UNITED STATES COMMISSION OF FISH AND FISHERIES SPE3NCE3K in. 13AIED, COMMISSIONER THE FISHERIES FISHERY INDUSTRIES OF THE UNITED STATES PREPARED THROUGH THE CO-OPERATION OF THE COMMISSIONER OF FISHERIES AND THE SUPERINTENDENT OF THE TENTH CENSUS BY GEORGE BROWN GOODE ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF THE IT. S. NATIONAL MUSEUM AND A STAFF OF ASSOCIATES SECTION I NATURAL HISTORY OF USEFUL AQUATIC ANIMALS WITH AN ATLAS OF TWO HUNDRED AND SEVENTY-SEVEN PLATES TEXT WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT FEINTING OFFICE 1884 3o ASSOCIATE AUTHORS. JOEL A. AliEN Museum of Comparative Zoology, Cambridge. TARLETON H. BEAN U. S. National Museum, Washington. JA;.IES TEMPLE. BROWN U. S. National Museum, Washington. A. HOWARD CLAKK -U. S. National Museum, Washington. JOSEPH W. COLLINS - - Gloucester, Massachusetts. R. EDWARD EAIJLL U. S.Fish Commission, Washington. RICHARD H. EDMONDS Baltimore, Maryland. HENRY W. ELLIOTT Cleveland, Ohio. EKXEST INGERSOLL New Haven, Connecticut. DAVID S. JORDAN Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana. LUDWIG KUMLIEN Milwaukee, Wisconsin. MARSHALL MACDONALD U. S. Fish Commission, Washington. FREDERICK MATHER N. Y. Fish Commission, Cold Spring, New York. BARNET PHILLIPS Brooklyn, New York. RICHARD RATHBUN U. S. National Museum, Washington. JOHN A. RYDER U. S. Fish Commission, Washington. CHARLES W. SMILEY U. S. Fish Commission, Washington. SILAS STEARNS Pensacola, Florida. FREDERICK W. TRUE U. S. National Museum, Washington. WILLIAM A. WILCOX Boston, Massachusetts. Hi PREFATORY NOTE. U. S. COMMISSION OF Fisn AND FISHERIES, Washington, May 30, 1884. In July, 1879, an arrangement was made with General Francis A. Walker, Superintendent of the Tenth Census, by which an investigation of the fisheries of the United States was undertaken as the .joint enterprise of the United States Fish Commission and of the Census Bureau. It was decided that this investigation should be as exhaustive as possible, and that both the United States Fish Commission and the Census should participate in its results. The preparation of a statistical and historical monograph of the fisheries, to form one of the series to be presented by the Superintendent of the Census in his report, was from the first the main object of the work, but in connection with this work extensive investigations into the methods of the fisheries, into the distribution of the fishing-grounds, and the natural history of useful marine animals were inaugurated and carried on. The direction of this investigation was placed in the hands of Mr. G. Brown Goode, Assistant Director of the National Museum, who had already been engaged for a number of years in a systematic, historical, and statistical investigation of the American fisheries, and who as early as 1877 had drawn up a scheme for an exhaustive exploratiou of the coast, quite as elaborate as that now adopted and not essentially different. The first step taken was to secure the co-operation of as many as possible of those persons who had in the past given attention to the subject of the fisheries, and this was so successfully accomplished that it is safe to say that every one who has been of late years prominent in such studies has taken part in the preparation of this report. The plan of the proposed investigation was drawn up by Mr. Goode before beginning the work, and was published in an octavo pamphlet of fifty-four pages, entitled " Plan of Inquiry into the History and Present Condition of the Fisheries of the United States." Washington : Government Printing Office ; 1879. The scheme of investigation divided the work into the following departments: I. Natural history of marine products. — Under this head was to be carried on the study of the useful aquatic animals and plants of the country, as well as of seals, whales, turtles, fishes, lobsters, crabs, oysters, clams, etc., sponges, and marine plants and inorganic products of the sea with reference to (A) geographical distribution, (B) size, (C) abundance, (D) migrations and movements, (E) food and rate of growth, (F) mode of reproduction, (G) economic value and uses. II. The fishing grounds. — Under this head were to be studied the geographical distribution of all animals sought by fishermen, and the location of the fishing-grounds; while, with referencee yi PREFATORY NOTE. to the latter, are considered : (A) location, (B) topography, (C) depth of water, (D) character of bottom, (E) temperature of water, (F) currents, (G) character of invertebrate life, etc. III. The fishermen and fishing towns. — Here were to be considered the coast districts engaged in the fisheries, with reference to their relation 1 .he fisheries, historically and statistically, and the social, vital, and other statistics relating to the fishermen. IV. Apparatus and methods of capture. — Here were to be considered all the forms of apparatus used by fishermen ; boats, nets, traps, harpoons, etc., and the methods employed in the various branches of the fishery. Here each special kind of fishery, of which there are more than fifty in the United States, is considered separately with regard to its methods, its history, and its statistics. Y. Products of fisheries. — Under this head were to be studied the statistics of the yield of American fisheries, past and present. VI. Preparation, care of, and manufacture of fishery products. — Here were to be considered the methods and the various devices for utilizing fish after they are caught, with statistics of capital and men employed, etc.: (A) preservation of live fish, (B) refrigeration, (G) sun-drying, (D) smoke-drying, (E) pickling, (F) hermetically canning, (G) fur dressing, (H) whalebone prep- aration, (I) isinglass manufacture, (K) ambergris manufacture, (L) fish guano manufacture, (M) oil rendering, etc. VII. Economy of the fisheries. — Here were to be studied: (A) financial organization and methods, (B) insurance, (C) labor and capital, (D) markets and market prices, (E) lines of traffic, (F) exports, imports, and duties. The fishery industry is of such great importance, and is undergoing snch constant changes that a visit of a few days or weeks to any locality, even by the most competent experts, has invariably proved unsatisfactory. We were able, therefore to collect only the most important facts, selected with special reference to the needs of the report in contemplation, leaving many subjects of interest uudiscussed. The field-work, and the correspondence in connection with it, was carried on by the following- named special agents, and approximately between the dates below mentioned: I. — Coast of Maine, east of Portland. Mr. It. Edward Earll and Captaiu J. W. Collins, August 1 to October 31, 1879; July 29 to October 20, 1880; January 1, 1881, to January 1, 1883. II. — Portland to Plymouth (except Cape Ann) and eastern side of Buzzard's Bay. W. A. Wilcox, September 2, 1879, to March 1, 1881. III. — Cape Ann. A. Howard Clark, September 1, 1879, to November 1, 1880; July, August, and September, 1883. IV.— Cape Cod. Frederick W. True, July 1 to October 1, 1879; September 1 to October 31, 1880; Vinal N. Edwards, October 1, 1880, to July 31, 1882. V. — Provincetown. Captaiu N. E. Atwood, August 1, 1879, to August 1, 1880. VI. — Ehode Island and Connecticut, west to the Connecticut Kiver. Ludwig Kumlien, August 10 to October 1C, 1880. VII. — Long Island and north shore of Long Island Sound, and west to Sandy Hook. Frederick Mather, August 1, 1879, to July 1, 1881. VIII.— New York City. Barnet Phillips, January 1, 1880, to July 1, 1881. IX.— Coast of New Jersey. R. Edward Earll, December, 1880. X.— Philadelphia. C. W. Smiley and W. V. Cox, November, 1880. XI. — Coast of Delaware. Captain J. W. Collins, December, 1880. PREFATORY NOTB. Vl'i XII.— Baltimore and the oyster industry of Maryland. R. II. Edmonds, October 1, 1879, to October 1, 1880. XIII.— Atlantic coast of Southern States. R. Edward Earll, January 1 to July 25, 1880. XIV.— Gulf coast, Silas Stearns, August, 1870, to July, 1880. XV. — Coast of California, Oregon, and Washington. Professor D. S. Jordan and C. H. Gil- bert, January, 1880, to January, 1881. XVI. — Puget Sound. James G. Swan, January, 1880, to January, 1881. XVII.— Alaska fisheries. Dr. T. H. Bean, June to October, 1880. XVIII. — Great Lakes fishery. Ludwig Kumlien, August, 1879, to August, 1880. XIX.— Eiver fisheries of Maine. 0. G. Atkins, January 1, 1880, to July 3, 1882. XX. — The shad and alewife fisheries. Colonel Marshall MacDonald, October, 1870, to January 1, 1883. XXI.— Oyster fisheries. Ernest Ingersoll, October 1, 1879, to July 1, 1881. XXII. — Lobster aud crab fisheries. Richard Eathbun, January 1, 1880, to January 1, 1882. XXIII.— Turtle and terrapin fisheries. Frederick \V. True, October 1, 1880, to January 1, 1882. XXIV. — The seal, sea-elephant, and whale fisheries. A. Howard Claris^ November 1, 1880, to February 1, 1881. In addition to the field assistants already mentioned a staff of office assistants were employed in carrying on correspondence, searching past records, and preparing' the report for publication. Mr. C. W. Smiley, Mr. James Temple. Brown, and Mr. George S. Hobbs were connected with the work from its start, aud subsequently Mr. J. E. Eockwell, Mr. C. W. Scudder, Mr E. I Geare, Mr. G. P. Merrill, Mr. W. S. Yeates, and others were thus employed. A number of clerks were temporarily detailed for this work by the Superintendent of the Census; at one time as many as twenty. A portion of the clerical force was placed under the immediate direction of Mr. C. W. Smiley, who had in special charge the distribution of circulars and the compilation of their results, and the compilation of summary tables from the records of the Treasury Department. The expense of the field-work from July 1, 1879, to July 1, 1881, was for the most part borne by the Census, together with a large amount of compilation office-work carried on by clerks detailed from the Census Office in Washington. The expense of the preparation of the report, final tabulation of statistics of production, and preparation of illustrations has been mainly at the cost of the Fish Commission. Since February, 1881, Mr. Goode's relation to the work has been that of a volunteer, and his services in the preparation of the reports and in connection with their publication have been rendered without compensation, in addition to his regular duties as Assistant Director of the National Museum. In the same manner a large share of the most important work upon special parts of the report has been done as volunteer labor by officers of the National Museum and Fish Commission, in additiou to their regular duties. A number of employees of the Fish Commission have been detailed from time to time for special work upon this report, for periods varying from four mouths to two years. The participation of the Census Office and the Commissioner of Fish and Fisheries has involved the expenditure of probably nearly equal amounts of money, aud the division of the results, so far as they are represented in reports ready for the printer, has been arranged to the satisfaction of both. The extent of the material collected has, however, been much greater than was antici- pated, and the portion assigned to the Fish Commission being too bulky for publication in the an- nual reports, application was made to Congress for permission to print as a separate special report an illustrated work in quarto upon the Food Fishes and Fisheries of the United States. viii PREFATORY NOTE. This permission was granted in a joint resolution, worded as follows, which passed the Senate July 16, 1882: Resolved by the Senate (the House of Representatives concurring), That the Public Printer be, and is hereby, instructed to print, in quarto form, a report by the U. S. Commissioner of Fish and Fish- eries, upon the food fishes and fisheries of the United States, the engravings to be in relief, and to be contracted for by the Public Printer, under the direction of the Joint Committee on Printing, and to receive the approval of the Commissioner before being accepted ; the work to be stereotyped, and 10,000 extra copies printed, of which 2,500 shall be for the use of the Senate, 5,000 for the use of the House, and 1,500 for the use of the Commissioner of Fish and Fisheries. There shall also be printed 1,000 extra copies for sale by the Public Printer, under such regulations as the Joint Committee on Printing may prescribe, at a price equal to the additional cost of publication and 10 per cent, thereon added. The manuscript for the entire report is for the most part ready for the printer, and several hundred drawings for the illustrations are finished. Part I was placed in the hands of the printer in August 1882, and would have been published more than a year ago but for the absence of Mr. Goode in England. The contents of these reports, it is proposed, shall be approximately as fol- lows, though it is probable that other topics may be added to the discussion before the work is completed : THE FOOD FISHES AND FISHERY INDUSTRIES OF THE UNITED STATES. PART I. — The Natural History of Useful Aquatic Animals. PAKT II. — The Fishing-Grounds. PART III. — The Fishing-Towns, containing a geographical review of the Coast, River, and Lake Fisheries. PART IV. — The Fishermen. PART V. — The Apparatus of the Fisheries and the Fishing-Vessels and Boats. PART VI. — The Fishery Industries, a discussion of methods and history. PART VII. — The Preparation of Fishery Products. PART VIII. — Fish Culture and Fishery Legislation. PART IX. — Statistics of Production, Exportation, and Importation. Summary Tables. PART X. — The Whale Fishery ; a special monograph. PART XI.— A Catalogue of the Useful and Injurious Aquatic Animals and Plants of North America. PART XII.— A list of Books and Papers relating to the Fisheries of the. United States. PART XIII. — A general Review of the Fisheries with a statistical summary. The report prepared for the Superintendent of the Census, the manuscript of which is now for the most part in his possession, is divided into the following sections : A REPORT UPON THE STATISTICS of THE FISHERIES AND FISH TRADE OF THE UNITED STATES. INTRODUCTION (giving a comprehensive abstract of the matter contained in the quarto report referred to above). PART I.— A Review of the Fisheries of the Atlantic Seaboard, with statistics of production and manufacture. PART II. — A Review of the Fisheries of the Pacific Coast, with statistics of production and manufactures. PART III.— A Review of the Fisheries of the Great Lakes, with stat. sties of production and manufactures. PART IV.— A Review of the River Fisheries of the United States. (Prepared by C. W. Smiley.) PART V.— A Review of the Consumption of Fish by Counties, with an estimate of the extent and value of the inland fisheries. (Prepared by C. W. Smiley.) PART VI.— A Review of the Fish Trade of cities of the United States having a population of more than 10,000 in 1880. (Prepared by C. W. Smiley.) PART VII. — Statistics of Importation and Exportation of Fishery Products from 1730 to 1880. PART VIII.— List of the Fishing- Vessels of the United States in 1880, giving tonnage, value, number of crew, name of owner, branches of fisheries engaged in, together with other important details. PART IX.— Monograph of the Seal Islands of ARiska. By Henry W. Elliott. (Already in type; 171 pages. 4to.) PART X.— Monograph of the Oyster Fisheries. By Ernest Ingersoll. (Already in type ; •_'">! pages.) The Census volume thus is arranged to include all compilations from circulars, and the results of the work performed by clerks detailed from the Census Office, together with much derived from PREFATORY NOTE. IX the archives of the Pish Commission. The first three sections are mainly made np from the material collection by the special agents in the field, and the form is as nearly as possible that in which it was originally collected; much, however, has been added from the archives of the Commission. By the plan just detailed, the statistical matter gathered by the joint efforts of the two organizations is assigned to the Census, together with a sufficient amount of descriptive and explanatory test to make the statistics fully intelligible, while the descriptive, historical, and natural history papers are taken by the Fish Commission, these being enriched by a sufficient amount of statistical detail to render them as useful as possible for the class of readers and students for whom they are intended. The statistical results of the investigation have already been published in a preliminary way. A series of special statistical tables appeared in the Bulletins of the Census Office, as follows : (1.) CENSUS BULLETIN No. 176. — [Preliminary Report upon the Pacific States and Territories] prepared by Mr. Goode from returns of Special Agents Jordan, Swan, aud Bean. Dated May 24, 1884. 4to. Pp. 6 (-(- 2). (2.) CENSUS BULLETIN No. 261. — Statistics of the Fisheries of the Great Lakes. Prepared by Mr. Frederick \V. True from notes of Special Agent Kumlien. Dated September 1, 1881. 4to. Pp. 8. (3.) CENSUS BULLETIN No. 278.— Statistics of the Fisheries of Maine. Prepared by Mr. R. E. Earll from his own notes and those of Capt. J. W. Collins and Mr. C. G. Atkins. Dated November 22, 1881. 4to. Pp. 47 (+1). (4.) CENSUS BULLETIN No. 281. — Statistics of the Fisheries of Virginia. Prepared by Colouol Marshall MacDouald. Dated December 1, 1881. 4to. Pp. 8. (5. ) CENSUS BULLETIN No. 295.— Statistics of the Fisheries of Massachusetts. Prepared by Mr. A. Howard Clark from returns of Special Agents Wilcox, Clark, True, Collins, and Atwood. Dated March 1, 1882. 4to. Pp. 35 + 1. (li.) CENSUS BULLETIN No. 291. — Statistics of the Fisheries of New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Connecticut. Pre- pared by Mr. A. Howard Clark. Dated April 5, 1882. 4to. Pp. 7 (+ 1. ) (7.) CENSUS BULLETIN No. 297.— Commercial Fisheries of the Middle States. Prepared by Mr. R. E. Earll and Colonel M. MacDouald. Dated June 5, 1882. 4to. Pp. 14. (8.) CENSUS BULLETIN No. 298. — Commercial Fisheries of the Southern Atlantic States. Prepared by Mr. R. E. Earll and Colonel M. MacDonald. Dated June 5, 1882. 4to. Pp.18. (This bulletin includes statistics of No. 4 (C. B., No. 281). In all 148 pages, quarto. In addition to these certain special tables have appeared. (10.) STATISTICAL TABLE.— Statistics of the Fisheries of the United States in 1880. [Prepared by Messrs. Goode and Earll from the reports of special agents.] Printed in Compendium of the Tenth Census, p. 88. Pp. — . Republished in Bulletin of the United States Fish .Commission, Vol. Ill, 1883, pp. 270-71, and in Preliminary Catalogue, International Fisheries Exhibition, January, p. 5. (11.) STATISTICAL TABLE.— Table showing by States the quantity of Spanish mackerel taken in 1880, and the total catch for the United States. By R. Edward Earll. Report United States Fish Commission. Part VIII, 1880, p. 410. (12.) STATISTICAL SUMMAKY.— Statistics of the Davis Strait Halibut Fisheries. By Newton P. Scudder. Report United States Fish Commission. Part VIII, pp. 190-192. (13.) STATISTICAL SUMMARY.— Statistics of the Swordfish Fishery. By G. Brown Goode. Report United States Fish Commissioners. Part VIII, pp. 361-367. (14.) STATISTICAL SUMMARIES.— Statistics of the Mackerel Fishery in 1880. By R. Edward Earll. Report United States Fish Commission. Part IX, pp. [124]-[127.] [Statistics of the Mackerel Canning Industry.] By R. Edward Earll. Ibid, p. [131.] Statistics of the Inspection of Mackerel from 1804 to 1880. By A. Howard Clark. Ibid, pp. [162]-[213.] Vessels in the Macki-rt-l Fishery in 1880. Ibid, p. 418. Catch of Mackerel by Americans in Canadian waters. 1873-'81. Ibid, p. [430.] (15.) INTRODUCTION to Section B., U. S. Catalogue International Fisheries Exhibition, London. (Collection of Eco- nomic Crustaceans, Worms, Echinoderms, and Sponges.) By Rjohard Rathbun. Pp. [3]-[20.] Crabs, p. [3]: Lobsters, p. [6]: Crayfish, p. [HI]: Shrimp and Prawns, p. [11]: Sponges, p. [18], etc. X PREFATORY NOTE. (16.) INTRODUCTION to Section D., U. S. Catalogue lut. Fisheries Exhibition. (Catalogue of the Economic Mollusca and the apparatus and appliances used in their capture and preparation for market, exhibited by the U. S. National Museum.) By Lieut. Francis Wiuslow, U. S. N., pp. [3] to [53]. Aggregate table of production, p. [3]; Special tables and statistical statements throughout. (17.) INTRODUCTION to Section E., U. S. Catalogue Int. Fisheries Exhibition. (The Whale Fishery and its Appliances. ) By James Temple Brown, pp. [3]-[25.] (18.) Statistics of the Whale Fishery. By A. Howard Clark, in the preceding, pp. [26]-[29.] (19.) A Review of the Fishery Industries of the United States, etc. By G. Brown Goode. An address at a conference of the International Fisheries Exhibition, June 25, 1883. 8vo., pp. 84. Numerous statistical statements, summaries, and tables. (20.) ADMINISTRATIVE REPORT. — Method and results of an effort to collect statistics of the fish trade, and consump- tion of fish throughout the United States. By Chas. W. Smiley. Bulletin U. S. Fish Commission, -vol. ii, 1882, pp. 247-52. Two special reports have also beeu published, as follows : (21.) A Monograph of the Seal Islands of Alaska. By Henry W. Elliott. 4to., illustrated. Pp.172. An edition of thi» report with substitutions on pp. 102-9 was also issued as a Special Bulletin of the Fish Commission, No. 176. (22.) The Oyster Industry. By Ernest Ingersoll. 4to., illustrated. Pp. 2f)2. The general results of the investigation, from the statistician's stand-point, may be briefly summarized as follows : In 1880 the number of persons employed in the fishery industries of the United States was 131,426, of whom 101,684 were fishermen, and the remainder shoresmen. The fishing fleet con- sisted of 6,605 vessels (with a, tonnage of 208,297.82) and 44,804 boats, and the total amount of capital invested was $37,955,349, distributed as follows : Vessels, $9,357,282 ; boats, $2,465,393 ; minor apparatus and outfits, $8,145,261; other capital, including shore property, $17,987,413. The value of the fisheries of the sea, the great rivers, and the Great Lakes, was placed at $43,046,053, and that of those in minor inland waters at $1,500,000— iu all $44,546,053. These values were estiinatcdnpon the basis of the prices of the products received by the producers, and if average wholesale prices had been considered, the value would have been much greater. In 1882 the yield of the fisheries was much greater than in 1880. and prices both " at first hand " and at wholesale were higher, so that a fair estimate at wholesale market rates would place their value at the present time rather above than below the sum of $100,000,000. The fisheries of the New England States are the most important. They engage 37,043 men 2,066 vessels, 14,787 boats, and yield products to the value of $14,270,393. In this district the principal fishing ports in order of importance are: Gloucester, New Bedford, the center of the whale fishery, Eastport, Boston, Proviucetown, and Portland. Next to New England iu importance are the South Atlantic States, employing 52,418 men, 3,014 vessels (the majority of which are small, and engaged in the shore and bay fisheries), 13,331 boats and returning products to the value of $9,602,737. Next are the Middle States, employing in the coast fisheries 14,981 men, 1,210 vessels, 8,293 boats, with products to the amount of $8,676,579. Next are the Pacific States and Territories with 16,803 men, 56 vessels, 5,547 boats, and products to tho amount of $7,484,750. The fisheries of the Great Lakes employ 5,050 men, 62 vessels, and 1,594 boats, with pioducts to the amount of $1,784,050. The Gulf States employ 5,131 men, 197 vessels, and 1,252 boats, yielding products to the value of $545,584. SPENCER F. BAIRD, Commissioner of Fisheries. WASHINGTON, May 30, 1884. LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL. UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM, Washington, July IS, 1882. SIR : I have the honor to transmit herewith, for approval and for publication, Section I of a general work upon THE FISHKRIES AND FISHERY INDUSTRIES OF THE UNITED STATES, consisting of an illustrated history of the useful aquatic animals of the United States. This work is intended especially for the use of the reading public, and technical zoological discussions and descriptions have therefore been intentionally avoided. I desire, in this place, to express my high appreciation of the manner in which the gentlemen associated with me in the preparation of this work have performed the tasks which they had undertaken, their work having been in large degree voluntary and unremuuerated. I have the honor to be, very respectfully, your obedient servant, G. BROWN GOODE. Professor SPENCER F. BAIRD, United States Commissioner of Fish and Fisheries. TABLE OF CONTENTS. PART I.— MAMMALS. Pftge. A.— THE WHALES AND PORPOISES. BY G. BROWN GOODE. 1. The Sperm Whale 7 2. The Blackfishes or Pilot Whales 11 3. The Grampuses or Cowfishes 13 4. The Harbor Porpoises or Herring Hogs 14 5. The Dolphins 16 6. The Killer Whales or Orcas 17 7. The Sperm Whale Porpoise 18 8. The White Whale or Beluga 18 i). The Narwhal 19 10. The Greenland, Bowhead, or Polar Whale 20 11. The Right Whales 24 12. The Humpback Whales 26 13. The Sulphur Bottom Whales 27 14. The Finback Whales 28 15. The Scrag Whales 30 16. The California Gray Whales 31 B.— THE SEALS AND WALRUSES. BY JOEL A. ALLEN. 17. The Seal tribe in general 33 18. The Walruses 34 19. The Sea Lions and Fur Seals in general 37 20. The Sea Lion 38 21. The California Sea Lion 44 22. TheFur,Seal 49 23. The Harbor Seal 55 24. The Harp Seal 62 25. The Ringed Seal 65 26. The Ribbon Seal 67 27. The West Indian Seal 67 28. The Hooded Seal 68 29. The California Sea Elephant 72 C.— THE HABITS OF THE FUR-SEAL. BY HENRY W. ELLIOTT. 30. A life history of the Fur-Seal 75 D.— THE MANATEES AND THE ARCTIC SEA-COW. BY FREDERICK W. TRUE. 31. The Manatees 114 '•\'i. The Arctic Sea-Cow 128 xiii TABLE OF CONTENTS. PART II— REPTILES AND BATRACHIANS. BY FREDERICK W. TRUE. B.— THE ALLIGATOR AND THE CROCODILE: 33. The Alligator and the Crocodile 141 F.— TORTOISES, TURTLES, AND TERRAPINS: 34. The Marine Turtles in general 147 35. The Loggerhead Turtle 147 36. The Hawk's-bill Turtles 149 37. The Green Turtles 150 38. The Soft- shelled tortoises 152 39. The Snapping Turtles 153 40. The Musk Tortoises ., 154 41. The Fresh-water Terrapins 155 42. The Diamond-hack or Salt-water Terrapin 156 43. The Pond Tortoises 157 '44. The Box Tortoises 158 G.— THE AMPHIBIANS: 45. The Bull-frog . . . - 159 PART III.— FISHES. BY G. BROWN GOODE. WITH DISCUSSIONS OF THE PACIFIC SPECIES BY DAVID 8. JORDAN AND TARLETON H. BEAN, NOTES ON THE FISHES OF THE GULF OF MEXICO BY SILAS STEARNS, AND CONTRIBUTIONS FROM JOSEPH W. COLLINS, N. E. ATWOOD, MARSHALL MACDONALD, R. EDWARD EAHLL, LUDWIG KU.MLIEN, AND OTHER AUTHORITIES. H.— THE FILE FISHFS, PIPE FISHES, AND ANGLERS: 46. The Ocean Sun Fishes (OrtTiagoriscidos) 169 47. The Porcupine Fishes (Diodontidce) 170 48. The Bellows-Fish Family (Tetrodontida;) 170 49. The Trunk Fishes (Oslraciontida) . 170 50. The File-Fish Family (Baliatidw) 171 51. The Sea-Horse Family (Hippocampidae) 172 52. The Pipe- Fish Family (Syngnathidai~) 172 53. The Devil Fishes (Antennariidoc and Maltheidte) - 173 54. The Goose Fish (Lophius piscatorius) 173 I.— THE FLAT FISHES AND FLOUNDERS: 55. Tho American Soles (Soleida) 175 56. The Plaice (Paraliclithtjs dcntatus') 178 57. The Bastard Halibut (Paraliclitliys maculosus) 182 58. Tho Flat Fish or Winter Flounder ( Pseudopleuronectea americanua) 182 59. The Flat Fishes and Soles of the Pacific Coast 184 00. Tho Halibut (Hippoglossiu vu.li/aris) 189 (il. The Sand Dab or Rough Dab ( Hippoglossoides plalessoides) 197 (i'2. The Greenland Tnrliot (['latysomalicltt/iys hippoglossoides) 197 63. Tho Pole Flounder or Craig Flounder (Glyplocephalus cynoglossus) 198 64. Tho Spotted Sand Flounder (Lophopsetta maculata) 199 TABLE OF CONTENTS. XV Page. J.— THE COD FAMILY AND ITS KINDRED: 65. The Cod (Gadua morrJiuo) 200 66. The Tom Cods (Microgadus tomcod and M. proiimus) 223 67. The Haddock (Melanogrammiis a-glefinus) 223 68. The Pollock (PoUachiimcarbonariiis) 228 69. The Cask (Brosmius brosme) 233 70. The Hakes (I'iitjcis cluiis, etc.) 234 71. The Burbot (Lota maculosa). By TARLETON H. BEAN 235 72. The Silver Hake aud tbe Merlucclo 240 73. Several Families related to the Gadidaj 243 74. The Lant, or Saud Eel ( Ammodytes lauccolatus) 244 K._ WOLF-FISHES, SCULPINS, AND WRASSES: 75. The Lycodes Family (Lijcndidte) 247 76. The Wolf-Fishes or Sea Catfishes (Anarrhichadida) 248 77. TheBlenny Family (Blenniidv) 250 - 78. The Toad-Fish (Batraclnu tail) 251 79. The Lump-Suckers : Lump-tish and Sea-Snails 253 80. The Gobies (Goblidce) 255 81. The Sea-Robin or Gurnard Family ( Triglida) 255 82. The Sculpin Tribe (Cottidae) 258 83. The Rose- Fish or Red Perch (Sebastes marinus) 260 84. The Rock Cods of the Pacific. By DAVID S. JORDAN .• 262 85. TkeRockTrouts(CViirirodes). By DAVID S. JORDAN 417 141. The Pike Perches 417 142. The Striped Bass (Coccus Uneatus) 425 143. The White Bass (Boccus clirysops) 423 144. The Yellow Bass (Eoccus interruptm) 431 145. The White Perch (Roecus americamts) 43 L 146. The Bluefish Family (Pomatomidcs) 433 147. The Cobia or Crab-Eater (Elacate Canada) 444 148. The Triple Tail or Black Perch (Lobotes surinanensis) 444 149. The Moon Fish (Chcetodipterus faber) 445 150. The Remora Family (JSeheiieidia) 446 P.— BARRACOUTA, MULLET, PIKE, AND MUMMICHOGS: 151. The Barracouta Family (Spliyrcenida) 448 152. The Deal-Fish Family (Tnichypteridai) 449 153. The Mullets (Mugil albuta and M. brasilie.nsis) 449 154. The Sand Smelts or Silver Sides (Atherinida-) 456 155. The Stickleback Family (Gastirosteidce) 457 156. The Silver Gar-fishes (IMonldce.) 458 157. The Hying-fish Family (Scomberesocida) 459 158. The Pike Family (Esocidce) 461 159. The Mummichog Family (Cyprixodonlidfe) 466 TABLE OF CONTENTS. XVli • Q.— THE SALMON TRIBE: 160. The Salmon (Salmo salar) 468 161. The Salmons of the Pacific. By DAVIDS. JORDAN 474 162. The Quinnat or California Salmon (Oncorltynchus cnouicha). By LIVINGSTON STONE 479 163. The Namaycush or Lake Trout (Sah'elinus namaycush) 485 164. The Speckled Trout (Salrelimit fontinalls) 497 165. The Saibliug or Bavarian Char (Salvelinua aJpinus) 500 166. The Dolly Vnrden Trout (Salrelinus malma). (By DAVID S. JOKDAN 504 167. The Grayling ( Thi/mallus tricolor) 505 168. The Lake White-fish (Corrgonus clupeiformis"). By R. I. GEARE 507 109. The Lesser White-fishes. By DAVID S. JORDAN 541 170. The Smelt Group 543 171. Families related to the Salinonichu 547 R.— THE HERRINGS AND THE MENHADENS: 172. The Herring ( Clupea liarentjus) 549 173. The Herrings of the Pacific Coast. By DAVID S. JORDAN 568 174. The Menhaden (Jireroortia tyrannus) 569 175. The Gulf Menhaden (Breroortia patronut) 575 S,— THE SHAD AND THE ALEWIVES. BY MARSHALL MACDONALD. 176. The River Herrings or Alewives ( Clupea ccstiralis C. and vernalis) 570 177. On the occurrence of the Branch Alewifo in certain Lakes of New York. By TARLETON H. BEAN.. 588 178. The Inland Alewifo or Skipjack ( Clupea chi-ysochloris) 594 179. The Shad ( Clupea sapidisxima) 594 180. The Hickory Shad or Matto wacca ( Clupea mediocris) 607 T.— FAMILIES RELATED TO THE CLUPEIDJE : 181. The Mud Shad ( Dorosoma cepedianum) 610 182. The Tarpum (Alegalops thrissoiden) 610 183. The Big- eyed Herring 611 184. The Anchovies (Engraulidce) 611 185. The Lady-fish Family (Albulida;) 612 186. The Moon-eye Family (Hyodontidce) 612 U.— CARP, SUCKERS, CATFISH, AND EELS: 187. The Sucker Family (Catontomida;). By DAVID S. JORDAN 614 188. The Carp Family (Cyprlmdce). By DAVID S. JORDAN 616 189. The Carp (Cyprinus carpio). By RUDOLPH HESSML 618 189. The Catfish Family (Siluridw). By DAVID S. JORDAN 627 190. The Morays (Murcenidce) 629 191. The Eel (Anguilla Bulgaria) 630 192. The Conger Eel (Leptocephalus conger) 656 V.— STURGEONS, SKATES, SHARKS, AND LAMPREYS: 193. The Bowfins (Amiidai} 659 194. The Paddle-fishes (Polyodontlda:) 660 195. The Sturgeons (Acipenseridtx) 660 196. The Chimsera Family (Cliimwrida;) 663 197. The Gar Pikes (Lepidonttidw} 663 198. The Torpedoes and Skates (Eaiae) 665 199. The Saw-fish (Pristis peclinatus) 668 200. The Sharks (Squall) 668 201. The Sharks of the Pacific Coast. By DAVID S. JORDAN 675 202. The Lampreys (Petromyzontidce) 677 203. The Hag Fishes (Myrinidte) 681 204. The Lancelots (Branchioatomidce) 682 Xviii TABLE OF CONTENTS. • PART IV.— MOLLUSKS. Page. W.— MOLLUSKS IN GENERAL. BY ERNEST INGERSOLL. 205. The Cuttles: Cephalopoda 687 206. The Sea-suails : Gasteropoda 693 207. The Wing-shells: Pteropoda 702 208. The Tusk-shells: Solenoconcha 703 209. The Bivalves: Lamellibranchiata 703 X.— THE LIFE HISTOEY OF THE OYSTEK. BY JOHN A. RYDER. 210. Outline Sketch of the Coarser Anatomy of the Oyster 711 211. The Minute Anatomy of the Oyster 715 212. Sex of the American and European Oysters 719 213. New Methods of Distinguishing the Sexes and of Taking the Eggs of the Oyster 722 214. Eate of Growth of Ostrea virgiuica: 215. The Food of the Oysters 729 216. The Cause of the Green Color of Oysters 735 217. Local Variations in the Form and Habits of the Oyster 742 218. The Oyster Crab as a Mess-mate and Purveyor 744 219. Physical and Vital Agencies Destructive to Oysters 746 220. Katural and Artificial Oyster Bank's 750 PART V.— CRUSTACEANS, WORMS, RADIATES, AND SPONGES. BY RICHARD RATHBUN. Y.— CRUSTACEANS : 221. The Crabs 763 222. The Common Edible or Blue Crab 775 223. The Lobsters 780 224. The American Lobster 781 225. The Cray Fishes, Astacns and Cambarus 812 22C. The Shrimps and Prawns , 816 227. The Mantis Shrimps: Squillidaj 823 228. The Amphipods 824 229. Thelsopods 826 230. The Entomostracans 827 231. The Cirripedia 828 232. TheXiphosura 829 Z.— WORMS: 233. The Annelids 831 234. Tho Leeches 833 ZA.— THE RADIATES: 235. Tho Echhioderms 838 236. The Coelentcrates 841 ZB.— THE PORIFERS: 237. The Sponges 843 233. Tho Genus Spongia, and the American Commercial Sponges 846 239. Injurious Sponges 850 LIST OF PLATES. (Engraved by the Photo-Engraving Company of New York City.) [The plates are bound together in the accompanying volume. The figures at the right refer to the pages of the text upon which the species illustrated are described.) Page. 1. The Sperm Whale, Phi/ncter mairoceplialns L — Outline from Scamiuon's Marine Mammals of the Northwest Coast, plate xiv. 2. The Pygmy Spei -111 Whale, Eoyia Goodei True 11 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 13738, TJ. S. National Museum. Stranded at S| rin^ Lake, New Jersey, April 27, 1883. The Blackfish, Gtoliinceiilialus mi-Inn (Traill) 11 From Transact inns of the Zoological Society of London, vol. 8, plate 30. 3. The capture of a school of Blacklish in Cape Cod 12 Drawing by Henry TV. Elliott, from a sketch by John S. Ryder. 4. The Cowfish or Gram pus. fi rum pun griseus (Less.) Gray 13 Outline by Henry W. Elliott, from cast No. 12839, TJ. S. National Museum. The Harbor Porpoise, or " Herring Hog," Pliot-ccna bracli i/don Cope 14 Outline by Henry W. Elliott, from photograph by 0. S. Fish Commission. 5. The Skunk Porpoise or Bay Porpoise, Laijcnorlii/nchiis guliernator Cope. (= L. perspicilluiuii Cope) Iti Outline from plate iv, Proceedings Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia. 1876. The HiyU-linued Killer, Orca rectijiinnia Cope 17 Outline from Scammon's Marine Mammals of the Northwest Coast. The Sperm Whale Porpoise, Hyperaoflon bidens Owen 18 Sketch by James Henry Blake, 1809, from specimen stranded at North Deunis. 6. The White Wbale, or Beluga, Delphinapterus caloilmi (L.) Gill 18 Outliue by Henry W. Elliott, from cast No. 12490, U. S. National Museum, obtained near Quebec, 1875. The Narwhal, Monodon moiioceros L 19 Sketch by Henry W. Elliott, adapted from Vogt and Specht's " Sangethiere," p. 230. 7. The Bowhead or Arctic Whale, Balcena mysticetus L 20 Outline from Scammon's Marine Mammals, plate xi. The Right Whale of the Pacitic, Balcena japonk-a Gray. (Eubalcena citllamacli) 24 Outline from Scammou's Marine Mammals, plate xiL 8. Diagrams illustrating the use of the whalebone plates in the mouth of the Bow head Whale 22 From sketches by Captain David Grey in Land and Water, December 1, 1877. (Upper.) The Bowhead with its month open. (Lower.) The Buwhead with its mouth shut. 9. The Humpback of the Pacific, Megapti-ra rersabilin C6pe 26 Outline from Scammon's Marine Mammals, plate vii. The Sulphur Bottom of the Pacific, SibbaliHn.t s«//«re«sCope. 27 Outline from Scamiuon's Marine Mammals, plate xiii. 10. Cutting in a Humpback Whale at Provincetowu, Massachusetts 28 From a sketch by John S. Kyilrr. 11. The Finback of the Pad lie, Haliriioptera relifera Gope 28 Outline from Scammou's Marine Mammals, plate ii. The California Gray Whale or Uevil-iisb, Ithai-liiaiifctea ylaucus Cope 31 Outline from Searamon's Marine Mammals, plate ii. 12. The Pacific Walrus, OiMiainus obcxux (Illiger) Allen 34 Sketch by Henry W. Elliott, Walrus Island, Alaska, July 5, 1872. 13. Steller's Sea Lion, Eumetopias Stelltrl (Less.) Peters 38 Sketch from life by Henry W. Elliott. 14. The California Sea Lion, Zalopltus callfornianus (Less.) Allen 44 Sketch from life by Henry W. Elliott. 15. The Harbor Seal, Phoca riluliaa L 66 Sketch from life by Henry W. Elliott, Alaska, 1872. xix XX LIST OF PLATES. Page. 16. The Harp Seal, Plioca grceiilaiidicn Fabricius 62 Sketch by Henry W. Elliott, from specimens iu Ihe TJ. S. National Museum, Nos. 13741. 13748, 13938, and 13939 obtained on the north shore of the Gnlf of Saint Lawrence by Dr. C. Hart Merriam. 17. The Ringed Seal, Phoca fatida Fnbricius 65 Sketch by Henry \V. Elliott, adapted from figure in Allen's North American Pinnipeds, p. 601. 18. The Ribbon Seal (Male and Female) Hixtriopliocu J'anciata (Ziimnermann) Gill 67 Drawing by Heury W. Elliott, from specimens in U. S. National Museum, No. 13284, obtained at Plover Bay. East Siberia, August 12. 1880. by \V. H. Ball, and No. 13285, obtained from Bering Sea. 1880, by Captain H. E. Williams. 19. The West ludiau Seal, Monachus tropical is Gray 68 Drawing by Henry W. Elliott, from specimen in U. S. National Museum. No, 13950, obtained by Professor Felippe Poey at Matanzas, Cuba, 20 The Hooded Seal (adult ami young) Cystophora crixtatu ( Erxl. ) Nilss 68 Sketch by Henry W. Elliott, from specimens in U. S. National Museum, Nos.13742 and 13753, collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam, off Labrador, 1883. 21. The Gray Seal, Halicliccnin ury/ius (Fabricius) Nilss 70 Sketch by Henry W. Elliott, from specimen in U. S. National Museum, No. 5851, collected at Sable Island, Nova Scotia, 1862. 22. The Square Flipper Seal, Erignatlius barbatus (Fabricius) Gill 70 Sketch by Henry W. Elliott, from specimen in TJ. S. National Museum, No. 13755, collected by Dr. C. Hart Merriam, off Battle Harbor, Gnlf of Saint Lawrence, 1883. 23. The Sea Elephant, Alacrorhinus anguatirostris Gill 72 Drawing by Henry W. Elliott, from specimen in U. S. National Museum, from Santa Barbara Island, California. 24. Map of the world on Mercator's Projection, showing the geographical distribution of the Species of the Hair Seal Family. Prepared by J. A. Alien 33 25. Map of the world on Mercator's Projection, showing the geographical distribution of the Walruses, Fur Seals, Sea Lions, and Sea Elephants, prepared for the illustration of the chapter by J. A. Allen. Prepared by J. A. Allen 33 26. The countenance of Callorhinus 75 A life study of an adult male fur-seal. (Full face of old male, profile and under view of female beads.) Drawing by Henry W. Elliott, North Eookery, Pribylov Group, July 5, 1873. 27. The Fur-Seal, Callorhinus urainits 88 A series of life studies by Henry W. Elliott, Pribylov Islands, 1872-1876. A.— Old "Seecatch" or male, eight to twenty-four years. B. — Young "Seecatch," six to eight years. C. — "Holluschicku1," or young males, two years. D. — " Matkah " or mother nursing her " Pup," I. E. — "Cow" fanniug herself. F. — "Cow" sleeping. G. — "Cow" napping and fanning herself. H. — "Cow " crooning to the male. J. — Characteristic position of old males. 28. Sundry Seal Sketches on the Pribylov Islands 96 From the portfolio of Henry W. Elliott, 1872-1876. 29. Hauling and Breeding Grounds of the Fur-Seal 99 Sketched from nature on the North Rookery, Saint George's Island. Pribylov Group, by Henry W. Elliott, July, 1874. 30. The north shore of Saint Paul's Island, Pribylov Group 99 Sketched from the summit of Hutehinson's Hill, by Henry W. Elliott, looking over a wing of the great Norastoshoah Eookery, July, 1872. 31. Pelagic attitudes of the Fur-Seal 101 Sketched from life bv Henry W. Elliott, Saint Paul's Island, 1872. Village of Saint Paul in distance. Black bluffs to the right on middle ground. 1. Position while sleeping. 2. Position when rising to breathe, survey, etc. 3. Position when scratching. 4. " Dolphin jumps." 32. Fur-Seals Sporting around the " bidarrah" 102 Sketched from life by Henry W. Elliott in Zoltoi, Saint Paul's Island, 1872. A view of the Reef Point and Gorbatcb Rookery on the horizon. 3:!. The Manatee, Trichechus maiiatua L 114 Sketch by Henry W. Elliott, from plate in Transactions, Zoological Society of London. 34. Manatees swimming 114 Sketch by Henry "W. Elliott, from plate in Transactions, Zoological Society of London. -35. The Sunfish, Hold rotunda Olivier 170 From wash-drawing by H. L. Todd, from a cast. .36. The Swell-fish or Burr-fish, Chilomycterua geometricus (Schneider) Kanp 170 Drawing by H. L. Todd. from No. 14825, U. S. National Museum, collected at Noank, Connecticut, 1874, by U. S. Fish Commission. LIST OF PLATES. XXI Page— The Rabbit-fish, Layuctiiluiliix lai'i./atus (L.) Gill 170 Drawing by H. L. Todd from No. 20757, U. S. National Museum, collected at Newport, Rhode Island, by Hon. Samuel Powel. 37. The Trunk- lisli or Cow-lish, (Jslraclon quiutricorniti L 170 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21548, U. S. National Museum, collected at Charleston, South Carolina, Jnly, 1878, by C. 0. Leslie. 36. The Tri^er-lish, JtiiUxtrn fapriscuii Gmrliii .' 172 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 15233, U. S. National Museum, collected at New York by Mr. Sutherland. 39. The Sea Horse, Hippocampus heptagomis Raf 172 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 3451, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Old Point Comfort, Virginia, by Commodore Farragut, U. S. N. 40. The Goose tish or Bellows-lish, Lojihius ]>i8catoritix L - 174 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from sprriinen collected in Vineyaid Sound, Massachusetts, by the U. S. Fish Commission. 41. The America i) Sole or " Iliif; Choker," Arliirus linen I us (L ) G'uv 176 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 12985, UJ. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, Jnly 14, 1871, by Viuai N. Edwards. (Upper.) Showing upper side of fish. (Lower.) Showing under side of fish. 42. The American Plaice or Tin-hot Flounder, ParaliohtJiya dm tat us (L.) J. & G 178 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21279, tT. S. National Museum, collected at Arlington, Saint John's River. Florida, 1878, by G. Brown Goode. 43. The Four-shotted Hounder, ParalicJithys obtonr/iis (Mitch.) J. & G 181 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 11)730, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Doll, Massachusetts, by Professor S. F. Eaird. 44. The Flatfish or Winter Flounder, Pseudoplenronectes americanas (Walli. ) Gill 182 Drawing by H. L. Todd. 45. The Smooth Flounder, Pleuronectes glabcr (Storer) Gill 183 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 5368, U. S. National Museum, collected at Salem, Massachusetts, by C. Putnam. 46. The Starry Flounder, Pli-urnxevlfs strlhitus Pallas 184 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 24164, U. S. National Museum, collected at San Francisco, California, January 1880, by Professor D. S. Jordan. 47. The Arctic Flounder, Plenronecli'S i/lnrialis Pallas 184 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27947, U. S. National Museum, collected at Kotzebue Sound, September 2, 1880, by Dall and Eean. 48. The Roufjh Liruanda, Limanda asprra (Pallas) Bean 184 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27944, U. S. National Museum, collected at Sitka, Alaska, 1880, by Dr. T. H. Bean. 49. The Rusty Dab, Limanda I't-rnii/inea (Storer) Goode & Bean 184 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21020, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Halifax, Nova Scotia, September 4, 1877, by U. S. Fish Commission. 50. The California "Sole," Lepidopselta bilineala (Ay res) Gill 185 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 27602, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Saint Paul's, Kodiak Island, Alaska, 1880, by Dr. T. H. Bean. 51. The San Francisco " Sole, " Psettickthys mi'la mint ictus Gira.nl 186 Draw-ins by II. L. Todd, from No. 24167, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at San Francisco, California. January, 1880, by Professor D. S. Jordan. 52. The Alaska Sand Dab, Sippoglonsn'ulea elaanoilon J. & G 188 Drawing by H. L. Todd. from No. 27938, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Hurnboldt Harbor, Shumagins, Alaska, July 10, 1SSO. by Dr. T. H. Bean. 53. The Athen-stes Flounder. AtJieresthes stomiaH J. & G 188 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27180, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Point Reyes, California, 1880, by Jordan and (Jil'H 1 1. 54. The Halibut, Hifpogloisna vulgaris Fleming • ' 190 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10439, U. S. National Museum, collected at Eastport, Maine, 1872, by TJ. S. Fish Commis- sion. 55. The Sand Dab, Hippogloasoidee platessoides (Fab.) Gill 197 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21002, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Le Have Bank, August 21, 1877, by TJ. S. l-'isli Commission. 56. The Greenland Turbot, Plalysomatichthys hi/t/mt/losxoides (Walb.) Goodo & Bean 198 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from a specimen obtained in Fulton Market, New York. 57. The Pole Flounder, (Hi/^l/jriplialnx (•//«»(; /UX.SH.I (L.) (Jill 198 Drawing by U. L. Todd. 58. The Codtish, (!,iitnx mnrrlina L 200 Drawing by II. L. Twld, from No. 10444, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Eastport, Maine, 1872, by TJ. S. Fish Com- mission. The Atlantic Tom Cod, Microgadus lomcod (Walb.) Gill 223 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 17733, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, December 23. 1875. by Vmal N. Edwards. XX11 LIST OF PLATES. Page. 59. The Haddock, Helanogrammui aiglcftuus L. Gill 223 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10440, U. S. National Museum, collected at Eaatport, Maine, 1872, by U. S. Fish Com- mission. The Saida Cod, Boreoyadus saida (Lepechin) Bean 0 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21746, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Annanactook Harbor, Cumberland Gulf, • October 19, 1877, by Ludwig Kumlien. 60. The Pollock, Polladiius carbonarius (L.) Gill 228 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10443, U. S. National Museum, collected at Eastport, Maine, 1872, by Professor S. F. Baird. The Alaska Pollock, PoUacliius clialcogrammits (Pallas) 232 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27637, U. S. National Museum, collected at Pirate Cove, Shumagin Islands, Alaska, 1880, by William H. DalL 61. The disk, Brosmius broxme (Miiller) White 233 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 29967, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Boston Market, January 11, 1882, by W. A. Wilcox. The Burbot or "Fresh water Cusk," Lota maculom (LeSueur) C. and O 235 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10553, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Ecorse, Michigan, by J. "W. Milner. 62. The Common Hake, Phyeia chuss (Walb.) Gill 234 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 28707, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Martha's Vineyard, July 16, 1881, by U. S. Fish Commission. The Squirrel or While Hake, Phycis tennis (Mitchill) De Kay -. 234 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21029, U. S. National Museum, collected in Halifax Harbor, November 30, 1877, by U. S. Fish Commission. 63. The King Hake, Phyr.is regius (Walb.) Gill 234 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 20923, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at New York Aquarium, 1878, by E. G. Black- ford. Earl's Hake, Phycis Eurllii Beau 234 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 25207, U. S. National Museum, collected at Charleston, South Carolina, March 25, 1880, by E. E. Earll. 64. Chester's Hake, Phycis Chesterl Goode & Bean 334 Drawn by H. L. Todd from The Blue Hake, Haloporphyrus viola Goode & Bean 0 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21837, U. S. National Museum, collected on Le Have Bank, August 26, 1878, by Captain J. W, Collins, schooner Marion. 65. The Merluccio, Merlitcius producing ( Ayres) Gill 243 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 26638, U. S. National Museum, collected at Seattle, Washington Territory, 1880, by Colonel F. W. Prosser. The Silver Hake or New England Whiting, MerluciusMlinearis (Mitch.) Gill 240 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21016, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Halifax, Nova Scotia, September 8, 1877, by the U. S. Fish Commission. 66. The Sand Cusk, Ophidium maryinatunt De Kay 243 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10762, U. S. National Museum, collected at Tornpkinsville, New York, by C. L. Copley. The Ouiou-tish or Grenadier, Macrurus rupestris (Muller) Bloch 244 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 15608, U. S. National Museum, coUectedat Saint George's Bank, October 27, 1875. Pre- sented by E. G. Blackford. The Larit or Sand Eel, Ammodytcs americanus De Kay 244 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 165(10, U. S. National Museum, collected at Nantucket, Massachusetts, August 12, by TJ. S. Fish Commission. 67. The Muttou-nttU, Zoarcts anyuillarls (Peck) Storer 247 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10438, U. S. National Museum, collected at Eastport, Maine, 1872, by U. S. Fish Com- mission. Vahl's Lycodes, Lycoiles Vaklii Reinhardt 247 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21991, TJ. S. National Museum, collected on Le Have Bank, by Captain Z. Hawkins, schooner Gwendolen. 68. The Common Cattish or Wolf-tish, Anarrhicas lupus L 248 Drawing by XI. L. Todd, from No. 21846, U. S. National Museum, collected on George's Bank, September 27, 1878, by Cap- tain John Gourville. The Spotted Cattish, Anarrhicas minur Olafsen 249 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21C18, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at sea November, 1878, by Captain E. H. Hurl- bert, «9. The Gulf Toadlish, or "Sapo," liatrachus pardits Goode & Bean 251 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 22237, U. S. National Museum, collected at IVusacola, Florida, 1878, by Silas Stearns. " The Naked Star-gazer," Astroscopnn anojilits (C. & V. ) lire vooi't 0 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 4622, U. S. National Museum, collected at Norfolk, Virginia, 70. The Lump-fish, Cyvloitlerus lumjms L 254 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 14790, TJ. S. National Museum, collided at Eastport, Maine, 1872, by TJ. S. Fish Com- mission. LIST OF PLATES. XXlli • Page. 71. Tho Sea Robin or Wingfish, Prionotus palmipea (Mitcli.) Storer 256 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 774, U. S. National Museum, collected at Beesley's Point, New Jersey, 1858, by Pro- fessor S. F. Baird. The Striped Sea Robin, Prionotus evolans (L. ) Gill 256 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 5556, U. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, by Vinal N. Edwards. 72. The Northern or European Sculpin, Cot Ins scorpins L 258 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21989, U. S. National Museum, collected at Cumberland Gulf, September 25, 1877, by Ludwig Kumlien. The Common Sculpin, Coitus scorpiua L., subspecies gr&nlandiciis (C. & V. ) Bean 258 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10441, U. S. National Museum, collected at Eastport, Maine, 1872, by U. S. Fish Com- mission. 73. The Alaska Sculpin, Coitus polyacanthocephalus Pallas 258 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 23499, U. S. National Museum, collected at Unalashka, 1879, by William H. Dali The Southern Sculpin, Coitus octodecims/iinosnn Mitch 258 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 4552, U. S. National Museum, collected at Beesley'a Point, New Jersey, 1858, by Pro- fessor S. F. Baird. 74. The Sea Raven, Hemitriptenu americaiuts (Guielin) C. & V 258 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 23199, U. S. National Museum, collected at Halifax, Nova Scotia, September 13, 1877, by TJ. S. Fish Commission. Jordan's Cabezou, Htmiltpidotus Jordani Bean 258 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27598, U. S. National Museum, collected at Iliuliuk, Unalashka Island, 1880, by Dr. T. H. Bean. 75. The Rose-fish or Norway Haddock, Sebastcs marinas (L.) Liitken 260 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10442, U. S. National Museum, collected at Eastport, Maine, 1872, by U. S. Fish Com- mission. 76. The Black-banded Rockfish, Sibastichtliys nigrocinctiis ( Ayres) Gill 263 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 272S5, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Puget Sound, 1880, by Jordan and Gilbert. 77. The Tree-lish, Stbasticlithi/s serriceps J. & G 263 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27041, U. S. National Museum, collected at Monterey, California, 1880, by Jordan and Gilbert. 78. The Yellow-backed Rockfish, Sebastichtliys maliger J. & G 264 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27713, U. S. National Museum, collected at Sitka, Alaska, June 2, 1880, by Dr. T. H. Bean. 79. The Corsair, Sebastichtliiis rosuceus (Grd.) Lock 265 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 2C001, U. S. National Museum, collected at Santa Barbara, California. 1880 (7), by Jor- dan and Gilbert. 80. The Orange Rocktish, Srbaxticlilhiis pinniger (Gill.) Lock 265 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27488, U. S. National Museum, collected at Neeah Bay, Wyoming Territory, December, 1880, by James G. Swan. 81. The Black Rockfish, Scbastichllii/s mi/stiiius J. & G 266 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27031, U. S. National Museum, collected at Monterey, California, 1880, by Jordan and Gilbert. 82. The Spotted Black Rockfish, Sebasticlithi/s melaaaps (Grd.) J. & G 266 Drawing by n. L.Todd, from No. 27628, U. S. National Museum, collected at Sitka, Alaska, May 28, 1880, by Dr. T. H. Bean. 83. Tho " Black Cod," " Black Candle-fish," or Bushow, Anophpoma fimbria (Pallas) Gill 268 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 27745, U. S. National Museum, collected at Sitka, Alaska, December, 1880, by Com- mander L. A. Beardslee, U. S. N. Tho "Atka Mackerel" or Yellow-fish, I'lniro/irammiis monopterygiiis (Pallas) Gill 268 Drawing by H. L. Todd. from No. 27954, U. S. National Museum, collected at Iliuliuk, TJnalashka, 1880, by Dr. T. H. Bean. 84. Steller'a Rock-trout, Hexagrammns asper Steller 268 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21530, U. S. National Mnsenm, collected at Saint Michael's, Alaska, June, 1875, by L. M. Turner. The Cultns Cod, Opliiodon don gains Girard ' 207 Drawing by H. L. Todd. from No. 65727, U. S. National Museum, collected at Sitka, Alaska, June 7, 1880, by Dr. T. H. Bean. 85. The Tantog, Tautona onilln (L.) Gthr 268 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 17738, U. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl. Massachusetts, December 13, 1875, by Vinal N. Edwards. 86. The Chogset or Gunner, Ctenolabrus adsi>ersns (Walb.) Goode 274 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 17741, U. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, December 11. 1875, by Vinal N. Edwards. 87. The Fat-head or Redfish, 1'imttlomctopon pulohcr ( Ayres) Gill. = Trochoco/iun pu/cher 275 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 24890, U. S. National Museum, collected at San Diego, California, January, 1880, by Jordan and Gilbert. XXIV LJST OF PLATES. Page. 88. The Hogfish or Capitaine, Laclinolamus falcatns (L.) C. & V 275 Drawing by H. L. Todd. 89. The Alfioue, Rliacocliilns toiotes Agassiz 277 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27015, U. S. National Museum, collected at Monterey, California, 1880, by Jordan and Gilbert. 90. The Spanish Ponipano, Gerrcs olistliosioma Goode & Bean Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 25118, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Indian River, Florida, March 8, 1880, by E. E. Earll. 91. The Mackerel, Scantier scombrus L Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 25256, U. S. National Museum, collected at Provincetowu, Massachusetts, September, 1879, by TJ. S. Fish Commission. The Chub Mackerel or " Thimble Eye," Scomler colias De La Roche . 303 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 23480, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Provincetown, Massachusetts, September, 1879, by U. S. Fish Commission. 92. The Frigate Mackerel, Anxis thazard Lac^pede 305 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 25757, IT. S. National Museum, collected at Newport, Ehode Island August, 1880, by TJ. S. Fish Commission. The Bonito, Sarda mediterranea (Schn.) J. & G Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10419, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, 1871, by TJ. S. Fish Commission. 93. The Spanish Mackerel, Scomberomorus mactilatus (Mitch.) J. & G 307 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 15582, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Fulton Market, New Tort, by E. G. Black- ford. 94. The Spotted Cero, Scomberomorus regalis (Bloch) J. & G 316 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 12527, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Key West, Florida, by E. G. Blackford The Cero or Kiugfish, Scomberomorus cabaUa(C. & V. ) J. & G 316 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 19418, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, 1875. by TJ. S. Fish Commission. 95. The Alalouga or Long-tinned Tunny, Orcynus alalonr/a (Gmel.) Risso 320 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 21884, U. S. National Museum, collected at Banquereau, September 10, 1878, by Capt- tain William Tbompsou, schooner Magic. The Striped or Oceanic Bonito, Eutlii/nnus pelamys (L.) Lutken Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 20762, sent from Museum of Comparative Zoology, Cambridge, Massachusetts. 96. The Horse Mackerel or Tunny, Orcynus tlujnnus (L.) Poey Drawing by H. L. Todd, from specimen collected in Vineyard Sound by TJ. S. Fish Commission. 97. The Horsetish or Blunt-nosed Shiner, Selene setipinnis (Mitch. ) Lntken Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 16252, TJ. S. National Museum, collected in Fulton Market, New York, by E. G. Blackford. 98. The Silver Mooufish or " Look-do wu," Selene argentca Lac^pede 323 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 22279, TJ. S. National Museum. 99. The Cavally or Crevall219, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Washington Market, District of Columbia, April 24, 1880, by U. S. Fish Commission. 171. The White Bass, Hoccus chri/wps (Raf.) Gill 428 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 103JU, TJ. S. National Museum collected at Sandusky, Ohio, by J. W. Miluer. 172. The Yellow Bass, Koccus interrupts (Gill) .1. and G Drawing by H. L. Todd, from specimens in National Museum. 173. The White Perch, ffoccun americaints (Gml.) J. aud G Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 13681, U. S. National Museum, collected at New York, November 15, 1875, by E. G. Blackford. 174. The Bluefish Pomatomus sallatrix (L.) Gill Drawing by H. L. Todd, from specimens in U. S. National Museum. The Cobia or Crab-eater, Elacate Canada (L.) Gill Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 18563, U. S. National Museum. 175. The Triple-Tail or Black Grouper, Lobotes suriiiamensia (Bl.) Cuvier 444 176. The Moon-fish or Spadu-lisb, Chcslodlpterus faber (Brouss.) J. and G 445 XXviii LIST OF PLATES. Page. 177. The Spear- fish Remora, UlinmbocJiirus osteochir (Cuv.) Gill 446 Drawing by 11. L. Todd, from No. 19022, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, 1875, by TJ. S. Fish Commission. The Sword-fish Remora, Remoropsis brndi yptcro, Lowe, _ 446 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 233 74, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at pea in 250 fathoms of water by Daniel MdSaobran. 178. The West Indian Barraconta or Sennet, Sphyrcena picuda Schn 448 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 14978, U. S. National Museum, collected at Florida by E. G. Blackford. The Northern Ban aeon ta, Spliyraina borealis De. Kay 443 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 18862, U. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, 1876, by Vinal N. Edwards. 179. The Striped Mullet, Afiigil albula L 449 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 24456, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, December 15, 1879, by Vinal N. Edwards. The White Mullet, Mugil brasilieusis Agass 449 Drawn by Miss M. Smith, from No. 21498, U. S. National Museum, collected at Pensacola, Florida, 1878, by Silas Stearns. 180. The Sand Smelt or Silversides, Menidia notata (Mitch.) J. and G 456 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from specimen in U. S. National Museum, collected at Noank, Connecticut, by U. S. Fisli Commission. The California "Smelt" or Pescadillo, Atherinopsie aaliforniensis Girard 457 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 26764, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at San Diego, California. 1880, by Professor D. S. Jordan. 181. The Two-spincd Stickle-back, Gasterosteus aculealus L 457 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 20875, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, December 3, 1877, by Vinal N. Edwards. The Silver Gar-fish, Tylosurus longiroatris (Mitch.) J. anil G 458 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from specimens in National Museum. The Skipper or Saury, Scomberesox saurus (Walb.) Fleming 460 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 19853, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, November 3, 1875, by Vinal N. Edwards. 182. The Half Beak, SemirampTvus imifasciatus Ranzani 461 Drawing by H. L. Tudd, from No. 16944, TJ. S. National Museum, collected in Chesapeake Bay, August, 1876, by Otto Lugger. The California Flying-fish, Exocaitus calif or nitii sis Cooper 459 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 26907, U. S. National Museum, collector at Santa Baibara, California, 1880, by Jordan and Gilbert. 183. The Pike, Ems hn-iiis L 461 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 9289, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Ecorse, Michigan, by George Clark. The Pickerel or Federation Pike, Esox rcttciilatiis Le Suenr - 464 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 20381, TJ. S. National Museum. 184. The Western Brook Pirki-rel, Emu- ninbruKus Kirf land .. 464 Drawing by II. 1.. T.idd. from No. 207U8, TJ. S. National Museum, collected by E. G. Blackford. The Muskellun <;(.•, JCms nobilior Thompson 4fi4 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10607, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Ecorse, Michigan, by George Clark. 185. The Mummiehog, Finn In Inn nHijnlix ( Walb.) Glhr. (Female) 466 Drawing li.L. Todd, from No. 13788, U. S. National Museum, collected at Wood's Holl, Massachusetts, September 15, 1871, by TJ. S. Fish Commission. The Blackfish of Alaska, Dal/ia pcctoralis Beau 466 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from 23498 A, U. S. National Museum, collected at Saint Michaels, Alaska, February, 1877, by L. M. Turner. 186. The Atlantic .Salmon, tSulmo salar L 468 Drawing by ILL. Todd, from specimen in theTJ.S. National Museum, taken in the Delaware Iliver. The Quinnat or California .Salmon, l>iicorliiiin-hn-i chouirlia (Walb.) J. and G 479 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 24671, TJ. S.Nalional Museum, collected at Neeah Bay, December, 1S79, by James G. Swan. 187. The Steel Head, Sal mo Giiinlin ri Richardson 474 Drawing by n. L. Todd, from No. 27218. TJ. S. National Museum, collected at Columbia River, 1880, by Professor D. S. Jordan. The Rainbow Trout, Ultimo iridrus Gibbons 475 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 29093, TJ. S. National Museum, collected at McCloud River, California, 1881, by Livings- ton Stone. 188. The Black-spot d-d Trout, ,sv,/»,» jnirpiirnlus Pallas 476 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27905, U. S. National Museum, collected at Sitka, Alaska, 1870, by L. A. Beardsley. LIST OF PLATES. XXIX Page. The Kayko or Dog Salmon, Oncorhiinchua keta (Walb.) Gill anil Jordan 476 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 27017, U. S. National Museum, collected at Fort Alexander, Cook's Inlet, Alaska, July 4, 1880, by J. Cohen. 189. The Gorbuscha or Hump-backed Salmon, Onmrliynclnig gorliimrlia (Walb. ) Gill and Jordan 476 Drawing by U. L. Todd, from No. 27743, U. S. National Museum, collected at Cook's Inlet, Alaska, July 0, 1880, by l)r. T. II. Beau. The Kisutch or Silver Salmon, Oncurlii/iichux k'mutch (Walb.) J. and G 477 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. -J7712, U. S. N.uioiml Museum, collected at Ilinliiik, Unalashka, October 12, 1880, by Dr. T. H. Bean. 190. The Krasmiva Ryba, Red-lish of Idaho, or Elm- Hack Salmon, Oncorhynahus iicrka (Walli.) (Jill and Jordan. 477 (Hook-jawed Male.) (Fein:d<-) Drawings Itv II. L. Tudd, from specimens in U. S. National Must-urn, collected by Captain C. Bendire, U. S. N., in the \Valluwa Iliver, Idaho. 191. The KraMiaya Kvba »r Bine ISack Salmon, O/icor/ii/iic/iux iierka (Walb.) J. and G 477 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from fresh tun male, sent toll. S. National Museum from the Columbia River, April, 1884, by A. Booth, esq. The Namayrnsh nr Lake. Trout, Salctliiius naniniiciixJi (Walb.) Goode 485 Drawing by H. L. Todd. from No. nul'J, U.S. National Museum, collected at Raqnette Lake, New York, February 23, 1877, by Vcrplauck Colvin. 192. The Speckled Trout, Salrrliiiux fiiiitiiiaHs (Mitch.) Gill and Jordan 497 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 28G51, U. S. National Museum, obtained in Now York Market, July. 1881, by E.G. Blackford. 193. The Oquassa Trout, KalriliMiis oijiiansu (Grd.) Gill and Jordan 503 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 20688, U. S. National Museum, collected at Oquassoc Lake, New York, November 9, 1877, byE. G.Blaokford. The Malma or Dolly Varden Trout, SalrfHiiu* malmn (Walb.) J.and G 504 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 27740, U. S. National Museulu, collected at PortChatbam, Cook's Inlet, Alaska, 1880, by Dr. T. II. Bean. 194. The Grayling, Tliyma Hun tricolor Cope 505 Drawing by fl. L. Todd, from No. 11115, U. S. National Museum, obtained from Au Sable River, Michigan, by J. W. Milner. 195. The Alaska Grayling, Tlii/inalliis «<3n, U. S. National Museum, collected at Ogechee Ponds, near Savannah, Georgia, March 6, 1880, by Colonel M. McDonald. 222. The RIM! Horse, Moxostoma macrolepidotum (Le S.) Jordan 614 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 8393, U. S. National Museum, collected at Ecorsc, Michigan, February, 1872, by George Clark. The Carp Mullet, Moxostoma carpio (Val.) Jordan 614 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10793, 0. S. National Museum, collected at Cincinnati, Ohio, by J. W. Milner. 223. The Moutana Sucker, Catostomus retropinnis Jordan 615 The Brook Sucker or Common Sucker, Cittostomus Conimeraoni (Lac. ) Jordan 615 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10548, U. S. National Museum, collected at Ecoise, Michigan, by J. W. Milner. 224. The Black Horse, Cycleptiis eloagatus (Le S.) Ag 615 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 10790, U. S. National Museum, collected at Cincinnati, Ohio, by J. W. Milner. 225. The Quill-back, Carpiodts ci/primis (Le S.) A^ - 615 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 331)73, XT. S. National Museum, collected at Havre de Grace, Maryland, June, 1882, by Dr. T. II. Bean. 220. The Red Month Buffalo-fish, Iitiobus bubtiliis (Raf.) Ag 615 Drawing bv H. L. Todd, from No. 20774, U. S. National Museum, collected at Normal, Illinois, 1877, by Professor S. A. Forbes. 227. The Golden Shiner or Bream, Xoti-miijoinm cliri/xoli'uciia (Mitch.) Jordan 616 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 20243, XT. S. Notional Museum, collected at Hackensack River, 1875, by Professor S. F. Baird. The Sacramento "Pike," Plycliocliilna oregonenah (Rich.) Grd 616 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27291, U. S. National Museum, collected at Columbia River, 1880, by Professor D. S. Jordan. •228. The Fall-fish or Silver Chilli, Snnotiliis biillaris (Raf.) Jordan 616 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 15359, TT. S. National Museum, collected at Bainliridgo, Pennsylvania, May, 1875, by Dr. T. H. Bean. The Horn Dace, Semotiltis corporal in (Mitch.) Putnam 617 . Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 10103, XT. S. National Museum, collected at Anx Plains River by R. Keunicott. 229. The Horny Head or River Chub, Ceratiohtkys biyuttatus (Kirtland) Girard 617 Draw-ins by H. L. Todd. from No. 1C9G9, U.S. National Museum, collected at Bainbridge, Pennsylvania, 1875, by Dr. T. H. Bean, The Orthodou Chub, Ortlwdon microlrpitlnhm (Ay res) Girard 617 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 27139, XT. S. National Museum, collected at Sacramento River, California, 1880, by Jordan and Gilbert. 230. The Leather Carp, Ciiprinua carpio L. (var. coriaoeus) 618 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 25217, XT. S. National Museum, collected at the Carp Ponds, Washington, D. C., April 20, 1880, by XT. S. Fish Commission. 231. The Gold Fish, Carassiiis tinnitus (L.) Bleeker 0 Drawing by II. L. Todd, from No. 22107, XT. S. National Mnstum, collected at Carp Ponds, Washington, D. C., January 21, 1878, by William Palmer. 232. The Channel Catfish of the Potomac, Ictalurua albidus (LeS.) J. & G 628 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 20925, XT. S. National Museum, collected at Potomac River, 1877, by Professor D. S. Jordan. 233. The Bull-Head, Amiurua m<7«s(Raf.) Jord. & Copeland 628 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 1497, IT. S. National Museum, collected at Anx Plains River by R. Keunicott. The Bull-Head or Cattish, Amiurus ctiin» (L.) Gill 628 Drawing by H. L. Todd, from No. 33075, U. S. National Museum, collected at Havre de Grace, Maryland, June, 1882, by Dr. T. H. Bean. 234. The Bull- Head, Amiiirus rnlgaris (Thompson) Nelson 628 Drawing by U. L. Todd. from No. 31940, XT. S. National Museum, collected at Wiunepeg, Manitoba, 1S83, by Historical and Scientific Society. 235. The GaffTopsail Cattish. .•fil.irk'liHii/H marinas (Mitch.) B. i/;/>c iniriviinriiix (libbes; male, about four-fifths the natural size 772. Drawing by II. L. Tml, iuter-ambulaeral zones. FlG. 4. The Star-fish or "Five Finger," Aslerias Forbesii Verrill ; much smaller than natural size. FIGS. 5, 6, 7. The Jelly Fishes. Fig. 5, Zyt/oilactyla Grcenlandica Agassiz ; profile view, one-half natural size. Fig. 6, Aureliu flamduhi Peron and Le Sueur; dorsal view, about one-fourth natural size. Fig. 7, Dactylomelra qmnqnecirra Agassiz ; lateral view, one-fourth natural size. T I. MAMMALS. A . —THE WHALES AND PORPOIS BS BY G. BROWN GOODE. B. — THE SEALS AND WALRUSES BY JOEL A. ALLEN. C.— THE HABITS OF THE FUR-SEAL BY HENRY W. ELLIOTT. D —THE MANATEES AND THE ARCTIC SEA-COW. . .BY FREDERICK W. TRUE. (3) ANALYSIS. Page. A.— THE WHALES AND PORPOISES : 1. The Sperm Whale 7 2. The Blaektishes or Pilot Whales 11 3. The Grampuses or Cowfishes 13 4. Tin- Harbor Porpoises or Herring Hogs 14 f>. The Dolphins 1C f tliu Sperm Whale. Londou, 18:ili, p. ISO. 1 1866. MURRAY, ANDREW : The Geographical Distribution of Mammals. Loiidon, 1866, p. 212. (7) 8 NATURAL HISTORY OP AQUATIC ANIMALS. by hereditary practice or instinct) to swim along the coral islands of the Pacific, within a stone's throw of the shore, they cannot understand, their instinct is not prepared to meet, shallow coasts and projecting headlands." Murray's views, though suggestive, are, perhaps, not entirely well iounded. It is certain, however, that the favorite haunts of the species have always been in the warmer seas, within or upon the verge of the tropics. ABUNDANCE IN FOEMER DAYS ON THE COAST OF THE UNITED STATES. — There is no reason to doubt that Sperm Whales were at one time, nearly two centuries back, as abundant in the North Atlantic as in more recent years in the, North Pacific. The vigorous prosecution of the whale fishery since the early part of the eighteenth century by American vessels has had much to do with their present scarcity. The traditions of the American whale fishery all point to their con- siderable abundance near the eastern coast of the United States. Macy, the historian of Nantucket, narrates that the first Sperm Whale known to that settle- ment was found dead and ashore on the southwest part of the island, and that the first taken by Nantucket whalemen was captured about the year 1712 by Christopher Hussey, who, " cruising near the shore for Right Whales, was blown off some distance from the land by a strong northerly wind, where he fell in with a school of that species of whale, and killed one and brought it home."1 That Sperm Whales cannot at that time have been rare near the shore, may be inferred from the fact that the Nantucket Sperm Whale fleet which was then fitted out, and which three years later consisted of six sloops, producing oil to the value of $5,500 annually, were usually absent only six weeks, during which time they procured the blubber of one or two whales.2 The Boston "News Letter" of October 2, 17C6, stated: "Since our last a Number of Vessels have arrived from Whaling. They have not been successful generally. One of them viz: Capt. Clark on Thursday morning last discovered a Spermaceti Whale near George's Banks, manu'd his Boat, and gave Chase to her & she coming up with her Jaws against the Bow of the Boat struck it with such Violence that it threw a son of the Captain (who was forward, ready with his Lance) a considerable Height from the Boat, and when he fell the Whale turned with her devouring Jaws opened, and caught him. He was heard to scream, when she closed her Jaws, and part of his Body was seen out of her Mouth when she turned and went off."3 The log of the whaling sloop "Betsey," of Dartmouth, records that on August L', 1701, her crew saw two Sperm Whales and killed one in latitude 45° 54', longitude 53° 57': this would be in the gully between the Grand Bank and Green Bank, about fifty miles west of Whale Deep, in the Grand Bank, and sixty miles south of the entrance to St. Mary Bay, Newfoundland. August 9, this vessel and her consort killed two to the south and west of the Grand Bank in latitude 42° 57'. lu 1822 Captain Atwood was on the "Laurel," of Provincctown, which took ;v Sperm Whale ou the sixth day out, on the course to the Azores, just east of the Gulf Stream, and less than 500 miles from Cape Cod. The nearest grounds upon which Sperm Whales now regularly occur are those to the north and east of Cape Hatteras, the "Hatteras Ground," and a ground farther south known as the "Charleston Ground." The last one observed on the New England coast was very young, only sixteen feet long, and was taken near New Bedford, Mass., March 29, 1842.4 In Douglass' " North America," published in 1755, it is stated that Spermaceti Whales -'are to be found almost everywhere, but are most plenty upon the coast of Virginia and Carolina." 1 MACY, ZACCHEUS : History of Nautucket, p. 36. "STARBUCK, ALEXANDER: in Report U. S. Fish Commission, part iv, 1878, p. £0. "STARBUCK, op. cil., p. 46-47. <1845. JACKSON, J. B. S. : Boston Journ. Nat. Hist., 1845, p. 138, pi. 16, fig. 1 (the stomach). SPERM WHALES— ABUNDANCE AND HABITS. 9 A Sperm Whale came ashore in IOCS in Casco Bay, and the circumstance seems uot to have been regarded as unusual in those days.1 A person writing in 1741 discourses as follows: "Some Years since, there stranded on the Coast of New England a dead Whale, of the Sort which, in the Fishers Language, is called Trnmpo, having Teeth like those ot a Mill; it's Mouth at a good Distance from and under the Nose, and several Partitions in the Nose, out of which ran a thin oily Substance that candy'd, the Eeinaiuder being a thick fat Substance, being scraped out, was said to be the Sperma Ceti ; it was said so, and I believe that was all. Whales were often caught formerly between New-England and New-York, and if the Sperma Ceti had really been in the Nose of that, it must have been more common, and more cheap, than Experience tells us, it has been even since this Discovery, and at this present time. As to the Whale Fishery, 'tis now almost as much a Earity in New as Old England; the Fishery of Cod is at this time very great here, tho' still far short of that of Newfoundland."2 OCCURRENCE ON THE COAST OP EUROPE. — In the Eastern Atlantic, also, the occurrence of this species has been by no means unusual. Fleming, in "British Animals," 1828, states that "the Spermaceti Whale often comes ashore in Orkney."3 In 1788, twelve males ran ashore in the Eng- lish Channel.'1 Other instances of their stranding on the English coast occurred in February, 1089,5 1795,6 17GG',7 February 1C, 1829,8 in 1825,9 and 1863,10 while others were obtained on the coast of . Brittany in 17S4,11 and in the Mediterranean, at St. Nazaire, in 185G,12 and on other occasions for which dates are not given. OCCURRENCE ON THE CALIFORNIA COAST. — Although Sperm Whales have occasionally been taken off the California coast for the past thirty years, it would appear that tew have been seen in those waters since 1874. Captain Scaminon has cited in his book no instances ot individuals per- sonally observed by him. SIZE AND COLOR. — The sexes difi'er greatly in size and form, the female being slenderer and from one-fifth (Beale) to one-third or one-fourth (Scaminou) as large as the male. The largest males measure from eighty to eighty-four feet in length, the head making up about oue-thirdof the whole. In the head is the cavity known as the "case," from which is obtained the spermaceti and a quantity of oil. The youngest Sperm Whale on record is the one measuring sixteen feet, already mentioned as having been taken near New Bedford in 1842; its weight was ;>,05.'] pounds. The Sperm Whale is black or brownish-black, lighter on the sides, gray OH the breast. When old it is gray about the nose and top of the head. HABITS OP ASSOCIATION, MOTION, BLOWING, ETC. — Sperm Whales are gregarious and are often seen in large schools, which are, according to Beale, of two kinds, (1) of females accompanied by the young and one or two adult males, (2) of the young and half-grown males; the adult males always go singly. Their manner of motion is well described by Scarninon as follows: 'In 1663 a Spermaceti Whale of 55 foot long was cast up in Winter Harbor, near Casco Bay. The like hath hap- pened in othtT places of the country at several times, when, for want of skill to improve it, much gain lialh slipped out of the hands of the finders.— Hnbbard's History of New England, From the Discovery to 1680. Boston, 1848, p. 642. aBritish Empire in Anii-rira. London, 1741, vol. i, pp. 188-189. 'FLEMING: British Animals, 1828, p. 29. •: Plialiiinolniria, 177;!, p. 3:!, pi. 1. "MOLYXEUX: Phil. Trans., xix, 1795, p. 508. 'RUTTY: fide Gray, op. cit. MIi-NTEK and WOODS: Mag. Nat. Hist., ii, 1829, p. 197. 9Tno.MPSON: Mag. Nat. Hist., ii, 1827, p. 477. • 1" G KAY: op. cit., p. 204. " BI.AINVILLE : Ann. fr. et etr. d'Anatomie et de Physiologic, ii, p. 235. "GEUVAIS: Comptes-Rendus, 1864, p. 876. 10 • NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. "Among the whole order of cetaceans there is none which respires with the same regularity as the Cachalot. When emerging to the surface, the first portion of the animal seen is the region of the hump; then it raises its head, and respires slowly for the space of about three seconds, sending forth diagonally a volume of whitish vapor like an escape of steam; this is called the ' spout,' which, in ordinary weather, may be seen from the mast-head at a distance of three to five miles. In respir- ing at its leisure, tbe animal sometimes makes no headway through the water; at other times it moves quietly along at the rate of about two or three miles an hour; or if ' making a passage' from one feed- ing ground to another, it may accelerate its velocity. When in progressive motion, after 'blowing,' hardly an instant is required for inspiration, when the animal dips its head a little, and moment- arily disappears; then it rises again to blow as before, each respiration being made with great regularity. * * * * With the largest bulls, the time occupied in performing one inspiration is from ten to twelve seconds, and the animal will generally blow from sixty to seventy-five times at a rising, remaining upon the surface of the sea about twelve minutes. As soon as 'his spotitings are out' he pitches headforemost downwards; then 'rounding out,' turns his flukes high in the air, and, when gaining nearly a perpendicular attitude, descends to a great depth, and there remains from fifteen minutes to an hour and a quarter. "When the Cachalot becomes alarmed or is sporting in the ocean, its actions are widely different. If frightened, it has the faculty of instantly sinking, although nearly in a horizontal attitude. When merely startled, it will frequently assume a perpendicular position, with the greater portion of its head above water, to look and listen ; or, when lying on the surface, it will •sweep around from side to side with its flukes to ascertain whether there is any object within reach. At other times, when at play, it will elevate its flukes high in the air, then strike them down with great force, which raises the water into spray and foam about it; this is termed 'lob- tailing.' Oftentimes it descends a few fathoms beneath the waves; then, giving a powerful shoot nearly out of the water, at aii angle of 45° or less, falls on its side, corning down with a heavy splash, producing a pyramid of foam which may be seen from the masthead on a clear day, at least ten miles, and is of great advantage to the whaler when searching for his prey. When individually attacked it makes a desperate struggle for life, and often escapes after a hard contest. Nevertheless, it is not an unusual occurrence for the oldest males to be taken with but little effort on the part of the whaler. After being struck, the animal will oftentimes lie for a few moments on the water as if paralyzed, which affords the active man of the lance opportunity to dart his weapon effectually and complete the capture." ' Owing to the peculiar shape and position of the mouth, the Sperm Whale has to turn upon its side to seize large objects between its jaws, and when one of them attacks a boat, it is in a reversed position, holding its lower jaw above the object it is trying to bite, as is shown in many pictures of whaling adventure. FOOD. — The food of this species consists of squids and of various kinds of fish. Couch tells of a y shil- lings apiece, and not much unlike for shape, with flesh fat and lean, like in color to the fat and Iran <>f a hog; and being opened upon the deck, had within his entrails, as liver, lights, heart, guts, &<-., for all the world like a swine. The seeing of him hauled into the ship, like a swine from the sty to the trestle, and opened upon the deck in view of all our company, was wonderful to us all, and marvellous mi Try sport, and delight ful to our women and children. So good was our God unto us, in affording us the day before spiritual refreshing to our souls and this day morning also delightful recreation to our bodies, at the taking and opening of this huge and sliange fish,"— Young's Chronicles of the First Planters of Mass. Bay Colony. Boston, 184C, p. 460. 14 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. Captain Cook thinks that these are the marks of the teeth made by the animals in playing with each other. It attains the length of fifteen or twenty feet, but is slenderer than the Blackfish. Its jaws are esteemed by the makers of fine oil. HABITS. — Regarding this species, Captain Cook writes: "About the same time that the Black- fish made their appearance in our waters, there was another of the whale kind made tlu-ir appear- ance also, called by the fishermen Cowfish. These whales are very much in shape of the Blackfish, ouly smaller, not so fat, and not so dark colored. These fish have only made their appearance in our waters three or four times for the last forty years, or about once in ten years. Probably not more than fifty have been taken in this period. The method of taking them is the same* as that used for Blackfish." Several specimens, old and young, were obtained by the Fish Commission in 1875, November 29, November 30, and December 2. and their casts are in the National Museum. That this animal was known to the early colonists of New England appears probable from allusions in the early records.1 PRODUCTS. — The oil of the Cowfish, particularly that of its jaws, is highly prized, though prob- ably no better than that of the Blackfish. The "Barnstable Patriot" of November 7, 1828, has this item: "A quantity of oil from the Grampus lately caught at Harpswell has been sold at Bath at $18 per barrel." It is very possible, however, that the Barnstable people of 1828 designate the Blackfish and the Grampus by the same name. Douglass' "North America," published in 1755, remarks : "Blackfish, i. e. Grampus, of six to ten barrels oil, Bottlenose of three or four barrels, may (like sheep) be drove ashore by boats." THE CALIFORNIA GRAMPUS. — On the California coast occurs the Whiteheaded or Mottled Grampus, G. Stearnsii Dall, described by Scammon as growing to the average length of ten feet. "They are gregarious," he writes, " and congregate frequently in large schools; at times two or three, or even a solitary individual will be met with, wandering about the coast or up the bays in quest of food, which consists of fish and several varieties of crustaceans. It is rarely taken, as it is extremely shy." He refers also to four other forms, unknown to zoologists, but familiar to whale- men: chief among these is the " Bottleuose," which grows to be twenty-five feet long, and has occasionally been taken, though with much difficulty owing to its great strength and speed. Its oil is reputed to be equal in quality to that of the Sperm Whale. 4. THE HARBOR PORPOISES OR HERRING HOGS. DISTRIBUTION. — On tho Atlantic coast occurs most abundantly the little Harbor Porpoise, Phoccena brachycion Cope, known to the fishermen as "Puffer," "Snuffer," "Snuffing Pig," or "Herring Hog." The Bay Porpoise of California, P. vomerina Gill, and the Common Porpoise or Marsuin of Europe, are very similar in size, shape, and habits: with the latter in fact it is probably specifically identical. The Atlantic species occurs off Nova Scotia and probably farther north- ward, and ranges south at least to Florida. The California species, according to Scammou, has been found at Bauderas Bay and about the mouth of the Pigiuto River, Mexico (latitude 20° 30'), and north to the Columbia River (latitude 46° 1C'). In the winter these Porpoises are seen off Astoria and in Cathlamet Bay twenty miles above, but in spring and summer, when the river is fresh to its mouth, they leave the Columbia. The Atlantic Porpoise also ascends rivers. They go 'Belknap's American Biography has the following account of one of the journeys of the first settlers of Massa- chusetts in IG'JO: "The next morning, Thursday, December 7, they divided themselves into two parties, eight in the shallop, and tho rest on shore, to make farther discovery of this place, which they found to be ' a bay, without either river or creek coming into it.' They gave it tho name of Grampus Bay, because they saw many fish of that species."- — Belkuap's American Biography, New York, 1846, vol. ii, p. 318. HARBOR PORPOISES: MOVEMENTS AND HABITS. 15 up the Saint John's in Florida to Jacksonville, and about 1850 one was taken in the Connecticut at Middletowu, twenty miles from brackish water. In Europe they ascend the Thames, the Weserr and other streams. SIZE AND MOVEMENTS. — They rarely exceed four or four and a half feet -in length. Everyone has seen them rolling and puffing outside of the breakers or in the harbors and river mouths. The western Atlantic species swim in droves of from ten to one hundred, but Scanimon says that those of California are never found associated in large numbers, though six or eight are often seen together. In England, according to Couch, seldom more than two are seen at once. They never spring from the water like Dolphins, but their motion is a rolling one and brings the back-fin often into sight, this always appearing shortly after the head has been exposed and the little puff of spray seen and the accompanying grunt heard. The rolling motion is caused by the fact that to breathe through the nostrils, situate on the top of the snout, they must assume a somewhat erect posture, descending from which the body passes through a considerable portion of a circle. REPRODUCTION. — The breeding season is in summer, in August and September, in Passama- quoddy Bay, perhaps also at other times. The new-born young of an English Porpoise fifty-six inches long, measured twenty -six inches, and was sixteen inches in circumference. FOOD. — They feed on fish, particularly on schooling species like the herring and menhaden, and are responsible for an enormous destruction of useful food material. USES. — Though frequently taken in the pounds and seines along both coasts and off Massa- chusetts in the gill-nets set for mackerel, they are of little importance except to the Indians of Maine and our Northwestern Territories, who carry on an organized pursuit of them, shooting them from their canoes. This industry will be described in the chapter upon ABORIGINAL FISHERIES. DESTRUCTIVENESS. — The Porpoise is pugnacious as well as playful. A fisherman in Florida told me that he once tried to pen a school of them in a little creek by anchoring his boat across its entrance. When they came down the creek they sprang over the boat against the sail, through which they tore their way and regained the river. A correspondent, whose name has been mislaid, writes : "A very unusual event occurred at Far Rockaway on Tuesday morning, about four o'clock, in front of the Nelson House. A school of Drumfish were chased into shallow water by a school of Porpoises. The Drumfish tried their best to get away, but the Porpoises pursued them so hotly that a number of the former were driven ashore. The people of the hotel were awakened by a great splashing and a noise somewhat similar to but less distinct than the grunt of a frightened hog. Looking out of the windows they saw the Porpoises striking the Drumfish with their tails. Soon after the Porpoises turned and left. The porters at the hotel and some of the fishermen secured with boat-hooks about twenty-five dead Drumfish, and a large number are still floating around Jamaica Bay. The Drumfish secured weighed from thirty to seventy pounds each. Some were sent to Canarsie for exhibition and others to Fulton Market for sale." The Drum being an enemy of the Oyster, it is possible that the Porpoise by destroying them is a benefactor. It would be no more curious than the experience of the Canadian Government in decreasing their Salmon fishery in the St. Lawrence by destroying the White Whales which preyed upon the. seals, the enemies of the Salmon. The story about the Porpoises killing drum seems incredible, but is supported by Sir Charles Lyell's account of a battle between the Porpoises and the Alligators in Florida : " Mr. Couper told me that in the summer of 1845 he saw a shoal of Por- poises coming up to that part of the Altamaha where the fresh and salt water meet, a space about a mile in length, the favorite fishing ground of the Alligators, where there is brackish water, which shifts its place according to the varying strength of the river and the tide. Here were seen about fifty Alligators, each with head and neck raised above water, looking down the stream at 16 NATUBAL HISTOET OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. their enemies, before whom they had fted terror-stricken and expecting an attack. The Porpoises, not more than a dozen in number, moved on in two ranks, and were evidently complete masters of the field. So powerful indeed are they that they have been known to chase a large Alligator to the bank, and, putting their snouts under his belly, toss him ashore."1 The authority referred to, Mr. Hamilton Couper, of Hopeton, Ga., was a gentleman of some prominence as a geological observer. 5. THE DOLPHINS. HABITS. — The Dolphins constitute a large group of cetaceans, represented by many species, and abundant everywhere in temperate and tropical seas. They are often seen in mid-ocean sporting in large schools, pursuing the pelagic fishes, but are still more common near the coast. They are from five to fifteen feet long, gracefully formed, and very swift. Nowhere are they the objects of organized pursuit, though frequently caught in nets or harpooned from the bows of vessels at sea. Many cod schooners fishing on the Grand Banks, especially those from Cape Cod, depend chiefly for bait upon the Porpoises they can kill and the birds they can catch. The best known species on the Atlantic coast are the " Skunk Porpoise" or "Bay Porpoise," Lagenorliynclms perspicillatus Cope, and related forms. Large schools are often seen in the sounds and along (he shore. They are easily distinguished from the little Harbor Porpoise, just spoken of, by the broad stripes of white and yellow upon their sides. When schools of a hundred or more can be surrounded and driven ashore by the fishermen, as is often done on Cape Cod, a large profit is made from the sale of their bodies to the oil-makers, though they are not so much prized as the Blackfish, so much larger and fatter. A closely related species is the Common Porpoise of California, Lagenorhynchus obliquidens Gill. "They are seen," writes Captain Scaunrnon, "in numbers varying from a dozen up to many hundreds tumbling over the surface of the sea, or making arching leaps, plunging again on the same curve, or darting high and falling- diagonally sidewise upon the water with a spiteful splash, accompanied by a report which may be heard to some distance. In calm weather they are seen in numerous shoals, leaping, plunging, lobtailing and finning, while the assemblage moves swiftly in various directions. They abound more along the coasts where small fish are found. Occasionally a large number of them will get into a school of fish, frightening them so much that they lose nearly all control of their movements, while the Porpoises fill themselves to repletion." The Eight Whale Porpoise, Leucorhamplms borealis (Peale) Gill, is found in the Pacific from Bering Sea to Lower California, though not so abundantly as the last. The Eight Whale Porpoise of the Atlantic, often spoken of by our whalers, is a related species, perhaps L. Peronii (Lac.) Lilljeboig, abundant in the South Atlantic and Pacific, but not yet recorded by naturalists for our waters. Several species of the true Dolphins occur in the North Atlantic, but only one, DelpMnus clymenis, has been found with us, Cope having secured it in New Jersey. Baird's Dolphin />. Bairdii Dall, a species six or seven feet long and weighing 100 to 175 pounds, is frequent in Cali- fornia. The Cowfish of California, Tursiops GilUi Dall, is a sluggish species known to the whale- men of the lagoons,2 and an allied species, T. erebennus (Cope) Gill, is known on the Atlantic coast. New forms of this group are constantly being discovered. All are of commercial value when taken. 'LYELL: Second Visit to the United States, vol. i, 1849, p. 25'J. 2The habits of the Cowfish, as observed on the coasts of California and Mexico, are strikingly different from those ol thi! true Porpoises. It is often remarked by whalemen that they are a "mongrel breed" of doubtful character, being frequently ween in company with Blaekfish, sometimes with Porpoises, and occasionally with Humpbacks, when the latter are found in large numbers on an abundant feeding ground. They are met with likewise in the lagoons along tin- roast, singly or in pairs, or in lives and sixes — rarely a larger number together — straggling about in a vagrant man- ner through the winding estuaries, subsisting on the fish that abound in these circumscribed waters. At times they are seen moving lazily along under the shade of the mangroves that in many places fringe the shores, at other times lying about in listless attitudes among the plentiful supplies of food surrounding them. — SCAMMON: op. fit., p. 101. THE KILLKI1 WHALKS: HABITS AND I'SKS ]7 6. THE KILLER WHALES OR ORCAS. HABITS AND DISTRIBUTION.— The Killer Whales are known the world over by their destruc- tive and savage habits. Although their strength and speed render it almost impossible, to capture them, they are of importance to the fisherman as enemies of all large sea animals, often putting them to flight at inconvenient times. The Atlantic species, Orm ?.">. 2 At a meeting, in I860, of the Polytechnic Association of the American Instil ute. in New York, a paper was read, prepared by D. H. Tetu, of Ivamonraska. Canada, on the White Whale of the Sainl Lawrence. The Canadians call it a Porpoise; it is found for a distance of 200 miles between Saint Koch and Father Point, also in the rivers emptying into Hudson's Bay. Since the disc-oven of ( 'anada, an article of commerce, but ihe oil not very good and little use found for the skin ; lately M. Tetu has succeeded in purifying the oil and tanning the skin. The oil is equal to the hest sperm oil. The average price of the animal I. -n years ago u as .- in. now it is sl.Ml. The average weight is 2,500 pounds; tho largest weigh r.,000 pounds, and are worth s-,'(id. The average length is twenty-two feet, and circumfer- ence fifteen feet. M. Tetu caught the whale in nets near the river Saguenay. Tho skin does not make good sole-leaf her, being loo pliable. Ordinary tanning proces.se.-, are employed, except that theliniug is omitted, and the "training" takes more time on account of the closeness of the fiber of the skin. The leather is very durable, and the skin of a whale is equal to tin- skins of twelve to twenty-four calves. The leather is chiedy used in the British army. 20 THE WHALES AND PORPOISES. into canes and other articles of ornament. The supply in this country is chiefly imported from Denmark. In New York City in 1880 a good tusk sold for $50. 10. THE GREENLAND, BOWHEAD, OR POLAR WHALE. CONFUSION BETWEEN THE BOWHEAD AND THE EIGHT WHALE. — Much uncertainty has resulted from the manner in which the Bowhead of the arctic regions has been confused with the right whales of the adjoining temperate seas. Murray, writing in 1SGG,1 made no attempt to clear up the subject; previous writers were confused as well as vague, and it is only in Scamraou's writings that a clear account of the distribution and habits of the species is to be found. The materials for the following biographical sketch are derived in the main from the statements of this author, and quotation marks are omitted only because the facts are arranged in a new sequence.2 DISTRIBUTION. — The range of the true Balccna mysticetm extends west from Nova Zembla to the coast of Eastern Siberia. Its northern limits yet remain undefined: it is seldom seen in Bering Sea south of the fifty-fifth parallel, which is about the southern extent of the winter ice, though in the Sea of Okhotsk it ranges south to the parallel of 54°. It was formerly found to the north of Spitsbergen, but it has been shown by Eschricht and Reinhardt that its habitat is, and always has been, confined to the polar seas, and that it has no claim to a place in the fauna of Europe.3 Everything tends to prove that the Bowhead is truly an " ice-whale," for its home is among the scattered floes or about the borders of the ice-fields or barriers. It is true that these animals are pursued in the open water during the summer mouths, but in no instance has their capture been recorded south of where winter ice-fields are occasionally met with. In the Okhotsk Sea they are found throughout the season after the ice disappears, nevertheless they remain around the floes till these are dispelled by the summer sun, and they are found in the same localities after the surface of the water has again become congealed in winter. 'MURRAY: Geographical Distribution of Mammals, pp. 207-208. '2In "A Digression concerning Whaling," written in 1748, published in Douglass' North America, Boston and London, 1755, vol. i, p. 50, is the earliest discrimination I have met with of the Bowhead and the Right Whale of the extra-polar regions. Some interesting facts are given : "The New-England whalers distinguish 10 or 12 different species of the whale-kind ; the most beneficialis the black whale, whale-bone whale, or true whale, as they call it ; in Davis's-straits in N. lat. 70 D. and upwards they are very large, some may yield 150 puncheons being 400 to 500 barrels oil, and bone of l*i feet and upwards ; thcj are a heavy loggy fish, and do not tight, as the New-England whalers express it, they are easily struck and fastened, but not above one third of them are recovered ; by sinking and bewildering themselves under the ice, two thirds of them are lost irrecoverably ; tho whalebone whales killed upon the coast of New-England, Terra de Labi-adore, and entrance of Davis's-straits, are smaller, do yield not exceeding 120 to 130 barrels oil, and 9 feet boue 140 Ib. wt. ; they are wilder more agile and do fight. "The New England whalers reckon so many ct. wt. bone, as bone is feet long ; for instance, 7 foot bone gives 700 wt. bone: New England bone scarce ever exceeds 9 feet; and 100 barrels oil is supposed to yield 1000 wt. of bone; whales killed in deep water, if they sink, never rise again." A few paragraphs below, however, he proceeds to mix the subject up again, speaking of the Finback, when it is quite evident that the Whale he has in mind is not the right-whale but the "Right Whale." "The fin-back, beside two small side-fins, has a large fin upon his back, may yield 50 to GO barrels oil, his bone is brittle, of little or no use, he swims swifter, and is very wild when struck. The Bermndiaus some years catch 20 of these whales, not in sloops, but in whale-boats from the shore as formerly at Cape-Cod. The governor of Bermudas has a perquisite of 10£. out of each old whale. "Whales are gregarious," he continues, " and great travellers or passengers; in the autumn they go south, in the spring they return northward. They copulate like neat cattle, but the female in a supine posture. The true or whalebone whale's swallow is not much bigger than that of an ox, feeds upon small fish and sea insects that keep in sholes, has only one small fin each side of his head of no great use to him in swimming, but with a large horizontal tail lie scul.s himself in the water. The North Cape (in N. Lat. 72 D. in Europe) whales, are of the same small kind as are the New-England, and entrance of Davis's-straits : here we. may again observe, that tho high European latitudes are not so cold as the same American latitudes, because 72 D. is the proper N. Lat. in Davis's-straits for the large whales, and the Dutch fish for them longsido of fields or large islands of ice, they use long warps, not drudges as in New-England." "EacilRiCHT & REINHARDT: Om Nordhvaleu, 1861. THE BOWHEAI): SIZE, USES. 21 REPRODUCTION. — The time and place of breeding are not certainly known, hut it is supposed that the young are horn in the inaccessible parts of the Arctic Ocean. In Tchautar 15ay arc found small whales called " Poggys," which resemble the Bowhead, and are by many believed to be their young. The Bowheads of the Arctic are classed by Scammoii as follows: (1) the largest whales of a brown color, average yield of oil 200 barrels; (2) smaller, color black, yield 100 barrels; (3) small- est, color black, yield 75 barrels, and to these should perhaps be added (4) the " poggy," yield 20 to 2."> barrels. Those of the third class are generally found early in the season among the broken Hoes, and have been known to break through ice three inches thick that had been formed over water between the floes. This they do by coming up under and striking it with the arched portion of their heads. Hence they have been called " ice-breakers." ECONOMIC IMPORTANCE. — The Bowhead is the most valuable of the whalebone whales, not so much by reason of its size, for it rarely exceeds fifty feet in length, never sixty-five, but because it yields so large an amount of oil and whalebone. It is short, bulky, and bloated in appearance. Like the sperm whale, it has a head the length of which is nearly one-third of the total, and which is its most striking feature. The caudal fill is immense, being sixteen to twenty feet in extent from tip to tip, and correspondingly thick and broad. SIZE. — Scarnnion gives measurements of two individuals. One, from the Arctic Ocean, August, l 0 Gape of mouth 10 8 MOVEMENTS. — When not disturbed the animal remains up, generally to respire, from one and a half to two minutes, during which time it spouts from six to nine times, and then disappears for the space of ten to twenty minutes. The volume of vapor is similar to that ejected by the right whale. Sometimes, when engaged in feeding, it remains down for 'twenty-five minutes or more. When struck by the whalemen they have been known to remain on the muddy bottom, at a depth of fifty fathoms or more, for the space of an hour and twenty minutes. Their movements and the periods of time they remain above or below the surface are, however, irregular. When going gently along or lying quietly, they show two portions of the body — the spout-holes, and a part of the back. BALEEN. — The baleen, or " whalebone," of the Greenland and the Eight Whales, being of so much importance commercially, it canuot be amiss to explain, by means of diagrams and a description, 22 TUE WHALES AND PORPOISES. liow it is attached to the mouth of the animal, and for what purposes it is used, even at the risk of being a trifle too elementary for many of the readers of this chapter. It is wrongly called "whalebone," since it is not bone, but a substance, resembling equally hair and horu, which grows in the mouth of the animal as a substitute for teeth,1 being, as anatomists generally admit, a peculiar development of hair growing upon the palate.2 This substance is developed into a sieve-like apparatus, consisting of extensive rows of compact, flexible, closely set plates or blades, growing from the thick gum at the circumference and palatal surface of the upper jaw, hanging down upon both sides of the tongue. Capt. David Gray, of the whaling ship "Eclipse," of Peterhead, Scotland, has recently made a number of important observations upon these whales, one of the most important of which was the ascertainment of the manner in which the Baleen Whales operate the powerful sieve-like organs within their jaws. He has also published some very interesting diagrams of the interior of the mouth of the Greenland Whale.3 "Along the middle of the crown-bone," writes Captain Gray, "the blades of whalebone are separated from each other by three-quarters of an inch of gum, but the interval decreases both towards the nose and the throat to a quarter of an inch. The gum is always white; in substance it resembles the hoof of a horse, but softer. It is easily cut with a knife, or broken by the hand, and is tasteless. The whalebone representing the palate is lined inside the mouth with hair, for the purpose of covering the space between the slips, and prevents the food on which the Whale subsists from escaping. This hair is short at the roof of the mouth, but is from twelve to twenty inches long at the points of the whalebone. This it requires to be, because when the mouth is opened the bone springs forward, and the spaces are greatest at the points. I counted the number of blades of whalebone in a whale's head last voyage, and found 286 on the left, and 289 on the right side of the head. " Hitherto it has been believed that the whale bone had room to hang perpendicularly from the roof of the mouth to the lower jaw, when the mouth was shut, but such is not the case. The bone is, however, arranged so as to reach from the upper to the lower jaw when the mouth is open; were it otherwise the whale would not be able to catch its food; it would all escape underneath the points of the whalebone. The whale has no muscular power over its whalebone, any more than other animals have over their teeth. When the animal opens its mouth to feed, the whale- bone springs forward and downward, so as to fill the mouth entirely; when in the act of shutting- it again, the whalebone being pointed slightly towards the throat, the lower jaw catches it and carries it up into a hollow in front of the throat."4 1 The uuboru Greenland Whale has undeveloped teeth (" sixty to seventy dental pulps on each side of each jaw "), but they never cut the gum, but are reabsorbed into the system. QBuckland remarks: "Aristotle first remarked this fact: ' Mysticetus etiam pitas in ore habet vice dentmm siiis sells similes' — the whale lias hairs in his mouth, instead of teeth, like the hairs of a pig." Professor Owen has also remarked that "to a person looking into the mouth of a stranded whale, the concavity of the palate would appear to be beset with coarse hair." 3Laud and Water, December 1, 1877, p. 468. 1 Capt. David Gray's observations upon the position of the whalebone in the mouth of the Greenland Whale are quite novel, and of great interest. They arose, as the captain tells me in a letter just received, in consequence of a conversation which we had together a few years ago, while looking at the skeleton of the large Whale mounted in the Museum of the College of Surgeons. I asked if he could explain, what had always been to me, as to others who have iH'vrr had Captain Gray's opportunities of observation, a great puzzle, viz, how the whalebone, could be so much longer than the space which it occupied in the animal's mouth, supposing the blades to lie placed, as usually repre- sented, at viglil angles wit li the long axis of the jaws. This difficulty occurred in looking ;it all the authentic figures, such as Scorcsliy's, in which the height of the head is far too small for the length assigned to the whalebone on the Supposition stated above, and equally in looking at the actual bony frame-work of the head. Captain Gray's explana- tion that the slender ends (if the whalebone blades fold backwards when the mouth is shut, the longer ones from the THE BOWHEAD: FOOD AND FEEDING. 2o FOOD. — Tlic loot I ol' the Mowhead consists of floating animals, classed by the whalemen nndei (lit- names " right whale feed" and <'brit." .Many kinds of invertebrates are. of course, included under these general terms, one of the most abundant of which is, perhaps, a kind of winded or ptcropod mollusk, the Clio homilix, which occurs in northern seas, floating- in great masses. When the IJowhead is feeding it moves with considerable, velocity near the surface, its ja\\s being open to allow the passage of currents of water into the cavity of the month ami through the layers of baleen at the sides. All eatable substances are strained out by the fringes of the baleen and are swallowed. FEEDING HABITS. — The manner of feeding is well described by Captain Gray : " When the food is near the surface they usually choose a space between two pieces of ice, from three to four hundred yards apart, which we term their beat, and swim backwards and forwards, until they are satisfied that the supply of their food is exhausted. They often go with the point of their nose so near the surface that we can see the water running over it just as it does over a stone in a. shallow stream; they turn round before coming to the surface to blow, and lie for a short time to lick the food off their bone before going away for another mouthful. They often continue feeding in this way for hours, on and off, afterwards disappearing under the nearest floe, sleeping, I believe, under the ice, and coming out again when ready for another meal. In no other way can this sudden reappearance at the same spot be accounted for. " Very often the food lies from ten to fifteen fathoms below the surface of the water. In this case the whales' movements are quite different. After feeding they come to the surface to breathe and lie still for a minute. One can easily see the effort they make when swallowing. They then raise their heads partially out of the water, diving down again, and throwing their tails up in the air every time they disappear. Their course below the water can often be traced from their eddy. This is caused by the movement of the tail, which has the effect of smoothing the water in circles immediately behind them. " More whales have been caught when feeding in this way than in any other; they lie longer on the surface, often heading the same way every time they appear, which is very important to whale fishers, because whales must be approached tail-on to give any certainty of getting near enough to have a chance of harpooning them, and the harpooner has a betler idea where to place his boat to be in readiness to pull ou to them whenever they come to the surface. " Like all the other inhabitants of the sea, whales are affected by the tides, beingmost numerous at the full ami change of the moon, beginning to appear three da.\ s before, and disappearing entirch three days after, the change. Often this will go on for months with (lie utmost regularity, unless some great change in the ice takes place, such as the floes breaking up on the ice being driven off the ground ; in either case they will at once disappear. "No doubt whales are seen, and often taken at any time of the tides ; but if a herd is hunted middle of the jaw falling into the hollow formed by the shortness of the blades behind them, as seen in the side view, is perfectly clear and satisfactory. It shows, moreover, how, whether tlie month is .shut or open, or in any intermediate |iiisition, the lateral spaces between the upper and lower jaw are always kept filled up by the marvelonnly eonstrneted hair sieve, or strainer, which adapts itself by its flexibility ami elasticity to the varying condition of the parts between which it is, as it were, stretched across. If the whalebone had been rigid and depending perpendicularly from I he upper jaw when the mouth was opened, a space \\(inld be. left between the lips of the whalebone forming the' lowei edge of the strainer, which, as Captain Cray justly remarks, would complct. ly interfere with its n.--c, although the stiff. wall-like lower lip, closing in the sides of the month below, may have the eU'eet, of remedying snch a contingency to a certain extent; at, least, it would do sn if the whalebone were short and linn as in the tinners. The function of this great lip in supporting the slender and flexible h>\\ er ends of the blades of (lie Greenland Whale ami pre\ enl ing them being driven outwards by the tlow of water from within when the animal is closing its month, is evident from Captain Gray's drawings and explanation. Tin; whole, apparatus is a most perfect piece of animal mechanism. — FLOWER, W. II. : Land and Water, December 1, 1877, p. 470. 24 THE WHALES AND PORPOISES. systematically, and they are attached to a particular feeding bank, this is their usual habit. Neither can this peculiarity iu their habits be easily accounted for; their food is as abundant during the neap as it is in the spring tides. "The principal food of the Greenland Whale consists of a small crustacean, not larger than the common house-fly, which is found iu greatest abundance when the temperature of the sea is from 34° to 35°, the ordinary temperature amongst ice being 29°, the color of the water varying from dark brown to olive green and clear blue, the blue water being the coldest. " The Crustacea live upon the animalculfe which color the water. They are transparent, and the contents of their stomachs can be easily seen to be dark brown or green as the case may be." ' 11. THE RIGHT WHALES. DISTRIBUTION AND AFFINITIES. — There is no group of existing mammals so important as the Right Whales, concerning which so little that is satisfactory is known. Zoologists have not yet determined how many species there are, nor what are the limits of their distribution. All that can be certainly said is, that Right Whales — that is, the right kind to kill for the whalebone — occur in the North Atlantic and the North Pacific, and also in the cooler waters of the southern hemisphere. In the northern hemisphere they never cross the Tropic of Cancer, though in the south, both iu the Pacific and the Atlantic, they have occasionally been known to cross that of Capricorn. The Right Whales of the north have, until very recently, been confounded by whalemen and zoologists with the bowhead, or polar whale, to which they are closely related. There is one group of baleen-bearing whales, the rorquals, finners, or finbacks, which have a fin upon the back : the true Right Whales, however, have none. The rorquals, the largest of whales, are very swift and slender, and are believed to occur in tropical as well as temperate seas, all the world over. The Right Whale of the Western Atlantic has been described by E. D. Cope, under the name Eubalwna cisarctica. This species, not remotely related to the Eubalcena biscayensis, of the Eastern Atlantic, was formerly abundant on the coast of New England, and, as will be shown in the chapter on the shore whale fishery of New England, its presence in such numbers about Cape Cod was one of the chief reasons for planting the early English settlements in this district. Captain Atwood informs me that they are most abundant off Provincetown, in April and May, though occasionally seen at other seasons. One was killed in Cape Cod Bay, near Proviucetown, in 1867 ; it was forty-eight feet long, and yielded eighty-four barrels of oil, as well as 1,000 pounds of baleen, valued at $1,000. Two or three others have since then been killed in the vicinity, but years now often pass by without any being seen.2 A Right Whale of forty to fifty feet was killed in the harbor of Charleston, S. C., January 7, 1880, after it had been swimming about within the bar several days.3 In evidence of the former abundance of this species, may be mentioned the fact, that when, about the middle of the last century, whales began to be scarce along the coast, a large fleet was dispatched to Davis Straits, where none but whalebone whales occur. E. cisarctica occurs at least as far south as the Bermudas. A species of Right Whale is found also about the Azores. In the North Pacific occurs the Pacific Right Whale, or " Northwest Whale" of the whalers, 'Land aud Water, December 1, 1877, p. 470. * WHALING AT PROVINCETOWN. — A Right Whalo was captured in Provincetowu Harbor last Thursday, by a party in three boats. Estimated to yield sixty barrels of oil. — Gloucester Telegraph, November 6, 1850. 3 See Charleston News, January 8, 1880. THE EIGHT WHALES: MOVEMENTS AND EEPEODUCT1ON. 25 - cullamach (Chamisso) Cope. Its distribution is not well understood. Dull gives it as occurring in the Arctic, Bering, and Okhotsk Seas, off Lower California, and, perhaps, in Japan.1 Scainmon writes that in former years they were found on the coast of Oregon, and occasion- ally in large numbers; but their chief resort was upou what is termed the "Kodiak Ground," which extends northwestward from Vancouver's Island to the Aleutian Islands, and westward to the one hundredth and fiftieth meridian. They also abounded in the Okhotsk and Bering Seas, and along the Kamschatka coast. He supposes that those which have been observed on the coast of California were stragglers from the north. " Some, indeed," he writes, " have been taken (from February to April) as far south as the Bay of San Sebastian Viscarrio, and about Cedros, or Cevros, Island, both places being near the parallel of 29° north latitude; while on the northwestern coast they are captured by the whalers from April to September inclusive."2 None appear to have been killed on the California coast, within thirty or forty years, if we may judge from Captain Scamuion's failing to mention such instances. In the Antarctic Seas and the adjoining waters are other Right Whales. Eubalcvna australis, the Cape Whale or Black Whale, abounds about the Cape of Good Hope, and is regarded by .Murray as an inhabitant of the South Atlantic, South Pacific, and Indian Oceaus.3 E. antipodarum was described by Gray from New Zealand, and in Murray's map is designated as a more antarctic form than the Cape Whale, though in the text of his book he denies that this is known to be a fact.4 Owing to the fact that the bowhead and the Eight Whales have until recently been con- sidered identical, there is a dearth of reliable observations upon habits known to refer definitely to these animals. MOVEMENTS. — Their manner of feeding and general mode of life are, as might be expected, very similar to those of the bowhead. 1 quote from Scammou : "They are often met with singly in their wanderings, at other times in pairs or triplets, and scattered over the surface of the water as far as the eye can discern from the masthead. Toward the last of the season they are seen in large numbers crowded together. The herds are called ' gams,' and they are regarded by experienced whalemen as an indication that the whales will soon leave the grounds. "Their manner of respiration is to blow seven to nine times at a 'rising,' then, 'turning flukes' (elevating them six or eight feet out of the water), they go down and remain twelve or fifteen minutes. It is remarked, however, since these whales have been so generally pursued, that their action in this respect has somewhat changed. When frightened by the approach of a boat they have a trick of hollowing the back, which causes the blubber to become slack, thus preventing the harpoon from penetrating. Many whales have been missed, owing to the boat-steerer darting at this portion of the body. Having been chased every successive season for years, these animals have become very wild and difficult to get near to, especially in calm weather." EEPEODUCTION. — The time of gestation is fixed by Scammou at about one year. Twins are occasionally though rarely born. The time and place of calving is not.known, but are supposed to be variable, as in the case of the sperm whale. These whales are said to resort to the California!! "bays" to bring forth their young, and formerly were sought for in the inland waters of these high southern latitudes, where many a ship lias in past years quickly completed her cargo by "bay whaling."5 'BALL: Catalogue of the Cetaceaus of the North Pacific Ocean. 5. A whale, seventy-five feet in length, was landed on King's Reach, on the 9th of December. Dr. Henry Burc.hstod rode into its mouth, iu a chaise drawn by a horse ; and afterwards had two of his bones set up for gate- posts at his house in Essex street, where they stood for more than fifty years. [Opposite the doctor's house, the cot of Moll 1'i tcher, the celebrated fortune-teller, stood. And many were the sly inquiries from strangers for the place whens the big whale-bones were to be seen.] — Ibid., p. 330. 3 Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, vol. viii, p. 204, and iu letters. TRUMBULL CONCERNING DUBEETUS. 29 In answer to a letter of inquiry from Professor Baird, Professor Truiubull wrote as follows: HARTFORD, February 1, 1880. DEAR PROFESSOR BAIRD : Your query of January 29 just now comes to hand. Isn't that troublesome Dubertus rltoil!iixi/l<'iixis satisfactorily disposed of yet ? More than twenty-one yours ago (in November, IS.jS) the Rev. S. C. Newman, of Pawtucket, questioned Professor Agassiz on the subject. His reply was, that having looked in the only work in which he supposed the desired information was likely to be found — Neinnich's Pollyglotten Lexicon — he could only say that it did not even contain the name " Dubertus." The correspondence, so far unsatisfactory, was printed in the " Providence Journal," December 9. The nest day the Hon. Albert G. Greene wrote to the ''Journal " that " before and at the time of the granting of the charter of Rhode Island, ' Dubertus ' was the word used to distinguish the sperm whale from' the common or right whale," and referred for his autlfority to the description given by Sir Thomas Browne "of the spermaceti whale," which "mariners (who are not the best noinenclators) called a Jubartaa, or rather Gibbartas." Mr. Greene came very near being right, and undoubtedly was right in identifying the "Dubertus" of the charter with the "Jubartas" or "Gibbartas"of the old whale fishermen; but he was wrong on the main point that either "Jubartas" or "Dubertus" was a distinctive name of the sperm whale, .•\cept by a "vulgar error" of the Norfolk mariners, who, as Sir Thomas Browne understood, "are not the best noinenclators." The "Jubartas," "Gibbartas," or "Gubartas" — as the name which, by an error of the engrossing clerk, appears as "Dubertus" in the Ehode Island charter, was variously written by naturalists in the seventeenth century — was a Finback, the " Balwna JVom A a (/lite," as Klein calls it, the " Jupiter visch" of the Dutch whalers, Balmwptera Jubartes of Lace'pede. (The last name I heard for it was, I think, Sibbaldius tuberosus ; but this was a year or two ago, and it may have been rechristeued a dozen times since then.) The name, however, has been applied to more than one species of Finback, for naturalists, when dealing with cetacea, were not, in the last century, much better "nomeuclators" than the English mariners ; but it has always been restricted to the Balaenopterida, and has never designated any species of either sperm or rii/ltt whales. The history of the name is curious. Eondelet (" De Piscibus" lib. xvi, p. 482) gives a figure of a " Bahiina Vera" (drawn from life, he says) which "the whale fishers of Saintouge call Gibbar, a Gibbero Dorso, that is, raised in a hump, on which is the tin." From this provincial name came Gibbai-fdK, Gubnrttm, Jubart, Jubartes, Jupiter, and half a dozen other corruptions, introduced first among mari n eis, and afterwards adopted or recognized as synonyms by naturalists, and distributed among three or four different species. Lace'pede, under Balwnoptera Jubartes, includes Balccna boops (Gmelin), and "probably the Kul/ilmr-bottom of the west coast of NorWi America," the Jubartes of Klein, and the Jupiter Fisch, described by Anderson, as well as Baleine Jxbartc of Bonnaterre (Encyc. Meth.). Klein ("Misc. Pise.," 11, 13) says that the whale catchers have corrupted the name of the Jupiter, or L'iscis Jovis, to Jubartes, which is reversing the actual process of corruption. He calls this the '• Whale of New England." Anderson, cited by Lacepede, in '-Nachrichten von Island, Gronland, etc.," p. 220, describes "the Jupiter or Jnpiterfisch " as a kind of fin-fish, saying that its name, without doubt, comes from that of Gubttries or Gibbtirtas, which has been given it by others, and which is itself a corruption of the Biscayau Gibbni-, But Lacepede makes " Balana nodosa," "Humpback Whale of the English," and Balwna gibbosa" the Whales of New England, and refers to Bonnaterre. who separates /«• Gibbar, Eugl. Finfish, from la Jubarte B. boops. Between Gibbar and Gibbosa, Jupiter and Gubartus, the things get rather mixed. 30 THE WHALES AND PORPOISES. ('ran/-, in his history of Greenland (Eugl. trausl., vol. i, p. 110) describes "the Jupiter Whale, which the Spanish whale fishers call more properly OnbartdSj or Oibbar, from a protuberance, gibber o, which grows towards the tail, besides the fin." Returning to the "Dubertus" of the charter, Senator 'Anthony will see how easy it was for an engrossing clerk to mistake the initial "G-," in seventeenth century chancery-hand, for a "D," in an unfamiliar name. A more troublesome mistake was made by the engraver of the seal of the Massachusetts Bay Company, which obliged Governor Wiuthrop always to describe himself, in official papers, as governor of the Company of Mattachusetts Bay, etc. J. HAMMOND TRUMBULL. THE PACIFIC FINBACK. — The Finback of the Pacific, Ealccnoptera veli/era Cope, also called the Oregon Finner, is common in Oregon and California, and is the rival of the sulphur-bottom in swiftness. Like the Atlantic Finbacks, it can be taken only with the bomb gun. Scammon gives the measurements of an individual sixty feet long which came ashore near the Golden Gate. He states that enormous quantities of codfish have been found in their stomachs. "The habitual movements of the Finback in several points are peculiar. When it respires, the vaporous breath passes quickly through its spiracles, and when a fresh supply of air is drawn into the breathing system, a sharp and somewhat musical sound may be heard at a considerable distance, which is quite distinguishable from that of other whales of the same genus. ( We have observed the intervals between the respirations of a large Finback to be about seven seconds.) It frequently gambols about vessels at sea, in mid-ocean, as well as close in with the coast, darting under them, or shoot- ing swiftly through the water on either side; at one moment upon the surface, belching forth its quick, ringing spout, and the next instant submerging itself beneath the waves as if enjoying a spirited race with the ship darting along under press of sail. Occasionally they congregate in schools of fifteen to twenty or less." ' "An instance occurred in Monterey Bay in 1865, of five being captured; a 'pod' of whales was seen in the offing, from their shore station, by the whalemen, who immediately gave chase- One was harpooned, and, although it received a mortal wound, they all 'run together' as before. One of the gunners managed to shoot the whole five, and they were all secured. "A Finback sixty-five feet long yielded seventy-five barrels of oil. The blubber was clear white, seven to nine inches thick. The largest baleen measured twenty-eight inches in length, thirteen in width, and was provided with a long fringe."2 Another related form, the Sharp-headed Finner, B. Davidsonii Scammon, has habits similar to the- Finback, but frequents more northern waters, where it is sometimes taken by the Indians of Cape Flattery. 15. THE SCRAG WHALE. HISTORY OF THE SCRAG WHALE. — The Hon. Paul Dudley, writing in 1809 of the whales of New England, remarked upon a certain kind in these words: "A Scrag ~\Vli. '.'•:>. JSCAMMON: up. fit., It. :$4. "DUDLEY, PAUL: Philosophical Transactions, xxxiii, 1809, p. 259. Till'; SCRAG AND THE DEVIL-PISH. 31 and grew up without parental care, which has caused a slight uiodiliratiiui. The most prominent feature is that in its dorsal ridge, near the tail, there are a number of small projections or bunches, having some resemblance to the teeth of a saw. It has no dorsal fin or hump on its back."1 Douglass, writing in 1748, also mentioned the Scrag and the humps upon its body. Cope has formed for this whale the genus Agaphclus, and it stands in the lists under the name AfinjihcliiH f/ilibiiNHs [Erxl.] (.'ope. The Sera- is of special interest on account of its influence in first developing the. whaling industries of Nan tucket. Macy, the historian of the island, states that in the very early days of that colony, prior to 1072, "A whale of the kind called the Scragg canie into the harbor and continued there three days. This excited the curiosity of the people and led them to devise measures to prevent his return out of the harbor. They accordingly invented and caused to be wrought for them a harpoon with which they attacked and killed the whale. This first success encouraged them to undertake whaling as a permanent business; whales being at that time numerous iu the vicinity of the shores." -' Scammon remarks: "Our observations make it certain that there is a 'Scrag' Eight Whale m the North Pacific which corresponds very nearly to that of the Southern Ocean, and which yields a paltry amount of oil."3 No identification of this form has yet been made. Dieffen- bach states that in the southern seas "Scrags" is the whalers' name for the young of the right whale.4 16. THE CALIFORNIA GRAY WHALE. DISTRIBUTION. — The California Gray Whale, RhacManectcs glaitcus Cope, called by whalemen " Devil-Jish," " Hard Head," « Gray Back," "Kip Sack," and " Mussel Digger," though long known to fishermen, was first described in 18C9, from specimens brought to the United States National Museum by Capt. W. H. Dall, of the United States Coast Survey. The only account of its habits is in Scammon's book, already often quoted. Its range is from the Arctic Seas to Lower Cali- fornia. From 'November to May it is found on the California coast, \\ hile in summer it resorts to the Arctic Ocean and the Okhotsk Sea. In October and November it is seen off Oregon and Upper California, returning to warm water for the winter. HABITS. — They follow close along the. shore, often passing through the kelp, and congregate in the lagoons of the southern coast, where they are the objects of the extensive, lagoon or hay whale fishery. ABUNDANCE. — Their abundance in former years and at present was thus discussed by Captain Scammon in 1874: "It has been estimated, approximately, by observing men among the shore whaling parties that a thousand whales passed southward daily from the 15th of December to the 1st of February, for several successive seasons after shore whaling was established, which occurred in 1851. Captain Packard, who has been engaged in the business for over twenty years, thinks this a low estimate. Accepting this number without allowing for those which passed offshore out of sight from the land, or for those which passed before the loth of December, and after the 1st of February, the aggregate would be increased to 47,000. Captain Packard also states that at the present time I he average number seen from the stations passing daily would not exceed forty. From our own observation upon the coast, we are inclined to believe that the numbers resorting annually to the coast of California from 1853 to ]85(! did not. exceed 40,000— probably not over 30,000; and at the present time there are many which pass off shore at so great a distance as to 'ALLEN: Mammalia of Massachiisrtts. <[Hnllrtin of ilio Museum of Comparative Zoology, 8, p. 203. "MACY: lli.story of fvuituckof, p. ys. :l SCAMMON: loc. cit., p. 67. 'DiEKFENBACU, E. : Travels iu Now Zealand,], 1H4H, p. 45. 32 THE WHALES AND PORPOISES. be invisible from the lookout stations ; there are probably between 100 and "200 whales going south- ward daily from the beginning to the end of the ' down season' (from December 15 to February 1). The estimate of the annual herd visiting the coast is probably not large, as there is no allowance made for those that migrate earlier and later in the season. From what data we have been able to obtain, the whole number of California Gray Whales which have been captured or destroyed since the bay whaling commenced in 1846 would not exceed 10,800, and the number which now periodically visits the coast does not exceed 8,000 or 10,000." l On another page he writes : "None of our whales are so constantly and variously pursued as this; and the large bays and lagoons where these mammals once congregated, brought forth and nurtured their young, are already nearly deserted. The mammoth bones of the California Gray lie bleaching on the shores of these silvery waters, and are scattered along the broken coasts from Siberia to the Gulf of California ; and ere long, it may be questioned whether this mammal will not be numbered amoug the extinct species of the Pacific."2 SIZE. — The male attains the average length of thirty-five feet, while the female grows to forty or more. A female forty -four feet long and twenty-two feet in circumference is considered large, though some still greater have been caught, yielding sixty or seventy barrels of oil. The average yield of the male is twenty to twenty-five barrels. The baleen is light brown or nearly white, coarse-grained, with a heavy, uneven fringe, the longest strips measuring from fourteen to sixteen inches. The blubber is solid and tough, reddish in color, and from six to ten inches thick. FOOD AND REPRODUCTION. — The nature of the food of the California Gray Whale is not satisfactorily known, though it is reasonable to suppose that it consists of surface animals, strained out by the baleen. They breed in the winter, the females entering the California lagoons, while the males remain outside. To their disturbance on their breeding grounds may be attributed the great diminution in numbers. The period of gestation is about a year. Alter the young are born, male and female and calf are seen working northward together, and Scaminon thinks that they bear young only once in two years. CAPTURE. — The habit of frequenting shoal bays is peculiar to this one species. They are often seen among the breakers, where they are tossed about by the grounds well, and where the water is hardly deep enough to float them. The pursuit of this whale is very dangerous, owing to their savage disposition and the shoalness of the water into which they are followed. The Eskimos and Indians of the Northwest kill many, using their flesh for food and their skins for clothing. 1 SCAMMON : op. (At., p. 23. 4 SCAMMON : op. cit., p. 33. THE SEAL TRIBE IN GENERAL. 33 B.— THE SEALS AND WALRUSES. NOTE. — The following biographies of the Seals and "Walruses are, by the permission of the author, J. A. Allen, extracted from the" Monograph of the Pinnipeds of North America." It is considered important to present in this Report, in a form convenient for reference, biographies of all the im- portant aquatic animals of the United States ; and since it is manifestly impossible to secure from any other source so complete and reliable a discussion of the Seals as that given by Allen, it has been thought allowable to reprint the biographical portion of his monograph. The material is here published iirsuch a different form, being divested of the great mass of technical matter, interesting chiefly to zoologists, with which it was originally surrounded, that it is to all intents a fresh pre- sentation of the subject. The Biography of the Walruses lias been condensed and rewritten by Mr. Goode, during the ill-health and absence of Mr. Allen, the discussions in the monograph being too extended for the needs of this Report. For an exceedingly interesting biography of these most interesting animals the reader is referred to Mr. Allen's more detailed work.1 17. THE SEAL TRIBE IN GENERAL. The Pinnipeds, or Pinnipedia, embracing the Seals and Walruses, are commonly recognized by recent systematic writers as constituting a suborder of the order Fenv, or Carnivorous Mammals. They are, in short, true Carnivora, modified for an aquatic existence, and have consequently been sometimes termed "Amphibious Garni rora." Their whole form is modified for life in the water, which element is their true Lome. Here they display extreme activity, but on land their move- ments are confined and labored. The existing Pinnipeds constitute three very distinct minor groups or families, ditlering quite widely from each other in important characters : these are the Walruses, or Odiilxriiida; the. Eared Seals, or Otariida:, and the Earless Seals, or Phocida: The first two are far more nearly allied than are either of these with the third, so that the Odoba-nida' and Otariida: may be together contrasted •with the Phocida'. The last named is the lowest or most generalized group, while the others appear to stand on nearly the same plane, and about equally remote from the Phocida'. The Walruses are really little more than thick, clumsy, obese forms of the otarian type, with the canines enor- mously developed, and the whole skull correlatively modified. The limb-structure, the mode of life, and the whole economy are essentially the same in the two groups, and aside from the cranial modifications presented by the Odolmnidce, which are obviously related to the development of the canines as huge tusks, the Walruses' are merely elephantine Otariids, the absence or presence of an external ear being in reality a feature of minor importance. The Pinnipeds present a high degree of cerebral development, and are easily domesticated under favorable conditions. They manifest strong social and parental affection, and defend their young with great persistency and courage. They are carnivorous (almost without exception), subsisting upon fishes, mollusks, and crustaceans, of which they consume enormous quantities. The Walruses and Eared Seals are polygamous, and the. males greatly exceed the females in si/e. The ordinary or Earless Seals are commonly supposed to be monogamous, and there is generally little difference in the size of the sexes. The Walruses and Eared Seals usually resort in lar^e numbers to certain favorite breeding grounds, and during the season of reproduction leave the water, and pass a considerable period upon land. The Earless Seals, on the other hand, with the exception of the Sen Elephants, do not so uniformly resort to particular breeding grounds oil land, n. ALI.IN, .inn. A-.u'ii : llistm-.v "I'Nnrtli Aniri ir:ii] ]'iniii|irils: :i moucgraph of the Walruses, Sea Lions, Sea s. :iinl s,-;i]s of North Auirnr.-i. Washington, Government I'riiitiiii; oilier. I.--M. -fid pp., xvi. 7-.".. ]>iililiratiniis. NIL 1-.'. 1". >. I it-ol. A. i reog. >nr\ .. 1". V. ll:i\ilni, Ci-nld^isi in rli:irj;i*. :j F 34 THE SEALS' AND WALRUSES. and leave the water only for very short intervals. They usually bring forth their young on the ice, must oi' (lie species being confined to the colder latitudes. Only one of the various species of the Pinniju'tliii appears to be strictly tropical, and very few of them range into tropical waters. As a group, the Pinnipeds are distinctively characteristic of the arctic, antarctic, and temperate portions of the globe, several of the genera being strictly arctic or subarctic in their distribution. The Walruses are at present confined mainly within the Arctic Circle, and have no representatives south of the colder portions of the Northern Hemisphere. The Otariidmatid Phocidce, on the other hand, are abundantly represented on both sides of the Equator, as will be noticed more in detail later. 18. THE WALRUSES. DISCUSSION OF THE ATLANTIC AND PACIFIC SPECIES. — There are two species of Walrus, that of the Atlantic, Odoltccnwt roxmants Malmgren, and that of the Pacific, 0. obesus (Illiger) Allen. These animals are found only in the extreme north, and it was for many years commonly supposed that there was but a single circumpolar species. Mr. Allen has confirmed the views of Pennant, expressed in 1702 and emphasized since 1870 by Elliott and Gill. Their differences are thus described : The Pacific Walrus is similar in size, and probably in general contour, to'that of the Atlantic (though possibly rather larger, and commonly described or depicted as more robust or thicker at the shoulders), but quite different in its facial outlines. The tusks are longer and thinner, generally more convergent, with much greater inward curvatures, the bristles upon the muzzle shorter and smaller. The chief external difference appears to consist in the shape of the muzzle and the size and form of the bristly nose-pad, which has a vertical breadth at least one-fourth greater than in the Atlantic species. Very important differences -between the two species are exhibited in the skulls, which are fully described in Mr. Allen's book. DISTRIBUTION OF THE ATLANTIC WALRUS. — The Atlantic Walrus is not now to be found within the limits of the United States, nor has it been within historic time, or during the last three hundred and fifty years, though, like the musk ox, the caribou, and the moose, it ranged during the great Ice Period much beyond the southern limit of its boundary at the time the eastern coast of North America was first visited' by Europeans. During the last half of the sixteenth century they are known to have frequented the southern coast of Nova Scotia as well as the shores aud islands to the northward, but this appears at- that time to have been their southern limit of distribution, and to these islands New England vessels seem occasionally to have resorted to kill them for their teeth and oil.1 In 1775 they were abundant in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, at the Magdalen Islands, Saint John's, and Anticosti, where they congregated yearly to the number of seven or eight thousand, and where they were soon exterminated by the "Americans."2 In ItSGO and 1809 Packard and Gil phi recorded the killing of individuals near the Straits of Belle Isle, and in 1S(>S one was driven ashore in Saint George Bay, Newfoundland. The last seen in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence was, according to Professor Packard, in 1841, when one was killed at Saint Augustine, Labrador. Dr. Bernard Gilpin speaks of the occurrence of their bones at Miscou, on the Day of Chaleur, in such numbers as to form artificial sea-beaches. These were, doubtless, victims of "the Royal Company of Miscou," founded during the earlier part of Hie seven- 1 A vessel that returned at thai time (KVI1) from the Jsles of Sables made a bettor voyage, bringing I'our hundred pair of Sea-horse tcclli with divers tun of oil, besides much other goods of like sort which they left In-hind, worth £15(10.— HuiiBAUD'.S Histoiy of New I'.ngland from^hc discovery to 1C4S, p. :',79. The Son-Cow or .Morse is plenty upon the coasts of Nova-Soot ia and the (iulph of Si. Laurence, particularly at Ilio island of St. John's: it is of (lie bigness of a middling cow (it is not the same with the Manatee of the Gnlpli of Mexico), a very thick skin with hair like that of a seal. — Dona. ASS' North America, 17.")."). -Meaning, of course, people from Hie southern colonies. THE WALRUS: HABITS A-ND DISTRIBUTION. 35 teentli century by the King of France, and whose ephemeral city of New Rochelle has passed away, leaving no sign. The murdered Sea horses have left a more enduring monument than their murderers. At the present time its distribution in the Western Atlantic seems to lie limited mi the south by the parallel of latitude.' (!5°, and on (lie west, along the arctic coast by the ninety- seventh meridian of longitude. It inhabits the shore of Hudson's P,ay, Davis's Strait, and Green- land, ranging north to Repulse Bay and Prince; Regent Inlet. In the Old World it is found only about the islands and in the icy seas of Eastern Europe and the neighboring waters of "Western Asia. It has rarely been met with to the eastward of the Jenisei (longitude 82° E.), and has not been seen eastward of the one hundred and thirtieth meridian. As lately as 1857 a straggler was seen at Orkney and another in Nor' Isles. The distribution of this species has been thus carefully noted because its destruction has been participated in, and the time of its extermination doubtless to some extent hastened, by the efforts of American whalemen. The Walrus is the Morse or Sea-horse of ancient writers, many quaint extracts from whom, with, reproductions of their figures, are given by Mr. Allen. DISTRIBUTION OF THE PACIFIC WALRUS.— While the Atlantic Walrus has been familiar to our race since A. I). S71. when the Norman explorer Othere brought tusks of the "Horsewhale" from the Arctic Sea- to King Alfred of England, that of the Pacific was not discovered until 1G4S, when the Cossack adventurer Staduchin found its tusks on the arctic coast of Eastern Asia; nor was it fairly known until the time of Steller, Cook, Kotzebne, and Pallas, in the latter half of the eighteenth century. Its range is comparatively narrow, being confined on the one hand to a com- paratively small stretch of the northern and eastern coasts of Asia, and to a still smaller portion of the opposite American coast. To the westward the Walrus appears not to have been traced beyond Cape Schelatskoi (157° 30' east longitude), and to have occurred in large herds only as far west as Koljutschin Island (150° east longitude). On the eastern coast of Asia, as early as 1742, none had been seen south of latitude 00°, and of course their southern range in that direction is now still more limited. In the Arctic Sea, north of Bering Strait, they have been met with as far north as ships have penetrated, their westward range being limited only by the unbroken ice sheet. On the American coast they have been traced eastward only as far as Point Barrow. They were formerly abundant about the islands in Bering Sea, but there is no evidence that they ever ranged as far south as the outermost islands in the Aleutian chain. On the mainland they were found by Cook, at Bristol Bay, latitude 58° 42', where now, according to Elliott, they are more numerous than at any point south of the Arctic Circle. Their immense destruction, chiefly by American whalers, renders it probable that before long they will be entirely exterminated in the territory of the United States. SIZE. — The length of a full-grown male Atlantic Walrus is given by Dr. Gilpiu at twelve t'eei three inches, its weight being estimated at 2,250 pounds, while Elliott gives the length of a similar Alaska specimen at twelve to thirteen feet, its girth ten to fourteen feet, and its weight 2. (KM) pounds, the skin alone weighing from 250 to 400, the head from 60 to 80 pounds. HAIUTS. — The Walruses are at all times more or less gregarious, occurring generally in large* or small companies, according to their abundance. Like the Seals, they are restricted in tlieii wanderings to the neighborhood of shores or large masses of floating ice, being rarely seen far out in the open sea. Although moving from one portion of their feeding ground to another, they are said to be in no sense a migrating animal. They delight in huddling together on the ice tloes, or on shore, to which places they resort to bask in the sun, pressing one against another like so many swine. They are also said to repair in large herds to favorable shores or islands, usually in Ma.\ and June, to give birth to their young, at which times they sometimes remain constantly on land 36 THE SEALS AND WALRUSES. for two weeks together, without ever taking food. They are believed to be monogamous, and to bring forth usually but a single young at a time, and never more thau two. The period of gesta- tion is eominouly believed to be about iiiue months. The young are born from April to June, the time probably varying with the latitude. The Walrus, like (he common Seal, is said to have its breathing' hole in the ice. The tusks appear to be used for two purposes, to aid in landing upon icy and rocky shores, and in aid of their clumsy locomotion, and also in digging up the shell-fish and roots of marine plants upon which they feed. Their voice is a loud roaring or '• Lucking," and the voices of a herd may be distinguished at the distance of several miles. Although savage ill appearance, they are inoffensive and harmless, except when attacked, but when enraged are fiei-ce and vindictive, especially in defense of their young, for which they exhibit much affection. They are wary and shy, however, and difficult to approach except under cover of darkness. The hide, the oil, and the tusks of the Walrus are of commercial value, and the walrus fishery of the Pacific is of considerable importance. "In looking at this uncouth animal," writes a contributor to ' Scribner's Monthly Magazine,' " the most natural question at once arises, What earthly service can such an ungainly 'stupid beast render'? What, indeed, is the use of its existence? But the answer is swift and satisfactory: were it not for the subsistence furnished so largely by the flesh and oil of the Morse, it is exceediugly doubtful whether the Esquimaux of North America, from Bering Strait clear around to Labrador, could manage to live. It is not to be inferred that walrus meat is the sole diet of these simple people, for that is very wide of the truth ; but there are several months of every year when the exigencies of the climate render it absolutely impossible for the hardiest native to go out and procure food, and then the value of the caclw of walrus meat is appreciated, when for weeks and weeks it forms the beginning and end of every meal. The Walrus responds to as many demands of the Iiiuuit as the camel of the Arab, or the cocoa-palm of the South Sea Islander. Its flesh feeds him; its oil illuminates and warms his dark hut; its sinews make his bird-nets; its tough skin, skillfully stretched over the light wooden frame, constitutes his famous kayak, and the serviceable oorniak, or bidarrah; its intestines are converted into water-proof clothing, while the soles to its flippers are transferred to his feet; and, finally, its ivory is a source of endless utility to him in domestic use and in trade and barter. Walrus famines among the Esquimaux have been recorded in pathetic legends by almost all of the savage settlements in the arctic. Even now, as I write (November, 1880), conies the authentic corroboration of the harsh rumor of the starvation of the inhabitants of Saint Lawrence Island — those people who live just midway between the Old World and the New, in Alaskan waters. The winter of 1879- '80 was one of exceptional rigor in the arctic, though in this country it was unusually mild and open. The ice closed in solid around Saint Lawrence Island, so firm and unshaken by the mighty powers of wind and tide that the Walrus were driven far to the southward and eastward, out of reach of the unhappy inhabitants of that island, who, thus unexpectedly deprived of their mainstay and support, seem to have miserably starved to death, with the exception of one small village on the north shore. The residents of the Poonook, Poogo- vellyak. and Kagallegak settlements perished, to a soul, from hunger — nearly 300 men, women, and children. I was among these people in 1874, during the mouth of August, and remarked their manifold superiority over the savages of the northwest coast and the great plains. They seemed then to live, during nine mouths of the year, almost wholly upon the flesh and oil of the Walrus. Clean-limbed, bright-eyed, and jovial, they profoundly impressed one with their happy subsistence and reliance upon the walrus herds of Bering Sea; and it was remarked then that these people had never been subjected to the temptation, and subsequent sorrow, of putting their trust in princes; hence their independence and good heart. 15ut now it appears that it will not suffice, either, to put Your trust in Walrus." THE EARED SEALS: HABITS AND DISTRIBUTION. 37 19. THE SEA LIONS AND FUR SEALS IN GENERAL. GENERAL CHARACTKRS. — The largest species of tin- Otarics (genera Otaria and Enmetopius) an1 Hair Seals, while the smallest (genera CaUorkiinis and Arctocephalus) are Fur Seals; but the species of Zitliiplnix, although Hair Seals, are intermediate in size between the other Hair Seals and the Fur Seals. All the Hair Seals have coarse, hard, still' hair, varying in length with age and season, and are wholly without soft underfur. All the Fur Seals have an abundant soft, silky underfill-, giving to the skiifs of the females and younger males great value as articles of commei <-e. The longer, coarser overhair varies in length and abundance with season and age. All the Hair Seals are yellowish or reddish brown (in Zalophus sometimes brownish-black), generally darkest when young, and becoming lighter with age, and also in the same individuals toward the molting season. There is also considerable range of individual variation in representatives of the same species, so that coloration alone fails to afford satisfactory diagnostic characteis. All the Fur Seals are black when young, but they become lighter with age, through an abundant admixture of grayish hairs which vary from yellowish-gray to whitish-gray. The southern Fur Seals are generally, when adult, much grayer than the northern. There is hence a wide range of color variation with age in the same species, as there is also among conspeciflc individuals of the same sex and age. While some have the breast and sides pale yellowish-gray, others have these parts strongly rufous, the general tint also showing to some extent these differences. There is also a wonderful disparity in size between the sexes, the weight of the adult males being generally three to five times that of the adult females of the same species. There are also very great differences in the form of the skull, especially in respect to the development of crests ami protuberances for muscular attachment, these being only slightly developed in females and enormously so in the males. With such remarkable variations in color and cranial characters, dependent upon age and sex, it is not a matter of surprise that many nominal species have arisen through a Disappreciation of the real significance of these differences. HABITS. — The Eared Seals show also a remarkable resemblance in their gregarious and polyg- amous habits. All the species, wherever occurring, like the Walruses and Sea Elephants, resort in great numbers to particular breeding stations, which, in sealers' i>firltmce, have acquired the strangely inappropriate name of "rookeries." The older males arrive first at the breeding grounds, where they immediately select their stations and await the arrival of the females. They keep up a perpetual warfare for their favorite sites, and afterward in defense of their harems. The number of females acquired by the successful males varies from a dozen to fifteen or more, which they guard with the utmost jealousy — might being with them the law of right. The strongest males are nat- urally the most successful in gathering about them large harems. The males, during the breeding season, remain wholly on land, and they will suffer death rather than leave their chosen spot. They thus sustain, for a period of several weeks, an uninterrupted fast. They arrive at the breeding stations fat and vigorous, and leave them weak and emaciated, having been nourished through their long period of fasting wholly by the fat of their own bodies. The females remain uninter- ruptedly on land for a much shorter period, but for a considerable time after their arrival do not leave the harems. The detailed account given a century ago by Steller, and recently confirmed by Bnant and Elliott, of the habits of the northern Fur and Hair Seals during the bn-iding season, is well known to apply, in gi eater or less detail, to nearly all the species of the family, and presumably to all. As the observations by Messrs. Elliott and Bryant are presented later in this work at length, it is unnecessary to give further details in the present connection. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. — The most striking fact in respect to the distribution of the OtariidcB is their entire absence from the waters of the North Atlantic. 38 THE SEALS AND WALRUSES. As already noticed, the Eared Seals are obviously divisible, by the character of the pelage, into two groups, which are commercially distinguished as the "Hair Seals" and the "Fur Seals," which are likewise respectively known as the "Sea Lions" and the "Sea Bears." The two groups have nearly the same geographical distribution, and are commonly found frequenting the same shores, but generally living apart. Usually only one species of each is met with at the same localities, and it is worthy of note that, with the exception of the coast of California, no naturalist has ever reported the occurrence together of two species of Hair Seals or two species of Fur Seals, although doubtless l wo species of Hair Seals exist on the islands and shores of Tasmania and Australia, as well as on the California!! coast. The Hair and Fur Seals are about equally arid similarly represented on both sides of the Equator, but they are confined almost wholly to the temperate and colder latitudes. Of the nine species provisionally above recognized, two of the five Hair Seals are northern and three southern; of the four Fur Seals, three are southern and one only is northern ; but the three southern are closely related (perhaps doubtfully distinct, at least two of them), and are evidently recent and but slightly differentiated forms of a common ancestral stock. Of the two Eared Seals of largest size (Eumctopias SteUeri and Otarin jubata), one is northern and the other southern, and, though differing generic-ally in the structure of the skull, are very similar in external characters, and geographically are strictly representative. Zalopltus is the only genus occurring on both sides of the Equator, but the species are different iu the two hemispheres. The Fur Seals of the north are the strict geographical repre- sentatives of those of the south. Phocarctos Hoolterl is Australasian, and has no corresponding form in the Northern Hemisphere. No species of Eared Seal is known from the North Atlantic. Several of the southern species range northward into the equatorial regions, reaching the Galapagos Islands and the northern shores of Australia. THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE FUE SEALS IN THE SOUTHERN SEAS. — They occur not only on both the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of the South American continent, about its southern extremity, and on all the outlying islands, including not only the Falklands, the South Shetland and South Georgian, but at other small islands more to the eastward, at Prince Edward's, the Crozets, Kerguelen, Saint Paul, and Amsterdam, the southern and western shores of Australia, Tasmania, New Zealand, and at the numerous smaller islands south of the two last named. They have been found, in fact, at all the islands making up the chain of pelagic islets stretching some- what interruptedly from Cape Horn and the Falkland Islands eastward to Australia and New Zealand, including among others those south of the Cape of Good Hope, so famous in the annals of the seal-fishery. It has been stated by Gray and others that the Cape of Good Hope Fur Seals (really those of the Crozets and neighboring islands) are far inferior in commercial value to those of other regions; but in tracing the history of the sealing business I have failed to notice any reference to the inferior quality of those from the last-named locality, or that there has been any difference in the commercial value of the fur seal skins obtained at different localities in the Southern Seas. The quality differs at the same locality, wherever the Fur Seals are found, with the season of the year and age of the animals, so that skins may come not only from the Cape of Good Hope, but from any other of the sealing places, that one "might feel convinced could not be dressed as furs." being "without very thick underfur." 20. THE SEA LION. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION.— The known range of this species, Eumetopias SteUeri (Lesson) Peters, extends along the west coast of North America from the Faralloue Islands, in latitude 37° 40' north, to the Priliylov Islands. Its northern limit of distribution is not definitely known, but THE SEA LION: GENERAL HISTORY. 39 it does not appear to have been met with north of about the latitude <>!' Saint Matthew's Island (about latitude lil°). Neither Mr. W. H. Dull nor Mr. H. W. Elliott has met with it above this point, and they have both informed me that they have no reason to suppose it extends any further northward or beyond the southern limit of floating ice. According to Steller, it existed in his time along the whole eastern coast of Kamtchatka and southward to the Kurile Islands. lie found it abundant on Bering** and Copper Islands, where it is still well known to exist. If Dr. ({ray's Ettiiiitnpiiis donijntiix, as originally described in 1873 (the same specimen was referred by him in 1S72 to E. Stelleri), be referable, as I believe, to the female of E. fiteUeri, the range of this species appears to extend southward on the Asiatic coast as far as Japan. Although the Sea Lions of the California coast that have of late years attracted so much attention appear to be the smaller species, Xulojtlmx C/ilifuniinnua, the occurrence of the present species there is also fully established, where it is resident the whole year, and where it brings forth its young, as proven by specimens transmitted some years .since by Dr. Ayres to the Smithsonian Institution. GENERAL HISTOUY. — The Northern Sea Lion was first described in 1751 by Steller, who, under the name of Leo martinis, gave a somewhat detailed account of its habits and its geographical range, so far as known to him. Captain Scam ui on, in 187-i, published a very interesting account of the Sea Lions of the Aleu- tian Islands, particularly as respects the methods employed in their capture, portions of which will be ipioted later. His account is devoted largely, however, to the Sea Lions of the California coast, and certainly includes the history of the smaller species, if in fact this part does not relate mainly to the latter. About the same time appeared Mr. H. W. Elliott's move detailed history of the northern species, which is so full and explicit that I transcribe it almost entire. The Sea Lion, he says, "has a really leonine appearance and bearing, greatly enhanced by the rich golden-rufous of its coat, ferocity of expression, and bull-dog muzzle and cast of eye, not round and full, but showing the white, or sclerotic coat, with a light, bright-brown iris. "Although provided with flippers to all external view as the Fur Seal, he cannot, however, make use of them in the same free manner. "While the Fur Seal can be driven five or six miles in twenty- four hours, the Sea Lion can barely go two, the conditions of weather and roadway being the same. The Sea Lions balance and swing their long, heavy necks to and fro, with every hitch up behind of their posteriors, which they seldom raise from the ground, drawing them up after the fme led with a slide over the grass or sand, rocks, ,&c., as the case may be, and pausing frequently to take a sullen and ferocious survey of the tit-Id and the drivers. "The Sea Lion is polygamous, but does not maintain any such regular system and method in preparing for and attention to its harem like that so finely illustrated on the breeding-grounds of the Fur Seal. It is not numerous, comparatively speaking, and does not 'haul' more than a few rods back from the sea. It cannot be visited and inspected by man, being so shy and wary that on the slightest approach a stampede into the water is the certain result. The males come out and locate on the narrow belts of rookery ground, preferred and selected by them ; the cows make their appearance three or four weeks after them (1st to 6th June), and are not subjected to that intense jealous supervision so characteristic of the Fur Seal harem. The bulls fight savagely among them- selves, and turn off from the breeding ground all the younger and weak males. "The cow Sea Lion is not quite half the size of the male, and will measure from eight to nine feet iu length, with a weight of four and live hundred pounds. She has the same general cast of countenance and build of the bull, but as she does not sustain any fasting period of over a week or ten days, she never comes out so grossly fat as the male or 'see-catch.' 40 THE SEALS AND WALRUSES. "The Sea Lion rookery will be found to consist of about ten to fifteen cows to the bull. Tbe covr seems at all times to have the utmost freedom in moving from place to place, and to start with its young, picked up sometimes by the nape, into the water, and play together for spells in the surf- wash, a movement on the part of the mother never made by the Fur Seal, and showing, in this respect, much more attention to its offspring. "They are divided up into classes, which sustain, in a general manner* but very imperfectly, nearly the same relation one to the other as do those of the Fur Seal, of which I have already spoken at length and in detail; but they cannot be approached, inspected, and managed like the other, by reason of their wild and timid nature. They visit the islands in numbers comparatively small (I can only estimate), not over twenty or twenty-five thousand on Saint Paul and contiguous islets, and not more than seven or eight thousand at Saint George. On Saint Paul Island they occupy a small portion of the breeding ground at Northeast Point, in common with the Callorhimts, always close to the water, and taking to it at the slightest disturbance or alarm. "The Sea Lion rookery on Saint George Island is the best place upon the Seal Islands for close observation of these animals, and the following note was made upon the occasion of one of my visits (June 15, 1873) : " 'At the base of cliffs, over four hundred feet in height, on the east shore of the island, on a beach fifty or sixty feet in width at low water, and not over thirty or forty at flood tide, lies the only Sea Lion rookery on Saint George Island — some three or four thousand cows and bulls. The entire circuit of this rookery belt was passed over by us, the big, timorous bulls rushing off into the water as quickly as the cows, all leaving their young. Many of the females, perhaps half of them, had only just given birth to their yonng. These pups will weigh at least twenty to twenty- five pounds on an average when born, are of a dark chocolate-brown, with the eye as large as the adult, only being a suffused, watery, gray -blue where the sclerotic coat is well and sharply denned in its maturity. They are about two feet in length, some longer and some smaller. As all the pups seen to-day were very young, some at this instant only born, they were dull and apathetic, uot seeming to notice us much. There are, I should say, about one-sixth of the Sea Lions in number on this island, when compared with Saint Paul. As these animals lie here under the cliffs, they cannot be approached and driven; but should they haul a few hundred rods up to the south, then they can be easily captured. They have hauled in this manner always until disturbed in 1SG8, and will undoubtedly do so again if not molested. "'These Sea Lions, when they took to the water, swam out to a distance of fifty yards or so, and huddled all up together iu two or three packs or squads of about five hundred each, holding their heads and necks up high out of water, all roaring in concert and incessantly, making such a deafening noise that we could scarcely hear ourselves in conversation at a distance from them of over a hundred yards. This roaring of Sea Lions, thus disturbed, can only be compared to the hoarse sound of a tempest as it howls through the rigging of a ship, or the playing of a living gale upon the bare branches, limbs, and trunks of a forest grove.' They commenced to return as soon as we left the ground. " The voice of the Sea Lion is a deep, grand roar, and does not have the flexibility of the Cal- lorltiititx, being confined to a low, muttering growl or this bass roar. The pups are very playful, but arc almost always silent. When they do utter sound, it is a sharp, short, querulous growling. " The natives have a very high appreciation of the Sea Lion, or see-vitehie, as they call it, and base this regard upon the superior quality of the flesh, fat, and hide (for iraking covers for their skin boats, biflarkiea and bidarmlix), sinews, intestines, &c. "As 1 have before said, the Sea Lion seldom hauls back far from the water, generally very THE SEA LIOX: ITS CAPTURE. 41 close to the surf-margin, and in this position it becomes quite a difficult task lor the natives to approach and get iu between it and the sea unobserved, for, unless this silent approach is made, the beast will at once take the alarm and bolt into the water. "By reference to my map of Saint Paul's, a small point, near the head of the northeast neck of the island, will be seen, upon which quite a large number of Sea Lions are always to be found, as it is never disturbed except on the occasion of this annual driving. The natives step down on to the beach, in the little bight just above it, arid begin to- crawl on all fours Hat on the sand clown to the end of the neck and in between the dozing sea-lion herd and the water, always selecting a semi-bright moonlight night. If the wind is favorable, and none of the men meet with an accident, the natives will almost always succeed in reaching the point unobserved, when, at a given signal, they all jump on their feet at once, yell, brandish their arms, and give a sudden start, or alarm, to the herd above them, for, just as the Sea Lions move, 'npou the first impulse of surprise, so they keep on. For instance, if the animals on starting up are sleeping with their heads pointed in the direction of the water, they keep straight on toward it; but if they jump up looking over the land, they follow that course just as desperately, and nothing turns them, at first, either one way or the other. Those that go for the water are, of course. ]<>.-,t, but the natives follow the laud-leaders and keep urging them on, and soon have them in their control, driving them back into a small pen, which they extemporize by means of little stakes, with flags, set around a circuit of a few hundred square feet, and where they keep them until three or four hundred, at least, are captured, before they commence their drive of ten miles overland down south to the village. "The natives, latterly, getting in this annual herd of Sea Lions, have postponed it until late in the fall, and when the animals are scant in number and the old bulls poor. This they were obliged to do, on account of the pressure of their sealing business in the spring, and the warmth of the season in August and September, which makes the driving very tedious. In this way I have not been permitted to behold the best-conditioned drives, i. e., those in which a majority of the herd is made up of fine, enormously fat, and heavy bulls, some lour or five hundred in number. "The natives are compelled to go to the northeast point of the island for the animals, inas- much as it is the only place with natural advantages where they can be approached for the purpose of capturing alive. Here they congregate in greatest number, although they can be found, two or three thousand of them, on the southwest point, and as many more on 'Seevitchie Cammin' and Otter Island. "Capturing the Sea Lion drive is really the only serious business these people on the islands have, and when they set out for the task the picked men only leave the village. At Northeast Point they have a barrabkie, in which they sleep and eat while gathering the drove, the time of getting which depends upon the weather, wind, &c. As the squads are captured, night after night, they are driven up close by the barrabkie, where the natives mount constant guard over them until several hundred animals shall have been secured and all is ready for the drive down overland to the village. "The drove is started and conducted in the same general manner as that which I have detailed in speaking of the Fur Seal, only the Sea Lion soon becomes very sullen and unwilling to move, requiring spells of frequent rest. It cannot pick itself up from the ground and slaniMe oil' on a loping gallop for a few hundred yards, like the Callorhinux, and is not near so free and agile in its movements on land, or in the water for that matter, for I have never seen the Eumd»i>i I'll liiivM|iir :uitinir ilu 44 THE SEALS AND WALRUSES. than the Fur Seals, landing during the months of May and June. They advance but little above high tide-mark, and those of all ages land together. The strongest males drive out the weaker and monopolize the females and continue with them till September. They go with them into the water whenever they are disturbed, and also watch over the young. When in the water they swim about the young and keep them together until they have an opportunity to land again. The females also keep near, rushing hither and thither, appearing first on one side and then on the other of the groups of young, constantly uttering a deep, hoarse growl at the intruder whenever they come to the surface. When left undisturbed they all soon laud again, preferring to spend the greater portion of their time at this season on the shore. During the breeding season they visit the same parts of the shore as the Fur Seals, but the Sea Lions, by their superior size and strength, crowd out the Seals, the latter passively yielding their places without presuming to offer battle to their formidable visitors. After having been disturbed the Sea Lions continue for some time in a state of unrest, occasionally uttering a low moaning sound, as though greatly distressed. Even after the breeding season they keep close to the shore near the breeding station until the severe weather of January. After this time they are seen only in small groups till the shores are free from snow and ice in the spring." 21. THE CALIFORNIA SEA LION. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. — The exact boundaries of the habitat of Zalophus calif orn i«n.us cannot at present be given. The only specimens I have seen are from the coast of California and its islands, from San Diego and San Nicholas Island northward to the Bay of San Francisco. Captain Scam rnon (see infra, pp. 301, 302) twice alludes incidentally to its presence "along the Mexican and California!! coasts," and Dr. Yeatch states that "Sea Lions" (which he calls "Ottu-ia jubata," but which are, almost beyond doubt, the present species) had populous breeding stations twenty years ago, and doubtless have still, on Cerros or Cedros Island, in about the latitude of 28i°, off the Lower California coast. Whether they occur southward of this point at the present time I am unable to state, but should infer that such was the case from Scamiuon's allusion to their capture along the "Mexican" coast. In any case, it appears probable that in Damper's time they ranged as far south as the Chametly and Tres iMarias Islands, respectively in latitudes about 23° and 21°, at which points he saw " Seals" in the year 1C8G. In describing the Chametly Islands (the most northerly of the two groups mentioned by him under this name), situated ofl' the west coast of Mexico in latitude 23° 11', he says, "The Bays about the Islands are sometimes visited with Seals; and this was the first place where I had seen any of these Animals, on the Xorth side of the Equator, in these Seas. For the Fish on this sandy Coast lye most in the Laguues or Salt- Lakes, and Mouths of Rivers; For this being no rocky Coast, where Fish resort most, there seems to be but little Food for the Seals, unless they will venture upon Cat-Fish." ' lie also met with Seals at the Tres Marias Islands (in latitude "2J° 5"'), and consequently two degrees south of the Chametly Islands, in describing one of which islands, named by him St. George's Island, he says: "The Sea is also pretty well stored with Fish, and Turtle or Tortoise, and Seal. This is the second place on this Coast where I did see any Seal: and this place helps to confirm what I have observed, that they are seldom seen but where there is plenty of Fish.'"-' It is of course not certain that the Seals here alluded to are Zalnjilnis califo>-Hintx, since the Sea Elephant of the California, coast also occurs at Cedros Island, and probably still further south, the two species having apparently about the same range. If they had been the latter, Dampier would probably have made some allusion to their large size. 'A New Vo.vu^r round the' World, .r>th i-d., vol. i, 170:t, pp. v!li::, '-'li-l. a {bill., p. 'J7li. THE CALIFORNIA SEA LION: HABITS. 45 The species of Zal<>i>hun occurring in Japan has been by some writers considered to be the same as the California!) one; but, though doubtless closely allied, its affinities, as will be noticed later (see infra, p. 293), appear to be not as yet satisfactorily determined. As Zalophus califor- ii in mat has not yet been detected on the American coast north of California, its occurrence on the Asiatic coast seems hardly to be expected. This species has hitherto been believed to be free from any serious complications of synonymy, and to have been first brought to the notice of the scientific world by McBain in 1858. Allen has, however, shown that it was noticed in 1822 by Choris and described by Lesson under the name of Otiirin califuniiana. HABITS. — Several more or less full accounts of the habits of the California!! Sea Lions have been given by different writers, who have, however, failed to distinguish the two species occurring along the Californiau coast, and consequently their descriptions are not wholly satisfactory. The large northern species certainly occurs, and. rears its young, as far south as the Farallones, but probably exists there only in small numbers, while I have seen no evidence of its presence at Santa Barbara Island. Even Captain Scammon, in his account of the Sea Lions of California, has not distinctly recognized the two species occurring there, and his description doubtless refers in part to both species, but unquestionably relates mainly to the present one.1 His "Sketch of a sealing season upon Santa Barbara Island," in 1852, presumably relates exclusively to Znlophns calif or- niitnus, but in addition to this I quote a few paragraphs from his general account of "the Sea Lion," since it is the testimony of a trustworthy eye-witness. "On approaching an island, or point, occupied by a numerous herd," he observes, "one first hears their long, plaintive bowlings, as if in distress; but when near them, the sounds become more varied and deafening. The old males roar so loudly as to drown the noise of the heaviest sur- among the rocks and caverns, and the younger of both sexes, together with the ' clapmatches,' croak hoarsely, or send forth sounds like the bleating of sheep or the barking of dogs; in fact, their tumultuous utterances are beyond description. A rookery of matured animals presents a ferocious and defiant appearance; but usually at the approach of man they become alarmed, and, if not opposed in their escape, roll, tumble, and sometimes make fearful leaps from high precipitous rocks to hasten their flight. Like all the others of the Seal tribe, they are gregarious, and gather in the largest numbers during the 'pupping season,' which varies in different latitudes. On the California coast it is from May to August, inclusive, and upon the shores of Alaska it is said to be from June to October, during which period the females bring forth their young, nurse them, asso- ciate with the valiant males, and both unite in the care of the little ones, keeping a wary guard, and teaching them, by their own parental actions, how to move over the broken, slimy, rock- bound shore, or upon the saiidy, pebbly beaches, and to dive and gambol amid the surf and rolling groundswells. At first the pups manifest great aversion to the water, but soon, instinctively, become active and playful in the element; so by the time the season is over, the juvenile creatures disappear with the greater portion of the old ones, only a few of the vast herd remaining at the favorite resorts throughout the year. During the pupping season, both males and females, so tar at we could ascertain, take but little if any food, particularly the males, though the females have been observed to leave their charges and go oft', apparently in search of subsistence, but they do not venture far from their young ones. That the Sea Lion ca-n go without food for a long time is unquestionable. One of the superintendents of Woodward's Gardens informed me that in 'That Cupraiu Sc-ummm con founded the t\vo sprues of northern Se;i Lions is evident not nuly from his published writings, but from his having transmitted in tin- National .Museum s]ieeiuiens of /iilapltnK from .Santa LJarliara Island, labeled liy him " Eumetopia* Xltlli-ri." 46 THE SEALS AND WALEUSES. numerous instances they have received Sea Lions into the aquarium which did not eat a morsel of nourishment during- a whole month, and appeared to suffer but little inconvenience from their long fast, "As tin- time approaches for their annual assemblage, those returning or coming from abroad are seen near the shores, appearing wild and shy. Soon after, however, the females gather upon the beaches, cliffs, or rocks, when the battles among the old males begin for the supreme control of the harems; these struggles often lasting for days, the fight being kept up until one or both become exhausted, but is renewed again when sufficiently recuperated for another attack ; and, really, the attitudes assumed and the passes made at each other, equal the amplification of a professional fencer. The combat lasts until both become disabled or one is driven from the ground, or perhaps both become so reduced that a third party, fresh from his winter migration, drives them from the coveted charge. The vanquished animals then slink off to some retired spot as if disgraced. Nevertheless, at times, two or more will have charge of the same rookery; but in such instances frequent defiant growliugs and petty battles occur. So far as we have observed upon the Sea Lions of the California coast, there is but little attachment manifested between the sexes; indeed, much of the Turkish nature is apparent, but the females show some affection for their offspring, yet if alarmed when upon the land, they will instantly desert them and take to the water. The young cubs, on the other hand, are the most fractious and savage little creatures imaginable, especially if awakened from their nearly continuous sleeping; and frequently, when a mother reclines to nurse her single whelp, a swarm of others will perhaps contend for the same favor. " To give a more detailed and extended account of the Sea Lions we will relate a brief sketch of a sealing season on Santa Barbara Island. It was near the end of May, 1852, when we arrived, and soon after the rookeries of 'clapmatches,' which were scattered around the island, began to augment, and large numbers of huge males made their appearance, belching forth sharp, ugiy howls, and leaping out of or darting through the water with surprising velocity, frequently diving outside the rollers, the next moment emerging from the crest of the foaming breakers, and wad- dling up the beach with head erect, or, with seeming effort, climbing some kelp-fringed rock, to doze in the scorching sunbeams, while others would lie sleeping or playing among the beds of sea- weed, with their heads and outstretched limbs above the surface. But a few days elapsed before a general contention with the adult males began for the mastery of the different rookeries, and the victims of the bloody encounter were to be seen on all sides of the island, with torn lips or muti- lated limbs and gashed sides, while now and then an unfortunate creature would be met with minus an eye or with the orb forced from its socket, and, together with other wounds, presenting a ghastly appearance. As the time for 'hauling-up' drew near, the island became one mass of animation; every beach, rock, and cliff, where a Seal could find foothold, became its resting-place, while a countless herd of old males capped the summit, and the united clamorings of the vast assemblage could be heard, on a calm day, for miles at sea. The south side of the island is high and precipi- tous, with a projecting ledge hardly perceptible from the beach below, upon which one immense Sea Lion managed to climb, and there remained ior several weeks — until the season was over. How he ascended, or in what manner he retired to the water, was a mystery to our numerous ship's crew, as lie came and went in the night; for 'Old Gray,' as named by the sailors, was closely watched i" his elevated position during the time the men were engaged at their work.1 1 "Relative to the Sea Lions leaping from giddy heights, an incident occurred at Santa Barbara Island, the last of tin' season of 1KV_>, which we will here mention. A rookery of about twenty individuals was collected on the brink of a precipitous dill', at a height at least, of sixty feet above the rocks which shelved from the beach below; and our party were sure in their own minds, that, by surprising the animals, we could drive them over the cliff. This was easily accomplished ; but to our chagrin, when we arrived at. the point below, where we expected to find the huge beasts helplessly mutilated, or killed outright, the last animal of the whole rookery was seen plunging into the sea." THE CALIFORNIA SEA LION. 47 '•None but the adult males were captured, which was usually done by shooting them in the ear or near it; tor a ball in any other part of the body had no more ell'cct than it would in a (Iri/./.ly ISear. Occasionally, however, they are taken with the club and lance, only shooting a lew of the masters of the herd. This is easily accomplished with an experienced crew, if there is sullicicnt ground back from the beach for the animals to retreat. During our stay, an instance occurred, which not only displayed the sagacity of the animals, but also their yielding disposition, when hard pressed in certain situations, as if naturally designed to be slain in numbers equal to the demands of their human pursuers. On the south of Santa Barbara Island was a plateau, elevated less than a hundred feet above the sea, stretching to the brink of a cliff that overhung the shore, and a narrow gorge leading up from the beach, through \\hich the animals crowded" to their favor- ite resting-place. As the sun dipped behind the hills, fifty to a hundred males would congregate upon the spot and there remain until the boats were lowered in the morning, when immediately the whole herd would quietly slip off into the sea and gambol about during the day, returning as they saw the boats again leave the island for the ship. Several unsuccessful attempts had been made to take them ; but at last a fresh breeze commenced blowing directly from the shore, and prevented their scenting the hunters, who landed some distance from the rookery, then cautiously advanced, and suddenly yelling, and nourishing muskets, clubs, and lances, rushed up within a few yards of them, while the pleading creatures, with lolling tongues and glaring e\ es, were quite overcome with dismay, and remained nearly motionless. At last, two overgrown males broke through the line formed by the men, but they paid the penalty with their lives before reaching the water. A few moments passed, when all hands moved slowly toward the rookery, which as slowly retreated. This maneuver is termed 'turning them,' and, when once accomplished, the disheartened creatures appear to abandon all hope of escape, and resign themselves to their fate. The herd at this time numbered seventy-five, which were soon dispatched, by shooting the largest ones, and clubbing and lancing the others, save one young Sea Lion, which was spared to see whether he would make any resistance by being driven over the hills beyond. The poor creature only moved along- through the prickly pears that covered the ground when compelled by his cruel pursuers; and, at last, with an imploring look and writhing in pain, it held out its fin-like arms, which were pierced with thorns, in such a manner as to touch the sympathy of the barbarous sealers, who instantly put the sufferer out of its misery by a stroke of a heavy club. As soon as the animal is killed, the longest spires of its whiskers are pulled out, then it is skinned, and its coating of fat cut in sections from its body and transported to the vessel, where, after being 'minced,' the oil is extracted by boiling-. The testes are taken out, and, with the selected spires of whiskers, find a market in China — the former being used medicinally, and the latter for personal ornaments. "At the close of the season — which lasts about three months, on the California coast — a large majority of the great herds, both males and females, return to the sea, and roam in all directions in quest of food, as but few of them could find sustenance about the waters contiguous to the islands, or points on the mainland, which are their annual'resorting places. They live upon fish,' niollusks, ' THJE SEA LlONS DESTRUCTIVE Ol 1 ISH. — The Farallone E^K Company, several \ears ayo. attempted to kill the S--a Lions which l'ivc|iu-iitr. :{:U-:K>9, pi. xv, 1T.">1. This, as is wrll known, is a posthumous paper, pub- lished six years at'li-r Si.-lln's death, Siellrr clyiii;; »f I'.A i r No\ emlier Ivi, 17-lf>, while on his way from Siberia to Saint Petersburg. '1 he tli-.-.criplion ol'lhe f«ea Hear v. as written al Bering's Islanil in .May, I74'J. •Hist. KamtehatUa (English edition i, translated from the Russian by Jauics Grieve, pp. UKM3U, ITtil. 52 NATURAL HISTOliY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. mainly on Steller's notes,1 but it embraces a few particulars not given in "De Bestiis Marinis." Steller's description of the habits of this animal has been largely quoted by Buffou, Pennant, Schrebcr, Hamilton, and other general writers. Buffon, Pennant, Schreber, Gmelin, and nearly all writers on the Pinnipeds, down to about 1820, confounded the northern Pur Seal with the Fur Seals of the Southern Hemisphere, blending their history as that of a single species. Pe"ron, in 1816, first recognized it as distinct from its southern allies, as it was so treated somewhat later by Deruarest, Lesson, Fischer, Gray, and other systematic writers,2 but its distinctive characters were not clearly set forth till 1859, when Dr. ,1. E. Gray described and figured its skull, and' showed that the northern species was not even con- generic with the Sea Bears of the south. Very few specimens of either the northern or southern Sea Bears appear to have reached European museums prior to about that date, so that naturalists had not previously been able to make a direct comparison of this species with any of its southern affiues. Dr. Gray, in referring to this point in 1859, wrote as follows: "I had not beeu able to see a specimen of this species in any of the museums which I examined on the Continent or in England, or to find a skull of the genus [Arctocephalus] from the North Pacific Ocean, yet I felt so assured, from Ste'ler's description and the geographical position, that it must be distinct from the Eared Fur Seals from the Antarctic Ocean and Australia, with which it had usually been confounded, that in my 'Catalogue of Seals in the Collection of the British Museum' [1850] I regarded it as a distinct species, under the name of Arctocephalus ursinits, giving an abridgment of Steller's descrip tioii as its specific character." "The British Museum," he adds, "has just received, under the name Otaria leonina, from Amsterdam, a specimen [skull and skin] of the Sea Bear from Bering's Straits, which was obtained from Saint Petersburg";3 which is the specimen already spoken of as figured by Dr. Gray. From the great differences existing between this skull and those of the Southern Sea Bears, Dr. Gray, a few weeks later, separated the northern species from the genus Arctocephalus, under the name Callorhinus.* It seems, however, that there were two skulls of Steller's Sea Bear in the Berlin Museum as early as 1841,5 and three skeletons of the same species in the Museum of Munich in 1849,e yet Dr. Gray appears to have been the first to compare this animal with its southern relatives, and to positively decide its affinities. Misled, however, by erroneous information respecting specimens of Eared Seals received at the British Museum from California, a skin of the Callorhinus ursinus was doubtfully described by this author, in the paper in which the name Callorhinus was proposed, as that of his Arctocephalus monteriensis, which is a Hair Seal. This skin was accompanied by a young skull, purporting, by the label it bore, to belong to it, but Dr. Gray observes that otherwise he should have thought it too small to have belonged to the same animal. Seven years later,7 he described the skull as that of a new species (Arctocephalus californianus), still associating with it, however, the skin of the 'Krascheninikow, it is stated, "received all of Mr. Steller's papers" to aid him in the preparation of his "History of Kamtchatka." 2Nilsson and Miiller in 1841, anil Wagner in 1846 and 1849, on the other hand, still considered all the Sea Bears as belonging to a single species. Wagner, in 1849 (Arch, fiir Natiug., 1849, pp. 37-49) described the osteological char- acters of the northern species from three skeletons in the Munich Museum received from Bering's Sea. One of these was apparently that of a full-grown female; a second was believed to be that of a half-grown male, while the third belonged to a very young animal, in which the permanent teeth were still not wholly developed. Wagner compares the species with Steller's Sea Lion, and with the figures of the skulls of the southern Sea Bears given by F. Cuvier, Blainville, and Qimy and Gaimard, and notes various differences in the form of the teeth and skull, but believes that these differences must be regarded as merely variations dependent upon age. :1Gl!AY, .1. E., iii the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 1859, p. W2. ^GRAV, J. E., in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 185'J, p. 359. 'See Archiv fiir Natnrgesch., 1841, p. 334. 6GltAY, J. K., in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 849, p. 39. 'GRAY, J. E., Catalogue of the Seals and Whales in the British Museum, 1866, p. 51. THE Kl'It SKAL: FIGURES. .,;; in:fiiuin. Tlio skull In' siil)si'(|ii<'iitly considered ;is thai of a young .1. (=Eumetopia8 Xicllcri); and referring his A. fulifurtiiiniiis to that species, hi.- was conscqucnt-ly led into tin1 double error of regarding the JHumetopias Sti'llcri as a Fur Seal (as already explained under that species and elsewhere in the present paper), and of excluding the Callorliiimx nrxhiiiK IVom I he list of Fnr Seals. To this I called attention in 1870, ami in 1871 Dr. Gray eornrlly referred his A. iHonterivititis and .1. califoniinntts in part (the "skin only")" to Callorlihiun urxhuttt.* What may be termed the second or modern epoch in the general history of this species began in 1869, when Captain ('. M. Scnminon published a highly important contribution to its biology,- he describing at considerable length, from personal observation, its habits, distribution, and products, as well as the various methods employed lor its capture. The following year Mr. \V. II. Dall devoted a few pages" to its history, in which he made many important suggestions relative to the sealing business. During the same year I was able to add not only something to its technical history,1 but also to make public an important communication on its habits kindjy placed at my disposal by Captain Charles Bryant/' government agent in charge of the Fur Seal Islands of Alaska. In 1874, Captain Scannnon republished his above mentioned paper," adding thereto a transcript of Captain Bryant's observations already noted. Almost simultaneously with this appeared Mr. H. W. Elliott's exhaustive Report on the Seal Islands of Alaska,7 in which the present species properly comes in for a large share of the author's attention. The work is richly illustrated with photographic plates, taken from Mr. Elliott's sketches, about twenty-five of which are devoted to the Fur Seal. The text of this rare and privately distributed work has been since reprinted," with some changes and additions, and has been widely circulated. It contains very little relating to the Fur Seal that is strictly technical, but the general history of its life at the Pribylov Islands is very fully told, while the commercial or economic phase of the subject is treated at length. A few minor notices of this species have since appeared (mostly popular articles in illustrated magazines, chiefly from the pen of Mr. Elliott), but nothing relating to its general history requiring special notice in the present connection, until the publication, in 1881, by the Census Bureau and the Fish Commission, of the two editions of Mr. Elliott's elaborate monograph of the Seal Islands of Alaska,9 FIGURES. — The first figures of the Northern Sea Bear were given by Steller, in his p;,per already cited. They represent an adult male, in a quite natural attitude, and a female reclining on her back. In respect to details, these. early figures were naturally more or less rude and inaccurate. They 1 GRAY, J. E. : Supplementary Catalogue of the Seals and Whales, p. 15 ; Hand-List of goals, p. IW. 2SCAMMON, C. M., in the Overland Monthly, vol. iii, Nov., 18H9. pp. 393-399. 3 DALL, WILLIAM II.: Alaska and its Resources, 1870, pp. 492-498. 'Bulletin of (ho Museum of Comparative Zoology, Cambridge, ii, pp. 7:!-89. 'Bulletin of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, Cambridge, pp. 89-108. SCAMMON, C. M. : The Marine Mammals of the Northwestern Coast, &o., 1874, pp. 141-10:!. 7 ELLIOTT, HENRY W.: Report ou the Prybilov Group, or Seal Islands of Alaska, 4to, unpaged, W:t [13*4]. "ELLIOTT, HENHYW.: Condition of Allaire in Alaska, 187.r>, pp. 107-151. 9 1881. ELLIOTT, HEXIIY W. : Department of the Interior. — | Tenth Census ol' the United States. | Fraiieis A. Walker, | Superintendent. | — | The history and present condition | of the fishery industries. | Prepared under the, direction of Professor S. F. Baird, U. S. Commissioner of Fish and Fisheries, by G. Brown Goode, Assistant Direetur, U.S. National Museum. | — | The Seal-Islands of Alaska, | by | Henry W. Elliott. | (Seal of Department of the Inte- rior.) | Washington: I Government Printing Office: | 1881. Quarto, pp. 170. Two maps; twenty-nine' plates. 1881. ELLIOTT, HENIIY W. : U. S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries. [ Spencer F. Baird, Commissioner. | — | 17U. | Special Bulletin. | — | A Monograph | of the | Seal Islands of Alaska | by | Henry W.Elliott | — | Reprinted, with additions, from the Report on Hie Fishery Industries | of the Tenth Census. [Washington: | <;ovcrmnrnl Printing oilier. | \>-'ft\>. Quarto, pp. 176. Two maps; twenty-nine plates. These two edit ions differ in Hie fact that in the census edition, pp. 1(1-,' to 10!!, relating to "Tin- K< •pnulm -t ion of the Fur Seal, Sea Lion, and Walrus," are replaced liy "A Brief Kcvicw of Hie Ollicial Repents ii] Hie Conduct of Affairs on the Seal Islands." f;4 NATURAL HISTORY OP AQlTATIC ANIMALS. were copied, however, by Buffon, Schreber, Pennant, and other early writers, and are the only representations of this species known to me that were made prior to about the year 1830, except Choris's plate of a group of these animals entitled "Ours marina dans 1'ile tie St. Paul,"1 published in 1822. This represents three old males, surrounded by their harems, and indicates very faithfully the mode of grouping and the variety of attitudes assumed by these animals when assembled on the rookeries. Hamilton, iii 1839, gave a figure of the "Sea Bear of Stcller (Otaria ur/iimt)" which he tells us is "from the engraving of the distinguished Naturalist of the Enrick,"2 the original of which I have not seen. This represents a male and female, the latter reclining on its side, with a pup resting on its right flipper. The first figure of the skull is that published by Gray in 185!),3 — a view in profile of the skull of an adult, male. A wood-cut of the same was given in ISGG/antl a fine lithographic plate in 1S74/' representing the skull in profile, from above and from below.6 In 1870 I gave figures of two adult male skulls (two views of each), of an adult female skull (three views), of a very young skull (three views), and of the scapula, dentition, etc. These, so far as known to me, are the only figures of the skull or other details of structure thus far published. In 1874 Captain Scammon gave figures of the animal,7 a zincograph of an old male,8 from a sketch by Mr. Elliott, a wood-cut of the head of a female seen from below (drawn by Elliott),9 two outline figures representing the female as seen from below and in profile, and two others in outline illustrating "attitudes of the Fur Seals." Mr. Elliott, in his first Report on the Seal Islands, in a series of over two dozen large photographic plates (from India ink sketches from nature), has given an exhaustive presentation of the phases of fur seal life so faithfully studied by him at Saint Paul's Island. Among these may be mentioned especially those entitled "The East Landing and Black Buttes — The beach covered with young Fur Seals"; "The North Shore of Saint, Paul's Island" (giving an extensive view of the rookeries) ; "Lukannon Beach" (Fur Seals playing in the surf, and rookeries in the distance); "Old male Fur Seal, or 'Seecatch'" (as he appears at the end of the season after three months of 'fasting); "Fur-seal Harem" (showing the relative size of males, females, and young, various attitudes, positions, etc.); "Fur-seal Males, waiting for their 'Harems'" (the females beginning to arrive); "Fur-seal 'Rookery'" (breeding-grounds at Polaviua Point) ; "Fur-seal Harem" (Reef Rookery, foreground showing relative size of males and females): "Fur-seal Pups at Sleep and Play"; "Hauling Grounds" (several views at different points); "Capturing Fur Seals"; "Driving Fur Seals"; "Killing Fur Seals — Sealing gang at work," etc. The only other pictorial contributions to the history of the Fur Seal of noteworthy importance prior to the publication by the Census of Mr. Elliott's latest work, is Mr. Clark's colored plate, on which are represented a nearly full-grown male, a female, and a pup, prepared from skins sent to the British Museum by the Alaska Commercial Company. In these the attitudes are excellent and the coloring fair. For detailed discussions of this species, its capture and its commercial uses, the reader is referred to Elliott's "Monograph" and to the chapters on THE HABITS OF THE FUR SEAL, and THE FUR SEAL FISHERY, in subsequent pages of this work. 1 CBORIS, L. : Voyage pittorosquo antour du Monde, Paris, 1822. lies Alrfoutiennes, pi. xv. -HAMILTON, R. : Miiriuo Ampkihiic, p. 2Hfi, pi. xxi. ;IGRAY, J. E., in Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 1859, pi. Ixviii. 1 GRAY, J. E. : Catalogue of the Seals and Whales in the British Museum, p. 45, fig. 1G. •'•GRAY, J. K. : Hand-List of Seals, pi. xix. "I infer this to be the, same, specimen in each case, not only from the resemblance the figures bear to each other, bill from Dr. Gray, so far as I can discover, referring to only the single skull from Bering's Strait, received in 1859. 'SCAM.Mox, ('. M. : The Marine Mammals of the Northwest Coast, &>•., pi. xxi, two figures. *El,l,iOTT, HENKY W. : Report on the Pribylov Group, or Km- Seal Islands, of Alaska, unpaged, and plates no* numbered. 'Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London, 1878, 271, pi. xx. THE HARBOR SEAL. 55 23. THE HARBOR SEAL. GENERAL HISTORY AND SYNONYMY. — The common Seal, Phuca (/'/<«<•«) rilulhx/ Linne. is mentioned in the earliest works on natural history, having been described and rudely figured by various writers as early as the middle of the sixteenth century as well as during the se\ enteenth century. Even down to the time of Linne it was the only species recogni/ed; or, more correct l.\. all the species known were usually confounded as one species, supposed to he the same as the common Seal of the European coasts; Consequently almost down to the beginning of the preseni century the '-common Seal" was generally supposed to inhabit nearly all the seas of the globe. Bufibn, Pennant, Schreber, and others referring to it as an inhabitant of the Southern Hemisphere. Linne distinguished only a single species, even in the later editions of his --SN sterna Natune." As is well known, the smaller species of Seal are with difficulty distinguishable by external characters, particularly daring their younger stages. Few, however, are so variable in color as the present. and none has so wide a geographical range. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. — The Harbor Seal appears to have formerly been mndi more numerous on portions of our eastern coast than it is at present.1 Dr. DeKay, writing in 1842, states that the "common Seal, or Sea Dog," is "now comparatively rare in our [New York] waters," though "formerly very abundant." He adds, "A certain reef of rocks in the harbor of New York is called /I'O/X'H'.V Reef, from the numerous seals which were accustomed to resort there ; robin or robyn being the name in Dutch for Seal. At some seasons, even at the present day, they are very numerous, particularly about the Execution Rocks in the Sound; but their visits appear to be very capricious." lie further alludes to their capture nearly every year in the Passaic River, in New Jersey, and states that a Seal was taken in a seine in the Chesapeake Bay, near Klko, .Maryland, in August, 1824, supposed by Dr. Mitchill, who saw it, to be of this species.2 Although still occasionally appearing on the coast of the Atlantic States as far southward as North Carolina,3 it is of probably only accidental occurrence south of New Jersey, and rare south of Massachusetts. In respect to its occurrence on the New Jersey coast, Dr. C. C. Abbott, the well known naturalist of Trenton, N. J., kindly writes me, in answer to my inquiries on this point, as follows: "Ingoing over my note-books, I find I have there recorded the occurrence of Seals (I'hocn ritiilina] at Trenton, N. J., as follows: December, 1861 ; January, 1804; December, I860; February. 1870; and December, 1877. In these five instances a single specimen was killed on the ledge of rocks crossing the river here and forming the rapids. In December, 18C1, three were seen, and two in February, 1870. A week later one was captured down the river near Bristol, Bucks County, Pennsylvania. My impression is that in severe winters they are really much more abundant in the Delaware River than is supposed. Considering how small a chance there is of their being seen when the river is choked with ice, I am disposed to believe that an occasional pair or more come up the river, even as high as Trenton, the head of tide-water, and one hundred and thirty-eight miles from the ocean. 'The '-Semi-Weekly Advertiser," Boston, January 10, 1872, had the following: "The keeper of the Bird Island light-house at Marion reports that one day last week lie saw over :!nil Seals on tlie iee at one time. He shot one and obtained from it two gallons of oil. In eight years that he has kept (lie light he never saw more than three at a time until now." - DK.KAY, JAMES E. : New York Zoology, or tho Fauna of \e\v York, part i, 1^42, pp. ~)4, "."'. 3 A recent record of its capture in North Carolina is the following, rlie reference, 1 think, unquestionably relating to the present species: "SOUTHERN RVXGE OF THE SEAL. — The Wilmington, N. C., 'Star' of February 2*. mentions the capture. in New Hiver, Onslow County, of a large female Spotted Seal, measuring about seven feet in length, and weighing •-'"•" pounds. This is an interesting note. The species must probably have been 111. common Harbor Seal (I'lmi'ii ritnliaa). The same newspaper says one was reported near Beaufort some time ago." — [\V. K. 1). Scorr.] " ( 'niiutr\ ." vol. i, \» ai, p. 29-2, March 111, 1-78. 56 NATURAL DISTORT or AQUATIC ANIMALS. " On examination of old local histories, I find reference to the Seals as not uncommon along our coast, and as quite frequently wandering up our rivers in winter. I can find no newspaper references to the occurrence of Seals later than February or earlier than December, but. as histoi-- ical references to climate, as well as the memory of aged men still living, show conclusively that our winters are now much milder than they were even fifty years ago, it is probable that Seals did come up the river earlier in past years. "In conversation with an old fisherman, now seventy-six years old, who has always lived at Trenton, and has been a good observer, I learn that every winter, years ago, it was expected that one or more Seals would be killed ; and that about 1840 two were killed in March, which it was supposed had accompanied a school of herring up the river. " In my investigations in local archaeology I have found, in some of the fresh-water shell heaps, or rather camp-tire and fishing-village sites along the river, fragments of bones which were at the time identified as those of Seals. I did not preserve them, as I had no knowledge of their being of interest. They were associated with bones of deer, bear, elk, and large wading birds, and then gave me the impression, which subsequent inquiry has strengthened, that the Seal, like many of our large mammals, had disappeared gradually, as the country became more densely settled, and that iu pre-European times it was common, at certain seasons, both on the coast and inland."1 In later communications (dated January 25 and March 20, 1879) he inclosed to me newspaper slips and notes respecting the capture of eight specimens in New Jersey, mostly near Trenton, during the winter of 1878-'79. On the coast of Massachusetts they occur in considerable numbers about the mouth of the Ipswich River, where I have sometimes observed half a score in sight at once. They are also to be met with about the islands in Boston Harbor, and along the eastern shore of Cape Cod. Captaiu N. E. Atwood states that they are now and then seen at Provincetown, and that in a shallow bay west of Rainsford Island "many hundreds" may be seen at any time in summer on a ledge of rocks that becomes exposed at low water.2 Farther northward they become more numerous, particularly on the coast of Maine and the shores of the Gulf of Saint Lawrence, Newfoundland, and Labrador, and are also common on the shores of Davis's Strait and iu Greenland, where, says Dr. Rink, " it occurs here and there throughout the coast," aud is likewise to be met with at all seasons of the year. Mr. Kumlien says it is one of the " rarer species " in the Cumberland waters, but its exact northern limit I have not, seen stated. On the European coasts it is said to occur occasionally in the Mediterranean, and to be not rare on the coast of Spain. It is more frequent on the coasts of France aud the British Islands, aiid thence northward along the Scandinavian peninsula is the commonest species of the family. It also extends northward and eastward along the arctic coast of Europe, but late explorers of the Spit/.bergen and Jan Muyen Islands do not enumerate it among the species there met with. Malmgren states distinctly that it is not found there,3 and it is not mentioned by Von Heuglin nor by the other German naturalists who have recently visited these islands. From its littoral habits its absence there might be naturally expected. It is also said by some writers to occur in the Black and Caspian Seas, and in Lake Baikal, but the statement is seriously open to doubt, as will be shown later in connection with the history of the Ringed Seal. On the Pacific coast of North America it occurs from Southern California northward to 1 Letter .lulnl Tmiton, N. .1., Dec. 26, 1878. '•'Seo Hull. Mus. Coiup. /c>r>]., vol. i, ]>. 193. :l Weigm. Arcih. fiir N:Unrtf. lHii-1, p. 84. THE HARBOR SEAL: RANGE AND HABITS. 57 Bering's Strait, where it seems to be an abundant species. I have examined specimens from the Santa Barbara Islands, and various intermediate points to Alaska, and from Plover Bay, on the eastern coast of Siberia. The extent of its range on the Asiatic coast has not been ascertained. If it is the species referred to by Pallas under the name Pkoca canina, and by Temininck, Von Schrenck, and other German writers, under the name Phoca nummularis, as seems probable, it occurs in Japan and along the Amoor coast of the Ochotsk Sea. Von Schrenck speaks of it, on the authority of the natives, as entering the Amoor River.1 The late Dr. Gray referred a speei men from Japan to his "Halicyon Riehardsi," which, as already shown, is merely a synonym of Phoca vitulina. It thus doubtless ranges southward along the Asiatic coast to points nearly cor- responding in latitude with its southern limit of distribution on the American side of the Pacific. The Harbor Seal not only frequents the coast of the North Atlantic and the North Pacific, and some of the larger interior seas, but ascends all the larger rivers, often to a considerable dis- tance above tide-water. It even passes up the Saint Lawrence to the Great Lakes, and has been taken in Lake Champlain. DeKay states, on the authority of a Canadian newspaper, that a Seal (in all probability of this species) was taken in Lake Ontario near Cape Vincent (Jefferson County, New York) about ISlM, and adds that the same paper says that Indian traders report the previous occurrence of Seals in the same lake, though such instances are rare.2 Thompson gives two instances of its capture in Lake Champlaiu; one of the specimens he himself examined, and has published a careful description of it, taken from the animal before it was skinned.3 They are also known to ascend the Columbia River as far as the Dalles (above the Cascades, and about two hundred miles from the sea), as well as the smaller rivers of the Pacific coast, nearly to their sources. Mr. Brown states that " Dog River, a tributary of the Columbia, takes its name from a dog-like animal, probably a Seal, being seen in the lake whence the stream rises."4 HABITS. — The Harbor Seal is the only species of the family known to be at all common on any part of the eastern coast of the United States. Although it has been taken as far south as North Carolina, it is found to be of very rare or accidental occurrence south of New Jersey. Respecting its history here, little has been recorded beyond the fact of its presence. Captain Scarnmou has given a quite satisfactory account of its habits and distribution as observed by him on the Pacific coast of the United States, but under the supposition that it was a species distinct from the well-known Phoca vitulina of the North Atlantic. Owing to its rather southerly distribution, as compared with its more exclusively boreal affines, its biography has been many times written in greater or less detail. Fabricius, as early as 1791, devoted not less than twenty pages to its history, based in part on his acquaintance with it in Greenland, and partly on the writings of pre- ceding authors ;5 and much more recently extended accounts of it have been given by Nilsson and 1 VON ScruiENK : Reiseu iin Auioor-Lande, Bd. i, p. 180. - DEKAY: New York Zoology, or the Fauna of New York, pt. i, 1842, p. 55. 3 His record of the capture of these examples is as follows: "While several persons were skating upou the- ice on Lake Champlain, a little south of Burlington, in February, 1H1U, they discovered a living Seal in a wild state which had found its way through a crack and was crawling upon (he ice. They took off their skates, with which they attacked and killed it, and then drew it to the shore. It is said l<> have heeii four and a half feet long. It must have reached our lake by way of the Saint Lawrence and Richelieu. "— Thompsons' Nat. and Civil Hist, of Vermont, 1842, p. 38. "Another Seal was killed upon the ice between Burlington and Port Kent on the I'M of February, 184i>. Mr. Tabor, of Keeseville, and Messrs. Morse and Field, of Peru, were crossing over in sleighs when they discovered it crawling upon the ice, and, attacking it with the butt end of their whips, they succeeded in killing it and brought it "" shore at Burlington, where it was purchased by Morton Cole, esq., and presented to the University of Vermont, where its skin and skeleton are now preserved. " * At the time the above-mentioned Saal was taken, t lie lake, with the exception of a few cracks, was entirely covered with ice." — Ibid., Append., 185:i, p. 13. y the writer last quoted. "On a sunny noon in the autumn of 1SGS," says this observer. •• I observed a Seal, not far from the same place, with a salmon in his mou'h, which he forced through the meshes of a stake net. The struggling salmon, whose head was in the jaws of the Seal, utruek the water violently with his tail, which gleamed like a lustre iu the lessening ray. The Seal rose and sank alternately, keeping seaward to escape Eley's cartridges from the shore. When above the water lie shortened the silver bar, which continued to lash his sides long after its thickest part had disappeared, by rising to his perpendicular, as if to allow the precious metal by its own weight to slip into his crucible. The Seal evidently swallowed above, and masticated below, water — the process lasting about twelve minutes, during which the Seal had travelled a full half mile.'' In their raids upon the nets of the fishermen they become sometimes themselves the victims, being in this way frequently taken along our own coast as well as elsewhere. They are, however, at all times unwelcome visitors. DeKay states that formerly they were taken almost every year in the '• fyke-nets" in the Passaic River, greatly to the disgust of the fishermen, the Seals when captured making an obstinate resistance and doing much injury to the nets. Their accidental capture in this way often affords a record of their presence at localities they are not commonly supposed to frequent, as in the Chesapeake Bay, and at even more southerly localities on the eastern coast of the United States. Owing to the difficulty of capturing this species, and its comparatively small numbers, it is of little commercial importance, although the oil it yields is of excellent quality, and its skins are of special value for articles of dress, and other purposes, in consequence of their beautifully variegated tints. Though not a few are taken iu strong seal-nets, they are usually captured by means of the rifle or heavy sealing gun. On rare occasions they are surprised on shore at so great a distance from water that they are overtaken and killed by a blow en the head with a club. Like other species of the seal family, the Harbor seal is very tenacious of life, and must be struck iu a vital part by either ball or heavy shot, in order to kill it on the spot. Says Mr. Reeks, "I have been often amused at published accounts of Seals shot iu the Thames or elsewhere, but which 'sank immediately.' What Seal or other amphibious animal would not do so if 'tickled' with the greater part of, perhaps, an ounce of No. 5 shot?" He adds that it is only in the spring of the year that this seal will "float" when killed in the water, but says that he has never seen a Seal "so poor, which, if killed dead on the spot, would not have floated from five to ten seconds," or long enough to give "ample time for rowing alongside," supposing the animal to have been killed by shot, and the boat to contain " two hands." The oil of this species, according to the same writer, sells iu Newfoundland for fifty to seventy-five cents a gallon, while the skins are worth one dollar each. Mr. Carroll gives the weight of the skin and blubber of a full-grown individual as ranging from eighty to one hundred pounds, while that of a young one averages, at ten weeks old, thirty to thirty-five pounds. The flesh of the young, the same writer quaintly says, is "as pleasant to the taste as that of any description of salt-water bird." Its flesh, as already stated, is esteemed by the Grceulanders above that of any other species. Few statistics relating to the capture of this species are available, but the number taken is small in comparison with the "catch" of other species, particularly of the Harp or Greenland Seal. Dr. Rink states that only from one thousand to two thousand are annually taken iu Greenland, which is about cue to two per cent, of the total catch. They are hunted to a considerable extent, however, wherever they occur iu numbers. The Harbor Seal received this name from its predilection for bays, inlets, estuaries, and fjords, 62 NATURAL HISTORY OP AQUATIC ANIMALS. from which habit it is also often termed Bay Seal, aiid, ou the Scandinavian coast, Fjord Sea, (Fjordskal), and also Eock Seal (Steeu-Kobbe).1 24. THE HARP SEAL. GENERAL HISTORY AND NOMENCLATURE. — The Harp Seal, Phoca (Pagophilm) grcenlandica Fabricius, like the Crested Seal, presents characters, at least in the male sex, that readily attract the attention of even the casual observer — the one by its "saddle" or "harp-mark" of black ou a light ground, the other by its inflatable hood. Accordingly both were mentioned by various early writers, but notably by Egede, Ellis, and Cranz, and the indications they gave of their existence enter into the technical history of the species, forming as they do the basis of the first systematic names. Erxlebeu described the species in 1777, under the name Phoca yrcenlandica, his descrip- tion being founded mainly on information previously made public by Crauz. Few Seals vary so much in color with age as the Harp Seal. This was long since mentioned by Crauz, who says: "All Seals vary annually their color till they are full grown, but no sort so much as this [the Attersoak], and the Greenlanders vary its name according to its age. They call the foetus iblau; in this state these are white and wooly, whereas the other sorts are smooth and coloured. In the 1st year 't is called Attarak, and 't is a cream-colour. In the 2d year Atteitsiak then 'tis gray. In the 3d Aglelctok, painted. In the 4th Milaktok, and in the 5th year Attarsoak. Then it wears its half-moon, the signal of maturity." Dr. Rink states that at the present day the Greenlanders, as well as the Europeans, divide the "Saddle-backs" into four or five different classes according to their age, but that in familiar language they only distinguish by different names the full-grown animals from the half-grown ones, the latter being called " Bluesides." The young, when first born, are called by the Newfoundland sealers "White-coats"; later, during the first molt, "Bagged-jackets"; when they have attained the black cresceutic marks they are termed "Harps," or " Saddlers," and also "Breeding Harps"; the yearlings and two-year- olds are called "Young Harps" or "Turning-Harps,"' and also "Bedlimers" (or "Bellamers," also spelled "Bedlamers"). The older and some recent writers state that the mature pattern of coloration is not attained till the fifth year, while Jukes, Brown, Carroll, and others state that it is acquired in the third or fourth year. There is also a diversity of statement respecting the sexual differences of color in the adults, some writers affirming that the sexes are alike, while others state that the female is without the harp-mark, or has the dark markings of the male only faintly indi- cated. Mr. Carroll says: "The reason why they are called Harp Seals, or 'Saddlers,' is, the male Seal, as well as the female, has a dark stripe on each side from the shoulders to the tail, leaving a muddy white stripe down the back. The male Harp Seal is very black about the head as well as under the throat. . . . The female Harp is of a rusty gray about the head and white under the throat." Both Jukes and Reeks, however, refer to the absence of the harp-mark in the female. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION.— Although the Harp Seal has a circumpolar distribution, it 1 Seals appear to be increasing in numbers in Massachusetts Bay. We observed them frequently near Race Point, I'rovincetown, in 1879, where they sometimes get into the gill-nets set f'oi mackerel. At Barnstabic they have become very numerous and troublesou e of late. They are often shot or taken in the weirs at Bamstable and Yarmouth, and are accused of seriously depleting the fisheries in this locality, as well as at Plymouth, where they Iiiive hern preserved tor a number of years. Crossing the entrance to Bamstable Harbor at sunset November It), 1 counted eight or ten heads above the surface. The number here is estimated at sixty-live or seventy, and there are probably not less than three hundred in the bay. They are resident, disappearing for a time in the spring and returning accompanied by their young, about one-quarter as large as their parents, in April or May. C'apt. Gideon Bow ley, of Provincetown, tells me that they teed on ''sun squalls," or medusae, and that he has seen them "boil 'em up," or vomit them, when caught. — G. BROWN GOODE. TFIK IIAK!1 SEAL: DISTRIBUTION, AiS'D USES. 63 appears not to advance so far northwaid as the Ringed Seal or the Bearded Seal; yet the icy seas of the north are pre-eminently its home. It is not found on the Atlantic coast of North America iu any numbers south of Newfoundland. A few are taken at the Magdalen Islands, and while oil their way 1o the Grand Banks some must pass very near the Nova Scotia coast. Dr. Gilpin, however, includes it only provisionally among the Seals that visit the shores of that Province. It doubtless occasionally wanders, like the Crested Seal, to points far south of its usual range, as I lind a skeleton of this species in the collection of the Museum of Comparative Zoology, bearing the legend "Nahaut, Mass., L. Agassiz." I have at times felt doubtful about the correctness of the assigned locality, as this seems to be the only proof of the occurrence of this species on the Massachusetts coast. I have, however, recently been informed by Dr. C. C. Abbott, of New Jersey, that a Seal, described (o him as being about six feet long, white, with a broad black baud along each side of the back, was taken near Trenton, in that State, during the winter of 1878-'7'J. This description can of course refer to no other species than Phoca grcenlandica, and as it comes from a wholly trustworthy source it seems to substantiate the occasional occurrence of this species as far south as New Jersey. Von Heuglin gives it as ranging "in den amerikanischeu Meereu siid warts bis New York,"1 but I know not on what authority. The Harp Seals are well known to be periodically exceedingly abundant along the shores of Newfoundland, where, during spring, hundreds of thousands are annually killed. In their migra- tions they pass along the coast of Labrador, and appear with regularity twice a year off the coast of Southern Greenland, ('apt. J. C. Ross states that in Baffin's Bay they keep mostly "to the loose floating floes which constitute what is termed by the whale-fishers ' the middle ice' of Baffin's Hay and Davis' Straits." He says he never met with them in any part of Prince Regent's Inlet, but states that they are reported by the natives to be very numerous on the west side of the Isthmus of Boothia, but that they are not seen on the east side.2 They are well-known visitors to the shores of Iceland, and swarm in the icy seas about Jan Mayeu and Spitsbergen. They also occur about Nova Zembla, and Payer refers to their abundance at Franz Josef Laud. They occur in the Kara Sea, and along the arctic coast of Europe. Malmgren, Lilljeborg, and Collett state that it is of regular occurrence on the coast of Finrnark, where it occurs in small numbers from October and November till February. Although reported by Bell and others as having been taken in the Severn, and by Saxby as observed at Baltasound, Shetland, the capture of a specimen iu Moreeornbe Bay, England, reported by Turner in 1874, Mr. E. R. Alston says is "the first British specimen that has been properly identified." The distribution of this species in the North Pacific is not well known. Pallas (under the name Phoca dorsata) records it from Kamtchatka, where its occurrence is also affirmed by Steller. Teinmiuck mentions having examined three skins obtained at Sitka, but adds that it was not observed by "les voyageurs ne'erhindais" in Japan. In the collections in the National Museum from the North Pacific this species is unrepresented, the species thus far received from there being the following four, namely: Phoca vitulina^ Phoca fcetida, Erignathm barbatus, and Histrioph<»-n faxciata. HUNTING AND PRODUCTS. — As so large a part of what has been already said in the general account of the seal fishery of the North Atlantic and Arctic waters necessarily relates to the present species, it is scarcely requisite in the present connection to more than recall the leading points of the subject, with the addition of a few details not previously given. As already stated, the sealing grounds par excellence are the ice-floes off t he eastern coast of Newfoundland and around 1 Vox HKUGLIN: KVisrn n.irh dcm Nordpolarrueer, j>. 5(>. -CARBOLL: Si-al and Herring Fishrrirs of Newfoundland, p. !it>. (54 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. Jan Mayen Island, where the present species forms almost the sole object of pursuit. The sealing season lasts for only a few weeks during spring; the enterprise1 gives employment during this time to hundreds of vessels and thousands of men, the average annual catch falling little short of * a million Seals, valued at about three million dollars. While the pursuit is mainly carried on in vessels, sailing chiefly from English, German, and Norwegian ports, or from those of Newfoundland and the other British Provinces, many are caught along the shores of the countries periodically visited by these animals, as those of South Greenland, Southern Labrador, Newfoundland, and the Gulf of Saint Lawrence. The pursuit with vessels, and the various incidents connected therewith, have already been detailed, and sufficient allusions have perhaps also already been made to the Greenland method of seal-hunting. In consequence of the gregarious habits of the species, and the fact that one-half to two-thirds of those taken are young ones that are not old enough to make any effectual attempt to escape, the success of a sealing voyage depends almost wholly upon the mere matter of luck in discovering the herds. While the old Seals are mostly shot, the young are killed with clubs. In respect to the ease and facility with which they are captured it may be noted that it is not at all unusual, in the height of the season, for the crew of a single small vessel to kill and take on board from five hundred to a thousand in a day. Mr. Brown states : " In 1866 the steamer Camperdown obtained the enormous number of 22,000 Seals in nine days," or an average of 2,500 per day. " It is nothing uncommon," he adds, " for a ship's crew to club or shoot, in one day, as many as from 500 to 800 old Seals, with 2,000 young ones."2 Such slaughter is necessarily attended with more or less barbarity, but this seems to be sometimes carried to a needless extreme. The Seals are very tenacious of life, and, in the haste" of killing, many are left for a long time half dead, or lire even flayed alive. Jukes states that even the young are " sometimes barbarously skinned alive, the body writhing in blood after being stripped of its skin," and they have even been seen to swim away in that state, as when the first blow fails to kill the Seals their hard-hearted murderers " cannot stop to give them a second." " How is it," he adds, " one can steel one's mind to look on that which to read of, or even think of afterwards, makes one shudder ? In the bustle, hurry, and excitement, these things pass as a matter of course, and as if necessary; but they are most horrible, and will not admit of an attempt at palliation." Scoresby and other writers refer to similar heartless proceedings — as though the necessary suffering attending such a sacrifice of unresisting creatures were not in itself bad enough without the infliction of such needless cruelty. The young Seals not only do not attempt any resistance, but are said to make no effort to move when approached, quietly sufl'ering themselves to be knocked on the head with a club. The old Seals are more wary, and are generally killed with fire-arms. Scoresby relates that "When the Seals are observed to be making their escape into the water before the boats reach the ice, the sailors give a long-continued shout, on which their victims are deluded by the amazement a sound so unusual produces and frequently delay their retreat until arrested by the blows of their enemies." The annual catch of Harp Seals in Greenland is stated by Eiuk to be 17,500 full-grown " Sad- dle-backs " and 15,500 " Bluesides," or 33,000 in all. The catch from the Newfoundland ports alone i ill en reaches 500,000, and in the Jan Mayen seas often exceeds 300,000, so that the total annual catch of this species alone doubtless ranges from 800,000 to 900,000. The commercial products are the oil — used in the lubrication of machinery, in tanning leather, and in miners' lamps — and the skins, which are employed for the manufacture of various kinds of 'For statistics of the seal fishery, see Allen's "North American Pinnipeds," pp. 4'J7-5O2. 2Man. Nat. Hist., Geol., &c., Greenland, Mammals, p. 67, foot-note. THE RINGED SEAL: HISTORY AND DISTRIBUTION G5 leather and articles of clothing. The .skins ;ire said to be mostly sold to English maimfactnieis. who employ them in tlie i>re])arutiou of a superior article of "patent" or lacquered leather. The flesh is esteemed by the Greenlanders as superior to that of their favorite \rilxil; (Plioca ftetida). 25. THE RINGED SEAL. GENERAL HISTORY AND NOMENCLATURE. — The earliest notices of Phoca fcetidn, Fabricius, in systematic works are based on the brief account given by Crauz in 1705, but then- appear to be still earlier references to it by Scandinavian writers. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. — Although the Ringed Seal is a well-known inhabitant of the Arctic Seas, of both hemispheres, the southern limit of its distribution cannot be given with certainty. Wagner1 records specimens from Labrador, which is the most southern point on the eastern coast of North America from which it seems to have been reported. It is not enumerated by Jukes or ( 'arroll as among the species hunted by the Newfoundland sealers,2 nor is it mentioned by Gilpin3 as occurring in Nova Scotia. Its occasional presence here and in the Gulf of Saint Lawrence is doubtless to be expected. Further northward, and especially along the shores of Davis's Straits and Greenland, its abundance is well attested. It has also been found as far north as explorers have penetrated, having been met with by Parry as high as latitude 82° 40'. J. G. Ross states that it is common on both sides of the Isthmus of Boothia, where it forms the chief means of subsistence to the inhabitants during eight or nine months of the year.4 It is common in Iceland, and Malmgren and Von Ileugliu state it to be numerous at Spitsbergen. The last-named author gives it as abundant in summer in the Stor-Fjord and its branches, in Henlopen Strait, and in the bays of the northwest coast of Spitzbergen, occurring in great herds as well as singly, in the open water along the shores and in the openings in the ice-floes. He states that it is also numerous about Nova Zembla, where great numbers are killed for their skins and fat.5 It is a common species on the coast of Finland, and farther eastward along the arctic coast of Europe and doubtless also of Western Asia.6 It is also a common inhabitant of the Gulf of Bothnia and neighboring waters, and also of the Ladoga and other interior seas of Finland. It is said by Blasius to extend southward along the coast of Middle Europe to North Germany, Ireland, and the British Channel. Professor Flower has recorded its capture on the coast of Norwich, England; it undoubtedly occurs at the Orkneys and the Hebrides, where it is supposed to be represented by the species known there as "Bodach" or "Old Man." A specimen was also taken many years since on the coast of France, but here, as on the 1 SCHREBER'S SUugethiere, vii, 1846, p. 31. -Professor Jukes says four species are known on the coast of Newfoundland, namely, tbe "Bay Seal" (Phoca iitiiliuii), the Harp Seal (Phoca grocnlandica), the Hooded Seal (Cystophora eristata). and the " Square Flipper" (probably HaHi-hu-rus gri/i>nn). Th'1 first he did not see on the ice.among the Seals pursued by the sealers. The second is the one that forms the principal object of the chase. The third seems not to be numerous, but occurs occasionally out on the ice-floes with the Harp Seals. The fourth is referred to as very rare, and as being larger than the Hooded Seal. Not one. was heard of or seen that season. He supposes it may be the Phoca barbata. — Excursions in Newfoundland, vol. i, pp. 308-312. Carroll stales that the species of Seal that are taken on the coast of Newfoundland are the " Square Flipper Seal" (probably Jlalichccrus grypus), the "Hood Seal" (Cyetopliora cristata), the "Harp Seal" (Phoca grcciilandica), and the "Dotard" or "Native Seal" (Phoca rilulina).— Seal and Herring Fisheries of Newfoundland, 1873, p. 10. 'The species given by Gilpi" as found on the coast of Nova Scotia are the Harbor Seal (1'hoca vituUna), the Harp Seal (Phoca granlandica), the Gray Seal (Halicliirrus grypui), and the Hooded Seal (Cyatophora crisjjja). ••Ross's Second Voyage, App., 183f>, p. xix. 'Reise nach dem Nordpolarmeer, Th. iii, p. .r,0. 6 In an account of Professor Nordcuskjiild's lale arclic voyage, published in "Nature" (vol. xxi, p. 40, November 13,1870), u is stated that Phoca faetida "was caught in great numbers, and along with fish and various vegetables forms the main food of the natives" at Cape Serdze (about 120 miles from Bering's -Straits), the point where the "Vega" wintered, this and the polar bear being the only mammals seen. 5 F 66 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. shores of the larger British Islands, it can occur as merely a rare straggler.1 Its fossil remains have been reported by Professor Turner as having been found in the brick clays of Scotland. It appears also to be a common species in the North Pacific, there being specimens in the National Museum, unquestionably of this species, from the coast of Alaska, and from Plover Bay, on the Sibe- rian side of Bering's Strait. Its southern limit of distribution along the shores of the North Pacific,, on either the American or the Asiatic side, cannot at present be given. Judging from its known dii4ribution in other portions of the arctic waters, there is no reason to infer its absence from the northern shores of Eastern Asia and Western North America. HABITS, PRODUCTS, AND HUNTING. — The Hinged Seal is pre-eminently boreal, its home being almost exclusively the icy seas of the arctic regions. Its favorite resorts are said to be retired bays and fjords, in which it remains so long as they are filled with firm ice; when this breaks up- .the\ betake themselves to the iloes, where they bring forth their young. It is essentially a littoral, or rather glacial species, being seldom met with in the open sea. From its abundance in its chosen haunts it is a species well known to arctic voyagers, and frequent reference is made to it in most of the narratives of arctic explorations.2 The habits of the Ringed Seal, as observed in European waters, seem to agree with what has already been related respecting their life-history in Davis's Strait and Cumberland Sound. Malm- gren, for example, states that the females bring forth their young on the western coast of Finland, on the ice, near the edge of great openings, between the 24th of February and the L'5th of March, or at the time given by Fabricius and later writers for the same event on the coast of Greenland, and in no respect does their mode of life appear to differ in the icy seas about Spitzbergeu from what has already been related. The Ringed Seal is of far less commercial value than the Harp Seal, but in this respect may be considered as holding the second rank among the northern Phocids. Brown states that "it is chiefly looked upon and taken as a curiosity by the whalers, who consider it of very little commer- cial importance and call it ' Floe-rat.'" Von Ileugliu, however, states that many thousands are- annually taken by the sealers for their skins and fat, in the vicinity of Nova Zembla and S|>itz- bergen. It is of the greatest importance, however, to the Esquimaux and other northern tribes,. by whom it is captured for food and clothing. Mr. Brown informs us that it forms, during the latter part of summer and autumn, "the principal article of food in the Danish settlements, and on it, the writer of these notes and his companions dined many a time; we even learned to like it and to become quite epicurean connoisseurs in all the qualities, titbits, and dishes of the well- beloved Neitsik! The skin," he continues, "forms the chief material of clothing in North Green- land. All of the i>l -iM.n\ dress in Neitsik breeches and jumpers; and we sojourners from a tar country soon encased ourselves in the somewhat hispid but most comfortable nether garments. It is only high dignitaries like 'Herr Inspektor' that can afford such extravagance as a Kassigiak (Callocephalus vitulinim) wardrobe ! The arctic belles monopolize them all." Rink states that the number annually captured in South Greenland has been calculated at 51,000. Capt. J. C. Ross 1 Re specting the southern limit of the habitat of this species in Europe, Professor Flowrr lias the following: "Nilsson speaks of ffcas being found on all the Scandinavian coasts, and as having been met with as far south as the Channel, on the strength of specimens in the Paris Museum from that, locality; but he was unable to find any proofs of its having beeii met with on the coast of England. Nor have I been able to discover any positive- evidt uce that it can, at the present day, bo reckoned a British species, although there is little doubt that it must occasionally visit our shores, where its occurrence would be easily overlooked." — Proc. Zool. Soc. Loud., 1871, p. 100. C'ollett, contrary to tho testimony of Nilsson, excludes it from tho mammalian fauna of Norway, and states that he docs not know of an authentic instance of its capture on the Norwegian coast. — Beuutrkninger til NorgesPuttedjT- fauna, 1876, p. 57, foot-note 2. •In Allen's Pinnipeds, I. c., is a long and interesting account of their habits, from the pen of Ludwij* Knmlieu. THE RIBBON SEAL AND WEST INDIAN SEAL. 07 states that the Esquimaux wholly depend upon it for then- winter food, and vou Schrenck alludes to the great importance of this animal to the natives of Arnoor Laud. 26. THE RIBBON SEAL. • GENERAL HISTORY.— The fiist account of the present species was published by Pennant, under the name "Rubbou Seal," in the first quarto edition of his "IJistory of Quadrupeds," in ITS I (vol. ii, p. 5'23). GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. — According to Pallas, the present species, Ilinlrio/ilioca fas- data (Zimni.) Gill, occurs around the Kurile Islands and in the Ochotsk Sea. Von Schrenck states that Dr. Wosucssenski obtained specimens that were killed on the eastern coast of Kamtchalka, and that he himself saw skins of examples killed on the southern coast of the Ochotsk Sea, where, however, the species seems to be of rare occurrence. He further states that it occurs also in the Gulf of Tartary, between the island of Saghalieu and the mainland, but apparently not to the southward of that island, the southern point of which (in latitude 4(;° N.) he believes to be the southern limit of its distribution. Mr. Dall secured specimens taken at Cape Komauzoff.1 Captain Scammon states, "It is found upon the coast of Alaska, bordering on Bering Sea, and the natives of Ounalaska recognize it as an occasional visitor to the Aleutian Islands. . . . The Russian traders who formerly visited Cape Eomanzoff, from Saint Michael's, Norton Sound, frequently brought back the skins of the male Histriophoca, which were used for covering trunks and for other ornamental purposes." This writer also states that he "observed a herd of Seals upon the beaches at Point Reyes, California," in April, 18513, which, " without close examination, answered to the description given by Gill" of the present species. Probably, however, a "close examination" would have shown them to be different, as no examples are yet known from the Califoruiau coast, and the locality is far beyond the probable limits of the habitat. Its known range may, therefore, be given as Bering's Sea southward — on the American coast to the Aleutian Islands, and on the Asiatic coast to the island of Saghalieu. HABITS. — Almost nothing appears to have been as yet recorded respecting the habits of the Ribbon Seal. Von Schrenck gives us no information of importance, and we search equally in vain for information elsewhere. All of the four specimens obtained by Wosnessenski were taken on the eastern coast of Kamtchatka, at the mouth of the Kauitcbatka River, about the end of March. According to the report of hunters, it very rarely appears at this locality so early in the season, being not often met with there before the early part of Jfciy. The natives use its skins, in common with those of other species, for covering their snow-shoes. 27. THE WEST INDIAN SEAL. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. — Respecting the present geographical distribution of the West Indian Seal, Monachits IropicaKs Gray, I am indebted for valuable information to Mr. 11. W. Kemp, who, under date of "Key West, Fla., April 29, 1878," wrote me as follows: "Some two or three years ago there were two seen near Cape Florida. It was supposed that they had strayed from some of the Bahama Islands, as there are some few to be found in that vicinity. I am informed by reliable parties that Seals are to be found in great numbers at the Anina Islands. situated between the Isle of Pines and Yucatan. One of my informants says that as he was sailing about the islands fishing and wrecking, he and his party discovered a number of Seals on one of them, and went on shore to kill some, merely 'for fun.' On Hearing the shore the Seals got into. 'The. National Must-tun pnssi-sses four fine specimens, t\v<> olilaincil by Mr. Hull, in l.-i-d. and two l>y Mr. K. \V- Nelson, aa well as several largo pouches, each made nf an entire skin of this species by the Eskimos. 68 NATURAL IIJSTOKY OK AQUATIC ANIMALS. the w nter. They then bid tbeinsclves iy the shrubbery along the beacb, and in about ten or fifteen minutes the Seals came on (lie beach again. The men, armed with axes, sprang upon them, the Seals trying to get into the water again. Two of them were killed, and another one, as one of the men came up to him, turned around and barked furiously at him, which frightened the poor man so badly (he having never seen one before, and knowing nothing of their habits) that he almost fainted. The Seals are said to be very easily killed or captured alive. They yield a great deal of oil. The skins are very large, but not easy to cure, on account of their fatty substance." In a later letter he refers to their great rarity on the Florida coast, where he says they occur "only once or twice in a life-time," but alludes to their comparative abundance on the coast of Yucatan, and their occasional occurrence at the Bahama Islands. Mr. L. F. de Pourtales also informs me that there is a rock on Salt Key Bank, near, the Bahamas, called "Dog Hock," presumably from its having been formerly frequented by the Seals. Also, that his pilot, in 1SG8-'•<• Klapmydse fangxt, or the 'lean-Klapmyds-catching,' which lasts from three to four weeks. Very seldom is a Klapmyds to be got at other places, and especially at other times. The- natives • Klupmyds found single up a fjord by the name of Nerimartont, the meaning of which is • gone after food.1 They regularly frequent some small islands not far from Jnlianshaab, where a gon.l number are caught. After this they go farther north, but are lost sight of, and it is not known where they go to (Rink, I. c.). Those seen in North Greenland an- mere si rug 'lers, wandering from the herd, and are not a continuation of the migrating lloclcs. Johannes (a very knowing man of Jnkobshavn) informed me that generally about the 12th of July a few aie killed in Jakohshax n Bay (hit. 09° lo' N.). It is more pelagic iii its habits than the other Seals, with the exception of the Saddle'.iack."5 1 conclude the account of the geographical distribution ot'the llooded Seal in Baflin's I '.ay with the following from Mr. Kmnlien's account : 1 ProriTi lilies :in«l Traiisatimis .Nova Srntian Institute of Natural Sciences, vol. iii, pk 4, p. bd4. -Seal ami HCTIUIL; KUln-rirs of NYwiiuimllauil, j>p. 13, 14. •'Proc. Bust Soi-.Nal. Hist., vol. x, p. a71. •"Danifili Greenland, etc., 1877, p 1-Jci. 6Proe. Zocil. Soc. Loud., ItiiM. |>p 4::ii. 4:i; : Man. Xat. Hist., etc., Greenland, Mam., \>\>. 65, 66. 70 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. "The Bladder-nose appears to be very rare in the upper Cumberland waters. Oue specimen •was procured at Amianactook in autumn, the only one I saw. The Eskimo had no name for it, and said they had not seen it before. I afterward learned that they are occasionally taken about the Kikkertou Islands in spring and autumn. I found their remains in the old kitchenmiddens at Kingwab. A good many individuals were noticed among the pack-ice in Davis's Straits in July."1 Ou the European coast this species is said to be of not very common occurrence on the northern coast of Norway, but more to the southward only stragglers appear to have been met with.3 In March and April, according to Malmgren, they are seen about Jan Mayen, and they are said to occur on the coast of Finmark, and at the mouth of the White Sea. Von Baer3 and Schultz also state that it is rarely found not only in the White Sea, but along the Timauschen and Mourmau coasts. Von Heugliu says it appears to be found in the Spitsbergen waters only on the western coast of these islands,4 and states that it is not known to occur at Nova Zernbla. He gives its principal range as lying more to the westward, around Iceland and Greenland. It thus appears that the range of the Crested Seal is restricted mainly to the arctic waters of the North Atlantic, from Spitzbergen westward to Greenland and Baffin's Bay, and thence south- ward to Newfoundland. Stragglers have been captured, however, far to the southward of these limits, on both sides of the Atlantic. Thus Gray observes: "A young specimen has been taken in the river Orwell; at the mouth of the Thames; aud at the Island of Oleron, west coast of France, but I greatly doubt if it had not escaped from some ship coining from North America ; there is no doubt of the determination of the species. The one caught on the River Orwell, 29th June, 1847, is in the Museum of Ipswich, and was described by Mr* W. B. Clarke, on the 14th August, 1847, in 4to, with a figure of the Seal and skull. The, one taken on the Isle d'Oleron is in the Paris Museum, and is figured, with the skull, in Gervais, Zool. et Paleont. Franc., t. 42, and is called Phoca Isidorei, by Lesson, in the Rev. Zool., 1843, 25G. The young is very like that of Pagopliilus grcenlandicus, but is immediately known from it by being hairy between the nostrils, and by the grinders being only plated and not lobed on the surface."5 Its capture has occurred a few times on the coast of the United States, as far from its usual range even as on the European coast. A large Seal is occasionally seen on the coast of Massa- chusetts, which has been supposed to be the Crested Seal, but just what this large Seal is remains still to be determined.0 DeKay, in 1824, recorded7 the capture of a male example of this species 'Bulletin of the United States National Museum, No. 15, 187'.l, p. G4. "Says Blasius, writing in 18.57, "An den siidlichen Kiistenlaudem der Nordsee hat man sie bis jetzt nocb nieht geseheii." — Xaturgesch. der Saugeth. Deutsehlauds.p. 260. 3 Bull. Acad. Imp. des Sui. de St. Petersb., iii, 1838, p. 350. ()0. The flesh is greatly esteemed by the Greenlanders. The Hooded Seal is usually taken on the ice, but Mr. Keeks states that many are also shot in the spring of the year by the settlers along the coast of Newfoundland. As already stated, the hood of the male affords such a protection to its owner as to render the animal so provided very hard to kill with the ordinary seal-club, or even with a heavy load of shot ; and they :nv, further- more, "at times very savage, and it requires great dexterity on the part of the seal-himters to keep from being bitten." 'New York Zoology, or tin- Fanua of New York, 184U, pt. i, p. Gti. "New Topographical Atlas of Maryland, lb?:i, p. Hi. 3 Proceedings of tin- Academy of Natural Sciences. Philadelphia, 1865, p. 273. 'JUKES: Excursions in Newfoundland, vol. i, p. 31:2. 72 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. 29. THE CALIFORNIAN SEA ELEPHANT. GENERAL, HISTORY. — The California Sea Elephant, Macrorhinus angustirostris Gill, was first described by Dr. Gill, in 18GG, from a skull of a female in the Museum of the Smithsonian Institu- tion, received from Saint Bartholomew's Bay, Lower California. Its external characters were lirst made known by Capt. C. M. Scammou in 1809, and the species was redescribed by him in 1874, with detailed measurements of two adult females and a newly-born pup. This is all that has thus far appeared relating to its technical history. Captain Scaminou, as early as 1854, gave some account of the habits of this species, under the name Sea Elephant, and earlier incidental references to it doubtless occur in the narratives of travelers. Dr. Gill observes, in his paper already cited, "For a long time, the fact that a species of the genus Macrorhinus or Elephant Seal inhabits the coast of Western North America has been well known. But, on account of the want of opportunity for comparison of specimens, the relations of the species have not been understood." I fail to find, however, in any technical account of the Sea Elephant, any previous notice of their occurrence on the coast of North America. GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION. — The Sea Elephant seems to have been formerly very abun- dant on the coast of California and Western Mexico, whence it became long since nearly extirpated. Captain Scammon, in writing (about 1852) of Cedros Island, off the eoast of Lower California, says : "Seals and Sea Elephants once basked upon the shores of this isolated spot in vast numbers, and in years past its surrounding shores teemed with sealers, sea-elephant and sea-otter hunters; the remains of their rude stone houses are still to be seen in many convenient places, which were once the habitations of these hardy men." ' A few Sea Elephants are still found at Santa Barbara Island, where they are reported, however, to be nearly extinct. "Whether or not they still occur elsewhere along the California!! coast I am without means of determining, although it is probable- that a .small remnant still exists at other points, where scarcely more than a quarter of a century ago vessels were freighted with their oil. Neither is it possible to determine with certainty the limits of their former range. Captain Scammon, who doubtless obtained his information from trustworthy sources, states that it extended from Cape Lazaro, latitude 24° 40' north, to Point Reyes, in latitude 38°, or for a distance of about two hundred miles. As has heretofore been stated, Dampier, in 1680, met with Seals on the islands off the western coast of Mexico, as far south as latitude 21° to 23°, but of what species his record unfortunately fails to show. They were doubtless either Sea Elephants 01 Sea Lions (Zalophus caJifornia-nus), and may Lave included both. This rather implies its former extension, two hundred years ago, considerably to the southward of the limit assigned by Captain Scammon, on probably traditional reports current among the residents of this part of the coast at the time of his visit there in 18.">2. "The sexes vary much in size, the male being frequently triple the bulk of the female; the oldest of the former will average fourteen to sixteen feet; the largest we have ever seen measured twenty- two fret from tip to lip." "The adult females average ten feet in length between extremities.'' — Xi'iiiiinion.. "Round the under side of the neck, in the oldest males, the animal appears to undergo a change with age; the hair falls oil', the skin thickens and becomes wrinkled — the furrows cross- ing each other, producing a checkered surface — and sometimes the throat is more or less marked with white spots. Its proboscis extends from opposite the angle ol the mouth forward (in the larger males) about fifteen inches, when the creature is in a state of quietude, and the upper surface appears ridgy; but when the animal makes an excited respiration, the trunk becomes elongated, and the ridges nearly disappear." The females "are destitute of the proboscis, the nose being like that of the common Seal, but projecting more over the month." — Scomnion. ' SCAMMON, C. M. : "On :i n>-w species of t.lm KVIHIS Mari-'H-liiiiuH." 1'roo. Chit-ago Acuil., i, 18(i<>, pp. I!!!, 34. THE SEA ELEPHANT: HABITS. 73 Captain Scammon gives the length of a "new born pnp" as four feet. HABITS.— We are indebted to Captain Scainmon, who lias fortunately had favorable oppor- tunities for observation, for everything of importance that has thus far been recorded respecting the habits of the Sea Elephant of California. "The habits of these huge beasts," lie tells us,1 "when on shore, or loitering about the foaming breakers, are in many respects likf those of the Leopard Seals [Phoca vitulina]. Our observations on the Sea Elephants of California go to show that they have been found in much larger numbers from February to June than during other months of the year; but more or less were at all times found on shore • pon their favorite beaches, which were^about the islands of Saiita Barbara, Cerros, Guadalupe, San Bonitos, Nalividad, San 1'oque, and Asuncion, and some of the most inaccessible points on the mainland between Asuncion and Cerros. "When coming up out of the water, they were generally first seen near the line of surf; then crawling up by degrees, frequently reclining as if to sleep; again moviug up or along the shore, appearing not content with their last resting place. In this manner they would ascend the ravines, or -low-downs,' half a mile or more, congregating by hundreds. They are not so active on land as the.Sea's; but, when excited to inordinate exertion, their motions are quick — the whole body quivering with their crawling, semi vaulting gait, and the animal at such limes manifesting great fatigue. Notwithstanding their unwieldiness, we have sometimes found them on broken and elevated ground, tifty or sixty feet above the sea. "The principal seasons of their coining on shore are, when they are about to shed their coats, when the females bring forth their young (which is one at a time, rarely two), and the mating season. These seasons for 'hauling up' are more marked in southern latitudes. The different periods are known among the hunters as the 'pupping cow,' 'brown cow,' 'bull and cow,' and ' March bull' seasons;2 but on the California coast, either from the influence of clinr.ite or some other cause, we have noticed young pups with their mothers at quite the opposite montha. The continual hunting of the animals may possibly have driven them to irregularities. The time of gestation is supposed to be about three-fourths of the year. The most marked season we could discover was that of the adult males, which shed their coats later than the younger ones and the females. Still, among a herd of the largest of those fully matin cd (at Santa Barbara Island, in tin ne, 1S52), we found several cows and their young, the latter apparently but a few days old. "When the Sea Elephants come on shore for the purpose of 'shedding,' if not disturbed they remain out of water until the old hair falls off. By the time this change comes about, the animal is supposed to lose half its fat; indeed, it sometimes becomes very thin, and is then called a 'slimskin.' "In the stomach of the Sea Elephant a few pebbles are found, \\hich has given rise to the Haying that 'they take in ballast before going down' (returning to the sea). On warm and sunny days we have watched them come up singly on smooth beaches and burrow in the d;\ sai.d. throwing over their backs the loose particles that collect about their fore limbs, and nearly covering themselves from view; but when not disturbed, the animals follow their gregarious propensity , aud collect in large herds." "The largest number I ever found in one herd," he states in another connection', "was one hundred and sixty-live, which lay promiscuously along the beach or up ravine near by." 'Minim- Mammals, l.-C-l, pp. 1 17-111). S. <• also I'toc. Acitd. Nat. Sri. 1'hilii., l-ti'.l. |ip. (i:'.-i .", v. In . 1 1,,. :,, hrn1 <|imtcd was I'u-Kf published. Sri- tint her .1. !{<»s l!ro« m-'s " II. M>ur. < sal the Paeilic I 'mist " [ Append. ]. p. 1 .!'. v. IH-IV tin- KHitu- unihor has also ^ivi-n :i short account nf its hal.ils lie ol-scrvecl at Cedros (or OITOS) Island in 1-vV.'. AUc an article entitled "Sen-elephant. Ihintinjr," in the "Overland Monthly," iii, pp. ll-J-117. No\., ISO - KHeirini; in the huliits, ol Ilic Southern Si ;i Lit pliant (.\JiKivrliiiiii* letHlimut), as In- hail "learned iVoin ship- masters who have taken Seals about Kerguelen'u l.iuid, tin- ('ri'/rts, and IIurd'H Island.'' Srr I'rur. Acini. Nal , s,i. Pliiln., Hn'.l, p. (M. 74 NATURAL D1STOKY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. Nothing further respecting llie breeding habits or sexual relations of the species appears to have been as yet recorded, but they may be presumed to be similar to those of the Sea Elephant of the Antarctic Seas.1 COMPARISON WITH THE SOUTHERN SEA ELEPHANT. — So far as can be determined by descrip- tions, the Northern and the Southern Sea Elephants2 differ very little in size, color, or other external features. Captain Scammon gives the average length of the full grown male of the northern species as twelve to fourteen feet, and says that the largest he ever measured had a length of twenty-two feet "from tip to tip." Peron gives the length of the southern species as twenty to twenty-five, and even thirty feet, with a circumference of fifteen to eighteen feet. Alison gives the length as twelve to twenty feet, and the circumference, as eight to fifteen feet. PeTnety records the total length as twenty-five feet. Scaminon gives the length of the young of the northern species, at birth, as four feet; and Pe>ou gives four or five feet as the length of the young at birth for the southern species. The skeletons of the two old males of the southern species, already mentioned, allowing for the intervertebral cartilages that have disappeared in maceration, measure respectively not over fifteen and sixteen feet, adding to which the length of the hind flipper and the proboscis gives a total length, from "tip to tip," of about twenty-one to twenty-two feet. From • the foregoing we may infer that the usual difference in size between the two species is not great, the southern species on the whole appearing to be somewhat the larger of the two. It would seem that tlie Northern and Southern Sea Elephants, though presumably distinct, are closely allied, as well in structural characters as in habits. In respect to geographical distribution, I am not aware that the southern species has been found north of about the 35th degree of south latitude (the Island of Juan Fernandez), or the northern species soiith of about the 241 h degree of north latitude. It may consequently be safely assumed that the two forms have been long isolated, and that the southern is an offshoot from northern stock, since the only other known species of the Cyxtophorince is also northern in its distribution. > It is he re assumed that the Sea Elephant!) of the Southern Hemisphere are all referable to a single species, the riiom leoniiia of LiuuiS, 1758, bused on the Sea Lion of Lord Alison, which was renamed Plioia t'lrplmntina by Molina, 17.XJ, and again renamed Plioca pruboxcidra bj Pdron, in 1810, and of which Flioca Byroni of Desmarest. and also Pliorn Jmoni of the same author (the latter species in part only), and the Mirounga paiayniiica of Gray are synonyms. I am aware, however, that. Peters lias recently proposed the recognition of four species, namely, Cysioplwra Icuiiitia (= Alison's Sea Lion), I', fullchnxlka (= Peruely's Sea Lion), C. proboscidea (ei PiSron), and C keryui Ii'iisis (the Sea Elephant of Kergnclen Inland) He seems not, however, to have arrived at this course by an examination of an extensive suite of specimens from various localities, as he refers in this connection to only a single old male example from Kergnelen Island, lie .seems to have been influenced merely by the varying staienu-uts in respect to size and some other features given by Penicty, Anson, and Peron. His entire presentation of the ease is as follows: "Peniety gibt. von seincm Seelmvcn cine laii»e Mahne, cine. Totallange von 'Jo Fuss nnd einem Pnrclimesser der Basis der Eckzahne von I! Zoll an. I , .MIIIS See-Elephanten sullen bis ISO IMISM lang nnd von blangrauer Farbe sein. Vielleicht sind alle die.se Arteu verschieden nud es wiirde tlann tier Name. I', liwuiiiu L. lilossdem AnsnnVchen Seeloxven zn helnssei: sein. wall rend die I'. . fiiliiainiiKi, wie. man die von P. rnety benennen konnte, die. C. jiriilinyi-idia P6ron, die C. ttii/iixtii-oxlr'x Gill der niirdlichen Hi mi.s]ih.°ire nnd die von Kerguelenland hesondcren Arten angehoren « iinleii. Fiir den letzteren Kail schlage ich vor, dicsr Art /.-('/Y/IK'/I -iixix zu beiie.iiiiniMi." (Monatsb. d. K. P. Akad. \VissenM-h. /.n Berlin l!-'7~', ]i. "i^l-l, fool-noie). -"rile Sea Elephants appear !o be exceptional among I lie I'/i/iriilii' in the great disparity of six.e between the sexes, in which, as well as in their breeding habits, they closely resemble the Otaries. Although, unlike the latter, they have not tlio power of using the hind limbs in locomotion on land, and are hence unable to walk, they manage to crawl to a considerable distance from the sea — aecoiding to Scaminon, a "half a mile or more." The habits of tho Southern Sea Elephant ( Macrorhlitun laiiiiinia) were long since described by Anson and Pornety, and later by Peron, but. their accounts seem in some respects to be tinged with romance. According to these writers tho males fight desperately for the possession of the females. THE HABITS OF THE FUR SEAL. 75 C.— THE HABITS OF THE FUR SEAL. By HENRY W. ELLIOTT. 30. LIFE-HISTORY OF THE FUR SEAL. DESCRIPTION OF AN ADULT MALE. — The Fur Seal, which repairs every year to the Pribylov Islands to breed and to shed its hair and fur, in numbers that seem almost fabulous, is the highest organized of all the Pinnipedia, and, indeed, for that matter, when land and water are weighed in the account together, there is no other animal known to man which can be truly, as it is, classed superior, from a purely physical point of view. Certainly there are few, if any, creatures in the animal kingdom that can be said to exhibit a higher order of instinct, approaching even our intelligence. I wish to draw attention to a specimen of the finest of this race — a male in the flush and prime of his first maturity, six or seven years old, and full grown. When it comes up from the sea early in the spring, out to its station for the breeding season, we have an .animal before us that will measure six and a half to seven and a quarter feet in length from tip of nose to the end of its abbreviated, abortive tail. It will weigh at least 400 pounds, and I have seen older specimens much more corpulent, which, in my best judgment, could not be less than GOO pounds in weight. The head of this animal now before us, appears to be disproportionately small in comparison with the immense thick neck and shoulders; but as we come to examine it we will find it is mostly all occupied by the brain. The light frame-work of the skull supports an expressive pair of large bluish hazel eyes; alternately burning with revengeful, passionate light, then suddenly changing to the tones of tenderness and good nature. It has a muzzle and jaws of about the same size and form observed in any full blooded Newfoundland dog, with this difference, that the lips are not flabby and overhanging; they are as firmly lined and pressed against one another as our own. The upper lips support a yellowish white and gray moustache, composed of long, stiff bristles, and when it is not torn out and broken off in combat, it sweeps down and over the shoulders 'as a luxuriant Illume. Look at it as it comes leisurely swimming on toward the land; see how high above the water it,. carries its head, an 1 how deliberately it surveys the beach, after having stepped upon it (for it may be truly said to step with its fore-flippers, as they regularly alternate when it moves up), carrying the, head well above them, erect and graceful, at least three feet from the ground. The lore-feet, or flippers, are a pair of dark bluish-black hands, about eight or ten inches broad at their junction with the body, and the metacarpal joint, running out to an ovate point at their extremity, some fifteen 1o eighteen 'inches from this union; all the rest of the forearm, the ulna, radius, and humerus. being eoneealed under the skin and thick blubber-folds of the main body and neck, hidden entirely at this season, wheuit is so fat. Bnt six \ucks to three months after this time of landing, when that siiperlluons fat and flesh has been consumed by self-absorption, thosii bones show plainly under the shimikcn skin. On tin; upper side of these flippers the hair of the body straggles down finer and fainter as it comes below to a point close by, and slightly beyond that spot of junction where the phalanges and the metacarpal bones unite, similar lo that point on our own hand where our knuckles are placed; and here the hair ends, leaving the rest of ihe skin to the end of the flipper bare and wrinkled in places at the margin of the inner side; showing, also, fine small pits, containing abortive nails, which are situated immediately over the union of the phalanges with their cartilaginous continuations to the end of the flipper. 76 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. On the other side of the flipper the skin is entirely bare, from its outer extremity up to the body connection; it is sensibly tougher and thicker than elsewhere on the body; it is deeply and regularly wrinkled with seams and furrows, •which cross one another so as to leave a kind of sharp diamond-cut pattern. When they arc placed by the animal upon the smoothest rocks, shining and slippery from algoid growths and the sea-polish of restless waters, they seldom fail to adhere. When we observe this Seal moving out on the land, we notice that, though it handles its foic feet in a most creditable manner, it brings up its rear in quite a different style ; for. after every second step ahead with the anterior limbs, it will arch its spine, and in arching, it drags and lifts up, and together forward, the hind-feet, to a fit position under its body, giving it in this manner fresh leverage for another movement forward by the fore-feet, in which the spine is again straightened out, and then a fresh hitch is taken upon the posteriors once more, and so on as the Seal progresses. This is the leisurely and natural movement on laud, when not disturbed, the body all the time being carried clear of and never touching the ground. But if the creature is frightened, this method of progression is radically changed. It launches into a lope, and actually gallops so last that the best powers of a man in running are taxed to head it off. Still, it must be remembered that it cannot run far before it sinks trembling, gasping, breathless, to the earth; thirty or forty yards of such speed marks the utmost limit of its endurance. The radical difference in the form and action of the hind-feet cannot fail to strike the eye at once ; they are one-seventh longer than the fore-hands, and very much lighter and more slender; they resemble, in broad terms, a pair of black kid gloves, flattened out and shriveled, as they lie in their box. There is no suggestion of fingers on the fore-hands; but the hind-feet seem to be toes run into ribbons, for they literally flap about involuntarily from that point where the cartilaginous processes unite with the phulangeal bones. The hind-feet are also merged in the body at their junction with it, like those anterior; nothing can be seen of the leg above the tarsal joint. The shape of the hind-flipper is strikingly like that of a human foot, provided the latter were drawn out to a length of twenty or twenty-two inches, the instep flattened down, and the toes run out into thin, membraneous, oval-tipped points, only skin-thick, leaving three strong, cylindrical, grayish, horn-colored nails, half an inch long each, back six inches from these skinny toe-ends, without any sign of nails to mention on the outer big and little toes. On the upper side of this hind-foot the body-hair comes down to that point where the meta- tarsus and phalangeal bones join and fade out. From this junction the phalanges, about six inches down to the nails above mentioned, are entirely bare, and stand ribbed up in bold relief on the membrane which unites them as the web to a duck's foot; the nails just referred to mark the ends of the phalangeal bones, and their union in turn with the cartilaginous processes, which run rapidly tapering and flattening out to the ends of the thin toe-points. Now, as we are looking at this Fur Seal's motion and progression, that which seems most odd, is the gingerly manner (if I may be allowed to use the expression) in which it carries these hind-flippers; they are held out at right angles from the body directly opposite the pelvis, the toe-ends or flaps slightly waving, curled, and drooping over, supported daintily, as it were, above the earth, the animal only suffering its weight behind to fall upon its heels, which are themselves opposed to each other, scarcely five inches apart. We shall, as we see this Seal again later in the season, have to notice a different mode of pro- gression and bearing both when it is lording over its harem, or when it grows shy and restless at the end of the breeding season, then faint, emaciated, dejected ; but we will now proceed to observe him in the order of his arrival and that of his family. His behavior during the long period of fasting and unceasing activity and vigilance, and other cares which devolve upon him as the most THE FUR SEAL: ARRIVAL OF THE BULLS. 77 emineut of all polygamies in (lie brute world, I shall carefully relate; and to folly comprehend the method of this exceedingly interesting animal, it will be frequently necessary for the reader to refer to my sketch-maps of its breeding-grounds or rookeries, and t'.ie islands. ARRIVAL AT THE SEAL GROUNDS: COMING IN OF THE BULLS. — The adult males are the first examples of the Callnrhinus to arrive in the spring on the seal ground, which has been deserted by all of I hem since the close of the preceding year. Between the 1st and 5th of May, usually, a few males will be found scattered over the rook- eries, pretty close to the water. They are at this time qnite«.xhy and sensitive, seeming riot yet Satisfied with the land ; and a great many spend day after day idly swimming out among the breakers, a little distance from the shore, before they come to it, perhaps somewhat reluctant at first to enter upon, th* assiduous duties and the grave responsibilities before them in fighting for aud maintaining their positions in the rookeries. The first arrivals are not always the oldest "bulls, but may be said to be, the finest and most ambitious of their class. They are lull grown and able to hold their places on the rookeries of the breeding-flats, which they immediately take up after coming ashore. Their method of lauding is to come collectively to those breeding-grounds where they passed the prior season; but I am not able to say authoritatively, nor do I believe it, strongly as it lias been urged by many careful men who were with me on the islands, that these animals come back to and take up the same position on their breeding-grounds that they individually occupied when there last year. From my knowl- edge of their action aud habit, and from what I have learned of the natives, I should say that very few, if any, of them make such a selection and keep these places year after year. Even did the Seal itself intend to come directly from the sea to that spot on the rookery which it left last summer, what could it do if it came to that rookery margin a little late and found that another "See-catch" had occupied its ground? The bull could do nothing. It would either have to die in its tracks, if it persisted in attaining this supposed objective point, or do what undoubtedly it does do — seek the next best locality which it can attain adjacent. One old "See-catch" was pointed out to me at the "Gorbatch" section of the Reef Rookery as an animal that was long known to the natives as a regular visitor close by or on the same rock every season during the past three years. They called him "Old John," aud they said they knew him because he had one of his posterior digits missing, bitten off, perhaps, in a combat. 1 saw him in 1872, and made careful drawings of him in order that I might recognize his individuality should he appear again in the following year, and when that time rolled by I found him not; lie failed to reappear, aud the natives acquiesced in his absence. Of course it was impossible to say that he was dead when there were ten thousand rousing, fighting bulls to the right, left, and below us, under our eyes, for we could not approach for inspection. Still, if these animals came each to a certain place in any general fashion, or as.a rule, 1 think there would be no difliculty in recog- nizing the fact; the natives certainly would do so; as it is, they do not. 1 think it very likely, however, that the older bulls come back to" the same common rookery-ground where they spent the previous season; but they are obliged to take up their position on it just as the circumstances attending their arrival will permit, such as finding other Seals which have arrived before them, or of being whipped out by stronger rivals from their old stands. It is entertaining to note, in this connection, that the Russians themselves, with the object of testing this mooted query, during the later years of their possession of the islands, drove up a number of young males from Lukannon, cut oil' their ears, and turned them out to sea again. The following season, when the droves came in from the "hauliug-grounds" to the slaughtering- fields, quite a number of those cropped Seals were in the drives, but instead of being found all at one 73 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. place — the place from whence they were driven tbo year before — they were scattered examples of croppies IVoin every point ou tbe island. The same experiment was again made by our people in 1870 (the natives having told them of this prior undertaking), and they went also to Lukanuon, drove up 100 young males, cut off their left ears, and set "them free in turn. Of this number, during the summer of 187'J, when I was there, the natives found in their driving of 75,000 Seals from the dif- ferent hauling groundsof Saint Paul np tothevillage killing-grounds, two ou NovostashnaL Rookery,, ten miles north of Lukannon, and two or three from English Bay and Tolstoi Rookeries, six miles west by water; one or two were taken on Saint George Island, thirty-six miles to the southeast, and 7iot one from Lukauuou was found among those that were driven from there; probably, had all the young males on the two islands this season been examined, the rest of the croppies that had returned from the perils of the deep, whence they sojourned during the winter, would have been distributed quite equally about the Pribylov Lauliug-grounds. Although the natives say that they think Ihe cutting off of the animal's ear gives the water such access to its Lead as lo cause its death, yet I noticed that those examples which we Lad recognized by this auricular mutilation were normally fat and well developed. Their theory does not appeal to my belief, and it certainly requires confirmation. These experiments would tend to prove very cogently and conclusively, that when the Seals approach tbe islands iu the spring, they have nothing in their minds but a general instinctive appreciation of the fitness of tbe land, as a wbole ; and no special fondness or determination to elect any one particular spot, not even the place of their birth. A study of my map of tbe distribution of the seal-life ou Saint Paul, clearly indicates that tbe landing of tbe Seals on the respective rookeries is influenced greatly by tbe direction of tbe wind at the time of their approach to the islands in tbe spring and early summer. The prevailing airs, blowing, as they do at that season, from the north and northwest, carry far out to sea tbe odor of tbe old rookery flats, together with tbe fresh scent of tbe pioneer bulls which have located themselves on these breeding-grounds, three or four weeks iu advance of their kind. The Seals come up from tbe great North Pacific, and hence it will be seen that the rookeries of the south and southeastern shores of Saint Paul Island receive nearly all tbe seal-life, although there are miles of perfectly eligible ground at Nahsayvernia, or- north shore. To settle this matter beyond all argument, however, I know is an exceedingly difficult task, for the identification of individuals, from one season to another, among the hundreds of" thousands, and even millions, that come under the eye on one of these great rookeries, is well iiigh, impossible. AGK OF FEMALES WHEN FIRST PREGNANT. — As to the time when tbe virgin cow is first covered by tbe bull, I found a strange medley of ideas among the people on the island. The com- mon opinion of the others and the natives was, that {hey were not covered until they were three, years of age, bringing forth their first young in the former case, in the generally accepted version, when they reached their fourth year. But this, on examination, was not a difficult problem at all to solve. The evidence every year decides when the yearlings are driven up to the village in the fall, that although to external appearance there is no difference between tbe sexes, an examination conclusively established the fact, that the yearling females herded with tbe yearling males on tbe hauling-grounds, each about equal in number, and that when the balance of the "Holluschickie," two-year-olds and upward, were driven in they never found a female1 in tbe droves. Where were these two-year-old females then ? They were not upon tbe hauling-grounds with tbe yearling females . and bachelors. Where were they ? The answer is, they have come up on tbe breeding-grounds, clothed with desire and supplied with physical life to meet prospective maternity. 'i. e., virile female. THE FUE SEAL : BATTLES OF THE MALES. 79 KELATTVE DURATION OF LIFE: KEPKODUCTION is TERRESTRIAL. — This 1'act also shows tbat, as the female Fur Seal is so conspicuously inferior to the male, physically viewed, IKS to size and weight, so also is her life lessened. In other words, wheii she is matured, as she must be by her third year, in bearing then her first pup, she can reasonably be expected to live no longer than nine or ten years, according to the general natural law governing this question ; while the male, not coming to his maturity and physical prime until he is five or six years of age, lives, iu obedience to the same law, fifteen or twenty years. OLD AND YOUNG MALES FIGHTING. — The males under six years of age, although hovering about the sea margins of the breeding-grounds, do not engage in much lighting there ; it is the six and seven year old males, ambitious and flushed with their reproductive consciousness, that swarm out and do battle with the older males of these places. The young niiile of this latter class is, however, no match for an old fifteen or twenty year old bull, provided that the aged " Seecatchie" retains his teeth; for, with these weapons, his relatively harder thews and sinews give him the advantage iu almost every instance, among the hundreds of combats that I have witnessed. The.-e trials of strength between the old and the young are incessant until the rookeries are mapped out; and by common consent the males of all classes recognize the coming of the females. After their arrival and settlement over the whole extent of the breeding-grounds, about the 15th July at the latest, very little fighting takes place.1 ONLY ONE PUP BOI?N AT TIME OF PARTURITION. — Touching the number of young born at a birth, the most diligent inquiry and scrutiny of observation on the rookeries have satisfied me that it is confined to a single pup. If they have twins, 1 have failed to discover a single instance of that character. I also failed to notice a malformed pup or a monster anywhere throughout the multitudes under my observation, from July until the middle of November every season. I think this somewhat noteworthy, as it presents, perhaps, better than any other exhibition in the animal 'It has been suggested to me that tlie exquisite power of scent possessed by these animals enables them to reach the breeding-grounds at about the place where they left them the season previously ; surely ihc nose of ihe Fur Seal ia endowed to a superlative degree with those organs of smell, and its range of appreciation in this respect must be very great. " In carnivorous quadrupeds the structure of the bones of the nasal cavities is more intricate than in the her- bivorous, and is calculated to afford a far more extensive surface for the, distribution of the nerve. Iu the Seal this conformation is most fully developed and the bony plates are here not turbinated, but, ram ill cd, as shown in the woodcut. Eight or more principal branches rise from the main trunk, and each of these is divided and subdivided to an extreme degree of minuteness, so as to form in all many hundred plates. The olfactory membrane, with all its nerves, is closely applied to every plate in this vast assemblage, as \\ell as to the main trunk and to the internal surface of the surrounding cavity, so that its extent cannot be less than 120 square inches in each nostril. An organ of such exquisite sensibility requires an extraordinary provision for securing it against injury, and nature has supplied a mechanism for the purpose, enabling the animal to close at pleasure the orifice of the nostril." — HARWOOD: Comp. Auat. and Physiol., Bridgeware? Treatise, vol. ii, p. 40-2. I noticed in all sleeping ami waking Seals that the nasal apertures were never widely expanded ; and that they •were at intervals rapidly opened and closed with inhalation and exhalation of each breath ; the nostrils of the Fur Seal are, as a rule, well opeued when the animal is out of watt r, aud remain so while it i.s nu laud. The distances at sea, away from the Pribylov Islands, in which Fur Seals are found dnring the breeding season, are very considerable ; .scattered records have been made of seeing large bands of them during August as far down the northwest coast as they probably rauge at any season of the year, viz, well out at sea in the latitude of Cape Flattery, 47° to 49° south latitude. In the winter aud spring, up to middle of June, all classes are found here spread out over wide areas of the ocean ; then, by the l.">th June they will have all departed, the first and the latest, en route for the 1'riliylov Islands. Then, 'when seen again in this extreme southern range, I presume the unusually early examples of return, toward the end of August, are squads of the yearlings of both sexes, for this division is always the last to laud on, and Ihe first, to leave, the Seal I-dauds, annually. Also, the two year-old females which have been covered on the breeding-grounds during Juno and .July undoubtedly stray liuck to sea. and down again from the Pribylov group, very early in August, some of them as far as the coast-heads of Fuca Straits; at least, many of them at one time are never seen inaswed on the rookeries, and as they do not consort with the Holluschirkio and yearlings on lan|j, quite a number of their large aggregate doubtless make frequent and extended fishing excursions during the height of the breeding season. 80 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. kingdom, the survival of the fittest iu the struggle for existence; for these bulls, by their own evolution, permit only the strongest and most perfect of their kind to stamp their impress on the coming generations. ! From the time of the first arrival in May up to the beginning of June, or as late as the middle of that month, if the weather be clear, is an interval in which everything seems quiet. Very few Seals are added to the pioneers that have landed, as we have described. By the 1st of June, how- ever, sometimes a little before, and never much Inter, the seal-weather — the foggy, humid, oozy damp of summer — sets in; and with it, as the gray banks roll up and shroud the islands, the bull Seals swarm from the depths by hundreds and thousands, and locate themselves in advantageous positions for the reception of the females, which are generally three weeks or a month later than this date iu arrival. PRE-EMPTION OF THE EOOKEKIES: BATTLES OF THE SEALS. — The labor of locating and maintaining a position on the rookery is really a terribly serious business for those bulls which come in last; and it is so all the time to those males that occupy the water-line of the breeding- grounds. A constantly sustained fight between the newcomers and the occupants goes on • morning, noon, and night, without cessation, frequently resulting in death to one or even both of the combatants. It appears, from my survey of these breeding-grounds, that a well-understood principle exists among the able-bodied bulls, to wit: that each one shall remain undisturbed on his ground, which is usually about six to eight feet square, provided that at the start, and from that time until the arrival of the females, he is strong enough to hold this ground against all comers; inasmuch as the crowding in of the fresh arrivals often causes the removal of those which, though equally able- bodied at first, have exhausted themselves by fighting earlier and constantly, they arc finally driven by these fresher animals back farther and higher up on the rookery, and sometimes off altogether. Many of these bulls exhibit wonderful strength and desperate courage. I marked one veteran at Gorbatch, who was the first to take up his position early in May, and that position, as usual, directly at the water-line. This male Seal had fought at least forty or fifty desperate battles, and fought off his assailants every time — perhaps nearly as many different Seals which coveted his position — and when the fighting season was over (after the cows are mostly all hauled up), I saw him still there, covered with scars and frightfully gashed; raw, festering, and bloody, one eye gouged out, but lording it bravely over his harem of fifteen or twenty females, who were all huddled together on the same spot of his first location and around him. This fighting between the old and adult males (for none others fight) is mostly, or rather entirely, done with the mouth. The opponents seize one another with their teeth, and then clenching their jaws, nothing but the sheer strength of the one and the other tugging to escape can shake them loose, and that effort invariably leaves an ugly wound, the sharp canines tearing out deep gutters in the skin and furrows in the blubber, or shredding the nippers into ribbon-strips. They usually approach, each other with comically averted heads, just as though they were ashamed of the rumpus which they were determined to precipitate. When they get near enough to reach one another they enter upon the repetition of many feints or passes, before either one or the other takes the initiative by gripping. The heads are darted out and back as quick as a flash; 'A trained observer, Kumlieu, who passed the winter (if lb77-'78 iu Cumberland Sound, and, speaking of lliis feature in tho Kinged Seal ( I'lioca fa-tula), says, "There is usually but one young at a birth ; still twins are not of rare occurrence, and one instance came under my observulion where there were Iriplets; bill they were small, and two of them probably would not have lived had they been born." THE FUE SEAL: ATTITUDES AND COLOEATIOX. 81 their hoarse roaring; and shrill, piping whistle never ceases, while their tat bodies writhe and swell with exertion and rage; furious lights gleam in their eyes; their hair flies in the air,and their blood streams down ; all combined, makes a picture so fierce and so strange that, from its unexpected position and its novelty, is perhaps one of the most extraordinary brutal eonte 1s man can witness. In these battles of the Seals, the parties are always distinct; the one is offensive, the other defensive. If the latter proves the weaker he withdraws from the position occupied, and is never followed by his conqueror, who complacently throws up one of his hind nippers, fans himself, as it were, to cool his fevered wrath and blood from the heat of the conflict, sinks into comparative quiet, only uttering a peculiar chuckle of satisfaction or contempt, with a sharp eye. open for the next covetous bull or -'See-catch."1 ATTITUDES AND COLORATION OF THE FUR SEAL. — The period occupied by the males in talcing and holding their positions on the rookery, offers a very favorable opportunity to study them in the thousand and one different attitudes and postures assumed, between the two extremes of desperate conflict and deep sleep — sleep so profound that one can, if he keeps to the leeward, approach elosa enough, stepping softly, to pull the whiskers of any old male taking a nap on a clear place; but after the first touch to these moustaches, the trifler must jump with electrical celerity back, if he has any regard for the sharp teeth and tremendous shaking which will surely overtake him if he does not. The younger Seals sleep far more soundly than the old ones, and it is a favorite pastime for the natives to surprise them in this manner — favorite, because it is attended with no personal risk; the little beasts, those amphibious sleepers, rise suddenly, and fairly shrink to the earth, spitting and coughing their terror and confusion. The neck, chest, and shoulders of a fur-seal bull comprise more than two-thirds of his whole weight; and in this long, thick neck, and the powerful muscles of the fore-limbs and shoulders, is embodied the larger portion of his strength. When on laud, with the fore hands he does all climb- ing over the rocks and grassy hummocks back of the rookery, or shuffles his way over the smooth parades; the hind-feet being gathered up as useless trappings after every second step forward, which we have described at the outset of this chapter. These anterior flippers are also the propel- ling power when in water, the exclusive machinery with which they drive their rapid passage; the hinder ones floating behind like the steering sweep to a whale-boat, used evidently as rudders, or as the tail of a bird is while its wings sustain and force its rapid flight. The covering to the body is composed of two coats, one being a short, crisp, glistening over- hair, and the other a close, soft, elastic pelage, or fur, which gives the distinctive value to the pelt. I can call it readily to the mind of my readers, when I say to them that the down and feathers on the breast of a duck lie relatively as the fur and hair do upon the skin of the Seal. At this season of first "hauling up,"2 in the spring, the prevailing color of the bulls, after they dry off and have been exposed to the weather, is a dark, dull brown, with a sprinkling in it of lighter brown-black, and a number of hoary or grizzled gray coats peculiar to the very old males. On the shoulders of all of them, that is, the adults, the over-hair is either a gray or rufous ocher, or a very emphatic "pepper and salt"; this is called the "wig." The body-colors are most intense and pronounced upon the back of the head , neck, and spine, fading down on the flanks lighter, to much lighter ground on the abdomen; still never white, or even a clean gray, so beautiful and peculiar to them when young, and to the females. The skin of the muzzle and flippers is a dark ' " See-catch," native name for tho bulls on the rookeries, especially those which are able to maintain their position. 2 "Hauling up," a technical term, applied to the action of the Seals when they laud from the surf and haul up or drag themselves over the beach. It is expressive and appropriate, as are most of the sealing phrases. 6 F 82 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. bluish-black, fading in the older examples to a reddish and purplish tint. The color of the ears and tail is similar to that of the body, being somewhat, if anything, a trifle lighter; the ears on a bull Fur Seal are from one inch to an inch and a half in length ; the pavilions or auricles are tightly rolled up on themselves, so that they are similar in shape to, and exactly the size of, the little finger on the human hand, cut off at the second phalangeal joint, a trifle more cone-shaped, however, as they are greater at the base than they are at the tip. They are haired and furred as the body is. I think it probable that this animal has and does exert the power of compressing or dilating this scroll-like pavilion to its ear, just according as it dives deeper or rises in the water; and also, I am quite sure that the Hair Seal has this control over the meat-tin exicrmis, from what I have seen of it. I have not been able to verify it in either case by actual observation; yet such opportunity as I have had gives me undoubted proof of the fact, that the hearing of the Fur Seal is wonderfully keen and surpassingly acute. If you make any noise, no matter how slight, the alarm will be given instantly by these insignificant-looking auditors, aud the animal, rising up from deep sleep with a single motion erect, gives you a stare of stupid astonishment, and at this season of defiance, mingling it with incessant, surly roaring, growling, and "spitting." VOICE OF THE FUR SEAL. — This spitting, as I call it, is by no means a fair or full expression of the most characteristic sound or action peculiar, so far as I have observed, to the Fur Seals alone, the bulls in particular. It is the usual prelude to all their combats, and it is their signal of aston- ishment. It follows somewhat in this way: when the two disputants are nearly within reaching or striking distance, they make a number of feints or false passes, as fencing-masters do, at one another, with the mouth wide open, lifting the lips or snarling so as to exhibit the glistening teeth, aud with each pass of the head and neck they expel the air so violently through the larynx, as to make a rapid choo-choo choo sound, like steam-puffs as they escape from the smoke-stack of a locomotive when it starts a heavy train, especially when the driving-wheels slip on the rail. All of the bulls have the power and frequent inclination to utter four distinct calls or notes. This is not the case with the Sea Lion,1 whose voice is confined to a single bass roar, or that of the walrns, which is limited to a dull grunt, or that of the Hair Seal,3 which is inaudible. This volubility of the Fur Seal is decidedly characteristic and prominent; Le utters a hoarse, resonant roar, loud and long; he gives vent to a low, entirely different, gurgling growl ; he emits a chuckling, sibilant, piping whistle, of which it is impossible to convey an adequate idea, for it must be heard to be understood; and this spitting or choo sound just mentioned. The cows3 have but one note — a hollow, prolonged, bla .i-ting call, addressed only to their pups; on all other occasions they are usually silent. It is something strangely like the cry of a calf or an old sheep. They also make a spitting sound or snort when suddenly disturbed— a kind of a cough, as it were. The pups "blaat" also, with little or no variation, their sound being somewhat weaker and hoarser than their mother's, after birth; they, too, comically spit or cough when aroused suddenly from a nap or driven into a corner, opening their little mouths like young birds in a nest, when at bay, backed up in some crevice, or against some tussock. 1 Kumetopiua Ktellcri. T/i'.ai ritiiliiin. •'Without explanation, I imiy be considered as making lisa of paradoxical language by using tlicsr terms of description; for the inconsistency of talking of "pups" with ''cows," and "bulls,"' and "rookeries," cm the breeding- grouuds of the .same, cannot fail to be noticed; but this nomenclature has been given and used by the American :iml English whaling aud sealing parties for many years, and the characteristic features of the Seals themselves so suit thu naming, that I have felt satistiod to retain the stylo throughout as rendering my description more intelligible, especially so to tho.sfe who are engaged in the business, or may be hereafter. The Russians are more consistent, but not so '• pat"; they call the bull " See-catch," a term implying .strength, vigor, etc.; the cow, "Matkali," or mother; the- pups,. •'Kotickie," or little seals; the non-breeding males under six and seven years, "Hollusehickie," or bachelors. The name applied collectively to the Fur .Seal by them is "— Morskie-kot," or Sea Cat. THE FCJIl SEAL: EFFECTS OF HEAT. 83 Indeed, so similar is the sound, that I noticed a number of sheep which the Alaska Commercial Company had brought up from San Francisco to Saint George Island, during the summer of 1ST.'!, were constantly attracted to the rookeries, and were, running in among the "Holluschickie"; so much so that they neglected the good pasturage on the uplands beyond, and a small boy had to be legularly employed to herd them where they could feed to advantage. These transported Oc'nhr, though they could not possibly find anything in their eyes suggestive of companionship among the Seals, had their ears so charmed by the sheep-like accents of the female pinnipeds, as to persuade them against their senses of vision and smell. The souud which arises from these great breeding-grounds of the Fur Seal, where thousands upon tens of thousands of angry, vigilant bulls are roaring, chuckling, and piping, and multitudes of seal-mothers are calling in hollow, blaatiug tones to their young, that in turn respond inces- santly, is simply defiance to verbal description. It is, at a slight distance, softened into a deep booming, as of a cataract; and I have heard it, with a light, fair wind to the leeward, as far as sis miles out from land on the sea; and even in the thunder of the surf and the roar of heavy gales, it will rise up and over to your ear for quite a considerable distance away. It is the monitor which the sea-captains anxiously strain their ears for, when they run their dead reckoning up, and are laying to for the fog to rise, in order that they may get their bearings of the land; once heard, they hold on to the souud and feel their way in to anchor. The seal-roar at ''Novostashnah," dining the summer of 187.!, saved the life of the surgeon,' and six natives belonging to the island, who had pushed out on an eggiug-trip from Northeast Point to Walrus Island. 1 have sometimes thought, as I have listened through the night to this volume of extraordinary sound, which never ceases with the rising or the setting of the sun throughout the entire season of breeding, that it was fully equal to the churning boom of the waves of Niagara. Night and day, throughout the season, this din upon the rookeries is steady and constant. EFFECTS OF HEAT ON THE SEALS. — The Seals seem to suffer great inconvenience and positive misery from a comparatively low degree of heat. I have been often surprised to observe that, when the temperature was 40° and 48° Fahr. on land during the summer, they would show every- where signs of distress, whenever they made any exertion in moving or fighting, evidenced by panting and the elevation of their hind-flippers, which they used incessantly as so many fans. With the thermometer again higher, as it is at rare intervals, standing at 55° and 00°, they then seem to suffer even when at rest; and at such times the eye is struck by the kaleidoscopic appear- ance of a rookery — in any of these rookeries where the Seals are spread out in every imaginable- position their lithesome bodies can assume, all industriously fan themselves; they use sometimes; the fore-tlippers as ventilators, as it were, by holding them aloft motionless, at the same time' fanning briskly with the hinder ones, according as they sit or lie. This wavy motion of fanning or flapping gives a hazy indistinctness to the whole scene, which is difficult to express in language;, but one of the most prominent characteristics of the Fur Seal, and perhaps the most unique feature, is this very fanning manner in which they use their flippers, when seen on the breeding-grounds- at this season. They also, when idle as it were, off-shore at sea, lie on their sides iu the watei with only a partial exposure of the body, the head submerged, and then hoist up a fore- or hind- flipper clear oat of the water, at the same time scratching themselves or enjoying a motnei.tan nap; but in this position there is no fanning. I say "scratching," because the Seal, in common, 'Dr. Otto Cramer. The suddenness with which !'<>£ and wind shut down and sweep over I he M a here, even when, the day opens most auspiciously for a short l)oat-vo\ a^e. ha* >-o alarmed the natives in times past, that a \i-it i> now never made by them from island to island, unless on one of the company's vessels. Several liidairahs have never lieei i heard from, which, iu earlier times, attempted to sail, with picked crews of the natives, Ironi one island to the other. 64 NATUEAL HISTOUY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. with all animals, is preyed upon by vermin, and it has a peculiar species of louse, or parasitic tick, that belongs to it. SLEEPING AFLOAT. — Speaking of the Seal as it rests in the water, leads rue to remark that they seem to sleep as sound and as comfortably, bedded on the waves or rolled by the swell, as they do on the land; they lie on their backs, fold the fore-flippers across the chest, and turn the hind ones up and over, so that the tips rest on their necks and chins, thus exposing simply the nose and the heels of the hind-flippers above water, nothing else being seen. In this position, unless it is very rough, tbe Seal sleeps as serenely as did the prototype of that memorable song, who was •"rocked in the cradie of the deep." FASTING OF THK SEALS AT THE ROOKERIES: INTESTINAL WORMS.— All the bulls, from the very lirst, that have been able to hold their positions, have not left them from the moment of their landing for a single instant, night or day; nor will they do so until the end of the rutting season, which subsides entirely between the 1st and 10th of August, beginning shortly after the coming of the cows in June. Of necessity, therefore, this causes them to fast, to abstain entirely from food of any kind, or water, for three, months at least; and a i'ew of them actually stay out four mouths, in total abstinence, before going back into tbe water for the first time after "hauling up" in May; they then return as so many bony shadows of what they were only a few mouths anteriorly; covered with wounds, abject and spiritless, they laboriously crawl back to the sea to renew a fresh lease of life. Such physical endurance is remarkable enough alone; but it is simply wonderful, when we come to associate this fasting with the unceasing activity, restlessness, and duty devolved upon the bulls as the heads of large families. They do not stagnate like hibernating bears in caves; there is not one torpid breath drawn by them in the whole period of their fast; it is evidently sustained and accomplished by the self- absorption of their own fat, with which they are so liberally supplied when they first come out from the sea and take up their positions on the breeding-grounds, and which gradually disappears, until nothing but the staring hide, protruding tendons and bones, marks the limit of their abstinence. There must be some remarkable provision made by nature for the entire torpidity of the Seals' stomachs and bowels, in consequence of their being empty and unsupplied during this long period, coupled with the intense activity and physical energy of the animals during the same time, which, however, in spite of the violation of a supposed physiological law, does uot seem to affect them, for they come back just as sleek, fat, and ambitious as ever, iu the following season. I have examined the stomachs of hundreds which were driven up and killed immediately after their arrival in the spring, near the village; I have the word of the natives here, who have seen hundreds of thousands of them opened during the slaughtering seasons past, but in no single case has anything ever been found, other than tbe bile and ordinary secretions of healthy organs of this class, with the marked exception of finding in every one a snarl or cluster of worms,1 from the size of a walnut to a bunch as large as a man's fist. Fasting apparently has no effect upon the worms, for on the rare occasion, and perhaps the last one that will ever occur, of killing three or four huudred old bulls late in the fall to supply the natives with canoe skins, I was present, and again examined their paunches, finding the same worms within. The worms were lively in these empty stomachs, and their presence. I think, gives some reason for the habit which the old bulls have (the others do not) of swallowing small water- worn bowlders, the stones iu some of the stomachs weighing half a pound apiece, in others much smaller. In one paunch 1 found over five '•Nematoda. THE FUR SEAL: PARASITIC WORMS. 85 pounds, in the aggregate, of large pebbles, which, in grinding against one another, I believe, must comfort the Seal by aiding to destroy, in a great measure, these intestinal pests. The Sea Lion is also troubled in the same way by a similar species of worm, and I preserved the stomach of one of these animals in which there was more than ten pounds of stones, some of them alone very great in sixe. Of this latter animal, I suppose it could swallow bowlders that weigh two and three pounds each. I can ascribe no other cause for this habit among these animals than that given, as they are the highest type of the carnivora, eating fish as a regular means of subsistence, varying the monotony of this diet with occasional juicy fronds of sea-weed or kelp, and perhaps a crab or such once in a while, provided it is small and tender or soft-shelled. I know that the sailors say that the ('ttllorhinux swallows these stones to "ballast" himself; in other words, to enable him to dive deeply and quickly ; but I noticed that the females and the " Holluschickie'' dive quicker and swim better than the old fellows above specified, and they do so without any ballast. They also have less muscular power, only a tithe of that which the ''Sea catch'' possesses. No. the ballast theory is not tenable. AUKIVAL OF THE cow SISALS AT THE ROOKERIES. — Between the l^thand 14th of June, the first of the cow Seals, as a rule, come up from the sea; then the long agony of the waiting bulls is over, and they signalize it by a period of universal, spasmodic, desperate, fighting among them- selves. Though they have quarreled all the time from the moment they first lauded, and continue to do so until the end of the season, in August, yet that fighting which takes place, at this date is the bloodiest and most vindictive known to the Seal. I presume that the heaviest percentage of mutilation and death among the old males from these brawls occurs in this week of the earliest appearance, of the females. A strong contrast now between the males and females looms up, both in size and shape, which is heightened by the air of exceeding peace and dove-like amiability which the latter class exhibit, in contradistinction to the ferocity and saturnine behavior of the males. DESCKIPTION OF THE cow SEAL. — The cows are from four to four and a half feet in length from head to tail, and much more shapely in their proportions than the bulls ; there is no wrapping around their necks and shoulders of unsightly masses of blubber; 'their lithe, elastic forms, from the first to the last of the season, are never altered; this they are, however, enabled to keep, because in the provision of seal economy, they sustain no protracted fasting period ; for, soon after the birth of their young, they leave it on the ground and go to the sea for food, returning perhaps to-morrow, perhaps later, even not for several days in fact, to again suckle and nourish it ; having in the mean time sped far oft' to distant lis/hing banks, and satiated a hunger which so active and highly organized an animal must experience, when deprived of sustenance for any length of time. As the females come up wet and dripping from the water, they are at first a dull, dirty-gray color, dark on the back and upper parts, but in a few hours the transformation in their appearance made by drying is wonderful. You would hardly believe that they could be the same animals, for they now fairly glisten with a rich steel and maltese gray luster on the back of the head, the neck, and along down the spine, which blends into an almost snow-white over the chest and on the abdomen. But this beautiful coloring in turn is again altered by exposure to the same weather; tor after a few days it will gradually change., so that by the lapse of two or three weeks it is a dull, rufous-ocher below, and a cinereous brown and gray mixed above. This col::r they retain throughout the breeding season, up to the time of shedding their coat in August. The head and cy<> of the female aie exceedingly beaut ill il ; the expression is really attractive, gentle, and intelligent; the large, lustrous, blue back eyes are humid and soft with the tenderest expression, while the small, well formed head is poised as giacefully on her neck as can be well 86 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. • imagined; she is the very picture of benignity and satisfaction, when she is perched np on some convenient rock, and has an opportunity to quietly fan herself, the eyes half-closed and the head thrown back on her gently-swelling shoulders. The females land on these islands not from the slightest desire to see their uncouth lords and masters, but from an accurate and instinctive appreciation of the time in which their period of gestation ends. They are in fact driven up to the rookeries by this cause alone ; the young cannot be brought forth in the water, and in all cases marked by myself, the, pups were born soon after landing, some in a few hours, but most usually a da.y or so elapses before delivery. ORGANIZATION OP THE ROOKERIES. — They are noticed and received by the males on the water-line stations with attention ; they are alternately coaxed and urged up on to the rocks, as far as these beach-masters can do so, by chuckling, whistling, and roaring, and then they are immediately under the most jealous supervision ; but, owing to the covetous and ambitious nature of the bulls which occupy these stations to the rear of the water-line and way back, the little cows have a rough-and-tumble time of it when they begin to arrive in small numbers at first, for no sooner is the pretty animal fairly established on the station of male number one, who has welcomed her there, than he, perhaps, sees another one of her style in the water from whence she has come, and, in obedience to his polygamous feeling, he devotes himself anew to coaxing the later arrival, by that same winning manner so successful in her case ; then when bull number two, just back, observes bull number one off guard, he reaches out with his long strong neck and picks up the unhappy but passive cow by the scruff of her's. just as a cat does a kitten, and deposits her upon his seraglio ground ; then bulls number three and four, and so on, in the vicinity, seeing this high-handed operation, all assail one another, especially number two, and for a moment have a tremendous fight, perhaps lasting half a minute or so, and during this commotion the little cow is generally moved, or moves, farther back from the water, two or three stations more, where, when all gets quiet again, she usually remains in peace. Her last lord and master, not having the exposure to such diverting temptation as her first, gives her such care that she not only is unable to leave, did she wish, but no other bull can seize upon her. This is only a faint (and I fully appreciate it), wholly inadequate description of the hurly-burly and the method by which the rookeries are filled up, from first to last, when the females arrive. This is only one instance of the many trials and tribulations which both parties on the rookery subject themselves to, before the harems are filled. Far back, fifteen or twenty " See-catchie" stations deep from the water-line, and sometimes more, but generally not over an average of ten or fifteen, the cows crowd in at the close of the season for arriving, which is by the l()th or 14th of July; then they are able to go about pretty much as they please, for the bulls have become so greatly enfeebled by this constant fasting, fighting, and excitement during ihe past two mouths, that they are quite content now even with only one, or two partners, if they should have no more. The cows seem to haul up in compact bodies from the water, filling in the whole ground to the rear of the rookeries, never scattering about over the surface of this area ; they have mapped out from the first their chosen resting places, and they will not lie quietly in any position outside of the great I-.K.SS of their kind. This is due to their intensely gregarious nature, and admirably adapted for their protection. And here I should call attention to the fact that they select this rookery-ground with all the skill of civil engineers. It is preferred with special reference to the drainage, for it must lie so that the produce of the constantly dissolving fogs and rain-clouds shall not lie upon them, having a great aversion to and a firm determination to rest nowhere on water-puddled ground. This is admirably exhibited, and will be understood by a study of my THE FUE SEAL: ORGANIZATION OF THE ROOKERIES. 87 sketch-maps which follow, illustrative of these rookeries and the area and position of the Seals upon them. Every one of these breeding-grounds slopes up gently from the sea, and on no one of them is there anything like a muddy flat. I found it an exceedingly difficult matter to satisfy myself as to a fair general average number of cows to each bull on the rookery; but, after protracted study,'! think it will be nearly correct when I assign to each male a general ratio of from fifteen to twenty females at the stations nearest the water; and for those back in order from that line to the rear, from five to twelve ; but there are so many exceptional cases, so many instances where forty-five and fifty females are all under the charge of one male; and then, again, where there are two or three females only, that this question was and is not entirely satisfactory in its settlement to my mind. Near Ketavie Point, and just above it to the north, is an odd washout of the basalt by the surf, which has chiseled, as it were, from the foundation of the island, a lava table, with a single roadway or land passage to it. Upon the summit of this footstool I counted forty-five cows, all under the charge of one old veteran. He had them penned up on this table-rock by taking his stand at the gate, as it were, through which they passed up and passed down — a Turkish brute typified. UNATTACHED MALES. — At the rear of all these rookeries there is invariably a large number of able-bodied males who have come late, but who wait patiently, yet in vain, for families; most of them having had to fight as desperately for the privilege of being there as any of their more fortunately located neighbors, who are nearer the water, and in succession from there to where they are themselves; but the cows do not like to be in any outside position. They cannot be coaxed out where they are not in close company with their female mates and masses. They lie most quietly and contentedly in the largest harems, and cover the surface of the ground so thickly that there is hardly moving or turning room until the females cease to come from the sea. The inaction on the part of the males in the rear during the breeding-season only serves to qualify them to move into the places which are necessarily vacated by those males that are, in the mean time, obliged to leave from virile exhaustion, or incipient wounds. All the surplus able-bodied males, that have not been successful in effecting a landing on the rookeries, cannot at any one time during the season be seen here on this rear line. Only a portion of their number are in sight; the others are either loafing at sea, adjacent, or are hauled out in morose squads between the rookeries on the beaches. COURAGE OF THE FUR SEALS. — The courage with which the Fur Seal holds his position as the head and guardian of a family, is of the highest order. I have repeatedly tried to drive them from their harem pQsts, when they were fairly established on their stations, and have always failed, with few exceptions. I might use every stone at my command, making all the noise I could. Finally, to put their courage to the fullest, test, I have walked up to within twenty feet of an old veteran, toward the extremeend of Tolstoi, who had only four cows in charge, and commenced with my double-barreled fowling-piece to pepper him all over with tine mustard-seed shot, being kind enough, in spite of my zeal, not to put out his eyes. His bearing, in spite of the noise, smell of powder, and painful irritation which the fine shot must have produced, did not change in the least from the usual attitude of determined plucky defense, which nearly all of the bulls assumed when attacked with showers of stones and noise; he would dart out right and left with his long neck and catch the timid cows, that furtively attempted to run after each report of my gnu, fling and drag them back to their places under his head ; and then, stretching up to his full height look me directly and defiantly in the face, roaring and chuckling most vehemently. The cows, however, soon got away from him; they could not stand my racket in spite <>!' their dread of him; but he still stood 88 NATURAL HISTOEY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. his ground, making little charges on me of ten or fifteen feet in a succession of gallops or lunges, spitting furiously, and then comically retreating to the old position, with an indescribable leer and swagger, back of which he would not go, fully resolved to hold his own or die in the attempt. This courage is all the more noteworthy from the fact that, in regard to man, it is invariably of a defensive character. The Seal is always on the defensive; he never retreats, and lie will not attack. If he makes yon return when you attack him, he never follows you much farther than the boundary of liis station, and then no aggravation will compel him to take the offensive, so far as I have been able to observe. I was very much impressed by this trait. BEHAVIOR OF THE FEMALE SEALS ON THE ROOKERIES. — The cows, during the whole season, do great credit to their amiable expression by their manner and behavior on the rookery; they never fight or quarrel one with another, and never or seldom utter a cry of pain or rage when they are roughly handled by the bulls, which frequently get a cow between them and actually tear the skin from her back with their teeth, cutting deep gashes in it as they snatch her from mouth to month. If sand does not get into these wounds it is surprising how rapidly they heal; and, from the fact that I never could see scars on them anywhere except the fresh ones of this year, they must heal effectually and exhibit no trace the next season. The cows, like the bulls, vary much in weight, but the extraordinary disparity in the size of the sexes, adult, is exceedingly striking. Two females taken from the rookery nearest to Saint Paul Village, right under the bluffs, and almost beneath the eaves of the natives' houses, called "Nah Speel," after they had brought forth their young, were weighed by myself, and their respective returns on the scales were fifty-six and one hundred pounds each, the former being about three or four years old, and the latter over six — perhaps ten; both were fat, or rather in good condition — as good as they ever are. Thus the female is just about one-sixth the size of the male.1 Among the Sea Lions the proportion is just one half the bulk of the male,2 while the Hair Seals, as I have before stated, are not distinguishable in this respect, as far as I could observe, but my notice was limited to a few specimens only. ATTITUDES OF FUR SEALS ON LAND. — It s quite beyond my power, indeed entirely out of the question, to give a fair idea of the thousand and. one positions in which the Seals compose themselves and rest when on land. They may be said to assume every possible attitude which a flexible body can be put into, no matter how characteristic or seemingly forced or constrained. Their joints seem to be double-hinged ; in fact, all ball and socket union of the bones. One favorite position, especially with the females, is to perch upon a point or edge-top of some rock, and throw their heads back upon their shoulders, with the nose held directly up and aloft; and then closing their eyes, to take short naps without changing their attitude, now and then softly lifting one or the other of their long, slender hind-flippers, which they slowly wave with their peculiar fanning motion to which I have alluded heretofore. Another attitude, and one of the most common, is to curl themselves up just as a dog docs on a hearth rug, bringing the tail and nose close together. They also stretch out, laying the head close to the body, and sleep an hour or two without rising, holding one of the hind flippers up all the time, now and then gently moving it, the eyes being tightly closed. 1 ought, perhaps, to define here the anomalous tail of the Fur Seal. It is just about as important as the caudal appendage to a bear, even less significant: it is the very emphasis of abbreviation. In the old males it is positively only four or five inches in length, while among the females only two and a half to three inches, wholly inconspicuous, and not even recognized by the casual observer. 'Adult mule iiuil i'niialr — I'ttllurliiiiuH ursinus. -Adult male and I'nmilc — Kumetopiim Stelleri. THE FUR SEAL: SLEEPING HABITS. 89 SLEEPING SEALS. — I com<> now to speak of another feature which interested me nearly, if not quite, as much as any other characteristic of this creature; anil that is their fashion of slumber. The sice]) of the Fur Seal, seen on land, from the old male down to the youngest, is always acenm paiiied by an involuntary, nervous, muscular twitching and slight shifting of the flippers, together with ever and anon quivering and uneasy rollings of the body, accompanied by a quick folding anew of the fore-flippers; all of which may be signs, as it were, in fact, of their simply having nightmares, or of sportiug, in a visionary way, far off in some dream-land sea; but perhaps very much as an old nurse said, in reference to the smiles on a sleeping child's face, they are disturbed by their intestinal parasites. I have studied hundreds of such somnolent examples. Stealing softly up, so closely that I could lay my hand upon them from the point where I was sitting, did I wish to, and watching the sleeping Seals, I have always found their sleep to be of this nervous description. The respiration is short and rapid, but with no breathing (unless the ear is brought very close) or snoring sound; the quivering, heaving of the thinks only indicates the action of the lungs. I have frequently thought that I had succeeded in finding a snoring Seal, especially among the pups; but a close examination always gave some abnormal reason for it; generally a slight distemper, never anything severer, however, than some trifle by which the nostrils were stopped ii] i to a greater or less degree. The cows on the rookeries sleep a great deal, but the males have the veriest cat-naps that can be imagined. I never could time the slumber of any old male on the breeding grounds, which lasted without interruption longer than live minutes, day or night; while away from these places, however, I have known them to lie sleeping in the manner I have described, broken by these fitful, nervous, dreamy starts, yet without opening the eyes, for an hour or so at a time. With the exception of the pups, the Fur Seal seems to have very little rest awake or sleeping; perpetual motion is well nigh incarnate with, its being. Fuu-SEAL PUPS. — As 1 have said before, the females, soon after landing, are delivered of their young. Immediately after the birth of the pup (twins are rare, if ever) the little creature finds its voice, a weak, husky bhial, and begins to paddle about with its eyes wide open from the start, in a confused sort of way for a few minutes, until the mother turns around to notice her oll'spiing and give it attention, and still later ro suckle it; and for this purpose she is supplied with four small, brown nipples, almost wholly concealed in the fur, and which are placed about eight inches apart, lengthwise with the body, on the abdomen, between the for"- and liind-tlippers, with about four inches of space between them transversely. These nipples are seldom visible, and then faintly seen through the hair and fur. The milk is abundant, rich, and creamy. The pups nurse very heartily, almost gorging themselves, so much so that they often have to yield up the excess of what they have taken down, mewling and puking in the most orthodox manner. The pup from birth, and for the next three months, is of a jet-black color, hair and flippers, save a tiny white patch just back of each forearm. It weighs first from three to four pounds, and is twelve to fourteen inches long. It does not seem to nurse more than once every two or three days, but in this I am very likely mistaken, for they may have received attention from the mother in the night, or other times in the day when I was unable to keep up my watch over the individuals which I had marked for this supervision. The apathy with which the young are treated by the old on the breeding-grounds, especially by the mothers, was very strange to me, and 1 was considerably surprised at it. I have never seen a seal-mother caress or fondle her offspring; and should it stray to a short distance from the hare . I could step to and pick it up, and even kill it before the mother's eye, without causing her the slightest concern, as far as all outward signs and manifestation would indicate. The same indilfcr- 90 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQ-UATIC ANIMALS. ence is also exhibited by the male to all that may take place of this character outside of the boundary of his seraglio; but the moment the pups are inside the limits of Ids harem-ground, he is a jealous and a fearless protector, vigilant and determined; but if the little animals are careless enough to pass beyond this boundary, then I can go up to them and carry them off before the eye of the, old Turk without receiving from him the slightest attention in their behalf — a curious guardian, forsooth! It is surprising to me how few of these young pups get crushed to death while the ponderous males arc floundering over them, engaged in fighting and quarreling among themselves. I have seen two bulls dash at each other with all the energy of furious rage, meeting right in the midst of a small "pod" of forty or fifty pups, tramp over them with all their crushing weight, and bowling them out right and left in every direction by the impetus of their movements, without injuring a single one, as far as I could see. Still, when wo come to consider the fact that, despite the great weight of the old males, their broad, flat flippers and yielding bodies may press down heavily on these little fellows without actually breaking bones or mashing them out of shape, it seems questionable whether more than one per cent, of all the pups born each season on these great rookeries'of the Pribylov Islands are destroyed in this manner on the breeding-grounds.1 The vitality of the Fur Seal is simply astonishing. His physical organization passes beyond the fabled nine lives of the cat. As a slight illustration of his tenure of life, I will mention the fact, that one morning the chief came to me with a pup in his arms, which had just been born, and was still womb-moist, saying that the mother had been killed at Tolstoi by accident, and he sup- posi d that I would like to have a "choochil."2 I took it up into my laboratory, and finding that it could walk about and make a great noise, I attempted to feed it, with the idea of having a comfortable subject to my pencil, for life-study of the young in the varied attitudes of sleep and motion. It refused everything that I could summon to its attention as food; and, alternately sleeping and walking, in its clumsy fashion, about the floor, it actually lived nine days — spending the half of every day in floundering over the floor, accompanying all movement with a persistent, hoarse, blnating cry — and I do not believe it ever had a single drop of its mother's milk. In the pup, the head is the only disproportionate feature at birth, when it is compared with the adult form; the neck being also relatively shorter and thicker. The eye is large, round, and full, but almost a "navy bine" at times, it soon changes into the blue- black of adolescence. The females appear to go to and come from the water to feed and bathe, quite frequently, after bearing their young, and the immediate subsequent coitus with the male; and usually return to the spot or its immediate neighborhood, where they leave their pups, crying out for them, and recognizing the individual replies, though ten thousand around, all together, should blaat at once. They quickly single out their own and nurse them. It would certainly be a very unfortunate matter if the mothers could not identify their young by sound, since their pnps get together like a great swarm of bees, and spread out upon t he ground in what the sealers call " pods," or clustered groups, while they are young and not very large; but from the middle or end of September, until they leave the islands for the dangers of the great Pacific, in the winter, along into the heat of November, they gather in this manner, sleeping and frolicking by tens of thousands, bunched together at various places all over the islands contiguous to the breeding-grounds, and right on them. A mother comes up from the sea, whither she has been to wash, and perhaps to feed, for the last day or two, feeling her way along to about where she thinks her pup should be — at least where she left 'The only damage which those little fellows have up hero, is being caught hy an October gale down at the surf- margin, when they have not fairly learned to swim; large numbers have been destroyed by sudden "nips" of this character. '-A specimen to stuff. THE FUR SEAL: HABITS OF THE TUPS. 91 it last— but perhaps slie misses it, and finds instead a swarm of pups in which it has been incor- porated, owing to its great fondness for society. The mother, without first entering into the crowd of thousands, calls out just as a sheep does for a lamb; and, out of all the din she — if not at first, at the end of a few trials — recognizes the voice of her offspring, and then advances, .striking out right and left, toward the position from which it replies. But if the pup happens at this time to be asleep, it gives, of course, no response, even though it were close by ; in the event of this silence the cow, after calling for a time without being answered, curls herself up and takes a nap, or lazily basks, to be usually more successful, or wholly so, when she calls again. The pups themselves do not know their own mothers — a fact which I ascertained by careful observation; but they are so constituted that they incessantly cry out at short intervals during the whole time they are awake, and in this way the mother can pick out from the monotonous blaating of thousands of pups, her own, and she will not permit any other to suckle it; but the "Kotickie" themselves attempt to nose around every seal -mother that comes in contact with them. I have repeatedly watched young pups as they made advances to nurse from another pup's mother; the result invariably being, that while the mother would permit her own offspring to suckle freely, yet, when these little strangers touched her nipples, she would either move abruptly away, or else turn quickly down upon her stomach, so that the maternal fountains were inaccessible to the alien and hungry "Kotickie." I have witnessed so many examples of the females turning pups away, to suckle only some particular other one, that I feel sure I am entirely right in saying that the seal-mothers kuow their own young; and that they will not permit any others to nurse save their own. I believe that this recognition of them is due chiefly to the mother's scent and hearing. DISORGANIZATION OF THE ROOKERIES. — Between the end of July and the 5th or 8th of August of every year, the rookeries are completely changed in appearance; the systematic and regular disposition of the families or harems over the whole extent of the breeding-ground has disappeared: all that clock-work order which has heretofore existed seems to be broken up. The breeding season over, those bulls which have held their positions since the first of May leave, most of them thin in flesh and weak, and of their number a very large proportion do not come out again on land during the season ; but such as are seen at the end of October and November, are in good flesh. They have a new coat of rich, dark, gray-brown hair and fur, with gray or grayish-ocher "wigs'7 of longer hair over the shoulders, forming a fresh, strong contrast to the dull, rusty brown and umber dress in which they appear to us during the summer, and which they had begun to sin d about the first of August, in common with the females and the "Holluschickie." After these males leave, at the close of their season's work and of the rutting for the year, those of them that happen to return to the land in any event do not come back until the end of September, and do not haul upon the rookery-grounds again. As a rule they prefer to herd together, like the younger males, upon the sand-beaches and rocky points close to the water. The, cows and pups, together with those bulls which we have noticed in waiting in the rear of the rookeries, and which have been in retirement throughout the whole of the breeding-season, now take possession, ina very disorderly manner, of the rookeries. There come, also, a large number of young, three, four, and five year old males, which have been prevented by the menacing threats of the older, stronger bulls, from lauding among the females during the rutting-season. Before the middle of August three-fourths, at least, of the cows at this date are off iu the water, only coining ashore at irregular intervals to nurse and look after their pnps a short time. They presented to my eye, from the summits of the bluffs round about, a picture more suggestive than anything I have ever seen presented by animal life, of entire comfort and enjoyment. Here, 92 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. just out and beyond the breaking of the rollers, they idly lie on the rocks or sand-beaches, ever and anon turning over and over, scratching their backs and sides with their fore- and hind-flippers. The Seals on the breeding ground appear to get very lousy. The Fur Seal spends a great deal of time, both at sea and on land, in scratching its hide; for it is annoyed by a species of louse, a, PedicuUis, to just about the same degree and in the same manner that our dogs are, by fleas. To scratch, it sits upon its haunches, and scrapes away with the toe nails of first one and then the other of its hind-flippers; by which action it reaches readily all portions of its head, neck, chest, and shoulders ; and, with either one or the other of its fore- flippers, it rubs down its spinal region back of the shoulders to the tail. By that division of labor with its feet, it can promptly reduce, with every sign of comfort, any lousy irritation wheresoever on its body. This Pediculus, peculiar to the Fur Seal, attaches itself almost exclusively to the pectoral regions; a few, also, are generally found at the bases of the auricular pavilions. When the Fur Seal is engaged in this exercise, it cocks its head and wears exactly the same expression that our common house-dog does while subjugating and eradicating fleas; the eyes are partly or wholly closed; the tongue lolls out; and the whole demeanor is one of quiet but intense satisfaction. The Fur Seal appears also to scratch itself in the water with the same facility and unction so marked on laud; only it varies the action by using its fore-hands principally, in its fluviatile exercise, while its hind-feet do most of the terrestrial scraping. While I have written with much emphasis upon the total absence of any record as to the prev- alence of an epidemic in these large rookeries, I should, perhaps, mark the fact that no symptoms of internal diseases have ever been noticed here, such as tuberculosis of the lungs, etc., which invariably attack and destroy the Fur Seal when it is taken into confinement, as well as the Sea Lions also; the latter, however, have a much greater power of endurance under such artificial circumstances of life. The thousands upon thousands of disemboweled Pribylov fur-seal carcasses have never presented abnormal or diseased viscera of any kind. MANGY cows AND PUPS. — The frequent winds and showers drive and spatter sand into their fur and eyes, often making the latter quite sore. This occurs when they are obliged to leave the rocky rookeries and follow their pups out over the sand-ridges and flats, to which they always have a natural aversion. On the hauling grounds they pack the soil under foot so hard and tightly in many places, that it holds AT ate r in the surface depressions, just like so many rock-basins. Out of and into these puddles the pups and the females flounder and patter incessantly, until evapora- tion slowly abates the nuisance. This is for the time only, inasmuch as the next day, perhaps, brings more rain, and the dirty pools are replenished. The pups sometimes get so thoroughly plastered in these muddy, slimy puddles, that the hail- falls oil' in patches, giving them, at first sight, the appearance of being troubled with scrofula or some other plague;: from my investigations, directed to this point, I became .-.atistied that they were not permanently injured, though evidently very much annoyed. With reference to this suggestion as to sickness or distemper among the Seals, 1 gave the subject direct and continued attention, and in no one of the rookeries could I discover a single Seal, no matter how old or young, which appeared to lie suffering in the least from any physical disorder, other than that which they themselves had inflicted, one upon the other, by lighting. The third season, passing directly under my observation, failed to reward my search with any manifestation of disease among the Seals which congregate in such mighty numbers on the rookeries of Saint Paul and Saint C.eoiye. The remarkable fr lorn from all such complaints enjoyed by these animals is noteworthy, and the TIIE FUR SEAL: MANGINESS. 93 most trenchant and penetrating' cross-questioning of the natives, also, failed to give me any history or evidence of an e])i(leinie in the past. HOSPITALS. — The observer will, however, notice every summer, gathered in melancholy squads of a dozen to one hundred or so, scattered along the coast where the healthy Seals never go, those sick and disabled bulls which have, in the earlier part of the season, been either internally injured or dreadfully scarred by the teeth of their opponents in lighting. Sand is blown by the winds into tin- fresh wounds and causes an inflammation and a sloughing, which very often finishes the life of the victim. The sailors term these invalid gatherings ''hospitals,'' a phrase .which, like most of their homely expressions, is quite appropriate. YovNii SKAI.S LK.YUNING To swoi. — Early in August, usually by the 8th or 10th, 1 noticed one of the remarkable movements of the season. I refer to the pup's first essay in swimming. Is it not odd — paradoxical — that the young Seal, from the moment of his birth until he is a mouth or six weeks old, is utterly unable to swim? If he is seized by the n.ipe of the neck and pitched out a nxl into the water from shore, his bullet-like head will drop instantly below the surface, and his attenuated posterior extremities flap impotently on it; suffocation is the question of only a few minutes, the stupid little creature not knowing how to raise his immersed head and gain the air again. After they have attained the age I indicate, their instinct drives them down to the margin of the surf, where the alternate ebbing and flowing of its wash covers and uncovers the rocky or sandy beaches. They first smell and then touch the moist pools, and flounder in the upper wash of the surf, which leaves them as suddenly high and dry as it immersed them at first. After this beginning they make slow and clumsy progress in learning the knack of swimming. For a week or two, when overhead in depth, they continue to flounder about in the most awkward manner, thrashing the water as little dogs do, with their forefeet, making no attempt whatever to use the hinder ones. Look at that pup now, launched out for the first time beyond his depth; see Low he struggles — his mouth wide open, and his eyes fairly popping. He turns instantly to the beach, ere he has fairly struck out from the point whence he launched in, and, as the receding swell which at first carried him off his feet and out, now returning leaves him high and dry, for a few minutes he seems so weary that he weakly crawls up, out beyond its swift returning wash, and coils himself up immediately to take a recuperative nap. He sleeps a few minutes, perhaps half an hour, then awakes as bright as a dollar, apparently rested, and at his swimming lesson he goes again. By repeated and persistent attempts, the young Seal gradually becomes familiar with the water and acquainted with his own power over that element, which is to be his real home and his whole support. Once boldly swimming, the pup fairly revels in his new happiness. He and his brethren have now begun to haul and swarm along the whole length of Saint Paul coast, from Northeast Point down and around to Zapadnie, lining the alternating sand-beaches and rocky shingle with their plump, black forms. How they do delight in it! They play with a zest, and chatter like our own children in the kindergartens — swimming in endless evolutions, twisting, turning, or diving — and when exhausted, drawing their plump, round bodies up again on the beach. Shaking themselves dry as young dogs would do, they now either go to sleep on the spot, or have a lazy terrestrial frolic among themselves. How an erroneous impression ever got into the mind of any man in this matter of the pup's learning to swim, I confess that 1 am wholly uuable.to imagine. I have nof seen any "driving" of the young pups into the water by the old ones, in order to teach them this process, as certain authors have pointedly affirmed.1 There is not the slightest supervision by the old mother or father of the pup, from the first moment of his birth, in this respect, until he leaves for the North Pacific, 1 AI.I.F.N : History of North American Pinnipeds, p. :{87. 94 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. full lledged with amphibious power. At the close of the breeding-season, every year, the pups are rcst'essly and constantly shifting' back and forth over the rookery ground of their birth, in large squads, sometimes numbering thousands upon thousands. In the course of this change of position they all sooner or later come in contact with the sea ; they then blunder into the water for the first time, in a most awkward, ungainly manner, and get out as quick as they can; but so far from showing any fear or dislike of this, their most n.itural element, as soon as they rest from their exertion they are immediately ready for a new trial, and keep at it, provided the sea is not too stormy or rough. During all this period of self-tuition they seem thoroughly to enjoy the exercise, in spite of their repeated and inevitable discomfitures at the beginning. PODDING OF THE PUPS. — The "podding" of these young pups in the rear of the great rookeries of Saint Paul, is one of the most striking and interesting phases of this remarkable exhibition of highly orgaui/ed life. When they first bunch together they are all black, for they have not begun to shed the natal coat: they shine with an unctuous, greasy reflection, and grouped in small armies or great regiments on the sand-dune tracts at Northeast Point, they present, a most extraor- dinary and fascinating sight. Although the appearance of the " Holluschickie" at English Bay fairly overwhelms the observer with the impression of its countless multitudes, yet 1 am free to declare, that at no one point in this evolution of the seal-life, during the reproductive season, have I been so deeply stricken by the sense of overwhelming enumeration, as I have, when, standing on the summit of Cross Hill, I looked down to the southward and westward over a reach of six miles of alternate grass and sand-dune stretches, mirrored upon which were hundreds of thousands of these little black pups, spread in sleep and sport within this restricted field of vision. They appeared as countless as the grains of the sand upon which they rested. SECOND CHANGE OF COAT. — By the 15th of September, all the pups bora during the year have become familiar with the water; they have all learned to swim, and are now nearly all down by the water's edge, skirting in large masses the rocks and beaches previously this year unoccupied by Seals of any class. Now they are about five or six times their original weight, or, in other words, they are thirty to forty pounds avoirdupois, as plump and i'at as butter-balls, and they begin to take on their second coat, shedding their black pup-hair completely. This second coat does not vary in color, at this age, between the sexes. They effect this transformation in dress very slowly, and cannot, as a rule, be said to have ceased their molting until the middle or 20th of October. This second coat or sea-going jacket, of the pup, is a uniform, dense, light-gray over-hair, with an under-fur which is slightly grayish in some, but in most cases is a soft, light-brown hue. The over-hair is fine, close, and elastic, from two-thirds of an inch to an inch in length, while the fur is not quite half an inch long. Thus the coarser hair shingles over and conceals the soft under- wool completely, giving the color by which, after the second year, the sex of the animal is recognized. The pronounced difference between the sexes is not effected, however, by color alone until the third year of the animal. This over hair of the young pup's new jacket on the back, neck, and head, is a dark chinchilla-gray, blending into a stone-white, just tinged with a grayish tint on the abdomen and chest. The upper lip, upon which the whiskers or moustaches take root, is covered with hair of a lighter gray than that of the body. This moustache consists of fifteen or twenty longer or shorter bristles, from half an inch to three inches in length, some brownish, horn-colored, and others whitish-gray and translucent, on each side and back and below the nostrils, leaving the muzzle quite prominent and hairless. The nasal openings and their surroundings are, as I have before said when speaking of this feature, similar to those of a dog. EVKS OF Tim PUP-SEALS. — The most attractive feature about the fur-seal pup, and that THE FUR SEAL: EYES OF YOUNG. 95 which holds this place as it grows oil and older, is the eye. This organ is exceedingly clear, dark, and liquid, with which, for beauty and amiability, together with real intelligence of expression, those of no other animal that I have ever seen, or have ever read of, can be compared; indeed, there are few eyes in the orbits of men and women which suggest more pleasantly the ancient, thought of their being "windows to the soul." The lids to the eye are fringed with long, perfect lashes, and the slightest annoyance, in the way of dnst or sand, or other foreign substances, seems to cause them exquisite annoyance, accompanied by immoderate weeping. This involuntary tear- fulness so moved Steller that he ascribed it to the processes of the Seal's mind, and declared that the seal-mothers actually shed tears. RA.XGI; or VISION. — I do not think that their range of vision on land, or out of the water, is very great. 1 have experimented frequently with adult Fur Seals, by allowing them to catch sight of my person, so as to distinguish it as of foreign character, three and four hundred paces off, taking the precaution of standing to the leeward of them when the win I was blowing strong, and then w.tlking unconcernedly up to them. 1 have invariably noticed, thai they would allow me to approach quite close before recognizing my strangeness; this occurring to them, the\ at once made a lively noise, a medley of coughing, spitting, snorting, and blaating, and plunged in spasmodic lopes and shambled to get away from my immediate neighborhood; as to the pups, they all stupidly stare at the form of a human being until it is fairly on them, when they ulso repeal in miniature these vocal gymnastics and physical efforts of the older ones, to retreat or withdraw a few rods, sometimes only a few feet, from the spot upon which you have cornered them, after which they instantly resume their previous occupation of either sleeping or playing, as though nothing had happened. BEIIAVIOR OF FUR SEALS AT NIGHT. — I naturally enough, when beginning my investigation of these seal-rookeries, expected to find the animals subdued at night, or early morning, on the breeding-grounds; but a few consecutive nocturnal watches satisfied me that the family organiza- tion and noise was as active at one time as at another throughout the whole twenty-four hours. If, however, the day preceding had chanced to be abnormally warm, I never failed then to find the rookeries much more U' isy and active during the night than they were In daylight. The Seals, as a rule, come and go to and from the sea, fight, roar, and vocalize as much during midnight moments as they do at noonday times. An aged native endeavored to satisfy me that the '-Seee .tchie"conld see much better by twilight and night than by daylight. I am not prepared to prove to the contran, but I think that the fact of l.is not being able to see so well himself at that hour of darkness was the true cause of most of his belief in the improved nocturnal vision of the Seals. At 1 write, this old Aleut, Phillip Yollkov, has passed to his final rest — "mi konchielsah"- winter of 1S78-'T!). lie was one of the real characters of Saint Paul; he was esteemed by the whites 011 account of his relative intelligence, and beloved by the natives, who called him their " wise 'nan," and who exulted in his piety. Phillip, like the other people there of his kind, was not imich comfort to me when 1 asked questions as to the Seals. He usually answered important inquiiies by crossing himself, and replying, "God knows." There was no appeal from this. StiLLKNXKSs OF OLD MALE SiiALS. — The old males, when grouped together by themselves, at tile close of the bleeding-season, indulge in no humor or frolicsome festivities whatsoever. On the contrary, they treat each other with surly indifference. The mature females, however, do not appear to l"se their good nature to anything like so marked a degree as do their lords and masters, for they will at all seasons of their presence on the islands be observed, now and then, to suddenly unbend from severe matronly gravity by coyly and amiably tickling and gently teasing ow another, as they rest in the harems, or Liter, when strolling in September. There is no sign 96 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. given, however, l>y these seal -in others of desire or action iu fondling or caressing their pups; nor do the young appear to sport with any others than the pups themselves, when together. Some- times a yearling and a five or six months old pup will have a long-continued game between them- selves. They are decidedly clannish in this respect — creatures of caste, like Hindoos. POWER OF SCENT: ODOR OF THE SEALS. — The greatest activity displayed by any one of the live senses of the Seal, is evidenced in its power of scent. This faculty is all that can be desired in the line of alertness. I never failed to awaken an adult Seal from the soundest sleep, when from a half to a quarter of a mile distant, no matter bow softly 1 proceeded, if 1 got to the windward, though they sometimes took alarm when I was a mile off. They leave evidences of their being on these great reproductive fields, chiefly at the rookeries, in the hundreds of dead carcasses which mark the last of those animals that have been rendered infirm, sick, or were killed by fighting among themselves in the early part of the season, or of those which have crawled far away from the scene of battle to die from death-wounds received in the bitter struggle for a harem. On the rookeries, wherever these lifeless bodies rest, the living, old and young, clamber and patter backward and forward over and on the putrid remains, and by thia constant stirring tip of decayed matter, give rise to an exceedingly disagreeable and far-reaching "funk." This has been, by all writers who have dwelt on the subject, referred to as the smell which these animals emit for another reason — erroneously called the " rutting odor." If these creatures have any odor peculiar to them when iu this condition, I will frankly confess that I am unable to distinguish it from the fumes which are constantly being stirred up and rising out of these decaying carcasses of the older Seals, as well as from the bodies of the few pups which have been killed accidentally by the heavy bulls fighting over them, charging back and forth against one another, so much of the time. They have, however, a very characteristic and peculiar smell, when they are driven and get heated; their breath exhalations possess a disagreeable, faint, sickly odor, and when I have walked within its influence at the rear of a seal-drive, I could almost fancy, as it entered my nostrils, that I stood beneath an ailanthus tree in bloom; but this odor can by no means be confounded with what is universally ascribed to another cause. It is also noteworthy, that if your finger is touched ever so lightly to a little fur-seal blubber, it will smell very much like that which I have appreciated and described as peculiar to their breath, which arises from them when they are driven, only it is a little stronger. Both the young and old Fur Seals have this same breath taint at all seasons of the year. REVIEW OF STATEMENTS CONCERNING LIFE IN THE ROOKERIES. — To recapitulate and sum up the system and regular method of life and reproduction on these rookeries of Saint Paul and Saint George, as the Seals seem to have arranged it, I shall say that — First. The earliest bulls land in a negligent, indolent way, at the opening of the season, soon after the rocks at the water's edge are free from ice, frozen snow, etc. This is, as a rule, about the 1st to the 5th of every May. They land from the beginning to the end of the season in perfect confidence and without fear; they are very fat, and will weigh at an average 500 pounds each; some stay at the water's edge, some go to the tier back of them again, and so on until the whole rookery is mapped out by them, weeks in advance of the arrival of the first female. Second. That by the 10th or 12th of June, all the male stations on the rookeries have been mapped out and fought for, and held in waiting by the "Seecatchie." These males are, as a rule, bulls rarely ever under six years of age; most of them are over that age, being sometimes three, and occasionally doubtless four, times as old. Third. That the cows make their first appearance, as a class, on or after the llith or 15th of LIFE IN THE FUR SEAL ROOKERIES. 97 • June, in very small numbers; but rapidly after the 23d and 25th of this mouth, every year, they begin to flock up in such numbers as to fill the harems very perceptibly; and by the 8th or 10th of July, they have all come, as a rule — a few stragglers excepted. The average weight of tint females now will not be much more than eighty to ninety pounds each. Fourth. That the breeding-season is at its height from the 10th to the 15th of July every year, and that it subsides entirely at the end of this month and early in August; also, that its method and system are confined entirely to the laud, never effected in the sea. Fifth. That the females bear their first young when they are three years old, and that the period of gestation is nearly twelve months, lacking a few days only of that lapse of time. Sixth. That the females bear a siugle pup each, and that this is born soon after lauding; no exception to this rule has ever been witnessed or recorded. Seventh. That the "Seecatchie" which have held the harems from the beginning to the end of the season, leave for the water in a desultory and straggling manner at its close, greatly emaciated, and do not return, if they do at all, until six or seven weeks have elapsed, when the regular systematic distribution of the families over the rookeries is at an end for the season. A general medley of young males now are free, which come out of the water, and wander over all these rookeries, together with many old males, which have not been on seraglio duty, and great numbers of the females. An immense majority over all others present are pups, since only about 25 per cent, of the mother-seals are out of the water now at any one time. Eighth. That the rookeries lose their compactness and definite boundaries of true breeding limit and expansion by the 25th to the 28th of July every year; then, after this date, the pups begin to haul back, and to the right and left, in small squads at first, but as the season goes on, by the 18th of August, they depart without reference, to their mothers; and when thus scattered, the males, females, and young swarm over more than three and four times the area occupied by them when breeding and born on the rookeries. The system of family arrangement and uniform compactness of the breeding classes breaks up at this date. Ninth. That by the 8th or 10th of August the pups born nearest the water first begin to learn to swim ; and that by the 15th or 20th of September they are all familiar, more or less, with the exercise. Tenth. That by the middle of September the rookeries are entirely broken up; confused, straggling bands of females are seen among bachelors, pups, and small squads of old males, crossing and recrossing the ground in an aimless, listless manner. The pea son now is over. Eleventh. That many of the Seals do not leave these grounds of Saint Paul and Saint George before the end of December, and some remain even as late as the 12th of January; but that by the end of October and the beginning of November every year, all the Fur Seals of mature age — five and six years, and upward — have left the islands. The younger males go with the others: many of the pups still range about the islands, but are not hauled to any great extent on the beaches or the flats. They seem to prefer the rocky shore-margin, and to lie as high up as they can get on such bluffy rookeries as Tolstoi and the Reef. By the end of this mouth, November, they are, as a rule, all gone. Such is the sum and the substance of my observations which relate to the breeding-grounds alone on Saint Paul and Saint George. It is the result of summering and wintering on them, and these definite statements I make with that confidence which one always feels, when he speaks of that which has entered into his mind by repeated observation, and has been firmly grounded by careful deductions therefrom. THE "HOLLUSCHICKIE" OR "BACHELOR" SEALS : A DESCRIPTION. — I now call the attention 7 v 98 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. • of the reader to another very remarkable feature in the economy of the seal-life on these islands. The great herds of "Holluschickie,"1 numbering from one-third to one-half, perhaps, of the whole aggregate of near 5,000,000 Seals known to the Pribylov group, are never allowed by the "See- catchie," under the pain of frightful mutilation or death, to put their flippers on or near the rookeries. By reference to my map, it will be observed that I have located a large extent of ground— markedly so on Saint Paul — as that occupied by the Seals' "hauling-grounds"; this area, in fact, represents those portions of the island upon which the "Holluschickie" roam in their heavy squadrons, wearing off and polishing the surface of the soil, stripping every foot, which is indicated on the chart as such, of its vegetation and mosses, leaving the margin as sharply defined on the bluffy uplands and sandy flats as it is on the map itself. The reason that so much more land is covered by the "Holluschickie" than by the breeding- Seals — ten times as much at least — is due to the fact, that though not as numerous, perhaps, as the breeding Seals, they are tied down to nothing, so to speak — are wholly irresponsible, and roam hither and thither as caprice and the weather may dictate. Thus they wear off and rub down a much larger area than the rookery Seals occupy ; wandering aimlessly, and going back, in some instances, notably at English Bay, from one-half to a whole mile inland, not traveling in desultory files along winding, straggling paths, but sweeping in solid platoons, they obliterate every spear of grass and rub down nearly every hummock in their way. DEFINITION OF " HOLLUSCHICKIE." — All the male Seals, from six years of age, are compelled to herd apart by themselves and away from the breeding-grounds, in many cases far away ; the large hauling-grouuds at Southwest Point being about two miles from the nearest rookery. This class of Seals is termed "Holluschickie" or the "Bachelor" Seals by the natives, a most fitting and expressive appellation. The Seals of this great subdivision are those with which the natives on the Pribylov group are the most familiar : naturally and especially so, since they are the only ones, with the exception of a few thousand pups, and occasionally an old bull or two, taken late in the fall for food and skins, which are driven up to the killing grounds at the village for slaughter. The reasons for this exclu- sive attention to the "Bachelors" are most cogent, and will be given hereafter when the "business" is discussed. LOCATING THE HAULING-GROUNDS: PATHS THROUGH THE ROOKERIES. — Since the "Hollu- schickie" are not permitted by their own kind to land on the rookeries and stop there, they have the choice of two methods of locating, one of which allows them to rest in the rear of the rookeries, and the other on the free beaches. The most notable illustration of the former can be witnessed on Reef Point, where a pathway is left for their ingress and egress through a rookery — a path left by common consent, as it were, between the harems. On these trails of passage they come and go in steady files all day and all night during the season, unmolested by the jealous bulls which guard the seraglios on either side as they travel ; all peace and comfort to the young Seal if he minds his business and keeps straight on up or down, without stopping to nose about right or left; all woe and desolation to him, however, if he does not, for in that event he will be literally torn in bloody griping, from limb to limb, by the vigilant old " Seecatchie." Since the two and three year old "Holluschickie" come up in small squads with the first bulls in the spring, or a few d,iys later, such common highways as those between the rookery-ground and the sea are traveled over before the arrival of the cows, and get well denned. A passage for the "Bachelors," which I took much pleasure in observing day after day at Polavina, another at Tolstoi, and two on the Reef, in 1872, were entirely closed up by the "Seecatcbie" and obliterated, 'The Russian term "Holluschickie" or "Bachelors" is very appropriate, and is usually employed. FUE SEAL HAULING-GROUNDS. 99 when I again searched for them in 1874. Similar passages existed, however, on several of the large rookeries of Saint Paul; one of those at Tolstoi exhibits this feature very finely, for here the hauling-ground extends around from English Bay, and lies up back of the Tolstoi Rookery, over a flat arid rolling .summit, from 100 to 120 feet above the sea-level. The young males and yearlings of both sexes come through and between the harems, at the height of the breeding-season, on two of these narrow pathways, and before reaching the ground above, are obliged to climb up an almost abrupt bluff, which they do by following and struggling in the water-runs and washes which are worn into its face. As this is a large hauliug-ground, on which, every favorable day during the season, fifteen or twenty thousand commonly rest, the sight of skillful seal-climbing can be witnessed here a.t any time during that period; and the sight of such climbing as this of Tolstoi is exceedingly novel and interesting. Why, verily, they ascend over and upon places where an ordinary man might, at first sight, with great positiveness say that it was utterly impossible for him to' climb. HATJLING-GROUNDS ON THE BEACHES. — The other method of coming ashore, however, is the one most followed and favored. In this case they avoid the rookeries altogether, and repair to the unoccupied beaches between them, and then extend themselves out all the way back from the sea, as far from the water, in some cases, as a quarter and even half of a mile. I stood on the Tolstoi sand-dunes one afternoon, toward the middle of July, and had under iny eyes, in a straightforward sweep from my feet to Zapaduie, a million and a half of Seals spread out on these hauling-grouuds. Of these, I estimated that fully one-half, at that time, were pups, yearlings, and " Holluschickie." The rookeries across the bay, though plainly in sight, were so crowded, that they looked exactly as I have seen surfaces appear upon which bees had swarmed in obedience to that din and racket made by the watchful apiarian, when he desires to hive the restless honey-makers. The great majority of yearlings and "Holluschickie" are annually hauled out and packed thickly over the sand-beach and upland hauling-grouuds, which lie between the rookeries on Saint Paul Island. At Saint George there is nothing of this extensive display to be seen, for here is only a tithe of the seal-life occupying Saint Paul, and no opportunity whatever is afforded for an amphibious parade. GENTLENESS OP THE SEALS. — Descend with me from this sand-dune elevation of Tolstoi, and walk into that drove of "Holluschickie" below us; we can do it; you do not notice much confusion or dismay as we go in among them ; they simply open out before us and close in behind our tracks, stirring, crowding to the right and left as we go, twelve or twenty feet away from us on each side. Look at this small flock of yearlings, some one, others two, and even three years old, which are coughing and spitting around us now, staring up in our faces in amazement as we walk ahead; they struggle a few rods out of our reach, and then come together again behind us, showing no further sign of notice of ourselves. You could not walk into a drove of hogs at Chicago, without exciting as much confusion and arousing an infinitely more disagreeable tumult; and as for sheep on the plains, they would stampede far quicker. Wild animals indeed! You can now readily understand how easy it is for two or three men, early in the morning, to come where we are, turn aside from this vast herd in front of and around us two or three thousand of the best examples, and drive them back, up and over to the village. That is the way they get the Seals; there is not any "hunting" or "chasing" or "capturing" of Fur Seals on these islands. "HoLLtiscniCKiE" DO NOT PAST.— While the young male Seals undoubtedly have the power of going for lengthy intervals without food, they, like the female Seals on the breeding-grounds, certainly do not maintain any long fasting periods on land; their coming and going from the shore is frequent and irregular, largely influenced by the exact condition of the weather from day to day; 100 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. for instance, three or four thick, foggy days seem to call them out from the water by hundreds of thousands upon the different hauling-grounds (which the reader observes recorded on my map). In some cases, I have seen them lie there so close together that scarcely a foot of ground, over whole acres, is bare enough to be seen; then a clear and warmer day follows, and this seal covered ground, before so thickly packed with animal life, will soon be almost deserted: comparatively so at least, to be filled up immediately as before, when favorable weather shall again recur. They must frequently eat when here, because the first yearlings and " Holluschickie" that appear in the spring are no fatter, sleeker, or livelier than they are at the close of the season; in other words, their condition, physically, seems to be the same from the beginning to the end of their appearance here during the summer and fall. It is quite different, however, with the "Seecatch"; we know how and where it spends. two to three months, because we find it on the grounds at all times, day or night, during that period. SPORTS AND PASTIMES OF THE YOUNG "BACHELORS." — A small flock of the young Seals, one to three years old, generally, will often stray from these hauling-grouml margins, up and beyond, over the fresh mosses and grasses, and there sport and play one with another, just as little puppy- dogs do; and when weary of this gamboling a general disposition to sleep is suddenly manifested, and they stretch themselves out and curl up in all the positions and all the postures that their flexible spines and ball-and-socket joints will permit. They seem to revel in the unwonted vege- tation, and to be delighted with their own efforts in rolling down and crushing the tall stalks of the grasses and umbelliferous plants; one will lie upon its back, hold up its hind-flippers, and lazily wave them about, while it scratches, or rather rubs, its ribs with the fore-hands alternately, the eyes being tightly closed during the whole performance; the sensation is evidently so luxurious that it does not wish to have any side-issue draw off its blissful self-attention. Another, curled up like a cat on a rug, draws its breath, as indicated by the heaving of its flanks, quickly but regu larly, as though in heavy sleep; another will lie flat upon its stomach, its hind-flippers covered and concealed, while it tightly folds its fore-feet back against its sides, just as a fish carries its pectoral fins — and so on to no end of variety, according to the ground and the fancy of the animals. These "Bachelor" Seals are, I am sure, without exception, the most restless animals in the whole brute creation, which can boast of a high organization. They frolic and lope about over the grounds for hours, without a moment's cessation, and their sleep, after this, is exceedingly short, and it is ever accompanied with nervous twitchings and uneasy muscular movements; they seem to be fairly brimful and overrunning with spontaneity — to be surcharged with fervid, electric life. Another marked feature which 1 have observed among the multitudes of "Holluschickie," which have come under my personal observation anil auditory, and one very characteristic of this class, is, that nothing like ill-humor appears in all of their playing together; they never growl or bite, or show even the slightest angry feeling, but are invariably as happy, one with another, as can be imagined. This is a very singular trait; they lose it, however, with astonishing rapidity, when their ambition and strength develop and carry them, in due course of time, to the rookery. The pups and yearlings have an especial fondness for sporting on the rocks which are just at the water's level and awash, so as to be covered and uncovered as the surf rolls in. On the bare summit of these wave-worn spots, they will struggle and clamber in groups of a dozen or two at a time throughout the whole day, in endeavoring to push off that one of their number which has just been fortunate enough to secure a landing; the successor has, however, but a brief moment of exultation in victory, for the next roller that comes booming in, together with the pressure by its friends, turns the table, and the game is repeated, with another Seal on top. Sometimes, as well as I could see, the same squad of "Holluschickie" played for a whole day and night, without a THK F1TR SHAL: SPORTIVK HABITS. 101 moment's cessation, around such n rock us this, oft' Nab. Speel Rookery; but in this observation I may be mistaken, because the Seals cannot be told apart. SEALS AMONG THE BREAKERS.— The graceful unconcern with which the Fur Seal sports safely in, among, and under booming breakers, during the prevalence of the numerous heavy gales at the islands, has afforded me many consecutive hours of spell-bound attention to them, absorbed in watching their adroit evolutions within the foaming surf, that seemingly, every moment, would, in its fierce convulsions, dash these hardy swimmers, stunned and lifeless, against the iron-bound foundations of the shore, which alone cheeked the furious rush of the waves. Not at all. Through the wildest and most ungovernable mood of the roaring tempest and storm-tossed waters attending its transit, I never failed, on creeping out, and peering over the bluffs, in such weather, to see squads of these perfect watermen— the most expert of all amphibians— gamboling in the seething, creamy wake of mighty rollers, which constantly broke in thunder tones over their alert, dodging heads. The swift succeeding seas seemed, every instant, to poise the Seals at the very verge of death. Yet the CallorJtinus, exulting in his skill and strength, bade defiance to their wrath, and continued his diversions. SWIMMING FEATS OF THE "BACHELORS." — The "Holluschickie" are the champion swimmers of all the seal tribe; at least, when in the water around the islands, they do nearly every fancy tumble and turn that can be executed. The grave old males and their matronly companions sel- dom indulge in any extravagant display, as do these youngsters, jumping out of the water like so many dolphins, describing beautiful elliptic curves sheer above its surface, rising three and even four feet from the sea, with the back slightly arched, the fore-flippers folded tightly against the sides, and the hinder ones extended and pressed together straight out behind, plumping in head first, to reappear in the same manner, after an interval of a few seconds of submarine swimming, like the flight of a bird, on their course. Sea Lions and Hair Seals never jump in this manner. All classes will invariably make these dolphin-jumps, when they are surprised or are driven into the water, curiously turning their heads while sailing in the air, between the "rises" and "plumps," to take a look at the cause of their disturbance. They all swim rapidly, with the exception of the pups, and may be said to dart under the water with the velocity of a bird on the wing; as they swim they are invariably submerged, running along horizontally about two or three feet below the surface, guiding their course by the hin d-flippers as by a rudder, and propelling themselves solely by the fore-feet, rising to breathe at intervals which are either very frequent or else so wide apart that it is impossible to see the speeding animal when he rises a second time. How long they can remain under water without taking a fresh breath, is a problem which I had not the heart to solve, by instituting a series of experiments at the island; but I am inclined to think that, if the truth were known in regard to their ability of going without rising to breathe, it would be considered astounding. On this point, however, I have no data worth discussing, but will say that, in all their swimming which I have had a chance to study, as they passed under the water, mirrored to my eyes from the bluff above by the whitish-colored rocks below the rookery waters at Great Eastern Eookery, I have not been able to satisfy myself how they used their long, flexible hind-fret, other than as steering media. If these posterior members have any perceptible motion, it is so rapid that my eye is not quick enough to catch it; but the fore-flippers, however, can be most distinctly seen, as they work in feathering forward and sweeping flatly back, opposed to the water, with great rapidity and energy. They arc <-\ idenlly the sole propulsive power of the Fur Seal in the water, as they arc its main fulcrum and lever combined, for progression on land. 1 regret that the shy nature of the Hair Seal never allowed me to study its swimming motions, but it seems to be a general point of agreement among authorities on the Phocidfe, that all motion in 102 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. water by them arises from that power which they exert and apply with the hind-feet. So far as my observations on the Hair Seal go, I am inclined to agree with this opinion. All their movements in water, whether they are traveling to some objective point or are in sport, are quick and joyons; and nothing is more suggestive of intense satisfaction and pnre physi- cal comfort, than is that spectacle which we can see every August, a short distance out at sea from any rookery where thousands of old males and females are idly rolling over in the billows side by side, rubbing and scratching with their fore- and hind-flippers, which are here and there stuck np out of the water by their owners, like the lateen-sails of the Mediterranean feluccas, or, when the hind-flippers are presented, like a "cat-o'-nine tails." They sleep in the water a great deal, too, more than is generally supposed, showing that they do not come on land to rest — very clearly not. LEAPING OTTT OP WATER : " DOLPHIN- JUMPS." — As I never detected the Sea Lions or the Hair Seals leaping from the water around these islands, in those peculiar dolphin-like jumps which I have hitherto described, I made a note of it early during my first season of observation, for corrobora- tion in the next. It is so: neither the Sea Lion nor the Hair Seal here ever leaped from the ocean in this agile and singular fashion heretofore described. Allen, so conservative usually, seems, how- ever, to have fallen into an error by reading the notes of Mr. J. H. Blake, descriptive of the Sea Lions of the Gallapagos Islands. As Allen quotes them entire in a foot-note,1 I am warranted in calling attention to the fact, that no authentic record has as yet been made of such peculiar swimming by Phocula:, or the sea-lion branch of the Otariida;. My notice has been called to this mistake by Professor Allen's own note, page 307, upon a quotation from my work, citing Mr. Blake's notes above referred to, which are themselves very interesting, but do not even hint at a dolphin-jump. How fast the Pur Seal can swim, when doing its best, I am naturally unable to state. I do know that a squad of young " Holluschickie" followed the "Reliance," in which I was sailing, down from the latitude of the Seal Islands to Akootan Pass with perfect ease, laying around the vessel, while she was logging straight ahead, 14 knots to the hour. The Fur Seal, the Sea Lion, the Walrus, and the Hair Seal all swim around these islands, and in these waters, submerged, extended horizontally and squarely upon their stomachs. I make this note here because I am surprised to read2 that the Harp (Hair) Seal's "favorite position when swimming, as affirmed by numerous observers, is on the back or side, in which position they also sleep in the water." Although this is a far distant, geographically speaking, relative of the Hair Seal of Saint Paul Island, yet the remarkable difference in fashion of swimming seems hardly warranted, when the two animals are built exactly alike. Still, I have no disposition to question, earnestly, the truth of the statement, inasmuch as I have learned of so many very striking radical differences in habits of animals as closely related, as to pause, ere seriously doubting this assertion that a Harp Seal's favorite way in swimming is to lie upon its back when so doing. It is simply an odd contradiction to the method employed by the Hair Seals of the North Pacific and of Bering- Sea. While I am unable to prove that the Fur Seal possesses the power to swim to a very great depth, by actual tests instituted, yet I am free to say that it certainly can dive to the uttermost depths, where its food-fish are known to live in the ocean; it surely gives full and ample evidence of possessing the muscular power for that enterprise. In this connection, it is interesting to cite the testimony of Mr. F. Borthen, the proprietor of the Fro Islands, a group of small islets off Trondhjems Fiord, in Norway; this gentleman has had an opportunity of watching the Gray Seal 1 History of North American Pinnipeds, p. 211. 8 ALLEN : op. tit., p. 651. THE FUR SEAL: LEAPING HABITS. 103 (Halichcsrus yrypux) as it bred ami rested on these rocks during an extended period of time. Among many interesting notes as to the biology of this large Hair Seal, he says: " As a proof that they [the Seals] fetch their food from a considerable depth, it is related that a few years ago a young one was found caught by one of the hooks of a fishing line that was placed at a depth of between seventy and eighty fathoms, on the outer side of the islands. Gray Seals have several times been seen to come up to the surface with lings (Molva vulgaris) and other deep-water fishes in their mouths, such fishes seldom or never found at a less depth than between sixty and seventy fathoms.''1 CLASSING THE "HOLLTJSCHICKIE" BY AGE. — When the "Holluschickie" are up on land they can be readily separated into their several classes as to age by the color of their coats and size, when noted, namely, the yearlings, the two, three, four, and five years old males. When the yearlings, or the first class, haul out, they are dressed just as they were after they shed their pup- coats and took ou the second covering during the previous year in September and October; and now, as they come out in the spring and summer, one year old, the males and females cannot be distinguished apart, either by color or size, shape or action ; the yearlings of both sexes have the same steel-gray backs and white stomachs, and are alike in behavior and weight. Next year these yearling females, which are now trooping out with the youthful males on the hauling-grounds, will repair to the rookeries, while their male companions will be obliged to come again to this same spot. SHEDDING THE HAIR: STAGEY SEALS.— About the 15th arid 20th of every August, they have become perceptibly "stagey," or, in other words, their hair is "well under way iu shedding. All classes, with the exception of the pups, go through this process at this time every year. The process requires about six weeks between the first dropping or falling out of the old over-hair, and its full substitution by the new. This takes place, as a rule, between August 1 and September 28. The fur is shed, but it is so shed that the ability of the Seal to take to the water and stay there, and not be physically chilled or disturbed during the process of molting, is never impaired. The whole surface of these extensive breeding-grounds, traversed over by us after the Seals had gone, was literally matted with the shed hair and fur. This under fur or pelage is, however, so fine and delicate, and so much concealed and shaded by the coarser over-hair, that a careless eye or a superficial observer might be pardoned in failing to notice the fact of its dropping and renewal. The yearling cows retain the colors of the old coat in the new, when they shed it for the first time, and from that time on, year after year, as they live and grow old. The yotiug three-year- olds and the older cows look exactly alike, as far as color goes, when they haul up at first and dry- out ou the rookeries, every .June and July. The yearling males, however, make a radical change when they shed for the first time, for they come out from their "stagiuess" in a nearly uniform dark gray, and gray and black mixed, and lighter, with dark ocher to whitish on the upper and under parts, respectively. This coat, next year, when they appear as two-year-olds, shedding for the three-year-old coat, is a very much darker gray, and so on to the third, fourth, and fifth season; then after this, with age, they begin, to grow more gray and brown, with rufous-ocher and whitish-tipped over-hair ou the shoulders. Some of the very old bulls change in their declining years to a uniform shade all over of dull- grayish ocher. The full glory and beauty of the Seal's -moustache is denied to him until he has attained his seventh or eighth year. COMPARATIVE SIZE OF FEMALES AND MALES. — The female does not get her full growth and weight until the end of her fourth year, so far as I have observed, but she does most of her ' ROBERT COLLETT : On the Gray Seal. Proceedings Zoological Society London, part ii, 1861, p. 387. 104 ttATUEAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. growing longitudinally iu the first two; after she has passed her fourth and fifth years, she weighs from thirty to fifty pounds more than she did in the days of her youthful maternity. The male does not get his full growth and weight until the close of his seventh year, but realizes most of it, osteologically speaking, by the end of the fifth ; and from this it may be perhaps truly inferred, that the male Seals live to an average age of eighteen or twenty years, if undisturbed in a normal condition, and that the females attain ten or twelve seasons under the same favorable circumstances. Their respective weights; when fully mature and fat in the spring, will, in regard to the male, strike an average of from four to five hundred pounds, while the females will show a mean of from seventy to eighty pounds. I did not permit myself to fall into error in estimating this matter of weight, because I early found that the apparent huge bulk of a sea-lion bull or fur-seal male, when placed upon the scales, shrank far below my notions: I took a great deal of pains, on several occasions, during the killing season, to have a platform scale carted out into the field, and as the Seals were knocked down, and before they were bled, I had them carefully weighed, constructing the following table from my observations : Table showing the weight, size, and growth of the Fur Seal (CaUorhinus iirsinus), from the pup to the adult, male and female. Age. Length. Girth. Gross weight of body. Weight of skin. Remarks. Incites. 12 to 14 Inches. lOtolOJ Pounds. 6to7J Pounds. ]i 24 25 39 3 38 25 39 4} 45 30 58 5J 52 36 87 7 58 42 135 12 65 52 200 1C Six years 72 64 280 25 Eight to twenty years. 75 to 80 70 to 75 400 to 500 45 to 50 An estimate only, calculating on their weight when fat, and early in the season. WEIGHT OF FEMALE SEALS. — The adult females will correspond with the three-year-old males iu the above table, the younger cows weighing frequently only seventy-five pounds, and many of the older ones going as high as one hundred and twenty, but an average of eighty to eighty-five pounds is the rule. Those specimens of the females which I have weighed were examples taken by me for transmission to the Smithsonian Institution, otherwise I should not have been permitted to make this record of their weight, inasmuch as weighing them means to kill them; and the law and the habit, or rather the prejudice of the entire community up there, is unanimously in opposition to any such proceeding, for they never touch females here, and never set their foot on or near the breeding-grounds on such an errand. It will be noticed, also, that I have no statement of the weights of those exceedingly fat and heavy males which first appear on the breeding-grounds in the spring; those which I have referred to, iu the table above given, were very much heavier at the time of their first appearance in May and June, than at the moment when they were in my hands, iu July; but the cows, iu the other class, do not sustain protracted fasting, and therefore their weights may be considered substantially the same throughout the year. CHANGE ra WEIGHT. — Thus, from the fact that all the young Seals and females do not change much in weight from the time of (heir first coming out in the spring, till that of their leaving in the fall and early winter, I feel safe in saying that they feed at irregular but not long intervals, THE FUK SEAL: CHANGES IN WEIGEtT. 105 during the time that they are here under our observation, since they are constantly changing from land to water and from water to land, day in and day out, I do not thiuk that the young males fast longer than a week or ten days at a time, as a rule. DISPERSAL OF THE " HOLLUSCHICKIE." — By the end of October and the 10th of November, the great mass of the "Holluschickie," the trooping myriads of English Bay, Southwest Point, Reef Parade, Lukanuou Sands, the table-lands of Polaviiia, and the mighty hosts of Novostashuah, tit Saint Paul, together with the quota of Saint George, had taken their departure from its shores, and had gone out to sea, spreading with the receding schools of fish that were now returning to the deep waters of the North Pacific, where, in that vast expanse, over which rolls an unbroken billow, five thousand miles from Japan to Oregon, they spend the winter and the early spring, until they reappear and break up, with their exuberant life, the dreary winter isolation of the land which gave them birth. TASTE OF THE SEALS IN THE MATTER op WEATHER. — A few stragglers remain, however, as late as the snow and ice will permit them to, in and after December; they are all down by the water's edge then, and haul up entirely on the rocky beaches, deserting the sand altogether; but the first snow that falls makes them very uneasy, and I have seen a large hauling-ground so disturbed by a rainy day and night, that its hundreds of thousands of occupants fairly deserted it, The Fur Seal cannot bear, and will not endure, the spattering of sand into its eyes, which always accompanies the driving of a rain-storm; they take to the water, to reappear when the nuisance shall be abated. The weather in which the Fur Seal delights is cool, moist, foggy, and thick enough to keep the sun always obscured, so as to cast no shadows. Such weather, which is the normal weather of Saint Paul and Saint George, continued for a few weeks in June and July, brings up from the sea millions of Fur Seals. But, as I have before said, a little sunshine, which raises the temperature as high as 50° to 55° Fahr., will send them back from the hauling-grounds almost as quickly as they came. Fortunately these warm, sunny days on the Pribylov Islands are so rare that the Seals certainly can have no ground of complaint, even if we may presume they have any at all. Some curious facts in regard to their selection of certain localities on these islands, and their abandonment of others, I will discuss in a succeeding chapter, descriptive of the rookeries; this chapter is illustrated by topographical surveys made by myself. ALBINOS. — I looked everywhere and constantly, when treading my way over acres of ground which were fairly covered with seal-pups, and older ones, for specimens that presented some abnormity, that is, monstrosities, albinos, etc., such as I have seen in our great herds of stock; but I was, with one or two exceptions, unable to note anything of the kind. I have never seen any malformations or "monsters" among the pups and other classes of the Fur Seals, nor have the natives recorded anything of the kind, so far as I could ascertain from them. I saw only three albino pups among the multitudes on Saint Paul, and none on Saint George. They did not differ, in any respect, from the normal pups in sitfe and shape. Their hair, for the first coat, was a dull ocher all over; the fur whitish, changing to a rich brown, the normal hue; the flippers and muzzle were a pinkish flesh-tone in color, and the iris of the eve sky-blue. When they shed the following year, they arc said to have a dirty, yellowish-white color, which makes them exceedingly conspic- uous when mixed in among a vast majority of black pups, gray yearlings, and •• Uolluschickie" of their kind. MONSTROSITIES AMONG THE SEALS. — Touching this question of monstrosities, I was led to examine a number of alleged examples presented to my attention by the natives, who took some interest, in their sluggish way, as to what, I was doing here. They brought uio an albino fur-seal 106 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. pup, nothing else, and gravely assured me that they knew it owed its existence to the fecundation of a sea-lion cow by a fur-seal bull; if not so, how could it get that color? I was also confronted with a specimen — a full and finely grown four-year-old Callorliinus which had, at some earlier day, lost its testicles either by fighting or accident while at sea; perhaps shaven off by the fangs of a saw-toothed shark, and also gravely asked to subscribe to the presence of a hermaphrodite ! Undoubtedly some abnormal birth shapes must make their appearance occasionally ; but at no time while I was there, searching keenly for any such manifestation of malformation on the rookeries, did I see a single example. The morphological symmetry of the Fur Seal is one of the most salient of its characteristics, viewed as it rallies here in such vast numbers, but the osteological differentiation and asymmetry of this animal are equally surprising. WHERE DO THE SEALS DIE ? — It is perfectly evident that a large percentage of this immense number of Seals must die every year from natural limitation of life. They do not die on these islands ; that much I am certain of. Not one dying a natural death could I find or hear of on the grounds ; they evidently lose their lives at sea, preferring to sink with the rigor mortis into the cold, blue depths of the great Pacific, or beneath the green waves of Bering Sea, rather than to encumber and disfigure their summer haunts on the Pribylov Islands. THE REPRODUCTION OF THE FUR SEAL.'— By treating this subject at length, my object is to fix attention upon several points connected with the reproduction of the Fur Seal which have vital importance to its relation with, and residence upon, the breeding-grounds of these islands under discussion. In the first place, naturalists generally have taken notice of the generative appara- tus exhibited by the Phocidce; and, while they have spoken at length in anatomical detail and discussion of the male organs of the Otariid(p, yet they exhibit a strange neglect or oversight with respect to those of the female. The singular cloacal arrangement of the female organs of generation in the Phocidai has excited comment and description from the earliest times. The modification of the generative apparatus peculiar to the male Otariidce, in contradistinc- tion to those organs possessed by the male Phocidw, has been noticed to some extent by several authorities2 prior to the date of this publication; but, while calling attention to this marked change in the morphology of the male organs of the Otariidcc, they are silent in regard to the fact that, though the Phocidce are very distinct, by the armature of the males, from the Otariidce, yet the cloacal arrangement of the females in both genera is identical. This is in itself, as I view it, quite as remarkable with regard to the females as it is noteworthy in respect to the males. Surely the wonderful modification of the physical structure of the male Fur Seal from that of his kindred, the Hair Seal, is very great ; and we are not surprised to find that his generative organs are pro- nounced, in common with all the others, distinct. So the females differ, physically, in every respect, to as great a degree, with the solitary exception of the intra-uterine life, and the cloacal form of the external generative organs. NECESSITY OP UNDERSTANDING THE SUBJECT. — This subject of the method of reproduction, 1 When they the approaching time perceive, They flee the deep, and watery pastures leave : On the dry ground, far from the swelling tide, Bring forth their young, and on the shores abide Till twice six times they see the Eastern gleams Brighten the hills, and tremble on the streams, The thirteenth morn, soon as the early dawn Hangs out its crimson folds or spreads its lawn, No more the lields and lofty coverts please, Each hugs her own, and hastes to rolling seas. — Old Roman poem : Hair Seals of the Mediterranean. 'ALLEN: North American Pinnipeds, 1880. MURIB: Trans. Zool. Soc., 1869-'72. THE FUR SEAL: REPRODUCTION. 107 as carried out by the Fur Seals on the breeding-grounds of the Pribylov Islands, should be under- stood distinctly and authoritatively, before the truth or falsity of certain hypotheses, which depend upon it, can be intelligently discussed. The general impression and commonly-received opinion in the popular, as well as the scientific world, is that the amphibian life of the ocean breeds in the water thereof; or, in other words, that the fertilization of the seal-life takes place by coition therein, and that the young may be born in this watery element, safely nurtured and cared for by their mothers.1 No end of fanciful rumor and romance has been published touching this point. We are told that some man of great credibility has seen Seals in the water, with their new-born clasped to their bosoms, rising in the waves to look at their disturbers, and then sinking, to carry away their young to safety and quiet. To this fanciful description, undoubtedly, the mermaid owes its origin in our recent mythology ; for the Hair Seal, in especial, has a bland, round, full physiog- nomy ; the large circular eyes are placed more in front of the skull than in the crania of any other genera of its kind. Such a head popping up suddenly in front of the mariner might naturally suggest a human face ; and it needs but a very little embellishment to trim it with long hair, place mamma? on its bosom, and all the other peculiar attributes of the yellow-haired mermaid so celebrated in song and art. FINE OPPORTUNITIES FOR OBSERVATION.— Therefore, what I wish to distinctly settle with regard to the reproduction of the Fur Seal, which I now have under consideration, is that mooted question as to the place, the manner, and the time of the union of the two sexes necessary for the reproduction of its kind. I have no personal knowledge of the system of fertilization employed, with reference to it, by the Phocidce; hence I shall not attempt to describe it.2 What I have 'Reasonably enough, the closet naturalist, no matter how able, will be deceived now and then in this manner by untrustworthy statements made by those who are sujtposed to know by personal observation of what they affirm. As an apt illustration of this confusion which the best of closet naturalists are thrown into by untrustworthy information touching this very matter, I may cite the case of Hamilton, who, in 1839, while writing of the Fur Seal of Cook and Forstcr, discovered in particular by them on South Georgia, in 1771, declares it to be no Fur Seal at all! Ho feels warranted in doing so, because one Captain Weddell says so. This authority was a hardy sailor who made sealing a specialty in the Antarctic during 1823-'26. Hamilton, after specifying the wide range of this Arctoceptialue, "at Dusky Bay, New Zealand, in New Georgia, Staten Land, Juan Fernandez, and the Gallapagos," goes on to say: " It will be observed that several of these authorities, particularly Dampier and Cook, speak of the fineness of the fur of this Seal. It is probably these statements which have led the able author of the article Pheque in the "Diet. Classique d'Hist. Naturelle" to state that this Seal is the Fur Seal of commerce. His words are: 'L'otarii de Forster est lo Pkoquo & fourrures dcs pecheurs europe"ens.' But this, we suspect, is a mistake. No one -will doubt that Captain Weddell was familiar with the Fur Seal. He was also familiar with the Ursine Seal, both as encountered in its haunt* and as described by naturalists ; and yet, when speaking of the Ursine Seal (so denominated by him), he never once hints that its fur has any peculiar value, but the contrary." — Amphibious Caruivora. Ediuburg, 1839, p. 265. Thus Hamilton quotes this old sailor, Weddell, throughout his whole memoir, with the utmost trust; and in the same manner others have been cited. They are worthless, unless taken " cum grano salis." The " long and short" of it is this: when most of the seafaring sealers and whalers are in the field, they are blind to everything except the mere capture of their quarry. Wheu they return, they are importuned, usually at first, for details which, in fact, they have never thought of, while away. 2 "The inconsequential numbers of the Hair Seal around and on the Pribylov Islands, seem to be characteristic of all Alaskan waters and the northwest coast ; also, the Phocidte are equally scant on the Asiatic littoral margins. Only the following four species are known to exist throughout the entire extent of that vast marine area, viz : PHOCA VITULINA — Everywhere, between Bering Straits and California. PHOCA FCETIDA — Plover Bay, Norton's Sound, Knskokvim mouth, and Bristol Bay, of Bering Sea ; Cape Seartze Kammin, Arctic Ocean to Point Barrow. ERIGNATHUS BARBATUS— Kamtchatkan coast, Norton's Sound, Kuskokvim month, and Bristol Bay, of Bering Sea. HISTRIOPUOCA FASCIATA — Yukon mouth, and coast south to Bristol Bay, of Bering Sea and drifting ice therein. Then, in additiou to this, Mr. Ivan Petrov, the special agent of the Tenth Onsns, I'uited States Army, reports the presence of a land-locked Seal in the fresh waters of Iliamua Lake, and also in Lake Walker. It may bo as distinct from any of the Phocidce above enumerated as is the Baikal or the Caspian Se.-ils ; and, as such, I suggest that it shall receive the name of Phoca petrovi, wheu it is eventually secured, and if identified as now to our lists. — Preliminary Report of Progress, Census of Alaska: Ivan Petrov, Washington, December, 1880, p. 45. In this connection, it is a somewhat curious fact that the description which Aristotle [300 B. C.] gives of the 108 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. heard from the natives would point clearly to the fact, that they know nothing really worthy of scientific attention; but in regard to the Fur Seal I have had unusual advantages, and an extended experience, ranging over four consecutive breeding-seasons, in which thousands of these animals, all perfectly in accord, have passed within the scope of my observation and record. GENITALIA OF THE MALE AND FEMALE FUR SEAL. — Considering the male Callorhinus: When it is first born the external organs of generation are not evidenced to the sight, and it requires a nice touch to find them under the skin. It is not until this animal has rounded off the second year of its existence, that the testes descend and become externally exposed: first faintly, but rapidly succeeding to the same prominence and same relative position that they occupy in the example of the dog. When this creature becomes three and four years old, its testes hang pendant in a somewhat flabby scrotum, which in the old male is as pendulous as that of an ordinary bull; the sack is smooth and shiny, entirely devoid of hair, and black, with a slightly wrinkled surface. The sheath of the penis is so merged with the skin of the .abdomen that it does not lie ribbed there and prominent as in the other caruivora ; but it is an erectile organ, with a bony skeleton, measuring, when fully developed, from five to seven inches in length. The females have their parts of generation exactly as they are described by Owen and Huxley — which descriptions are based upon examples of the well-known Phocida;; their external organs are entirely concealed, by the fact that the rectum terminates on the opposite side of the vulva; and a common, somewhat flaccid, sphincter closes both apertures. In other words, the anal and genital openings of the female are united into a single one, through which the regular secretions of the body pass, and the forces of reproduction are received and introduced. Thus, while the female Phocidw correspond in this respect with the female Otariidw, yet the extraordinary development of the male organs in the Otariidce are quite marked, when contrasted with those peculiar to the Phocidce.1 No EVIDENCE OF BUTTING ODORS: SPEEDY BIRTH OF PUPS. — When the male Fur Seals or " Seecatchie," as the natives call them — a term implying strength and virility — arrive first upon the breeding- grounds, long before the coming of the females, as described in a preceding chapter of this monograph, they give no evidence of being in rut ; nor do they emit any odor during the rest of the season which at all resembles the " rutting odor" ascribed to many animals. I call attention to this because a common blunder has been made, and likely will be made, whereby the smell upon the rocks, so far-reaching and so offensive, is called the " rutting funk." It is, as I have also stated, due to other causes which are conspicuous and which have been specified here- tofore. When the females came to laud upon the breeding grounds, I .noticed that, with the exception of the virgin cows, they were heavy with young; that the period of their gestation must soon culminate by the birth of their offspring, which usually took place within a couple of hours after they reached the shore, or within as many days at the most. Frequently I have observed the mothers land, and ere they were dry the young would be expelled; and the thought rose then to my mind " how wonderfully well-timed the return of those gravid cows was " — for, in spite of tempests and currents, and many of them quite two and three thousand miles from their winter Hair Seal (Monachus albiventer, very likely) is, in most respects, correct ; while Buflbn, the celebrated French zoologist, as late as 17*5, lias not, despite his vast advantages, been nearly as accurate in his treatment of the Pinnipeds. That tliis old Grecian philosopher, three hundred years before the Christian era, should have done better in this respect ilrui that, world-wide distinguished academician did more than two thousand years afterward, affords an entertaining suggestion as to tln< alleged degeneracy of the. present age, especially so since the monument erected over Button's remains bears an inscription which declares that be possessed •' a mind equal to the majesty of nature." (!) 1 See Owen's Anatomy of Vertebrates," vol. iii, p. 699, London, 1868. The Phocida are the subject of this eminent author's examination and report. THE FDR SEAL: SPEEDY BIRTH. 109 feeding places, yet they reach this land-speck in Bering Sea just in season for instant delivery after arrival!1 PANGS OF IMPENDING PARTURITION ALONE PROMPT FEMALES TO LAND. — The females do not land until they are obliged to by the precipitation of this event of parturition. They land upon the breeding-grounds of Saint Paul just as they coine in contact with the shore — guided and influenced at the moment of approach to the islands by only one ruling thought, and that is, to reach as near as possible the locality upon which they resided in former years. Soon after lauding, which I have heretofore described, the birth of the young takes place, and in this wise: the cow shows, an hour or so prior to delivery, great nervous agitation; she trembles all over; her eyes blinking, and flippers twitching; rolling, stretching, and thoroughly uneasy, until the labor-pains. If the ground where she happens to rest is rocky, she manages to lie upon the top of a bowlder, her hind-flippers working spasmodically with a wavy, fan-like motion backward and forward, as she rests full upon her stomach, with the fore-flippers alternately pressed tightly to the rock or closely to her sides, like pectoral tins; she sways her head, her eyes are partly closed and her mouth slightly opened in panting, during the fifteen or twenty minutes which usually ensue between the first contraction of the uterus, until the expulsion of the intra-uterine life takes place. These labor-pains are not, in my opinion, at all very severe or abnormal in any respect. The pup carries with it, at the moment of birth, the entire placental pouch or "after-birth." This envelope is broken, usually by the mother, in forcing the labor and during the first expulsion of the pup's head, which is always presented in advance. The little "Kotick" may be said to fairly drop upon ' If there is any one faculty better developed than the others in the brain of the intelligent Callorhinus, it must be its ''bump" of locality. The unerring directness with which it pilots its annual course back through thousands of miles of watery waste to these spots of its birth— small fly-dots of land in the map of Bering Sea and the North Pacific — is a very remarkable exhibition of its skill in navigation. While the Russians were established at Bodega and Ross, California, sixty years ago, they frequently shot Fur Seals at sea, wh'en hunting tin- Sea Otter off the coast between Fuca Straits and the Farallones. Many of these animals, late in May and early in Juue, were so far advanced in pregnancy that it was deemed certain by their captors that some shore must be close at hand upon which the near impending birth of the pup took place ; thereupon, the Russians searched over every rod of the coast-line of the main- land and the archipelago, between California and the peninsula of Alaska, vainly seeking everywhere there for a fur- seal rookery. They were slow to understand how animals, so close to the throes of parturition, could strike out into broad ocean to swim fifteen hundred or two thousand miles withiu a week or ten days ere they landed on the Pribylov group, and almost immediately after gave birth to their offspring. There is no record made which shows that the Fur Seals have any regular or direct course of travel tip or down the northwest coast. They are principally seen in the open sea, eight or ten miles from laud, outside the heads of the Straits of Fuca, and from there as far north as Dixon Sound. During May and June they are aggregated in greatest numbers here, though examples are reported the whole year around. The only Fur Seal which I saw, or which was noticed by the crew of the Reliance, in her cruise, June 1 to 9, from Port Townseml to Sitka, was a solitary "Hollu- schack" that we disturbed at sea well out from the lower end of Queen Charlotte's Island; then, from Sitka to Kadiak, we saw nothing of the Fur Seal until we hauled off from Point Greville, and coming down by Ookamok Islet, a squad of agile "Holluschickie" suddenly appeared among a school of hump-back whales, sporting in the most extravagant manner around, under, and even leaping over the wholly indifferent cetuci-a. From this eastern extremity of Kadiak Island elear up to the Pribylov group we daily saw them here and there in small bands, or also as lonely voyageurs, all headed for one goal. We were badly outsailed by them ; indeed, the chorus of a favorite "South Sea pirate's" sung, as incessantly sung on the cutter's "'tween decks," seemed to Lave special adaptation to them : "For they bore down from the windwi'anl, A sailin' seven knots to oar fonr'n." The ancient Greeks seemed to have been impressed somewhere by rookery odors, for old Homer says — "The web-footed seals forsake th** stormy swell, And, sleeping in herds, exhale nanseona smell." Where this illustrious bard sniffed up this characteristic unpleasantness of breeding-seals, I am at loss to i-ay. The Pribylov Islands and the great Antarctic grounds wen- .-..-, Jar Iron) that poet then as the moon is from us to-day. Fie must have been introduced to it within the confines of the Caspian Sea, or else- credibly informed, by trustworthy authority, of this peculiarity of the large herds of r/iocirfn- in those waters. Small bands, however, of Hair Seals breed now, as they bred then, in the Mediterranean and Black Seas. He may have stumbled upon a few of them while provoking his muse in lonely travels over Grecian pelagic shouts 110 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. its feet, for the moment it appears from within the natal walls it seems to be in full possession of all its faculties; its eyes are wide open, and its voice is raised in weak, husky bleatings, as it feebly paddles around, still attached to the umbilical cord, which it, by its own efforts, pulls asunder as it flounders about on the rocks or ground of the rookery. The mother, in the mean time, gives her offspring none of that attention so marked in the case of the Ganidce and other carnivores, not even turning to look at it; but she draws herself up with an expression of intense comfort and relief, throwing her head back with a gentle, swaying motion, as she fans herself slowly with either one or both of the hind-flippers. She also pays no attention to the cleansing of her own person, the after-birth lying undisturbed by her, it being speedily trampled under foot and ground out of recognizance by the restless multitudes around her, which pass to and fro. The pup quickly dries off, with rapid alternations of short naps with awakenings, in which it gets up and on its flippers to essay brief scrambles over the rocks and ground until, in nosing about, it claims the attention of its mother (sometimes hours after birth) : this she gives by gently elevating her abdomen and turning her parts posteriorly, so that one or two of the obscure teats, filled with milk, can be seized by the hungry pup, which now nurses therefrom greedily, even to gorging itself. MILK OF THE FUR SEAL. — The milk of the Fur Seal mother is very rich and creamy, and the secretion is always abundant, but there is not, under any circumstances, the enlarged udder and mamma?i peculiar to dogs and similar animals ; the nipples are scarcely distinguishable, even when exposed to the reach and notice of the young. IRREGULAR FEEDING OF THE PUPS. — The umbilicus of the pup rapidly sloughs off, and the little fellow grows apace, nursing to-day heartily in order that he may, perhaps, go the next two, three, or four days without another drop from the maternal fount; for it is the habit of the mother Seal to regularly and frequently leave her young, on this spot of its birth, to repair for food in the sea; she is absent on these excursions, on account of the fish not coming inshore within a radius of at least one hundred miles of the breeding-grounds, through intervals varying, as I have said, from a single day to three or four, as the case may be. The manner in which she returns after feeding, and in which she singles out by scent, and at a glance, her own offspring from many thousands surrounding it, I have clearly described in a foregoing chapter.1 PRELIMINARY ADVANCES OF THE SEXUAL UNION. — The pup being born, the cow rapidly passes into "heat." I have noticed examples where ten hours only elapsed between the event of the birth and that of copulation, and I doubt not of full impregnation for another period. But as a rule forty-eight hours is a fair figure to express the time from the birth to the state known as "being in heat." The cow always makes the first advances to the bull. If she is one of the earlier subjects for his attention, the union is soon accomplished ; but should she be of the later applicants in his 'When the females first come ashore there is no sign of affection manifested, whatever, between the sexes. The males are surly and morose, and the females entirely indifferent to such reception. They are, however, subjected to very harsh treatment sometimes in the progress of battles between the males for their possession, and a few of them are badly bitten and lacerated every season. One of the cows that arrived at Nah Speel, Saint Paul Island, early in June, 1872, was treated to a cruel uiutUat inn in this manner, under my eyes. When she had finally lauded on the barren rocks of one of the numerous " Seecatehie" at the water front of Ibis small rookery, and while I was carefully making a sketch of her graceful outlines, a rival bull, adjacent, reached out from his station and seized her with his mouth at the nape of the neck, just as a cat lifts a kitten. At the same instant, almost simultaneously, the old male that was rightfully entitled to her charms, turned, and caught her in his teeth, by the skin of her posterior dorsal region. There she was, lifted and suspended in mid air, between the jaws of her furious rivals, until, in obedience to their powerful struggles, the hide of her back gave way, and, as a ragged flap of lli« raw skin more than six inches broad and a foot in length was torn up and from her spine, she passed, with a rush, into the possession of the bull who had covetously seized her. She uttered no cry during this barbarous treatment, nor did she, when settled again, turn to her torn and bleeding wound to notice it in any way whatsoever that I could observe. When severe inflammation takes place, they seek the water, disappearing promptly from your scrutiny. TflE FUR SEAL: REPRODUCTION. Ill harem, after he has been more or less exhausted by the vital drafts made upou him, she must wait. I have observed instances of this character in which the female teased the male for hours and hours before arousing him. PELAGIC COITION IMPOSSIBLE.— In this act of coition on these breeding-grounds of Saint Paul and Saint George, I have noticed the fact that, whenever the female was well covered by the male on the flat or smooth shelves of rock or earth, they moved and shuffled about without any particular effective coition until brought up againt a rougher inequality, or some fragments of lava shingle, so characteristic of the rookery grounds. The reason for this is due to the fact, that in spite of the great weight of the male, six times more than that of the female which he covers, the orgasms are so rapid and violent that, unless the female is held by some other agency thau the weight of the male, she is literally shoved ahead and away from under him. This fact I call attention to, as it aloue is sufficient, upon the slightest reflection, to satisfy any judicial mind that it is a physical impossibility for these Seals to copulate in the water. Under no conceivable position assumed for this supposed pelagic coition could effectual sexual connection be made.1 ACTION OF REPRODUCTION. — The male serves the female exactly as a big Newfoundland dog would serve a small terrier slut. The "Seecatchie" draws his heavy body over and upou the out- stretched spine of the female, who lies prone before him on her stomach; so that when the male has adjusted himself, which he does by arching his back from the shoulders to the on coccyx, he covers her so completely that nothing of her body can be seen, except a portion of her head just peering out from between his fore-flippers and under his broad chest. Notwithstanding their great rapidity and the muscular power employed, the orgasms last, without interruption, for the surprising space of from eight to fourteen minutes — not a second's intermission. Of course, toward the close of the season, when the male is tired, he does not remain in coitu longer than three or four minutes. On account of the vigor and duration of this first coitus, I am inclined to think that that female has no further intercourse with that male, or any other one, during the rest of the season. She is satisfied, and passes rapidly out of heat. Certain it is that she is not noticed by him again; she goes up to his seraglio- grounds, to and from the sea, seeking her young and feeding undisturbed for the balance of the time; also, that the other bulls seem to recognize this condition of passed sexual requirement and satisfaction, in her case, by paying her no attention. PERIOD OF GESTATION. — Thus it is apparent that the period of gestation in the Fur Seal is nearly, lacking a few days, twelve calendar mouths; for the next year finds her again heavy with young at almost exactly the same day that, she gave birth to her previous offspring in the prior season. The systematic and regular appearance of the females every year upou the Pribylov Islands at such a time, usually in June or July, without the slightest regard to what the weather Those extremely heavy adalt males which arrive first in the season, and take their stations on the rookeries, are s» Cat that they do not exhibit a wrinkle or a fold of the skins enveloping their blubber-lined bodies; most of this fatty deposit is found aronud the shoulders and the neck, though a warm coat of blubber covers all the other portions of the body save the flippers; this blubber thickening of the neck and chest is characteristic of the adult males only, which are, by its provisions, enabled to sustain the extraordinary protracted fasting periods incident to their habit of life and reproduction. When those superlatively fleshy bulls first arrive, a curious body tremor seems to attend every movement which the animals make on land; their fat appears to ripple backward and forward under their hides, like waves; as they alternate with their flippers in walking, the whole form of the "Seecatchie" shakes as a bowl full of jelly docs when agitated on the table before us. There is also a perfect uniformity in the coloration of I lie breeding coats of the Fur Seals; and it is strikingly manifest while inspecting the rookeries late in July, whon they are solidly massed thereon. At a quarter mile distance, the whole immense aggregate of animal life seems to be fused into a huge homogeneous body that is alternately roused up in sections and then composed, just as a quantity of iron filings, covering the bottom of a saucer, will rise and fall, when a magnet is passed over and around the dish. 112 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. may have been during the winter and spring previous, or is when they land, establishes without doubt this exact limit of their gestation. IMPORTANCE OF THIS SERVICE. — The reason why I dwell upon these details is because they have a very important bearing upon the question as to what ratio of males every year is needed for service on this great breeding-ground of Bering Sea. If the common opinion, hitherto entertained, was tenable, of free and effective pelagic coition, then.it will be readily understood that nearly all the males from four years up, and on, could have easy access to the females ; and that it would be a matter of very small concern how many old males, or rather those males upon the land located over the rookeries, were fit for service. But understanding, as I now do, without a shadow of tenable contradiction, that these "Seecatchie" which receive, fight for, and cover the females on the rookeries, are the only active fertilizing powers toward the reproduction and perpetuation of their kind, the importance of my detailed description of the method of coition is evident; for it shows conclusively that unless we see every year, long prior to the arrival of the females, a full supply of able-bodied "Seecatchie" holding out upon and located over the rookeries of Saint Paul and Saint George — unless we see such a number in good condition — we may safely count upon the fact that danger will arise of imperfect and nugatory fertilization for the coming year. It will not do to indulge the hope, should a scarcity or diminution of the old males ever occur, when the rookeries are mapped out in spring, of the deficiency being made good by the young males which are swimming around everywhere in the water. VITALITY OF THE MALE. — I believe that an able-bodied adult " Seecatchie " is capable of serving well from the 14th June to the 14th July, during which period the height of the breeding season occurs, one hundred females. If he is, however, as he frequently is, enfeebled by previous fighting and struggling with other males to hold the station which he has selected and fought for, it is more than likely that his virility will not extend beyond the proper serving of twenty or thirty cows. As I have said in another place, I found great difficulty in finding, to my own satisfaction, a fair number of females as the average to every harem on the rookery.1 Some instances occur where the male treats forty-five or fifty females, owing to the peculiar configuration of the landing grounds; but most generally, and as the rule, I think fifteen or twenty cows to every bull is a true computation; hence I do not believe, under any normal circumstances and all normal disad- vantages, such as fighting involves by weakening the males, that, when the females arrive, there is the least risk of a single one of them getting back to the water without a perfect and effectual impregnation. A common opinion was prevalent on the islands among the employe's touching this matter, that, when the female was not instantly covered during her first heat, she went to the water, cooled off, and on returning, sexual desire never reappeared, and she became a farrow or barren cow from that time to the end of her natural life. Analogous physiology confutes this 1 This striking and accurate average is still further complicated by that unknown distribution of the virgi n females which come up to the rookeries every year for their first meeting with the virile males. What proportion of them reach the rear of the breeding-grounds compared with their numbers which are served at the water-line ? I surely am at fault to say. for they do not leave that tangible evidence which the other older cows do in the forms of their young. One of the curious contradictions to generally received ideas of the habit of Seals is the fact that the Fur Seal wil] not rest either upon snow or ice ; it seems to positively avoid all contact with either of those substances upon which the I'hoeidus wholly, and the Sea Lions to some degree, delight in hauling over. Callorhimts has the warmest of seal coats, by all odds, yet it dreads a snowy or an icy bed with as much sincerity as any habitud of the tropics can. The Sea Lions and Hair Seals have often been surprised in sporting, or sleeping on the ice floes of Bering Sea in the. spring, by whalemen while ^ruining al (lie edge of the fro/en pack, waiting for the channel to open, clear into the Arctic Oi-ean ; as neither Eumi'tujiiiii nor I'!i. *-'.<. 8 Vox FKANTZIUS: .SUngi'tliiere Costa Rica.s, in Wiegmann's Archiv, xxxv, Jahrg. i, pp. 304-307. 3 Loc. cit. 4 Prince Maximilian. 116 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. BOUNDARIES OF THE RANGE OF AMERICAN MANATEES. — The entire range, therefore, of the American Manatees extends over about forty-nine degrees of latitude — that is, from 30° north to 19° south. It is probable, as Mr. Steams surmises, that the existing species ranged farther north in former days, and, furthermore, it is not definitely known that the southern Manatee does not extend south of 19° south in Brazil. It is certain, however, as Burmeister distinctly states, that ifc is not found on the coast of the Argentine Republic.1 As an instance of the unusual wandering of (probably) the Florida Manatee, it may be noted that an animal, the description of which fairly portrayed the appearance of that species, was cast on the coast of Shetland in 1785. It was described by the British zoologist Fleming as probably being a Rhytiua, but this seems very unlikely to one acquainted with the facts of the geographical range and size of that animal. Gray refers it to his Manatus australis, which includes both the Florida and South American Manatees. It seems to me that if it was carried across the ocean by the Gulf Stream, as Gray suggests, it most probably "set sail" from the Floridan. coast.2 Dr. Leidy has described the teeth of two fossil species, Manatus antiquus3 and Manatus inor- natus,4 from the "phosphate beds" of the Ashley River, South Carolina, showing that, as in the case of many other American genera, there has been a movement southward in geological time. ORIGIN OF THE NAME "MANATEE." — I doubt if it is possible to arrive at any satisfactory conclusion regarding the origin of the name Manatee. Certain it is that it was first used by the early Spanish and Portuguese explorers. Pietro Martire, who is the first to record the existence of the animal, in 1500, as I gather from Ramusio's collection of early voyages, does not give it a name.5 The notes which he gives regarding the animal were probably taken from the original records of Colurnbus's fourth voyage, in the midst of the narrative of which they are given. Oviedo, in 1535, calls it "Mauati";6 Exquemelin, about 1650, states that the Spanish call it "Manentine";7 Atkins in 1735 uses "Mauatea"; Gumilla, in 1741, uses "Manati."8 The French writers, beginning with Biet, in 1CG4, employ the names "Lamantin," "Lamentiu" (Condamine, 1745), and "Manaty" (Du Tetre, 1GC7). The appellation "Manatee" occurs for the first time, so far as I am aware, in 1703. in Dampier's account of his voyages round the world. The word in this form, or as " Manati," has been used by most English writers. Whether this name, in its various forms, refers to the peculiar fore-legs of the Manatee or to its means of suckling its young, can only be decided by the investigations ot philologists more learned and more zealous than myself. DIFFERENT NAMES OF THE MANATEE. — Other names for the Manatee occur, most of which define, as it were, the characteristics of the animal. Such are "Pegebuey," a native Amazonian name, employed by Acuua in 1041, and its translations: "Ox Fish," as written by Sloane in his natural history of Jamaica, in 1725, and "Poissou boeuf," as given by Condamine, in 1667, in his history of the Antilles. The French name, " Vache marin," and the corresponding English word, '' Sea-cow," occur in numerous instances in scientific literature. In Guiana the natives use the name "Cojumero" (Gray). Bellin (1703) alludes to "Lamenum." The term "Petit Lamentiu du nord," used by French writers to distinguish the South American Manatee from the Floridan species, is, I believe, of later origin. 1 BUUMEISTEII: Description physique, RUO, fol., libr. 8, fide Brandt. s OVIEDO: Hist, general do las Iiulias, 1535, lib. xii, c. 10. 7 EXQUEMKLIX: Buccaneers of America, English translation, 1684, p. 82. •GUMILI.A: El Orinoco Hlusfrado, 1741. TDE MANATEES: SIZE AND WEIGHT. 117 SIZE OF THE FLORIDA MANATKE.— In treating of tin- si/.e of the American Manatees, it will be necessary to consider the two species separately, although llie adults seem to attain nearly equal proportions. Ilarlan gives, as the maximum length of the Florida Manatee, eight or ten feet, but these measurements were not made by himself.1 Mr. W. A. (Jonklin, director of the Central Park menagerie, in New York City, {jives llie following dimensions of a specimen kept alive in that establishment in 1873: "The following are its absolute dimensions: length, 0 feet !).! inches; cir- cumference around the body, 4 feet 0 inches; length of tlipper, 1 loot; widtli of same, 4;| inches; width of tail joining body, 1 foot (ij inches; gicatest width of tail, 1 loot .S.I inches; weight, 450 pounds."2 I am not aware that any other measurements of the Florida Manatee, under its proper name, are on record. SIZE AND WEIGHT OF THE SOUTH AMERICAN MANATEE. — The size of the South American Manatee has been differently estimated by different observers. "This Creature," says Dumpier, "is about the bigness of a Horse, and 10 or 12 foot long. ... 1 have heard that some have weighed above 1200 L. but I never saw any so large."3 Stedman, alluding to a Manatee which floated past his encampment on the river Cottica, in Surinam, says: "This Manatee was exactly sixteen feet long, almost shapeless, being an enormous lump of fat, tapered back to a fleshy, broad, horizontal tail "* Smyth and Lowe captured a Manatee in 1835 in Peru, at their encampment at Sarayacu, on the Ucayali. "We had one opportunity," they relate, "while at this place, of examining a raca marina, or manatee, that was just caught; but, not being anatomists, are unable to give, a scientific account of it. The animal was seven feet eight inches long from the snout to the tip of the tail. . . . This was not considered a huge one. . . . When the animal was killed, it took the united strength of at least forty men to drag it up from the water to the town, which they effected by means of our ropes."5 In 1872 Dr. Murie published a valuable memoir on the South American Manatee, in which he gives measurements of two specimens which reached London in 180G, fresh but not alive. The length of one, a young male, from the Maroni Eiver, in Surinam, was forty eight inches or four feet; that of the second specimen, a young female, from Porto Rico, sixty-five inches, or live feel five inches. In his remarks on these animals, Dr. Murie says: "When studying in the Stuttgart Museum, I derived much information from Professor Krauss, the able director. Among other things he mentioned that their large stuffed specimen of Manatee was the mother of our Society's young male, as attested by Herr Koppler, of Surinam, who transmitted it. The length of the female mounted skin I ascertained to be 122 inches [ten feet two inches], therefore twice and a half the length of the young animal possibly six or eight months old. Another stuffed male specimen at Stuttgart measures 94 inches. Both of the above are doubtless .stretched to their fullest extent; Btill, one is justified in assuming the adult Muntittis to be from '.I to 10 feet long."11 Of the weight of the specimens he remarks: "According to Mr. Greey, the entire carcass of the Zoological Society's female, when weighed immediately after death on board ship, was 228 Ibs. That of the young male as ascertained by myself was (il Ibs."6 'HAKLAN': Faiiua Americana, l^j.'i, p. -'77. 4 CONKUS : Tin- M.iraicc- at Central Park, in "Forest and Str.-am." i. 1H74, i>. 166. "DA.Mi-ii-a:: A \.-\v Voyage round iln- WmM, i. ITU.!, p]>. ;;:!,:U. 4 STEDMAN: Narrative ot an expedition t" Surinam, ii, 17IM, p. 1T.~>. •SMYTH and LOWR: Journey from Lima to I'.ira. London, L«.">;i, p. 1!>7. '.\1UKIE: On the I'onii and Htmctnrc of the Manatee. Transactions Zoological Society of London, viii, Ib73, pp. 129-131. 118 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. Another specimen, ;i female, received by the saint society from Surinam, measured eighty indies, but no indication of. its age is given.1 Still another specimen, this time a male, arrived in London. When dead, measurements showed its length to be ninety-four and five-tenths inches or seven feet ten and one-half inches.2 Of two male Surinam specimens which died in the Zoological Gardens at Philadelphia, one measured exactly six feet from snout to tip of tail, the other six and a half feet.3 General Thomas Jordan, writing in "Forest and Stream," in 1873, says: "Three of these huge mammals I saw on Indian River, in 1849-'50, each weighing at least fifteen hundred pounds, and between fifteeu and twenty feet in length." He adds: "The Florida species (T. latirostrix) are much larger than those found in the Antilles, South America, or Africa."4 This last statement can scarcely be strictly correct. Other writers, as we have seen, have found quite as large specimens as those here referred to in South America. BREEDING HABITS OF MANATEES. — In relation to the breeding of Manatees, and the size and habits of the young, almost nothing is known. Ogilby, in his account of Cuba, says: "No less wonderful is the Fish Manate; it breeds for the most part in the Sea, yet sometimes swimming up the Rivers, comes ashore and eats Grass."5 This account, however, is of little value, as it was copied by Ogilby, who does not state whence he derived it. Du Tertre states that two calves are born at a time. " If the mother is taken," he writes, "one is assured of having the young: for they follow their mother and continue, to move about the canoe until they are made companions of her misfortune."6 Descomrtlitz, writing regarding his own observations in 1809, says: !'The Manatees possess a gentle and amiable nature, and lament when they are separated from their young, which the mother nourishes with much tenderness. They appear sensitive and intelligent; they weep when they are taken without having received any bad treatment, seeming to regret that they can never return to their haunts. Although sometimes they appear to avoid man, at other times they regard him without suspicion and seem to implore his pity. The young do not quit the mother for many years, and, sharing her dangers, often become the victims of their filial devotion."7 Brandt, who has examined much of the literature of the subject, states that it is said that the period of gestation lasts eleven months, and that the young follow the mother a half year.8 FOOD OF SIRENIANS. — The Sireuians, as a group, are very strictly graminivorous, and the American Manatees form no exception. The structure of their lips and teeth is such that this fact might be surmised were nothing known of their habits. Living as they do at the mouths of rivers and about the coast, or in the upper waters of streams, they find no lack of aquatic vegetation on which to subsist. Exactly what plants they thrive best upon has been the subject of inquiry by several observers, especially those who have'been interested in the attempt to keep the Manatee in captivity. Mr. Chapman informs us that the specimen at the Philadelphia gardens ate freely of various garden vegetables — cabbage, celery tops, spinach, kale, baked apples, and others, while they devoured as well quantities of the aquatic plant Vallineria spiralis, and the sea-weed Ulva latissima.9 The Central Park specimen seems to have been more dainty. "A variety of aquatic 'GARKOD: Transactions Zoological Society of Londou, x, 1877, p. 137. -MUHIE: Transactions Zoological .Society of London, xi, 1880, p. 27. 'CHAPMAN: Pi or. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, xxvii, 1875, p. 452. 4 Forest ami Stream, i, 1*73, p. 169. "OG1LBY: America, 1071, p. 315. SDUTKKTKE: HiHtoire Nat. des Antilles, 1GG7, pp. •JOl/JOi. 'DESCOURTLITZ: Voyage d'un Naturaliste, ii, 1801I, pp. 27-1,275. "BltANDT: Symbolic Sireuologicaj, fasc. iii, IHOl-'liS, p. 256. '•CHAPMAN, II. C., in Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Philadelphia, xxvii, 1875, pp. 459-461. THE MANATEES: FOOD. 119 plants were placed before its mouth," says Mr. Conklin, "and each in turn rejected. At length some canna, Canna indica, was procured, which it devoured greedily, and which it continues to use alternately with sea- weed, Fucwt vcsiculosus, obtained in the East River."1 The process of eating takes place under water, which seems strange, in view of the fact that the animal cannot breathe while therein engaged. Dr. Murie thus interestingly narrates the feeding habits of the Manatee at the London Zoological Gardens in 1878: "On first arrival at the aquarium, cabbage, lettuce, watercress, pieces of carrot ami turnip, loose and bundles of hay, and quantities of pond-weed were put into the tank, both floating and sunk by weights attached. Occasionally it would sniff or examine these by snout and lips without chewing or swallowing, until its appetite returned as above mentioned. It then showed a preference to water-cress, though often taking cabbage, but after- wards it chose lettuce, and entirely eschewed the others. When in the height of health it consumed, according to Mr. Caningtou, from ninety to one hundred and twelve pounds of green food daily. As lettuce became scarce and dear it cost ten shillings a day to supply it with the French sort; and although cabbage, etc., was then cheap and abundant, it daintily chose the former, and as steadily avoided and refused the latter."2 EARLY ALLUSIONS TO THE HABITS OF THE. AMERICAN MANATEES: BY COLUMBUS. — What relates to the food of the Manatee in the writings of travelers and explorers is so connected with observations on its habits in general, that I may be pardoned for not withdrawing the facts for insertion in the previous paragraph. We shall find in reviewing the various accounts of the liabits of Sea-cows that there is not always a harmony of statements, and it will be necessary to look with a critical eye upon the narratives of some of the earlier voyagers, who seem to have been a little confused sometimes by the unfamiliar phenomena with which they were surrounded. The first apparent reference to the American Manatees in literature appears to be that in the narrative of Columbus's fiist voyage, at the stage of his first departure for Spain, in 1493. Taking up the thread of the narrative as given by Herrara, we read as follows: " Wednesday the ninth of January, he hoised sail, came to Punta Roxa, or Red Point, which is thirty-six Leagues East of Monte Christo, and there they took Tortoises as big as bucklers, as they went to lay their eggs ashore. The Admiral [Columbus] affirui'd he had thereabouts seen three Mermaids, that rais'd themselves far above the Water, and that they were not so handsome as they are painted, that they had something like a human Face, and that he had seen others on the Coast of Guinea.'"3 The probability of the fact that the mermaids here referred to were really Manatees is in Columbus's statement of having seen others on the coast of Guinea, as it is in that region that the African Manatee, T. sencyalatsix, is abundant. Not many years later, in 1502, on the occasion of Columbus's fourth voyage to America, the Manatee became well known to the adventurers while at San Domingo. Oviedo, as quoted by Ilerrara, says: "The Spaniards at this Time found a new sort of Fish, which was a considerable advantage to them: tho' in those parts there is much Variety. It is call'd Manati, in shape like, a skin they use to carry Wine in, having only two Feet at the Shouldars, with which it swims, and it is found both in the Sea and in Rivers. From the Middle it sharpens off to the Tail, the Dead of it is like that of an Ox, but shorter, and more fleshy at the Snout; the Eyes small, the Colour of it grey, the Skin very hard, and some scattering Hairs on it. Some of them are twenty Foot long, and ten in Thick- 'CoXKUN, in Korcst and Stream, i, 1*71, ]>. H'>ii. - MUKIK, iii Trims. Zoc'ilojjiciil Sm-ii-ty London, xi, 1880, pp. 22,23. (STKVuxs): 1 1 ist. America,, i, 17;>f>, p. 82. 120 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. ness. The Feet are round, and Lave four Claws on each of them. The Females bring forth like the Cows, and have two Dugs to give suck. . . . Sometimes they are taken ashore, grazing near the Sea, or Rivers, and when \oung they are taken with Nets."1 Then follows the oft repeated story of the tame Manatee of the Cazique Carametex: "Thus the Cazique Carametex took one, and fed it twenty-six Years in a Pond, and it grew sensible and tame, and would come when call'd by the name of Mato, which signifies Noble. It would eat whatsoever was given it by Hand, and went out of the Water to feed in the House, would play with the Boys, let them get upon him, was pleas'd with Musick, carry'd Men over the Pool, and took up ten at a Time, without any Difficulty."2 FATHER ACUNA UPON THE "PEGEBUEY." — In the fourth decade of the succeeding century Father Acuua, in narrating his adventures on the Amazon River, makes mention of the South American Manatee somewhat at length. An-ong other things he says: "But above all, the iish, that like a king lords it over all the others, and which inhabits this river from its sources to its mouth, is the Pegebuey (Fish Ox), a fish which when tasted only can retain the name, for no one could distinguish it from well-seasoned meat. It is large as a calf a year and a half old, but on its head it has neither ears nor horns. . . . This fish supports itself solely on the herbage on which it browses, as if in reality a bullock ; .and from this circumstance the flesh derives so good a flavour, and is so nutritious, that a small quantity leaves a person better satisfied and more vigorous than if he had eaten double the amount of mutton. It cannot keep its breath long under water; and thus, as it goes along, it rises up every now and then to obtain more air, when it meets with total destruction the moment it comes in sighjt of its enemy."3 ROCHEFOKT UPON THE HABITS OF THE ANTiLLEAN MANATEE. — After Oviedo, Gotiuira, and Acuua no oue seems to have added any new facts, or supposably new facts, to the history of the habits of the Manatees until Hernandez and Rochefort published their narratives. The work of the former I have not had at command, but from F. Cuvier's notes it would seem that it contains nothing of importance. Rochefort, the second edition of whose work on the Antilles was pub- lished in 1GC5, gives the following information: "This fish feeds upon plants which it collects about the rocks and on the shallows which are not covered with more than a fathom (brasse) of water. The females breed at the same season as do cows, and have two marninse with which they suckle their young. Two calves are born at a birth, which are not adandoued by the mother until they have no more need of special nourishment, or until they can browse upon plants like the mother."4 15. BIET'S AND Du TEKTRE'S ACCOUNTS. — Biet repeats these observations, although it is to be believed independently, saying that the Manatee roams about the shores near the sea browsing on the plants which grow there.5 Dn Tertre in effect repeats the little that his predecessors have laid down, but adds some additional observations which are interesting if sufficiently substantiated. "The food of this fish," he says, " is a little plant which grows in the sea, and on this it browses after the manner of an ox. After being filled with this food it seeks the fresh-water streams, where it drinks and bathes twice a day. Having eaten ;iud been refreshed it goes to sleep (s'en dort) with its snout half out of water, a sign by which its presence is recognized by the fishers from afar."6 . •HERRARA (STKVKNS): His'ory of America, i, 1725, p. 278. 2IlKRi!AHA (STI:VI:XS): History of Amrrira, i, 17'J5. p. 279. "CiiRISToVAl. DK ACUN\ : River of tlio Amazons 1(141, pp. G8-9'.». (llakluyt Society.) «ROCHEKOI:T: IILstoiiv p. ,U2, 83. -TnXKM.V, ill l''oivsl Mini Stream, i, I-::;, ]>. Hi.;. 122 NATUEAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. indies in length, of a lighter slate-colour than bet companion, of more slender build and proportions. Both are marked with white on the under sides of their bodies. The pair occupied a tank twelve feet six inches in length by eight feet six indies in breadth, with an almost Hat bottom. Temper- ature of water, about 70° F. : depth, two feet six inches in the daytime, reduced to six inches at night. The water is run off daily, a fresh supply being admitted at the requisite heat from a neighboring tank filled with warmed fresh water. Although the area of these quarters appear somewhat limited when compared with the bulk of the animals, the Manatees seem perfectly comfortable, and, being of a sluggish disposition, rarely explore the whole of their small domain. Nor do they, so far as I observed, avail themselves of the shallowuess of the water and, by sup- porting their bodies on the tail-flu, keep their heads above the surface and avoid the constant repetition of the upward movement iu order to breathe the necessary air. They habitually rest side by side at the bottom of the tank, with the caudal fin stretched out quite straight, and the tips of the fore fins just touching the ground. "Thence they rise gently, often with the least perceptible movement of the tail and flapping motion of the paddles, raising the upper part of the body until the head reaches the surface, when the air is admitted through the nostril flap-valves, which are closely shut after the operation, and the original and usual position is gently resumed. They seem generally to be compelled to rise to the surface for aerial respiration every two or three minutes, but the interval between respiration varies much at different times. In one quarter of an hour, during which one was carefully timed, it rose nine times, at very irregular intervals. I have been informed that they occasionally remain under the water for a much longer period, but have never observed them to exceed six minutes, although I have timed them before and after feeding, and at all hours of the day. The respiratory movement appears to be repeated almost mechanically and without effort."1 The fact that these Manatees in confinement kept constantly beneath the surface does not accord with the observations of Du Tertre, already quoted. It is probable that the air about the aquarium was not sufficiently warm to induce them to float with the head out of water, as they do in their native haunts. The same observer furnishes some facts of a highly important character regarding the attempts made by the Manatees at terrestrial progression. "The habits of the animals iu captivity, while affording occasional evidence of the ease and rapidity with which they move in the water, do not furnish much support to the views of their capability of habitual active progression on land. Yet it must be admitted that, supplied with a sufficiency of nicely varied food, they have no inducement to leave the water, and that the con- struction of their straight-walled tank precludes such efforts, as a rule. The male, however, has recently been observed to make some slight attempts at terrestiial movement, turning himself round and progressing a few inches when his tank was empty. With jaws and tail-fin pressed closely to the ground, the body of the animal becomes arched, and is moved by a violent lateral effort, aided and slightly supported by the fore-paddles, which are stretched out in a line with the mouth. But the effect of these very labored efforts was not commensurate with their violence; in fact, their relation to active locomotion may be compared to those of a man lying prone, with fettered feet and elbows tied to side. Nor does the Manatee seem at all at ease out of water, as he lies apparently oppressed with his own bulk, while he invariably makes off to the deepest corner of his tank directly the water is readmitted."2 ABUNDANCE OF THE FLORIDA MANATEE. — In the great struggle for life no animal is, in a man- ner, more destructive than man himself. The fierce carnivora may prey upon the more peaceful 1 CHANE, AGNES, in Proc. Zoological Society of London, IBtfO, \>\t. 456-457. 3ioc. ci(., pp. 4./J, 4liO. THE MANATEES: ABUNDANCE. 123 graminivora, but tlit> attack must be made, one may say, in person, subject to nil the dangers attendant upon an encounter with those weapons which a long course of selection has developed in the prey. Man ensnares alike the lion and the deer by the devices of his brain, with little or no danger to himself. Notwithstanding, the fleetest animals oftentimes escape him and the strongest intimidate him; but such drowsy beasts as the Sirenians fall helpless victims to his strategy. The past century witnessed the extinction of one of these animals, the Rhytina, through no other apparent agent than man. The inquiry intrudes itself, Will the Manatees succumb to the same fate which overtook their huge relative? It is undoubtedly a fact that the American Manatees are much less abundant in many regions than they were at the time of the discovery of America. They have withdrawn before the advance of civilization into the more inaccessible places out of the reach of man. In regard to the Floridan Manatee, the statement of Harlan (who obtained it from Dr. Burrows), made so lace as 1825, namely, that an Indian could readily obtain a dozen in a year,1 is now doubt- fully true. The statements of Mr. Stearns, given in the early part of this essay, show that it has disappeared from some localities in Florida within a comparatively recent period. Nevertheless, the Florida Manatee cannot yet be considered as threatened with extinction, and in Southwestern Florida, if we may believe Mr. Maynard, is still abundant. Specimens are received from time to time for our museums and zoological gardens, and to satisfy the curiosity of the gaping crowds at the circus. The prices obtained for specimens of both American Manatees in this country and in England show, however, that they are not to be obtained without difficulty.2 Gundlach refers to the abundance of the Manatee in Cuba in the following terms: " In former times very abundant; at present much reduced in numbers, but not rare though difficult to capture."3 According to Dr. Von Frantzius, the South American Manatee was abundant along the western shores of the Gulf of Mexico, especially in Costa Rica. "They are still very common," he says, "along the Atlantic coast, where they find abundant nourishment in the numerous lagoons (Hajf- bildituf/en), and likewise the needed protection ; they pass into the rivers and are found abundantly in San Ju.in and neighboring streams, the Rio Colorado, Sarapiqui, and San Carlos. Apparently they are prevented from going tar into the San Carlos on account of the rapids which occur near its mouth, and hence are not found in the Rio Frio nor in Lake Nicaragua itself."4 ABUNDANCE OF THE SOUTH AMERICAN MANATEE. — In relation to the present abundance Of Manatees in South America, it is perhaps unnecessary for me to enter into details here. Brandt, has reviewed the subject at length quite recently, giving many particulars.5 His investi- gations show that in many regions, particularly about the mouths of rivers and in other places where sufficient shelter is wanting, the Sea-cows are disappearing or have become entirely extinct. In the upper waters of the rivers, however, where the native Indians are few and civilization has not reached, little diminution is probable. PROBABILITY OF EXTINCTION. — Putting all the facts together, it seems evident that not many centuries will pass before Manatees will be extremely rare, especially in our own country. More specimens should be accumulated in our museums, both of the entire animal and of its bones, and its wanton destruction should cease. MODES OF CAPTURE. — The methods of capturing Manatees are numerous. In Florida, Mr. Goode informs me, strong rope nets, with large mesh, are oiten employed. The details of this 'HARLAN: Fauna Ami-rii-ana, 1 '"-'•">, ]>. ^77. "Trans. Zoological Society London, xi, l**(l. |>. •>}. Edwards' Guide to Florida, 1875, p. 69. :'L\(.:ii: I!i-vista y Cat.dc- In* Mainil'rrns i-nliaiio*. KYpiTl. FiMro-nat. dr Culm, ii. no. 'J. 18fiC, p. 56. ••Vox FKANT/.IUS: Siiii^olLii-ir Costa Kic-as. Arrliiv I'iir Natnrgeschichte, xxxv, i, WGti (if), pp. 304-^07. : Symbols .Siiviiolo^ica.', I'asi'. iii. Irtnl-'ti.-*, p. a,".:t. 124 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. method are given in the notes ot'an observer, Mr. ,T. Francis Le Baron, writing from Titnsville in 1880. His account of the fishery, given with much fullness, bears all the evidences of correctness. I may be allowed to quote the part which pertains to my subject: ''The manatee hunter aims to catch the animal alive, and for this purpose quite an extensive outfit is required. It consists, first, of a large seine net, about one hundred yards long and six or eight feet wide, made of 'spun yarn,' so called, which consists of three or four rope yarns spun into one line, about the size of a clothes- line, and very strong. The meshes are fifteen inches wide. The head-line consists of a strong rope, and floats made of wood, shaped like a double ended boat, are placed at intervals along this to keep the top of the net near the surface of the water. The bottom is weighted with small pieces of brick or stone, just enough to cause the net to hang perpendicularly in the water. A large sail-boat is also required. The hunter, taking the net in the boat, proceeds quietly to the part of the river frequented by the manatee, and keeps a sharp lookout for the animals, which have a. habit of passing up and down the river by certain points. If the lookout perceives a manatee in the river above him he knows that sooner or later the animal will take a cruise down the river, and he proceeds accordingly to stretch his net across the channel. One end of the net he first makes fast to a small bush or twig, or, if no tree is available, to a stake driven for the purpose into i he bank. To this the shore end of the net is fastened by a small cord secured to the head- line, and the stake or bush before mentioned, care being taken to use a cord so small that in its struggles it will be easily broken by the animal, for a reason which -will appear hereafter. The boat is then rowed across the stream with the other end of the net, and when the latter is stretched to its full length, the boat is anchored and the net secured by a similar easily broken cord to the boat in such a manner that the first struggle of the animal will be felt by the occupants of the boat, being communicated by the cord to a tell-tale, or the cord is fastened to the body of one of the hunters, who now go to sleep if night has come on, or perhaps while away the time by a game of cards, keeping perfectly quiet. There are very likely several manatee in the river, and before long one attempts to pass by the boat. His progress is of course arrested by the net, and his struggles to force a passage are at once communicated by the tell-tale cord. Unsuccessful in his first attempt to effect a passage, the manatee increases his efforts, and the result is that the slender cords holding the net to the shore and the boat are broken, and the net with the manatee entangled drifts away with the current. The frantic efforts of the animal only serve to closer enwind him in the meshes of the net, which doubles and wraps itself around him closer and closer. It is now that the objects of the light sinkers and slender holding cords are apparent. The manatee is a warm-blooded animal and must come to the surface for air every few minutes. If the sinkers are too heavy, or if the net is immovable in the water, he is unable to do this and is drowned. The large floats serve now to show the hunters the location of the prey, and they bear down upon it and tow it with the confined animal into shoal water. Here a large box or tank is ready. The net is unwound, ropes are placed around the animal, and by the united efforts of the hunters, he is transferred to the bos. The box is then towed to the 'crawl,' which is an inclosure formed by driving stakes close together in the water with their tops projecting several feet above, and is generally near the home of the hunters. The box is floated into the crawl and the animal let out. He is there kept and fed daily until an opportunity occurs for shipment. This is made in the same large box, which is water- tight and about half filled with water. Such is the method employed by the Indian Eiver hunters for catching the manatee alive. It is, however, often shot with a rifle, from the shore or a boat, when feeding or coming to the snrf.ice to breathe, but (he hunter must be very quick and expert with his weapon, as they show only one-third of the head, and that only for a second. The profit* of manatee hunting are large. The skeleton, if properly cleaned, will readily bring a hundred THE MANATEES: MODES OF CAPTURE. 125 dollars, and the skin a like sum if taken off whole, being in demand by scientists for museums all ovc.- the world."1 "So valuable an animal,'1 says Wood, alluding more particularly to the South American Manatee, "is subject to great persecution on the part of the natives, who display great activity, skill, and courage in the pursuit of their amphibious quarry. The skin of the Manatee is so thick and strong that the wretched steel of which their weapons are composed — the 'machetes' or sword- knives, with which they are almost universally armed, being sold in England for three shillings and six pence per dozen — is quite unable to penetrate the tough hide. Nothing is so effectual a weapon for this service as a common English three-cornered file, which is fastened to a spear- shaft, and pierces through the tough hide with the greatest ease."2 Many of the early explorers give lively accounts of the manatee fishery in South America. "• Diners other fishes," says Oviedo, in alluding to the fishes of the Orinoco River, as quaintly translated by Pnrchas, " both great and small, of sundrie sorts and kinds, are accustomed to follow the ships going vnder saile, of the which I will speak somewhat when I have written of Manatee, which is the third of the three whereof I have promised to entreat. Manatee, therefore, is a fish of the sea, of the biggest sort, and much greater than the Tiburon in length and breadth, and is very brutish and vile, so that it appeareth in forme like vnto one of those great vessels made of Goats skins, wherein they vse to carry new wine in Medina de Campo or in Arenale : the head of this beast is like the head of an Oxe, with also like eyes, and hath in the place of armes, two great stumps wherewith he swimmeth. It is a very gentle and tame beast, and commeth oftentimes out of the water to the next shoare, where if he finde any herbes or grasse, he feedeth thereof. Our meii are accustomed to kill many of these, and diners other good fishes, with their Crosse-bowes, pursuing them iu Barkes or Canoas, because they swim in manner aboue the water, the which thing when they see, they draw them with a hooke tyed at a small corde, but somewhat strong. As the fish fleeth away, Archer letteth goe, and prolongeth the corde by little and little, vntill he have let it goe many fathoms: at the end of the corde, there is tyed a corke, or a piece of light wood, and when the fish is gone a little way, and hath coloured the water with his bloud, and feeleth himselfe to faint and draw toward the end of his life, he resorteth to the shoare, and the Archer followeth, gathering vp his corde, whereof while there yet remaiue sixe or eight fathoms or somewhat more or lesse, he draweth it toward the Land, and draweth the fish therewith by little and little, as the wanes of the Sea helpe him to doe it the more easily: then with the helpe of the reste of his compauie, he lifteth this great beast out of the Water to the Land, being of such biguesse, that to convey it from thence to the Citie, it sh;dl be requisite to haue a Cart with a good yoke of Oxen, and sometimes more, according as these fishes are of bignesse, some being much greater then other some iu the samekinde, as is scene of other beasts: Sometimes they lift these fishes into the Canoa or Barke without drawing them to the Land as before, for as soone as they are slaine, they flote aboue the water: And I beleeue verily that this fish is one of the best in the world to the taste, and the likest vuto flesh, especially so like vnto beefe, that who so hath not scene it whole, can iudge it to be nother when hee seeth it in pieces then very Beefe or Veale, and is certainly so like vnto flesh, that all the men in the -world may herein be deceiued : the taste likewise, is like unto the taste of very good Veale, and lasteth long, if it be powdrcd: so that in fine, the Beefe of these parts is by no means like vnto this. Tl:e Manatee hath a cc i tainr stone, or rather bone in his head within the braine which is of qualitie greatly appropriate against the disease of the stone, if it be burnt and ground into small powder, ;md taken fasting in the morning 1 !.[•: I'.Aiiox: Iu Fon-Kt an-! Suvain. xiii, 1 -.-(', |>. inir.. li'lli,. •WOOD: Illustrated Natural History. Mammals, ]i. ">48. 126 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. when the paine is felt, in such quantities as may lye vpon a peny with a draught of good white wine. For being thus taken Ihree or foure mornings it acquicteeth the griefe, as diuers haue told me which haue proved it true, and I my selfe by testiinouie of sight doe wituesse that I have seen thus stone sought of divers for this effect."1 Du Tertre, whose narrative we have already several times quoted, gives an account of the mode of capture, which has all the tokens of accuracy. He writes : "Three or four men go in a small canoe (which is a small boat, all of one piece, made of a single tree in the form of a canoe). The oarsman is at the back of the canoe and dips the blade of his paddle right and left in the water in such a way that he not only governs the course of the canoe but makes it advance as swiftly as if it were propelled by a light wind or under reef. The Vareur (who lances the beast) stands on a small plank at the bow of the canoe holding the lance in hie hand (that is to say, a sort of spear, at the end of which a harpoon or javelin of iron is fastened). The third man, in the middle of the canoe, arranges the line, which is attached in order to be paid out when the animal is struck. "All keep a profound silence, for the hearing of this animal is so acute that the least noise of water against the canoe is sufficient to cause it to take flight and frustrate the hopes of the fishers. There is much enjoyment in watching them, for the harpooner is fearful lest the animal escape him, and continually imagines that the oarsman is not employing half his force, although he does all that he is able with this arms and never turns his eyes from the harpoon, with the point of which the harpooner points out the course he must follow to reach the animal, which lies asleep. " When the canoe is three or four paces away the harpoouer strikes a blow with all his force and drives the harpoon at least half a foot into the flesh of the animal. The staff falls into the water, but the harpoon remains attached to the animal, which is already half caught. When the animal feels itself thus rudely struck it collects all its forces and employs them for its safety. It plunges like a horse let loose, beats the billows as a negro beats the air, and makes the sea foam as it passes. It thinks to escape its enemy, but drags him everywhere after it so that one might take the harpooner for a Neptune led in triumph by this marine monster. Finally, after having dragged its misfortune after it, and having lost a great part of its blood, its power fails, its breath gives out, and being reduced to distress, it is constrained to stop short in order to take a little rest ; but it no sooner stops than the harpooner draws in the line and strikes it a second blow with a harpoon better aimed and more forcibly thrown than the first. At this second blow the animal makes a few more feeble efforts, but is soon reduced to extremities, and the fishermen readily drag it to the shore of the nearest island, where they place it in their canoe, if the latter is of sufficient size."2 Barbot, after quoting the account of the fishery by Acufia, in the quaint translation which 1 shall quote on a following page, adds some valuable notes on the commercial transactions which are carried on in connection with salted Manatee meat. He says: "The ManatVs flesh used at Cayenne is brought ready salted from the river of the Amazons ; several of the principal inhabitants sending the barks and brigantines thither with men and salt to buy it of the Indians for beads, knives, white hats of a low price, some linen, toys, and iron tools. When those vessels are enter'd the river of the Amazons, the Indians, who always follow the Manati fishery, go aboard, take the salt, and with it run up the river in canoes or Piragua* to catch the ManatVs; which they cut in pieces, and salt as taken, returning with that salt fish to the brigantines; which go not up, because the Portuguese who dwell to the eastward, at Para, and other places of Brazil, claim the sovereignty of the north side of that river, and give no quarter 'Purchas his Pilgrimes, iii, 1025, pp. 987, 988. »Du TKBTRK : Histoiro dea Antilles, ii, 1667, pp. 200, 201. TUE MA>iATEES: CAPTURE. ] 27 to the French or otlior Europeans they cuu take in their liberties, which has occasional manj disputes and quarrels between them, as 1 shall observe hereafter. "That controversy was decided by the treaty of Utrecht, in the year 1713. The Portuguese some years since designing to settle on the west side of the Amazons, cruelly massacred many, who before used to go unmolested, and consequently mistrusting no danger. "The hrigantines having got their lading of salted Manati, return to Cayenne, and sell it there, commonly at three pence a pound."1 "The flesh of the Manatee being much esteemed," writes Deseourtlitz, in ISO!), from his own observations, "and its fat never becoming rancid, the negroes employ many means to destroy them, sometimes by the use of nets, in the places where they feed, sometimes by shooting them from canoes; more commonly they harpoon them when they are able to approach sufficiently near, but as the animal, although seriously wounded, does not die immediately, they let out a cord in order not to lose so precious a prey, which one sees reappear at the surface of the water, drowned and lifeless."2 PRODUCTS FURNISHED BY MANATEES. — The Sireniaus possess the quality, most fatal to them, of furnishing palatable food for man. The huge Sea-cow of Bering Sea disappeared from this cause, and the Dugong, the Sireuian of the Indian Ocean, and the Manatees suffer not less on the same account. For the Indian of South America the Manatee is a fund of wealth. (In its flesh he subsists, with its oil he anoints himself, from its skin he makes shields and cords, in its bones he finds medicine. The early explorers were not long in discovering its virtues. Ilerrara gathers the following estimate of its importance from their accounts of America: "The Taste of it is beyond Fish: when fresh it is like Veal, and salted like Tunny-Fish, but better, and Will keep longer: the Fat of it is sweet, and does not grow rusty. Leather for Shoes is dress'd with it. The Stones it has in the head3 are good against the Pleurisy and the Stone."4 Rochefort is not less impressed with the good qualities of the animal. He exclaims: "Among all the fishes there is none having so good flesh as the Lamantin. Two or three of these beasts will till a large canoe, and the flesh is like that of a land animal, firm, pink and appetizing, and mixed with fat, which being rendered never becomes rancid. When it has been two or three days in pickle, it is better for the health than when eaten entirely fresh."5 He also gives some very good advice in regard to the use of the ear bones for medicine. "The superstitions," he sa>s, "lay great store by the stones which are found in the Lead, because they possess the power, they say, when reduced to powder, to stop the formation of calcareous deposits, and to remove those already formed; but, since the remedy is very violent, no one ought to use it without the advice of a wise and experienced physician."6 Biet mentions the Manatee first in his list of the fishes [sic] of the He de Cayenne. Alluding to the flesh, he says: "It is very excellent, and although one may have other provisions, it will tie preferred to beef. Its fat, also, is as sweet as butter, and can be used to advantage in all kinds of pastry, IVieasees, and soups."7 I'.arbot seems to have summed up all that was known of the Manatee of South America up to his time, early in the eighteenth century, and quotes, also, Father Acuna, in a translation which, 1 li.MtitoT: !>/>. fit., p. :ii:i. ; I>i-:srori:Ti \T/.: Vov :i^e d'nn Naturalist.-, ii, 1H09, p. 276. 3Tlle car lioneH. 'Hr.iutAitA: History of America, i, l?'J.r>, ]>.2?6. MxdciiKrolM: Nat. HiHtoire . lit:,. 'BiKT: Voyjigi- en Pile de Cayenne, 1664, pp. 34G, 347. 1 28 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. according to my notion, is preferable to that of the Hakluyt Society. Having alluded to its small eye, but quick ear, and to other characteristics of its organization, he says: "The flesh of this creature is excellent, very wholesome, and tastes very much like veal of Europe, when young: for the biggest are not so delicate and agreeable to the palate. Their fat is hard, and very sweet, as that of our hogs ; the flesh resembles veal. It dies with very little loss of blood, and is not observ'd to come upon dry land; nor is there any likelihood it should, considering its shape, as in the cut, whence it is concluded not to be amphibious. "The Spaniards about the island of St. Margaret, or Margarita, called the Manati Pcce-Buey, that is, Ox Fish; and particularly value the stomach and belly part of it, roasted on spits. Others cut long slices of the flesh of its back, which they salt a little, only for two days, and then dry it in the air; after which it will keep three or four mouths. This they roast and baste with butter, and reckon delicious meat. A gentleman has assur'd me, that at Jamaica they give eighteen pence a pound for young Alanati. At Cayenne it yields but three pence a pound salted. " F. Christopher de Acunna, in the relation of his voyage on the river of the Amazons, chap. 25, describes this fish as follows: "The Pecc-Buey, says he, is of a delicious taste; any one that eats it, would think it to be most excellent flesh well season'd. This fish is as big as a heifer of a year and a half old ; it has a head and ears just like those of a heifer, and the body of it is all cover'd with hair, like the bristles of a white hog; it swims with two little arms, and under its belly has teats, with which it suckles its young ones. The skin of it is very thick, and when dressed into leather, serves to make targets, which are proof against a musket bullet. It feeds upon grass, on the bank of the river, like an ox; from which it receives so good nourishment, and is of so pleasant taste, that a man is more sstrengthen'd and better satisfy'd with eating a small quantity of it, than with twice as much mutton. "It has not a free respiration in the water, and therefore often thrusts out its snout to take breath, and so is discover'd by them that seek after it. When the Indians get sight of it they follow it with their oars in little canoes; and when it appears above water to take breath, cast their harping-tools made of shells, with which they stop its course, and take it. When they have . kill'd it, they cut it into pieces, and dry it upon wooden grates, which they call Boucan; and thus dressed, it will keep good above a month. They have not the way of salting and drying it to keep a long while, for want of plenty of salt; that which they use to season their meat being very scarce, and made of the ashes of a sort of palm-tree, so that it is more like salt-petre than common salt."1 For the Romanist of South America the Manatee is, as the old voyagers persisted in calling it, a fish. It is, therefore, eaten on days when a meat diet is forbidden by the rites of the church. CONCLUSION. — In the Manatee, then, we have an animal of great size, of gentle disposition and apparently of rapid growth, which lives in places readily accessible to man, and is easily captured, and which furnishes meat which is not inferior, oil which is remarkably fine, and leather which possesses great toughness. From these considerations it would seem evident that, with the proper protection, it would furnish no small revenue to the people in those portions of our country which it inhabits, for centuries to come. 32. THE ARCTIC SEA-COW. ' THE EXTINCTION OK SPECIES IN HISTORICAL TIME. — The catalogue of animals which are known to have hecome extinct within historical times is not a long one. I do not allude, of 1 liAIJBOT : A DdSCriptioil of thi1 Island of Cnyrnih1, in Appciiilix to Description o1' tin1 CoasN ol' Noilli ami Soutli Guinea, l~'M, p. Tilili. THE ARCTIC SEA-COW: EXTINCTION. 129 course, to those animals which have been driven from their native haunts before advancing civili- zation, and which with its decline would flourish again amidst the fallen columns and crumbling walls, but to those of which no remnant remains, whose existence as the representatives of certain definite stages of organic development is forever closed. Such a one is the Rhytina (Rhytina yiffas, Zirumeriuann), which inhabited Bering Sea until within about a century. The story of its discovery and extermination forms one of the most interesting pages of zoological history. THE GEEAT NORTHERN EXPEDITION. — At the opening of the last century the northeastern portion of the Russian Empire was one of the least known quarters of the globe. The barrenness of the laud, the dreadful winter, and the almost impassable sea, had deterred travelers and voyagers to a large extent from penetrating into its wilds. Those who adventured in the frozen seas went principally in search of a northwest passage, or in pursuit of other matters relating to geography and commerce, and paid little attention to the products of the land or of the waters. Early in the seventeenth century, however, Peter the Great, desirous of knowing whether Asia and America were contiguous, gave orders that an expedition should proceed to ascertain the (ruth. Before they could be executed he died, but the Empress Catherine commanded that they should be fulfilled. Capt. Vittis Bering was placed in charge of the expedition, and Gmelin, of the St. Petersburg Academy, was appointed chief naturalist. After several preliminary cruises had been made which extended over a number of years, two ships set sail from Kamtchatka on the 15th (4th) of June, 1741. Before the departure of this final voyage, however, Gmelin had withdrawn on account of ill-health, and George William Steller, who had been sent out by the St. Petersburg Academy as his assistant, was commissioned to complete the scientific researches. THE DISCOVERY OP BERING ISLAND AND WRECKING OF THE "ST. PETER." — The two vessels, the " St. Peter," commanded by Bering, and the " St. Paul," in charge of Tschirikov, sailed eastward toward the American continent. Before arriving, however, on the 1st of July (20th of June) a storm separated them. Having touched at Alaska, Bering started westward again, encoun- tering before long the most tempestuous weather. The crew grew weak and sick through long- continued hardship. On the 10th of November (30th of October) the ship approached Bering Island, then unknown. A few days after the storm drove her upon the rocks, and the crew were forced to take up winter quarters on the island. DEATH OF BERING. — Many of the sick died as soon as they were removed to the land, and on the 19th (8th) of December the commander also perished. After some days "it was resolved to examine what store of provisions there was, and compute how long they would last, to regulate the distribution of the shares accordingly, notwithstanding which thirty persons died on the island. They found the stores were so much exhausted that if they had not been supplied with the flesh of sea-animals they must have all perished for want of food."1 USE OF THE RHYTINA TO THE SURVIVORS. — Prominent among the animals which served them as food was the Rhytina. Its well-flavored flesh and pleasant fat proved a great boon to them. "And the sick found themselves considerably better, when, instead of the disagreeable hard beaver's flesh, they eat of the Manati, tho' it cost them more trouble to catch than one of the beavers. They never came on the land, but only approached the coast to eat sea-grass, which grows on the shore, or is thrown out by the sea. This good food may, perhaps, contribute a great deal to give the flesh a more disagreeable2 taste than that of the other animals that live on fish. The young ones, that weighed 1,200 pounds and upwards, remained sometimes at low water on the dry land between the rocks, which afforded a fine opportunity for killing them; but the old ones, 'MCLLER: Voyages from Asia to America. English translation, Jefferys, 1761, p. 58. 1 This is surely a typographical error for agreeable. 9 F 130 NATURAL HISTORY OF AQUATIC ANIMALS. * which were more cautious, ami went oft' at the right time with the ebb, could be caught no other- wise than with harpoons fixed to long ropes. Sometimes the ropes were broke, aud the animal escaped before it could be struck a second time. This animal was seen as well in the winter as iu the summer time. They melted some of the fat, with which, like hogs, they are covered from three to four inches thick, and used it as butter. Of the flesh, several casks full were pickled for ship's provision, which did excellent service on their return."1 STELLER'S OBSERVATIONS. — In the midst of these privations, Steller did not fail to make and record observations relative to the animals which came about the island. To his most praise- worthy perseverance we owe all that we know of the appearance and habits of the Rhythm. Not a word has been added to his account of the characteristics of the animal, which a few years later became extinct. THE RETURN TO KAMTCHATKA; MISFORTUNES OF STELLER. — In the summer of 1742 the shipwrecked crew of the "St. Peter" built a boat from the wreck of their vessel, and on the 21st (10th) of August sailed toward Kaintchatka. "The next day at noon they were in sight of the southeast point of Bering's Island, at a distance of four leagues N. by E., to which they gave the name of Cape Manati; from the above-mentioned Sea-cows, which herd more here than in any other parts."2 Shortly after they arrived safely in Kamtchatka. But while some of the crew soon afterward reached St. Petersburg, and had distinctions conferred upon them by the government, Steller was most shamefully treated because he dared to condemn the abuses of the officials, and finally died, in November, 1746, in an obscure town, with but a single friend to sympathize with him.3 His observations on the Rhytiua, which I shall quote at length, together with those on other marine animals, were published by the St. Petersburg Academy in 1751. His statements, it should be remembered, relate to the occurrence of Rhytina on Bering Island only. The somewhat numerous facts which have accumulated regarding the reality or probability of its occurrence in other regions, I shall cite on another page. After giving a table of measurements, and a very detailed description of external and internal parts, which I am not at liberty to quote in this connection, Steller expands upon the natural history of the Sea-cow.'1 The following translation of the original Latin is the product of the unremunerated labor of my brother, Mr. A. Charles True, of the State Normal College, Westfield, Massachusetts, who has taken pains to make it as accurate as possible. STELLER'S OBSERVATIONS ON THE NATURAL HISTORY OF THE SEA-COW.— "It was my fortune on au unlucky occasion," writes the naturalist, " to observe daily during ten months the habits and 'ioe. tit., pp. 61,62. *Loc. oil., p. 64. 3 "As to the academical company of travellers," says Milller, " Gmelin and I arrived at Petersburg on Feb. 15 [26], 1743, having passed through all the ports of Siberia. But Steller, who stayed iu Kamtschatka after Waxel, to make researches in natural history, did not enjoy this good luck. He inimerged himself -without necessity, though with good inten- tion, iu matters that did not belong to his department ; for which he was called to an account by the provincial chancery nlJakutzk. Steller vindicated himself so perfectly that the Vice Governor there gave him permission to proceed on his journey. The proceedings were not sent to the Senate at Petersburg so soon as transacted. The Senate, who had intelligence of his passing through Tobolsk, sent an express to meet him, and to carry him back to Jakutzk. Aud soon after advice being received from Irkntzk, of his acquittal, another express was dispatched to annul the first order. In the mean time, the first express met Steller at Solikamsk, and had carried him back as far as Tara, before the second express overtook him. He then proceeded without delay on his return for Petersbury by the way of Tobolsk, but got no farther than Tumen, where he died of a fever in November, 1746, in company of one Hau, a surgeon, who had been with him in the Eamtscltatka expedition. I have thought it necessary to relate these circumstances, because many falsities have been propagated abroad concerning him, nay, even his death has been doubted. He was born on the 10th of March (21st), 1709, at Winshnm in Franconia."— MttLLER: op. tit., pp, 65, 66. Scheerer (fide Nordenskiold), in his biography, attached to Stcller's account of Kamtchatka, states that Steller got as far as Moscow when ordered to return, and was frozen by the way. 4 STELLER, GEOROK WILLIAM: L>e bestiis marinis anctore Georgio Wilhelmo Stellero.