK REG.N.S.PAT OFF
The Ruffed Grouse is about the size of a
Bantam Rooster and is found in all wood-
lands of our northern states and in Can-
ada from the Maritime Provinces to
Alaska. In our eastern states it goes
south to Georgia in the mountains.
The nest is a few dead leaves scraped
together and may contain from eight to
fourteen buffy eggs, sometimes with
RESOURCES
brown speckles. The little
downy chicks can run about for
food at once.
During the mating season, April and
May, the male makes a curious drum-
ming sound by rapidly beating his
wings against the air as he stands erect
on a log or stone.
The Grouse eats seeds, berries, buds
and insects. It is a wild, shy bird, but
thrives in the neighborhood of man if
not too much disturbed.
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 8
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PROTECT CONSERVE
AMERICA'S
WHITETAIL DEER
(Odocoileus virginianus)
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WILDLIFE
TRADE MARK REG
The Whitetail Deer is America's best
known large wild animal, except in a
few of the western states. Deer have in-
creased at an astonishing rate in many
states, coming back in areas close to the
big eastern cities where they had been
unknown for almost a century. In
RESOURCES
country where snow gets to
be very deep there are sections
in which the Deer are too many for
the winter food supply, which is chiefly
white cedar boughs. There is a heavy
loss of young Deer from starvation when
the herds are permitted to become too
large. The Deer gets its name from its
"flag," a flashing signal as a Deer
bounds through the thick woods.
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 10
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AMERICA'S
RESTORE
CANADA GOOSE
(Branta canadensis)
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WILDLIFE
RESOURCES
Although some Canada Geese
nest in parts of the United
States, most of them pass the sum-
mer in Canada-some as far north as
the Arctic circle. The nest is placed on a
high spot of ground, or on a little island.
Five to nine buffy-white eggs are laid
on a bedding of down. The newly-
hatched Goslings are buffy yellow.
Several races of Canada Geese are
recognized-one, the Cackling Goose,
which spends the winter in California, is
almost as small as a Mallard Duck.
TRADE MARK REG.S.PAT.OFF
Wedges of Geese passing overhead are
as symbolic of spring as the first Robins.
The musical "honking" of the V-shaped
flocks is a very exciting sound. These
black-necked, white-cheeked fellows are
far from being the "silly Geese" that
their barnyard brethren are. They would
not survive long in the wild, if they were
not quite intelligent.
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
NAME
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 13
PROTECT CONSERVE
AMERICA'S
RESTORE
AMERICAN PINTAIL
(Anas acuta tzitzihoa linnaeus)
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WILDLIFE
TRADE MARK REG
The Pintail, aptly called the greyhound
of water fowl, is a swift-flying, agile,
hardy species. The male is attractively
garbed in a most effective blending of
gray, white and brown, surpassing many
other birds of more gaudy hues. The
Pintail breeds from Alaska and James
Bay to California and, rarely, Pennsyl-
vania; and winters from British Columbia
RESOURCES
and New York to the West
Indies and Panama; also in
Hawaiian Islands. These ducks
arrive at their breeding grounds
very early, sometimes before the ice
is out of the lakes, and their eggs, seven
to ten in number and pale greenish to
olive buff in color, are laid in late March
or April, the young being fully fledged
in late June.
PAT. OFF.
The species has increased wonder-
fully since spring shooting was out-
lawed by Federal law. Pintails are very
fond of grain for winter feed.
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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Wildlife Post Card Series
Subject 12
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AMERICA'S
RESTORE
ROSE-BREASTED
GROSBEAK
CONSERVE
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WILDLIFE
(Hedymeles ludovicanus)
The black and white male, with his large
triangular breast-patch of rose-red, is one
of the most beautiful of eastern birds.
His mate is quite different, more like a
large overgrown Sparrow, buf with a
much larger bill than any Sparrow has.
The male's reputation as a singer lives
up to his beauty. His song resembles the
RESOURCES
carolling of a Robin but is
smoother, more melodious
one of the pleasantest bird songs to
be heard in the June Woodlands.
The nest is built from 6' to 20' from the
ground, in a shrub or small tree. The
three to five greenish eggs are spotted
and blotched with brown.
TRADE MARK REGNS.PAT OFF
The Rose-breast is found in the sum-
mer east of the Rocky Mountains, from
the central states north to central Mani-
toba and southern Quebec. It migrates
to southern Mexico and South America.
Copyright 1939, National Wildlife Publishing Corp., New York
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