* ' * « Trl If I THE LIBRARY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESENTED BY PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID fkole tjf //cjtry King, Sy.inry. AUSTRALIAN COCKATOO. The sulphur-coloured crest of this bird a arranged in the form of a horse-shoe. Photo by OttoHiar Anschul:, Berlin, MACAW. Next to the brilliancy of its colouration , the most slrik inn u-at ui this bird is its huge beak. . Thi» wmi.l • , . worn only lor a few week> in Hi. This 1 me on • "l IK moil extra' Birds of Other Lands T^eptiles - Fis/zes • yointed ^Animals and J^ower Forms EDITORS AND SPECIAL CONTRIBUTORS Charles J. Cornish Ernest Ingersoll F. C. Selous R. Lydekker Sir Herbert Maxwell Sir Harry Johnston H. N. Hutchinson J. W. Gregory and many others THE UNIVERSITY SOCIETY INC. New York X • COPYRIGHT, 1917, BY THE UNIVERSITY SOCIETY, INC. A portion of the material contained in this volume was previously published in The Standard Library of Natural History. MANUFACTURED IN THE U. S. A. (V t, CONTENTS O.F OTHER LANDS PAGES THE OSTRICH AND ITS KINDRED .... .......... 1 THE GAME-BIRDS AND RAILS .............. 13 PIGEONS AND SAND-GROUSE .............. 28 AUKS, GULLS, AND PLOVERS .............. 31 BUSTARDS AND CRANES ............... 38 GREBES AND DIVERS, PENGUINS, ETC ............. 41 STORKS, HERONS, AND PELICAN TRIBE ............ 49 SCREAMERS, DUCKS, GEESE, AND SWANS ............ 66 BIRDS OF PREY AND OWLS ............... 74 NIGHT-JARS, SWIFTS, AND HUMMING-BIRDS ........... 87 PARROTS, CUCKOOS, AND PLANTAIN-EATERS ........... 91 ROLLERS, KINGFISHERS, HORNBILLS, AND HOOPOES .......... 102 BEE-EATERS, TROGONS, ETC ............... 110 TOUCANS, WOODPECKERS, ETC ............... 112 THE PERCHING BIRDS ................ 117 LARKS, TITMICE, HONEY-EAT"ERS, ETC ....... ..... 128 SHRIKES, THRUSHES, AND THEIR ALLIES ........... 135 REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS CROCODILES AND ALLIGATORS .............. 147 TORTOISES AND TURTLES ............... 153 LIZARDS .... ............... 165 CHAMELEONS AND THE TUATERA .......... ... 183 SNAKES ...... .............. 187 FROGS AND TOADS ......... . ...... 200 NEWTS AND SALAMANDERS . 207 vi CONTENTS FISHES PAGES LUNG-FISHES AND CHIMERAS 21 1 THE PERCH FAMILY 214 SCALY- FINS, SWORD-FISHES, ETC. • • • • . zi j HAIR-TAILS, GURNARDS, ETC. 222 l.i MP-SUCKERS, FLYING- FISHES, ETC 230 THE WRASSE-LIKE FISHES 2.5;> PlPE-FlSHES, SUN-FlSHES. /VXD THEIR ALLIES •••••. /.)8 THE COD FAMILY 01, ••••.. ^4j CAVE-FISHES, SAND-EELS, AND FLAT-FISHES o^ EELS AND CAT-FISHES . •••••. Z4H THE CARP FAMILY 252 PIKES, ARAPAIMAS, BEAKED SALMON, AND SCOPEMDS .... iS4 THE SALMON FAMILY 2<$7 THE HERRING AND ITS KINDRED 2oU BONY-PIKE, STURGEON, ETC. 264 SHARKS AND RAYS Zoo JOI\TED AXLMALS IAB AND SCORPION GROUPS INSECTS THE CRAB AND SCORPION GROUPS . --- 272 283 LOWER FORMS SHELL-FISH, OR MOLLUSCS Jj9 LAMP-SHELLS 346 STAR-FISHES, SEA-URCHINS, ETC. ••••••. v*4o Moss- ANIMALS i->i WORMS . JJO CORALS, SEA-AM M,, MS. \M, JELLY-FISH i s ?Af • • • • • ,,l()l" SPONOES AND ANIMALCULES Soo Birds of Other Lands BY W. P. PYCRAFT, A.L.S., F.Z.S. CHAPTER I THE OSTRICH AND ITS KINDRED THE Ostriches are a very an- cient group of birds, and, judg- ing from what we know of their anatomy, they must be regarded as representing the most primitive of liv- ing birds. With the exception of a single group, to be discussed presently, all have lost the power of flight. In some, in consequence, the wing has be- come reduced to a mere vestige. It organ, such as a wing or a leg or a tail, Phot, ky H. ;«, F.,q. RHEA AND YOUNG Although the ivings of the rhea are large, they fit so closely to the body as to he in-visible "when closed Phctt ty W. P. Dando, F.Z.S. RUFOUS TINAMOU, BRAZIL The tail-feathers of these birds are so small as to appear to be wanting is a rule in Nature, we may remark, that whenever an ceases to be useful, it undergoes forthwith a slow process of reduction or degeneration, growing smaller and smaller in each successive generation, till at last it may even disappear altogether. The loss of flight has been accompanied by a degeneration in the quality of the feathers — that is to say, their service- ability as aids to flight has been entirely lost. The size of the members of this group varies much. The largest of all is the African Ostrich; the smallest, of the flightless forms, the New Zealand Apteryx. The ostrich-like birds which have retained the power of flight are known as Tinamous, and are natives of South America. All these are smaller than the flightless Apteryx. TINAMOUS The TlNAMOUS should perhaps be regarded as standing at the head of the Ostrich Tribe, since they have reached a higher degree of development than any other of its members. They have also preserved the power of flight. In their general appearance they bear a singular resemblance to partridges, though a little careful observation will reveal many points wherein they differ therefrom. They are very confiding and unsuspicious birds — some persons call THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD rhttt ky H. NtH,, RHEA AND YOUNG ONES Although frequently bred in captivity, the young Jo not teem to be easily reared them stupid on this account — and in the early morn- ing the species inhabiting the Argentine pampas will, observers tell us, come right up to the isolated houses of the settlers, so that the boys knock them down with stones. The delicate quality of the flesh has caused these birds to be highly esteemed as food, and their trustful nature renders them an easy prey, so much so that in some districts they have been almost exter- minated. Large numbers are caught by riding round them in a circle and securing them with a noose. Mr. Hudson, who lived many years in the pampas, assures us that the GREAT TIXAMOI: is one of the sweetest-voiced of the native birds. The song is composed of " five modulated notes, flute-like in character, and very expressive, and is uttered by many individuals answering each other as they sit far apart, concealed in the grass." The eggs of the tinamous are to be reckoned among the wonders of bird life, being so highly bur- nished as to look like beautifully glazed porcelain. The colour varies according to the species, ranging from wine-red, blue-green, and brown to black. The young are almost as remarkable as the eggs, being clothed with a peculiar down, of great complexity of structure, and resembling in some respects the nestling down of the true ostrich. THE RHEA The RHEA is a native of South America. It is frequently referred to as the Son H AMERICAN OSTRICH, and also as the NANDU. The resemblance which it bears to the true ostrich is striking, but it may at once be distinguished therefrom by the fact that it has three toes and a feathered head and neck; furthermore, it is smaller in size, and lacks the conspicuous white wing- and tail-plumes. The tail, indeed, as may be seen from the photographs reproduced is wanting. The rhea must be re- garded as standing at the head of the flightless members of the Ostrich Tribe. Its wings, though not large enough to raise its heavy body from the ground, are yet of considerable size. In Buenos Ayres rheas are hunted with dogs. If a breeze is blowing, the birds raise one wing, which acts as a sail. This done, they can acquire a speed which makes it absolutely im- possible for either dog or horse to come up with them. The only chance of ultimately captur- LYING DOWN ing them is by wearing them out Tht krtail if ikt larger mcmbrri of ikt Ollritk Trihe it pro+'ljrj wilt a large horny flait, an -whit* they tupport ikt ktdy when rtinnf THE OSTRICH AND ITS KINDRED 3 by ceaseless pursuit. A chase of this kind may last an hour and a half. Needless to say, for sport of this kind both horses and dogs must be the best of their kind and in " good form." The natives and Indians hunt them on horseback with the " bolas." The bolas, or balls, used for this purpose consist of two round stones covered with leather, and united by a thong of about 8 feet long. One of these is held in the hand and the other whirled round the head and suddenly released, when both go whirling madly round till they strike the rhea's legs, around which they instantly twist, and the victim is a fast prisoner. The rhea is in danger of disappearing altogether as a wild bird, owing to the ruthless slaughter which is made upon it for the sake of its feathers. For some years back, Mr. Harting tells us, " the number of birds killed has averaged 400,000 per annum, and, as a consequence, the species has already disappeared from nearly half the territory of the River Plate." On some estates in Argentina the wild birds are driven in and plucked. Like most of the Ostrich Tribe, the male alone performs the duties of incubation, hatching Photo br J. T. fftwman] [Btrkhamtttd RHEAS IN A PUBLIC PARK In spite of its large size, the rhea is not a conspicuous bird in a -wild state, the grey plumage harmonising perfectly 'with the surrounding pampas some twenty eggs at a time, the produce of several different females. There are three different kinds of rhea, but they do not differ much one from another. The young are curiously striped. The egg is very large, of a cream colour, and deeply pitted. Darwin, in his " Voyage of the Beagle," tells us that when he was "at Bahia Blanca, in the months of September and October, the eggs, in extraordinary numbers, were found all over the country. They lie either scattered and single, in which case they are never hatched, and are called by the Spaniards huachos ; or they are collected together into a shallow excavation which forms the nest. Out of the four nests which I saw, three contained twenty-two eggs each, and the fourth twenty-seven. In one day's hunting on horseback sixty-four eggs were found : forty-four of these were in two nests, and the remaining twenty scattered huachos. The Gauchos unanimously affirm — and there is no reason to doubt their statement — that the male bird alone hatches the eggs, and for some time afterwards accompanies the young. The cock, when on the nest, lies very close : I have myself almost ridden over one. It is asserted that at such times they are occasionally fierce and even dangerous, and that they have been 4 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD known to attack a man on horseback, trying to kick and leap on him. My informer pointed out to me an old man whom he had seen much terrified by one chasing him. ... 1 understand that the male emu in the Zoological Gardens takes charge of the nest: this habit, therefore, is common to the family. " The Gauchos unanimously affirm that several females lay in one nest. I have been positively told that four or five hen birds have been watched to go, in the middle of the day, one after another, to the same nest. . . . Although this habit at first appears very strange, I think the cause may be explained in a simple manner. The number of eggs in the nest varies from twenty to forty, and even fifty; and according to Azara even seventy or eighty. Now, although it is most probable, from the number of the eggs found in one district bcin^ so extraordinarily great in proportion to the parent birds, and likewise from the state of the ovarium of the hen, that she may, in the course of the season, lay a large number, yet the time required must be very long. ... If the hen was obliged to hatch her own eggs before the last was laid, the first probably would be addled ; but if each laid a few eggs at successive periods in different nests, and several hens . . . combined together, then the eggs in one collection would be nearly of the same age. If the number of eggs in one of these nests is, as I believe, not greater on an average than the number laid by one female in the season, then there must be as many nests as females, and each cock bird will have its fair share of the labour of incubation : and that during a period when the females probably could not sit, from not having finished laying. I have before mentioned the great number of huachos, or deserted eggs ; and that in one day's hunting twenty were found in this state. It appears odd that so many should be wasted. Does it not arise from the difficulty of several females WHITE RHEAS Tkca art tntj vtritliti of tkt tommtmftrm, net a Jisrir.ft THE OSTRICH AND ITS KINDRED associating together, and find- ing a male ready to under- take the office of incubation? It is obvious that there must at first be some degree of association between at least two females, otherwise the eggs would remain scattered over the wide plains, at dis- tances far too great to allow of the male collecting them into one nest : some . . . have believed that the scattered eggs were deposited for the young birds to feed on. This can hardly be the case . . . because huachos, although often found addled and putrid, are generally whole." THE OSTRICH The OSTRICH is the giant amongst living birds, the full-grown male standing some 8 feet high, and weighing about 300 Ibs. It is flight- less, the wings being smaller, in proportion to the size of the body, than in the rhea. But the energy which in other birds is employed in sustaining flight in the ostrich is expended in running, so that it has reached a high degree of speed — no less, in fact, than twenty-six miles an hour. When at full speed, it is generally believed the ostrich derives no small help from the wings, which are used .ail-Wise. Nor is this belief by any means a modern one, for all of us must be familiar with Job's observations on this subject: "What time she lifteth up her wings on high, she sc )rneth the horse and his rider." The wings are never used in running at full speed, but re of much service in turning, " enabling the bird to double abruptly, even when going at top speed." In justice to the older observers, however, it must be remarked that ostriche do run with raised wings, but only at the commencement of the run, or in covering a short distance, when the pace may be considerable ; but if circumstances demand " full speed ahead," they are held close to the body, where they offer the least resistance to speed. With the gradual perfection of its running powers, there has followed a gradual change in the form of the leg. This change has taken place by reduction in the number of the toes. Of the original five with which its ancestors began life only two now remain — the third and fourth. The third is of great size, having apparently waxed great at the expense of the other toes, a growth which seems to be still in progress, inasmuch as the fourth toe is undoubtedly dwindling. It is very small, and gives unmistakable signs of growing smaller, since it has now become nailless. When it has quite disappeared, the ostrich, like the horse, will have but a single toe on each foot — the third. The dainty, mincing step of the ostrich is a delight to watch, and, thanks to the Zoological Gardens, this can be done. Th- o.;trich, like its cousin of South America, the rhea, commonly associates with herds of the larger mammalia. On the South African veldt the companions of the ostrich are the zebra, wildebeest, and hartebeest, just as on the pampas of South America the rheas are found associated with herds of deer and guanaco. Phllt kj W. Ktil\ [h-uhaui, N. b. OSTRICH STANDING BESIDE HER EGGS In a 'wild state both cock and hen take part in the preparation of the nett THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD The egg of the ostrich weighs about 3 Ibs., and is of delicious flavour. The empty shell, it has been found by experiment, is large enough to hold the contents of eighteen eggs of the common domesticated fowl. It takes about forty minutes to boil an ostrich egg hare. About fifteen eggs represent the clutch. The nest is a mere depression in the sand. The hen sits by day, and her mate by night; but the eggs are never left, as is sometimes stated, to the heat of the sun, so as to lessen the duties of the parent. Such a course would infallibly destroy the eggs, for the sun's rays, especially at noon, are very powerful. The male and female ostrich differ much in coloration. In the former the trunk is clotlu-cl in a vestment of richest black, whilst the quills of the wings and tail-feathers are of pure white : they form the much-prized ostrich plumes. The female is much less splendid, being clothed in sober grey. But these colours are not merely ornamental ; they render the male by night and the female by day invisible, owing to the perfect harmony they make with their surroundings, thus affording an interesting illustration of protective coloration. " All ostriches," says Mr. Cronwright Schreiner, " adults as well as chicks, have a strange habit known as ' waltzing.' When chicks are let out from a kraal in the early morning, they will often start away at a great pace. After running for a few hundred yards they will all stop, and, with wings raised, spin round rapidly for some time, often till quite giddy, when a broken leg occasionally occurs. Adult birds, when running in large camps, will often, if ;he veldt is good, do the same, especially if startled in the fresh of the <• morning. A troop of birds \\alt/.in ;, in full plumage, is a remarkably pretty sight. Vicious cocks ' roll ' when challenging to fight, also when wooing the lien. The cock will suddenly bump down on to his ' km . . . open his wings, making a straight line across his breast, and then swing them alternately backwards and forwards ... as if on a pivot, each wing, as it comes forward, being raised, while that going backward is depressed. The neck is lowered until the head is on a level with the back, and the head and neck swing from side to side with the wings, the back of the head striking with a loud click against the ribs, first on the one side and then on the other. The click is produced by the skin of the neck, which then bulges loosely just under the beak and for some distance downwards. While ' rolling,' every feather over the whole body is on end. and the plumes are open, like a large white fan. At such a time the bird sees very imperfectly, if at all ; in fact, he seems so preoccupied that, if pursued, one may often approach unnoticed. I have \\alked up to a 'rolling' cock and seized him by the neck, much to his surprise. Just before rolling, a cock, especially if courting the hen, will often run slowly and daintily on the points of his toes, with neck slightly inflated, upright and rigid, the tail half drooped, and all his body- feathers fluffed up ; the wings raised and expanded, the inside edge-, touching the sides of the neck for nearly the whole of its length, and the plumes showing separately, like an open tan ... on each side of his head. In no other attitude is the splendid beauty of his plumage displayed to such advantage." The males are very fierce while guarding their eggs or fighting for mates, and kick with extraordinary violence with their powerful legs. As an example of their fierceness when aroused, Mr. Crunwright Schreiner, who knows much of these birds, relates a story, told him by a fh.1. h If. K.id] [Ifl.liiw, N.B. OSTRICHES TEN DAYS OLD Tkl dnan-fcatkcrs of young ostrichei are fuile different from tkoa if otker birjs, the tifl of cock being produced into a korny ribbon Photo by Mr. C/o [Cape 'letun AN OSTRICH FAMILY Tie sock bird it in -tnusuallv fine tfiecimcn, measuring exactly S feet from head la feat 7 8 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD railway-guard, of an old male who charged a goods-train coming at full speed down a steep gradient. The bird, as soon as he caught sight of the train, at once got on the line, " and advanced fearlessly to fight the monster. As the screeching engine approached, he rushed at it from straight in front, hissing angrily, and kicked. He was cut to pieces the next moment." The Bedouin tribes hunt the ostrich on dromedaries, so also do the natives of Somaliland, and when near enough shoot it with poisoned arrows. In the Sahara, Canon Tristram tells us. it is ridden down on horseback, a method of capture which the Sahara sportsman regards as the greatest feat of hunting. '"The Bushmen," says Mr. Harting, "like the Somalis, kill the ostrich with poisoned arrows, or catch it very cleverly in pit-falls or with the lasso, and the Sukurieh and Hadendawah tribes likewise use the lasso, with which the bird, when once fairly caught, is strangled. ... A favourite plan is to wait for the birds in a place of concealment, as near as A GROUP OF COCK. OSTRICHES tfete tkt contfieuoui tail in tktit tirji j it ii "wanting in alter mtmbert of tkt Ostric/i Trite possible to the pools to which they come for water, and then, with a gun loaded \\ ith swan- shot, to fire at their necks as they stoop to drink, when perhaps half a dozen are laid low at once. . . . Another plan to which the Bushman often resorts is simpler still. Having found an ostrich's nest, he removes all the eggs, and, ensconcing himself in the nest, quietly awaits the return of the bird, which he shoots with a poisoned arrow before it has time t<> recover from its surprise at finding him there instead of the eggs. ... In Senaar the .\bu-kof bring it down by throwing a curved flat stick from 2.] to 3 feet long, not unlike- the Australian boomerang, and made of tough acacia-wood or hard zizyphus." Mr. Arthur Glynn, of Leydenburg, give- a ;.;ra]>hir di-scription of an ostrich hunt, his quarry being a troop of twenty birds — " on sighting which," he tells us, " \\e immediately ga\ e elia-r. discovering directly afterwards that a single hull wildebeeste was among them. After a stilt' gallop," he says, "of half a mile, \ve got within seventy yards of the troop; 90 reining in, we both dismounted and fired, bringing down one ostrieh and the wildebeeste bull. . . . \Ve quickly mounted and continued the pursuit, the ostriches never running for any distance in a direct THE OSTRICH AND ITS KINDRED course, but always turning and twisting, which made it difficult for ius to keep them in sight. . . . We went sailing on, neck and neck, regardless of holes or anything else, only thinking of the grandly plumaged birds in front of us, our horses straining every nerve to over- take them, as only old stagers know how to run when in pursuit of game. We had now approached within fifty yards, and, jumping down, we fired at two cock birds running separately from the troop, bringing them both •down. Hastily mounting, we con- tinued on after the retreating troop ; but at this juncture my friend's horse trod in a hole, sending his rider over his head, thereby completely putting him out of the run. I now continued the chase by myself. For a mile the ostriches gained on me, as they continued to run in a straight line, thereby not enabling me to cut off any point, but obliging me to keep in their rear all the time. ... I got off twice, and fired several fruitless shots, and then continued the chase for certainly two miles without dis- mounting once. ... I now got within a hundred yards, and jumped down. . . . The first shot I fired brought down a fine cock bird, but the second struck the ground over the others, turning them to the right along a low ridge. They appeared very much exhausted, and ran with their wings spread out. ... I saw that they were coming direct for me, and waited until they were close. . . . When the ostriches approached within fifteen yards, I selected the best-looking bird, and put a bullet through him. He ran on for about twenty yards and fell dead." CASSOWARIES AND EMEUS With the Cassowaries and Emeus we have come as near as we can get at the present day to the representatives of the ancient type from which the Ostrich Tribe have sprung. But both these forms are to be regarded as having passed the prime of their development, for, like their allies which we have already considered, they have lost the power of flight. Both emeu and cassowary possess, when adult, one character shared by no other living adult bird ; they have what may be called double feathers, each feather possessing two shafts of equal length. They appear to follow a custom of their own in the matter of the coloration of their eggs, since these are never white, like those of the rhea or ostrich, but green, with a very rough surface. The young, like those of the rhea, are striped with alternate black and white stripes. The emeu is found only on the continent of Australia ; the cassowary occurs both in Australia and on the neighbouring islands of New Guinea, Ceram, and Aru. The lot of the CASSOWARY appears to have been cast in pleasant places, making it possible Photo by II'. P. Dando, i-'.Z.S.] SCLATER'S CASSOWARY This bird is not yet full gro*wn, the horny casque on the top of the head being much larger in the adult 10 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD :* h D. l.t Stuff] [Mttlwtrnt NEST AND EGGS OF EMEU Tht fttt of the old htrdt which vial Handing near, can he teen behind the eggs to indulge in the luxury of personal decoration — a decoration, moreover, shared equally by the males and females, both sexes having the head and neck most brilliantly coloured. In some species all the hues of the rainbow arc vividly reflected. To show these colours, the feathery covering, still worn by their relatives on the distant continents of Africa and America, has been cast off and the skin left bare. To these gorgeous hues they have added yet other features, for the head is surmounted in many species by a huge casque, or helmet; whilst from the neck depend curious fleshy lobes, or wattles, coloured in accord- ance with the rest of the bare, coloured skin of this region. Then, too, they have effected quite a novel transformation in the quills of the wing, for these project on either side of the body in .1 series of shining black spines. Nor is this all, for over and above the energy which they have to spare for personal decoration is a very large reserve to be expended in fighting. The males are very pugnacious, and to give point to this pugnacity they wear a \ formidable weapon on the inner toe in the shape of a huge nail, which can inflict a really dangerous wound. It is used in kicking, the foot being brought forwards and downwards with incredible speed and great force. When wounded, these powerful birds arc very dangerous to approach. " On more than one occasion a wounded bird has caused a naturalist to take to a tree. The sharp nail of the inner toe is a most dangerous weapon, quite equal to the claw of a large kangaroo, and capable of doing quite as much execution." Although forest-haunting birds — wherein they differ from their allies, which are plain- dwellers — the cassowaries are adepts at swimming. There is a danger that these beautiful and interesting birds will slowly be exterminated by greedy and thoughtless settlers. The Australian cassowary is already decreasing sadly, being persecuted for the sake of its skin, which is used for rugs and doormats. The E.MEL', though a sort of cousin of the cassowary, boasts none of its splendour; on the contrary, it is a dull, dowdy-looking bird. In size, however, it is much larger than the cassowary. The wings, which are exceedingly small, have numerous tiny quill-feathers — not long, hard spines, as in the cassowary. When in captivity, it exhibits great curiosity; furthermore, it is swift to realise symptoms of fear in the faces of any visitor whom it may have under inspection. Occasion- ally fear turns into flight, and then, thoroughly entering into the joke, the emeu pursues at top speed. Needless to say, hunting of this kind can only be done in fairly large paddocks or parks ; but emeus are frequently so kept. A very remarkable and quite unique structure in the emeu is a curious bag or pouch, formed by a sort of out-pocketing of the inner lining of the windpipe. Kmerging flUHtf u. L. Snlf] through a long slit caused by tin YOUNG EMEUS FIVE DAYS OLD incompleteness of some of the rings ^ ^ >jf ^ rf a perfect fren/v. At this time he i-~ pntectly unconscious of all around him, and poachers, knowing this, sometimes take advantage to creep up and shoot him. On hearing the cock, the hens assemble from all parts of the forest. The male then descends- from the tree to the ground, when " he and his THE GAME-BIRDS AND RAILS female friends join company" and march away. The caper- callie is jealous of trespassers on his domain, and instances are on record where people have been attacked when so infringing. Like the capercallie, the BLACKCOCK must be sought in the woods, whence he sallies forth to the moors and stubble- fields to feed. The GREY-HEN, as the female of this species is called, lays from six to ten eggs, of a buff colour, spotted with rich brown : both in number and colour they resemble those of the capercallie. PARTRIDGES, QUAILS, AND PHEASANTS. The birds which come under this head are so many in number they may be reckoned by the hundred, and include several forms of exquisite beauty. The legs of many are armed with formidable spurs, with which the males, who are exceedingly pugnacious, fight furiously with their rivals for the possession of some coveted female. Of the more conspicuous forms we may mention the RED-LEGGED and COMMON PARTRIDGES. In England the former is known more generally as the FRENCH PARTRIDGE —why, it is hard to say. It is a native of South-eastern Europe, whence it was introduced towards the end of the eighteenth century. It is a handsome bird, but not in high favour with sportsmen, since it prefers to escape by run- ning rather than by flight. fhai tf IT. P. Dando, F.Z.S. GOLDEN PHEASANT This bird is moulting. In full dress the cape seen in the upper figure is golden -with blue-black ban P>M> by C. GOLDEN PHEASANT This bird is often kept in aviaries, on account of its magnificent livery i, K.B. «w. tf If. f. Dt*J», F.Z.S. SILVER PHEASANT A alver fkiautnt it embroidered at a badge on mandarini' Jreiui Hal, *» C. Kilif] [H-,,htw, N.B. ENGLISH PHEASANTS Tkea birdi are of the ring-necked variety Flau if Stlulmilii Fntli. C«.] [fmm'l Grim REEVES'S PHEASANT TUt it a native of Ncnk and West CUna, and kat keen intro- duced into Britain FHu, kt «' f. Dt*d*. r '/. < .\\1II1 KSfS PHEASANT Ttil HrJ ii moulting : in full dreii tke caft ii vihitt and iki • -n: Hood-red Phtt* by Sch»laitit Phitt. C«.] [Parttn'i Grttn GOLDEN PHEASAN 1 Tke female it lobtrly clad, and kai no creit or cafe Fh,i» h H\ P. I) ami*, f.. I'l \i (ii K IM1K ASANT Tktu fkeatanti take tkr\r njme from t^ t\e-ikt ifotl on til v/ingi 16 THE GAME-BIRDS AND RAILS The COMMON PARTRIDGE is the more abundant of the two species. Though more sober in coloration, it is still a beautiful bird. The " horse-shoe " mark, borne on the breast, so characteristic of this bird, is not con- fined to the males, as is generally believed. " Yielding," says Professor Newton, " perhaps in economic importance to the red grouse, what may be called the social influence of the partridge is greater than that excited by any other wild bird." This bird displays great courage and affection in defence of its eggs or young. A story illustrating this is told of a gentle- man, who, " whilst superintending his plough- men, saw a partridge glide off her nest, so near the foot of one of his plough-horses that he thought the eggs must be crushed ; this, however, was not the case. . . . He saw the old bird return to her nest the instant he left the spot. It was evident that the next round of the plough must bury the eggs and nest in the furrow. His surprise was great when, returning with the plough, he came to the spot and saw the nest indeed, but the eggs and bird were gone. • ', Dando, F.Z. S. HIMALAYAN MONAL In tome parti of India this bird has been exterminated, owing to the demands of the plume-market F)uu bf W. P. Dandv, F.Z.S, HIMALAYAN MONAL The female of the monal is quite soberly clad An idea struck him that she had removed her eggs ; and he found her, before he left the field, sit- ting under the hedge upon twenty-one eggs. . . . The round of ploughing had occupied about twenty minutes, in which time she, probably aided by the cock bird, had removed the twenty-one eggs to a distance of about forty yards." The RED-LEGGED PARTRIDGES, their allies the FRANCOLlNS.and the GREY PARTRIDGES areall ground- birds; the TREE-PARTRIDGES, as the name implies, are not, or at least less completely so — hence their mention here. They are natives of the Indo-Chinese countries, and the islands of Java, Borneo, and Formosa. The QUAIL is a little-known British bird, very like a small partridge in appearance. Enormous numbers, Professor Newton tells us, " are netted on the Conti- nent, especially in the spring migration. The captives are exposed in the poulterers' shops, confined in long, cloth-covered cages, with a feeding-trough in front." The bulk " of these are males, which are the first to arrive, and advantage is taken of this circumstance by the bird-catchers, who decoy hundreds into their nets by imitating the call-note of the female. It has been stated that in the small island of Capri, in the Bay of Naples, 160,000 have been netted in a single season, and even larger numbers are on record." An idea of the vast numbers which travel together in THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD W.r. *, C. R.iJ] [ICiihtw, N.B. RED COCHINS Tke wngi in the typical Cockint are to tkort as to be uulett migration may be gathered from Canon Tris- tram's statement that in Algeria, in April, he found the ground covered with quails for an extent of many acres at daybreak, where on ihe preceding afternoon not one was to be sem. These are the birds which were so eagerly sei/ed by the Israelites as a welcome change in the diet which had become so monotonous in the days of their early wanderings. The story, so vividly told in the Book of Exodus, is, of course, familiar to all. The quail lays from nine to fifteen eggs in a feeble apology for a nest. It is said that the curious metallic note "clic-lic-lic " gave origin to the Spanish Castanet, for these birds are much esteemed in Spain, being kept in cages for the pleasure their notes afford. There are five or six other species of quail closely related to the above. The British bird enjoys an enormous range, being found almost everywhere in Europe, Asia, and Africa. The so-called AMERICAN QUAILS — some forty species in number — are generally regarded as belonging to a distinct group. That ornament to all rural scenery, the PHEASANT, is said to have been introduced from the banks of the river Phasis, in Colchis, Transcaucasia, by the Romans — at least, the original form of pheasant was. Late during the eighteenth century a Japanese and a Chinese form were introduced, and these have freely interbred with the original form, so that pure bred specimens of any of the three are rare. The speed of a pheasant on the wing in full flight has been estimated at thirty-eight miles an hour. Occasionally pheasants will take to the water, and are said to swim well. The number of pheasants reared by hand at the present day is prodigious. In 1883, Professor Newton tells us, 134,000 pheasants' eggs were sold from one estate in Norfolk, while 9,700 fully grown birds were killed upon it. In olden times pheasants were taken in snares or nets, by hawking, and by the cross-bow ; but on the introduction of guns these methods were superseded. Yet another form of pheasant has been in- troduced here of late years. This is Ki i vi s*S PHEASANT, a truly magnificent bird, with a tail fully 5 feet long in adult males. These birds also interbreed with the more common forms, but not freely. Beautiful as these pheasants undoubtedly arc, they are eclipsed by many of their relatives. Among the most noteworthy of these we may notice the magnificent TRA<;< >i'A\s. Rich in coloration of the feathers, these birds have added an additional feature in brilliantly coloured areas of bare skin on the head and neck, which are furthermore rendered conspicuous by being BROWN LEGHORN loCK l^Hte Ltfkarni TMl ireeJ has I'ttn JtrifrJ ' Game-fowl Tnm t, C. Rtid~\ SILVER-SPANGLED HAMBURGS This bird apparently originated in England N.B. DARK BRAMAS The Brama is an Asiatic breed 19 , N.B. 20 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD developed with " horns " and wattles. These " horns " can be erected at will, a process which causes them at the same time to be greatly increased in size. The bird, with a proud con- sciousness of his beauty, displays his charms to the full when wooing. Mr. Kartlctt tells us that, "after walking about rather excitedly, he places himself in front of the female, with the body slightly crouching upon the legs, and the tail bent downwards; the head is then violently jerked downwards, and the horns and wattle become conspicuous. The wings have a flapping motion, and the bright red patch on them is fully displayed. The whole of the neck appears to be larger than usual during this action, so do the horns, which, moreover, vibrate with every motion. This scene is concluded by the bird suddenly drawing himself up to his full height, with his wings expanded and quivering, the horns erect, and the wattles fully displayed." Equally splendid, some think more so, are the four species of pheasant known as MONALS or I.Mi'KYAN PHEASANTS. The plumage in this case looks like burnished metal rather than /•*•/• it C Kilt\ [tfiiluu; N.t. SILVER WYANDOTTE HEN WITH PHEASANT CHICKS TAil it an American treed, derived by (rolling it-itA the Brama feathers. The head is adorned with a crest either of long or beautifully curled feathers. Monals are found in the same haunts as the tragopans — the highest forest regions of the Himalaya. But the most gorgeous of all the Pheasant Tribe are perhaps the (>m in \ I'III:\V\MS. The crimson body and exquisitely beautiful collar of gold barred with black constitute a perfectly royal livery. Since, however, these are amongst the commonest occupants of the aviary, we need not describe them further here. They are natives of China and Tibet. Jl \«. I. K.-H >\VI. AND TliriK 1 )< 'M1XI h MM' DESCENDANTS These birds, of which there are four distinct species, are close allies of the domesticated fowls: the descent of these latter, indeed, is traced from the red jungle-fowl of the Himalaya and Central India. The characteristic features of the group are the naked head, bearing the familiar wattles and fleshy comb, ami the formidable spurs on the legs. The varieties of the domesticated jungle-fowl are numerous. The pugnacity of the THE GAME-BIRDS AND RAILS 2 I PEACOCK Note the perfectly symmetrical distribution of the " eyes " in the " train ** members known as the GAME-BREED is well known, and in the days of cock-fighting large sums of money changed hands over the fierce battles waged by rival game-cocks pitted one against the other — the game-cock, it should be remarked, being the little-modified descendant of the red jungle-cock. The modern game-cock is purely a show-bird, breeders having changed the type by selecting characters which would render the bird quite unable to hold its own if matched in battle with one of the original breed. Very different from the wild ancestor is the huge, much-feathered COCHIN. This was introduced into England, not from Cochin-China, as is popularly supposed, but from Shanghai, some fifty years ago. At that time this bird enjoyed the reputation of being wonderfully prolific. This is, alas! no longer a feature of the breed. The show-pen is apparently respon- sible for this, attention having been paid rather to external appearance than to useful qualities. The PLYMOUTH ROCK and DORKING are both well-known breeds. The former is of American origin, made by crossing Cochins with a native breed — the Dominique. The BLACK SPANISH, MINORCAS, LEGHORNS, ANDALUSIANS, etc., constitute what are known as the Mediterranean breeds. They are noted for their great prolificacy. This has been gained by carefully breeding from the most productive birds, but with the result that the instinct to sit has been lost entirely. This is a matter of no consequence, how- Ph,t. k, L. Midland, F.Z.S.] [JV.rl* FinM,, ever, as when chicks are required there are plenty of " broody " hens of other breeds which can be made BACK VIEW OF PEACOCK tO Undertake the duties of foster-mother. Note the true tail, like a stout fan, supporting the train 22 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD HU BLACK-CHESTED CRESTED GUINEA-FOWL Ttit it a black tirj, w/rii ligkt blue ifoti The HAMBURGS are of two kinds — the SPANGI.KH, which is of English, and the PENCILLED, of Continental origin. A very old breed is the POLISH. It figures often in the pictures of the old Dutch masters. One of its chief characteristics is the huge crest of fathers rising from the crown of the head. The development of this crest has had a very extraordinary effect upon the conformation of the bones of the skull, entirely altering the shape of the brain-case. Perhaps the most artificial of all breeds of fowl are the SEUKICHT BANTAMS. These are diminutive birds, the result of a cross between the Polish with " laced " feathers and a bantam. The feathers of this cross are beautifully " laced " — that is, they are white, edged with black. Another interesting diminutive breed is the JAPANESE BANTAM. The cock carries its tail, which is long, remarkably high, giving a very quaint effect. This breed is further interesting, since it furnishes us with an instance of the breeder's power of localising colour by selection. The tail is black and the body white. Yet another interesting Japanese fowl is the remarkable long-tailed breed in which the tail-coverts grow continuously, attaining a length of from 9 feet to, it is said, 18 feet. The birds are kept for show purposes. The greater part of their lives is passed tethered on high perches. Once a day they are taken down for exercise, when the long feathers are carefully rolled up and securely fastened out fv* of harm's way. THE ARGUS-PHEASANT AND PEACOCK AND THEIR ALLIES The ARGUS-PHEASANT most certainly demands notice, on account of the extra- ordinary development of the wing-quills, which are nearly a yard long, and the wondrous beauty of the pattern thereon. This pattern takes the form of a number of eyes, so shaded as to give the appearance, when fully displayed, of a number of balls lying in a socket. These enormous quills are borne only by the male, and used, like the ornamental feathers of its allies, in cap- tivating the female. When fully displayed. the two wings are spread out to form one huge fan, producing an effect which words cannot adequately describe. The argus- pheasants are found in the forests of Siam, the Malay Peninsula, and Sumatra, and arc excessively wary birds. The PEACOCK is too well known to need BLACK < HB8TXD ( R! srED GUINEA-FOWL a very long description. But a word as to ^ ^^ Ajf fcW| arf tfm ^^ Kj]fr the so-called " tail." This magnificent wealth *«'•£ -very dtlicait and muck THE GAME-BIRDS AND RAILS of plumes does not represent the tail, as is popularly supposed, but is made up of the feathers of the lower part of the back and the upper tail-coverts. These gradually increase in length from before-back- wards, culminating in the long and exquisite feathers which form the circumference of the huge, outspread shield. This shield is properly called the " train "; the true tail lies behind it and acts as a support. When the bird is about to display, the "train" feathers are slowly and gently raised till the well- known fan-shaped glory of green and gold and blue is exposed to the fullest possible extent. " Watch the bird trying to do his best to persuade his chosen what a handsome fellow he is. He first places himself more or less in front of her, but at some little distance off; and then, watching his opportunity, walks rapidly backwards, going faster and faster and faster, till, arrived within a foot, he suddenly, like a flash, turns round and displays to the full his truly gorgeous vestments. This turning movement is accompanied by a violent shaking of the train, the quills of which rattle like the pattering of rain upon leaves. Often this movement is followed by a loud scream. "When the train is fully erect, it will be noticed that it lies so far forward that the bird's head and neck appear as if rising from its base. In a side view the whole body, from the front of the wings backwards, appears to lie behind the train." This bird is a native of India, where it is held in great reverence by the Hindus, and - ~*~ *;jyV NEST OF BRUSH-TURKEY This is made by several birds, of decaying vegetable matter, in which the eggs are laid and left to hatch e i/ C. Ktu\ TURKEY COCK AND HEN The curious " tassel " depending from the breast is found in no other bird THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD ff*H h Kirrj *• C..] WALLACE'S PAINTED MEGAPODE Tkii tirj buries its eggs in ike land, burrowing for each a slanting noil from J to 4 feel deef in the Hindu States it is not allowed to be killed under any circumstances. There are two, some say three, distinct species of peacock, but they all closely resemble one another. Brief mention will serve for the Gl'lM \-i <>\\ i ^ and TURKEYS, since they are well known to us all. Gn\r:.\- KOWI.S arc African birds. The farm- yard form, popularly known as " Come- backs," from their peculiar cry " come-back, come-back, come-back," is a descendant of the common helmeted form, of which type there are eight distinct species. Besides these are four crested specie^ ; <>ne very beautiful species known as the Yri/lTRK I. IKK GriM -.\-\ •( >\\ I ; and one, the rarest of all, known as the BLACK GUIM:A-R>\VI.. i:\cn in the British Museum, writes Mr. Ogilvie Grant, " there are only two examples of it, and neither of these are perfect specimens." It was discovered by M. Du Chaillu. " One day," he says, " I went out hunting by myself, and, to my great joy, shot another new bird, a black wild-fowl, one of the most singular birds I have seen in Africa. . . . The head, where it is bare, is in the female of a pink hue, and in the male of a bright scarlet. . . . Wild they are, and most difficult to approach, and rare, even in the forests where they are at home." They do not travel in huge flocks, like other guinea-fowls, but a male and two females at most. The familiar form of the TURKEY scarcely needs description; but most people are probably puzzled by its name. Why Turkey? The bird is a native of America, so it certainly cannot have anything to do with its place of origin. Professor Newton has it that it is on account of its call-note, " to be syllabled ' turk, turk, turk,' whereby it may almost be said to have named itself." The domesticated turkey is descended from the MEXICAN TURKEY, and was probably introduced into Europe during the sixteenth century. This, according to Captain Bendire, is a mountain-living species, and still abundant in the wilder portions of Western Texas and New Mexico. It appears to attain greater bulk than its domesticated descendant, Captain Bendire having recorded a specimen shot by himself which weighed 28 Ibs. after having been drawn, and heavier birds are said to occur occasionally. The Mexicans say that the coyotes catch turkeys by running in circles under the tree in which they are roosting, till the birds get dizzy with watching them, and fall clown into the open mouths below ! There are three distinct kinds of turkey — the Mi\u\\, AMIKK \\, and Hoxiti KAS TURKEY. The last is a very fine bird, with a bright blue head and neck, instead of red. The top of the head is adorned with numerous scarlet, berry-like warts, looking like holly-berries. THE GAME-BIRDS AND RAILS The MEGAPODES and BRUSH-TURKEYS, though dull and uninteresting-looking birds, are, on account of the facts connected with the propagation of their species, quite remarkable. They do not brood over their eggs, as do other birds, but instead bury them, either in sand in the neighbourhood of warm springs or in heaps of decaying vegetable matter. In the latter case the material is often collected by several birds working together. Mounds of 8 feet high and 60 feet in circumference have been found, the work of the NlCOBAR MEGAPODE. Such have been many years in use, material being added each season. Into this mass the female digs down and deposits an egg every second day, covering it up as soon as laid. There it remains till hatched, when the young, probably aided by its mother, forces its way up to the surface, and emerges, not a downy nestling as one would expect, but clothed with feathers differing but slightly in texture from those worn in the adult state. Owing to the precocious development, young megapodes are able to fly within an hour after birth. There are many different kinds of megapodes occurring in Australia, Samoa, and the Nicobar and Philippine Islands. Photo by Scholastic Photo. Co.] RAZOR-BILLED CURASSOW So called from the sharp ridge along the top (if the beak h.ta,,i, PhM. C,.} CRESTED CURASSOW So called from Its crest of curled feathers The CURASSOWS and GUANS are very handsome birds, but probably quite unknown to most of our readers, yet they may always be seen in Zoological Gardens. They are closely re- lated to the megapodes, which we have just been discussing; but their nesting habits are quite different. They lay their eggs in nests, either on the ground or in trees, and brood over them like other birds. Many have brilliantly coloured bare skin on the head and handsome crests. They are natives of Central and South America, where they are often kept by the settlers, as they tarn? easily. It is said that one of the guans, when crossed with the domesticated fowl, becomes intensely pugnacious, and superior to the game-cock for fighting purposes BUSTARD-QUAIL AND PLAIN-WANDERERS These are small and quail-like in appearance, though they are probably only distant relatives of the Game-birds. But they are, nevertheless, remarkable birds. A great authority, Mr. A. O. Hume, writing of the INDIAN Bl'STARD-QUAlL, says of them : " The most remarkable point in the life-history of these bustard-quails is the extraordinary fashion in which, amongst them, the position of the sexes is reversed. The females are the larger and handsomer birds. The females only call, the females only fight — natives say that they fight for the males,- and probably this is true. The males . . . only ... sit upon the eggs, the females meanwhile larking about, calling, and fighting, without any care for their obedient mates ; and, lastly, the males tend . . . the young brood." 26 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD The group has a wide geographical range, occurring in Europe, Africa, Madagascar, South Asia, the Indian Archipelago, and Australia. THE HOATZIN This bird is one of the puzzles of the ornithologist. Its pedigree is still a mystery, but it is generally believed to have some relation to the d. inn birds. Its whole life is passed in trees overhanging water, and its flight restricted to short journeys from tree to tree. In South America, its home, it is known by a variety of names, one of which means STINKING-PHEASANT. This is in allusion to the peculiar odour of its flesh, which smells. according to some, like musk, and to others like raw hides. Another remarkable feature of this bird is the fact that it has turned its crop into a sort of gizzard, whilst the true gizzard, having been relieved of its functions, has diminished to the size of a hazel-nut. The unusual purpose to which the crop has been put has brought about considerable modification in the form of the breast-bone, which is quite different to that of any other bird. The young of these birds are quite .is remarkable as the parents, for almost as soon as they are hatched they crawl out of the nest, along the boughs of the tree in which it rests, to meet the parents coming with food. In these crawling excursions they are aided by the wings, which for a time serve as fore feet. The thumb and first finder armed with strong claws, with which a firm hold is gained on the bark of the tree. To render these claws effective so long as they are necessary, the quill-feathers of tin- tip of the wing have their development checked till the others have grown long enough to serve the purposes of flight. Tin: RAH > The KAILS are all water-loving birds, dwelling in swamps or on the borders of lakes and streams. Although all swim . ., . . easily, none have webbed feet. 1 he flight HOATZIN js Weak; Several species, indeed. h:ive lost TUi i, t native of the Amtmons falley, and livci entirely in ike irtts this power altogether. The body is much compressed, enabling them to pass readily through the narrow interspaces of dense aquatic foliage. Tin- Kails appear to be related on the one hand to the Game-birds, and on the other to the (.'runes. In si/c they vary from a bird as large as a fowl to one as small as a lark. One of the commonest of the Rails is the C< iKN-CKAKK, more commonly, perhaps. known as the LAND-KAIL. Its curious grating cry is one of the commonest sounds which the summer brings with it, and one possessing a charm of its own. Hut rarely seen, it builds its nest in hay-fields, and, when the grass i-, being cut, sits so closely on its treasures that it is sometimes beheaded by the swinging scythe. In the autumn it falls not infrequently to the sportsmen when partridge-shooting. The corn-crake leaves in the winter for the in.. re congenial climate of Africa, a feat th.it seems wonderful when its feeble powers of flight are considered. Its near relative the \Vvil.K-kAll. is rather a handsome bird, but of shy and retiring habr The \Vr.KA-K.\lL, a native of New /calami, is one of the flightless forms to which we THE GAME-BIRDS AND RAILS 27 Photo by Scholaitic Photo. Co.] WEKA-RAIL Ike -wings, though fairly large, are useless for fight have referred. It is about as large as a pheasant, but lacks its splendour, being soberly clad in brown and black. Un- like its relative, it breeds in a burrow, which it digs for itself by the aid of its bill. The name " weka " was given it by the Maoris. The COMMON WATER- HEN, or MOOR-HEN, is one of the most familiar birds of the London parks. Although fre- quent enough to be seen upon streams and broads, it is, nevertheless, shy and wary ; but in the sanctuary of the public parks all reserve is thrown off. The water-hen, like its allies, is an expert swimmer, in spite of the fact that the toes are not webbed ; on the contrary, they are very long and slender. When alarmed, these birds will often submerge the body till only the beak projects above water. All the members of this group are easily recognised by the bare patch of skin extending from the beak on to the top of the head. In the COOTS this is white; in the WATER-HENS and GALLIXULES it is red. The coots and water-hens are clad in sober colours, grey or black ; but the gallinules are gorgeously clad in purple, shaded with dark green, olive-brown, and black. MANTELL'S GALLINULE of New Zealand is probably now extinct, the last bird having been killed in 1898. THE FIN-FEET These are little-known birds, found in Africa, South America, South-east Asia, and Sumatra. They are closely related to the coots, but differ therefrom in many important particulars. Like the coots, they are river-haunting birds, and have broad flaps of skin fringing the toes, which serve the purpose of a web ; but they have much longer necks and tails than the coots and water-hens. Not much is known about them. Phut fy If. F. fifgilt] [liightcn Bux. WATER-RAIL This is a common British bird, seldom seen, on account of its retiring habits CHAPTER III PIGEONS AND SAND-GROUSE PIGEONS, as a rule, are birds of wonderful powers of flight. The young, which never exceed two in number, are hatched perfectly blind and helpless, and but sparsely clothed. They are nourished by a peculiar milky secretion of the parents' crop known as " pigeons' milk." The operation of feeding is performed by the parent thrusting its beak into the mouth of its offspring and ejecting therein the secretion just referred to. The nest is a very simple structure, being composed of twigs, generally placed in a tree, but sometimes in a cave or hole in a bank. The eggs, which never exceed two in number, are pure white. Perhaps the most beautiful species occur among the large group known as FKI i r-i ii.i > >\s. Many of these are invested in raiment of vivid green and yellow, forming a little coterie by themselves — the GUI i \ PK;I:I >NS. < Hhers, on account of their brilliancy, have been designated PAIN ri:i> I'H.KI >\-s, of which, perhaps, the most beautiful of all is I-'.idi \i s PICKON. Try to imagine it ! The head is pure white, the upper part of the breast a purple-red surrounded by a dull purple b.md: the under parts are greyish green, shading into white ; the flanks green ; whilst the upper parts are also green, but of a rich OF YOUNG PIGEONS IN NEST br()I1Xc. tim. Another group The hair-likt down of tke young figeon it juite diferent to any other nettling down I [Btrihamittd NEST from the Fiji Islands includes a magnificent species, the male of which is clothed in a glorious orange, save the head and throat, which are olive- yellow. His mate is scarcely less beautiful, her plumage being rich green. Another member of the group— the WHITE NUTMEG-PIGEON — is clad in creamy white, with black quills, and a black tip to the tail. It is a native of Borneo. The fruit-pigeons, it should be mentioned, include some of the largest of living pigeons. Whilst many of the Pigeon Tribe seem to have succeeded in dyeing their feathers with all the hues of the rainbow, others have secured equal glory by a covering which at first sight would rather appear to be of burnished metal than of feathers. The most striking instance <•!" this is found in the magnificent NICOHAK PIGEONS. There are two species of these birds, which occur not only in the Nicobar Islands, from which they take their name, but aK,, in the Malay Archipelago and the Solomon and IVlew IsLmls. The general tone of the one species is black, but the upper parts are superbly gl,,sM-d with bron/e and copper reflections. The other, from the 1'elcw Islands, is indigo-blue in general tone. In ..lie of the Nicobar Islands these birds occur in thousands. Furthermore, these two pigeons stand alone, in that the neck feathers are greatly elongated, forming " hackles " like those of the common fowl. The largest of living pigeons are the GOURAS, OfCROWNED PlOBONS. There are six species, />*./. bj J. T. Ktu-mat] A PAIR 28 Phoio t>* L. Me.-:an.-, F.Z.S'} [North Finch! ti SOUTHERN FRUIT-PIGEON The flesh of the fruit-pigeon surpasses that of all other birds in delicacy Photo \>y L. Midland, F.Z.S.} [North Finthly NICOBAR IMPERIAL FRUIT-PIGEONS These birds lay but a single eggt 'which is large • Flint *jr 1C. P. DWo, F.Z.S. NEW GUINEA CROWNED PIGEON This is the largest of living pigeons 3 Phut bj If. P. Dande, F.Z.S. WONGA-WONGA PIGEON This bird is Jound in the brush country of Eastern Australia 29 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD all of which are confined to Australasia. They are characterised by a huge and very beautiful fan-shaped crest of feathers which springs from the crown of the head. At the other extreme stand the NAMAQUA and SCALY DOVES. The former is regarded by Professor Newton as one of the most graceful in form of all the Pigeon Tribe : the latter are scarcely, if at all, larger than the sparrows. The power of flight of some forms is, however, extremely limited ; they bid fair in course of time to become flightless, like the dodo and the solitaire. The most interesting of these is the GREY-NAPED GROUND-PIGEON. Pigeons for the most part display a marked preference for a life among the trees rather than on the ground ; but there are some which are essentially ground-dwellers. The species in which this changed habit is most deeply rooted, and probably of longest standing, exhibit one very interesting point of difference from their neighbours of the woods. This difference consists in the very considerably longer legs which mark the ground-haunting bird. The GREY-NAPED GROUND-PIGEON of South-east New Guinea forms an excellent example, inasmuch as the legs are much longer than in any other pigeon. 11 1 birds (for there are three species in all) resemble the Megapodes in habit, and frequent hills or dense thickets. They lay one egg, which is deposited at the foot of a tree. Among domesticated breeds is the ENGLISH POUTER, a bird characterised by its enormous gullet, which can be distended with air whenever the owner wills. The carriage of the body is vertical, not, as in pigeons generally, horizontal. The CARRIER is a breed illustrating the result of long-sustained selec- tion to increase, amongst other character-;. the development of the bare skin surrounding the eye and beak of all pigeons, wild or tame. In the SHORT-FACED TfMin.KR we have a breed wherein those birds with the shortest beaks have been steadily bred from. To-day so little beak is left that some individuals are hatched which, when grown up, are unable to feed themselves. An example of a radical change in the feathers is the IMMAN !•" KILL- BACK. In this case the leathers all over the body are reversed, or turned forwards, giving the bird a quite extraordinary appearance. In the JACOBIN we have a breed —and we could cite others — wherein the feathers of the neck are much elongated, and turn upwards and forwards over the head to form a hood. In general appearance SAND-GROUSE are small, very short-legged birds, with small heads and pointed wings and tail. Their general tone of coloration may be described as sand- coloured, and this has been adopted to render them in harmony with the barren sand- wastes in which they dwell. But some may be described as quite highly coloured, being banded and splashed with chestnut, black, pearly grey, white, and yellow, according to the specie-;. PALLAS'S SAND-GROUSE is a native of the Kirghiz Steppes, extending through Central Asia to Mongolia and Northern China, and northwards to Lake Baikal, and southwards to Turkestan. Here they maybe met with in enormous numbers. In North China large numbers are often caught after a snow-storm. The snow is cleared away, and a small green bean is scattered about. Young sand-grouse differ remarkably in one particular from young pigeons, inasmuch as the former are hatched covered with a thick down, and are able to run about soon alter leaving the egg, whilst the pigeon comes into the world very helpless and much in need of clothing. Three eggs are laid by the sand-grouse, anil these arc double-spotted ; whilst the pigeon lays but two, which are white. The eggs of the sand-grouse arc laid in a depression in the ground, without any nest. t k, L. Mid'.end, F.Z.S.] [Ninh fltuMtj MALE BLACK-BELLIED SAND-GROUSE Young tand-groute run directly lAe\ are hatched, thui differing from young figeont CHAPTER IV AUKS, GULLS, AND PLO7ERS THE AUK TRIBE THE GUILLEMOT is found all around Britain, and breeds wherever the sea is fringed by cliffs affording ledges for the reception of the eggs. It breeds in colonies often num- bering many thousands, and lays but one egg, which is large and pear-shaped. Since the guillemot builds no nest, but lays its egg on the bare rock, this peculiar shape is advanta- geous, since it revolves on itself, when disturbed, instead of rolling off the ledge into the sea. At the same time thousands of eggs fall into the sea every year owing to the bird's leaving the egg, whilst incubating, in too great a hurry. At Lundy Island one of the sources of amusement for the gap- ing tourist was that of firing a shot to frighten the birds, with the result that, at each shot, showers of eggs were knocked off the ledges on to the rocks below. The colour of the egg varies infinitely, no two being quite alike. This, it has been suggested, is useful, as the mother is thereby enabled to identify her own egg, even when surrounded by hundreds of others. The young are covered with long down, and when big enough, but still unable to fly, are taken down by the mother to the sea, being carried, some say, on her back : others say the chick is seized by the wing and carried down. The RAZOR-BILL is nearly, if not quite, as com- mon on the coasts of Britain as the guillemot, from which it may be readily distinguished by its beak, which is much compressed from side to side — hence its name of Razor-bill — and deeply grooved. In habits it very closely resembles the guillemot, but in one respect at least it is a more interesting bird, inasmuch as it is related to and closely resembles the now extinct GREAT AUK, the giant of the tribe. The smallest British representative, it should be mentioned, is the LITTLE AUK, a species more nearly allied to the guillemot. It is only a winter visitant to Britain, breeding in huge colonies on the inhospitable shores of Greenland and Iceland. So quaint a bird as the PUFFIN most certainly finds a place here. One of its most characteristic features is its enormous bill, which is rendered more conspicuous on account of its bright colour. It is bluish at the base, yellow at the tip, and striped with orange. A very remarkable feature of this bill is the fact that it is larger in summer than winter, portions of the sheath being shed in autumn. Enormous numbers of puffins breed in Ireland ; myriads breed on Lundy Island. The Fame Islands, the cliffs of Flamborough, and Scotland are also tenanted by thousands. Puffins breed in holes, which they dig for themselves when occasion requires, but when rabbit-burrows are to be had they prefer these, dispossessing the owners without the slightest compunction. Might, with the puffin, is right, as well as with many other animals. By ptr mission of tht Hen. Walter Rothschild, Trtng WHITE TERN There are t-ivo species of 'white tern, a/most restricted to the Southern Hemisphere 32 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD Young puffins, like young auks and guillemots, are hatched covered with long down. The parents feed them on fish, which they deposit at the mouth of the burrow twenty at a time, and give them to the young bird one by one. When the female is sitting, her mate feeds her in a similar way. Puffins lay only a single egg, which differs from that of its relatives the Auks and Guille- mots in being white. The white colour enables the sitting-bird to see it in the dark burrow. THE GULL TRIBE To get at the real inwardness of the Gull Tribe, so to speak, we must examine tin •it- anatomy very closely; then we shall be convinced that they are modified Plovers, and have nothing to do with the Petrels, to which they bear an undoubted re- semblance. TERNS Terns are gulls in miniature, on which account it is probable that many a visitor to the seashore passes them unwittingly. But let him watch next time tor what look like flocks of tiny, long-\\inged, and un- usually active gulls, now hovering gracefully in the air, and now sud- denly plunging headlong like an arrow to the sea, with a force and dash that will surprise him, now that attention is drawn to them. These are terns. From their vivacity and forked tails, they have been aptly named Sea- swallows. There are several species of tern. Like the Gulls, they have a dis- tinctive dress for summer and winter, but the sexes are both dressed alike. The general livery, as with the ("mils, is pearly grey above and pure white below — in summer, in some species, relieved by a black head. ( >ne species, the Rosi AIT. TKKN. has the breast suffused with a most exquisite rose- pink, which fades rapidly after death, however. Young terns, in their first plumage, differ conspicuously from their parents, having much brown intermixed with grey. Terns layabout three eggs, which are deposited among the shingle on the beach; and so closely do the eggs, and later on the young, resemble the surrounding stones th.it it is almost impossible to find them. As a rule tern-' breed in colonies, often numbering many thousand birds. There are exceptions to the rule just laid down as to nest bnildin i >ne species «,f the NODI'V TKKNS, for example, builds a nest of turf and dry grass, pi, iced in bushes or in low- trees. It seems to return to the same in -t year after year, adding on each return new materials, till they form masses nearly 2 feet in height. Occasionally it appears to make a mud-nest, placed in the fork ofa tree; whilst the superb little U'liin- N<>m>Y often deposits HIM *f G. W*tmui[k U;h,t,r TERNS ON A SHINGLE BANK Term lay their eggs among the shingle ; from their coloration^ these are difficult to detect among the surrounding stones AUKS, GULLS, AND PLOVERS 33 [Pa- Ph,l« tv ScMailic PhM. Co.J HERRING-GULL So called from in habit of following the shoals of herrin its egg on the leaf of a cocoanut-palm — truly a wonderful site, and still more wonderful when we reflect that it is chosen by one of the Gull Tribe. About six species of tern commonly occur in the British Islands, and some five or six other species occasionally visit them. SKIMMERS The SKIMMERS are tern-like birds, with a very wide geographical distri- bution, occurring in India, Africa, and North and South America, and re- markable for the very extraordinary form of the beak. The upper jaw is much shorter than the lower, and both are compressed to the thinness 'of a knife-blade. This beak is associated with, and is probably an adaptation to, an equally remarkable method of feeding, which has been admirably described by Darwin, who watched them feeding in a lake near Maldonado. " They kept their bills," he says, " wide open, and the lower mandible half buried in the water. Thus skimming the surface, they ploughed it in their course ; . . . and it formed a most curious spectacle to behold a flock, each bird leaving its narrow wake on the mirror-like surface. In their flight . . . they dexterously manage with their projecting lower mandible to plough up small fish, which are secured by the upper and shorter half of their scissor-like bills." THE GULLS Gulls are larger and heavier birds than terns, with longer legs, and shorter, thicker beaks. Furthermore, with one exception, the tail is never forked. Like the terns, gulls generally breed in colonies, and these are often of large size. Young gulls, when newly hatched, are quite active. Later, when their feathers have grown, they are found to wear a dress quite different from that of the parents. Sometimes the ad tilt Pfiott h StkoUitic PJloto. Co.J [Parson's Gretn YOUNG HERRING GULLS IN THE GREY PHASE OF PLUMAGE In their dull grey plumage the young of all gulls are i-ery unlike the adults plumage is gained at the end of the first year of existence, sometimes not until after the third year. Gulls feed on everything that comes in their way, from fish caught swimming at the surface of the sea to worms picked up at the plough-tail. One of the commonest and best known of all the gulls is perhaps the species known as the BLACK-IIKADKD Gt'i.L, which has become so common in the heart of busy London, where hundreds may be seen, during the winter months, Hying up and down the river, or 34 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD r.(.t> tj u: r. STONE-CURLEW, OR [Liighttn Buvtscard THICK.-K.NEE The plumage u tlouly riumblei the sandy mil an which the bird lives that concealment is easily effected ty crouching clou to the ground wheeling about over the lakes in the parks. The black- headed gull rcccivesits popular name on account of the fact that, like some terns and some other gulls, in the spring, the feathers of the head sud- denly acquire a sooty-black colour: all trace of this is lost in the winter, sa\e for two patches, one behind each ear. The eggs of this bird are collected in thousands each spring, and sold in London and other markets as plovers' eggs. As many as 20,000 have been taken in a -i-a-on from the extensive gullery at Scoulton Mere, in Norfolk. Three or four eggs are laid in a nest of rushes, which is always placed on the ground in marshy and often inaccessible spots. The largest of the Gull Tribe is the GREAT BLACK-BACKED Gll.l., which is, furthermore, a common British bird ; indeed, it is frequently seen flying, together with the last-mentioned species, on the Thames, doing its best to get a full share of the tit-bits thrown by interested spectatois from the various London bridges. Unlike the black-headed gull, it has no seasonal change of plumage, but is clad all the year round in the purest white, set off by a mantle of bluish black. The young of this bird has a quite distinct plumage of greyish brown, and hence has been described as a distinct species — the GKI:Y Gl'l.L. This dress is gradually changed for the adult plumage, but the process takes about three years. The KITTIWAKI; is another of the common British gulls, breeding in thousands in favourable localities on the coasts. Its eggs are deposited on the narrowest and most inaccessible ledges of precipitous cliffs. This species sometimes falls a victim to the fashion of wearing feathers. " At Clovelly," writes Mr. Howard Saunders, " there was a regular staff for preparing plumes ; and fishing-smacks, with extra boats and crews, used to commence their work of destruction at Lundy Island by daybreak on the 1st of August. ... In many cases the wings were torn off the wounded birds before they were dead, the mangled victims being tossed back into the water." And he has seen, he con- tinues, "hundred- of young biids dead or dying of starvation in the ne-t-, through the want of their parent-' can-. ... It is well within the mark to say that at least 9,000 of these inoffensive birds were de-troyed during el' Kl.ru the fortnight." /•».» tj U'. f. Pltl'tt & tailed in account of its note AUKS, GULLS, AND PLOVERS 35 Photo by C. ff, Mavrojeni] [Smyrna WOODCOCK The female is larger than the male Of the SKUA GULLS there are several species. Their coloration differs from that of the gulls just described in being confined to shades of brown. One of their most remarkable traits is that of piracy. They await their cousins the Gulls coming shoreward from the sea with newly swallowed fish, and then, giving chase, compel the gull, in order to lighten itself and escape, to disgorge its hard-won meal. So swift of flight is the skua that the ejected morsel is caught before it reaches the water. THE PLOVER TRIBE BIRDS of very various size, shape, and coloration areincluded in this group — that is to say, birds which vary much super- ficially, but, it must be under- stood, all undoubtedly closely related. In England they are to be met with almost every- where. The seashore, the lonely moorland, the desolate marshes, the river's brink, or the woods — all these shelter some one or other of the Plover Tribe. Like the Gulls, many adopt a dis- tinctive dress for the courting- season, which, however, is some- times worn by the males only, and not by both sexes alike, as in the Gulls. One of the most striking and familiar instances of this change is seen in the GREY PLOVER. In winter the plumage of the upper-parts of this bird is dusky grey, that of the under-parts pure white ; but in the spring the former is ex- changed for a beautifully varie- gated mantle of black and white, and the latter becomes uniformly jet-black, save the under tail- coverts, which remain white. In the DUNLIN, again, we have a similar change, the upper-parts being in winter grey, the under-parts white : in the spring the former become black, with an admixture of rust-colour, and the latter black in so far as the breast is concerned, but the abdomen remains white. In many of that section of the Plover Tribe distinguished as " Wading-birds," the changes which take place in the spring in the plumage of the upper-parts resemble those already instanced, but the under-parts turn to a rich chestnut instead of black. This occurs in the forms known as the Gomvrrs, KNOTS, and SANDKRI.INGS, for example. In all the instances so far quoted, both male and female are coloured alike, but, as already hinted, occasionally the change of plumage affects the male only. This is the case with the Photo ty Jt. H. F. Cruitlihani] OYSTER-CATCHER ON ITS NEST Three eggs are laid in a slight hollow in the ground. The oyster-catcher is one of the most ii-arf of the Plover Tribe, and very difficult to approach 36 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD Kui-T. The importance of this ex- ception is still further increased by the fact that the change in coloration is accompanied by the development of a large frill around the neck, surmounted by two large tufts called " cars," and fleshy, brightly coloured warts around the beak. The coloured picture of the male in its spring dress, which will be found on another page, gives an admirable idea of the typical ruff, but it must necessarily fail to give any indication of one very n mark- able fact concerning this frill and the two " ears," and for this reason — no two individuals < -ver have these peculiar feathers of the same colora- tion and pattern. The range of colour is certainly not great — the changes being rung, so to speak, on black, white, chestnut, bay, and ash-colour. Diversification is gained by contrasting the "ears" with the frill, and adding bars or streaks to the light coloration, and purple, green, and violet reflec- tions to the dark. These ornaments are donned in a surprisingly short space of time, and are discarded as quickly, for they are scarcely completed by the month of May, and are thrown off again at the end of June. During the time that this resplendent livery is worn the males engage in mimic battles — which may occasionally develop into real ones — arranged apparently for the edification of the female-, which, it seems, select as partners, at least for that season, those which please or excite most. This power of pleasing must certainly be considerable, for the ruff is a polygamous species. Formerly the ruff was a common bird in England, but the drainage of the fens and persecution have practically brought about its extermination. At least two groups of plovers haye succeeded in reversing the usual order of things in the matter of sexual plumage. Ther-e are the l'!l.\i.\i«i|'i> which arc Hritish birds and the I'\IMI:I> SMIT., in both of which the female is more brightly coloured and some- CRK.AT HlslAKDS what larger in si/.e than the Tht «xk <,* tin rigki it " ,iwi*g „/" . r. nw., F. z.s.i [*»/««•» p*'t DENHAM'S BUSTARD TUi ifeciet, -when " thsfwing off," fillt tke gullet with air, having no iftdal air- sac iite tlit great bustard /;,..-. /.:/•. r. !/,„;,/ I'lioto by Ottintntr . luscli iil:. 11,-ilin. CROWNED CRANE. Tin- feathers of the Crt-si of this bird look not unlike stiff hairs-. AUKS, GULLS, AND PLOVERS 37 male. As is the case where this reversal occurs, the duties of incubation fall mainly or entirely upon the smaller and duller male. It is interesting to note, furthermore, that only in the phalaropes is there a seasonal change of plumage: in the painted snipe the same livery is worn all the year round. Many of the plovers have no seasonal change of plumage, but both male and female wear all the year round, some a more or less markedly bright-coloured livery, as the DOTTEREL and TURNSTONES, others a more sober vestment, as the CURLEWS and SNIPE, for example. The SNIPE and WOODCOCK may be cited as especially instructive forms in this connection, showing, in regard to the beak, for instance, undoubted proof of this structural modification, the result of adaptation to the peculiar method of seeking their food. This beak constitutes an organ of touch of great sensitiveness, and is used as a probe, to thrust down into the soft soil in the search for hidden worms. Phala ti Billinglan'} INDIAN BUSTARDS Bustards have 1'cry short toes, like many other birds ivhich ivalk much on sandy soil Of the three species of snipe which occur in Britain, probably the one known as the COMMON SNIPE is most familiar; but it will, perhaps, be new to some to learn that this bird ranks as a musical performer, on account of a very extraordinary " bleating" or "drumming" noise which it gives forth, especially during the spring of the year — the season of courtship. We cannot describe this noise better, perhaps, than as an unusually high-pitched " hum," produced, it is generally held, by wind driven between the outer tail-feathers by the rapid vibration of the wings as the bird descends, or rather pitches, at a fearful pace, earthwards. These feathers have the shafts peculiarly thickened; and it is interesting to note that the characteristic sound may be artificially produced if they be fastened to a stick and rapidly whirled through the air. The snipe and woodcock are not the only members of the Plover Tribe whose beaks have undergone marked structural modifications; indeed, many instances could be cited, but two or three must suffice. In the AvocET the beak turns upwards like an awl, and the bird is in consequence known in some places as the COBBLER'S-A\VL DUCK. In one particular, however, the beak differs from an awl, tapering as it does to an exceedingly fine point. When the THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD bird feeds, it walks along in shallow water with the curved tip of the beak resting on the surface and the head moving swiftly from side to side, the jaws meanwhile being opened and closed with exceeding rapidity, and seizing instantly upon such small Crustacea and other organisms as come in their way. . \ltliough all the Plovers might be described as long-legged birds, the STILTS are quite exceptionally so, and afford evidence of modifica- tion in another direction. Relatively to the size of the body, the stilts have the longest legs of all living birds. They seek their prey by wading in shallow water, like the Avocets, to which they are closely related. One species — the Bi.At k- WINGEDSTILT — occasionally appears in Britain. Some other members of the Plover Tribe — the J At AN \ of Brazil, and the \Y.vn-:k-i'!li: A- \\ i of India, Ceylon, and China, for example — have enormously long toes, as well as claws of great length. These birds are furthermore remarkable for the possession of for- midable weapons of offence, borne on the wrist-joint of the wing, in the shape of long, sharp, and powerful spurs. Similar weapons are carried by certain plovers — the EGYPTIAN SITR-\VIM;EU PLOVER, for instance. fha, kj If. f. STANLEY CRANE Ttii is a Sculh African tpecict CHAPTER V BUSTARDS yf\D CRJXES THE Plover Tribe, Bustards, Cranes, and Rails form a large group of diverse but probably closely related forms. Of the Bustards, the most interesting and important species is tlie("iKi:vi Hi 51 \ui». About a hundred years ago this magnificent bird might have been seen any day in such favoured localities as the Yorkshire and Lincolnshire wolds, the Norfolk ami Suffolk " brecks," the heaths of Newmarket, or the downs of Berkshire and Wiltshire. It owes it- extermination to several causes, foremost among which must be reckoned the reclaiming of waste land and improved methods of agriculture. "The bulk of its body," Bays Professor Newton. " renders it a conspicuous and stately object; and when on the \\ing, to which it readily takes, it- flight is not inferior in majesty to that of the eagle." The expanse of the outstretched wings of a great bustard is 8 feet, or even more; and the weight of the male may even exceed 7,5 Ibs. The female is smaller. COMMON CRANE 39 4<> THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD To see the great bustard in a wild state to-day, one would have to travel to Spain. And if one could make a pilgrimage for this purpose during the birds' courting- season, some very wonderful antics on the part of the male would be witnessed. These antics make up what is really a very elaborate love-display. In this perform- ance the bird inflates his neck with wind, draws his head closely down on to the back, throws up his tail, so as to make -the most of the pure white feathers underneath, and sticks up certain of the quill-feathers of the wins in a manner that only a gnat bustard can. Certain long feathers projecting from each side of the head now stand out like the quills of the porcupine, forming a sort of ckeval-de-frise on either side of the head, and complete the picture, which, in our eyes, savours of the ludicrous. The inflation of the neck is brought about by filling a specially developed wind-bag M«. *, StMtirii Flint, ft., P*n,*', MANCHURIAN CRANE Tki fiikald flsimagt of tkis iftciei is distinctive between the gullet and the skin with air through a small hole under the tongue. For manyyears it was believed this bag was used as a sort of water-bottle, to enable the bird to live amid the arid wastes which were its chosen haunts. . t, S.Mault P* 'W* - •u t WATTLED CRANE & ratttJ from ski ftndtnl lafftti of tki throat, is a Sautk African iftcits COMMON CRANE CRANES. Cranes vary much in general appearance Some species have much of the skin round the head hare and brilliantly coloured, such as the SARI'S CRANK of India and the CKOUMD ("RANK. The WIIITK and WHOOPING CKAXF.S are birds of wondrous beauty. Tlv first-named species has been not inaptlv called the "lily of birds." The whole plumage. with the exception of the black quills, is white. The legs are red. as is also the face. Dr. ('ours once mistook one of these birds the \Yiioni-i N(; CK- \\i for an antelope. He and a companion saw what they "look to lie an an- telope standing quietly feeding, with his broad white stern inward us. and only about ;tx) yards oil" \Ve attempted f,,r at least fifteen minutes to 'Mas,'' the crea- ture This proving unavailing, my friend proceeded to stalk the game, for about half the distance before GREBES AND DIVERS, PENGUINS, TUBE-NOSED BIRDS the ' antelope ' unfolded his broad black-tipped wings and flapped off, revealed at length as a whooping (white) crane." Another very remarkable species is the CROWNED CRANE. This is an African species, and takes its name from the tuft of curiously modified feathers on the top of the head. The coloured plate gives a good idea of its general appearance. THE SERIEMA This is a very hawklike-looking bird; indeed, by some ornithologists it has been regarded as (closely allied to the Hawks and Eagles, and ijjjr ^f\ more especially to the Secretary-bird. Really, '-^^^^NE however, it is a very ancient kind of crane. the TRUMPETERS, the COURLANS, the KAGU, and the SUN-BITTERN are other ornithological puzzles. Concerning the precise affinities of these birds much is yet to be learnt; they are, how- ever, undoubtedly related to the Cranes. The last mentioned is a small bird, with wonderfully beautiful wings, which it displays with great effect to its mate during the courting-season. Phato by If. F. I' zs"i} [Li/ghle GREAT CRESTED GREBE Young grebes in do'wn are beautifully striped CHAPTER VI GREBES AND DWERS, PENGUINS, AND TUBE-NOSED BIRDS THE GREBES AND DIVERS THEGrebesandDivers are representatives of an exceedingly ancient type, and are in many ways besides very interesting. BotharecommonBritish birds. The greater part of their lives is spent upon the water, and to suit this aquatic existence their bodies are specially modified. One of the principal features of this modification is seen in the position of the legs. These, by a shortening of the thigh-bones in the grebes, leave the body so far back that when the bird walks the body is held vertically. With the clivers walking has become an impossibility, and they can only move on land on their bellies, pushing themselves along with the feet. Both grebes and divers Ph BLACK-THROATED DIVERS These 'very handsome birds breed in Scotland 42 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD are expert swimmers, and dive with the greatest ease, remaining long under water. The grebes haunt ponds, lakes, and broads ; the divers prefer the open sea. Both feed on fish. GREBES Of the numerous species of grebe, the most familiar are the GREAT CRESTED Gki i i: and the little DAHCHICK. The former has suffered grievous persecution for the sake of its beautiful breast-feathers, which Fashion decreed should be worn by the gentler sex in the form of muffs or hats. Thus a price was set upon the head of this beautiful and harmless bird, and its ranks were speedily thinned. Some species wear during the nesting-season beautiful chestnut or golden " ears," " horns," or " frills" on the head and neck. The EARED GREBE is especially mag- nificent at this time. DIVERS These, as already remarked, are sea- loving birds, but they breed inland on the shores of lakes. There are not many species of divers, but, like the grebes, they assume a special dress during the nesting-season, more beautiful than the winter dress. THE PENGUINS TllE PENGUINS may justly be called won- derful birds, and they arc undoubtedly of very ancient descent. For counties* generations the sea has been their home and refuge, and, in «-.*, „: P. D^., ,.*,.] [«,..,.. M consequence, flight has been abandoned in ex- BLACK-FOOTED PENGUIN ?"*& for increased swimming-powers, which have been gained bv transforming the wing Ttn bird, alw katvia ai ike Cafe or Jackass-fenruin, ireeJt in • ... .... . ,- . '. kurrw, or under UJgei cf rock iiitoa paddle. 1 his transformation lias resulted in Battening the wing-bones —and so increas- ing the surface of the hand and arm whilst reducing its thickness ami the suppression of the quill-feathers. The result is a blade-like paddle closely resembling the paddle of the whale, the turtle, or the extinct fish-lizards. XYith this organ they cleave their way through the water, often far below the surface, in pursuit of food, just as of old their ancestors did through the air. In other diving-birds the wings arc kept closely pressed to the side of the liody when under water, whilst the locomotion is effected by the feet. The penguin's legs, in consequence of diminished use, have shortened considerably. Hut besides the wings and legs, the feathery covering has also undergone a certain amount of change. This h.is been effected by increasing the size of the shaft of the feather and diminishing the vane; as a result, on the front part of the wings these feathers look more like scales than feathers. Professor Moselev has vividly described the appearance of a flock of penguins at sea. He writes from Tristan d'Actmhn: "As we approached the shore, I was astonished at seeing a GREBES AND DIVERS, PENGUINS, TUBE-NOSED BIRDS 43 shoal of what looked like extremely active, very small porpoises or dolphins. . . . They showed black above and white beneath, and came along in a shoal of fifty or more . . . towards the shore at a rapid pace, by a series of successive leaps out of the water and leaps into it again. . . . Splash, splash, went this marvellous shoal of animals, till they went splash through the surf on to the black, stony beach, and then struggled and jumped up amongst the boulders and revealed themselves as wet and dripping penguins." Like their relatives in other parts of the world, penguins breed in huge communities known as " rookeries," a rookery being peopled by tens of thousands. Their nests, made of small stones, are placed among the tall grass and reached by beaten pathways, exceedingly difficult to walk through. Professor Moseley thus describes a " rookery " : " At first you t / to avoid the nests, but soon find that impossible ; then, maddened almost by the pain [for they bite furiously at the legs], stench, and noise, you have recourse to brutality. Thump, thump, goes your stick, and at each blow down goes a bird. Thud, thud, you hear from the men behind you as they kick the birds right and left off the nests; and so you go for a bit — thump, smash, whack, thud, ' caa, caa, urr, urr,' and the path behind you is strewn with the dead and dying and bleeding. Of course, it is horribly cruel thus to kill whole families of innocent birds, but it is absolutely necessary. One must cross the rookeries in order to explore the island at all, and collect the plants, or survey the coasts from the heights." Penguins feed principally on Crustacea, molluscs (" shell-fish "), and small fish, varied with a little vegetable matter. Although the legs are very short, penguins yet walk with ease, and can, on occasion, run with considerable speed. It would appear, however, as if the largest of the tribe, the EMPEROR-PENGUIN, had become somewhat too bulky to run ; for when speed is necessary it lies down upon the snow and propels itself with its feet, traveling, it is said, in this manner with incredible speed. Penguins, though confined to the Southern Hemisphere, enjoy a wide range and every variety of climate. They are found on the Antarctic ice, on the shores of South Africa, South America, Australia, New Zealand, and inhabit many islands of the southern seas, >~—^ BLACK-FOOTED PENGUINS BATHING The name Jackass is bcstoiued because the noise made by these birds closely resembles the bray of a donkey 44 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD r >..<•*, u: p. ,, F.Z «.] KING-PENGUIN Tkit it oat of tht largest of tkt Penguins notably the Falklands, Ker- guelen, and Tristan d'Acunha. In size penguins vary greatly. The largest is the EMPEROR' ri:M;ri\ of the Antarctic seas ; scarcely smaller is the KIM,- n ITOUIN of Kerguclcn Island. The emperor-penguin stands some 3.} feet high, and may weigh as much as 78 Ibs. The GENTU I'l \';u\,or"Johnny" of the sailors, is next in si/e, being but little smaller than the king-penguin ; this sp. inhabits Kerguelen Inland and the Falklands. The CKI >ri :n Pi \«.i INS, or ROCK- Ti-Ks, of which there are several species, are muchsmaller ; they occur in the Falkland Islands, New Zealand, and the Antaiv- tic. The South African form is known as the HI.AI K-I • « > n.i • 1'ENorix. Its nearest allies are HUMBOLDT'S FENCITX of Western South America, and the JACKASS-PENGUIN of the Falklands. The smallest of all is the little Bi.ui: PKMii'ix of South Australia and New Zealand, standing only 17 inches high. THE TUBE-NOSED BIRDS UNTIL recently these birds were believed to be closely related to the Gulls, but it is now generally agreed that they are really distant relatives of the Divers and Penguins. The association with the Gulls was pardonable, for they certainly bear a superficial resemblance to them. The birds now under discussion may be readily distinguished from the ("mils by the fact that the nostrils open into a tube on the top of the beak, or a pair of tubes, one on either side— hence the name of the group. Like the Gulls, they are sea-birds and web-footed. Their young are downy and for a time helpless. One egg is laid, which is white, and in some cases spotted with red at the large end. As a rule no nest is made, but the egg laid on the bare ground, in a hole or burrow or in crevices of rocks. The Albatrosses build a nest of earth, tufts of grass, and moss, the whole structure raising the sitting-bird well above the ground. The Giant and Fulmar Petrels also build nests. The albatross is said by Professor Moseley to hold the egg in a pouch while sitting, as in the case of the king-penguin. The nature of this pouch has never been described. Although occurring in the seas of all parts of the world, the Southern Hemisphere must be regarded as their headquarters, since here the greatest number of spe. i. - are found. All are carnivorous, and — with the exception of one small group, the Diving-petrels of the Strait of Magellan — are birds of powerful flight. A large number of -pccies belong to this group, but an enumeration of all would be wearisome. A few of the more striking have, then-lore, be.-n selected for description. Till-: Ai i;\ 1 1;< »SS1 -< It was an albatross which brought such woe upon the ancient mariner whoso pitiful story o feelingly told by Coleridge. Hut the tables arc occasionally turned, for men falling overboard in southern seas are liable to be attacked by the-e powerful giants. The . ilb.it: is mostly renowned for its majestic flight. Mr. Fronde has given us a wonderful description GREBES AND DIVERS, PENGUINS, TUBE-NOSED BIRDS 45 of this flight, which is quoted with approval by Professor Newton. It runs as follows: "The albatross wheels in circles round and round, and for ever round the ship — now far behind, now sweeping past in a long, rapid curve, like a perfect skater on an untouched field of ice. There is no effort; watch as closely as you will, you rarely or never see a stroke of the mighty pinion. The flight is generally near the water, often close to it. You lose sight of the bird as he disappears in the hollow between the waves, and catch him again as he rises over the crest ; but how he rises and whence comes the propelling force is to the eye inexplicable : he alters merely the angle at which the wings are inclined ; usually they are parallel to the water and horizontal ; but when he turns to ascend or makes a change in his direction, the wings then point at an angle, one to the sky, the other to the water." Professor Htitton, speaking with similar enthusiasm of the wonderful flight, gives us, however, another side to the picture. " Suddenly," he says, " he sees something floating on the water, and prepares to alight; but how changed he now is from the noble bird but a moment before, all grace and symmetry ! He raises his wings, his head goes back, and his back goes in ; down drop two enormous webbed feet, straddled out to their full extent; and with a hoarse croak, between the cry of a raven and that of a sheep, he falls ' souse ' into the water. Here he is at home again, breasting the waves like a cork. Presently he stretches out his neck, and with great exertion of his wings runs along the top of the water for seventy or eighty yards, until, at last, having got sufficient impetus, he tucks up his legs, and is once more fairly launched in the air." For the wonderful photographs of the albatross at home we are indebted to the Hon. Walter NESTING ALBATROSSES ON LAYSAN ISLAND This colony ivas oj enormous si-zt, and included thousands of birds 46 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD Rothschild. They are from his book on the avifauna of Laysan Island, in the North Pacific. Unfortu- nately for the albatrosses and other birds, traders have been attracted to Laysan for the sake of the guano deposits. The birds were strictly protected during the occupation of Mr. IVccce, but when he left they had no friend to shield them, and their eggs were taken in cart-loads, as the accompanying photograph shows. When an albatross makes love, Professor Moseley tells us, he stands "by the female on the not, raises his wings, spreads his tail and elevates it, throws up his head with the bill in the air, or stretches it straight out forwards as far as he can, and then utters a curious cry. . . . Whilst uttering the cry the bird sways his neck up and down. The female responds with a similar note, and they bring the tips of their bills lovingly together. This sort of thing goes on for half an hour or so at a time." There are several different kinds of albatross. The largest measures over 1 1 feet across the out- stretched wings. Theyare inhabitants of the southern seas. After the Albatrosses, the largest bird of the group is the GIANT PETREL. The sailors call it " Break-bones," "Nelly," or " Stinker." In habits it differs much from its aristocratic relative the albatross, haunting the coasts in search of dead seals and whales, and the bodies of other birds. Professor Moseley aptly likens it to the vulture : " It soars all day along the coast on the look-out for food. No sooner is an animal killed than numbers appear as if by magic, and the birds are evidently well acquainted with the usual proceedings of sealers, who kill the sea- elephant, take off the skin and blubber, and leave the carcase. The birds gorge themselves with food, just like the vultures, and are then unable to fly. I came across half a dozen at Christmas Harbour in this condition. We landed just opposite them; they began to run to get out of the way. The men chased them ; they ran off. spreading their wings, but unable to rise. Some struggled Unit h D- !•• «•«•/] V.lknin, WHITE-CAPPED ALBATROSS ON EGG Pnftuor Mauley dtseriktt the fgg of tke albatroa as bring held in a ion if pouch B ftrmiiiitn »' iht If CARTING ALBATROSS EGGS ON Mil IM \M> <>!• I.AVSAN /tt out timt ikta birds ll-irt froHcleJ; at MI'J faolc^rafk Inlifrs, tliis is no ikt cast ROCK-HOPPER PENGUIN The name Rock-hop fer is given in allusion to the habit of hopping o-ver boulder i of rock 47 fhut 0) WHITE STORKS Tkt ri^hi-liand jigure ihtrui! ike bird mating the curious ctapptring -u'.'.h in beeJ> \VIII IK STORK A fartnt kirj returning ivitk * frof far in young 48 GREBES AND DIVERS, PENGUINS, TUBE-NOSED BIRDS 49 into the water and swam away, but two went running on, gradually disgorging their food, in the utmost hurry, until they were able to rise, when they made off to sea." The FULMAR PETREL is a British bird. On St. Kilda, Professor Newton tells us, from 18,000 to 20,000 young are killed in one week in August, the only time when, by the custom of the community, they are allowed to be taken. These, after the oil is extracted, serve the islanders for winter focd. The STORM-PETREL is a small bird which breeds abundantly in St. Kilda and the Orkneys, and so fearless that it will allow itself to be taken from the nest by hand. Immediately this is done, the bird vomits a quantity of pure oil from its mouth. The wild fowlers make use of this habit, capturing the bird, collecting the oil, and setting the prisoner free again. A story is related of a storm-petrel which was kept in a cage for three weeks. It was fed by smearing its breast with oil, which the bird swallowed by drawing the feathers separately through its beak. These birds are popularly supposed to be seen only before stormy weather, and therefore are not welcomed by sailors, who call them " Devil's Birds " and " Witches." This bird seems to commend itself to some palates ; thus the late Mr. Seebohm says : " Cooked on toast, like snipe, we found them delicious eating, very rich, but not at all fishy." We cannot refrain from a brief mention of the remarkable little DIVING-PETREL— remarkable because of its unlikeness to all the other Petrels and its strong resemblance to the Auks. But its tubular nostrils and certain anatomical characters proclaim its true affinities. " This is a petrel," says Professor Moseley, " that has given up the active aerial habits of its allies, and has taken to diving, and has become specially modified by natural selection to suit it for this changed habit, though still a petrel in essential structure." On two occasions Professor Moseley met with them in the Strait of Magellan, and describes the water as being covered with these birds in flocks extending over acres, which were made black with them. T CHAPTER VII STORKS, HERONS, AND PELICAN TRIBE HE Storks, Herons, and Pelican Tribe form a group of closely allied but externally very unlike birds, distantly related to the Petrels on the one hand, and the Cranes and Hawk Tribe on the other. THE STORKS There are few birds which have figured more prominently in the realms of fairy- tale and fable than the WHITE STORK. To- day it is almost universally held in affectionate regard, and in Holland, Denmark, and Germany is afforded the strictest protection, every effort being made, in localities where it is plentiful, to induce it to build its nest upon the house-roof. Sometimes, to effect this, its fondness for a stage of some sort being known, a cart-wheel is set up, and this generally proves successful, the grateful bird erecting thereon its nest. Once occupied, it may be held by several genera- tions of tenants ; and year by year additions are made to the nest, so that the original shallow structure at last attains a height of several feet. The material used in its FULMAR PETREL Like the vulture, this bird nvill so gorge itself with food as to he unable^ fur a time, to fy THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD construction consists of sticks and other substances. He considers himself a fortunate nun indeed who can boast a stork's nest on his house. To show how widespread is the regard in which this bird is held, we may mention th.it in Morocco, according to Colonel Irby, " almost every Moorish hovel has its stork's nest on ihe top, a pile of sticks lined with grass and palmetto-fibre," and he goes on to relate that in " Morocco and Fez, and some other large towns in the Moorish Kmpire, there is a regular storks' hospital, and that, should one be in any way injured or fall from the nest, it is sent to this institution, or rather enclosure, which is kept up by subscriptions from wealthy Moors, who regard the stork as a sacred bird." Though the nest appears to be generally placed upon buildings, it is, when these fail, built in trees, and the selection of such sites must be regarded as representing the original practice of the species. The stork is one of the very few birds which appear to be quite dumb. It supplies the want of a voice by a very remarkable clapping noise made by the long, horny beak. Hut even this noise is rarely made, and appears to be prompted by unusual excitement. "During the breeding-season," Mr. Howard Saundcrs tells us, "storks keep up a clappering with their bills, and this sound may frequently be heard proceeding from a number of birds circling in the air at such a height as to be almost invisible." The affection displayed by storks for their young is proverbial. They feed them In- thrusting their beaks down into the gaping little mouths, and injecting the half-digested remains of their last meal, which may represent reptile, frog, or fish, varied by a small mammal, young bird, worms, or insects. The white stork is a really beautiful bird. Except the quill- and some of the smaller wing-feathers, which are black, the plumage is snow-white, whilst the bill and the legs are bright red. Like the swallow, it performs extensive migrations, traveling in flocks, number- ing many thousands, at an immense height. Scarcely less beautiful is the Mi ACK STORK, and, like its white-plumaged ally, it is also an occasional visitant to Hritain. It is a handsome bird, having the plumage of the upper- parts black, richly glossed with purple, copper, and green; the under-parts pure white; and the legs and beak red. Hut it is far less sociable, and consequently less known, than the white stork, shunning the haunts of men. and seeking seclusion for its nest in the lofty trees of large forests. The largest members of the Stork Tribe are the Anjf i A\ i •- 1< IRKS and J.\I;IRI s. 'UK- adjutants are also, to our eyes at least, singu- larly ugly birds. In spite of this very natural disadvantage, they have won a very high place in the regard of tin- people among whom they dwell, on account of the fact that, both in Africa and India, they perform, with the vultures, the work of scavengers. Yet there is snmething of quaintnes> about thc-c birds, if they are watched from a di-tance too great to reveal the character which imparts the ugli- ness to which we have referred, and their actions I in. MUD SIOKK not seldom border on the grotesque. The name A ran iftciei, rtmarkablt fir t»i kugt tisa of iht ttai Adjutant has been bestowed upon them OH STORKS, HERONS, AND PELICAN TRIBE 51 account of the peculiar gait, which bears a fanciful resem- blance to the measured pacing of an officer on parade. Like all the Storks, they have large bodies and very long legs, but they have outstripped all their relatives in the enormous size of the beak. The features which have earned this unenviable reputation for ugliness are the peculiarly unkempt and unwashed appearance of the head and neck. These are but scantily clothed in very shabby, brown-looking down-feathers; and the neck is made still more, we might almost say, repulsive by the presence of a large bare pouch, which can be distended with air to an enormous size at will. The Arabs, on accountof this pouch, call the species resident with them " The Father of the Leather Bottle." Some, how- ever, say that the correct trans- lation of the native name Phut by W. F. Dande, f.Z.S. ADJUTANT-STORK The curious 'wind hag ii t of its tribe. The whole plumage is pure white, and the upper-parts are made additionally resplendent by an indescribable satin-like gloss. The beautiful whiteness of its plum.i-r U enhanced by the fact that the head and neck, bill and feet, are jet-black. Some would give the palm of beauty to the AFRICAN SADDLE-BILLED STORK. Black and white, as in the American form, are the contrasting " colours " ; but the plumage of the body, instead of being pure white, is plentifully enriched with black, with beautiful purple reflections. fhut tj I). Li FLAMINGOES In flight the long neck and legt are fully extended, giving the bird a very remarkable apfearancc More or less nearly allied to the Storks are several species familiar enough to the professional ornithologist, but not very well known generally. One of the rarest and most interesting of these is the WHALE-HEADED or SHOK-I:IU u> SIOKK of the Nile, remarkable for its enormous boat-shaped bill. More common but equally interesting are the beautiful FLAMINGOES. Apart from the brilliancy of their colour, the most noticeable feature of these birds is the curious beak, which is bent downwards at a sharp angle, and provided on its inside with horny plates resembling those of the Ducks and Swans. The tongue of this bird, unlike that of the Stork Tribe generally, is thick and fleshy, and also resembles that of the duck. The flamingo is the only member of the Stork Tribe which builds a mud-nest. Its foundation laid often in as much as 15 inches of water, and rising above the Mirfarc from 6 to 8 inches, with a diameter at the top of 15 inches, it forms a pile of no mean size. Strangely enough, though these birds are never so happy as when wading "knee" deep in water, yet after the construction of the nest the incubation of the eggs is delayed so long STORKS, HERONS, AND PELICAN TRIBE 53 Phclo ty C--arhs Knight FLAMINGOES On account of the swan-like neck and " strainers " along the edges of the beak, these birds have been regarded 'as long-legged members of the Duck Tribe, but they seem more nearly related to the that before they are hatched the water has disappeared, leaving a burning plain of sun-baked mud. On the top of this nest the parent sits with its long neck neatly curled away among the back- feathers, with its long legs doubled up, and projecting behind her for some dis- tance beyond the tail. Until quite recently it was believed that the bird incu- bated its eggs by sitting astride the nest, the length of the legs forbidding any other position : this has now been proved beyond cavil to be an entirely erroneous opinion. The eggs, two in number, are peculiar in that they are encased in a thick outer chalky coat, which on removal reveals a greenish-blue shell. The characteristic crooked beak of the adult is not at all apparent in the young bird, and only appears as it approaches maturity. The huge flocks in which these birds consort are graphically described by Mr. Abel Chapman as follows : " In herds of 300 to 400, several of which are often in sight at once, they stand feeding in the open water, all their heads under, greedily tearing up the grasses and water-plants from the bottom. On approaching them, which can only be done by extreme caution, their silence is first broken by the sentries, who commence walking away with low croaks ; then hundreds of necks rise at once to full extent, every bird gaggling its loudest, as they walk obliquely away, looking back overtheir shoulders, as though to take stock of the extent of the danger. Pushing a few yards forward, up they all rise, and a more beautiful sight cannot be imagined than the simultaneous spreading of the crimson wings, flashing against the sky like a gleam of rosy light. In many respects these birds bear a strong resemblance to geese. Like them, flamingoes feed by day ; and great quantities t fy If. P. Dartdt, I'.'/, .«. EUROPEAN FLAMINGOES These birds breed in the Si.uth of France and Sfain 54 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD of grass, etc., are always floating about the muddy water when a herd has been feeding. Their cry is almost indistinguishable from the gaggling of geese, and they fly in the same catenarian formations." The SPOONBILLS and IBISES also belong to the Stork Tribe. The former are remarkable chiefly for the strange spoon-shaped bill : one species, a few hundred years ago, nested in Kngland. This remarkable beak is associated with a peculiar method of feeding, well described by the late Mr. Wolley. During the operation, he says, " the beak was passed sideways through the water, and kept open till something palatable came within its grasp; but the action by which the bird effected this was most singular; for instead of turning onlv its head and neck, it turned its whole body from left to right and from right to left, like the balance-wheel of a watch; its neck stretched out and its beak immersed perpendicularlv to about half its depth : this semicircular action was kept up with great vigour and at a tolerably quick march." M«. */ W. f. Dtnd; F.Z.S. SPOONBILL So called an account of in tfoon-ihafed till ,, r.7. *. SACRKD IKis Sacred ta the ancient Egyptians, it is tnnvn ta the Abfiunians as "Father John" A graphic description by Mr. Alfred Crowley of a visit to the breeding haunts of the spoonbill, about fifteen miles from Amsterdam, in 1884, is well worth reproducing hero : " Taking a small boat in tow, we were punted across the open water, over which were flying numbers of sand-martins, swifts, common and black terns, and black-headed gulls, the reeds being full of coots, moorhens, sedge- and reed-warblers, etc., and in the distance we saw, rising above the reeds occasionally, a small spoonbill or purple heron. On Hearing a large mass of reeds, one of the boatmen struck the side of the punt with the pole, when up rose vine tiltv spoonbills and eight or ten purple herons; and as we came closer to the reeds there were soon hovering over our heads, within easy -hot, some 2OO of the former, and fifty or sixty of the latter. Strange to say, not a note or sound escaped from the spoonbills, and only a feu- croaks from the herons. On reaching the reeds, we moored our punt, and two of the men, wading in the mud, took us in the small boat about fifty yards through the reeds, where we found ourselves surrounded by spoonbill-' nests. They were plac< d on the mud among the reeds, built about I toot or i.S inches high and 2 feet in diameter at the bottom, tapering to I foot at the top, where there was a Might depression, in which lay four e or in most cases four young bird-, many ready to leave the nest, and several ran off as we STORKS, HERONS, AND PELICAN TRIBE 55 approached. In the nests with young there was a great difference in age and size, one being about a day or so old, and the oldest nearly ready to leave the nest — some two or three weeks old — so that evidently the birds lay their four eggs at con- siderable intervals, and begin to sit on depositing the first. After wandering about, a matter of difficulty on account of the mud, we found a clutch of only three eggs, and one of four, which I man- aged to blow. We also obtained two clutches of eggs of the purple heron, but some of the latter had young." The IBISES, though much alike in form, are strangely diverse in colour. One species was sacred to the Ancient Egyptians. The reverence and affection they showed to this bird, above all others, is probably largely due to its migrating habits, which obtained in that far past just as they do to-day. The naturalist Brehm says on Phota h W. P. Dandt, F.Z.S.' COMMON NIGHT-HERON .o bt i\fco.'jj//L YOUNG COMMON HERONS These birds have not yet acquired their full plumage this subject: "When the Nile, after being at its lowest ebb, rose again, and the water assumed a red tinge, then the ibis appeared in the land of the Pharaohs as a sure guarantee that the stream — the giver and preserver of life, which the people in their profound reverence raised to the rank of a god — would once again empty the well-spring of plenty over the thirsty land. The servant and messenger of an all-bounteous Deity commanded of a necessity a reverence of a poetic and distinguished character, by reason of its im- portance : he too must be a god." The glossy ibis has been found breeding in colonies of thousands in Slavonia. The nests are large structures formed of sticks and a few weeds, never far from the water, and many even, in the colony referred to, were so near the surface that they appeared to be floating. The eggs, three or four in number, are of a beautiful greenish blue. The young, while still unable to fly, climb actively among the branches of the trees in which the nest is placed, clinging so firmly with the feet as to be removed with difficulty. THE HERONS AND BITTERNS. In the first mentioned of these two groups the COMMON HERON is the best known. Indeed, THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD there must be few who have not encountered it in a wild state at some time or another. In suitable spots it may occasionally be met with standing mid-leg in water on the look-out for eels and other fish and frogs, a diet varied by an occasional young bird or small mammal. Sometimes this prey is hunted, so to speak, the bird walking along with a slow, measured step, striking with lightning rapidity and wonderful precision the moment its victim is sighted, whilst at others it stands motionless, as when fishing, striking the instant the unsuspecting eel or flounder comes within range. Herons breed in more or less extensive colonies, the nests — somewhat bulky structures, made of sticks and lined with twigs — being placed in the tops of high trees. From four to six is the normal number of eggs, and these are of a beautiful sea-green colour. The young are thinly clad in long, hairy-looking down, and for some considerable time are quite helpless. Similar in appearance to the common heron is the American GREAT Hi n: HI-:K<>.\. though it is by no means the largest of the herons, as its name might seem to imply. This distinc- tion belongs to the GOLIATH HERON. A native of Africa, it is remarkable not only for its size, but for an extraordinary de- velopment of long, loose feathers hanging down from the lower part of the breast, and bearing a strange resemblance to an apron, concealing the upper part of the legs. Passing over many species, we pause to descant on the EGRETS. These are num- bered amongst the most unfortunate of birds, and this because of the gracefulness and beauty of certain parts of the plumage worn during the breeding-season, which are coveted alike by Eastern magnates and Western women. The feathers in question are those known as "egrets," or, more com- monly, "ospreys" ; and their collection, as Professor Newton points out, causes some of "the most abominable cruelty practised in the animal world." «•« <•.- ^ <•• <>"••>•< '•*• • The CATTLE-EGRET, better known as BUFF-BACKED HF,RON the BUFF-BACKED HERON, breeds in the TtuUrHMutlijfiebiuKitfnmtblfcbtfcmii southern portion of the Spanish Peninsula, where from March to autumn it is very common in the marshes of Andalusia, thousands con- gregating there, herding with the cattle, from the backs of which they may be often seen pick- ing off the ticks; hence the Spaniards give them a name meaning "cattle cleaners." The NIGHT-III.KIINS are comparatively small birds, and derive their name from their habit of turning night into day, waking up only as the shades of evening fall to bunt for food: only during the breeding-season is this habit broken through, when they are obliged to bunt for food for their young during the daytime. They breed in colonies, in bushes or low trees in the neighbourhood of swamps. In some places they are protected- -as, for instance, round the Great Honam Temple at Canton, where these birds are held sacred. Colonel Swinhoc, says Mr. 1 loward Saundcrs, describes the nests "as placed thickly in some venerable banyans, the granite slabs that form the pavement beneath the trees being bedaubed with the droppings of old and young, while from the nests arose the chattering cry of the callow broods, for which the parent birds were catering the whole day long, becoming more active at sunset. As darkness set in, the noise and hubbub from the trees rose to a fearful pitch." STORKS, HERONS, AND PELICAN TRIBE 57 In Hungary large numbers of herons and egrets breed together in the marshes, egrets and night-herons breeding together with the common and purple herons. Landbeck, an enthusiastic ornithologist, writes of such heronries : "The clamour in these breeding-places is so tremendous and singular in its character as almost to defy description ; it must be heard before a person can form any idea of what it is like. At a distance these hideous noises blend with a confused roar, so as in some way to resemble the hubbub caused by a party of drunken Hungarian peas- ants ; and it is only on a nearer approach the separate notes of the two species, the common and the night-heron, can be distinguished — namely, 'craik' and 'quack,' to which the notes of the young, "zek- zek-zek,' ... in different keys, serve as an accompani- ment." The tops of the highest trees are usually occupied by the nests of the common heron. A little lower down we find the egret ; and on the lowest branches the heron. THE BITTERNS These are birds of a re- markable type of coloration, adapted to aid their skulking habits. Thecolorationpartakes so completely of the nature of the undergrowth among which they dwell, that, aided by certain peculiar habits de- scribed below, they succeed in harmonising so perfectly with their surroundings as to render themselves invisible to their enemies. The best-known species in Britain is the COMMON BIT- TKKN, though this epithet no longer applicable, for at the present time it is but an occa- sional visitant there. Once it was plentiful .enough, as the frequent references both in prose and poetry bear witness. These references have been inspired mainly by its very peculiar note, made apparently only during the breeding-season. This sound is variously described as " booming," " bellowing," and " bumping," and many arc the theories which have been invented to account for its origin. Thomson, in " The Seasons," says that it is made whilst the beak is thrust into the mud : - The bittern knows his time, with bill ingulf'd To shake the sounding marsh. Chaucer, that it is caused whilst it is immersed under water; and Dryden represents it as Pnilt tf SiMaittc Phelo. Co. INDIAN CATTLE-EGRET This is a species of buff-backed heron, and earns its name from its habit of hovering round cattle for the sake of picking off the ticks by -which they are infested 58 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD made by thrusting the bill into a reed. Mr. J. K. Harting is one of the few win. have actually watched the bird during the production of the sound, and from him wo gather that it is made by expelling the air from the throat whilst the head is held vertically upwards. The protective coloration and the peculiar habits associated therewith have only recently been recognised. These birds, when threatened, do not take flight, but immediately bring the body and the long neck and pointed head into one vertical line, and remain absolutelv motion- less so long as the cause of alarm peisists. The peculiar coloration of the body harmonise* so perfectly with the surrounding undergrowth, that, as just remarked, detection is well-nigh impossible. Although the pattern and tone of the coloration vary in the various specie bittern — which occur all over the world — this principle of protection obtains in all. The drainage of the fens is answerable for the extinction of the bittern in England. \Ve would draw special attention to the great length of the feathers on the neck, which, when the bird is excited, are extended on either side to form an enormous feather shield. 1 his is admirably shown in the photograph below, which represents a bittern preparing to strike. It i- a curious fact that, when extended, the hind part of the neck is protected only by a thin < ..at of down. When the excitement has passed, the elongated feathers fall again, and, curling round the unprotected area, give the bird the appearance of having a perfectly normally clothed neck. A wounded bittern will strike at either man or dog, and is extremely dangerous, owing to the sharpness of its dagger-like bill. If a dog advances on one not entirely disabled, the bird imme- diately turns itself upon its back, and fights with beak and claws, after the fashion of a wounded hawk or owl. Owing to the way in which the neck can be tucked up, by throwing it into a series of curves, and then suddenly extended, great danger attends the approach of the unwary. The bittern is by no means particular in its choice of food, small mammals, birds, li/ards, frogs, fishes, and beetles being alike palatable. The writer remembers taking from the gullet and stomach of one of these birds no less than four water-voles, three of which hail apparently been killed only just before it was shot, for the process of digestion had hardly begun. On migration these birds appear to travel in flocks of considerable size, since Captain Kelham reports having seen as many as fifty together high up in the air, when beuu-en Alexandria and Cairo. Curiously enough, they flew like " a gaggle " of geese — in the form of a V ! but every now and then he noticed they, for some reason or other, got into great confusion. At one time the flesh of the bittern was much esteemed as food for the table, being likened in taste and colour to the leveret, with some of the flavour of wild-fowl. Sir Thomas Browne, who flourished during the middle of the seventeenth century, says that young bitterns were c< >nsid< : <••/,.,.», 7. L. a..*.,., T.,,. ~ Hritain till the middle of the nine- COMMON HITTKRN teenth century, one of the last nests Prtfarinf it, attack (nJt fine) being taken in Norfolk in 1868. a by U'. P. Dandc, t.Z..-,.] EGYPTIAN PELICAN In the Pelicans the tiuo sexes are cct^ur<:d a [Regenft t'ark 59 60 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE \\ORLD Tin: Pi I.ICAN Tumi: The members of the Pelican Tribe may be readily distinguished from other living birds by the fact that all their toes arc united in a common fold of skin or wcl>. In the Ducks and other wcb-l'o,, ted birds only the front toes arc so united. The Pelican Tribe embraces several apparently dissimilar forms, whose only claim to be grouped together, judged from a superficial point of view, lies in the fact that they possess the peculiar type of foot above mentioned. \Yith the general appearance of the Pelican itself probably every one is familiar, but we had better mention here that the other representatives of the group with which we have now to deal are the Cormorants and Ganncts, common on the British coasts, and the less-known Darters, Frigate-birds, and Tropic- birds; these, as we know from their anatomy, are all closely allied forms, and with the Pelicans make up a somewhat isolated group whose nearest allies appear to be the members of the Stork Tribe. The PELICAN figures largely in ecclesiastical heraldry as the type of maternal tenderness. Tradition has it that the bird, in admonishing its young, occasionally did so with such violence as to slay them. Remorse immediately following, the distracted parent drew blood from its own breast, and therewith sprinkled the victims of its wrath, which thereupon became restored to life again. The exhaustion following on this loss of blood was so great that the young had perforce to leave the nest to procure food for themselves and the sinking parent. If any, through lack of filial affection, refused to aid in this good work, the mother, on recovering strength, drove them from her presence, but the faithful children she permitted to follow her wherever she went. One of the most remarkable features of the pelican is the pouch which hangs suspended from the under side of the beak. This is capable of great distension, and is used, ulu-n fishing, as a sort of bag-net, of which the upper jaw serves as the lid. The young are fed by the female, which, pressing her well-filled pouch against her breast, opens her mouth and allows them to take their fill therefrom. Pelicans display great sagacity when fishing, a (lock often combining to form a hor--c- shoe, and, driving the fish into a mass, take their fill. This method, of course, i- only possible when fishing in the estuaries of rivers or lakes, where the tish can be "rounded up," so to speak. Clumsy as the pelican looks, it is yet capable of wonderful powers of flight; indeed, it shares the honour with the vultures, storks, and adjutants as an expert in the peculiar form of flight known as "soaring." A North American species of pelican is remarkable in that during the breeding-season the beak is ornamented with a peculiar horny excrescence, which is shed as soon as that period is over. Hut. t, th, Dailuii •/ B«. CRESTED PELICAN This bird derives its name from the curiously curled feathers on the tof> of the head and nape of the neck STORKS, HERONS, AND PELICAN TRIBE 61 Pelicans are natives of the tropical and temperate regions of the Old and New Worlds, and live in flocks often numbering many thou- sands. The nest is placed on the ground, and therein are deposited two white eggs. The young are helpless for some time after hatching. In all some six-and-thirty species of CORMORANTS are known to science, of which two are commonly to be met with round the British coasts, one of which also travels inland to establish itself on such lakes and rivers as may afford it support. In various parts of the world cormorants are taken when young and trained to catch fish : sometimes for sport, or — as in China — to furnish a livelihood for their owners. At one time the Master of the Cormorants was one of the officers in the Royal Household of England, the post having been created in 1611 by James I. The method of hunting is as follows: — After fastening a ring around the neck, the bird is cast off into the water, and, diving immediately, makes its way beneath the surface with incredible speed, and, seizing one fish after another, rises in a short space of time with its mouth full and throat distended by the fish, which it has been unable to swallow by reason of the restraining ring. With these captures it dutifully returns to its keeper, who deftly removes the fish, and either returns the bird to the water, or, giving it a share of the spoil, restores it to its perch Cormorants nest either in trees or on the ground ; they lay from four to six eggs, and the young feed themselves by thrusting their heads far down the parents' throats and helping themselves to the half-digested fish which they find there. The cormorant has a certain sinister appearance equalled by no other bird, so that its introduction in Milton's " Paradise Lost " (Book IV., 194) seems particu- larly appropriate. Satan, it will be remembered, is likened to a cor- morant : — So clomb this first grand Thief into God's fold: fy D. Li So«/] [A^.'isurn- YOUNG AUSTRALIAN PELICAN Pelicans, like gannets and cormorants, are hatched perfectly naked and quite blind "halt by IP. Savllit-Kint, F. 7, S. YOUNG PELICANS Toung pelicans never develop Icng down-feathers, like gannets and frigate-birds s Thence up he flew, and in the Tree of Life, The middle tree and highest there that grew, Sat like a cormorant. The curious bottle-green plumage, green eyes, long hooked beak, and head surmounted by a crest of the smaller sea-loving representative of the two British species were doubt- less familiar enough to Milton before blindness overtook him. Some of our readers may have made the acquaintance of the cor- morant's nearest ally, the DARTER, or SNAKE-NECK, in the Fish-house at the 62 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD Zoological Gardens of London. For the sake of those who have not, we may say that the darter may be described as a long-necked cormorant, with somewhat lighter plumage. The head is small and flat, and armed with a pointed, dagger-like bill, whose edges are finely toothed, with needle-like points projecting backwards. The neck is very long and slender; hence its name of Snake-neck. Furthermore, it is remarkable for a very strange " kink," formed by a peculiar arrangement of the neck-bones— an arrangement intimately associated with its peculiar method of capturing its prey, which, as with the cormorant, is pursued under water. How dexterously this is done may be seen any day in the Fish-house at the Zoological Gardens, where, as we have already mentioned, these birds are kept. At feeding- time they arc turned loose into a large tank into which a number of small fish have been placed. The birds dive as soon as they reach the water, and with surprising speed chase their prey till within short range. Then, by a sudden bayonet-like lunge, made possible by the peculiar " kink " in the neck, a victim is transfixed, brought to the surface, released from the bill by a series of sudden jerks, tossed into the air, and dexterously caught and swallowed. The darter is found in Africa, India, the Malay region, Australia, and South America, frequenting the banks of rivers, lakes, and swamps, sometimes singly, some- times in pairs or in immense flocks. Very different from either of the fore- going species, both in build and coloration, is the GANNKT. In its habits it is also different. The adult bird is about the size of a goose, white in colour, and armed with a powerful pointed bill. Tin- young have a quite distinct plumage, being deep brown, speckled with white, this livery being worn for nearly three years. The greater part of a gannet's lifetime seems to be spent upon the wing, a fact which implies a very different method of feeding from that followed by the cormorant and darter; and this is actuallv the case. CORMORANT fluu kj In ikt tf ring a tfigtt crea it Jnit/cpeJ, and a -sftilt fatck af fears on the ttigk Preying upon shoals of herring, mackerel, sprats, or pilchards, the birds, flying singly or in flocks, as soon as the fish are discovered, rise, soar in circles to such a height as experience shows best calculated to carry them by a downward motion to the required depth, and then, partially closing the wings, plunge upon their prey, and rarely without success, the time which elapses between the plunge and the immersion being about fifteen seconds. A flock of gannets feeding is a really wonderful sight, and can be witnessed in many places around the British coasts, for the gannct is one of the very common Hritish birds. The pilchard-fishermen off the Cornish coast learn when the shoals are at hand, and the direction in which they arc travelling, by the actions of these birds. A very cruel experiment is sometimes practised upon the gannet, based upon its well-known method of fishing. A herring is tied to a beam and set adrift, and the bird, not noticing the trap, plunges with its usual velocity upon the Bl firmillicn if thi Han. U^allir RelhiMtd] FRIGATE-BIRDS AT HOME The feathers of frigate-birds are used for head-dresses in the Padfc Islands 63 IT'il THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD fish, with the result that it is killed instantly by the shock of the contact. Gannets breed in colonies of thousands on the islands off the east and west coasts of Scotland. They lay but a single egg, in a nest composed of seaweed deposited in inaccessible crags of pre- cipitous cliffs. The young are at first naked ; later they become clothed with long white down. " Atone time, "says Mr. HowardSaunders," young gannets were much esteemed as food, from 1,500 to 2,000 being taken in a season during the month of August. They are hooked up, killed, and flung into the sea, where a boat is waiting to pick up the bodies. These are plucked, cleaned, and half roasted, after which they are sold at from Phttt fa S*h»lj-!if Pht'6. Ct.~\ [Paritn'i Grttn YOUNG GANNETS, FIRST YEAR The plumage at this aagt is very dark brown, each feather being tippfd with white -eightpence to a shilling each. . . . The fat is boiled down into oil, and the feathers, after being well baked, are used for stuffing beds, about a hundred birds producing a stone of feathers." Gannets present one or two structural pecu- liarities of sufficient interest to mention here. In most birds, it will be remembered, the nostrils open on each side of the beak ; but in the gannet no trace of true nostrils remains; and the same may almost be said of the cormorant and darter. fkttt tt V.A»,'j;/». Phttt. CV] [Pfntn'i C'ftn GANNET, FULL PLUMA(,I Tkt fully adult plumage ii not attained till the bird ii three yeart old fhtlt *r SlMaitlt Fhill. Ct.] [Pjri.n'i (,r»n GANNET, SECOND YEAR The white plumage of the necl ii just beginning la appear In gannets, however, a slight indication of their sometime existence remains, though the nostril itself no longer serves as an air-pa>^ige ; and these birds are compelled to breathe through the mouth. Again, the tongue, like the nostrils, has also been reduced to a mere vestige. Stranger still is the fact that immediately under the skin there lies .in e\ten>ive system of air- cells of large si/e, which can be inllated or emptied at will. Many of these cells dip down between the muscle-, of the body, so that the whole orgam-.ni is pervaded with air-cells, all of which are in connection with the IUIIL;V The FRIGATE- and TROPIC-BIRDS, which now remain to In- described, are -probably much le>s familiar to our readers than the foregoing species. Phata by falinlini &* Sin), Ltd.} GANNETS ON THE BASS ROCK The Bass Rock is the only breeding-station of the gannet on the eastern coast of the British Islands 6s \ Dun it. 66 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD FRIGATE-BIRDS are remarkable in more ways than one. To begin with, their general appear- ance may be described as that of a small, long-winged, fork-tailed albatross, mounted upon particularly diminutive legs, so short as to do little more than raise the body off the ground. Their flight is wonderfully graceful, and capable of being sustained for considerable periods ; for, like the gannets, they pass most of their time on the wing. They feed upon surface-fish, which they capture from the surface of the water without alighting, or upon fish which they take from the gannets of the neighbourhood. Frigate-birds build their nests in trees, on low bushes, or on the ground, and sometimes upon ledges of precipitous cliffs. The nest is a loose structure composed of sticks, and its construction is accompanied by much pilfering from one another. Only a single egg is laid. About the beginning of January the male acquires a very remarkable pouch of brilliant scarlet skin, which hangs beneath the beak. Frigate-birds are found all over the world within the tropics. The TROPIC-BIRDS, or BOATSWAIX-IHRDS, as they are sometimes called, are more like gulls or the heavier species of terns in general appearance, and in no way resemble superficially the forms with which they are associated, save in the fact that all the toes are enclosed in the same web. A study of their anatomy, however, leaves little doubt that these birds are really members of the Pelican Tribe. Either pure white, relieved with black, or of a beautiful apricot-yellow, with similar black markings, with a powerful bill and long tapering tail, the tropic-bird is one of the most beautiful of sea-birds. There are altogether about six species of tropic-birds, distributed over the Pacific and Indian Oceans. They nest in hollows of cliffs or holes in trees, and lay a single egg, which bears some resemblance to that of a kestrel. CHAPTER VIII SCREAMERS, DUCKS, GEESE, AND SWANS CRESTED SCREAMER, OR CHAKA Tki Cntitii anJ H'tid Strramrn art iki null mcmhtri if :kt family Vlilktul FAMILIAR as are most of our readers with all save the first mentioned of these birds, yet few probably suspect how great a wealth of forms this group displays. All are more or less aquatic in their habits, of heavy build, with long nocks and small heads, short legs, and short wings and tails. The young arc hatched covered with a peculiar kind of down, which more nearly resembles that of the Ostrich Tribe than the down of other birds, and they run about or accompany their parents to the water either immediately or a few hours after hatching. Several -pcvics have become domesticated, and in some case-, have given risr ti> peculiar breeds, whilst many are much in demand for the purpose of enlivening ornamental waters. The least-known members of the grouj are the very remarkable and extremely interest ing SCKI:\MI KS of South America, of which there are three -; I hese are large birds, presenting some resemblances to the Game- birds on the one hand and the (ieese on the SCREAMERS, DUCKS, GEESE, AND SWANS 67 other. Not only the beak, but the skull, in certain characters, recalls that of the Game-birds. The body may be described as goose-like, but in the longer legs and enormous toes, which are not connected by a web, these birds recall the Megapodes, or Mound- builders The screamers are generally regarded as primitive members of the group with which they are now asso- ciated ; but in many respects they are quite peculiar. Not the least interesting of their habits is the great predilection they observe for soaring in the air at immense altitudes, uttering the while the curious cry to which they owe their name. Several birds often do this at once. Yet stranger is the fact that they not seldom gather together in vast flocks to sing in concert. Mr. Hudson, for instance, states that the species known as the CRESTED SCREATVIER on one occasion surprised him by " an awful and overpowering burst of ' melody,' " which saluted him from half a million of voices at an out-of-the-way spot in the pampas one evening at nine o'clock; and, again, once at noon he heard flock after flock take up their song round the entire circuit of a certain lake, each flock waiting its turn to sing, and only stopping when the duty had been performed. Like the gannet, these birds are richly supplied Pflota by J. T. f!iwman~\ [B.rlham,ltd AYLESBURY DUCK This is one of the most esteemed of all domesticated breeds Pha, ft, 7. W. African] [Highbury POCHARD This is one of the diving-ducks with air-cells between the body and the skin, and between many of the muscles ; so highly are these cells developed, that it is said a crack- ling sound is emitted when pressure is applied to the skin. The wings of these birds are armed each with a pair of powerful and sharp spurs, recalling those of certain of the Plover Tribe, though in the latter only one spur is present on each wing. The division of the remainder of this group into Ducks, Geese, and Swans is generally recog- nised, but no hard-and-fast line can yet be drawn between the several sections. We must regard them as representing adaptations to peculiar modes of life, which appear to be most marked in the duck-like forms. These may be divided into FRESH-WATER DUCKS, SALT-WATER DUCKS, SPINY-TAILED DUCKS, and MERGANSERS. Of the FRESH-WATER DUCKS, the most familiar is the WILD-UUCK, or MALLARD. This is a resident British bird, and also the parent of the domesticated stock, which frequently closely resembles the wild form. In this species, as with the majority of the fresh-water ducks, 68 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD fli,l, tf If. F. *•<«•»] [Leifhtt* Buxxtrd EIDER-DUCK /; ii lit dvwn of tkii bird ivliick it to muck in demand for t/uilli the males wear a distinctive livery; but the males for a few weeks during the summer assume more or less completely the livery of the female, a process aptly described as going into " eclipse." The assumption of the female dress at this season is necessary, since it harmonises completely with the surrounding foliage, and so effectually conceals the bird at a time when it is peculiarly helpless ; for, .1-, with all birds, the quills or flight-feathers are cast off by the process known as moulting once a year, but instead of being replaced in pairs, and the flight remaining unaffected, they are shed all at once, so that escape from enemies must be sought by concealment. Usually among birds the male has the more powerful voice, but with the mallard and its allies the reverse is the case, the female giving forth the loud familiar " quack, quack," whilst the note of the male sounds like a feeble attempt to answer its mate, but smothered by a cold in the head. This peculiar and characteristic subdued voice is associated with a remarkable bulb-shaped bony enlargement at the bottom of the windpipe, just where it branches off to the right and left lungs, the female being without this swelling. The nest is composed of grass, and lined with down plucked by the female from her own breast, with the sole object, it is generally believed, of keeping the eggs warm ; but it is possible that the down is removed as much for the sake of bringing the warm surface of the body in closer contact with the eggs. The site chosen for the nest is exceedingly varied ; usually the nest is placed on the ground and near the water, but sometimes in a hedgerow or in a wood, and occasionally in trees, and instances are on record where the deserted nests of hawks and crows have been appropriated. At such times the young seem to be brought to the ground by the parent, who carries them down in her bill. It is some time before the wings of the young birds are big enough to carry them ; indeed, they are quite full grown in so far as the body is concerned. At this stage they are known as " flappers." Advantage was at one time taken of their helplessness in the " sport" known as" flapper- shooting." On other occasions numbers of people assembled and " beat " a vast tract of country, driving these young flappers before them to a given spot where nets were placed, in which as many as 150 dozen have been taken at one time. Fortunately this practice has been abolished """ h "• f~ ""'"> I*'**- *•" by Act of Parliament. SHELDRAKE Several Very distinct Tki ftmaU tirdi, jutltxun *f ktr ma at tit kaicm efa/tnf turrrw ' SCREAMERS, DUCKS, GEESE, AND SWANS 69 domesticated breeds of ducks have been derived from the mallard. The commonest breed differs but little, save in its great size, from the wild parent form, but the most esteemed are those known as the ROUEN and AYLESBURY. The PENGUIN-DUCK is the most aberrant and the ugliest of these breeds, having a peculiarly upright, awkward carriage, and very small wings. The SALT-WATER DUCKS, or DIVING-DUCKS, are for the most part of a heavier build than the foregoing species, and many are of a sombre coloration. All the species are expert divers, and in consequence have the legs, which are short, placed far backwards, and this causes them to assume a more upright carriage when on land. The curious bony bulb at the base of the windpipe found in the fresh-water species becomes in the salt-water forms greatly enlarged, and its walls incompletely ossified, leaving large spaces to be filled by peculiarly delicate sheets of membrane. The majority of the species in this section frequent the open sea, but some occur inland. One of the most useful, and at the same time most ornamental, of this section is the ElDER-DUCK, the male in full plumage being a truly magnificent bird : the female, as in the majority of ducks, is clad in sober colours. In Iceland and Norway the eider-duck is strictly protected, a fine being imposed for killing it during the breeding-season, or even for firing a gun near its haunts. This most unusual care is, however, by no means of a disin- terested kind, but is extended solely that certain privileged persons may rob the birds of their eggs and the down on which they rest, the latter being the valuable eider- down so much in demand for bed-coverlets and other pur- poses. " The eggs and down," says Professor Newton, " are taken at intervals of a few days by the owners of the ' eider-fold,' and the birds are thus kept depositing both during the whole season. . . . Every duck is ultimately allowed to hatch an egg or i, N.S, PARADISE-DUCKS This species is a native of Nciv Zealand, inhere the photograph was taken. The bird on the right -with the white head is the female two to keep up the stock." Mr. W. C. Sheppard gives an interesting account of a visit to an eider-colony on an island off the coast of Iceland. "On landing," he says, "the ducks and their nests were everywhere. Great brown ducks sat upon their nests in masses, and at every step started from under our feet. It was with difficulty we avoided treading on some of the nests. On the coast of the opposite shore was a wall built of large stones . . . about 3 feet high and of considerable thickness. At the bottom, on both sides of it, alternate stones had been left out, so as to form a series of square apartments for the ducks to nest in. Almost every apartment was occupied. . . . The house itself was a marvel. The earthen walls that surrounded it, and the window embrasures, were occupied by ducks. On the ground the house was fringed with ducks. On the turf slopes of its roof we could see ducks, and a duck sat on the door-scraper. The grassy banks had been cut into square patches, about 18 inches having been removed, and each hollow had been filled with ducks. A windmill was infested, and so were all the outhouses, mounds, rocks, and crevices. The ducks were everywhere. Many were so tame that \vc could stroke them on their nests, and the good lady told us that there was scarcely a duck on the island that would not allow her to take its eggs without flight or fear." THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD The nest is composed externally of seaweed, and lined with down, which is plucked by the female from her breast as incubation proceeds, till eventually it completely conceals the eggs. Each nest yields about one-sixth of a pound, and is worth, on the spot, from twelve to fifteen shillings a pound. The POCHARDS, SCAITS, GOLDEX-EYES, and SCOTERS are relatives of the eider-duck; but since all resemble the latter in their general mode of life, we need not consider them here. The MERGANSERS and SMEWS, to which reference has been made, differ markedly from all the ducks so far considered in the peculiar formation of the bill, which is relatively long and narrow, with its edges armed with sharp, tooth-like processes projecting backwards towards the back of the mouth. These processes are really only horny spines, and have no relation to Ptuti h i*« Duttiut •/ Bilftrf] CAPE BARREN GOOSE Tkii bird ii a aativt of Soutk-tast Australia and Tasmania, and remarkable far its lien heak teeth, although they are used, as teeth would be, for holding slippery prey, such as fish, which form the greater part of the diet of these birds. So far, in all the ducks which we have considered, the male differs conspicuously from the female in plumage ; but in the forms we are now about to describe both sexes are coloured alike. The first is the COMMON SHELDRAKE, which seems to lie somewhere on the borderland between the Ducks and the Geese. It is a very beautiful bird, conspicuously marked with broad bands of orange-chestnut, white, and black. The beak being coral red in colour, and further ornamented by a peculiar fleshy knob at its base, serves to set off the glossy bottle- green colour of the head and neck. As appears to be invariably the case where both sexes are coloured alike, the female builds her nest in a hole, generally a rabbit-burrow, whilst the young have a distinct livery, duller in tone than that of the parent. The female sheldrake breeds in Britain, and may be frequently seen at sea flying in small parties, which have been likened to a flock of butterflies. SCREAMERS, DUCKS, GEESE, AND SWANS Pt,,t, b, W. Savillt-Ktnt, F.Z.S.] [Milfird-tn-Sn AUSTRALIAN PYGMY GOOSE The pygmy geese are expert divers • The GEESE include birds of somewhat con- spicuous coloration, besides a considerable number of more subdued aspect. The sexes are distin- guished by different names, the female being known as the Goose, the male as the Gander, whilst the young is the Gosling. As we have already mentioned, there is no hard-and-fast line to be drawn between the three sections of this group. The Ducks are connected by the Shel- drakes with the Geese, through the Spur-winged Goose, the Egyptian and Orinoco Geese, and certain other species which cannot be alluded to on this occasion. The SPUR-WINGED GEESE, of which there are two species, are African birds, and derive their name from the long spur seated on the wing. A still more remarkable form is the HALF- WEBBED GOOSE, so called from the fact that its feet are only partially webbed. It has a black- and-white plumage, a hooked beak, and a large warty prominence on the front of the head. It spends most of its time perched on the branches of the Australian tea-trees, and rarely enters the water. The windpipe is peculiar, being coiled in several folds between the skin and the breast-muscles. From these peculiar forms we pass to the true geese. The largest living species is the CHINESE or GUINEA-GOOSE of Eastern Siberia, regarded as the stock from which the domesticated geese of Eastern countries have been derived. European domesticated geese have been derived from the GREY or GREY-LAG GOOSE, a species at one time exceedingly common in England, breeding in considerable numbers in the fen districts, where the young were frequently taken and reared with the large flock of domesticated geese commonly kept at that time for the sake of their feathers. The grey-lag goose, however, has long ceased to breed in England, though a few still nest in Scotland. The most important breeds derived from the grey-lag are the TOULOUSE and EMDEN. Other British species are the BEAN-GOOSE, PINK-FOOTED and WHITE-FRONTED GEESE, and the " BLACK " BRENT and BARNACLE- GEESE, in all of which the sexes are precisely similar in coloration and subdued in tone. In the New World some very beautiful white geese are found, which are still more interesting in that the females have a different coloration. These are the KELP- and UPLAND- GEESE of Patagonia and the Falklands. The female of the kelp-goose is brownish black above and black barred with white below, whilst the female of the upland-goose is rufous and black in colour. The latter may be seen in London parks. I astly, we have a few species known from ., F.Z...] thdr sma]1 size as pvGMY GEESE of Australia, BLACK-NECKED SWAN Indiai and Africa. Perhaps the best known Thefitshy knob at the base of the bill is of a bright red colour is the Indian Species, Called the COTTON-TEAL. 72 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD TRUMPETER- AND WHOOPER-S W ANS Tkt trumftttr it ttt bird in the foreground : ike ivkooftr it rtmarkablt for in mulical note, rcumblin£ tkt word " ivkoof ' ' quietly • rprjrrj They are tiny birds, resembling small ducks rather than geese, and dive admirably, a feat which the larger species do not perform. The SWANS are linked with the Geese through a very beautiful South American species, known as the COSCOROBA SWAN. It is the smallest of all the swans, pure white in colour, save the tips of the greater wing-quills, which are black, and the coral-red bill and feet. Of all the swans, probably the best known is the MI;TK SWAN, the semi-domesticated descendants of which are so common on ornamental waters. For hundreds of vcars the latter were jealously guarded, none but the larger freeholders being allowed to keep them, and then not without a licence from the Crown; with this licence was coupled an obligation to mark each swan with a particular mark, cut with a knife or other instrument through the skin of the beak, whereby ownership might be established. It would seem that these swans and their descendants were not derived from the native wild stock, but were introduced into England, it is said, from Cyprus by Rich. ml I. At the present day large " swanneries " have almost ceased to exist Perhaps the largest is that of the Earl of Ilchcster, at Abbotsbury, near \\Vymouth. In i,X;8 between 1,300 and 1.400 swans were to be seen there at one time, but latterly the number has been reduced to about half. Although swans do not perhaps stand so high in the general esteem as table delic., with our forefathers, then- are yet many who appreciate the flesh of this bird; but the St. Helen's Swan-pit at Norwich is the only place in England where they are systematically fattened for the table. Here from 70 to 200 cygnets -as the young swans are called — caught in the neighbouring rivers, are placed early in August, and fed upon cut grass ,md barley till Christmas, when they are fit for table, weighing, when "dressed," about 15 Ibs., SCREAMERS, DUCKS, GEESE, AND SWANS 73 and fetching, if purchased alive at the pit, about two guineas each. The pit is con- structed of brickwork, and is about 74 feet long, 32 feet wide, and 6 feet deep — the water, admitted from the river, being about 2 feet deep. The food is placed in floating troughs. The birds, " when so disposed," says Mr. Southwell, " leave the water by walking up a sloping stage, and thus obtain access to a railed-in enclosure, where they may rest and preen themselves." The beautiful swan-like carriage, so familiar in the floating bird, seems to belong only to the mute swan, the other species of white swans carrying the neck more or less straight, and keeping the wings closely folded to the body. No greater anomaly could at one time have been imagined than a BLACK SWAN. For centuries it was considered to be an impossibility. We owe the discovery of such a bird to the Dutch navigator Willem de Vlaming, who, more than 200 years ago, captured the first specimen at the mouth of what is now known, in consequence, as the Swan River. A year after their capture accounts reached England through the burgomaster of Amsterdam, and these were published by the Royal Society in 1698. The bird is now fairly common on ornamental waters, where its sooty-black plumage, set off by pure white quill-feathers and coral-red bill, contrasts strongly with the typical snow-white mute swan, generally kept with it. Equally interesting is the handsome BLACK-NECKED S\VAN of South America. In this species the plumage is pure white, save that of the neck, which is black. The distribution of this species is practically the same as that of the Coscoroba swan. Breeding freely in confinement, it has become a fairly common bird on ornamental waters. It shares with the mute swan the reputation of gracefulness when afloat, swimming 'with the neck curved and wings raised. I t h W. Kiid] AUSTRALIAN BLACK SWANS AND CYGNETS The cygnets are light-coloured, like those of the 'white siuans [Wiituw, N.B. CHAPTER IX BIRDS OF PRET J\I) OIl'LS BIRDS OF PREY T one time the boundaries of this group were much larger than now, for within them were included at least form which has since proved to belong to the Ci.inc Tribe: we allude to the Seriema (page 42Si, and also to the Owls. This classification was based on the very remarkable superficial resemblance to the typical birds of prey which those forms bear. Modern ornitho- logists regard as birds of prey onlv the forms known as the \cw World Yiiltinv-. the Secretary-bird, and the Falcons, I .a-1. ~. Vultures, Buzzards, and the numcn >us smaller forms commonly classed as " Hawks." Phut f>t Sth»Iaiti{ Ptittt. C«.] CONDOR [Pfntn't Grtin The habit of standing with tke wings exf aided it a very common one •with these bird* THE NEW WORLD VULTURES These may be distinguished from their distant relatives of the Old World by the fact that the nostrils are not divided from one another by a partition, and by their much weaker feet. The head and neck in all, as in the true vultures, is more or less bare, and, furthermore, is often very brilliantly coloured, in which last .particular these birds differ from the typical vultures. One of the most important members of the group is the CONDOR, one of the largest of flying birds, and when on the wing the most majestic. " When the condors," says Darwin, " are wheeling in a flock round and round any spot, their flight is beautiful. Except when rising off the ground, I do not recollect ever having seen one of these birds flap its wings. Near Lima I watched several for nearly half an hour, without once taking . f. D**d,, f.X.S. CONDOR The bare sJtin of the head and nick it of a da'k purple colour, the rujft circling the neck being of pure white d^-wn-J'tathert 7-4 BIRDS OF PREY AND OWLS 75 off my eyes ; they moved in large curves, sweeping in circles, descending and ascending, with- out giving a single flap." One which he shot measured, from tip to tip of the fully expanded wings, 8^2 feet. The condor, like its smaller relatives, hunts by sight, and not, as was at one time believed, by smell, feeding on the dead bodies of guanacos which have died a natural death or been killed by pumas, and upon other dead animals. In the neighbourhood where sheep and goats are kept, they are much dreaded, as they will attack the young kids and lambs. The flock- owners on this account wage constant war against them, capturing them by enclosing a carcase within a narrow space, and when the condors are gorged galloping up on horseback and killing them, for when this bird has not space to run it cannot rise from the ground. Sometimes the trees on which they roost are marked, and when night falls a man climbs the tree and cap- tures them with a noose, for they are very heavy sleepers. The condor ranges from the Andes of Ecuador, Peru, and Chili southwards to the Rio Negro on the east coast of Patagonia. It lays two large white eggs on a shelf of bare rock projecting from precipitous cliffs, and the young are said to be unable to fly till after they are a year old. As will be seen in the photographs, the head of the male is crowned by a bare, fleshy caruncle, which, like the surrounding bare skin, is of a dull reddish colour: lower down the neck is a frill of pure white down, which forms a conspicuous contrast with the glossy black plumage of the rest of the body and wings. THE SECRETARY-BIRD. The second of the three main divisions into which the Birds of Prey are divided is reserved for the SECRETARY-BIRD. This bird derives its name from the crest of long feathers which bear a fanciful resemblance to the quill-pens a clerk is supposed to stick above his ear. It differs from all the other members of the Hawk Tribe in the exceedingly long legs, which in the young are said to be so fragile as to fracture if the bird is suddenly alarmed. It feeds chiefly on insects and reptiles, especially snakes, for which last it seems to have a special liking. It attacks even the most venomous species, striking at them with its powerful wings and pounding them with its feet, jumping upon them with great force, till rendered helpless, when they are at once swallowed head-foremost. On account of its great value as a snake-eater it has been accorded special protection, though unfortunately there is a tendency on the part of English settlers to relax this, on account of the fact that it will occasionally eat animals coming within the scope of "game." Valuable as the latter may be, there yet seems no justification for such a course. The secretary-bird, which is a South African species, though extending northwards as far as Abyssinia, builds a huge nest of sticks in low bushes, under which will often be found numerous nests of the Cape sparrow, apparently the only available site on the veldt, where bushes are scarce. Here the sparrows are efficiently protected from the icy winds which so frequently sweep across this region, and apparently suffer no fear of personal violence from the fierce owners of the domicile above them. When sitting, the female secretary is fed by her mate. The young do not appear to leave the nest for five or six months. They are frequently taken from the nest and brought up as household pets, becoming not only very tame, but exceedingly useful. THE EAGLE AND FALCON TRIBE. From the perplexing wealth of species displayed among the forms herein bracketed together, we can only select a few examples, which embrace, however, all the more important and interesting forms. Beginning with the more lowly, we start with those members of small or medium size known as KITES, and as an example of the group take the species known in the British Islands as the KITE, or GLEAD. In former days this bird was extremely common in England, 76 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD being found in numbers not only in the rural districts, but in London itself, where, as old records of the fifteenth century show, it occurred in such numbers near London Bridge % to excite the wonder of foreigners visiting the city. These birds found an abundance of food in the garbage of the streets, and also of the Thames itself— "an observation," remarks Mr. Finn, " which throws a lurid light upon the city sanitation." In the days of falconry the kite was royal game, not, however, by legal enactment, hut by reason of the fact that none but specially trained falcons could secure a prey with such wonderful powers of flight. Consequently the price of a falcon which had attained this degree of skill was beyond the purse of any but a king. Save on the wing, the kite is not a handsome bird, its general colour being of a pale reddish brown; but those who have had the good fortune to watch its flight are one and all impressed. Cowper admirably expresses the general admiration in the lines: — Kites that swim sublime In still repeated circles, screaming loud. The kites may be distinguished from other members of the tribe by their forked tails. Somewhat of a scavenger, as we have already hinted, the kite feeds also upon such small game as moles, frogs, young birds, rabbits, snakes, and fish. Its partiality for young birds caused it to be much dreaded in the farmyard in the days when it was common ; and when, with the introduction of modern and improved firearms, game-preserv- ing became more strenuously prosecuted, its doom was sealed, for a ceaseless war was waged against it, which ended only with its extermination. Nearly allied to the Kites, the HoNEV-BfZZARDS next claim attention. The name Honey- buzzard is a misnomer, for honey forms no part of the bird's food. . This species exhibits, however, a quite remarkable partiality for the immature stages of wasps and bees, the nests of which it tears in pieces with its feet, so as to lay bare the coveted morsels, devouring them on the spot, perfectly regardless of the stings of the infuriated insects, which seem unable to penetrate its feathers. When its favourite food is not to be had, it will feed upon corn, earth-worm>, beetles, slugs, small birds' e^ and moles— a diet sufficiently Plot, *; S.Miuii Mil.. Ci.] I Pant*' j OV*«i SECRETARY-BIRD 7' full plumage tkt tail of tku bird n much Jongtr AUSTRALIAN W H IT E -B E LLI ED SEA EAGLE This species of ospny is confined to Australia anJ the Austra-Malay IslanJs 77 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD strange for a bird of prey. Honey-buzzards appear to be exemplary parents, for they are said to construct a bower of leafy boughs above the nest to screen the young from the sun, the boughs being replaced as they wither by fresh ones. The honey-buzzard occurs but rarely in England, and nowhere appears to be a very common bird, though it is said to be more frequently met with in Arabia and Egypt than elsewhere. On migration, however, it appears in unusually large numbers, the late Lord Lilford recording an occasion when he observed many hundreds crossing the Straits of Gibraltar from Spain to Africa. These were apparently on their autumnal migration to warmer winter quarters. The dash, energy, and courage which we are wont to associate with the Hawk Tribe have certainly not been manifest in the members of the order which we have examined so far; but these attributes will be evident enough in the majority of the species with which we are now about to deal. One of the most interesting of these fiercer forms is the OSPKKY, or FlSHING-HAWK. As its name implies, it feeds largely upon fish, which it captures with great dexterity, seizing them either with its feet from the surface of the water, or by plunging entirely beneath the surface, when it disappears amid a shower of spray, to emerge a moment later with a fish writhing in its talons. To ensure a firm grip of its slippery prey, the si'les of its feet are armed with rough tubercles, whilst the foot is furthermore remarkable in that the outer toe can be turned backwards, so as to lie parallel with the hind toe — an arrangement rare in birds of the Hawk Tribe, but characteristic of the Owls and some other birds. At times, it would seem, the osprey seizes a fish too large to be raised from the water, when, owing to the firm hold which the claws have taken, the bird is unable to release itself, and is speedily dragged beneath the surface and drowned. Some have suggested that the bird falls a victim, not to inability to free itself, but rather to its obstinacy. The osprey is now rare in Great Britain, though it breeds occasionally in the wilder parts of Scotland. It enjoys an extensive range, however, being found all over the world. In America it appears to be very common. On an island " off the eastern extremity of Long Island, New York," writes Professor Newton, " 300 nests were counted. The old birds were rearing their young close together, living as peaceably as so many rooks, and were equally harmless to other birds." Colonies of this kind are rare among birds of prey. Whilst the fiercer raptorial birds, which hunt and kill their prey, live only upon small or medium-sized animals, a certain section, known as the WI:ITKI-;S, feed upon the carcases of the largest mammals which they find either in the throes of death or already dead, and even far advanced in decomposition. Gathering to the feast in large crouds, even the largest bodies arc soon demolished; and on this account the vultures are to be reckoned amongst the most useful of birds, speedily removing matter which in hot countries would rapidly endanger the health of neighbouring communities. Many years ago a great controversy was waged over the question of the faculty which guides the vulture in the discovery of its food, since it was a matter of common knowledge that the traveller might sweep the l^^^="fc Wfl i ftitt* if tP F. £>*«.<•, F.Z. *., Ktftnt'i Ptrk EGYPTIAN KITE Fttdmg on garbage of all kindt, kittt are useful bk in not countriet BIRDS OF PREY AND OWLS 79 horizon in vain for a sign of these birds, yet, should a camel from a caravan fall out and die, or men fall in warfare, within an incredibly short space of time a crowd of vultures would be squabbling over the dead. Some held that the vulture was guided by scent, others by sight,, and this latter view is now almost universally accepted. The bird's natural habit of soaring at an immense height enables it to survey not only immense tracts of country, but the actions of its neighbours soaring at the same altitude, though perhaps miles away. So soon as one descries food it betrays the fact by its actions, making off in the direction of the prospective feast; it is then followed immediately by its yet more distant neighbour, and this by a third, and so the first serves as a guide to all the other soaring birds for miles around. This flight has been admirably expressed by Long- fellow in " Hiawatha." We need here mention only one or two of the more important species of vulture, and among these one of the most interesting is the LAMMERGEiR, or BEARDED VULTURE. This species is one of the least vulture-like of the tribe, not only in general appear- ance, but also in habits, and is to be regarded as near the ancestral stock, whose descendants have become more and more addicted to feeding upon dead bodies. The lammergeir, or bearded vulture, is a bird of large size and majestic flight, differing from all other vultures in that the head and neck are clothed in feathers, whilst the nostrils are covered by long bristles. Beneath the bill hangs a tuft of bristles like those covering the nostrils ; hence its name of Bearded Vulture ; and this, coupled with a remarkable red rim to the eyes, gives the bird an almost diabolical appearance. It lives partly upon living animals and partly upon carrion, bones apparently being especially relished ; these it breaks by dropping them from a height upon the rocks below, probably to get at the marrow. Land-tortoises are treated in a similar manner, and it was possibly this species which caused the death of the poet /Eschylus, on whose bare head a tortoise is alleged to have been dropped. It was at one time common in Europe, and is still fairly numerous in West Africa, though rare in the East and South. Many stories are told of its strength and daring, some of which concern the carrying off of young children ; but these are prob- ably mythical, modern observers generally agreeing that the bird is by nature far from courageous. The more typical vultures differ from the lammergeir in having the head and neck more or less bare, and often conspicuously coloured, or covered with a short velvety down. The CINEREOUS, GRIFFON, PONDICHERRY, and EGYPTIAN VULTURES maybe cited as examples of these. The CINEREOUS or BLACK VULTURE is a heavy and repulsive-looking bird, feeding entirely on garbage. On the wing, however, this vulture shares with its relatives the admiration of all who have been privileged to watch it; sailing in graceful circles in the blue sky of the tropics, or hurrying from all quarters of the compass to some ghoulish feast, it forms a spectacle, once seen, never to be forgotten. It is found on both sides of the Mediterranean, and extends eastwards to India and China. fhala kj Charlii Knight} \Aldtrs}M BEARDED VULTURE // is called the Bearded Culture on account of' the tuft of bristles hanging frt/m the chin 8o THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD This species, like the GRIFFON-VULTURE, has the head and neck down-covered, thus stand- ing in strong contrast with the PoNDlCHERRY and SACRED VULTURES of India and Africa, which have bare heads and necks ornamented by loose folds or lappets of skin of a pinkish colour. These vultures hunt in pairs, and are very self-assertive, driving away all other birds from their prey. They build enormous nests of sticks in bushes and trees, thus differing from the vultures previously described, which generally nest on ledges of rock on precipitous cliffs. These nests are made of sticks, lined with straw and leaves. A single egg is laid, which is white with red markings. The largest species rivals the condor in size. The EGYPTIAN VULTURE, sometimes known as PHARAOH'S HEN, is the smallest of the vultures. The plumage is white ; the head, throat, and fore part of the neck are naked and of a lemon-yellow colour; whilst the feet are pink and the eyes crimson. Not only is it a carrion-feeder, but it will also follow the plough, picking up worms and grubs. This species occurs in Europe, breeding in Provence and Savoy, the Madeiras, Cape Verde, the Canaries, North and South Africa, and India. On three occasions it has wandered to Great Britain. We pass now to the EAGLES, a group the exact limits of which it is impossible to define, since the forms so designated merge insensibly into Buzzards, Hawks, Harriers, and so forth. Eagles occur all over the world, save only in New Zealand. An eagle, it is interesting to note, is the bird of Jove, the emblem of St. John and Rome, and at the present day of the American Republic. It also plays an emblematic part in German}-, Austria, and Russia. Of the true eagles, perhaps the best known is the GOLDEN EAGLE, or MOIMAIN- KAI;LE — a British bird, breeding still, though in diminishing numbers, in Scotland. In Ireland it is fast verging on extinction, trap, gun, and poison having wrought its destruction. In times past it bred in tin: Lake District of England. It is found over the greater part of Europe, Northern AM.I, India and China, and Northern Africa, and America as far south as Mexico. It i^ .1 very fierce and powerful bird, attacking such Hiu k) SiMtitll fit,!,. C«.] [ftntn'i Gr GRIFFON-VULTURE One of the largest of the •vultures Hull h Slltiltitii Mi:.. I- RUPPELL'S VUI.TURK An African species, timely allied it tke [rijf '/>* BIRDS OF PREY AND OWLS 8l large animals as antelopes, wolves, and foxes, as well as the more helpless fawns, lambs, hares and rabbits, and ducks, geese, grouse, and so on. Very different from the free-roving golden eagle and its allies is the South American HARPY-EAGLE. This is a denizen of the forest, of great size and enormous strength, as the powerful bill and feet testify. Whilst other eagles are conspicuous for their powers of flight, the present species is rarely seen on the wing, being strictly a forest-dweller, with short wings and tail, and of a somewhat owl-like plumage, the feathers being very soft. At rest it is one of the most striking of all the eagles. The head is crested, the under parts of the body are white, and the upper dark grey, banded with black. It feeds upon sloths, peccaries, and spider- monkeys. So recently as 1897 another forest-dwelling species was discovered in the Philippines, and this also preys largely upon monkeys. Its nearest 'ally is apparently the harpy-eagle, and, like this species, it is a bird of large size and very Phtto ty Schtlastic Pheto. Co.] [Farten'i Green ANGOLAN VULTURE A common West African hird, living upon fish and carrion powerful. It is further remarkable for the enormous size of the beak, which differs from that of all other members of this group in being much compressed from side to side. The sea, as well as the mountain and the forest, is also, as it were, presided over by members of this group, which are in consequence called SEA-EAGLES. One species, the WHITE- TAILED EAGLE, OR ERNE, is reckoned among British birds, though it is fast verging on extinction. In former days it bred on the sea- cliffs of Scotland and Ireland, and in the Lake District. The nest, or eyrie, as it is called, is commonly placed on inaccessible cliffs, but some- times on the ground or in a tree, and, as is usual with the group, is made of sticks, with a lining of finer materials. This eagle feeds principally upon fish, though hares, lambs, and rabbits and carrion are occasionally taken. The Hawk Tribe, generally speaking, have the wings comparatively short, the legs long and slender, and the edges of the beak with a sinuous outline and unnotched ; but it is impossible to sharply define the group. The best-known species are the SPARROW- and Gos- HAWKS. The first named is still a common British bird, but the latter has now become very bj W. P. Dandt, F.Z.S.~\ [Ktgint'i Park PONDICHERRY VULTURE This Indian species is remarkable for the loose fans of skin 'which hang down on each side of the head 82 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD rare indeed. In both species the male is a much smaller bird than the female, and is also more brightly coloured. The Gos-HAWK was at one time used in falconry; it is a bird of extremely ferocious disposition, and in the days when hawks were used for sporting purposes had to be kept very safely tethered, as, if it gained its liberty, it would at once proceed to kill every other hawk and falcon in the " mews." The Falcon Tribe is divisible into two sections — the one containing the Ameri- can CARRION-HAWKS, and the other the FALCONS. The CARRION-HAWKS, or CARACARAS, are long-legged birds which spend most of their time on the ground and run well. They are said to hunt, not seldom in packs, after the fashion of wild dogs. One species at least affords an admirable example of mim- icry— so rare among birds. This is the CURASSOW-HAWK, so called from its resemblance to the curassow, one of the /•*•<• tf [Rtgtnt'i Part EGYPTIAN VULTURE This it one of the foulest feeders of the Culture Trlbt WEDGE-TAILED EAGLE This is an Australian sfeciei, fa ding chief y upon carrion Game-birds. The resemblance is evidently advantageous, for there- by the hawk is enabled to sit quietly at rest till its prey comes within easy reach, mistaking the hawk for the inoffensive curassow. Tin- F\i CONS form an ex- • Hngly interesting group, if only on account of the part which they played in the sports of media-val Kngland. Birds of large sixe and forms as >mall as sparrows are included within the group ; all are very powerful on the wing, and all feed on living prey, though, in the case of the di- minutive forms, this may consist BIRDS OF PREY AND OWLS mainly, if not entirely, of insects. The members of the Falcon Tribe may be distinguished from the majority of the larger hawks by the fact that the eyes are dark hazel-brown instead of yellow, and that the bare, yellow, waxy-looking band of skin at the base of the beak, so characteristic of the Birds of Prey, is not sharply defined, but scantily clothed with fine bristles, passing insensibly into the feathers of the crown of the head. Some of the best-known members of this section of the group are the PEREGRINE and JER-FALCONS, and the KESTREL, HOBBY, and MERLIN. Only the peregrine and the kestrel, however, can now be called common. The PEREGRINE is the falcon held so much in esteem by falconers, by whom the female only was called the "falcon," the male, which is smaller, being known as a "tiercel." The female was used for the capture of the larger game, such as herons and rooks ; whilst the male was flown only at partridges, and sometimes magpies. In a wild state the peregrine falcon is regarded by other birds with the greatest fear and terror. Ducks feeding on the banks of streams or lakes, on perceiving it, immediately take to the water ; whilst plovers and lapwings rise to an immense height in the air,and remain there for hours. Mr. U s s h e r, Ph,t, bf W. f. Dando, F.Z.S.] lR< i asionally the members of this little group are said to beauty, and at one time were much in request by falconers, probably largely on account of their appearance, for they lack the power and spirit of the peregrine, (irey and black and white and black are distinctive colours of the various species, which are inhabitants of northern regions. The KESTREL, or WIND-IKIVEK. is one of the commonest birds of prey, much and most unjustly persecuted by gamekeepers. Like the peregrine falcon, the kestrel does not build a nest, but takes possession of the deserted nests of crows and magpies, or deposits its eggs on the bare earth of a recess in some cliff or quarry which is overhung by a projecting shelf of rnrk. Occasionally a hole in a tree is chosen, the then resting on the rotten wood at the bottom. That the kestrel is of a more confiding .li-po-i tion than the majority of its tribe seems to be proved by the fact that it will often deposit its eggs in nesting-boxes, if these are placed in suit- able spots. The food of the kestrel appears to COHMM mainly of mice, but frogs, earthworms, grass- hoppers, cockchafers, and other beetles are also taken. Kestrels will also eat dead animals, as / /!•/* if Ottimar SPECTAC1 in OWL A South American bird vittk a wmrwkat rcmartatli cclorj BIRDS OF PREY AND OWLS hunt down and kill birds larger than themselves. OWLS. FEW birds have been more misrepresented in literature than the OWLS. For centuries they have been depicted as birds of ill omen, and accused of all kinds of diabolical practices. Shakespeare, for example, repeatedly makes the owl do duty for some evil sign, or fulfil some dire purpose. Thus in Macbeth, Act II., Scene ii., It was the owl that shriek'd, the fatal bellman, Which gives the stern'st good-night. And later on, in Act IV., it is an owl's wing which he makes the witches add to their caldron of noi- some things, when brewing their deadly potion. In Spain the scops and tawny owls are believed to be devil's birds, and are accused of drinking the oil from the lamps suspended before the shrines of saints. The gamekeeper nails their bodies up on the barn door as offenders of the worst type, whilst the Malagasy believe owls to be the embodi- ments of evil spirits. Phati kj ff. F. DanJi, F.Z..?.] [Rtgtnt's tarlt TAWNY OWL One of the commonest British owls Phttt by C. M Mavroytnt] [Smyrna EAGLE-OWL One of the largest owls It is therefore a relief to find this unwarrantable prejudice is not absolutely universal, since amongst some people, at least, the owl has found some favour. The best-known instance of this is the case of the Greeks, who made the owl the symbol of wisdom, and chose as an emblem, singularly enough, the species known as the Little Owl, a bird which is notorious for its ludicrous behaviour, so much so that it has earned for itself the reputation of being the veritable buffoon of birds. Its grotesque and ridiculous antics are utilised by Continental bird-catchers, who use it as a lure to attract small birds, tethering it for this pur- pose near nets, snares, or twigs smeared with bird-lime. Amongst other birds, strangely enough, the owl appears to be as much disliked as the fiercer and more dangerous members of the Hawk Tribe, and in con- sequence, should one venture abroad during the day or be discovered in its retreat, the alarm is given, and every small bird within call is summoned to take part in a general mobbing. Although proverbially unpalatable, the Little Owl 86 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD is said to be eaten in Italy, as are other species in the various countries in which they are found. Varying considerably in size, the owls, nevertheless, present a very general uniformity in appearance. All are remarkable for the peculiar softness of their plumage, which imparts to the wings the almost unique power of absolutely silent flight, the sound being deadened or muffled, so that the prey can be approached suddenly, and seized before escape is possible. This is very necessary when hunting in twilight hours. The owls are almost the only birds in which the outer toe is reversible, or capable of being turned either forwards or backwards. Furthermore, the members of this group are remarkable for the fact that the eyes look directly forward, instead of outwards, as in other birds, and that the feathers of the face are arranged round each eye in the form of a disk, and thus impart the familiar owl-like visage, seen elsewhere only among certain of the Hawk Tribe known as "Harriers." We may regard as the typical owl the species known as the TAWNY or WOOD-OWL. The benefits it confers are great, but, unfortunately, unrecognized, for its chief food consists of rats and mice. This is the bird which gives utterance to that weird "hoo-hoo — hoo-hoo-hoo," one of the most charming of the many delightful sounds that break the stillness of the summer nights. Other common species are the LONG- and SHORT-EARED OWLS, both remarkable for the fact that the aperture of the ear, which is of enormous size, is of a different shape on the right and left sides of the head. These owls, furthermore, are characterised by the possession of a pair of feathery tufts, or "horns," springing from the top of the head, which can be erected or depressed at pleasure. These horns are found in many species of owl not necessarily closely related. The species under consideration are of medium size, with large eyes of a most wonderful golden-yellow colour, standing in strong contrast with those of the tawny owl, which are nearly black. Like the tawny owl, these two species, and especially the short-eared, live largely on rats and mice. The last-named bird also devours great numbers of dor beetles and cockchafer-. Amongst the largest of the tribe are the EAGLE- and SNOWY OWLS. The eagle-owl may be described as a largely magnified long-eared owl in general appearance, though, as a matter of fact, the two are not very closely related. The snowy owl, as its name implies, is white in colour, the white being relieved by more or less conspicuous black markings. This white livery, assimilating with its snowy surroundings, allows the wearer to approach its prey unperceived on the snow. Whilst the snowy owl is confined to northern regions, the eagle-owl enjoys a wide distribution. The larger species of eagle-owl are the most ferocious members of the order, and prey largely upon hares, rabbits, and the large gamebirds : whilst the snowy owl. though selecting similar prey, does incalculable good by devouring those destructive little rodents known as the lemmings. The species known as PYGMY OWLS and LITTLE OWLS we mention here only on account of their small size, one member of the former group being little bigger than a lark. Thus they stand in strong contrast with the giant snowy and eagle-owls. CHAPTER X NIGHT-JARS, SWIFTS, AND HUMMING-BIRDS NIGHT-JARS IT is probable that the NlGHT-JARS are the nearest allies of the Owls. As pointed out in the last chapter, although the latter have acquired the habits of the Hawk and Eagle Tribe, they are not really connected with that group by descent. Soberly clad, so as to be in complete harmony with its surroundings, with large eyes, huge mouth, and peculiarly short beak, beset with long bristles, the night-jar may be distinguished at once from all other British birds. By day it hides, squatting close to the ground, or perched on the thick branch of a tree ; but when on the latter, it sits along and not across the bough, like other birds, the complete harmony between its plumage and the bark rendering it as invisible as when on the ground. Not until the spring has far advanced does this bird leave its winter resort in Africa for Europe, making its presence known by its con- spicuous habit of hunting its food (which consists of moths and beetles) after twilight has fallen. Later, its extraordinary churring note is heard i ty A. S. Rudland &> Sim COMMON NIGHT-JAR Known also as Fern-owl and Goat-sucker ftim t; A. S. Kudland 6" Stni PENNANT-WINGED NIGHT-JAR (FRONT VIEW) T/u long and graceful flumes arc much-lengthened quill-feather t, and by their resemblance to the -waving grass in -which the bird nesti afford frotection . 87 88 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD a note which has been likened to the noise made by a spinning-wheel, and so powerful as to be audible half a mile off. This note is made while on the ground : on the wing, while toying with its mate, another equally peculiar sound is made, which has been likened to the noise made by swinging a whip-thong through the air. No nest is made by this bird; but the eggs, two in number and beautifully marked, are laid on the bare ground. The young are covered with down, and remain in tin: n.-^t for some time. Another very remarkable feature is the fact that the claw of the middle toe has its inner edge curiously serrated, forming a sort of comb, the function of which is unknown. This comb-like claw occurs also in some few other birds — bitterns, for instance. A very remarkable kind is the l'i \\ \\T-\VI.\CKD NIGHT-JAR, in which one of the qnill- feathers in each wing is produced into a " pennant " of some 17 inches in length. The shaft of the feather is bare for the greater part of its length, and terminates in a feathery blade. It is an Abyssinian species about which not much is known. Some of the night-jars, as the New World XK;HT-HAWK and the OldWorld EAKI:I> XH.IIT i \ks,;u-c particularly owl-like,a resemblance imparted by long " ear-like " tufts of feathers which rise from i In- back of the head. Others, .is the MORK-i'ORK of the Tasmanian colonists, or the Fko<,-\ii >rrn, as it is called in Australia, are remark- able for the huge size of the mouth, bounded, as it appears to be, by huge lips, represented by the short, round-edged beak. Very nearly related to the night-jars is the OII.-WRD of South America, which lives in caves in Trinidad, Ecuador, and Peru, where it builds a nest which has been likened in appearance to a huge cheese, and in which are laid from two to four white eggs. Like the night-jars, these birds feed l>y night, emerging from their gloomy Their food, however, is entirely />*•«« I? if. , F.Z.S.] MORE-PORKS So called from the note tkey utter [Mllftrd-m-Sia retreats at twilight with much noise and in great numbers, of a vegetable nature, consisting of oily nuts or fruits. The young, soon after they are hatched, become perfect masses of fat, and on this account are much in demand by the Indians, who make a special business of killing them and extracting the oil. Swu is In general appearance SWIFTS bcara strong superficial resemblance to Swallows; in reality they are related, not to those harbingers of spring, but to the Night-jars on the one hand and the Humming-birds on the other. The COMMON SWIFT arrives in England during the early part of May. and stays till the end of August, or sometimes till September has half run its course. Black in colour, relieved only by a white throat, it has little in the sense of beauty to recommend it; nevertheless, there are probably few who do not cherish tender feelings towards this bird NIGHT-JARS, SWIFTS, AND HUMMING-BIRDS 89 SWIFT A common British bird during the summer months [Btrkhamiltd The swift has great buoyancy of spirits, as is manifested by the wild, exuberant bursts of screaming to which it gives voice as it rushes in small parties down the lanes or along the less-frequented thoroughfares of towns as morning breaks or evening falls, and occasionally throughout the day. The greater part of its life is spent upon the wing (indeed, it appears to rest only when incubating or sleeping), and of all the smaller birds it is the most graceful in flight, turning and twisting in fairy mazes high in the heavens for hours at a time. The swift chooses for its nesting-place the eaves of houses and holes in church towers, and occasionally a crevice in the face of a quarry. The nest is formed of bits of straw, dry grass, and a few feathers, glued together by a secretion of the salivary glands into a compact crust ; in this the bird deposits from two to four white eggs. The young, which are hatched naked and blind, never develop down-feathers, but soon become more or less imperfectly clothed in a mass of tiny spines, representing the budding feathers ; these give the bird somewhat the appearance of a young hedgehog. In adaptation to its remarkable powers of flight, the wing has undergone considerable modification in form, so that it differs from that of all other birds. On the other hand, the legs, being so little required, have diminished considerably, and are remarkable for their smallness — a fact which hampers the bird considerably, should it happen to alight on level ground, for, owing to the great length of the wings, it can arise only with considerable difficulty. Nearly allied to the common swift is SALVIX'S S\VIFT, remarkable on account of its nest, which has been described by Dr. Sharpe as the most wonderful in the world. About 2 feet long and 6 inches in diameter, it looks rather like the sleeve of an old coat than a nest. It is made entirely of the downy seeds of plants, which, floating through the air after the fashion of such seeds, are caught by the birds when on the wing, and, partly felted and partly glued by the salivary secretion, are woven slowly into the characteristic woolly domicile. The site and manner of fixation of the nest are scarcely less wonderful, for it is suspended from the flat surface of some projecting piece of rock on the face of a cliff, and is thus almost inaccessible; yet, as if to make assurance doubly sure, two entrances are made, one at THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD the bottom, which is really blind, and one at the top, near its foundation, if we may call it so, which leads into the nursery. Still more swallow-like in general appearance are the diminutive EniKLE SWIFTS, so called, not on account of the palatability of the birds themselves, but of their nests, which are in great demand by the wealthy Chinese for conversion into birds'-nest soup. It has already been remarked that the salivary glands are unusually active in the swifts, their secretion bearing a very important part in the construction of the nest, and serving as a kind of cement. It is, therefore, not surprising that in some members of the group we find this secretion playing a still more prominent part, forming, at least in one species, the entire material of the nest. " With these nests," writes Dr. Sharpe, " a large trade is done with China from many of the Malavan Islands, over 3,500,000 nests having been known to be exported in a single year from Borneo to the latter country. ... In Borneo and other places the caves in which the swiftlets build are leased to the collectors for a considerable sum ; but it is only the white nests, made of the pure secretion, which are of any real value. The nests of those species which mix into their nests grass or feathers are not appreciated as an article of commerce." Colonel Legge gives some extremely interesting particulars concerning the nesting habits of these birds in Ceylon. " It is noteworthy," he writes, " that the partially fledged young — which were procured on this occasion for me, and which I kept for the night — scrambled out on to the exterior of the nest, and slept in an upright position, with the bill pointing straight up. This is evidently the normal mode of roosting resorted to by this species. The interior of this cave, with its numbers of active tenants, presented a singular appearance. The bottom was filled with a vast deposit of liquid guano, reaching, I was informed, to a depth of 30 feet, and composed of droppings, old nests, and dead young fallen from above, the whole mingled into a loathsome mass, with water lodged in the crevices, and causing an awful stench, which would have been intolerable for a moment even, had not the hundreds of frightened little birds, as they screamed and whirred in and out of the gloomy cave with a hum like a storm in a ship's rigging, power- fully excited my interest, and produced a long examination of the colony. This guano-deposit is a source of considerable profit to the estate, the hospitable manager of which informed us that he had manured 100 acres of coffee with it during that season." HUMMING-BIRDS It is generally admitted that HrM\n\<;-ifiKi>s are nearly related to Swifts, with which, however, they stand in the strongest possible contrast in the matter of plumage — the latter being always inconspicuously coloured, whilst the former are for the nn>>t part clad in vestments so gorgeous as to render it extremely difficult to describe them in ^>l>rr language. Moreover, so great is the wealth of species — some hundreds in number — and so varied are the form and coloration, and so closely do the various types pass one into the other, that their classification is a matter of extreme difficulty. i ly A. S. R*dU*d V I,KI 1 DIBLE SWIFT Tht unit ef tkn bird art ttud ft,r icup j Jivi an urn in thh pfictoprapk CHAPTER XI PARROTS, CUCKOOS, AND PLANTAIN-EATERS PARROTS THE art of taming wild animals," writes Mr. Jenks in his " History of Politics," •' and making them serve the purposes of man, is one of the greatest discoveries of the world." He holds — and there can be little question as to its reasonableness — •" that the domestication of animals converted the savage pack into the patriarchal tribe," and that the earliest domesticated animals were pets. How great a share, then, PARROTS may have had in this civilisation and advancement no man can tell, for it is impossible to say how long these beautiful birds may have been esteemed as pets, or how early they were introduced to the notice of the civilised peoples of past generations. Certain it is, however, that for more than 2,000 years they have been held in the highest esteem. Modern discovery has added enormously to the list of known parrots, so that to-day more than 500 different species have been described, and these may be divided into NESTORS, LORIES, COCKATOOS, COCKATEELS, MACAWS, and KAKAPOS. Phut bj W. JJ.M] *ju', A'.*. KEA kno'wn as the Jlfountain-nestor 91 -92 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD Pha* bj D. Li S,u>r-\ [M,, NEW ZEALAND KEA Tht kea frequents the slopes of lofty inoiu-fovered mountains Of the first named, the best known is the KEA, or Morxi AIX-NESTOR, of the South Island, New Zealand. Dull in coloration, and, not striking in appearance, it has earned an unenviable notoriety, which appears to rest as much upon fable as upon fact. It seems that, since the introduction of sheep into this part of the world by the settlers, this bird has found a diet of flesh more stimulating than one of fruit. Kxactly how this came to be is not known. Two explanations have been advanced. The first lias it that the birds settled on the skins of the sheep slaughtered for their wool, and picked off piivrs of fat therefrom, as well as various tit-bits from the carcases of the same, and thus found out how toothsome — or beaksome — mutton was. From this they went a step further, and did the slaughtering for themselves. Parties of them now go a-hunting, worry a sheep till exhausted, then dig down through the back, and so wound the intestines that death results. Another explanation is that the birds in the original instance mistook the sheep's backs for the huge masses of lichen common to this region, of which the birds are very fond. Not finding it to their taste at the top, they dug deep, and soon came to the flesh, which, like the forbidden fruit, proved more palatable than that which was provided for them by a bountiful Nature. The result is, that they have become a menace to sheep-farmers, and are on this account in danger of extermination. It has, however, been denied recently that the damage inflicted is anything like so serious as was at one time reported, since on one run, where the damage was unusually large, only I in 300 sheep was so attacked. This bird has also been said to attack horses. Very different, in general appearance and in esteem, are the LORIES. Like the Nestors, the tip of the upper jaw, or beak, is smooth, or nearly so; and in this respect these two groups are to be distinguished from all the other parrots; but in the gorgeousness of their plumage they far eclipse their congeners. Absent in New Zealand, they are found elsewhere PARROTS, CUCKOOS, AND PLANTAIN-EATERS 93 ' .'I: "-.-..** '-> [Melbournt, NEW ZEALAND KAKA The Maoris keep thii bird as a lure throughout the Australasian region, inclusive of Polynesia, and are highly esteemed as pets, combining great beauty with a very docile disposition and con- siderable talking powers. The birds of this section are also known as BRUSH-TONGUED PARROTS, from the presence of a remarkable " brush " borne on the end of the tongue. This is a special adaptation, enabling the birds to feed upon honey ; some, indeed, have this brush particularly well de- veloped, and are almost entirely honey- seekers, whilst others, wherein the brush is less developed, live largely on fruits. Professor Moseley tells us that honey literally poured from the mouths of BLUE MOUNTAIN-LORIES which he shot at Cape York. The COCKATOOS areabundantin the Australian region, but have their head- quarters in the Malay Archipelago. Besides the familiar white-crested form so commonly kept in England, the group includes an iron-grey coloured bird with a bright red head, and a huge black species, which represents the giant of the order. It is a funereal-looking bird, the largest specimens inhabiting New Guinea. One of its most striking features is the beak, which is of enormous size. Its tongue differs from that of other parrots in that it is slender and -cylindrical in shape, and of a deep red colour, instead of thick, fleshy, and black. It frequents, Mr. Wallace tells us, the lower parts of the forest, feeding upon various fruits and seeds, but displaying a marked partiality for the kernel of the canary-nut, which grows on a lofty forest-tree; "and the manner in which it gets at these seeds," writes Mr. Wallace, " shows a correlation of structure and habits which would point to the canary as its special food. The shell of this nut is so excessively hard that only a heavy hammer will crack it; it is some- what triangular, and the outside is quite smooth. The manner in which the bird opens these nuts is very curious. Taking one end-ways in its bill, and keeping it firm by a pressure of the tongue, it cuts a transverse notch by a lateral sawing motion of the sharp-edged lower mandible. This done, it takes hold of the nut with its foot, and, biting off a piece of leaf, retains it in the deep notch by the upper mandible, and again seizing the nut, which is prevented from slipping by the elastic tissue of the leaf, fixes the edge of the lower mandible in the notch, and a powerful rip breaks off a piece of the shell. Again taking the nut in its claws, it inserts the very long and sharp point of the bill, and picks out the kernel, which is seized hold of, morsel by morsel, by the extensile tongue." Of the typical parrots, the best known is the common GREY AFRICAN PARROT, with a red tail, so valued on account of its great talking powers. Other species of this section which should be mentioned here are the PYGMY PARROTS, MACAWS, HAWK-BILLED PARROT, BUDGERI- GARS, and OWL-PARROT. The first named are the smallest of all the tribe, remarkable as well for the splendour of the plumage as their size, which is less than that of the common sparrow. The LONG-TAILED MACAWS, representing the most showy and gaudily coloured of all the Parrot Tribe, inhabit the tropical forests of South America. Mr. Bates describes a flock of scarlet-and-blue macaws, which he came across one day, as looking like a cluster of flaunting banners among the crown of dark green leaves of a bacaba-palm. The superb HYACINTHINE MACAW is one of the rarest of the Parrot Tribe, and was found 94 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD ' P*.f. *, If. Sfvllli-K"il. F.Z.S. BLACK COCKATOO Found in pairt in tkick fortits The HANGING-PARROTS are about the same size as the well-known " love-birds," and remarkable for their habit of sleeping suspended head-downwards by one foot from the boughs of trees. They are all brilliantly coloured birds, and have a fairly wide range, extending from India and the Philippines through the Malay region as far east as Duke of York Island. The Australian BUDGERIGARS, or GRASS- PARRAKI I is, need no description here; but it is interesting to note that nearly allied to them is a small species known as the SXVAMT- OrLoNG-TAIl.l.l'GlO'l MH'AKKAk! I '• AsitS by Bates in the interior of Brazil. As its name implies, it is of a deep hyacinthine colour, relieved by a bare patch of pure white skin round the eyes. It feeds on the nuts of several palms, especially those of the macuja. These nuts, which are so haul as to be difficult to break without a heavy hammer, are crushed to a pulp by the power- ful beak of this macaw. Crests among parrots are common enough, but only one species wears a frill; tin the HAWK-BILLED PARROT of the Amn/«n Valley. It is closely related to the large and well-known AMA/DN PARK' us, and has been aptly described as a most extraordinary bird. Its coloration is striking — green above, with a brown head; the frill or ruff around the neck shows up in strong contrast, being dark red, with blue edges, and barred with blue. The feathers of the breast and abdo- men, like the frill, are also red and blue, whilst the under-surfaces of the tail and wings are black. It is only when the bird is excited or angry that the ruff is raised. Hull fy SiMllltl tnill. Ci.] COCKATOO Cotkatooi in a viild nan often ccngrefait in immetiu 'i Grrr* PARROTS, CUCKOOS, AND PLANTAIN-EATERS 95 Phote by Otlomar jfnjchutx] LEADBEATER'S COCKATOO Has a red crest, banded ivith yelloiv and tipped ivith 'white [Berlin name implies, it is a ground-dwelling species, and, in accordance with this habit, has considerably longer legs than the tree-haunting species. This lengthening of the leg in arboreal species is seen also among pigeons and many other birds. The most interesting, perhaps, of all the parrots is the remarkable K.VKAPO, or O\VL-PARROT, of New Zealand. Like the species just described, it is also a ground-dweller; furthermore, it differs from all other members of the tribe in being flightless, and, like the flightless members of the Ostrich Tribe, has completely lost the deep keel from the breast-bone, which gives support to the muscles which move the wings. It is a large bird, green in colour, mottled with yellow and black, and derives its name of Owl-parrot from the fact that the feathers of the face radiate from the eye outwards to form a kind of disk. When eating grass, it is said to graze, nibbling after the fashion of a rabbit. Occasionally it is said to climb trees, descending with extended wings, so as to break the force of its career. It has been described as a playful and affectionate pet in captivity, displaying also great cleverness and intelligence. Unfortunately it is growing more and more rare, so that its final extermination is only a question of time — the ravages of dogs, cats, and pigs, introduced by the settlers, being mainly the agents of destruction. Once common all over New Zealand, the range of the owl-parrot is now restricted to the mountainous regions of North Island and the northern half of South Island. During the day it remains concealed in the holes in rocks or under roots of trees, and if disturbed is difficult to rouse. When taken from its retreat, it runs swiftly, and tries to hide, seeking shelter, if possible, under a heap of soft, dry grass. At sunset, however, it becomes very animated, and travels — at least when possible — in companies, making tracks a foot or more wide across the herbage. It feeds greedily upon mosses, ferns, seeds, berries, and, it is said, even lizards, giving vent, when devouring some favourite morsel, to a kind of grunting noise. THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD The kakapo nests in holes under trees and rocks, laying two or three eggs, which, like those of the Parrots, are white. The natives take advantage of its feeble powers of flight, hunting it on foot by torchlight, aided by dogs, which, it is said, are not seldom seriously wounded by the powerful bill. When the breeding-season is over, these birds appear to live in small communities, four or five occupying the same hole. They are apparently gifted with some fore- sight, inasmuch as they lay up a store of food, to be drawn upon during bad weather. CUCKOOS AND PLANTAIN-KATKKS The Cuckoo Tribe is somewhat unfortunate in that the numerous members of which it is composed are completely overshadowed by the prominence which has been given to the COMMON CUCKi " >. Few birds, indeed, have managed to secure so much attention, the poet in particular having sung its praises without stint. This enthusiasm undoubtedly is but an echo of the general popular senti- ment, for there are few birds to which the British extend a more hearty welcome, its well-known cry possessing a peculiar charm for lovers of the country. Coming in April, and leaving again in July, its stay is of the shortest; but during the greater part of this time its whereabouts may generally be known by the familiar call " cuckoo, cuckoo," though undergoing certain characteristic changes as the months glide by. Apart from its song, one of the most interesting things concerning the cuckoo is the fact that it goes about in disguise — the disguise of the ass in the lion's skin with a vengeance; for it is clothed in the garb of that terror of the countryside, the sparrow-hawk. Nay, more; it has also most successfully imitated the flight of that bogy; and this to frighten little birds — not, however, for the mere purpose of creating consternation amongst them, but for far more sinister ends. Somehow or another, in cuckoo society, the rearing of a family is a responsibility which is utterly repudiated. Great pains seem to have been taken to evade this duty, and yet to ensure the continuity of their distinguished house. The oviparous method of reproduction, which obtains in the feathered world, has been turned to good account — in fact, everything depends upon this. It seems to have suggested itself as far more convenient to drop an egg here and there into a neighbour's nursery, and leave the work of bringing it to life to the owners thereof. But to carry out this system <>f distributing foundlings requires tact, C. ««(j Billingten] [Quttnsland PHEASANT-CUCKOO The hind toe terminates in a spur-like cla-w ; hence these cuckoos are knoitin as Lark-heeled Cuckoos 100 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD confirmed by most trustworthy observers, we must now admit the charge proved. One of the best known of these accounts is that of Mrs. Hugh Blackburn. She has given us a vivid picture of this most extraordinary of domestic tragedies. The victims in this instance were meadow-pipits. Finding a pipit's nest with a cuckoo's egg therein, she kept it carefully under observation. At one visit she found the pipits hatched, but not the cuckoo. Forty- eight hours later the cuckoo had not only arrived, but ousted his foster-brothers and -sisters, who were found lying outside the nest, but yet alive. They were replaced beside the cuckoo! which at once reopened hostilities for the purpose of maintaining its absolute possession of the nursery. This it did by burrowing under one of them, which, balanced upon its back, it proceeded to eject by climbing up the nest tail-foremost, till, reaching the brim, it could relieve itself of its burden by heaving it over the edge and down the bank. Pausing a moment, it then felt backwards with its wings to make sure the pipit was really gone, and, having satisfied itself on this point, subsided to the bottom of the nest. Next day, when the nest was visited, the remaining pipit was found outside the nest cold and dead. " Hut what struck me most," she writes, " was this : the cuckoo was perfectly naked, without a vestige of a feather or even a hint of feathers, its eyes were not yet opened, and its neck seemed too weak to support the weight of its head. The pipits had well-developed quills on the wings and back, and had bright eyes partially opened, yet they seemed quite helpless under the manipulations of the cuckoo, which looked a much less developed creature." The GREAT SPOTTED CUCKOO of South Europe and North Africa is a species which, though parasitic, does not seem to have sunk to such a depth as the common cuckoo. Its eggs very closely resemble those of certain magpies and crows within its breeding- area, and it is in the nests of these that they are deposited. We may assume that mimicry has been resorted to, and become perfected by the same means as have accomplished this end in the case of the common cuckoo. We notice here, however, two points of difference there- from. In the first place, from two to four eggs are left in each nest instead of one ; and, secondly, the young cuckoos seem to live in perfect amity with their foster-brothers and -sisters — there is no ejection of the rightful heirs. Having pledged themselves to a course of deception and treachery, there is no telling the lengths to which such conduct may lead. We have already seen that the bird has succeeded in lav- ing what we may call forged eggs, but we come now to an instance where the young has also to be disguised. This is furnished by a species of cuckoo known as tin- K< >I I ., inhabiting Palawan, an island in the Philippines. This bird shifts its parental duties upon th<- shoulders of a species of myna inhabit ing the same island. Now, the mynas are black, and their young, as is often the case where both sexes arc coloured I «.,!*.,„„„< CUCKOO ONE DAY OLD IN HEDGE-SPARROWS NEST Tkt jouKf bird kat ill mwk ,fen, rtaJy for all tkt fecj tkt fwtr can tollttt PARROTS, CUCKOOS, AND PLANTAIN-EATERS IOI alike, resemble the parents, and are black likewise. With the cuckoo the case is different. The male and female are conspicuously different in coloration, the former being black, the latter brown. In such cases it is the rule for the young to wear the livery of the female. If this rule were adhered to in the case of the cuckoo, destruction would be more than probable, for the mynas would as likely as not destroy so outrageous a departure from myna custom as a brown youngster. But the koel has proved equal to the occa- sion, by the simple expedient of attiring the young in the male instead of the female livery. Later on in life the rule for the exchange of plumage is reversed, and the young female doffs the temporary black dress of the male for the brown one of the adult female, instead of vice versd. All cuckoos, however, are not para- sitic, the species known as LARK-HEELED CUCKOOS — from the presence of a long, spine-like claw on the hind toe — building a nest and hatching their own eggs. They have a wide range, being found in Africa from Egypt to Cape Colony, Mada- gascar, India, China, New Guinea, and Australia. As a rule, the Cuckoos are not conspicuously coloured, but some species are clad in a livery resplendent with metallic colours. These are represented by the Indian and Australian BRONZE CUCKOOS and the African GOLDEN CUCKOOS. One of the most beautiful of all is the African EMERALD CUCKOO, in which the upper-parts are of a vivid emerald-green, whilst the under-parts are bright yellow. Finally, we must mention the GROUND-CUCKOOS, which are comparatively long-legged, terrestrial forms, with small wings. One of the best known is an inhabitant of the Southern United States, from Texas to New Mexico, Southern Colorado, and California. " It has obtained the name of ROOD-RUNNER," writes Dr. Sharpe, " from the speed with which it flies over the ground, some idea of which may be gained from a statement of Colonel Stevenson, that, when in Southern California, he saw, on two occasions, the ranchmen of that part of the country chase one of these birds on horseback for a distance of a mile or more at full speed, when the cuckoo, though still in advance, would suddenly stop and fly up among the upper limbs of some stunted tree or bush near the roadside, and the rider, having kept the bird in view all the way, would dismount and easily take the exhausted bird from its perch alive." That the African PLANTAIN-EATERS, or TOURACOS, are related to the Cuckoos there can be no doubt, although they do not bear any very close superficial resemblance to them. Striking in appearance and of beautiful plumage, they owe as much of the interest which now centres on them to the chemist as to the ornithologist. Long ago it was noticed that the rich irimson colour of the wing-quills disappeared after exposure to a heavy rain, having beer Photo by J. T. Nfwman] YOUNG CUCKOO A young cuckoo remains in the nest till fully jltdged [Berxhamited 102 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD apparently washed out — asupposition justified by the discovery still later that the water in which captive species had been bathing was strongly tinged with colour. A little more than thirty years ago these facts came under ^,« ™-, •_ _^- ^^ the notice of Professor Church, who, ^|^^W\ 4 ^^^^^^^™ ^ result of a thorough examination of the ^^^^ A ^&^^^0^^ **V mystery, was enabled to announce the dis- ^^v mV ^.^( ^1 covery of a new animal pigment containing . ~^* copper, which he called " turacin." There are twenty-five different species of plantain-eaters, which are divided into two groups — those which have red in the quills and those without. All are forest-dwellers, feeding upon various wild fruits, building a nest of sticks resembling that of a pigeon, and laying therein three white eggs. The majority of the species are crested and brilliantly coloured, but a few are quite soberly clad. The largest of the tribe is nearly 3 feet long, and a brief description of its coloration will serve to convex- a notion of the beauty of the more gorgeously clad members. In this species, then, the upper surface of the body is blue, the tail yellow, with a blue base and black bar across the tip, the under surface of the body rufous brown, the bill yellow, with a scarlet tip, and the eye red. Though the tops of the highest trees seem to be their favourite resort, these birds are found also among the dense tangled masses of creepers near the ground, tlitting, when disturbed, in graceful curves, and alighting with crest erected and the tail turned sharply upwards. The powers of flight appear to vary among the different species, some being described as decidedly clumsy on the wing, whilst others, on the contrary, are light and graceful. Shy and very restless, they are very difficult to procure, when wounded running with great speed, and taking shelter in holes in trees. Their flesh is esteemed a great delicacy by the natives. Save during rain or the heat of midday, they appear to be very noisy birds, having a harsh note, varied with cat-like mowings. Phttt fy J. T. fftwmar. YOUNG CUCKOO IN REED-WARBLER'S NEST TUi pkotografk was taken in August, an unusually Ian dale to find tkese birds in ike nest CHAPTER XII ROLLERS, KINGFISHERS, HOR.\'B/U.S, J.\'D HOOPOES CROW-LIKE birds of brilliant coloration, the ROLLERS have earmd their name from the habit of occasionally rolling or turning over in their flight, after the manner of tumbler-pigeons. One species at least visits Britain occasionally, only to he -,h,,t down at once by the insatiable pot-hunter and collector of rare birds. They are birds of wide distribution, occurring over the greater part of the Old World, and, as we have already remarked, of brilliant coloration, blue and green, varied with reddish, being the predominating colours. As with all birds of beautiful plumage, they are subjected to much persecution, P*.M- MON KINGKISHKR eclipses all its congeners. For centuries a wealth of fable, held together by a modicum of fact, served to secure fur this bird a peculiar interest; whilst to-day, though shorn of much of the importance with which these fables had invested it, this kingfisher is still esteemed one of the most interesting and beautiful of its tribe. Green and blue are the predominating colours of its upper- and bright chestnut- red of its under-surface ; but owing to structural peculiarities of the feathers of the upper-parts, the reflection of the green and blue areas changes with the direction of the light from which the bird is viewed, in the same way that the peacock's train-feathers change according as the light falls upon them. As is the rule where both sexes are brilliantly coloured, this bird breeds in a hole, which in the present species is generally excavated in the bank of a stream, but sometimes in an old gravel-pit or chalk-pit, a mile or even more from the water. Occasionally the crumbling under the roots of an old tree affords sufficient shelter. No nest is made, although what is equivalent to a nest is ultimately formed from the bird's habit of ejecting the indigestible parts of its food on to the floor of the space in which the eggs are laid. In course of time this becomes a cup-shaped structure; but whether, as Professor Newton remarks, by the pleasure of the bird or the moisture of the soil, or both, is unknown. With care the nest may be removed entire, but the slightest jar reduces the whole to the collection of fish-hones and crustacean skeletons of which it was originally composed. There is a tradition, not yet extinct, to the effect that these "nests" are of great pecuniary value, and scarcely a year passes without the authorities at the Hn'.ish Museum being offered such a treasure, .it prices varying from a few pounds to a hundred. The nest-chamber is approached by a tunnel sloping upwards, and varying from 8 inches to 3 feet in length, terminating in a chamber some 6 inches in diameter, in which the eggs are laid. These, from six to eight in number, have a pure white, shining shell, tinged with a most exquisite pink colour, which is lost when the eggs are blown. The young seem to be reared under very unsanitary conditions, for the ejected fish-bone.* and other hard parts are not reserved entirely for the nest, but gradually distributed along Hun tr W. t, Fiff"] [!.j Sthelasrit Pheit. Co.] LAUGHING-KINGFISHERS This ipecits has comparatively dull-coloured plumage 106 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD bill, he tells us, is coral-red, the undcr-surface pure white, the back and wings deep purple, while the shoulders, head, and nape, and some spots on the upper part of the back and wings, are pure azure-blue. The tail is white, narrowly edged with blue. These birds live upon insects and small land-mollusca, which they dart down upon and pick up from the ground just as the fish-eating species pick up a fish. Of the forest-haunting spe< however, the best known is probably the large and, for a kingfisher, dull- coloured L.U<,HIN<;-I \CK.\S~. , or SETTLER'S CLOCK, of Australia. Its food is of a very mixed character — small mammals, reptiles, insects, and crabs being devoured with equal relish. Since it is not seldom to be set n bearing off a snake in its bill, it may- be regarded as a useful bird — sup posing, of course, the snake to be of a poisonous variety. A good idea of the bird in its native haunts is given by the late Mr. Wheelwright. " About an hour before sunrise," he writes, " the bushman is awakened by the most discordant sound if a troop of fiends were shouting, whooping, and laughing around him in one wild chorus. This is the morning song of the ' laughing-jackass,' warning his feathered mates that daybreak is at hand. At noon the same wild laugh is heard, and as the sun sinks into the west it again rings through the forest. I shall never forget the first night I slept in the open bush in this country. It was in the Hlack Forest. I woke about daybreak after a confused sleep, and for some minutes I could not remember where I was, such were the extraordinary sounds that greeted my ears: the fiendish laugh of the jackass, the clear, flute-like notes of the magpie, the hoarse cackle of the wattle-birds . . . and the screaming of thousands of parrots as they dashed through the forest, all giving chorus, formed one of the most extraordinary coin I have ever heard, and seemed, at the moment, to have been got up for the purpose of welcoming the stranger to this land of wonders on that eventful morning. I have heard it hundreds of times since, but never with the same feelings that I listened to it then. The laughing-jackass is the bushman's clock, and being by no means shy, of a companionable nature, and a constant attendant on the bush-tent and a destroyer of snakes. j> regarded, like the robin at home, as a sacred bird in the Australian forests. It is an uncouth-looking bird . . . nearly the size of a crow, of a rich chestnut-brown and dirty white colour, the wings slightly chequered with light blue, after the manner of the Hritish jay. The tail-feathers are long, rather pointed, and barred with brown. ... It is a common bird in all the forest throughout the year, breeds in the hole of a tree, and the eggs are white." Whilst the Kingfishers are remarkable for the wondrous beauty of their coloration, the HoRMUI.l.s, their allies, attract our attention rather by the grotesqticness of their shape, due to the enormous size of the bill, and the still more remarkable horny excrescences which surmount it in not a few species, forming what is known as a "casque." Absent in some of the smaller and possibly more primitive forms, its gradual development may be traced, beginning Plitu kj C. H. Afat r,,,n,) [Smtr KINGFISHER Tkt f kotvg raft itcwi the nature of the favourite haunts of ttii ipettci Photo by C. A. M*t; r,> vrin. Sn HOOPOE FLYING. This photograph displays tin- crest fully elevated, and likewise shows the beautifully banded colouration of the under surface of the wing, as well as the position of the wings in flight. ROLLERS, KINGFISHERS, HORNBILLS, AND HOOPOES 1 07 with a series of corrugations along the ridge of the base of the bill, gradually increasing, to form, in the most extreme cases, huge superstructures of quaint shapes, and apparently of great solidity. As a matter of fact, however, these casques are practically hollow, save in the case of the HELMET-HORNBILL of the Malay countries, in which the horny sheath is backed by solid supports of bone, whilst the front of the sheath itself is of great thickness and surprising density, and is used by the natives for carving and making brooches and other ornaments. The use of this powerful hammer — for such it may possibly be — is unknown. Hornbills are forest-birds, feeding upon fruit and insects, the latter being captured on the wing. With large bill and wings, a long tail, and a relatively small body and short legs, they are rather unwieldy birds, and yet, for many reasons, unusually interesting. ' Their nesting habits are unique, and quite worth recounting here at some length. Of the many accounts, one of the most interesting, as well as one of the latest, is that of Mr. Charles Hose, of Borneo. "The nest," he writes, "is always built in the hollow of a large tree — the hollow, be it noted, being always due to disease of the tree or the ravages of termites, not to the personal labours of the birds. The bottom of this cavity is often plugged by a termites' nest and accumulation of decayed wood, and on the upper surface of this is made the nest, a very rough-and-ready structure, composed simply of the feathers of the female. The hollow of the tree communicates with the exterior air by means of a long aperture, which, just before the period of incubation, is closed up almost entirely by the male, simply leaving a long slit open, up and down which the beak of the enclosed female can move. The substance used in thus closing the aperture closely resembles some vegetable resin, and is probably composed of a gastric secretion, combined with the woody fragments of fruit. It should be noticed that this slit is always in close proximity to the nest, so that the female can easily protrude her beak LAUGHING-JACKASS FrtQuently knoivn as the Settler* j [ffithmi, N.B. io8 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD for food without moving from her sitting position. During incubation the male bird supplies the female with food in the form of pellets of fruit, seeds, insects, portions of reptiles, etc., the pellets being enclosed each in a skin of rubber-like consistency. While feeding the female, the male clings to the bark of the tree, or sits on a branch if conveniently near, and jerks these pellets into the gaping beak of the hen, two to four pellets forming a meal. During mastication (for it is a mistake to suppose that the hornbills always bolt their food entire) some fragments of the pellets fall to the ground, and seeds which these fragments may contain take root, germinate, and sprout, and the natives can judge approximately of the date of incubation by the age of the seedlings. When these are four- leaved, the eggs have been hatched out for two or three weeks. At this stage, though not always so early, the mother bird leaves the nest, breaking down the gluey substance with her beak to effect an exit; having left the nest, the aperture through which she left is carefully closed up again, leaving the slit as before, and now both male and female devote their energies to feeding the young birds, which in course of time follow the example of their mother and leave their place of imprisonment. It is more than probable that this gluing up first of the mother bird and her eggs and afterwards of the nestlings alone is solely a means of protection against predacious carnivora. . . . "The nesting-season is during May and June, and it is noteworthy that the birds, if undisturbed, return to the same nesting-place every year. The saplings at the foot of the tree, sprung from seeds dropped in the first year of paring, afford signs to the natives of the number of years during which the tree has been occupied. If during paring or incubation the female or female and young are destroyed, the male takes to himself another mate, and repairs to the same nesting-place; if, however, the male and female are destroyed, the nest is never reoccupied by other pairs. An interesting incident was observed while on Mount Dulit. Espying on a tree the external signs of a hornbill's nest, and a male rhinoceros perched close by, I shot the male, and while waiting for my Dyak collectors to make a ladder up the tree to secure the female, I observed several young male birds fly to the nest and assiduously ply the bereaved widow with food, a fact which seems to indicate a competition in the matrimonial market of the bird-world as severe as that among human beings. It is no easy matter to procure embryos or nestlings of hornbills, for the natives are inordinately fond of both as articles of diet, and, further, are always anxious to secure the tail-feathers of the adults to adorn their war-coats and hats. "The native method of catching the female during incubation is ingenious, though Hut,. c..J CRESTED HORNBILL The Hornbillt derive their name from the great ti-ze of the ROLLERS, KINGFISHERS, HORNBILLS, AND HOOPOES 109 Ph,te ty W. P. Dandt, f.Z.S.\ [Rigtnt'i Part CONCAVE-CASQUED HORNBILL, INDIA The noise made by hornbills on the iving is said to resemble that of a steam engine decidedly brutal. The tree is scaled, the resin-like substance is broken away, and the frightened bird flies from her nest up the hollow trunk of the tree, but is ignominiously brought down by means of a thorny stick (the thorns point downward), which is thrust after and twisted about until a firm grip in her plumage is obtained. The Dyaks, never very faithful observers of nature, believe that the female is shut up by the male, so that after hatching her eggs she may die, the maggots in her putrefying body affording food for the young. One very curious habit of the rhinoceros- hornbill which I have not hitherto seen noted is the rapid jumping up and down on a branch with both feet together. This jumping motion is imitated by the Kyans and Dyaks in their dances, the figure being known to the Kyans as ' wan blingong.' " That the HOOPOES, unlike as they may be in general appearance, are nevertheless intimately related to the Hornbills there can be no doubt. Graceful in contour and pleasing in coloration, it is a pity that the species which so frequently visits Britain, and has on more than one occasion nested there, should be so ruthlessly shot down immediately its presence is discovered. Save the wings and tail, the body is of a light cinnamon colour, whilst the head is surmounted by a magnificent crest of black-and-white-tipped feathers, which can be raised or depressed at the pleasure of the bird : the excepted portions of the plumage — the wings and tail — are buff, varied with bands of black and white. Thus it may be truthfully said to be a conspicuously coloured bird ; yet this same livery seems also to come under the head of protective coloration, for we are assured that, when danger threatens, the bird throws itself flat upon the ground, spreads out its wings, and at once becomes transformed into what rather resembles a heap of rags than a bird. Escape by flight, however, instead of subterfuge, seems also at times to be resorted to, since, when pursued by a falcon, it will mount rapidly to a great height, and not seldom effect its escape. The domestic habits of the hoopoe are, however, by no means so charming as one would expect to find in so beauti- ful a bird. " All observers agree," writes Professor Newton, " in stating that it delights to find its food among filth of the most abominable description, and this especially in its winter quarters. But where it breeds, its nest — usually in the hole of a tree or of a wall — is not only partly composed of the foulest materials, but its condition becomes Phttn by SctlsUttic Phatt. Co.] [Parton't Gntn GROUND-HORNBILL The legs of the ground-hornbill are much longer than those of its allies 8 worse as incubation proceeds, for the hen scarcely ever leaves her eggs, being assiduously fed by the cock as she sits no THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD (a feature strongly recalling the custom of the Hornbills), and when the young are hatched their faeces are not removed by their parent?, as is the case with most birds, but are discharged in the immediate neighbourhood of the nest, the unsanitary condition of which can readily be imagined. Worms, grubs, and insects generally, form the hoopoes' food, and upon it they get so fat in autumn that they are esteemed a deli- cate morsel in some of the countries of Southern Europe, and especially by the Christian population of Constantinople." Beside the EUROI i \\ I looPOE, which also ex- tends into Northern Africa, four other species are known, three of which are African, whilst a fourth ranges from India to Hainan. Nearly related to the birds we have just described are the WOOD-HOOPOES. They differ from their allies in being crestless, having a more curved bill, and a plumage of metallic purple, with a white patch on the wings and white markings on the tail. Their habits resemble those of their more highly coloured relatives. Phil* ty Sth»Uitt€ [Paritm t (jret* r.. C..] HOOPOE A rtlarive of tkt Hornbill common in Europe CHAPTER XIII BEE-EATERS, MOTMOTS, TODIES, COLIES, JND TROGONS IN the present chapter we deal with a number of birds of singular beauty and gracefulness. In their coloration green predominates, thus recalling the Rollers, Parrots, Plantain-eaters and Kingfishers, all of which groups, as we have seen, contain a large proportion of green species. The BEE-EATERS, like the Kingfishers, Hornbills. and Hoopoes, have a foot of quite peculiar structure, the middle and outer toes being joined together throughout the greater part of their length. They are an Old World group, ranging from the British Islands to Australia, in the American Continent their place being taken by the Motmots and Jacamars, of which we shall speak presently. They are especially plentiful in the African region, somewhat less so in the Indian, the temperate regions of the Old World possessing but few species. On rare occasions one species visits the British Islands. This is, furthermore, one of the most beautiful of the group. It has the head, neck, upper back, and a broad wing-bar of a ruddy-brown colour; the lower back buff" colour; green wings and tail, with black tips to the middle tail-feathers, which are longer than the rest. The forehead is pale green and white; the ear-coverts are black; and the throat bright yellow, divided from the greenish-blue under- parts by a black band. "The name Bee-eater," writes Mr. Kvans "is well deserved, for in Spain [it] is a perfect pest to the bee-keeper, catching the workers as they enter and leave the hives." Like the Kingfishers, the indigestible parts of the food are cast up and deposited around the eggs, though bee-eaters do not appear to form a nest of them, as with the Kingh'shei s. From four to six eggs of a beautiful glossy white colour are deposited in holes in banks, or — and this is worthy of special notice — in tunnels bored vertically downwards in level ground for a distance of from 3 to 10 feet. How this is done is a mystery, for the bird's beak and feet look by no means equal to such a task. No ne>t appears to be made, the eggs being deposited at the extremity of the burrow without further preparation. Two species of the group, however, are said to form an exception, constructing a nest of straw and feathers BEE-EATERS, MOTMOTS, TODIES, COLIES, TROGONS III These two, as well as the members of the genus to which the British bird belongs, ap- parently breed in colonies. Unfortunately for the bee- eater, its flesh is palatable, whilst its plumage is in great demand for millinery purposes. Its persecution is of long stand- ing, since more than 300 years ago Belon witnessed a particu- larly cruel experiment practised by the boys in Crete. Transfix- ing a beetle with a bent pin, to the head of which a thread was tied, and then holding its other end with their hand, they would let the insect fly. The bee-eater, which catches most of its prey on the wing, would dart upon it, and, swallowing the bait, be caught by the hook. Not unlike the Bee-eaters in general appearance and coloration, the MOTMOTS are birds of peculiar interest, and this on account of a remarkable habit of one of their tribe — a habit which is perfectly unique, and to which we shall return presently. Belonging, as we have already remarked, to the New World, they range from Southern Mexico to Paraguay, inhabiting dense forests, and being but rarely seen. The plumage is somewhat loose in character — green, blue, cinnamon, and black in colour. The beak has the margins serrated, or saw-like ; whilst the feet resemble those of the Kingfishers and Bee-eaters. As with the Bee-eaters, no nest is made. The eggs, three or four in number and creamy white in colour, are deposited in a hole bored by the birds themselves in a tree or bank, both sexes sharing in the work of incubation. Their food consists of insects caught in the air, small reptiles, and fruit. The remarkable habit to which we have referred is displayed by the species known as the RACKET-TAILED MOTMOT, from the fact that the two middle tail-feathers project beyond the others, and have the greater part of the shaft bare, but terminating in a spoon-shaped expansion. In this there is nothing unusual, for such racket-feathers are common amongst birds. In this particular case, however, the feathers were originally entire, and acquired their characteristic shape artificially, the bird nibbling away the vane on either side of the shaft with its bill until the required shape is obtained. Such an act of conscious decoration on the part of a bird is elsewhere unknown throughout the whole class. The TODIES are diminutive allies of the Motmots, frequenting hilly districts and woods. They sit with the beak pointed upwards, the head drawn in close to the body, and the plumage puffed out, apparently oblivious of all around them — at least it would seem so, since at such times they may be caught with a butterfly-net. Like their larger allies, they are green in coloration, but have a light red throat, and yellowish-white or pinkish tinder-parts, with green or pink flank-feathers. They vary in length from 3 to 4] inches. PhM If J. S. Rudland &• Stm BEE-EATER A native of the Malay countries. The long feathers on the throat are bright scarlet 112 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD The CoLIES, or MOUSE-BIRDS, of South Africa are small, crested, long-tailed, loose-plumaged birds whose exact relationships are somewhat puzzling. The name Mouse-bird is given on account of the habit of creeping along the boughs of trees with the whole foot applied to the branch. The toes are peculiar in that all turn forwards, and are commonly so retained. About ten species are known, ranging from Abyssinia southwards. Resplendent without doubt are the majority of the forms which we have been lately considering, but prob- ably the palm for gorgeous coloration should be given to the TROGONS — at least they must be allowed to share the honours with the Humming-birds. The most splendid of all is the QUEZAL, the male of which has a train of great length, resembling at first sight a tail. But, as in the peacock, this is formed by enormously elongated tail-coverts, concealing the true tail. These tail-coverts differ, however, markedly from those in the peacock in that they are not erectile, but pendent. The head is ornamented with a large, rounded crest; the ground-colour of the upper parts of the plumage is of brilliant metallic green; the under parts from the chest downwards are of a deep blood-red. Certain of the covert-feathers of the wing form elegant drooping plumes, hanging down on either side and giving a wonderfully beautiful effect. The late Mr. Salvin's account of this bin., in its wild state is well worth quoting. Hunting with a native for this bird in the forest, where alone it is to be met with, he writes : " A distant clattering note indicates that the bird is on the wing. He settles — a splendid male — on a bough of a tree, not seventy yards from where we are hidden. Cipriano wants to creep up to within shot, but I keep him back, wishing to risk the chance of losing a specimen rather than miss such an opportunity of seeing the bird in its living state, and of watching its movements. It sits almost motionless on its perch, the body remaining in the same position, the head only moving from side to side. The tail is occasionally jerked open and closed again, and now and then slightly raised, causing the long tail-coverts to vibrate gracefully. I have not seen all. A ripe fruit catches the quezal's eye, and he darts from his perch, hovers for a moment, picks the berry, and returns to his former position. This is done with a degree of elegance that defies description." flal, ir A. S. RudUnd covered in the case of one species only: these were found in a hole in a bank, and contained two shining white eggs. The BARRETS are possibly more closely related to the Honey-guides than the Jai-.miars and Puff-birds. Brilliantly coloured, and having a plumage exhibiting violent contrasts of red, blue, purple, and yellow, on a green ground, sometimes with crests, bare skin round the eye, and brightly coloured bills, the barbels are, in spite of a somewhat hairy appearance, exceedingly attractive birds. fluit *; A. S. Kudlind A- S,n< CURL-CRESTED TOUCAN & callld from ike curiouity curltJ- ftalktri on the head, niembling black and gliittning ihavingi WOODPECKERS Forest-dwellers, like their allies, they feed upon fruit, seeds, insects, bark, and buds ; but so noiseless are they said to be when feeding that their presence is betrayed only by the falling of berries they have accidentally released. It is interesting to note that the geographical range of the barbet is much wider than that of its immediate allies, extending through tropical Asia, Africa, and America. The Woodpecker Tribe constitutes a large group, generally divided into two sections — the WOODPECKERS and the WRYNECKS. The former are characterised by their large heads and very powerful bills and long and ex- ceedingly stiff tails. The feet are also peculiar, two toes pointing directly forwards and two backwards. Beak, feet, and tail are all specially adapted to the peculiar habits of these birds, which pass their lives upon trees, climbing the trunks, and searching the interstices of the bark . bj A. H. RuJUnd S? S,n A FAMILY OF GREATER SPOTTED WOODPECKERS This ivoodwker is a British ipcciti PkiU \>j A. S. Rudland &• Sin, HONEY-GUIDE The name is bestoivcd on account of its remarkable habit of draivint attention to bees' nests for ants, or drilling holes into the un- sound portions of the trunk itself for the purpose of extracting the grubs which feed upon decaying wood. That ants and other small insects form the staple diet of the woodpecker isevidentfromtheextraordinarylength of the tongue. This is a long, worm- like structure, capable of being pro- truded many inches from the beak, and covered with a sticky secretion, so that, thrust into colonies of ants, it quickly becomes covered with them, to be with- drawn immediately into the mouth and cleared again for further action. Woodpeckers are all birds of bright plumage, some particularly so, and have a wide geographical distribution, inhabiting all parts of the world save Madagascar, the Australasian region, and Egypt. Three species occur in the British Islands, though they are exceedingly rare in Scotland and Ireland. The GREEN WOODPECKER is a particularly handsome bird. Grass-green is the predominating colour of its livery, relieved by a light scarlet cap, a golden patch over the lower part of the back, and chequered bars on the wings and quills. Il6 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD Scarcely less beautiful, in their way, are the GREATER and LESSER SPOTTED Woi>n- I'LCKERS. The plumage of these birds has a very rich effect, steely blue-black and white being contrasted with scarlet. The SPOTTED and BLACK WOODPI > KI us are remarkable for a curious drumming sound, so powerful as to be distinctly audible even a mile off". It appears to be caused by hammering vigorously on the bark of some rotten branch, the bird's head moving with amazing rapidity as it beats out this curious tattoo. Three North American species, known as SAP-SUCKERS, have the curious habit of piercing the boles of trees for the purpose of procuring the sap which flows copiously when the in so " tapped." Another species of the s.mu region seems to be possessed of a persistent dread (if famine, storing up immense quantities of nuts, which it appears never afterwards to use. These nuts are tightly fixed into holes in the bark of trees, and in such numbers that " a large pine 40 or 50 feet high will present the appear- >*.» tf if. r. rtu«i\ [z.«!•' PARADI-I-:, which was discovered towards the end of the sixteenth century, if not earlier. ( >n their first discovery it was popularly supposed that these birds lived in the air, turning always to the sun, and never alighting on the earth till the)' died, for they had neither feet nor wings. Hence the Malay traders called them " God's Birds, "the Portuguese " Birds of the Sun," and the Dutch "Paradise-birds." Seventeen or eighteen inches long, these birds have the body, wings, and tail of a rich coffee-brown, which deepens on the breast to a blackish violet or purple-brown. 1 lie top of the head and neck are of a delicate straw-yellow, the feathers being short and close-set, [M.f, k. Dr. K. U-. S*,,V.'.; BLUE JAY (NATURAL SIZE) The blue jay it \VER-»IRD) might be called an avenue, being about 3 feet in length, and 7 or 8 inches broad inside; a transverse section giving the figure of a horse-shoe, the round part downwards. They are used by the birds as a playing-house, or ' run,' as it is termed, and are used by the males to at- tract the females. The ' run ' of the SATIN-BIRD is much smaller, being less than i foot in length, and, moreover, differs from that just described in being decorated with the highly coloured feathersofthel'arrotTribe. ThcSPOTTED HI >\\ I:R- BIRD, on the other hand, collects around its ' run ' a quantity of si i >ncs, shells, bleached bones, etc. ; they are also 'strewed down the centre within." More wonderful still are the structures reared by the GARDENEK-WKD of New Guinea, presenting, as Professor Newton remarks, "not only a modification of bower-building, but an appreciation of beauty perhaps unparralleled in the animal world. . . . This species . . . builds at the foot of a small tree a kind of hut or cabin . . . some 2 feet in height, roofed with orchid-stems that slope to the ground, regularly radiating from the central support, which is covered with a conical mass of moss, and sheltering a gallery around it. ( >ne side of this hut is lelt open, and in front of it is arranged a bed of verdant moss, bedecked with blossoms and berries of the brightest colours. As these ornaments wither they are removed to a heap behind the hut, and replaced by others that are KING BIRD OF PARADISE A natfvf of Nrw Guinea ; remarkable far the curl tail' feat her t THE PERCHING BIRDS 121 /.-, 5 4; If-'. ff.-,l.'-.i;-.n, F.f.S, QUEENSLAND RIFLE-BIRD This unique Australian representative of the Birds of Paradise is about the size of a pigeon. Its plumage is black 'with a purple sheen ,• the throat is brilliant metallic emerald-green, like that of a humming-bird brown. Later black feathers, with large white spots at the tips, make their appearance among the brown. These spotted feathers eventually replace the brown, and the bird enters upon a second quite distinct phase — a black, spotted with white. Gradually this gives place to a plumage entirely unspotted, the feathers on the breast being spear-shaped. In the adult dress a wondrous variety of metallic reflections is acquired — green, purple, and violet. Associating in the autumn and winter in large flocks, starlings move from place to place in search of food. Sometimes the number of birds in these combined flocks rises to an enormous figure. One of the largest of these gatherings recorded in England existed on the property of the late Mr. Miles near Bristol. " This locality is an evergreen plantation . . . covering some acres, to which these birds repair fresh. The hut is circular and some 3 feet in diameter, and the mossy lawn in front of it nearly twice that expanse. Each hut and garden are, it is believed, though not known, the work of a single pair of birds, or perhaps of the male only ; and it may be observed that this species, as its trivial name implies, is wholly inornate in plumage. Not less remarkable is the more recently described ' bower' of the GOLDEN BOWER-BIRD. . . . This structure is said ... to be piled up almost horizontally around the base of a tree to the height of from 4 to 6 feet, and around it are a number of hut-like fabrics, having the look of a dwarfed native camp." Allied species, though building no bowers, yet clear a space of ground some 8 or 9 feet in diameter, on which to display themselves, and ornament this with little heaps of gaily tinted leaves, replacing them as they fade with fresh specimens. We pass next to the birds of the Starling Family, of which the BRITISH STARLING is the type. A bird so familiar needs no description here ; but we may draw attention to the many interesting phases of plumage this species undergoes. The first plumage is a uniform greyish Photo by W. Savilli-Ktnl, F.Z.S. RED BIRD OF PARADISE Found only on the small island of Waigiou, off the north-ivest roast of Neiv Guinea 122 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD of an evening ... by millions, from the low grounds about the Severn, where their noise and stench are something altogether unusual. By packing in such myriads upon evergreens, they have stripped them of their leaves, except just at the tops, and have driven the pheasants, for whom the plantation was intended, quite away from the ground. In the daytime, wlun the birds are not there, the stench is still excessive. Mr. Miles was about to cut the whole plantation down, to get rid of them, two years ago, but I begged him not to do so, on account of the curiosity of the scene, and he has since been well pleased that he abstained." A similar but still larger congregation has been described; in this, about the year 1845, from 150,000 to 200,000 starlings were computed to rest every night, between the end of October and the end of March, in certain trees in the gardens of the Zoological Society in Dublin. The roof of St. Patrick's Cathedral, in the heart of Dublin, has from time to time been resorted to, as many as 2,000 seeking shelter there. "Possessing very considerable powers of wing," observes Yarrell, " these are turned to account in an extraordinary mannerby the birdscomposing the flock. They wheel, close, open out, rise and descend, as if each were obeying a com- mander, and all this is done with the utmost marvellous precision while the flock is proceeding at a rapid pace through the air. At times it may extend in a long and nearly straight thread; suddenly an undulation is visi- ble along the line, and in a moment it takes the form of a thin and smoke-like cloud ; another moment, and it is a dense and almost perfect globe ; then possibly, having preserved this appearance for a perceptibly longer time, it becomes pear-shaped, and in another instant has assumed a spiral figure ; an instant after it has spread out like a sheet, and its members are streaming softly along the ground, perhaps to alight, or perhaps once more to mount aloft and circle as before." There are few more magnificent sights in the world than a flock of starlings when performing evolutions of this kind. Differing much, not only in general appearance, but also in coloration, from the common starling is the ROSE-COLOUR1 i- Si \KI.I\<;, so called from the beautiful rose-pink colour of the back and breast, set oft" by the rest of the plumage, which is black, glossed with violet, blue, and green reflections. This, handsome bird occasionally visits Britain. Feeding largely upon locusts, these birds are much affected in their movements by the peregrinations of these pests; and this accounts for the sporadic appearance of the rose-coloured starling in huge flocks in places where it is generally seldom seen. Dull in appearance, ungraceful in flight, and with a harsh, unmusical note, the starling . YOUNG STARLINGS Starlinfri, if taken tvhen young, are taitly tamed and make excellent peri THE PERCHING BIRDS 123 Photo by J. T. Newman COMMON STARLING Starlings appear to he on the increase in Scot/and) "whilst larks are said to be on the decrease, diving to the destruction of their eggt by the former known as the Ox-PECKER would seem at first sight to have little to recommend it; yet it is one of the benefactors of the larger African mammals, clearing them of flies and other insect-pests. Buffaloes, rhinoceroses, elephants, are alike grateful for its services, as it climbs about their huge bodies, picking off the liliputian enemies by which they are beset. But little appears to be known of the breeding-habits of these birds. In strong contrast to the dull-looking Ox-birds arethebeautifulGLOSSYSTARLlNGS and CRACKLES. The AFRICAN GLOSSY STARLINGS, indeed, repre- sent the most beautiful of all the members of the Starling Tribe. In one of the handsomest and best-known species — the LONG-TAILED GLOSSY STARLING — metallic green and purple-violet are the predominating tones in the plumage, glossed with copper reflections, and relieved by black or darker bars of green and purple. In another species — the GREEN GLOSSY STARLING of East- ern Africa — the shimmer of the plumage is so wonderful that the exact shades of colour are diffi- cult to describe, in that they change completely, according to the light in which the bird is held. The CRACKLES, or HILL-MYNAS, are Indian birds, with glossy black plumage, relieved by bare flaps of yellow skin projecting backwards These birds make excellent pets, learning both to from the head immediately behind the eye. whistle and talk. We come ROW to the beautiful ORIOLES — -birds belonging to the temperate and tropical parts of the Old World. The males, as a rule, are clad in a vestment of brilliant yellow and black, but in some species the under-parts are relieved by rich crimson. One species — the GOLDEN ORIOLE — has on several occasions visited the British Islands, and even in one or two instances has nested there. But, as with all brightly plumaged birds in England, no sooner is their presence discovered than they are doomed to fall to the gun of some local collector. We pass now to a group of exceedingly interesting birds, some of which are remarkable on account of the beauty of their plumage, others from their wonderful nesting-habits. The group includes many faroiliar as cage-birds, such as the LONG-TAILED WIDOW-BIRDS, the RED- BEAKED WAXBILLS, AMADAVATS, JAVA SPARROW, GRASS-FINCHES, MUNIAS, and so on, all of which are embraced under the general title of WEAVER-BIRDS, a name bestowed on account of their peculiar nests. Abundant in Africa, and well represented in South-eastern Asia and Australia, these birds bear a strong family resemblance to the Finches, from which they differ in having ten primary quills in the wings. One of the most peculiar is the South African LONG-TAILED WHYDAH- or WIDOW-BIRD. Strikingly coloured, this bird is rendered still more attractive by the extremely elongated tail- feathers, which are many times longer than the body, so long, indeed, as to impede its flight, which is so laboured that children commonly amuse themselves by running the bird down. Kaffir children stretch lines coated with bird-lime near the ground across fields of millet and Kaffir corn, and thereby capture many whose tails have become entangled among the threads. In brilliancy of coloration the Whydah-birds — for there are several species — are pressed hard 124 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD by the BlSHOP-BlRUS, the handsomest of which is the red species. Sociable in habits, this bird throughout the year consorts in immense flocks, which in the summer consist chiefly of males. Of the more remarkable nest-builders, the most conspicuous are the B.\YA SPARROWS, or TODDY-BIRDS, of India and Ceylon, and the SOCIABLE WKAVERS. The former suspend their ne^ts by a solidly wrought rope of fibre from the under side of a branch, the rope expanding iir globular chamber, and then again contracting into a long, narrow, vertical tube, through which the birds make their exit and entrance. The latter — the SOCIABLK WKAVKR-BIRD of Africa- builds a still more wonderful structure. As a thing apart it has no existence, a number of birds, varying from 100 to 300, joining their nests together, so as to form a closely interwoven structure, resembling, when finished, a gigantic mushroom. The structure is built .among the branches of large trees, so that the tree looks as though it had grown up through a native hut, carrying the roof with it. Cartloads of grass are required to rear this structure, which is nearly solid. Seen from below, it presents a flat surface riddled with holes ; these are the entrances to the nests. Closely resembling the typical Finches in general appearance, .^— -^. and often gorgeous in coloration, is Bk ._ ^^^ /r^-^. Y""~ the group known as the TANAGERS, of which more than 400 distinct species are known to science. F.\- clusively American, the majority of the species are found in Central and South America, though a few move northwards into the United States in summer. The most beautiful are the SCARI i r, CKIMSON-IIKADKD, and Wiirn-:- CA1TKD TANAdKKS. The last- named is generally allowed to be the loveliest of the group. The entire plumage of both sexes is a beautiful cornflower-blue, sur- mounted by a cap of silvery-white feathers, a crimson spot on the forehead looking like a drop of blood. The identical coloration of the sexes is worth noting, as among the tanagers generally the female is dull-coloured. Among the Finches there is a considerable variety of coloration, though but little in bodily form; they are all attractive birds, and have the additional advantage that many are British. Distributed over both the northern and temperate regions of the Kastern and Western Hemispheres, they are unknown in Australia. The group, which comprises a very large number of species, may be divided into three sections— Gk<>H',i.AK.s, Tiui: I-'i. \vnr.s, and BUNTINGS. The GROSBEAKS, as their name implies, are characterised by the great stoutness of the beak, and some, as the K\ I:\IM, <;i« ISHKAKS of America, are remarkable for their beauty. Among the well-known British members are the II\\vil\< iu> and (ikl I \i-i\i ill-. Common in many parts of Kngland, though rare in Scotland and Ireland, the I IA\VI i\< 11 contrives to make itself much disliked by the gardener, owing to its fondness for peas, though it fully compensates for the damage done in this direction by the numbers of noxious insects it destroys. The n a very beautiful structure; outside it is composed of twigs inter- mixed with lichens, inside of dry grasses lined with fine roots and hair. The site chosen Fhu HAWFINCH A resident in ihi eauer n and midland counritt of England Ptte'e br C. Ktid YOUNG CHAFFINCHES The chaffinch is one of the commonest of the British finches Phala k> C. Rlid HOUSE-SPARROWS The sparroiv is to be reckoned among the fe-iv really harmful birds 125 126 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD BULLFINCH Bleu\ varieties are occational/v taken in a wild state. Caged ifecimentfed on kcmp-ietd frequently turn black varies, a favourite place being an old apple- or pear- tree in an orchard ; but the woods and fir plantations are not seldom resorted to. The GREENFINCH is an equally common British bird. Of a more confiding disposition than the hawfinch, it makes an excellent cage-bird, becoming with judicious treatment exceed- ingly tame. It is a useful bird, travelling during the autumn and winter in large flocks, and feeding on the seeds of wild mustard and other weeds. Its nest differs conspicuously from that of the hawfinch, being a somewhat untidy structure, composed of fibrous roots, moss, and wool, lined with finer roots, horse- hair, and feathers. Among the TRUE FINCHES, distinguished from the Grosbeaks by their less powerful bills, are several other well-known British birds. Of these, none are better known than the CHAFFINCH. Gay in appear- ance and sprightly in habit, this is a general favourite everywhere, and much in demand as a cage-bird. His short though delightful song possesses a peculiar charm, coming as it does with the earliest signs of returning spring. • The fascination of this song has never been better expressed than in Browning's lines: — O to be in England Now that April 's there ; And whoever wakes in England Sees, some morning, unaware, That the lowest boughs of the brushwood sheaf Round the elm-tree bole are in tiny leaf, While the Chaffinch sings on the orchard bough In England now ! The nest, which is an exceptionally beautiful structure, takes about a fortnight to build. Closely woven, it appears to consist mainly of wool, into which moss and lichens of various colours are deftly woven. The outside is cunningly decorated with bits of lichen and the inner bark of trees, such as the birch, the whole being secured by a thin veil of spiders' webs. The lichen and bark serve to render the nest inconspicuous by blending it with the general appearance of the bush or small tree in a forked bough of which it is placed. Inside the wool is more closely felted even than on the outside, and this is covered with tine hairs, amongst which a few feathers are intermixed. The work of building seems to be done by the female only, though the male helps by bringing the materials. Of the GOLDFINCH, I.INM.IS, and Hu.u i\< n, by far the most popular and beautiful is the GOLDFINCH, which is, and probably will long remain, one of the most pri/.ed of cage-birds. Gifted "with the fatal gift of beauty." this bird is much persecuted by bird-catchers; and indeed, partly owing to the depredations of these men, and partly t<> improved methods of agriculture, which have diminished its feeding-area, this handsome bird is growing more and more rare every year. Next to the goldfinch perhaps the I.IXNKI is most sought after as a cage-bird. Large numbers are taken during the autumn, when the birds congregate in large (locks before departure on migration. Those captured in the spring are said to be very impatient of confinement, and only a small percentage seem to survive. The linnet is one of the most variable of birds in the- matter of plumage, and for a l'>ng while the opinion was generally held, especially by bird-catchers, that several distinct species — THE PERCHING-BIRDS 127 the RED, BROWN, and GREY LINNETS — existed. It is now known that these are all phases of plumage common to one species. In the male in full summer dress the forehead and centre of the crown are blood-red, whilst the breast is of a glossy rose-red ; but these bright colours do not seem to be acquired so universally as is the case with other birds which don a special breeding-dress, nor are they ever developed in captivity. Occasionally what are called LEMON- BREASTED varieties of the linnet occur in which the rose-colour of the breast is replaced by yellow. The BULLFINCH, though one of the common British birds, is by no means so abundant as the two foregoing species ; for whilst the other two travel in small flocks, the bullfinch is a solitary bird. Few birds perhaps have earned a more evil name than the bullfinch, which is accused by the gardener of inflicting enormous damage on the flower-buds of fruit-trees in winter and spring. " On the other hand," writes Mr. Hudson, " he is greatly esteemed as a cage-bird, and the bird-catchers are ever on the watch for it. But the effect in both cases is pretty much the same, since the hatred that slays and the love that makes captive are equally disastrous to the species." That it is diminishing in many districts there can be no doubt, and perhaps its final extermination is only a matter of time. Though by no means a remarkable songster in a wild state, in captivity it is capable of learning to whistle strains and airs of human composition with some skill, good performers fetching high prices. The SPARROW and the wild CANARY of Madeira — from the latter of which our cage- pets have been derived — are also members of the Finch Tribe, but are too well known to need fuller mention. Closely allied to the finches are the BUNTINGS, which are really only slightly modified finches. Several species are British birds, one of the commonest being the CORN- BUNTING, a bird which bears a wonderful resemblance to a skylark, from which, how- ever, it may be distinguished by its large beak and small claw on the hind toe. The YELLOWAMMER, or YELLOWHAM- MER, is another familiar roadside form in Pheto by J. T. Newman GREENFINCH Commonly known as the Green Linnet England, which scarcely needs description. The most celebrated of all the buntings is the ORTOLAN, or GREEN-HEADED BUNTING, a bird resembling its congener the yellowhammer, but lacking its bright coloration. It has acquired fame from the delicate flavour of its flesh, and to supply the demand for this delicacy immense numbers are netted annually by the bird-catchers of the Continent. Wintering in North Africa, these birds leave Europe in September in large flocks, and it is during this migration and the return journey in the spring that their ranks are so mercilessly thinned. Common over the greater part of Europe, it is somewhat surprising that the ortolan does not occur more frequently in the British Islands, where it is only an occasional spring and autumn visitor. The SNOW-BUNTING, or SXOWFLAKE, is a regular winter visitant to the British Islands, some pairs indeed remaining to breed in the Highlands of Scotland every year, whilst its presence serves to enliven some of the dreariest spots of high northern latitudes. The male in breeding-dress is a handsome bird, having the upper-parts black and the under white; its mate is somewhat duller, the black parts being obscured by greyish white, fulvous, and blackifh 128 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD Phu, tf If. F. P!gt"t LINNET One of tkt man popular cage-birds. Tilt to-called Red-brown and Grey Linneli art but phases of plumage of the same sfrfits. The bird in the ~ight-hand corner it a greenfinch brown, whilst the white parts are less pure in tone. The full iln-ss of the male is rarely seen in the British Islands, save in specimens procured from Scotland ; for in winter, when the snow-bunting is chiefly captured, the plumage is altogether more rufous. Unlike the buntings so far described, the KKKD-WNTIM; is to be found only in marshy places, but in suitable localities it may be found in the British Islands all the year round, being as common a species as the corn-bunting, and therefore not calling for special description hrre. The eggs of the buntings are remarkable for the curious scribble-like markings which cover them, and serve readily to distinguish them from those of any other British bird. CHAPTER XVI LARKS, TITMICE, HONEY-E.A'1'KRS, /\I) Til KIR A7.\ CONFINED almost entirely to the Old World, where they arc represented by more than one hundred species, many of which have undergone considerable specialisation in the matter of plumage, so as to enable them to live in desert regions, the I .AUKS constitute a well-marked group, into the characters of which we need not enter here. The best-known member of the group is the SKVI.AUK. Common throughout the British Islands, and of sober coloration, no bird is more universally beloved, and this largely on account of the sweetness of its vug, which is second only to th.it of the nightingale. 1' and prose-writers alike have sounded its praises, many in passages that will be remembered as long as our language lasts. The skylark is one of the few birds which sing while mi the wing; the peculiar nature of the (light at this time all must have watched, entrained tin- while by the beauty of the « I Photo by C. l\cnl, ll'tsliaw. WAXB1LLS. Wax-bills are relatives of the Weaver birds, and take their name from the waxen appearance of the beak which is coral red INDIGO FINCHES The Indigo Kinrh or Indigo Bird is a well known member of a group of American Kindles of which the Nonnareil Finch is another ivpreser.tiiiix.. LARKS, TITMICE, HONEY-EATERS, THEIR KINDRED 129 Grahame, in his "Birds of Scotland," happily describes the nest as follows: — The daisied lea he loves, where tufts of grass Luxuriant crown the ridge ; there, with his mate, He founds their lowly house, of withered bents, And coarsest speargrass ; next, the inner work With finer and still finer fibres lays, Rounding it curious with its speckled breast. This bird displays great affection for its young, removing them under the fear of impending danger, or if the nest is meddled with. Occasionally, however, the bird sits close, instead of seeking safety by flight. Brighton enjoys the credit of consuming more larks than any other place in England, except London. It has been estimated that the number of larks annually entering the metropolitan markets alone reaches a total of 400,000 — 20,000 or 30,000 being often sent together; and the numbers eaten elsewhere in the country must be enormous, quite as large, indeed, as abroad. Most are captured from the hosts which arrive on the east coast of Scotland and England from the Continent on approach of severe weather, the birds making their appearance in thousands, forming a constant and unbroken stream for two or three days in succession. Close allies of the Larks, the WAGTAILS and PIPITS come next under consideration. The former range over the Old World, but are unknown in Australia and Polynesia. The pipits have a similar range, but one species is found in, and is peculiar to, Australia. Like wagtails, pipits are unknown in Polynesia; only two species occur in America. The WAGTAILS are generally black and white, grey and white, grey with yellow breasts, or yellowish green with yellow breasts. In the last-mentioned case, as in some specimens of the YELLOW WAGTAIL, the yellow predominates. These birds frequent streams and stagnant waters, like the RED and GREY WAGTAILS; or corn-fields and meadows, as in the case of the YELLOW WAGTAIL. All these are commonly met with in the British Islands. fhti t> C. Riif] SKYLARKS The numbers of tkylarki teem to increase with the ifread of agricultural improvement 130 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD The PIPITS are duller-coloured than the Wagtails, have shorter tails, and evince less fondness for the water. The MEADOW-, ROCK-, and TRKE-I'IHTS are the commonest British species. Neither Wagtails nor .Pipits are much given to perching, but tne TREE-CREEPKKS spend their lives upon trees, some being specially modified for this mode of life, their tail-feathers being stiff and terminating in sharp points. By pressing its tail closely against the tree-trunk up which it is climbing, the bird obtains a wonderfully reliable support. Beginning at the bottom of a trunk, creepers quickly work their way up in a spiral direction, or sometimes in jerky zigzags, searching every crevice for tiny insects, their eggs and larvae, and flitting from the higher branches, when these are reached, to the base of another tree. . Creepers are mostly dull-coloured, but the WALL-CREEPER has crimson patches on the wings. This bird, which has occurred in Britain, haunts mountain-cliffs. The TREE-CREEI'KR, a resident in Britain, builds its nest behind pieces of loose bark, or under tiles, or in crevices of trees, walls, or hollow branches. In this nest are laid from six to nine eggs, pure white, spotted with red, or with a creamy ground-colour, with the spots thicker round the large end. Intermediate in position between the Creepers and the Titmice are the N IT- HATCHES. Chiefly inhabitants of the northern parts of both hemispheres, they extend as far south as Mexico, whilst in the Old World they occur plentifully in the Himalaya. The largest species is found in the moun- tains of Burma. One species is frequently met with in England, and occasionally in Scotland, but is unknown in Ireland. The ENGLISH NUTHATCH may serve us as a type of the group. " Its habits," writes Dr. Sharpe, " are a combination of those of the tit and woodpecker. Like the former bird, the nuthatch seeks diligently for its insect-food on the trunks and branches of trees, over which it runs like a woodpecker, with this difference, that its tail is not pres-ed into the service of climbing a tree, nor does it generally ascend from the bottom to the top, as a woodpecker so often does. On the contrary, a nuthatch will generally be found in the higher branches, and will work its way down from one of the branches towards the trunk, and is just as much at home on the under side of a limb as the upper. Its movements are like those of a mouse rather than of a bird, and it often runs head-downward, or hangs on the under side of a branch and hammers away at the bark with its powerful little bill. The noise produced by one of these birds, when tapping at a tree, is really astonishing for a bird of its si/e, and, if undisturbed. it can be approached pretty closely. Its general food consists of insects, and in the winter the nuthatches join the wandering parties of tits and creepers which traverse the woods in search of food. ... In the autumn it feeds on hazel-nuts and beech-mast, breaking them open by constant hammering; and, like the tits, the nuthatches can be tempted to the vicinity of houses in winter, and become quite interesting by their tamenes,." The nuthatch nests in hollow trees, plastering up the entrance with mud, and leaving an aperture only just sufficient to enable it to wriggle in and out. A remarkable nest may be seen at the British Natural History Museum. It was built in the side of a haystack, to which the industrious birds had carried as much as i i Ihs. of clay, and had thus made for themselves a solid nest in an apparently unfavourable position. Phut f, A. S. Rud'.anl & Sint YOUNG SKYLARKS Several trooat art reared by tack fair of tirjs in a uaton LARKS, TITMICE, HONEY-EATERS, THEIR KINDRED 131 Photo A, 7 T Ntwman The TITMICE occur in one form or another all over Europe, Asia, and Africa, and in the New World as far south as Southern Mexico. The family may be divided intoTRUE.CRESTED, L( >NG-TAILED, and PENDULlNETlTS and REED- LINGS, all but the penduline tits being repre- sented in England. Of the true tits, the best known is the BLUE TlT, which is no stranger even in London parks. Traveling in small bands throughout the autumn and winter, they may frequently be met with during a country walk, their presence being made known by a pretty tink- ling little note. This method of traveling is obviously advantageous, for the discovery of food at this time is an arduous task, and, if undertaken individually, many would surely starve, as Professor Newton points out : " A single titmouse searching alone might hunt for a whole day without meeting with a sufficiency, whilst, if a dozen are united by the same motive, it is hardly possible for the place in which the food is lodged to escape their detection, and, when discovered, a few call-notes from the lucky finder are enough to assemble the whole company to share the feast. . . . One tree after another is visited by the active little rovers, and its branches examined : if nothing be forthcoming, away goes the explorer to the next that presents itself, merely giving utterance to the usual twitter that serves to keep the whole body together. But if the object of search be found, another chirp is emitted, and the next moment several members of the band are flitting in succession to the tree, and eagerly engaged with the spoil." These little birds display great affection for their old nesting-places. An instance is on record where, so far back as 1785, a pair built their nest in a large earthenware bottle placed in the branches of a tree in a garden at Oxbridge, near Stockton-on-Tees. With two exceptions only, this bottle was tenanted by a pair of these birds every year till 1873. In 1892 Professor Newton, who had this account from Canon Tristram, was informed that the occupancy had ceased for four years. The LONG-TAILED or BOTTLE-TIT is a British species, deriving its name from the long tail. It is a pretty little bird, black and rose-colour above, with a rose-coloured abdomen, and the head, throat, and breast white. It enjoys the distinction of being one of the smallest British birds, and is found in woods and plantations all over England, though less common in Scotland. These tits have a curious habit of roosting during the winter, six or seven huddling together in a row, with three or four others perched on their backs, and two or three on the top. The nest, which is placed in a tree or bush, is a model of industry. Oval in shape, and roofed, with a small aperture near the top, it is composed of moss, lichen, and hair, closely felted and lined with an enormous collection of feathers, Macgillivray having counted 2,779 in a single nest. Other species of titmice occurring in Britain are the GREAT, MARSH-, COAL-, and CRESTED TITS. NUTHATCH 132 THE LIVING ANIMALS OF THE WORLD 7- r. MARSH-TIT SEARCHING FOR INSECTS marth'tit may be distinguished1 from itt ally , the coal-tit , />y Mr absence of white on the nafe of the neci Whether the REKIU.IM.S, or I'.i \RDi:i) Trrs, as they arc generally called, are really true titmice or peculiarly modified buntings is a moot-point. There is but one specie-, which is British, though found also on the Continent; but it is un- fortunately becoming more and more rare every year. The general colour of the upper-parts is cinnamon- rufous, except the head, which is pearly grey: between the bill and the eyes hangs a tuft of long black feathers; hence the name Bearded Tit. The undcr-parts arc white, tinged with yellow and pink, whilst the wings arc variegated with white, black, and red. This tit lives in beds of reeds fringing the " broads" of the eastern counties of Kngland, though even there it is now exceedingly ran-. The same uncertainty that obtains with regard t.) the position of the Keedlings confronts the ornithologist with regard to the affinities of the liliputian Goi.D-t RI:S i s. About six species are known, from the northern and temperate parts of the Old and New Worlds, extending as far south in the latter as Mexico. Two occur in Britain: one, known simply as the (i