CAMPS AND CRUISES 2] OF AN ORNITHOLOGIST ls FRANK M.CHAPMAN CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY LABORATORY OF ORNITHOLOGY LIBRARY Pg me : me tae OOD Pec Prme Cornell University The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924022533404 CAMPS AND CRUISES OF AN ORNITHOLOGIST By FRANK M. CHAPMAN, Curator of Birds in the American Museum of Natural History. HANDBOOK OF BIRDS OF EASTERN NORTH AMERICA. With Keys to the Species, Descriptions of their Plumages, Nests, etc., and their Distribution and Migrations. With over 200 Illustrations. 12mo. Liprary EDITION, $3.00. PockeET EDIri0Nn, flexible covers, $3.50. BIRD-LIFE. A Guide to the Study of Our Common Birds. PoPruLaR EDITION in colors, $2.00 net. BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA. With Introductory Chapters on the Outfit and Methods of the Bird Photographer. Illustrated with over 100 Photographs from Nature by the Author. 12mo. Cloth, $1.75. THE WARBLERS OF NORTH AMERICA. With Contributions from other Ornithologists and 24 full-page Colored Plates illustrating every Species, from Drawings by L. A. Fuertes and B. Horsfall, and Half-tones of Nests and Eggs. 8vo. Cloth, $3.00 net. CAMPS AND CRUISES OF AN ORNITHOLOGIST. Illustrated by 250 Photographs from Nature by the Author. 8vo. Cloth, $3.00 net. D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, NEW YORK. Flamingoes Feeding Young. (See page 187.) From a photograph colored hy Bruce Horsfall. CAMPS AND CRUISES OF AN ORNITHOLOGIST BY FRANK M. CHAPMAN CURATOR OF ORNITHOLOGY, AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY FELLOW OF THE AMERICAN ORNITHOLOGISTS’ UNION; AUTHOR OF ‘*HANDBOOK OF BIRDS OF EASTERN NORTH AMERICA ”’ ‘“BIRD-LIFE;’’ ‘‘ BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA,’’ ETC. WITH 250 PHOTOGRAPHS FROM NATURE BY THE AUTHOR NEW YORK I. APPLETON AND COMPANY 1908 SIX S Sa COPYRIGHT, 1908, BY D. APPLETON AND COMPANY Published November, 1908 I DEDICATE THIS VOLUME TO HERMON C. BUMPUS DIRECTOR OF THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY IN RECOGNITION OF HIS INVALUABLE AID AND ADVICE AND TO THOSE MEMBERS OF THE MUSEUM WHOSE CO-OPERATION HAS MADE POSSIBLE THE WORK ON WHICH IT IS BASED Map Indicating Localities Visited PREFACE During the past seven years, with the assistance of artist and preparateur, I have devoted the nesting season of birds to collecting specimens and making field studies and photographs on which to base a series of what have been termed “ Habitat Groups” of North Ameri- can birds for the American Museum of Natural History. These groups are designed to illustrate not only the habits and haunts of the birds shown, but also the country in which they live. The birds and, in most instances, their nests and young, are therefore placed in a facsimile reproduction, containing from sixty to one hun- dred and sixty square feet of the locality in which they are found, and to this realistic representation of their habitat is added a background, painted from nature, and so deftly joined to the foreground, that it is difficult to distinguish where one ends and the other begins. (See the photographs of groups on pages, 62, 110, 231, 243, 291.) In selecting the subjects for these groups, not alone birds, but the country they inhabit has been taken into consideration; it being desired to have the series of great panoramic backgrounds, some of which are twenty-eight feet in length, portray not only the haunts of certain American birds, but America as well. Characteristic shore, marsh, prairie, plain, desert, forest, and mountain scenes present the major features of American physiography, and each is executed with an ac- curacy which gives to the groups a geographical as well as an ornitho- logical value. Some subjects were in nearby localities, which were easily visited; others were in remote places which were reached with more or less difh- culty. In some cases an entire season was given to gathering the mater- ial for a single group—that of the Flamingoes, for example; in others. several groups were secured in a single season, the Bahaman Man-o’- viii PREFACE War Birds, for instance, being obtained in April, the Carolina Egrets in May, the Saskatchewan Geese in June, and the Alberta Ptarmigan in July, 1907. No ornithologist, I imagine, has ever pursued his calling with greater pleasure and satisfaction than I have experienced in gathering the material and data for these groups of birds. Not only has it been my fortune to behold some of the most interesting and remarkable sights in the world of birds, but it has been my privilege to have them reproduced in so admirable a manner that they convey to others a wholly adequate conception of the scene itself. I desire now further to perpetuate these experiences and studies by telling the story of the various expeditions of which the groups were the objects, adding such information concerning the birds observed as seems worthy of record, and illustrating the whole with many photo- graphs from nature and a number of the groups themselves. It is a pleasure to acknowledge here my indebtedness to the co-la- borers who have been associated with me in this seven years’ task; to Mrs. Chapman, always my first field assistant, to Hermon C. Bumpus, whose suggestions and advice have been invaluable, to Louis Agassiz Fuertes, artist and tried camp-mate, to Carlos Hittell, Bruce Horsfall and Hobart Nichols, artists, to J. D. Figgins, preparateur, to H. C. Denslow, Herbert Lang, and E. W. Smith, taxidermists. Without the cooperation of these efficient fellow workers the undertaking in which this book has its origin, could not have been brought to a successful conclusion. Several of the following chapters have appeared in ““The Century,” “Scribner's,” “Country Life in America,” “Outing,” and ‘“Bird-Lore,” but the greater number have not before been published. F d Frank M. Cuapman. American Museum of Natural History. October, 1908. CONTENTS Page aE ENYA, CnGact nes cate arn ae at Oy RRR eae CEO ht See Ch ORY Fe gr vii TEN TRODU CDLON oe tasderyceeiekey cose nae tes Ue aaa ae Hoe RS xl PART I. Travers Asour Home FETE CVV a yis40 Gaal ny Stara weep eae ees Ciara ee enn Sener se 5 A Morning with Meadowlarks.............00. ce cc eee e ee ees 15 Bird-Nesting with Burroughs ...............0 000.000.0000 20 ANighthawk: Inierdent® is.-aideuc Scns pte ata aes Reha h es 29 PART II. Tue Birp-Lire or Two Atriantic Coast IsLanps Gardiner's: Island» 244.2 5h ib sens bed Seah wean oS OS es 38 Cop brseds amd baw Biccpemanrascoy ave ore aurea ead ee teat sear ae ret eae A 63 PART III. Fronipa Birp-Lire Pelican Usha. ee oes a Be el das ie erat See eis caked 83 The Florida Great Blue Heron and the Water Turkey.......... 113 RhesAmerican: Weret a4 pnb ae oe eo Wart ee he eae eee 123 Cuthbert: Rook enya os iss weg os Hitachi eta We oon Dace wieed eats Cees 135 PART IV. Bauama Birp-Lire Phe Blaming oy ¢ vais ca yeke eins Sian eee Seg chee eb GS Ged 155 her Big oe sD ind Syst sniesel cater wiaueen Mactan hanes fea Sih ph aan ae 192 The Booby and the Man-o’-War Bird.....................0.. 200 x CONTENTS Page PART V. Tue Story or THREE WeEsTERN Birp Groups Thes Prairies Hen® js 22-25 Sse ne ee ee ee ee 229 A: Goldew Eagle's: Nest... sic sens a tie wer eare os eteom genet bee ene tras 236 Cactus: Desert 2B indaleit esx cox ssten rancoe: eiaes es pres ey teete ge tee eee eet see 242 PART VI. Birp Stupigs IN CALIForNIA ‘The: Coastal “Mountains: at Paris dice sec oss, fsa d-o ce nee eee 259 The Coastzat Wonterey