LIBRARY OF ie85_IQ56 V IK^^" jf ^nln^i^tun^ far the I ^^^ " and ^ - — (\Br ^ — riOf'a.. iif't'r/u'Jrir. \W///-> '/> /uUtS i"''"^^/>. A // //if- L/'// /lav // '.y^'c/y r//f//,/r,/ .. 'r.'r. 7 '"'""7^ t; AM) SOI, I) uv Ai.i. r.DoK si:i,i,i:ks .l«;n . THE ANIMAL KINGDOM ARRANGED ACCORDING TO ITS ORGANIZATION, SERVING AS A FOUNDATION FOR THE NATURAL HISTORY OF ANIMALS, AND AN INTRODUCTION TO COMPARATIVE ANATOMY. BARON CUVIER, Great Officer of Uie Legion of llnnour, Counsellor of Slate, and Member of the Royal Council of Public Instruction ; One of the Forty of the French Academy ; Perpetual Secretary to the Academy of Sciences; Member of the Academies and Royal Societies of London, Berlin, Petersburgh, Stockholm, Turin, Edinburgh, Copenhagen, Gottingen, Bavaria, Modena, the Netherlands, and Calcutta ; and of the Linnasan Society of London, &c. &c. WITH FIGURES DESIGNED AFTER NATURE: THE M. LATREILLE, Chevalier of the Legion of Honour, Member of the Institute (Royal Acaderary of Sciences), and of the greater portion of other learned Societies in Europe, America, &c. STransIatsU from ti^e latest JFrentl^ "EDition. WITH ADDITIONAL NOTES, AND ILLUSTRATED BY NEARLY 500 ADDITIONAL PLATES. IN FOUR VOLUMES. VOL. I. LONDON: G. HENDERSON, 2, OLD BAILEY, LUDGATE-HILL, AND SOLD RY ALL I500KSELLERS. 1834. LONDON: ADVERTISEMENT. IN presenting this version of the " Animal Kingdom " of the celebrated Cuvier to the British public, the Translator feels assured that he has only acted in compliance with the wishes of the most intelligent portion of the community, inasmuch as the great deficiency in our language of a complete work in this grand department of Natural History is thus supplied in a manner that it is impossible to excel. It is essential for the reader to understand that the attempts hitherto made by English authors to enrich British scientific literature with the labours of Cuvier, have been confined to the translation of the first edition of the " Regne Animale," which made its appearance so far back as the year 1816. With respect to that translation, it is not necessary that we should dwell upon it farther than to observe, that it is the version of a work which may now be deemed to be completely superseded. The great French author himself, indeed, has acknowledged the imperfections of his first edition, as compared with the last, which is now enriched with the results of labours, whereby, during the interval of twelve years, an immense pro- gress is declared by Cuvier to have been effected in this science. It is scarcely necessary to add, that no part of those labours, and no por- tion of that improvement, failed to be examined by this indefatigable naturalist. His connection with the government of France, his reputa- tion throughout Europe, and his consequent unbounded facilities of com- munication with fellow-labourers in all quarters of the globe, gave to Cuvier opportunities of procuring information of new facts, or corrections of former errors, such as could not be accessible to almost any other individual. From considering these facts, the reader will not fail to conclude that a difference, to no small amount, must necessarily exist between the former and the latter edition of the "Animal Kingdom;" nor will he, upon due examination, be prepared to deny that the latter is essentially a new and distinct work, from the number of alterations and improvements which have been incorporated with it. Cuvier records, with the most grateful expressions, his sense of the value of the information derived by him from the vast number of faithfully executed figures in Natural History which were supplied by recent travellers. The difficulties presented in the arrangement of the synonymes in the nomenclature of animals were also found by our great author very seriously diminished when he came to prepare the second edition of his " Regne Animale." Naturalists of ii ADVERTISEMENT. all countries felt the necessity of more minute distinctions being esta- blished amongst those extensive groups which they had previously formed, and the result was a much nearer approximation than ever to an exact definition of each of the species. We refer to the Preface, at page xxx of the present volume, for a more copious account of the advantages which the last edition of the " Animal Kingdom" presents, as compared with the first. It remains for us, then, merely to state, that we felt the great importance of at once adding to our scientific literature a work of such permanent value as the " Animal Kingdom" of Cuvier. The character of the author for a profound knowledge of his subject — the conviction which we entertained of his exact accuracy in all that related to his labours, seemed to be sufiicient to authorize us in trusting altogether to his authority ; and if we have added a few notes occasionally in the present volume, our object only was to enable our readers to make such an application of the text as our local advantages in this country enabled us to do. ' In the following work, therefore, the reader will not find himself di- verted from the regular current of the simple text by any protracted and tedious notes, which dispute, as it were, the right to the space of every page with the actual contents of the original. We have, in the front of our announcement to the public, pledged ourselves to place the British reader onalevelwith the French one, in comprehending the result of Cuvier's researches into the most interesting of the subjects that can engage the mind of man ; and to the fulfilment of that pledge we feel it to be our duty to adhere. Fidelity, then, in the translation, was the first grand object of our car£. We have laid it down as a fixed rule, never to depart, even in a casual expression, from a most faithful representation of the thoughts and words of the original ; and we trust that we have not failed altogether in our attempt to transfer from his pages some portion at least of the energetic spirit, yet true simplicity, by which Cuvier's style is so happily distinguished. It has been, therefore, no object of our ambition, on this occasion, to attempt the improvement of the charming colours of the lily, or give fresh beauty to the glowing hues of the violet. Our task was plain ; and we felt that we performed enough, in devoting the whole of our exertions to efiect the nearest possible approximation to the style and manner of the great Original — in other words, to secure to the English nation all the advantages of such an easy and instructive exposition of scientific knowledge as the French nation had already at their command. #' BAIRCO^-F €TLITmiE MEMOIR OF BARON CUVIER. ALTHOUGH France is entitled to all the glory which is reflected upon her by the fame of the illustrious Cuvier, yet he was only her child by adoption, if we are to consider the claims of locality as capable of deciding the point of affinity between country and individuals. He was born on the 23d of August, 17C9, at Montbeillard, which was, at the period of his birth, and for several years afterwards, included in the duchy of Wirtemberg. Here it was that his father had ultimately chosen his re- sidence, after having devoted the best years of his life to the military service. The elder Cuvier was a Swiss, who had in early life entered the French army, and, having faithfully adhered to the government of France, he, at the conclusion of his active labours, retired to his native town of Montbeillard, on a small pension, which eventually was considerably in- creased by the revenue accruing from a fresh appointment as com- mandant of the artillery. In his childhood, the subject of our memoir exhibited all the charac- teristic marks of a feeble constitution. The cares of his mother were for this reason redoubled; and her affectionate vigilance was rewarded in the unceasing veneration of the surviving object of it to the latest moment of his existence. It was to her that he was indebted for his early devotion to books and the art of drawing. He was successively placed in the in- stitutions for education in its various branches, which had, even at that early period, been common in the country ; and, it is a curious fact, that his first impressions of partiaHty for natural history were derived from the sight of a Gesner with coloured plates, and also from the perusal of those accompanying the work of Buffon, of which a copy was by accident accessible to him. The sort of- talent displayed by young Cuvier whilst still occupied in the rudimentary schools of Montbeillard, was of a nature to point him out as a fit candidate for the church ; and, as he was educated in the Protestant religion, the local government, which was Pro- testant also, took the usual measures for securing the services of such a promising auxiliary in maintaining a religion surrounded by an opposition of the most formidable nature. In furtherance of these views, Cuvier was sent to Studtgard, and was placed, by order of Prince Charles of Wirtemberg, in the college called VOL. I. b the Academie^ Caroline, an institution belonging to the university of that city. After having spent some time in the various studies which were en- joined on pupils of his age, Cuvier appears to have been closely attended to by the Duke, and, as there is reason to believe that the latter acknow- ledged some serious obligations in former times to members of the Cuvier family, so did he feel a peculiar interest in forwarding the views of the young aspirant. It appears, that though the youth was at first intended for the clerical profession, yet at Studtgard his studies were all directed to his education for performing political duties. We can readily believe that the courses thus enjoined upon him were sufficiently agreeable to his tastes, when we remember that they comprehended the branches of natural history. He seems to have had leisure enough to perform herborizing ex- cursions, to visit collections of objects in art and nature, and even to copy the representations of animals. At Studtgard he distinguished himself by obtaining many of the prizes, and succeeded in attaining the order of chi- valry, a sort of distinction which fell to a very small number of the pupils who won it by their merit. The accident of the retirement of Duke Frederick, the governor of Montbeillard, into Germany, deprived young Cuvier of his most powerful friend, and, for a moment, he suspended those ambitious hopes which had long floated before him. Without patrimony, or the means of entering u])on any permanent system for his life, Cuvier was under the necessity of seeking out a tutorship. In 1788, we find him in the family of Count d"Hericy, at Caen, in Normandy, where he was engaged in the instruc- tion of an only son. The proximity of this Norman residence to the sea afforded to the active tutor facilities for such observations on natural pro- ductions as his instinctive inclinations led him to seek; and it was to the accidental opportunities thus presented to him, that he owed the impulse, which, in its subsequent influence, so vastly contributed to build up his great reputation. Cuvier, being destitute of books or other means of re- ference at the period we are speaking of, committed the results of his disco- veries to paper, and the manuscripts survived to be of essential service to him afterwards. At this interesting era of the life of Cuvier, a circum- stance occurred which must not be omitted in the detail of the auspicious events which led him gradually to his exalted destiny. At the little town of Valmont, near the residence of the Count d'Hericy, a society used to meet for the purpose of discussing points connected with the most im- portant public question of the locality, viz. its agriculture. At this so- ciety an individual of the place usually took a leading part; and it was not long before the penetrating tutor recognised in him a contributor on this subject to the Encyclopedic Methodique, then a highly popular scientific work, published in Paris. Cuvier, in the ardour of an energetic spirit, MEMOIR. iti made known to this individual the nature of his discovery, when the latter exclaimed, " Then I am lost!" " Lost?" replied the young man; " no, no; henceforth you shall be the object of my anxious care." The fact was, that the person spoken of was M. Tessier, who was resident at the place in question in a disguised character, having fled from Paris to avoid the dangerous chances of the reign of terror. Through M. Tessier, the aspiring young naturalist had the gratification of opening a correspondence with the most celebrated naturalists of the day. In the spring of 1795, the reflecting portion of the Parisian commu- nity saw the necessity of making some attempt at restoring at least the literary institutions, which with every other means of utility had fallen in the recent revolutionary devastation. Cuvier had laid such a foundation for the eminence of his character by this time, as to be received into the select few who were to take a practical part in the great work of intel- lectual renovation ; and, being invited to Paris, was at once appointed Commissioner of Arts, and Professor at the Central School of the Pan- theon. Shortly afterwards, M. Mertrud, who had occupied the chair of Comparative Anatomy, finding the duties of his situation too fatiguing for a person of his advanced age, obtained the consent of his colleagues, the illustrious triumvirate, Jussieu, GeolFroy, and Lacepede, to appoint Cuvier as his assistant. In this fortunate promotion, Cuvier saw that he had passed the portals of that high way of fame to which all his ambition had been directed. It was towards the close of 1795, that he fixed his residence at the Gar- den of Plants, and a moment did not pass after he became master of a comfortable home, before he determined on sharing it with his aged father, and his brother, the only members remaining of his immediate family. In a letter, which is found prefixed to the first volume of his Compa- rative Anatomy, and which was addressed by Cuvier to Mertrud, he re- fers to various circumstances connected with this critical epoch of his career. John Claude Mertrud held the situation of Demonstrator of Anatomy in the Garden of Plants, from 1750 up to the period when he was appointed Professor of Comparative Anatomy. He assisted Dauben- ton in the great Natural History; and his services to BufFon are recorded by the latter in terms such as the highest esteem and the warmest affec- tion alone could dictate. In this epistle Cuvier particularly refers to the progress which comparative anatomy was then making; and he shewed how the learned men formerly connected with the National Museum of Natural History, at Paris, strove to aid and promote that science. "With respect to those who then filled the offices of the former, Cuvier thus addresses his friend and master: — "The learned men who compose the b 2 IV M EMOl K. present administration of the Museum, are worthy of imitating the glo- rious examples of their predecessors. I have received from them, as well as from you, all the assistance I could have expected from an en- lightened love for science, rendered more grateful by all the attentions the most generous friendship could suggest. Nothing has been spared that could lead to discoveries, or to the completion of the system of our know- ledge in comparative anatomy. The correspondents of the Museum have imitated the example of its depositaries. Citizen Baillon, in parti- cular, so well known by the valuable observations which he furnished to Buffon, and by those which he continues to make, procured me, with un- exampled zeal and generosity, the rarest birds and fishes. Citizen Hom- bert, of Havre, who has applied, with the greatest success, to the study of Mollusca and Sea Worms, has favoured me with a great number of these animals, the perfect preservation of which rendered their examina- tion exceedingly useful. Citizens Beauvois, Bosc, and Olivier, the two first returned from North America, the third from Egypt and Persia, have kindly communicated to me some of the valuable specimens they have brought to Europe. I have, therefore, no reason to envy the good fortune of Aristotle, when a conqueror, who was the friend of the sciences, made other men subservient to him, and placed millions at his disposal, to enable him to forward the history of Nature. " This assertion will not surprise, when it is known that I have been permitted to dissect, not only the animals which have died in the mena- gerie, but also those which have been brouglit, during a great number of years, from all parts of the world, and preserved in spirits. Time only was capable of bringing this collection to its present degree of perfection, and has, in this instance, performed what no other power was capable of accomplishing. *' In opening to me your treasures — in admitting me to a share of the labours necessary to their arrangement and their augmentation, you have imposed upon me only one condition : that is, to enable other naturalists to enjoy them, by giving such a description of them a» they merit. You know with what assiduity I endeavour to perform this task, but you also know better than any other what time such a work requires. However rich may be the acquisitions that are made, more will still be desired. Sometimes a new species is discovered, which we wish to compare with those we already know. Sometimes the consideration of an organ induces us to make further attempts to develope its structure. On other occa- sions it is necessary to extend our observations; because something re- mains to be learned respecting the object as a whole, or the relation of its parts. In natural history, in particular, we are always dissatisfied with what we perform, for Nature proves to us, at each step, that she is inex- haustible." MEMOIR. V The French National Institute, which has been so powerful an engine in the diffusion of a taste for natural history, was instituted in 1706, and amongst its founders the name of Cuvier is conspicuous. The first of his coutributions to the literature of science bears the date of 1792; several detached papers were, about this period, written and published by him in periodical journals, and in them we trace the commencement of that powerful devotion to fossil anatomy, which he subsequently elevated into such an empire of natural wonders. The first of his more extended and important works was the " Tableau Eleraentaire of the Natural His- tory of Animals," which he published in 1798. In his capacity of assistant to M. Mertrud, Cuvier had to deliver lectures on Comparative Anatomy; and so valuable were they deemed, that a favourite and able pupil of his, M. Dumeril, was induced to take notes of them, which, with the author's sanction and assistance, he placed before the public. They form the first two volumes of the Comparative Anatomy of Cuvier. The " Tableau," just alluded to, was the rudimental form in which the great principles of classification founded by Cuvier were fully developed. In detached memoirs, such as that on the circulation of White-blooded Animals, he had already supplied some knowledge of those principles; but it was only in the larger work that he had entered upon the general plan of classification, which was to rest, perhaps for ever, on the ruins of the Linnsean system. lu 1800, Cuvier succeeded Mertrud, and resigned the chair of the Central School of the Pantheon. When the expedition to Egypt was contemplated, Cuvier was amongst the savants who had been nominated as fit to accompany the army, in the capacity of naturalists. But he declined the compliment, having the at- tractions at home, by which were provided for him a quiet life, and un- bounded facilities for his favourite study. When Bonaparte assumed the oflice of President of the National Institute, he selected Cuvier as one of the six individuals who were to act as Inspectors-General, for the purpose of establishing Lyceums for education in thirty towns of France, and in this character he established useful seminaries for youth in Marseilles, Nice, and Bordeaux, which still flourish under the title of Royal Colleges. Whilst he was engaged in this important duty, a change of the constitu- tion of the National Institute was effected, whereby the secretaryships were made perpetual ; and Cuvier being raised to that of the National Sciences, it remained in his hands up to the period of his death. The father of Cuvier having died from a fall, an event which was soon followed by the premature death of his brother's wife, his home was no longer that centre of domestic comfort which he had found it before. The natural resource of a refined and prudent man placed in such a conditiou vi MEMOIR. as this was resorted to by Cuvier, and a matrimonial alliance was formed by him in 1803. The lady whom he selected as his partner for life, was the widow of M. Duvaucel, a fermier general, who fell a sacrifice to the fury of the revolutionary rabble in 1794. The circumstances under which he chose Mrs. Duvaucel for his wife, are at once decisive of the disinterested feelings which accompanied the resolution ; for the calamity to which her late husband had become a victim extended to his fortunes, and only a wreck of what she once was fell to the lot of Cuvier. Nay, he saw, that by the alliance a burden would be placed upon his industry; for the widow had under her protection four children, the fruit of her first marriage. But though these accompaniments formed very powerful objections, as well they might, to a union of his destinies, on the part of Cuvier, with this female, still he saw in her mind and feelings an abundance of what was calculated to make him forget those objections. The four children of the former marriage met with a very various des- tiny. One was assassinated during the retreat of the French army from Portugal, in the memorable campaign of 1809: a second, who had fol- lowed the example of his illustrious step-father, and encountered perils and fatigues in pursuit of science, exhausted his vital powers by a vain attempt to defy the deleterious influence of an uncongenial climate : he died in Madras. The third of the sons of Madame Duvaucel is still living, an officer of customs at Bordeaux ; and his sister, the last of the children, performed the amiable duties of nurse to the illustrious object of all the anxious cares of his family, and remains as the chief source of consolation to the old age of her mother. Madame Cuvier, besides the tliree sons and daughter just spoken of, had four children more whilst married to her last husband, but, unhappily, both the parents survived them all. There is no one, therefore, now in existence, to whom we can look as the hereditary successor of Cuvier's peculiar intellect; that great, and to his fellow-creatures, most beneficial endowment, ceased with his life-breath, and is buried, we fear, with him in his grave. in the mean time, as a public man, Cuvier was the object of fresh ho- nours, the testimonies of the increasing esteem which his labours had yarned. In 1809, Napoleon appointed him to the office of Councillor of the Imperial University, which that emperor had created; and, in this character, Cuvier was entrusted with the establishment of new seminaries of instruction in that branch of the French empire which, for a season, consisted of several Italian states. The principles which he laid down for the constitution and government of these asylums of science, receive their best panegyric from the circumstance that they were perpetuated by the succeeding governments, who could not have been interested in the pre- servation of national memorials so adverse to their own interest. The extent to which the time of Cuvier was employed, in consequence of his appointments by Napoleon in political affairs, was such as to niduce us to conclude that he found it necessary to abandon the pursuit of science. But the real truth appears to be, that, whilst he scrupulously fulfilled his obligations as a public functionary, he made the very occasions in which he was occupied in that capacity subservient to the one ulterior, object of his life; and the affairs connected with the establishment of se- minaries in Marseilles and Bordeaux were only so many inducements to him to proceed to the sea shore, there to behold and to investigate his favourite department of the animal series — the MoUusca tribes. We have mentioned, that the labours of Cuvier in the department of comparative anatomy had been completed in 1805, by the publication of the three successive volumes as the sequel of the first two which appeared in 1800. The knowledge which he acquired by his labours in this de- partment proved the source of some of the most memorable triumphs of his genius; amongst which we may especially mention his grand re- searches on the fossil remains of the bones of animals. The history of the causes which led Cuvier to the investigation of the geology of the site of Paris is amongst the most curious and agreeable chapters in the annals of science. Up to a very recent period, not only in France, but also in England, the conclusions to which the celebrated German, Werner, had come, in tlie science of mineralogy, appeared to leave nothing to be done for the further elucidation of the knowledge of the crust of the earth. His sys- tem comprised, it was thought, the most perfect explanation of the whole series of the strata of that crust; and the scientific world seemed to think it a work of superfluity to attempt to add new facts to the series which that naturalist had collected in reference to this subject. But, as edu- cation, assisted by the progress of the habit of a free exertion of mind, scattered abroad the contagion of a disposition to inquiry, the scientific men of Paris began to acknowledge, that, in the very heart of their city, in every inch of the soil upon which they daily trod, they saw before them a series of geological structures, of which the supposed infallible apostle of mineralogy had certainly predicated nothing whatever. A neaier in- spection of the phenomena, which powerfully arrested their attention, brought them at last to the conviction, that either they were incapable of making a due application of the system of Werner, or that that system was altogether inadequate to expound the whole of what it undertook to explain with satisfaction. The savants of Paris, thus forced in self-de- fence to the task of inquiry, directed their own and their pupils' attention to the German and Swiss mountains, and they were ultimately prevailed upon to render justice to science, through the influences which arose from the grand progress of comparative anatomy, its pioneer being the immor- tal naturalist of the present memoir. In the last years of the late, and during the early part of the present century, the professors of the Garden of Plants, and of most other estab- lishments of Paris, where the teaching of comparative anatomy formed a part of the sciences which were taught, had frequently brought to their at- tention either skeletons, or detached portions of skeletons, dug up from beneath the soil of the city, evidently the relics of animals, and, in com- parison with which, the bony structures of the present race of living beings were altogether on a different scale. The comparative anatomists of the Parisian schools would have lost their reputation, as well as their hearers, were they to allow these discoveries to pass for objects inexpli- cable by human penetration, particularly as every day brought forth, in the neighbourhood of the city, some object that was calculated still further to perplex the mystery of its origin. At last, the multitude of these spe- cimens was such as to reach the power of irritating the pride of Cuvier; and that chivalrous champion of Nature's jurisdiction said that there was no alternative but to grapple with the apparition, and ascertain at once its nature and properties. Cuvier, in association with M. A. Brongniart, proceeded to the investigation of the soil, and, after many a laborious year of toil and fatigue in quarries, caverns, &c., after many a tedieus ascent up the heights of Montmartre, the indefatigable inquirers collected such a body of information, as at once shed abundant light upon the phe- nomena that had perplexed the scientific world so long. The results were published in 1812, in a large work on the fossil bones, which has since been reproduced with such improvements as to render it, ac- cording to the opinion expressed by one of the most celebrated of the geologists of this country (Mr. Bakewell), '• the most luminous and inte- resting exposition of local geology ever presented to the world." The great authority just mentioned adds, that it is from the era of this publi- cation that we are to date the first accurate knowledge, of what is called by geologists, the " tertiary strata*." From the work on fossil organic remains just mentioned, the conclusion is obvious, that Cuvier was the first, who, by the application of the rarest • The high place assigned by the learned of all countries to this great composi- tion, has induced the proprietor of the present translation of the " Animal Kingdom," to prepare a version of the last edition of the " Fossil Bones" of the same cele- brated author. This is the work which exhibits the wonderful genius of Cuvier in its most triumphant exertion; and it is only surprising that British enterprize, in ail- that regards the advancement of science, should not, ere this, have secured to our scientific literature a soiu'ce of knowledge of so much consequence. The translation here :innounccd, and its multitude of graphic illustrations, will be on the same ex- pensive scale to the proprietor, and the same ecououiical one to the public, as have been adopted in the present work. MKMOIR. IX' powers of observation and reflection, and by an unequalled ingenuity, con- verted comparative anatomy into a sort of talisman for unfolding the won- ders of the osseous contents which lay for ages in the caverns of the earth. His researches on the fossil bones, as they now appear in the work to which we have just alluded, form an epoch in the annals of geology, that yields to no part of its history in deep and durable interest; nor has even the great author himself of this important discovery which he has made in his beautiful scheme of exposition, failed to consider it to be a source of wonder, as it was of pride, to his own heart. " When," said he, " the sight of some bones of the bear and the elephant, twelve years ago, in- spired me with the idea of applying the general laws of comparative ana- tomy to the reconstruction and the discovery of fossil species; when I began to perceive that these species were not perfectly represented by those of our day, which resembled them the most, I did not suspect that I was every day treading upon a soil, filled with remains more extraordi- nary than any that I had yet seen ; nor that I was destined to bring to light whole genera of animals unknown to the present world, and buried for incalculable ages at vast depths under the earth. It was to M. Veurin that I owe the first indications of these bones furnished by our quarries : some fragments which he brought me one day having struck me with as- tonishment, I made inquiries respecting the persons to whom this indus- trious collector had sent any formerly: what I saw in these collections served to excite my hopes and increase my curiosity. Causing search to be made at that time for such bones in all the quarries, and offering re- wards to arouse the attention of the workmen, I collected a greater num- ber than any person who had preceded me. After some years I was suf- ficiently rich in materials to have nothing further to desire; but it was otherwise with respect to their arrangement and the construction of the skeletons, which alone could conduct me to a just knowledge of the spe- cies. From the first moment, I perceived that there were many diff'erent species in our quarries ; and soon afterwards, that they belonged to various genera, and that the species of the diff'erent genera were often of the same size; so that the size alone rather confused than assisted my arrange- ment. I was in the situation of a man who had given to him, pele mele, the mutilated and incomplete fragments of a hundred skeletons belonging to twenty sorts of animals, and it was required that each bone should be joined to that which it belonged to. It was a resurrection in miniature; but the immutable laws prescribed to living beings were my directors. At the voice of comparative anatomy, each bone, each fragment, regained its place. I have no expressions to describe the pleasure experienced, in perceiving that, as I discovered one character, all the consequences, more or less foreseen, of this character, were successively developed. The feet were conformable to what the teeth had announced, and the teeth to the feet; the bones of the legs and the thighs, and every thing that ought to reunite these two extreme parts were conformable to each other. In one word, each of the species sprung up from one of its elements. Those who will have the patience to follow me in these memoirs, may form some idea of the sensations which I experienced, in thus restoring by degrees these ancient monuments of mighty revolutions. This volume will afford much interest to naturalists, independent of geology, shewing them, by multi- plied examples, the strictness of the laws of co-existence, which elevate zoology to the rank of the rational sciences, and which, leading us to abandon the vain and arbitrary combinations that had been decorated with the name of systems, will conduct us at last to the only study worthy of our age — to that of the natural and necessary relations, which connect together the diff'erent parts of all organised bodies. But geology will lose nothing by this accessary application of the facts contained in this volume : and thus the numerous families of unknown beings, buried in the most frequented part of Europe, offer a vast field for meditation." The reader will not fail to be struck with the expression of confidence which is uttered by Cuvier in the above passage, on the security which he felt in appealing to the immutable laws of nature, as the light which would enable him to trace the most beautiful of systems of harmony and order in this apparent chaotic mass of fragments; and he does not hesi- tate to enter further into detail on the nature of those immutable laws prescribed to living beings, to which he devoted the worship of his earliest and latest years. In the following passage Cuvier has more fully explained what he de- nominates " the immutable laws prescribed to living beings:" — "Every organised being forms a whole and entire system, of which all the parts mutually correspond and co-operate, to produce the same definite action, by a reciprocal re-action; none of these parts can change, without a change of the others also. Thus, if the intestines of an animal are organised in a manner only to digest fresh flesh, it is necessary that his jaws should be constructed to devour the prey, his claws to seize and tear it, his teeth to divide the flesh, and the whole system of his organs of motion to follow and overtake it, and of his organs of sense to perceive it at a distance. It is necessary, also, that he should have seated in his brain the instinct to hide himself and spread snares for his victim: such are the general conditions of a carnivorous regimen ; every carnivorous animal must infallibly unite them — without them the species could not subsist. But, under these general conditions, there are particular ones with respect to the size of the species, and the abode of the prey for which each animal is disposed." In this vast work on the fossil remains, Cuvier furnished to the world not only the ample results of his personal labours, in the neigh- bourhood of Paris, in different parts of provincial France, in Italy and Holland, whither he had been sent on political or educational purposes, but also the fruits of researches carried on by the naturalists of other countries, which he gathered either from their published productions or from their correspondence. The effect in the scientific world which was produced by the intimate connection demonstrated by Cuvier to subsist between Zoology and Geology, was altogether of the most useful and gra- tifying kind; and it was the fond superstition of the enthusiastic students of those branches of intellectual pursuit to believe, that the unparalleled assemblage of opportunities of which Cuvier had the command for the elucidation of this mingled science, were purposely consigned to one whose rare qualifications rendered him the only competent agent to make the proper use of them. Whilst the world's honours were thus profusely showered upon Cuvier's head, his heart was doomed to feel all the anguish which the bereave- ment of the dearest objects of life is calculated to excite. In 1812, he lost a daughter at the age of four years, and the year which succeeded swept away an only son in his seventh year. The latter calamity occur- red whilst the fatlier was fulfilling the duties of a high commission at Rome, where he proved that his philosophy was sufficient to enable him to avoid the evil consequences that usually arise from collision of creeds in matters of state importance. His services in Italy were rewarded with the appointment to the office of Master of Requests in the Council of Slate; and, in 1813, he was nominated Imperial Commissioner, and set out for Mayeuce, in oi-der to rouse the people on the left bank of the Rhine to declare in favour of France; but his journey terminated at Nancey, into which the allied army had just made its entrance, and he returned to Paris. Napoleon finally advanced him to the rank of Coun- cillor of State; but the promotion of Cuvier only took place on the eve of his master's downfall. After the restoration he was re-appointed to the same office. During the hundred days Cuvier lived in retirement; and when Louis finally came to the possession of the crown, the illus- trious Naturalist continued to receive from the restored dynasty that respect and attention which he deserved. He was made Chancellor of the University by Louis XVIII., and enjoyed office until his decease. In 1819 he was created a Baron. From the history of the career of Cuvier to this point, we learn that under every form of government his scientific merits were uniformly ac- knowledged. The republic, the imperial ruler, and the regal dynasty, alike rendered homage to his talents and his integrity. Jealous of Xn MEMOIR, Cuvier's devotion to science, all these governments sought to avail themselves successively of his assistance; and being thus compelled to enter upon the field of politics, no man could pass through the temptations and seductions with which that field abounds more free from taint than Cuvier. When called upon by authority to act the part of a political minister, he obeyed the command with the fidelity and promptitude which a sense of duty in all conscientious subjects would compel them to adopt. But here the political tendencies of Cuvier stopped: when summon- ed to appear in the arena of the Court, he neither looked to the left liand nor to the right, to select the intriguing group, with whom he should hire himself, or put up his influence and patronage to the highest bidder. He stood indifferent amid the agitations of parties around him, and saw without uneasiness that the contempt with which he looked upon their designs and their exertions had rendered him an object of hostility to them. Having been entrusted with the duty of superintendant to the educational and religious establishments connected with the Protestant community of France, Cuvier appears to have executed his functions in such a manner as that, whilst he satisfied the wishes of those whom he was appointed to serve, he, at the same time, made his arrangements agreeable to all. His good sense, his benevolent mind, his religious im- pressions, so guided and animated his whole conduct, that the very sources of animosity in most countries, religious distinctions, were converted, through his skilful exertions, into motives of charity. The first visit made by Cuvier to England was in the year 1818, and his sojourn there lasted six weeks. He saw the memorable West- minster election, which was contested by Sir Murray Maxwell; he was kindly received by the Prince Regent; he went down to Oxford, and the whole of the scientific lions of London were pointed out to him by Dr. Leach, who took great pleasure in acting the part of his cicerone ; he went to Windsor — called at Herschel's and saw the great telescope, and paid a visit to Spring Grove, where he was treated with due worship by Sir Joseph Banks. Cuvier ever after spoke with emotion of the recep- tion which he had obtained in England. It was not without good reason that the scientific circles of Great Britain were emulous in paying respect to the eminent naturalist. His work on Fossil Bones, and particularly the preliminary discourse on the revolutions on the surface of the globe, together with his volumes on " Comparative Anatomy," but above all, his " Animal Kingdom," had already established his reputation in England, and the full amount of the merit which these various productions represented was unhesitatingly ac- corded to him by the general voice of the learned in this country. The year before his excursion to England was that in which the " Regne MEMOIR. Xlll Animal" appeared; and as the first and second Prefaces of tlie author, wliich will be found in the present volume, abundantly explain the nature and objects of that great performance, and the circumstances under which it was undertaken, we do not feel ourselves at liberty to dwell upon the subject. In reference, however, to the important question of classifica- tion, it is of some consequence that we should render complete justice to the original labours of Cuvier. Those who are familiar with the works of the antient philosopher, Aristotle, will be astonished to find that, in an age so remote as that in wliich he flourished, the true principles on which the classification of animals should be effected were perfectly well understood. Mankind, at least, seem to have been contented with them, inasmuch as no attempt, from the days of that Father of Naturalists to the age of Linnasus, was ever made to alter the system of the former. The attempt made by Linnaeus to im- prove upon Aristotle, is held by Lamarck to have been successful in these respects, that the Swede uses the term mammalia, which is sufficiently distinctive — that he has put the Whales into that class — that he forms the Reptiles into a separate class, placing them between the Birds and the Fishes. If we can suppose these changes to be incorporated with the system of Aristotle, there will be very little difference between that system and the one universally adopted in modern times. It follows, therefore, that the improvement in the right distribution of animals effected by Linnsus, is comparatively trifling, and, in our view, much in- ferior in the depth and importance of its principles to that which was discovered and established by the subject of this biography, "VVliilst Aristotle exhibited wonderful judgment in his arrangements, still he had no true -notion of the laws which regulate species; he was confounded altogether by the limits of the variation of species, and here it is that the second Aristotle has been able triumphantly to succeed. Cuvier studied ardently and incessantly the nature of the conditions that allow of the developement of individuals or species in the form in which they appear, and the results of his original and wonderful labours have cast a light over the mysteries of living nature, such as discloses them in a condition in which they are most calculated for our comprehension. Ciivier, in traversing the relics of the antient world, and comparing them with the structures which compose the breathing beings of this, disco- vered the talisman which opened every locked treasure to his hand, in the simple law that every part of any animal, and in some, the very smallest portion, constitutes a certain index of the character in all respects of the rest. The successful [application of this law is one of the greatest triumphs of the genius of Cuvier. The Bourbons increased in their attachment to the illustrious natur- alist as time went on, and at the coronation of Charles X. he officiated as President of the Council. He received from that monarch the deco- ration of Grand Officer of the Legion of Honour, and to his sole super- intendence were left the whole of the religious communities of France, which were unconnected with the prevailing faith. The calamities which multiplied so unhappily in his domestic life, were increased to a degree almost beyond endurance, in 1827, by the death of the only relic of the general wreck of his children, in the continuance of whose society he had any reason to confide. His daughter Clementine had attained her twenty- second year, and had then been bound to her parents by bonds of the dearest connection. But she fell like a flower in her prime, and left her parents to seek that consolation in their aflliction Avhich can only be ob- tained from Heaven. Cuvier manifested but too tenderly, for along time afterwards, the effect of his privations. In 1830, Cuvier resumed the office of Lecturer at the College of France, and delivered a series of discourses on the progress of science in all ages, which shewed the most extraordinary erudition. In 1832, he was elevated to the rank of a Peer of France, and received the appoint- ment of President of the Council. We now approach the only repugnant portion of our task — the account of Cuvier's death. We, of course, have no other materials to refer to than those furnished by the immediate friends of the deceased, and amongst these, the report of M. Rousseau, the assistant of the Baron at the Garden of Plants, and who was in close attendance upon him during the whole of his last illness, appears to be that which deserves the greatest confidence. It appears from the statement of this gentleman, that, " on Monday the 7th of May, 1832, M. Cuvier had slight diarrhoea, with disturbance of the bowels, for which he took a lavement, with some drops of laudanum in it. On Tuesday he felt quite well, and gave his accustomed lecture at the College of France with even more than his usual energy; so much so, indeed, that he was covered with perspiration at its conclusion. The day was rather cold, and M. Cuvier walked home, contrary to his ordinary custom. He dined as vvell as usual, and in the evening attended a soiree of the Professors at the Museum, where he talked a good deal. It was on the next morning, Wednesday, that he complained of the stiffness and difficulty of moving his right upper ex- tremity; yet he attended the Council of State, and on his return had an appetite for dinner; but though he could eat his soup well enough, he was surprised to find that it was almost impossible for him to swallow any thing more solid. That night leeches were applied to the anus. On Thursday the right arm was perfectly paralyzed; deglutition was more difficult than ever; but he could walk about very well. The pulse was MEMOIR. XV normal, beating from 80 to 85 in the minute. One of the medical attend- ants, however, thought fit, in the course of the day, to bleed the patient largely: two pounds of healthy looking blood were drawn from the left arm, A mustard foot-bath was used in the evening, and a large blister applied to the back of the neck. The night was spent very restlessly; and about three, a.m., the pulse seemed so hard and full that the attend- ants were induced to repeat the bleeding, which they now did from the right arm. After this the patient's muscular powders sunk rapidly, though his nervous sensibility and intelligence were not at all impaired. On F'riday morning he was ordered a little tartar emetic, which however did not act upwards. His mouth was then observed to be filled with a copious flow of mucous saliva; and this, together with the difficulty which he felt in swallowing the emetic solution, induced the patient himself to remark that he was hke a person labouring under hydrophobia. In the afternoon, M. Du- puytren, in order to excite the action of the oesophagus and pharynx, threw into the stomach four-and-twenty grains of ipecacuanha, but no vomiting ensued. In three hours after double the quantity was employed, but without the occurrence even of nausea. At seven in the evening, a strong lavement of salt and water (saturated) was given : this produced a super- purgation. Same night two or three large 'English vesicatories' were applied along the course of the cervical plexuses, and the patient was in a most restless condition. On Saturday morning it appeared that the left leg was beginning to be paralyzed. At the patient's earnest request, some bouillon was conveyed into his stomach : he was also removed from his bed-chamber into his spacious saloon. The blisters did no good ; they did not even irritate the skin. In the course of the day he had given him some iced raspberry vinegar, and enjoyed comparative repose; but the night brought on much severe suffering. All power of motion and swallowing was now extinct. Twenty leeches were applied to the region of the mastoid processes. ' When I saw him on Sunday morning,' says Dr. Rousseau, ' it seemed as if he had grown on a sudden ten years older; his voice also was wonderfully changed.' That day (Sunday, 13th — the day of his death) the patient began to lose all hope. When any new mea- sure was proposed to him he shook his head with a desponding assent. He was cupped on the loins about noon ; and again, about eight in the evening, he was persuaded to suffer himself to be cupped below the sca- pulae. This operation fatigued him greatly. At a quarter to nine he asked the hour, and complained that his faculties were leaving him; * and, at a quarter to ten,' says Dr. R., * I observed three or four slight motions of the head and a feeble expiration, which I found had deprived the world of d man of vast knowledge and the most extraordinary genius. He died in his arm-chair, sitting erect, with his head neither inclined one way nor the other. His'figure was majestic, in the attitude of deep contemplation. So like the life did he seem, that his family would not believe the melan- choly fact; but the illustrious patient was no more.'" To Mrs. Bowditch, an intimate acquaintance of the Baron and of his family, we are indebted for the following details respecting the person and habits of this illustrious man. " In person M. Cuvier was moderately tall, and in youth slight; but the sedentary nature of his life had induced corpulence in his alter years, and his extrenae near-sightedness brought on a slight stoop in the shoulders. His hair had been light in colour, and to the last flowed in the most pic- turesque curls, over one of the finest heads that ever was seen. The im- mense portion of brain in that head was remarked by Messrs. Gall and Spurzheim, as beyond all that they had ever beheld; an opinion which was confirmed after death. His features were remarkably regular and handsome, the nose aquiline, the mouth full of benevolence, the forehead most ample ; but it is impossible for any description to do justice to his eyes. They at once combined intellect, vivacity, archness, and sweetness ; and long before we lost him, I used to watch their elevated expression with a sort of fearfulness, for it did not belong to this world. There are many portraits published of M. Cuvier, formed of various materials ; but, with the exception of the medallion of M. Bovy, the copper medal, the plaster bust, the lithographic print by M. le Meunier, and the oil paint- ing by Mr. Pickersgill, they scarcely convey any just idea of M. Cuvier's expression: in fact, some of the prints are positive caricatures." We may add, that it afi'orded Cuvier singular satisfaction in his dying hours, to reflect that the great work on which his heart was entirely bent — that performance on which he most desired to rest his claims to the respect of posterity — his Ichthyology, was in part before the public, and that the remainder would come forth under a superintendance in the value of which he entertained unbounded confidence. PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. HAVING from my earliest years devoted myself, from taste, to the study of Comparative Anatomy ; in other words, to the laws which preside over the organization of animals, and the modifications of that organization, as they are found throughout the diversified species — having, for nearly thirty years, consecrated to this science every moment which my duties left at my own disposal, I have ever kept in view, as the object of my labours, the resolution of the science into general laws, and into propositions of the simplest expression. My first essays soon made me perceive, that I could only attain this in proportion as the animals, whose structure I should have to elucidate, were arranged in conformity with that structure, so that in one single name of class, order, genus, &c. might be embraced all those species which, in their external as well as internal conformation, might have affinities either more general or particular. Now, this is what the oreater number of naturalists of that epoch had never attempted, and what but few of them could have effected, had they even been willing to try, since a similar arrangement presupposes an extensive knowledge of the structures, of which it is partly the representation. It is true that Daubenton and Camper had supplied facts, — that Pallas had indicated views; but the ideas of these learned men had not yet exer- cised upon their contemporaries the influence which they merited. The only general catalogue of animals then in existence, and the only oire we possess even now, the system of Linnaeus, had just been disfigured by an unfortunate editor, who did not even take the pains to examine the prin- ciples of that ingenious methodist, and who, wherever he found any dis- order, seems to have tried to render it more inextricable. It is no less true, that, upon particular classes, there existed some very extensive works, which described a considerable number of new species ; but then the authors of these performances scarcely carried their attention beyond the external relations of these species, and no one was found to employ himself in arranging the classes and orders according to the nature of the structure of the animals. I was compelled then, — and the task occupied a considerable period of time,— to make anatomy and zoology, dissections and classification, the pioneers of my steps ; to search for better principles of distribution in my VOL. I. ^ Xviii PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. first remarks on organization — to employ them in order to arrive at new- ones, and to render the distribution perfect — in fine, from this mutual re- action of the two sciences, to elicit a system of zoology that might serve as an introduction and a guide in anatomical investigations, and as a body of anatomical doctrine fitted to develope and explain the zoological system. The first results of this double labour appeared in 1795, in a special memoir upon a new division of the white-blooded animals. A sketch of their application to genera, and to their division in subgenera, was the object of my elementary " Tableau Elementaire des Animaux," printed in 1798, which, in conjunction with M. Dumeril, I improved, in the tables annexed to the first volumes of my " Legons d'Anatomie Comparee" in 1800. 1 should, perhaps, have contented myself with perfecting these tables, and proceeded immediately to the publication of my great work on ana- tomy, if, in the course of my researches, I had not been frequently struck with another defect of the greater number of the general or partial sys- tems of zoology ; I mean the confusion in which the want of critical acumen has left a great number of species, and even several genera. Not only were the classes and orders not in conformity with the in- timate nature of the animals, for the purpose of forming a foundation for a treatise on comparative anatomy ; but the genera, though undoubtedly for the most part better composed, presented in their nomenclature very inadequate materials, inasmuch as the species were not arranged under each of them respectively according to its character. Thus, in placing the Sea- cow (Manatus, Cuv.^ in the genus Morse (Trichechus, Z?w.), the Siren in that of the Eels, Gmelin had rendered any general proposition relative to the organization of these two genera impossible, just as by approximating to the same class the same order, and placing side by side the Sepia and the fresh water Polypus, he had made it impossible to say any thing in general on the class and order which embraced such different beings. The examples above cited are selected from the most striking of these errors ; but the number of them that existed was infinite, and, though not so easily to be perceived at the first glance, still they were not the less sources of real inconvenience. It was not enough, then, to have imagined a new arrangement of classes and orders, and to have properly placed the genera there ; it was also ne- cessary to examine all the species, in order to ascertain if they really be- longed to the genera in which they had been placed. When I came to do this, I not only found that the species were either grouped or distributed in defiance of common sense; but I saw that many of the species were by no means positively established by the characters attributed to them, or by the figures and descriptions given of them. prefacp: to the first edition. xix In some parts, one of the species, by means of synonyraes, is made to represent, under a single name, a great number, whicli are so different from each other as to be incapable of being placed in the same genus ; in others, a single species is doubled, and trebled, and appears again and again successively in divers subgenera, genera, and even sometimes in various orders. What shall we say, for instance, of the Trichechus Manatus of Gmelin, which in one single specific name comprises three species and two ge- nera; two genera, differing in almost every thing! By what name shall we speak of the Velella, which figures there twice among the Medusae, and once among the Holothuriae? How are we to bring together the Biphorae; some of which are called there Dagysse, the greater number Salp«, and several placed among the Holothurise? Thus, then, in order completely to attain the object, it was not sufficient to review the species — it was necessary to review even their synonymes, or, in other words, it was indispensable to reconstruct the system of animals. Such an enterprise, from the prodigious development of the science in late years, could not have been executed completely by any one individual, even supposing him to have no other employment, and to live the longest possible term of years. Had I been constrained to depend upon myself alone, 1 should not have been able to prepare even the simple sketch I now give ; but the resources of my position seemed to me to supply what I wanted both of time and talent. Living in the midst of so many able naturalists — drawing from their works as fast as they appeared — enjoying the use of their collections as freely as themselves — and having formed a very considerable one myself especially appropriated to my object, a great portion of my labour consisted merely in the employment of so many rich materials. It was not possible, for instance, that much remained for me to do on shells studied by M. de Lamarck, or on quadrupeds described by INI. Geoffroy. The numerous and new affinities observed by M. de Lacepede were so many traits for my system of fishes. Among so many beautiful birds, collected from all parts of the world, M. Le Vaillant per- ceived details of organization, which I immediately adapted to my plan. My own researches, employed and multiplied by other naturalists, yielded those fruits to me which, in my hands alone, they would not all have produced. Thus, by examining, in the cabinet I have formed, the anato- mical preparations on which I designed to found my division of reptiles. M. de Blainville and M. Oppel anticipated (and perhaps better than I could have done) results of which as yet 1 had but a glimpse, &c. &c. These reflections encouraged me; and I resolved on prefixing to my Treatise on Comparative Anatomy, a sort of abridged systematic table c 2 XX PREFACE TO THE FIRST I.DITION. of animals, in which I should give their divisions and sub-divisions in the greatest detail, as established both in their internal and external structure ; in which I should indicate the best authenticated species be- longing to each of the subdivisions, and in which, to increase the interest, I should add some details regarding those species that are rendered re- markable by their being so common in this country, by their utility or mischievous practices, by the singularity of their habits and their economy, by their strange forms, their beauty, or their size. In so doing I hoped to prove useful to young naturalists, who, for the most part, have but little idea of the confusion and errors of criticism in which the most accredited works abound, and who, in foreign countries particularly, do not sufficiently attend to the study of the true relations of the conformation of beings; I considered myself as rendering a more direct service to those anatomists, who require to know beforehand to what orders they should direct their researches, when they wish to solve any problem of human anatomy or physiology by comparative anatomy, but whose ordinary occupanons do not sufficiently prepare them for ful- filling this condition, which is essential to their success. I had no intention, however, of extending this two-fold view to all the classes of the animal kingdom ; and the Vertebrated animals, as in every sense the most interesting, naturally claimed a preference. Among the Invertebrata, 1 had to study more particularly the naked Mollusca and the great Zoophytes ; but the innumerable variations of the external forms of shells and corals, the microscopic animals, and the other families whose part, on the great theatre of nature, is not very apparent, or whose or- ganization affords but little room for the use of the scalpel, did not require a similar minuteness of detail. Independently of this, so far as the shells and corals were concerned, I could depend on the work of M. de Lamarck, in which will be found all that the most ardent thirst for knov/ledge can desire. As regards Insects, which, by their external form, organization, habits, and influence on all animated nature, are so highly interesting, I have been fortunate enough to find assistance, which, in rendering my work infinitely more perfect than it could have possibly been had it emanated from my pen alone, has, at the same time, considerably accelerated its publication. My friend and colleague, M. Latreille, who has studied these animals more profoundly than any other man in Europe, has kindly consented to give, in a single volume, and nearly in the order adopted for the other parts, a summary of his immense researches, and an abridged description of those innumerable genera entomologists are continually es- tablishing. With respect to the remaining portion, if I have given in some places TREFACE TO THD FIRST EDITION. Xjd a less extended explanation of the subgenera and species, tliis imperfec- tion does not hold in the portion relating to the higher divisions and the relative characters, these being every where placed on foundations equally solid, the result of researches equally assiduous. I have examined, one by one, all the species of which I could procure specimens; I have approximated those which merely diifered from each other in size, colour, or in the number of some parts of little importance, and have formed them into what I denominate subgenera. At every opportunity I dissected one species at least of each subgenus ; and if those be excepted to which the scalpel cannot be applied, there will then be but very few groups of this degree found in my work, of which I cannot produce some portion of the organs. Having determined the names of the species which I observed, and which had been previously either well described or well figured, I placed in the same subgenera those I had not seen, but whose exact figures, or descriptions, sufficiently precise to leave no doubt remaining as to their natural relations, I found in authors ; but I have passed over in silence that great number of vague indications, on which, in my opinion, natur- alists have been too eager to establish species, whose adoption is what has mainly contributed to introduce in the catalogue of animals that con- fusion which deprives it of so great a portion of its utility. 1 could, every where, have added great numbers of new species, but as I could not refer to figures it would in that case have been necessary to extend their descriptions beyond my limits ; I have preferred, therefore, depriving my work of that ornament, and have indicated those only whose singular formation gives origin to new subgenera. My subgenera, once established on undoubted relations, and composed of well ascertained species, nothing remained but to construct this great scaffolding of genera, tribes, families, orders, classes and divisions which constitute the community of the animal kingdom. Here I have proceeded, partly by ascending from the inferior to the superior divisions, on the principles of affinity and comparison, and partly by descending from the superior to the inferior divisions, on the principle of the subordination of characters; carefully comparing the results of the two methods, verifying one by the other, and taking care to establish always the correspondence of forms, external and internal, both of which constitute integral parts of the essence of each animal. Such has been my mode of proceeding whenever it was necessary and possible to form new arrangements ; but I need not observe that, in many places, the results to which it would have conducted me had been already so satisfactorily obtained, thtit no other trouble was left to me than that of following the track of my predecessors. Even in these cases, how- ever, where I had nothing more to do than they had, by new observations XXn PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. I have verified and confirmed what was previously acknowledged, and what I did not adopt until it was subjected to a rigorous scrutiny. An idea of this mode of examination may be obtained from the Memoirs on the anatomy of the Mollusca, which have appeared in the " Annales du Museum,'" and of which I am now preparing a separate and augmented collection. I venture to assure the reader, that the labour I have bestowed upon the Vertebrated animals, the Annulata, the Radiata, and many of the Insects and Crustacea, is equally extensive. I have not deemed it necessary to publish it with the same detail ; but all my preparations are exposed in the Cabinet of Comparative Anatomy in the Jardin du Roi, and will serve hereafter for my Treatise on Anatomy. Another work of considerable labour, but whose proofs cannot be made so authentic, is the critical examination of species. I have verified all the figures adduced by authors, and as often as possible referred each to its true species, before making a choice of those I have cited; it is from this verification alone, and never from the arrangement of preceding clas- sifiers, that I have referred to my subgenera the species that belong to them. Such is the reason why no astonishment should be experienced on finding that such or such a genus of Gmelin is now divided and dis- tributed even in different classes and divisions ; that numerous nominal species are reduced to a single one, and that vulgar names are very dif- ferently applied. There is not a single one of these changes that I am not prepared to justify, or of which the reader himself may not obtain the proof by recurring to the sources I have indicated. In order to diminish this trouble, I have taken care to select for each class a principal author, generally the richest in good original figures, and I quote secondary works only in those cases in which the former are silent, or where it was useful to set up some comparison, for the sake of better establishing synonjTnes. My subject could have been made to fill many volumes, but I consi- dered it my duty to condense it, by contriving abridged means of publi- catioDfe I have obtained these by graduated generalities; by never repeating for a species what could be said of a whole subgenus, nor for a genus what might be applied to an entire order, and thus is it that we ar- rive at the greatest possible economy of words. To this my endeavours have been, above all, particularly directed, inasmuch as this was the prin- cipal end of my work. It may be observed, however, that I have not employed many technical terms, and that I have endeavoured to commu- nicate ray ideas without that barbarous apparatus of factitious words, which, in the works of so many modern naturalists, prove so very repul- sive. I cannot perceive, however, that I have thereby lost any thing in precision or clearness. I have been compelled, unfortunately, to introduce many new names. PRRFACE TO TIIK FIRST EDITION. XXIU altliougli I endeavoured, as far as possible, to preserve those of my pre- decessors ; but the numerous subgenera I have established required these denominations, for in things so various the memory is not satisfied with numerical indications. I have selected them, either for an indication of some character, or from the common names which I have latinized, or finally, after the example of Linnaeus, from the mythological nomencla- ture, which are generally agreeable to the ear, and which we are far from having exhausted. In naming species, however, I would recommend the employment oi\ly of the substantive of the genus, and the trivial name. The names of the subgenera are designed as a mere relief to the memory, when we wish to indicate these subdivisions in particular. Otherwise, as the subgenera, already very numerous, will, in the end, become greatly multiplied, in consequence of having substantives continually to retain, we shall be in danger of losing the advantages of that binary nomenclature so happily imagined by Linnajus. It is for the better preservation of it, that I have dismembered, as little as possible, the genera of that illustrious reformer of science. When- ever the subgenera in which I divide them were not to be translated to different families, I have left them together under their former generic appellation. This was not only due to the memory of Linneeus, but it was necessary in order to preserve the tradition and mutual understand- ing of the naturalists of different countries*. This habit, necessarily acquired in the study of natural history, of the mental classification of a great number of ideas, is one of the advantages of that science which is seldom observed, and wliich, when it shall have been generally introduced into the system of common education, will become, perhaps, the principal one. By it the student is exercised in that part of logic which is termed method, just as he is by geometry in that of syllo- gism, because natural history is the science which requires the most pre- cise methods, as geometry is that which demands the most rigorous rea- soning. Now this art of method, once well acquired, may be applied, with infinite advantage, to studies the most foreign to natural history. Every discussion implying a classification of facts, every inquiry which demands a distribution of materials, is performed according to the same laws; and the young man who had cultivated this science merely for * Here the author inserts a paije of matter containing an explanation of the causes which induced liiin to direct the employment of several forms of type in the body of the work, and also of the classes and other divisions which were to be indi- cated by the varieties of the letter. " Thus," he concludes the paragraph, " will the reader be able, at one glance, to distinguish the most important portions in every page, and the order of arrangement of every idea, and thus will the printer have se- conded tlie author in all those contrivances which his art is capable of supplying to the faculty of the memory." — Eng. Ed. XXIV PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. amusement, is surprised, wlien he makes the experiment, at the facilities it affords him in disentangling all kinds of affairs. It is not less useful in solitude. Sufficiently comprehensive to satisfy the most powerful mind, sufficiently various and interesting to calm the most agitated soul, it consoles the unhappy, and calms animosities. Once elevated to the contemplation of that harmony of nature irresistibly re- gulated by Providence, how weak and insignificant appear those causes which it has been pleased to leave dependent on the arbitrary will of man! How astonishing to behold so many examples of fine genius consuming themselves so vainly for their own happiness, or that of others, in the pur- suit of empty speculations, whose very traces a few years suffice to sweep- , away ! I boldly avow it — these ideas have always been present to my mind in my laborious hours ; and if I have endeavoured by every means in my power to diffuse this peaceful study, it is because, in my opinion, it is more capable than any other of supplying that want of occupation which has so largely contributed to the disorders of our age — but I must return to my subject. There yet remains the task of accounting for the principal changes I have effected in the latest received methods, and to acknowledge the amount of my obligations to those naturalists whose works have furnished or suggested a part of them. To anticipate a remark which will naturally present itself to many, I must observe that I have neither desired nor pretended to class animals so as to form one single line, or so as to mark their relative superiority. I even consider every attempt of this kind impracticable. Thus, I do not mean that such of the Mammalia or of the Birds as come last are the most imperfect of their class; still less do I believe that the last of the Mammalia are more perfect than the first of the Birds, the last of the Mollusca more so than the first of the Annulata or of the Radiata, even confining the meaning of this vague expression, most perfect, to that of most completely organized. I regard my divisions and subdivi- sions as merely the graduated expression of the resemblance of the beings which enter into each of them ; and although in some we observe a sort of degeneration or transition from one species to the other, which cannot be denied, this disposition is far from being general. The pre- tended scale of beings is but an erroneous application to the whole crea- tion of those partial observations, which are only true when confined to the limits within which they were made — and this application has, in my opinion, prejudiced the progress of natural history in modern times, to an extent which it is not easy to imagine. It is in conformity with these views that I have established my general tiivision into four sections, which have already been made known in a se- rRl.FACE TO THE HuST EDITION. XXV parate Memoir. I still think it expresses the real relations of animals more exactly than the old arrangement of Vertebrata and Invertebrata, and for the reason that the former animals have a much greater re- semblance to each other than the latter bear to each other, and that it was necessary to mark this difference in the extent of their relations. M. Virey, in an article of the " Nouveau Dictionnaire d'Histoire Na- turelle," had already discovered a part of the basis of this division, and principally that which depends on the nervous system. The particular approximation mutually between the Oviparous Verte- brata originated in the curious observations of M. Geoffrey on the com- position of bony heads ; and from those I have added to them, relative to the rest of the skeleton and to the muscles. In the class of Mammalia I have brought back the Solipcdes to the Pachydermata, and have divided the latter into families, in conformity WHth new views ; the lluminantia I have placed after the Quadrupeds, and the Sea-cow near the Cetacea. The arrangement of the Carnaria I have somewhat altered — the Ouistitiss have been wholly separated from the Monkeys, and a sort of parallelism between the pouched animals and other digitated INlammalia indicated ; the whole from my own anatomical researches. All that I have given on the Quadrumana and the Bats is based on the recent and profound labours of my friend and colleague, M. Geoffrey de Saint-Hilaire. The researches of my brother, M. Fre- derick Cuvier, on the teeth of the Carnaria and the Rodentia, have proved highly useful to me in forming the subgenera of these two orders. Notwithstanding the genera of the late M. Illiger are but the results of these same researches, and those of some foreign naturalists, I have adopted his names whenever my subgenera could be placed in his genera. I have also adopted M. de Lacepede's excellent divisions of this descrip- tion; but the characters of all the divisions and all the indications of species have been taken from nature, either in the Cabinet of Anatomy, or the galleries of the Museum. The same plan was pursued with respect to the Birds. I have exa- mined with the greatest care and attention more than four thousand indi- viduals in the Museum ; I arranged them agreeably to my views in the public gallery more than five years ago, and all that is said of this class has been drawn from that source. Thus, any resemblance which my subdivisions may bear to some recent descriptions is on my side purely accidental*. • [Note added by the Author to this Preface in the Second Edition.— Eng. Ed.] This observation not having been sufliciently understood abroad, I am compelled to repeat it here, and openly to declare a fact witnessed by thousands in Paris— it is tills, that all the birds in the public gallery of the iMuseuni were named and arranged according to my system in 1811. Even such of my subdivisions as I had not yet named were marked by particular signs. This is my date. Independently of this. XXVI PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. Naturalists, I hope, will approve of the numerous subgenera I have deemed it necessary to establish among the Birds of Prey, Passerinse, and Shore-Birds; they appear to me to have thrown the greatest light on genera hitherto involved in much confusion. I have also marked, as exactly as I could, the correspondence of these subdivisions with the genera of MM. de Lacepede, Meyer, Wolf, Temminck, and Savigny, and have referred to each of them all the species of which I could obtain a very positive knowledge. This fatiguing work will prove of value to those who may hereafter attempt a true history of Birds. The splendid works on Ornithology published within a few years, those chiefly of M. Le Vaillant, which are filled with so many interesting observations, and those of M. Vieillot, have been of much assistance to me in designating with precision the species they represent. The general division of this class remains as I published it in 1708 in my " Tableau Elementaire *." The general division of Reptiles, by my friend M. Brongniart, I have thought proper to preserve, but I have prosecuted very extensive and laborious anatomical investigations to obtam my ulterior subdivisions. M. Oppel, as I have already stated, has partly taken advantage of these preparatory labours; and whenever my genera finally agreed with his, I have noticed the fact. The work of Daudin, indiiFerent as it is, has been useful to me for indications of details; but the particular divisions I have made in the genera Monitor and Gecko, are the product of my own observations on a great number of Reptiles recently brought to the Museum by Messrs. Peron and Geoffroy. My labours with regard to the Fishes will probably be found to exceed those I have bestowed on the other vertebrated animals. Since the pub- lication of the celebrated work of M. de Lacepede, the accession to our Museum of a great number of fishes has enabled me to add several sub- divisions to those of that learned naturalist, to form different combinations of several species, and to multiply anatomical observations. I have also had better means of verifying the species of Commerson and of some other travellers, and on this point I owe much to a review of the drawings of Commerson and of the dried fishes he brought with him, by M. Dumeril, which have been but very lately recovered: resources to which I added those presented to me in the fishes brought by Peron from the Indian Ocean and Archipelago ; those which I collected in the Mediter- ranean, and the collections made on the coast of Coromandel by the late my first volume was printed in the beginning of 1816. Four volumes are not printed as quickly as a pamphlet of a few pages. I say no more. * I only mention tliis, because an amiable naturalist, M. ^'^ieillot, in a recent work, has attributed to himself the union of the Piote with the I'asseres. 1 had published it in 1798, exactly as I liad made my other arrangements, so as to render them pub- lic, ill the Museum, since 1811 and 1812. PKEFACii TO THE FIRST EDITION. XXVU M. Sonnerat, at the Isle of France by M. Mathieu, in the Nile and Red Sea by M. Geoffroy, &c. I was thus enabled to verify most of the species of Bloch, Russel, and others, and to have prepared the skeletons and viscera of nearly all the subgenera, so that this portion of the work will, I presume, present to icthyologists much that is new. As to my division of this class, I confess its inconvenience, but I still think it more natural than any preceding one. When 1 some time ago published it, I put it forth for what it was worth ; and if any one discovers a better principle of division, and as conformable to the organization, I shall hasten to adopt it*. It is well known that all the works, on the general division of the Invertebrated animals, are mere modifications of what I proposed in 1795, in the earliest of my memoirs ; and the time and care I have devoted to the anatomy of the MoUusca in general, and principally to the know- ledge of the naked Mollusca, are likewise well known. The determina- tion of this class, as well as of its divisions and subdivisions, rests on my observations ; the magnificent work of M. Poll had alone anticipated me by descriptions and anatomical researches, useful to me it is true, but confined to bivalves and multivalves only. I have verified all the facts furnished to me by that skilful anatomist, and I have, I think, marked with greater accuracy the functions of some organs. I iiave also endea- voured to ascertain the animals to which the principal forms of shells belong, and to arrange the latter from that consideration ; but as to the ulterior divisions of those shells whose animals resemble each other, I have examined them only so far as to enable me to describe those admitted by Messrs. de Lamarck and de Montfort; even the small number of genera or subgenera which are properly mine, are derived from observa- tions on the animals. In citing examples I have confined myself to a certain number of the species of Martini, Chemnitz, Lister, and Soldani, and that only because the volume in which M. de Lamarck is to treat this branch, not being yet published, I was compelled to fix the attention of the reader on specific objects. In the selection and determining of these species, however, I lay no claim to the same critical accuracy I have em- ployed for the Vertebrated animals and the naked Mollusca. The excellent observations of Messrs. Savigny, Lesueur, and Desmarest, on the compound Ascidia, approximate the latter faniily of the Mollusca to certain orders of Zoophytes — a curious relation, and an additional proof of the impracticability of arranging animals on one single line. The Annulata (the establishing of which order, although not the name, belongs de facto to me) have, I think, been extricated from the confusion • The Second Edition, however, as will be seen in the Second Volume of this Translation, contains a new arrangement of the class of Fishes, whici), though pre- senting some deficiencies in precision, still possesses the advantage of not breaking in upon its natural families. — Eno. Ed. XXviii PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. in wliich they had hitherto been involved among the Mollusca, the Tes- tacea, and the Zoophytes, and placed in their natural order — even their genera have been elucidated only by my observations on them, published in the " Dictionnaire des Sciences Naturelles," and elsewhere. I shall say nothing relative to the three classes contained in the third volume. M. Latreille, who, with the exception of some anatomical de- tails, founded on my own observations and those of M. Raradohr, added to his text, its sole author, will explain in an advertisement whatever is particularly deserving of remark in his performance. As to the Zoophytes, which terminate the animal kingdom, I have availed myself, for the Echinodermata, of the late work of M. de Lamarck, and for the Intestinal Worms, of that of M. Rudolphi, entitled Entozoa; but I have dissected all the genera, some of which have been determined by me only. Besides this, there is an excellent work of M. Tiedemann on the anatomy of the Echinodermata that received the prize of the In- stitute some years ago, and which will shortly appear — it will leave no- thing to be wished for in the description of these curious animals. The Corals and the Infusoria, allowing no field for anatomical investigations, have been briefly disposed of. The new work of M. de Lamarck will supply my deficiencies*. With respect to authors, I can only mention here, those who have fur- nished me with general views, or who were the origin of such in my own mind-j-. There are many others to whom I am indebted for particular facts, whose names I have carefully quoted wherever I have made use of them. They will be found in every page of my book. Should I have omitted to do justice to any, it must be attributed to involuntary forget- fulness — no property, in my eyes, is more sacred than the conceptions of the mind, and the custom, too common among naturalists, of disguising plagiarisms by a change of names, has always appeared to me an un- doubted crime. The publication of my Comparative Anatomy will now occupy me with- out intermission ; the materials are ready, great quantities of preparations and drawings are finished and arranged; and I shall be careful in divid- ing the work into parts, each of which will form a whole, so that should my physical powers prove insufficient for the completion of the whole of ray plan, what I shall have produced will still form integral parts, and the materials I have collected be ready for the hand of him who may under- take the continuation of my labours. Jar din du Rot, 1816. * I have this moment received, I'Histoire des Poh/piers corallighies flexihles of M. Lamouroux, whieb furnishes an excellent supplement to ISI. Lamarck. t M. de Blainville has recently published general zoological tables, which I regret came too late for nie to profit by; having appeared when my book was nearly printed. PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. THE preceding preface exhibits a faithful account of the state in which I found the history of animals at the time the first edition of this work was published. During the twelve years that have since elapsed, this science has made immense progress both in the harvests which have been reaped by numerous travellers, as accomplished as they were intrepid, who have explored every region of the globe, either by means of the rich museums formed under the auspices of various governments, or by those learned and beautiful works in which new species are represented and described, and in which we feel prompted to catch their mutual relations, and to contemplate them under every point of view*. I have endeavoured to avail myself of these discoveries, as far as my plan permitted, by first studying the innumerable specimens received at the King's Cabinet, and comparing them with those which served as the basis of my first edition, in order to deduce thence new approximations or new subdivisions, and then by searching in all the books I could procure for the genera or subgenera established by naturalists, and the descrip- tion of species by which they have supported these different combina- tions. This study of synonymes has become much easier now than it was at the period of my first edition. Both French and foreign naturalists seem to have felt the necessity of establishing divisions in those immense genera, in which such incongruous species were formerly heaped toge- ther; their groups are now precise and well defined, their descriptions sufficiently detailed, their figures scrupulously exact even to the most minute characters, and very frequently of the greatest beauty as specimens of art. There now remains scarcely any difficulty in fixing the identity of their species, they had only to establish an understanding about the nomenclature. Unfortunately that object of care was the one which they most neglected; the names of the same genera and of the same spe- cies are multiplied as often as an author speaks of them, and, in conse- quence of this disagreement, the same chaos will spring up in all its former confusion, though arising altogether from a different cause. * See my Discourse before the Institute on the " Progr^s de I'Histoire Naturelle depuis la Paix maritime," published at the commencement of the third volume of my " Eloges." XXX PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. I have used every effort to compare and approximate these redundant names, and, forgetting even my own petty interest as an author, I have frequently specified names which had every appearance of being con- trived merely for the purpose of evading the acknowledgment that they were borrowed from my decisions. But for the complete execution of such a work, the very pinnacle of the Animal Kingdom, but which every day becomes more necessary, — for the discussion of evidence, and for settling the permanent nomenclature that ought to be adopted upon ade- quate descriptions and figures — for all this, a period of time would be required which I have not at my disposal, and which is imperiously de- manded by other works. It is in the " History of Fishes," which, as- sisted by M. Valenciennes, I have commenced publishing, that I intend to give an idea of what I thirk might be effected with respect to all parts of the science. Here 1 pretend to furnish only a mere abridgment, in- deed a simple sketch — happy will I be if I only succeed in rendering it correct in all its parts. Various descriptions of a similar kind have been published of some of the classes, and I have carefully studied them all, in order to perfect my own. The "Mammalogie" of M. Desmarest, that of M. Lesson, the "Treatise on the Teeth of Quadrupeds" of M. Frederick Cuvier, the English translation of my first edition by Mr. Griffith, enriched by nu- merous additions chiefly by Hamilton Smith, the new edition of the " Manual of Ornithology" of M. Temminck, the " Ornithological Frag- ments " of M. Wagler, the " Description of Reptiles," by the late Mer- rem, and the dissertation on the same subject by M. Fitsinger, were principally useful to me for the Vertebrated animals. The ** History of the Invertebrated Animals" of M. de Lamarck, and the " Malacologie" of M. de Blainville, were also of great use to me for the Mollusca. To these T have added the new views and facts contained in the numerous and learned writings of Messrs. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, father and son, Savigny, Temminck, Lichtenstein, Kuhl, Wilson, Horsfield, Vigors, Swainson, Gray, Ord, Say, Harlan, Charles Bonaparte, Lamouroux, Mitchell, Lesueur, and many other able and studious men, whose names will be carefully mentioned wherever I speak of the subjects they have described. The fine collection of engravings which have appeared within the last twelve years have allowed me to indicate a greater number of species, nor have I failed to make ample use of the opportunity. I must parti- cularly acknowledge what I owe on this score to the " Histoire of Mam- miferes" of MM. Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire and Frederick Cuvier, the " Coloured Plates" of Messrs. Temminck and Laugier, the " Gallery of Birds" of M. Vieillot, the new edition of the " German Birds" of M. PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. XXXl Nauman, the "Birds of the United States" of Messrs. Wilson, Ord, and Charles Bonaparte*, the great works of M. Spix and of the Prince IMaximilian de Wied on the animals of Brazil, and to those of M. Ferus- sac on the Moliisca. The plates and zoological descriptions of the tra- vels of Messrs. Freycinet and Duperrey, given in the first by Messrs. Quoy and Gaymard, and in the second by Messrs. Lesson and Garnot, present, also, many new objects. The same should be said of the ani- mals of Java, by M. Horsfield. Though, on a smaller scale, new figures of rare species are to be found in the " Memoires du Museum," in the " Annales des Sciences Naturelles," in the different dictionaries of the natural sciences, in the " Zoological Illustrations" of M. Swainson, and in the Zoological Journal published by able naturalists in London. The Journals of the Lyceum of New York, and of the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia, are not less invaluable ; but in proportion as the taste for natural history becomes extended, and the more numerous the countries in which it is cultivated, the number of its acquisitions in- crease in geometrical progression, and it becomes more and more difficult to collect all the writings of naturalists, and to complete the table of their results; I rely, therefore, on the indulgence of those whose observations may have escaped me, or whose works I may not have studied with as much care as would enable me to avail myself of all which they were capable of affording me. My celebrated friend and colleague, M. Latreille, as in the first edi- tion, having consented to take upon himself the important and difficult subject of the Crustacea, Arachnides, and Insects, will himself point out the path he has pursued; so that on these points I need say nothing more at present. Jardin du Roi, October, 1828. * The work of M. Audubon vipon the Birds of North America, which surpasses all others in magnificence, was unknown to me till after the whole of that part which treats of birds was printed. INTRODUCTION. iVs correct ideas respecting natural history are not very generally formed, it appears necessary to begin by defining its peculiar object, and establish- ing rigorous limits between it and neighbouring sciences. In our language, and in most others, the word nature is variously em- ployed. At one time it is used to express the qualities a being derives from birth, in opposition to those it may owe to art; at another, the entire mass of beings which compose the universe; and at a third, the laws which govern those beings. It is in this latter sense particularly that we usually personify nature, and, through respect, use its name for that of its Creator. Physics, or Natural Philosophy, treats of the nature of these three re- lations, and is either general or particular. General physics examines abstractedly each of the properties of those moveable and extended beings we call bodies. That branch of them styled Dynamics, considers bodies in mass; and, proceeding from a very small number of experiments, de- termines mathematically the laws of equilibrium, and those of motion and of its communication. Its different divisions are termed Statics, Hydro- statics, Hydrodynamics, Mechanics, &c. &c., according to the nature of the particular bodies whose motions it examines. Optics considers the particular motions of light, whose phenomena, which hitherto nothing but experiment has been able to determine, are becoming more numerous. Chemistry, another branch of general physics, exposes the laws by which the elementary molecules of bodies act on each other ; the combinations or separations which result from the general tendency of these molecules to re-unite ; and the modifications which the various circumstances capable of separating or approximating them produce on that tendency. It is purely a science of experiment, and is irreducible to calculation. The theory of heat and that of electricity belong either to dynamics or chemistry, according to the point of view in which they are considered. VOL. I. A 2 INTRODUCTION, The ruling method in all the branches of general physics consists in isolating bodies, reducing them to their greatest simplicity, in bringing each of their properties separately into action, either by reflection or ex- periment, and by observing or calculating the results ; and finally, in gene- ralising and connecting the laws of these properties, so as to form codes, and, if it were possible, to refer them to one single principle into which they might all be resolved. The object of Particular Physics, or of Natural History — for the terms are synonymous — is, the special application of the laws recognised by the various branches of general physics to the numerous and varied beings which exist in nature, in order to explain the phenomena which each of them presents. Within this extensive range. Astronomy also would be included; but that science, sufficiently elucidated by mechanics, and completely sub- jected to its laws, employs methods, differing too widely from those re- quired by natural history, to permit it to be cultivated by the students of the latter. Natural history, then, is confined to objects which do not allow of exact calculation, nor of precise measurement in all their parts. Meteorology also is subtracted from it and united to general physics ; so that, properly speaking, it considers only inanimate bodies called minerals, and the dif- ferent kinds of living beings, in all of which we may observe the effects, more or less various, of the laws of motion and chemical attraction, and of all the other causes analysed by general physics. Natural history, in strictness, should employ similar methods with the general sciences; and it doss so, in fact, whenever the objects it examines are sufficiently simple to allow it. This, however, is but very rarely the case. An essential difference between the general sciences and natural history is, that, in the former, phenomena are examined, whose conditions are all regulated by the examiner, in order, by their analysis, to arrive at general laws ; whereas, in the latter, they take place under circumstances beyond the control of him who studies them for the purpose of discovering, amid the complication, the effects of known general laws. He is not, like the experimenter, allowed to subtract them successively from each condition, and to reduce the problem to its elements — he is compelled to take it in its entireness, with all its conditions at once, and can perform the analysis only in thought. Suppose, for example, we attempt to insulate the nu- merous phenomena which compose the life of any of the higher orders of animals ; a single one being suppressed, every vestige of life is annihi- lated. Dynamics have thus nearly become a science of pure calculation; che- INTRODUCTION. 3 mistry is still a science of pure experiment ; and natural history, in a great number of its branches, will long remain one of pure observation. These three terms sufficiently designate the methods employed in the three branches of the natural sciences ; but in establishing between them very different degrees of certitude, they indicate, at the same time, the point to which they should incessantly tend, in order to attain nearer and nearer to perfection. Calculation, if we may so express it, thus commands nature, and deter- mines her phenomena more exactly than observation can make them known; experiment compels her to unveil; while observation pries into her secrets when refractory, and endeavours to surprise her. There is, however, a principle peculiar to natural history, which it uses with advantage on many occasions; it is that of the conditions of existence, commonly styled final causes. As nothing can exist without the re-union of those conditions which render its existence possible, the component parts of each being must be so arranged as to render possible the whole being, not only with regard to itself but to its surrounding relations. The analysis of these conditions frequently conducts us to general laws, as cer- tain as those that are derived from calculation or experiment. It is only when all the laws of general physics and those which result from the conditions of existence are exhausted, that we are reduced to the simple laws of observation. The most effectual method of obtaining these, is that of comparison. This consists in successively observing the same bodies in the different positions in which nature places them, or in a mutual comparison of dif- ferent bodies ; until we have ascertained invariable relations between their structures and the phenomena they exhibit. These various bodies are kinds of experiments ready prepared by nature, who adds to or deducts from each of them different parts, just as we might wish to do in our labo- ratories ; shewing us, herself, at the same time their various results. In this way we finally succeed in establishing certain laws by which these relations are governed, and which are employed like those that are determined by the general sciences. The incorporation of these laws of observation with the general laws, either directly or by the principle of the conditions of existence, would complete the system of the natural sciences, in rendering sensible in all its parts the mutual influence of every being. To this end, should these who cultivate these sciences direct all their efforts. AH researches of this nature, however, pre-suppose means of distin- guishing clearly, and causing others to distinguish, the bodies they are occupied with ; otherwise we should be continually confounding them. Natural history then should be based on what is called a system of nature — ■ a2 4- INTRODUCTION. or, a great catalogue, in which all created beings have suitable names, may be recognised by distinctive characters, and be arranged in divisions and subdivisions, themselves named and characterised, in which they may be found. In order that each being may be recognised in this catalogue, it must be accompanied by its character : habits or properties, which are but mo- mentary, cannot, then, furnish characters — they must be drawn from the conformation. There is scarcely a single being which has a simple character, or can be recognised by one single feature of its conformation ; a union of several of these traits are almost always required to distinguish one being from those that surround it, who also have some but not all of them, or who have them combined with others of which the first is destitute. The more numerous the beings to be distinguished, the greater should be the number of traits ; so that to distinguish an individual being from all others, a complete de- scription of it should enter into its character. It is to avoid this inconvenience, that divisions and subdivisions have been invented. A certain number only of neighbouring beings are com- pared with each other, and their characters need only to express their dif- ferences, which, by the supposition itself, are the least part of their con- formation. Such a re-union is termed a genus. The same inconvenience would be experienced in distinguishing genera from each other, were it not for the repetition of the operation in uniting the adjoining genera, so as to form an order, the orders to form a class, &c. Intermediate subdivisions may also be established. This scaffolding of divisions, the superior of which contain the inferior, is called a method. It is in some respects a sort of dictionary, in which we proceed from the properties of things to arrive at their names ; being the reverse of the common ones, in which we proceed from the name to arrive at the property. Wlien the method is good, it does more than teach us names. If the subdivisions have not been established arbitrarily, but are based on the true fundamental relations, on the essential resemblances of beings, the method is the surest means of reducing the properties of beings to general rules, of expressing them in the fewest words, and of stamping them on the memory. To render it such, we employ an assiduous comparison of beings, di- rected by the principle of the subordination of characters, which is itself derived from that of the conditions of existence. The parts of a being pos- sessing a mutual adaptation, some traits of character exclude others, while, on the contrary, there are others that require them. When, therefore, we perceive such or such traits in a being, we can calculate before hand those that co-exist in it, or those that are incompatible with them. The parts, INTRODUCTION. 5 the properties, or the traits of conformation, wliich have the greatest num- ber of these relations of incompatibility or of co-existence with others, or, in other -words, that exercise the most marked influence upon the whole of the being, are called the important characters, dominating characters; the others are the subordinate characters, aU varying in degree. This influence of characters is sometimes determined rationally, by the consideration of the nature of the organ. When this is impracticable, we have recourse to simple observation ; and a sure mark by which we may recognise the important characters, and one which is drawn from their own nature, is their superior constancy, and that in a long series of different beings, approximated according to their degrees of similitude, these cha- racters are the last to vary. That they should be preferred for distin- guishing the great divisions, and that, in proportion as we descend to the inferior subdivisions, we can also descend to subordinate and variable char- acters, is a rule resulting equally from their influence and constancy. There can be but one perfect method, which is the natural method. We thus name an arrangement in which beings of the same genus are placed nearer to each other than to those of the other genera ; the genera of the same order nearer than those of the other orders, &c. &c. This method is the ideal to which natural history should tend ; for it is evident that if we can reach it, we shall have the exact and complete expression of all nature. In fact, each being is determined by its resemblance to others, and difference from them ; and aU these relations would be fully given by the arrangement in question. In a word, the natural method would be the whole science, and every step towards it tends to advance the science to perfection. Life being the most important of all the properties of beings, and the highest of all characters, it is not surprising that it has in all ages been made the most general principle of distinction ; and that natural beings have always been separated into two immense divisions, the livincj and the inanimate. Of Living Beings, and Organization in general. If, in order to obtain a correct idea of the essence of life, we consider it in those beings in which its effects are the most simple, we quickly perceive that it consists in the faculty possessed by certain corporeal combinations, of continuing for a time and under a determinate form, by constantly at- tracting into their composition a part of surrounding substances, and ren- dering to the elements portions of their own. Life then is a vortex, more or less rapid, more or less complicated, the direction of which is invariable, and which always carries along molecules of similar kinds, but into which individual molecules are continually entering. 6 INTRODUCTION. and from which they are continually departing ; so that tlie form of a living body is more essential to it than its matter. As long as this motion subsists, the body in which it takes place is hving — it lives. When it finally ceases, it dies. After death, the ele- ments which compose it, abandoned to the ordinary chemical affinities, soon separate, from which, more or less quickly, results the dissolution of the once living body. It was then by the vital motion that its dissolution was arrested, and its elements were held in a temporary union. All living bodies die after a certain period, whose extreme limit is fixed for each species, and death appears to be a necessary consequence of life, which, by its own action, insensibly alters the structure of the body, so as to render its continuance impossible. In fact, the living body undergoes gradual, but continual changes, dur- ing the whole term of its existence. At first, it increases in dimensions, ac- cording to proportions, and within limits, fixed for each species and for each, one of its parts ; it then augments in density in the most of its parts — it is this second kind of change that appears to be the cause of natural death. If we examine the various living bodies more closely, we find they pos- sess a common structure, which a little reflection soon causes us to per- ceive is essential to a vortex, such as the vital motion. Solids, it is plain, are necessary to these bodies, for the maintenance of their forms ; and fluids for the conservation of motion in them. Their tissue, accordingly, is composed of network and plates, or of fibres and so- lid lamina, within whose interstices are contained the fluids ; it is in these fluids that the motion is most continued and extended. Foreign substan- ces penetrate the body and unite with them ; they nourish the solids by the interposition of their molecules, and also detach from them those that are superfluous. It is in a liquid or gaseous form that the matters to be exhaled traverse the pores of the living body ; but in return, it is the so- lids which contain the fluids, and by their contraction communicate to them part of their motion. This mutual action of the fluids and solids, this transition of molecules, required considerable affinity in their chemical composition ; and such is the fact — the solids of organized bodies being mostly composed of ele- ments easily convertible into fluids or gases. The motion of the fluids needing also a constantly repeated action on the parts of the solids, and communicating one to them, required in the latter both flexibility and dilatibility ; and accordingly we find this charac- ter nearly general in all organized solids. This structure, common to all living bodies ; this areolar tissue, whose more or less flexible flbres or laminae intercept fluids more or less abund- ant; constitutes what is called the organization. As a consequence of INTRODUCTION. 7 what we have said, it follows, that life can be enjoyed by organized bodies only. Organization, then, results from a great variety of arrangements, which are all conditions of life ; and it is easy to conceive, that if its effect be to alter either of these conditions, so as to arrest even one of the partial mo- tions of which it is composed, the general movement of life must cease. Every organized body, independently of the qualities common to its tis- sue, has a form peculiar to itself, not merely general and external, but ex- tending to the detail of the structure of each of its parts ; and it is upon this form, which determines the particular direction of each of the partial movements that take place in it, that depends the complication of the ge- neral movement of its life — it constitutes its species and renders it what it is. Each part co-operates in this general movement by a peculiar action, and experiences from it particular effects, so that in every being life is a whole, resulting from the mutual action and re-action of all its parts. Life, then, in general, pre-supposes organization in general, and the life proper to each individual being pre-supposes an organization peculiar to that being, just as the movement of a clock pre-supposes the clock; and accordingly we behold life only in beings that are organized and formed to enjoy it, and all the efforts of philosophy have never been able to discover matter in the act of organization, neither per se, nor by any external cause. In fact, life exercising upon the elements which at every moment form part of the living body, and upon those which it attracts to it, an ac- tion contrary to that which, without it, would be produced by the usual che- mical afl&nities, it seems impossible that it can be produced by these affini- ties, and yet we know of no other power in nature capable of re-uniting previously separated molecules. The birth of organized beings is, therefore, the greatest mystery of the organic economy and of all nature : we see them developed, but never be- ing formed; nay more, all those whose origin we can trace, have at first been attached to a body similar in form to their own, but which was deve- loped before them — in a word, to a parent. So long as the offspring has no independent existence, but participates in that of its parent, it is called a germ. The place to which the germ is attached, and the cause which detaches it, and gives it an independent life, vary ; but this primitive adhesion to a similar being is a rule without exception. The separation of the germ is called generation. Every organized being reproduces others that are similar to itself, other- wise, death being a necessary consequence of life, the species would be- come extinct. Organized beings have even the faculty of reproducing, in degrees vary- 8 INTRODUCTION. ing with the species, particular parts of wliich tliey may liave been de- prived— this is called the foiver of reproduction. The developement of organized beings is more or less rapid, and more or less extended, as circumstances are more or less favourable. Heat, the abundance and species of nutriment, with other causes, exercise great in- fluence, and this influence may extend to the whole body in general, or to certain organs in particular : thence arises the impossibility of a perfect similitude between the ofi'spring and parent. Differences of this kind, between organized beings, form what are termed varieties. There is no proof, that all the differences, which now distinguish or- ganized beings, are such as may have been produced by circumstances. All that has been advanced upon this subject is hypothetical. Experi- ence, on the contrary, appears to prove, that, in the actual state of the globe, varieties are confined within rather narrow limits, and go back as far as we may, we still find those limits the same. We are thus compelled to admit of certain forms, which, from the origin of things, have perpetuated themselves without exceeding these limits, and every being appertaining to one or other of these forms constitutes what is termed a species. Varieties are accidental subdivisions of species. Generation being the only means of ascertaining the limits to which va- rieties may extend, species should be defined — the re-union of individuals descended one from the other, or from common parents, or from such as resemble them as strongly as they resemble each other. But although this definition is strict, it will be seen that its application to particular in- dividuals may be very difficult, where the necessary experiments have not been made. Thus then it stands — absorption, assimilation, exhalation, developement, and generation, are functions common to all living bodies ; birth and deatli the universal limits of their existence ; an areolar, contractile tissue, con- taining within its lamina fluids or gases in motion, the general essence of its structure ; substances, almost all susceptible of conversion into fluids or gases, and combinations capable of an easy and mutual transformation, the basis of their chemical composition. Fijied forms that are perpetuated by generation distinguish their species, determine the complication of the se- condary functions proper to each of them, and assign to them the parts they are to play on the great stage of the universe. These forms are nei- ther produced nor changed by their own agency — life supposes their exist- ence, its flame can only be kindled in an organization already prepared, and the most profound meditation and lynx-eyed and delicate observation can penetrate no farther than the mystery of the pre-existence of germs. INTRODUCTION. Division of Orcjanized Beings into Animals and Vegetables. Living or organized beings have always been subdivided into animate beings, that is, such as are possessed of sense and motion ; and into inani- mate beings, which are deprived of both these faculties, and are reduced to the simple faculty of vegetating. Although the leaves of several plants shrink from the touch, and the roots are steadily directed towards mois- ture, the leaves to light and air, and though parts of vegetables appear to oscillate without any apparent external cause, still these various motions have too little similarity to those of animals, to enable us to find in them any proofs of perception or will. The spontaneity in the motions of animals required essential modifications even in their purely vegetative organs. Their roots not penetrating the earth, it was necessary they should be able to place within themselves a supply of aliment, and to carry its reservoir along with them. Hence is derived the first character of anim^als, or their alimentary canal, from which their nutritive fluid penetrates all other parts through pores or vessels, which are a kind of internal roots. The organization of this cavity and its appurtenances required varying, according to the nature of the aliment, and the operation it had to under- go, before it could furnish juices fit for absorption ; whilst the air and earth present to vegetables nought but elaborated juices ready for ab- sorption. The animal, whose functions are more numerous and varied than those of the plant, consequently necessitated an organization much more com- plete ; besides this, its parts not being capable of preserving one fixed re- lative position, there were no means by which external causes could pro- duce the motion of their fluids, which required an exemption from atmos- pheric influence ; from this originates the second character of animals — their circulating system, one less essential than that of digestion, since in the more simple animals it is unnecessary. The animal functions required organic systems not needed by vegetables — that of the muscles for volun- tary motion, and nerves for sensibility ; and these two systems, like the rest, acting only through the motions and transformations of the fluids, it was necessary that these should be most numerous in animals, and that the chemical composition of the animal body be more complex than that of the plant; and so it is, for one substance more (azote) enters into it as an es- sential element, whilst in plants it is a mere accidental junction with the three other general elements of organization — oxygen, hydrogen, and car- bon. This then is the third character of animals. From the sun and atmosphere, vegetables receive for their nutrition, water, which is composed of oxygen and hydrogen ; air, which contains 10 INTRODUCTION. oxygen and azote; and carbonic acid, whicli is a combination of oxygen and carbon. To extract their own composition from these aliments, it was necessary they should retain the hydrogen and carbon, exhale the super- fluous oxygen, and absorb little or no azote. Such, in fact, is vegetable life, whose essential function is the exhalation of oxygen, which is effected through the agency of light. Animals also derive nourishment, directly or indirectly, from the vege- table itself, in which hydrogen and carbon form the principal parts. To assimilate them to their own composition, they must get rid of the su- perabundant hydrogen and carbon in particular, and accumulate more azote, which is performed through the medium of respiration, by which the oxygen of the atmosphere combines with the hydrogen and carbon ot their blood, and is exhaled with them in the form of water and carbonic acid. The azote, whatever part of the body it may penetrate, seems al- ways to remain there. The relations of vegetables and animals to the surrounding atmosphere are therefore in an inverse ratio — the former reject water and carbonic acid, while the latter produce them. The essential function of the animal body is respiration, it is that whicli in a manner animalizes it, and we shall see that the animal functions are the more completely exercised in proportion to the greatness of the powers of respiration possessed by the animal. This difference of relations constitutes the fourth character of animals. Of the Forms peculiar to the Organic Elements of the Animal Body, and of the principal Combinations of its Chemical Elements. An areolar tissue and three chemical elements are essential to every living body ; there is a fourth element peculiarly requisite to that of an animal ; but this tissue is composed of variously formed meshes, and these elements are variously combined. There are three kinds of organic materials or forms of texture — the cel- lular membrane, the muscular fibre, and the medtdlary matter; and to each form belongs a peculiar combination of chemical elements, as well as a particular function. The cellular sulstance is composed of an infinity of small fibres and laminae, fortuitously disposed, so as to form little cells that communicate with each other. It is a kind of sponge, which has the same form as the body, all other parts of which traverse or fill it, and contracting indefi- nitely, on the removal of the causes of its tension. It is this power that retains the body in a given form and with certain limits. When condensed, this substance forms those laminae called membranes; the membranes rolled into cvlinders, form those more or less ramified tubes INTRODUCTION. 11 named vessels; the filaments, called fibres, are resolved into it; and bones are nothing but the same thing indurated by the accumulation of earth- ly particles. The cellular substance consists of a combination well known as gelatine, characterised by its solubility in boiling water, and forming, when cold, a trembling jelly. We have not yet been able to reduce the medullary matter to its or- ganic molecules ; to the naked eye, it appears like a sort of soft bouilUe, consisting of excessively small globules ; it is not susceptible of any appa- rent motion, but in it resides the admirable power of transmitting to the ME the impressions of the external senses, and conveying to the muscles the orders of tlie will. It constitutes the greater portion of the brain. and the spinal marrow, and the nerves which are distributed to all the sen- tient organs are, essentially, mere fasciculi of its ramifications. The fleshy, or muscular fibre, is a peculiar sort of filament, whose distinc- tive property, during life, is that of contracting when touched or struck, or when it experiences the action of the will through the medium of the nerve. The muscles, direct organs of voluntary motion, are mere bundles of fleshy fibres. All vessels and membranes which have any kind of com- pression to execute are armed with these fibres. They are always inti- mately connected vdth nervous threads, but those which belong to the purely vegetative functions contract, without the knowledge of the me, so that, although the will is truly a means of causing the fibres to act, it is neither general nor unique. The fleshy fibre has for its base a particular substance called fibrine, which is insoluble in boiling water, and which seems naturally to assume this filamentous disposition. The nutritive fluid or the blood, such as we find it in the vessels of the circulation, is not only mostly resolvable into the general elements of the animal body, carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and azote, but it also contains fi- brine and gelatine, almost prepared to contract and to assume the forms of membranes or filaments peculiar to them, all that is ever wanted for their manifestation being a little repose. The blood also contains another com- bination, which is found in many animal fluids and solids, called albumen, whose characteristic property is that of coagulating in boiling water. Be- sidos these, the blood contains almost every element which may enter into the composition of the body of each animal, such as the lime and phospho- rus which harden the bones of vertebrated animals, the iron from which it and various other parts receive their colour, the fat or animal oil which is deposited in the cellular substance to supple it, &c. All the fluids and solids of (he animal body are composed of chemical elements found in the 12 INTRODUCTION. blood, and it is oiily by possessing a few elements more or less, that each of them is distinguished ; whence it is plain, that their formation entirely depends on the subtraction of the whole or part of one or more elements of the blood, and in some few cases, on the addition of some element from elsewhere. These operations, by which the blood nourishes the fluid or solid matter of all parts of the body, may assume the general name of secretions. This name, however, is often appropriated exclusively to the production of li- quids ; while that of nutrition is more especially applied to the formation and deposition of the matter necessary to the growth and conservation of the solids. The composition of every solid organ, of every fluid, is precisely such as fits it for the part it is to play, and it preserves it as long as health re- mains, because the blood renews it as fast it becomes changed. The blood itself by this continued contribution is changed every moment, but is re- stored by digestion, which renews its matter by respiration, which delivers it from superfluous carbon and hydrogen, by perspiration and various other excretions, that relieve it from other superabundant principles. These perpetual changes of chemical composition form a part of the vi- tal vortex, not less essential than the visible movements and those of trans- lation. The object of the latter is, in fact, but to produce the former. Of the Forces which act in the Animal Body. The muscular fibre is not the only organ of voluntary motion, for we have just seen that it is also the most powerful of the agents employed by nature to produce those transmutations so necessary to vegetative life. Thus the fibres of the intestines produce the peristaltic motion, which causes the alimentary matter therein contained to pass through them ; the fibres of the heart and arteries are the agents of the circulation, and through it of all the secretions, &c. Volition contracts the fibre through the medium of the nerve ; and the involuntary fibres, such as those we have mentioned, being also animated by them, it is probable that these nerves are the cause of their con- traction. All contraction, and, generally speaking, every chaiige of dimension in nature, is produced by a change of chemical composition, though it con- sist merely in the flowing or ebbing of an imponderable fluid, such as ca- loric; thus also are produced the most violent movements known upon earth, explosions, &c. There is, consequently, good reason to suppose that the nerve acts upon the fibre through the medium of an imponderable fluid, and the more so, as it is proved that this action is not mechanical. INTRODUCTION. lit The medullary matter of tlie whole nervous system is homogeneous, and must be able to exercise its peculiar functions wherever it is found ; all its ramifications are abundantly supplied with blood vessels. All the animal fluids being drawn from the blood by secretion, we can have no doubt that such is the case with the nervous fluid, and that the medullary matter secretes it. On the other hand, it is certain that the medullary matter is the solo conductor of the nervous fluid ; all the other organic elements restrain and arrest it, as glass arrests electricity. The external causes which are capable of producing sensations or caus iug contractions of the fibre are all chemical agents, capable of effecting decompositions, such as light, caloric, the salts, odorous vapours, percus- sion, compression, &c. &c. It would appear then that these causes act on the nervous* fluid chemi- cally, and by changing its composition ; this appears the more likely, as their action becomes weakened by continuance, as if the nervous fluid needed the resumption of its primitive composition to fit it for a fresh alteration. The external organs of the senses may be compared to sieves, which allow nothing to pass through to the nerve, except that species of agent which should affect it in that particular place, but which often accumulates it so as to increase its effect. The tongue has its spongy papillae which imbibe saline solutions; the ear, a gelatinous pulp which is violently agi- tated by sonorous vibrations; the eye, transparent lenses which concen- trate the rays of light, &c. &c. It is probable, that what are styled irritants, or the agents which occa- sion the contractions of the fibre, exert this action by producing on the fibre, by the nerve, a similar effect to that produced on it by the will ; that is, by altering the nervous fluid, in the way that is requisite to change the dimensions of the fibre which it influences : but with this process the will has nothing to do, and very often the me is entirely ignorant of it. The muscles separated from the body preserve their susceptibility of irritation, as long as the portion of the nerve that remains with them preserves the power of acting on them — with this phenomenon tlie will has evidently no connexion. The nervous fluid is altered by muscular irritation, as well as by sen- sibility and voluntary motion, and the same necessity exists for the re- establishraent of its primitive composition. The transmutations necessary to vegetable life are occasioned by irri- tants; the aliment irritates the intestine, the blood irritates the heart, &c. These movements are all independent of the will, and generally (while in health) take place without the knowledge of the jie; in several parts, the 14 INTRODUCTION. nerves that produce them are even differently arranged from those that are appropriated to sensation, or dependent on the wOl, and the very object of this difference appears to be the securing of this independence. The nervous functions, that is, sensibility and muscular irritability, are so much the stronger at every point, in proportion as tbeir exciting cause is abundant ; and as this cause, or the nervous fluid, is produced by secre- tion, its abundance must be in proportion to the quantity of medullary or secretory matter, and the amount of blood received by the latter. In animals that have a circulating system, the blood is propelled through the arteries which convey it to its destined parts, by means of their irrita- bility and that of the heart. If these arteries be irritated, they act more strongly, and propel a greater quantity of blood ; the nervous fluid be- comes more abundant and augments the local sensibility ; this, in its turn, augments the irritability of the arteries, so that this mutual action may sometimes be carried to a great extent. It is called orgasm, and when it becomes painful and permanent, inflammation. The irritation may also originate in the nerve when exposed to the influence of acute sensations. This mutual influence of the nerves and flbres, either intestinal or ar- terial, is the real spring of vegetative life in animals. As each external sense is permeable only by such or such sensible sub- stances, so each internal organ may be accessible only to this or that agent of irritation. Thus, mercury irritates the salivary glands — cantharides irritate the bladder, &c. These agents are called specifics. The nervous system being homogeneous and continuous, local sensations and irritation debilitate the whole, and each function, by excessive action, may weaken the others. Excess of aliment weakens the power of thought, while long continued meditation impairs that of digestion, &c. Excessive local irritation will enfeeble the whole body, as if all the powers of life were concentrated in one single point. A second irritation produced at another part may diminish, or divert, as it is termed, the first : such is the effect of blisters, purgatives, &c. Brief as our sketch has been, it is sufficient to establish the possibility of accounting for all the phenomena of physical life, from the properties it presents, by the simple admission of a fluid such as we have defined. Summary Idea of the Functions and Organs of the Bodies of Animals, and of their various Degrees of Complication. After what we have stated respecting the organic elements of the body, its chemical principles and acting powers, nothing remains but to give a summary idea of the functions of which life is composed, and of tlieir ap- propriate organs. INTRODUCTION. I.") Tli8 functions of the animal body are divided into two classes : The animal functions, or those proper to animals, that is to say, sensi- bility and voluntary motion. The vital, vegetative functions, or those common to animals and vege- tables, i. e., nutrition and generation. Sensibility resides in the nervous system. The most general external sense is that of touch ; it is seated in the skin, a membrane that envelopes the whole body, which is traversed in every direction by nerves whose extreme filaments expand on the surface into papillae, and are protected by the epidermis and other insensible tegu- ments, such as hairs, scales, &c. &c. Taste and smell are merely delicate states of the sense of touch, for which the skin of the mouth and nostrils is particularly organized : the first, by means of papilla more convex and spongy; the second, by its extreme delicacy and the multiplication of its ever humid surface. We have already spoken of the ear and the eye. The organ of generation is endowed with a sixth sense, seated in its in- ternal skin ; that of the stomach and intestines declares the state of those viscera by peculiar sensations. In fine, sensations more or less painful may originate in every part of the body through accident or disease. Many animals have neither ears nor nostrils, several are without eyes, and some are reduced to the single sense of touch, which is never absent. The action received by the external organs is continued by the nerves to the central masses of the nervous system, which, in the higher animals, consists of the brain and spinal marrow. The more elevated the nature of the animal, the more voluminous is the brain and the more is the sensitive power concentrated there ; the lower the animal, the more the medullary masses are dispersed, and in the most imperfect genera, the entire nervous - substance seems to melt into the general matter of the body. That part of the body which contains the brain and principal organs of sense, is called the head. \VTien the animal has received a sensation, and this has occasioned vo- lition, it is by the nerves, also, that this volition is transmitted to the muscles. The muscles are bundles of fleshy fibres whose contractions produce all the movements of the animal body. The extension of the limbs and every elongation, as well as every flexion and abbreviation of parts, are the ef- fects of muscular contraction. The muscles of every animal are arranged, both as respects number and direction, according to the movements it has to make ; and when these motions require force, the muscles are inserted into hard parts, articulated one over another, and may be considered as so many levers. These parts are called bones in the vertebrated animals, where they are internal, and are formed of a gelatinous mass, penetrated IG INTRODUCTION. by particles of phosphate of lime. In the MoUusca, the Crustacea, and Insects, where they are external, and composed of a calcareous or horny substance that exudes between the skin and epidermis, they are called shells, crusts, and scales. The fleshy fibres are attached to the hard parts by means of other fibres of a gelatinous nature, which seem to be a continuation of the former, constituting what are called tendons. The configuration of the articulating surfaces of the hard parts limits their motion, which are also restrained by cords or envelopes, attached to the sides of the articulations, called ligaments. It is from the various arrangements of this bony and muscular appara- tus, and the form and proportion of the members therefrom resulting, that animals are capable of executing the innumerable movements that enter into walking and leaping, flight and natation. The muscular fibres, appropriated to digestion and the circulation, are independent of the will ; they receive nerves, however, but the chief of them are subdi\'ided and arranged in a manner which seems to have for its object their independence of the me. It is only in paroxysms of the pas- sions and other powerful affections of the soul, which break down these barriers, that the empire of the me is perceptible, and even then it is al- most always to disorder these vegetative functions. It is, also, in a state of sickness only that these functions are accompanied with sensations : di- gestion is usually performed unconsciously. The aliment, divided by the jaws and teeth, or sucked up when liquids constitute the food, is swallowed by the muscular movements of the hinder parts of the mouth and throat, and deposited in the first portions of the ali- mentary canal that are usually expanded into one or more stomachs ; there it is penetrated with juices fitted to dissolve it. Passing thence through the rest of the canal, it receives other juices destined to complete its pre- paration. The parietes of the canal are pierced with pores which extiact from this alimentary mass its nutritious portion ; the useless residuum is rejected as excrement. The canal in which this first act of nutrition is performed, is a conti- nuation of the skin, and is composed of similar layers ; even the fibres that encircle it are analogous to those which adliere to the internal sur- face of the skin, called the fleshy pannicle. Throughout the whole inte- rior of this canal there is a transudation which has some connexion with the cutaneous perspiration, and which becomes more abundant when the latter is suppressed ; the absorption of the skin is even very analogous to that of the intestines. It is only in the lowest ord^r of animals that the ex- crements are rejected by the mouth, their intestines resembling a sac, having but one opening. INTRODUCTION. 17 Even among those where the intestinal canal has two orifices, there are many in whicli the nutritive juices, being absorbed by the parietes of the intestine, are immediately diiFused throughout the whole spongy substance of the body : such, it would appear, is the case with all Insects. But from the Arachnides and Worms upwards, the nutritive fluid circulates in a system of closed vessels, whose ultimate ramifications alone dispense its molecules to the parts that are nourished by it ; the vessels that convey it are called arteries, those that bring it back to the centre of the circulation, veins. The circulating vortex is here simple, and there double and even triple (including that of the vena-portce) ; the rapidity of its motion is often assisted by the contractions of a certain fleshy apparatus called a heart, which is placed at one or the other centres of circulation, and sometimes at both of them. In the red-blooded vertebrated animals, the nutritive fluid exudes from the intestines white or transparent, and is then termed chyle; it is poured into the veins, where it mingles with the blood, by a set of peculiar vessels called lacteals. Vessels similar to these lacteals, and forming with them an arrangement called the lymphatic system, also convey to the venous blood the residue of the nutrition of the parts and the products of cutaneous absorption. Before the blood is fit to nourish the parts, it must experience from the circumambient element the modification of which we have previously spoken. In animals possessing a circulating system, one portion of the vessels is destined to carry the blood into organs in which they spread it over a great surface to obtain an increase of this elemental influence. When that element is air, the surface is hollow, and is called lungs; when it is water, it is salient, and is termed branchice. There is always an ar- rangement of the organs of motion for the purpose of propelling the ele- ment into, or upon, the organ of respiration. In animals destitute of a circulating system, air is diffused through every part of the body by elastic vessels called trachece; or water acts upon them, either by penetrating through vessels, or by simply bathing the surface of the skin. The respired or purifled blood is properly quali- fied for restoring the composition of all the parts, and to effect what is pro- perly called nutrition. This facility, whicli the blood possesses, of decom- posing itself at every point, so as to leave there the precise kind of mole- cule necessary, is indeed wonderful; but it is this wonder which consti- tutes the whole vegetative life. For the nourishment of the solids we see no other arrangement than a great subdivision of the extreme arterial ra- mifications ; but for the production of fluids the apparatus is more complex and various. Sometimes the extremities of the vessels simply spread themselves over large surfaces, whence the produced fluid exhales; at VOL. I. 18 INTRODUCTION. others it oozes from the bottom of little cavities. Before these arterial extremities change into veins, they most commonly give rise to particular vessels that convey this fluid, which appears to proceed from the exact point oi anion between the two kinds of vessels ; in this case the blood vessels and these latter form, by interlacing, particular bodies called con- glomerate or secretory glands. In animals that have no circulation, in insects particularly, the parts are all bathed in the nutritive fluid: each of these parts draws from it what it requires, and if the production of a liquid be necessary, proper ves- sels floating in the fluid take up, by their pores, the constituent elements of that liquid. It is thus that the blood incessantly supports the composition of all the parts, and repairs the injuries arising from those changes which are the continual and necessary consequences of their functions. The general ideas we form with respect to this process are tolerably clear, although we have no distinct or detailed notion of what passes at each point ; and for want of knowing the chemical composition of each part with sufficient precision, we cannot render an exact account of the transmutations neces- sary to effject it. Besides the glands which separate from the blood those fluids that are destined for the internal economy, there are some which detach others from it that are to be totally ejected, either as superfluous — the urine, for instance, which is produced by the kidneys ; or for some use to the animal — - as the ink of the cuttle-fish, and the purple matter of various mol- lusca, &c. With respect to generation, there is a process or phenomenon, infinitely more difficult to comprehend than that of the secretions — the production of the germ. We have even seen that it is to be considered as almost in- comprehensible ; but the existence of the germ being admitted, generation presents no particular difficulties. As long as it adheres to the parent, it is nourished as if it were one of its organs ; and when it detaches itself, it possesses its own life, which is essentially similar to that of the adult. The germ, the embryo, the foetus, and the new-born animal have never, however, exactly the same form as the adult, and the difference is some- times so great, that their assimilation has been termed a metamorphosis. Thus, no one not previously aware of the fact, would suppose that the ca- terpillar is to become a butterfly. Every living being is more or less metamorphosed in the course of its growth ; that is, it loses certain parts, and developes others. The anten- nae, wings, and all the parts of the butterfly were inclosed beneath the skin of the caterpillar ; this skin vanishes along with the jaws, feet, and other organs, that do not remain with the butterfly. The feet of the frog are INTRODUCTION. If) inclosed by the skin of tire tadpole ; and the tadpole, to become a frog, parts with its tail, mouth, and branchias. The child, at its birth, loses its placenta and membranes ; at a certain period its thymus gland nearly dis- appears, and it gradually acquires hair, teeth, and beard ; the relative size of its organs is altered, and its body augments in a greater fatio than its head, the head more than the internal ear, &c. The place where these germs are found, and the germs themselves are collectively styled the ovary; the canal through which, when detached, they are carried into the uterus, the oviduct; the cavity in which, in many species, they are compelled to remain for a longer or shorter period pre- vious to birth, the litems; and the external orifice through which they pass into the world, the vulva. Where there are sexes, the male impreg- nates the germs appearing in the female. The fecundating liquor is called semen; the glands that separate it from the blood, testes; and when it is requisite it should be carried into the body of the female, the intro- ductory organ is named a penis. Of the Intellectual Functions of Animals. The impression of external objects upon the me, the production of a sensation or of an image, is a mystery into which the human understand- ing cannot penetrate ; and materialism an hypothesis, so much the more conjectural, as philosophy can furnish no direct proof of the actual exist- ence of matter. The naturalist, however, should examine what appear to be the material conditions of sensation, trace the ulterior operations of the mind, ascertain to what point they reach in each being, and assure himself whether they are not subject to conditions of perfection, dependent on the organization of each species, or on the momentary state of each individual body. To enable the me to perceive, there must be an uninterrupted commu- nication between the external sense and the central masses of the medul- lary system. It is then the modification only experienced by these masses that the me perceives : there may also be real sensations, without the ex- ternal organ being affected, and which originate either in the nervous chain of communication, or in the central mass itself; such are dreams and vi- sions, or certain accidental sensations. By central masses, we mean a part of the nervous system, that is so much the more circumscribed, as the animal is more perfect. In man, it consists exclusively of a limited portion of the brain ; but in reptiles, it includes the brain and the \vhole of the medulla, and of each of their parts taken separately, so that the absence of the entire brain does not prevent sensation. In the inferior classes this extension is still greater. The perception acquired by the me, produces the image of the sensation 20 INTRODUCTION. experienced. We trace to without the cause of that sensation, and thus acquire the idea oi the object that has produced it. By a necessary law of our intelligence, all ideas of material objects are in time and space. The modifications experienced by the medullary masses leave impres- sions there which are reproduced, and thus recall to the mind images and ideas; this is memory — a corporeal faculty that varies greatly, according to the age and health of the animal. Similar ideas, or such as have been acquired at the same time, recall each other ; this is the association of ideas. The order, extent, and quick- ness of this association constitute the perfection of memory. Every object presents itself to the memory with all its qualities or with all its accessary ideas. Intelligence has the power of separating these accessary ideas of objects, and of combining those that are alike in several different objects under a f/eneral idea; the object of which no where really exists, nor presents it- self per se — this is abstraction. Every sensation being more or less agreeable or disagreeable, experience and repeated essays soon shew what movements are required to procure the one and avoid the other ; and with respect to this, the intelligence abstracts itself from the general rules to direct the ivill. An agreeable sensation being liable to consequences that are not so, and vice versa, the subsequent sensations become associated with the idea of the primitive one, and modify the general rules framed by intelligence — tliis is prudence. From the application of these rules to general ideas, result certain for- mulae, which are afterwards easily adapted to particular cases — this is called reasoning. A lively remembrance of primitive and associated sensations, and of the impressions of pleasure or pain that belong to them, constitutes imagination. One privileged being, man, has the faculty of associating his general ideas with particular images more or less arbitrary, easily impressed upon the memory, and which serve to recall the general ideas they represent. These associated images are styled signs; their assemblage is a language. When the language is composed of images that relate to the sense of hear- ing, or of sounds, it is termed speech, and when relative to that of sight, hieroglyphics. Writing is a suite of images that relates to the sense of sight, by which we represent the elementary sounds, and by combining them, all the images relative to the sense of hearing of which speech is composed; it is therefore only a mediate representation of ideas. This faculty of representing general ideas by particular signs or images associated with them, enables us to retain distinctly, and to remember without embarrassment, an immense number; and furnishes to the rea- INTRODUCTtON. 21 soiling faculty and the imagiiuitioii innunierahle materials, and to indivi- duals means of communication, which cause the whole species to participate in the experience of each individual, so that no bounds seem to be placed to the acquisition of knowledge — it is the distinguishing character of hu- man intelligence. Although, with respect to the intellectual faculties, the most perfect ani- mals are infinitely beneath man, it is certain that their intelligence per- forms operations of the same kind. They move in consequence of sensa- tions received, are susceptible of durable aiFections, and acquire by expe- rience a certain knowledge of things, by which they are governed inde- pendently of actual pain or pleasure, and by the simple foresight of con- sequences. Wlien domesticated, they feel their subordination, know that the being who punishes them may refrain from so doing if he will, and, when sensible of having done wrong, or behold him angry, they assume a suppliant and deprecating air. In the society of man they become either corrupted or improved, and are susceptible of emulation and jealousy ; they have among themselves a natural language, which, it is true, is merely the expression of their momentary sensations, but man teaches them to under- stand another, much more complicated, by which he makes known to them his will, and causes them to execute it. To sum up all, we perceive in the higher animals a certain degree of rea- son, with all its consequences, good and bad, and which appears to be about the same as that of children ere they have learned to speak. The lower we descend from man the weaker these faculties become, and at the bottom of the scale we find them reduced to signs (at times equivocal) of sensibi- lity, that is, to some few slight movements to escape from pain. Between these two extremes the degrees are infinite. In a great number of animals, however, there exists another kind of in- telligence, called instinct. This induces them to certain actions necessary to the preservation of the species, but very often altogether foreign to the apparent wants of the individual ; often also very complicated, and which, if attributed to intelligence, would suppose a foresight and knowledge in the species that perform them, infiuitely superior to what can possibly be granted. These actions, the result of instinct, ave not the effect of imita- ti'.n, for very frequently the individuals who execute them have never seen cnem performed by others : they are not proportioned to ordinary intelli- gence, but become more singular, more wise, more disinterested, in propor- tion as the animals belong to less elevated classes, and in all the rest of their actions are more dull and stupid. They are so entirely the property of the species, that all its individuals perform them in the same way, with- out ever improving them a particle. The working bees, for instance, have always constructed Very ingenious «2 INTRODUCTION. edilices, agreeably to the rules of the highest geometry, and destined to lodge and nourish a posterity not even their own. The solitary bee, and the wasp also, form highly complicated nests, in which to deposit their eggs. From this egg comes a worm, which has never seen its parent, which is ig- norant of the structure of the prison in which it is confined, but which, once metamorphosed, constructs another precisely similar. The only method of obtaining a clear idea of instinct is by admitting the existence of innate and perpetual images or sensations in the sensorium, which cause the animal to act in the same way as ordinary or accidental sensations usually do. It is a kind of perpetual vision or dream that al- ways pursues it, and it may be considered, in all that has relation to its instinct, as a kind of somnambulism. Instinct has been granted to animals as a supplement to intelligence, to concur with it, and with strength and fecundity, in the preservation, to a proper degree, of each species. There is no visible mark of instinct in the conformation of the animal, but, as well as it can be ascertained, the intelligence is always in propor- tion to the relative size of the brain, and particularly of its hemispheres. Of Method, as applied to the Animal Kingdom. From what has been stated with respect to methods in general, we have now to ascertain what are the essential characters in animals, on which their primary divisions are to be founded. It is evident that they should be those which are drawn from the animal functions, that is, from the sen- sations and motions ; for both these not only make the being an animal, bat in a manner establish its degree of animality. Observation confirms this position by shewing that their degrees of de- velopement and complication accord with those of the organs of the vege- tative functions. The heart and the organs of the circulation form a kind of centre for the vegetative functions, as the brain and the trunk of the nervous system do for the animal ones. Now we see these two systems become imperfect and disappear together. In the lowest class of animals, where the nerves cease to be visible, the fibres are no longer distinct, and the organs of di- gestion are simple excavations in the homogeneous mass of the body. In insects the vascular system even disappears before the nervous one ; but, in general, the dispersion of the medullary masses accompanies that of the muscular agents : a spinal marrow, on which the knots or ganglions repre- sent so many brains, corresponds to a body divided into numerous rings, supported by pairs of limbs longitudinally distributed, &c. This correspondence of general forms, which results from the arrange- ment of the organs of motion, the distribution of the nervous masses, and INTRODUCTION. S.'j the energy of the circulating system, should then be the basis of the pri- mary divisions of the animal kingdom. We will afterwards ascertain, in each of these divisions, what characters should succeed immediately to those, and form the basis of the primary subdivisions. General Distribution of the Animal Kingdom into four great Divisions. If, divesting ourselves of the prejudices founded on the divisions former- ly admitted, we consider only the organization and nature of animals, with- out regard to their size, utility, the greater or less knowledge we have of them, and other accessary circumstances, we shall find there are four prin- cipal forms — four general plans, if it may be so expressed, on which all ani- mals seem to have been modelled, and whose ulterior divisions, whatever be the titles with which naturalists have decorated them, are merely slight modifications, founded on the developement or addition of certain parts, which produce no essential change in the plan itself. In the fijst of these forms, which is that of man, and of the animals most nearly resembling him, the brain and principal trunk of the nervous system are inclosed in a bony envelope, formed by the cranium and vertebrae ; to the sides of this intermedial column are attached the ribs, and bones of the limbs, which form the frame work of the body ; the muscles generally cover the bones, whose motions they occasion, while the viscera are contain«JALI.\. These are the hot-blooded fishes of the ancients, or the cetacea, which, uniting to the vigour of the other Mammalia the advantage of being sus- tained by the watery element, present to our wondering sight the most gigantic of animals. ORDER L BIMANA. ;Man forms but one genus, and that genus the only one of its order. As his history is the more directly interesting to ourselves, and forms the point of comparison to which we refer that of other animals, we will speak of it more in detail. We will rapidly sketch every thing that is peculiar in each of his or- ganic systems, amidst all that he shares in common with other Mammalia ; we will examine the advantages he derives from these peculiarities over other species ; we will describe the principal varieties of his race and their distinguishing characters, and finally point out the natural order in which his individual and social faculties are developed. Peculiar Conformation of Man. The foot of Man is very different from that of the Monkey; it is large; the leg bears vertically upon it ; the heel is expanded beneath ; the toes are short, and but slightly flexible ; the great toe, longer and larger than the rest, is placed on the same line with, and cannot be opposed to them. This foot, then, is peculiarly well adapted to support the body ; but cannot be used for seizing or climbing, and as the hands are not calculated for walking, Man is the only true bimanous and biped animal. The whole body of Man is arranged with a view to a vertical position. His feet, as just mentioned, furnish him with a base more extensive than that of any other of the Mammalia. The muscles which extend the foot and thigh are more vigorous, whence proceeds the projection of the calf and buttock ; the flexors of the leg are inserted higher up, which allows full extension of the knee, and renders the calf more apparent. The pelvis is wider, hence a greater separation of the thighs and feet, and that pyramidal form of the body so favourable to equilibrium. The necks of the thigh bones form an angle with the body of the bone, which increases still more the separation of the feet, and augments the basis of the body. Finally, the head in this vertical position is in equilibrium on the body, because its articulation is exactly under the middle of its mass. Where he to desire it, Man could not, with convenience, walk on all fours ; his short and nearly inflexible foot, and his long thigh, would bring the knee to the ground ; his widely separated shoulders and his arms, too far extended from the median line, would ill support the upper portion of BIMANA. 04 his body. The great indented muscle, which, in quadrupeds, suspends, as in a girth, the body between the scapula;, is smaller in Man than in any one among them. The head is also heavier, both from the magnitude of the brain and the smallness of the sinuses or cavities of the bones ; and yet the means of supporting it are weaker, for he has neither cervical ligament, nor are his vertebrae so arranged as to prevent their flexure forwards ; the result of this would be, that he could only keep his head in the same line with the spine, and then his eyes and mouth being directed towards the earth, he could not see before him ; — in the erect position, on the con- trary, the arrangement of these organs is every way perfect. The arteries which iire sent to his brain, not being subdivided as in many quadrupeds, and the blood requisite for so voluminous an organ being carried into it with too much violence, frequent apoplexies would be the consequence of a horizontal position. Man, then, is formed for an erect position only. He thus preserves the entire use of his hands for the arts, while his organs of sense are most favourably situated for observation. These hands, which derive such advantages from their liberty, receive as many more from their structure. The thumb, longer in proportion than that of the Monkey, increases its facility of seizing small objects. All the fingers, the annularis excepted, have separate movements, a fa- culty possessed by no other animal, not even by the monkey. The nail, covering one side only of the extremity of the finger, acts as a support to the touch, without depriving it of an atom of its delicacy. The arms, to which these hands are attached, are strongly and firmly connected by the large scapula, the strong clavicle, &c. Man, so highly favoured as to dexterity, is not at all so with respect to force. His swiftness in running is greatly inferior to that of other animals of his size. Having neither projecting jaws, nor salient canine teeth, nor clav/s, he is destitute of oiFensive weapons ; and the sides and upper parts of his body being naked, unprovided even with hair, he is absolutely with- out defensive ones. Of all animals, he is also the longest in attaining the power necessary to provide for himself. This very weakness, however, is but one advantage more — it compels him to have recourse to that intelligence within, for which he is so emi- nently conspicuous. No quadruped approaches him in the magnitude and convolutions of the hemispheres of the brain, that is, in the part of this organ which is the principal instrument of the intellectual operations. The posterior portion of the same organ extends backwards, so as to form a second covering to the cerebellum ; the very form of his cranium announces this magnitude of the brain, while the smallness of his face shews how slightly that por- tion of the nervous system which influences the external senses predomi- nates in him. These external sensations, moderate as they all are in Man, are never- theless extremely delicate and well balanced. His two eyes are directed forwards ; he does not see on two sides at once, like many quadrupeds ; which produces more unity in the result of his sight, and concentrates his attention more closely on sensations of this kind. The ball and iris of his eye vary but little ; this restrains the ac- tivity of his sight to a limited distance, and a determined degree of light. 38 MAMMALIA. His external ear, possessing but little mobility or extent, does not increase the intensity of sounds ; and yet, of all animals, he best distinguishes the various degrees of intonation. His nostrils, more complicated than those of the monkey, are less so than those of all other genera ; and yet he ap- pears to be the only animal whose sense of smell is sufficiently delicate to be affected by unpleasant odours. Delicacy of smell must have some in- fluence on that of taste ; and, independently of this, Man must have some advantage in this respect over other animals, those, at least, whose tongues are covered with scales. Lastly, the nicety of his tact results both from the delicacy of his teguments and the absence of all insensible parts, as well as from the form of his hand, which is better adapted than that of any other animal for suiting itself to every little superficial inequality. Man is pre-eminently distinguished in the organ of his voice ; of all the Mammalia, he alone possesses the faculty of articulating sounds, its pro- bable causes being the form of his mouth and the great mobility of his lips. From this results his most invaluable mode of communication ; for, of all the signs which can be conveniently employed for the transmission of ideas, variations of sound are those which can be perceived at the greatest dis- tance, and are the most extensive in their sphere of operation. The whole of his structure, even to the heart and great vessels, appears to have been framed with a view to a vertical position. The heart is placed obliquely on the diaphragm, and its point inclines to the left, thereby occasioning a distribution of the aorta, differing from that of most quad- rupeds. The natural food of man, judging from his structure, appears to consist of the fruits, roots, and other succulent parts of vegetables : his hands of- fer him every facility for gathering them ; his short, and but moderately strong jaws on the one hand, and his canini being equal in length to the remaining teeth, and his tubercular molares on the other, would allow him neither to feed on grass nor to devour flesh, were these aliments not pre- viously prepared by cooking. Once, however, possessed of fire, and those arts by which he is aided in seizing animals or killing them at a distance, every living being was rendered subservient to his nourishment, thereby giving him the means of an infinite multiplication of his species. His organs of digestion are in conformity with those of manducation ; his stomach is simple, his intestinal canal of moderate length, the great in- testines well marked, his ccecum short and thick and augmented by a small appendage, and his liver divided only into two large lobes and one small one ; his epiploon hangs in front of the intestines, and extends into the pelvis. To complete the hasty sketch of the anatomical structure of Man requisite for this introduction, we will add, that he has thirty-two vertebrae, of which seven belong to the neck, twelve to the back, five to the loins, five to the sacrum, and three to the coccyx. Seven pairs of his ribs are united with the sternum by elongated cartilages, and are called true ribs ; the five fol- lowing pairs are denominated false ones. His adult cranium is formed of eight bones; an occipitalis, two ossa temporis, two parietalia, and tlie frontal, ethmoidal and sphenoidal bones. The bones of his face are four- teen in number, two maxillaries, two ossa mal*, each of which joins the temporal to the maxillary bone of its own side by a kind of handle called the zygomatic arch ; two nasal bones, two ossa palati behind the palate, a vomer between the nostrils, two turbinated bones of tlie nose in the nos- BIMANA. 39 trils, two lachrymals (unguis) in the internal angles of the orbits and the single bone of the lower jaw. Each jaw has sixteen teeth; four cutting incisors in the middle, two pointed canines at the corners, and ten tuber - cula-ted molares, live on each side. At the extremity of the spine of his scapula, is a tuberosity called the acromion, to which the clavicle is at- tached, and over its articulation is a point called the coracoid process, with which certain muscles are connected. The radius revolves upon the ulna, owing to the mode of its articulation with the humerus. The carpus has eight bones, four in each range ; the tarsus has seven ; those of the re- maining parts of the hand and foot may be easily counted by the number of lingers and toes. Enjoying uniform and regular supplies of nourishment, the fruit of his industry, Man is at all times inclined to the " plaisirs d'amour," without ever experiencing that irresistible and violent impetus which marks the passion in quadrupeds. His organ of generation is not upheld by a bony axis; the prepuce does not tie it down to the abdomen, and it hangs loosely in front of the pubis. Numerous and large veins which effect a rapid transfer of the blood of his testes to the general circulation, appear to contribute to the moderation of his desires. The uterus of woman is a simple oval cavity; her mamms, only two in number, are placed upon her breast, and correspond with the facility she possesses of supporting her child upon her arm. Physical and Moral Developement of Man. The term of gestation in the human species is nine months ; and but one child is usually produced at a birth, as in five hundred cases of partu- rition there is but one of twins ; more than the latter is extremely rare. The fcetus, a month old, is generally about one inch in height; when two months, it is two inches and a half; when three, five inches; in the fifth month, it is six or seven inches ; in the seventh, it is eleven inches ; in the eighth, fourteen, and in the ninth, eighteen inches. Those which are born prior to the seventh month usually die. The first or milk teeth begin to appear in a few months, commencing with the incisors. The number increases in two years to twenty, which, about the seventh year, are successively shed to make room for others. Of the twelve posterior molares which are permanent, there are four which make their appearance at four years and a half, and four at nine ; the last four are frequently not cut until the twentieth year. The growth of the foetus is proportionably increased as it approaches the time of birth — that of the child, on the contrary, is always less and less. It has more than the fourth of its height when born ; it attains the half of it at two years and a half, and the three-fourths at nine or ten years; its growth is completed about the eighteenth year. Man rarely exceeds the height of six feet, and as rarely remains under five. Woman is usually some inches shorter. Puberty is announced by external symptoms, from the tenth to the twelfth year in girls, and from the twelfth to the sixteenth in boys ; it ar- rives sooner in warm climates ; and neither sex (very rarely at least) is productive before or after that manifestation. Scarcely has the body gained the full period of its growth in height, before it begins to increase in bulk ; fat accumulates in the cellular tissue. 40 MAMMALIA. the different vessels become gradually obstructed, the solids become rigid, and, after a life more or less long, more or less agitated, more or less painful, old age arrives with decrepitude, decay, and death. Man rarely lives beyond a hundred years, and most of the species, either from disease, accident, or old age, perish long before that term. The child needs the assistance of its mother much longer than her milk ; from this it obtains an education both moral and physical, and a mutual attachment is created that is fervent and durable. The nearly equal number of the two sexes, the difficulty of supporting more than one wife, when wealth does not supply the want of power, all go to prove that monogamy is tlie mode of union most natural to our species: and as, wherever this kind of tie exists, the father participates in the education of his offspring, the length of time required for that education allows the birth of others — hence the natural permanence of the conjugal state. From the long period of infantile weakness springs domestic subordination, and the order of society in general, as the young people which compose the new families continue to preserve v.ith their parents those tender re- lations to which they have so long been accustomed. This disposition to mutual assistance multiplies to an almost unlimited extent those advan- tages previously derived by insulated man from his intelligence ; it has assisted him to tame or repulse other animals, to defend himself from the effects of climate, and thus enabled him to cover the earth with his species. In other respects, man appears to possess nothing resembling instinct, no regular habit of industry produced by innate ideas ; his knowledge is the result of his sensations and of his observation, or of those of his prede- cessors. Transmitted by speech, increased by meditation, and applied to his necessities and his enjoyments, they have originated all the arts of life. Language and letters, by preserving acquired knowledge, are a source of indefinite perfection to his species. It is thus he has acquired ideas, and made all nature contribute to his wants. There are very different degrees of developement, however, in man. The first hordes, compelled to live by fishing and hunting, or on wild fruits, and being obliged to devote all their time to search for the means of subsistence, and not being able to multiply greatly, because that would have destroyed the game, advanced but slowly. Their arts were limited to the construction of huts and canoes, to covering themselves with skins, and the fabrication of arrows and nets. They observed such stars only as directed them in their journeys, and some few natural objects whose pro- perties were of use to them. They domesticated the dog, simply because he had a natural inclination for their own kind of life. "VATien they had succeeded in taming the herbivorous animals, they found in the possession of numerous flocks a never failing source of subsistence, and also some leisure, which they employed in extending the sphere of their acquire- ments. Some industry was then employed in the construction of dwell- ings and the making of clothes: the idea of property was admitted, and consequently that of barter, as well as wealth and difference of conditions, those fruitful sources of the noblest emulation and the vilest passions : but the necessity of searching for fresh pastures, and of obeying the changes of the seasons, still doomed them to a wandering life, and limited their improvement to a very narrow sphere. BIMANA. 41 The multiplication of the human species, and its improvement in the arts and sciences, have only been carried to a high degree since the inven- tion of agriculture and the division of the soil into hereditary possessions. By means of agriculture, the manual lahour of a portion of society is ade- quate to the maintenance of the whole, and allows the remainder time for less necessary occupations, at the same time that the hope of acquiring, by industry, a comfortable existence for self and posterity, has given a new spring to emulation. The discovery of a representative of property, or a circulating medium, by facilitating exchanges and rendering fortunes more independent and susceptible of being increased, has carried this emulation to its highest degree ; but, by a necessary consequence, it has also equally increased the vices of effeminacy and the furies of ambition. The natural propensity to reduce every thing to general principles, and to search for the causes of every phenomenon, has produced reflecting men, in every stage of society, who have added new ideas to those already obtained, nearly all of whom, while knowledge was confined to the few, endeavoured to convert their intellectual superiority into the means of do- mination, by exaggerating their own merit, and disguising the poverty of their knowledge by the propagation of superstitious ideas. An evil still more irremediable is the abuse of physical power: now that man only can injure man, he is continually seeking to do so, and is the only animal upon earth that is for ever at war with his own species. Savages fight for a forest, and herdsmen for a pasture, and, as often as they can, break in upon the cultivators of the earth to rob them of the fruits of their long and painful labours. Even civilized nations, far from being contented with their blessings, pour out each other's blood for the prero- gatives of pride, or the monopoly of trade. Hence, the necessity for go- vernments to direct the national wars, and to repress or reduce to regular forms the quarrels of individuals. The social condition of man has been restrained, or advanced by circum- stances more or less favourable. The glacial climates of the north of both continents, and the impenetra- ble forests of America, are still inhabited by the savage hunter or fisher- man. The immense sandy and salt plains of Central Asia and Africa are covered with a pastoral people and innumerable herds. These half civi- lized hordes assemble at the call of every enthusiastic chief, and rush like a torrent on the cultivated countries that surround them, in which they es- tablish themselves, but to be weakened by luxury, and in their turn to be- come the prey of others. This is the true cause of that despotism which has always crushed and destroyed the industry of Persia, India, and China. Mild climates, soils naturally irrigated and rich in vegetables, are the natural cradles of agriculture and civilization ; and when so situated as to be sheltered from the incursions of barbarians, every species of talent is excited; such were (the first in Europe) Greece and Italy, and such is, at present, nearly all that happy portion of the earth. There, are, however, certain intrinsic causes which seem to arrest the progress of particular races, although situated amidst the most lavourable circumstances. 42 MAMMALIA. Varieties of the Human Species [a). Although the promiscuous intercourse of the human species, wliich pro- duces individuals capable of propagation, would seem to demonstrate its {j^ (o) Notivithstanding the high character of Cuvier, as a founder of classes, yet the arrangement established by Blumenbach of the varieties of the human species has been universally adopted. In this classification the varieties are five, viz. — I. The Caucasian, which comprehends the ancient and modem inhabitants of Europe, the Western Asiatics, or those of this side of the Caspian Sea, and of the rivers Obi and the Ganges, together with the Northern Africans. The characters of this race are as follows: — The head is nearly the figure of a globe; the forehead is high and expanded; the cheek bones are without prominences; the nose is narrow and slightly aquiline; the face is oval and straight; the mouth small, with lips slightly everted; the skin is white, and the cheeks florid; the hair is long, soft, and shining, and varies in colour, from a nut-brown to the deepest black. — There are thirty-eight crania of this variety in the Hunterian Museum, London College of Surgeons. (See F/afe I. Mammalia, Fig. 1. The portrait of Jusuf Aguiah Efendi, a Turk, and once Ambassador from the Sublime Porte at the Court of London). IL The Mongolian, commonly called the Tartarian, takes in the Finnish tribes in- habiting the colder parts of the north of Em-ope, such as the Laplanders and Esqui- maux, and also the Asiatics not included in the Caucasian variety, so that it com- prehends the Chinese, but not the Malays. The head approximates to a quadrilateral figure; the face broad and flattened, so that the parts appear to run into each other; the nose is small and flat, and the space between the eyes flat and broad; the cheek- bones are rounded and projecting; the aperture made by the eye-lids is narrow, and its line extends towards the temples, the internal angle of the eye being depressed towards the nose, and the upper eye- lid being at that angle continued into the lower one by a rounded sweep; the skin is pale olive, and the hair is tliin, black, stiff, and straight. — There are nine crania of this variety in the Hunterian Museum. (See Plate 1. Mammalia, Fig. 2. The portrait of Feodor Iwanowitsch, a Cal- muck, who was sent, when young, by the Empress of Russia to the Hereditary Princess of Baden; was educated at Carlsruhe, and became a famous engraver at Rome). II L The ^Elhio/jinn, consists of all the Africans not included in the Caucasian divi- sion, and these partake more or less of the negro character. The front of the head is compressed laterally, and looks as if the forehead were removed, being, in this respect, a perfect contrast with the globular form of the head of the Caucasian va- riety. The entire cranium is contracted anteriorly, its cavity is considerably les- sened; the foramen magnum, and the condyles at its circumference, are placed farther back towards the occipital region; there is great developement of the face, and great prominence of the jaws, particularljr of their alveolar margins and teeth, the upper incisors are oblique; the chin recedes, and the zygomatic arch projects to- wards the front; the skin is brown, black, and sometimes yellow, and the hair is deep black, crisp, and curly. — There are ten crania of this variety in the Hunterian Museum. (See Plate I. Mammalia, Fig. 3. The portrait of J. J. E. Capitein, a negro, who received holy orders in Holland). IV. The Americati, includes all the inhabitants of the vast continent of Nortli and South America, excepting those of the northern part of the continent, and some of the islands, paiticularly the Caribbee. The cheeks are broad, but the malar bones are more rounded and arched than in the ^Mongolian race; the forehead is small and low; the orbits of tlie eye are unusually deep, and the nasal cavity is very large. The Caribs were in the habit of lowering the forehead by employing artificial pres- sure on the head in early infancy; hence, in this community, the characteristic feature of the American variety, the low forehead, is much more strikingly marked than in any other class of Americans. — There are five crania of this variety in the Hunterian Museum. (See Plate I. Mammalia, Fig. 4. The portrait of Thay Endaneega, a chief of the Mohawks, or Six Nations). \ . The Malay, embraces the whole of the natives of the numerous Asiatic islands, and of those of the Pacific Ocean, New Zealand, New Holland, &c. Their head is BIMANA. 43 unity, certain hereditary peculiarities of conformation are observed, which constitute what are termed races. Three of tliem in particular appear very distinct — the Caucasian or white', the IMomjolian or yellow, and the Ethiopian or negro. The Caucasian, to which we belong, is distinguished by the beauty of the oval formed by his head, varying in complexion and the colour of the hair. To this variety, the most highly civilized nations, and those which have generally held all others in subjection, are indebted for their origin. The Mongolian is known by his high cheek bones, flat visage, narrow and oblique eyes, straight black hair, scanty beard and olive complexion. Great empires have been established by this race in China and Japan, and their conquests been extended to this side of the Great Desert. In civi- lization, however, it has always remained stationary. The Negro race is confined to the south of mount Atlas ; it is marked by a black complexion, crisped or woolly hair, compressed cranium, and a flat nose. The projection of the lower parts of the face, and the thick lips, evidently approximate it to the monkey tribe : the hordes of wliicli it consists have always remained in the most complete state of utter bar- barism. The race from which we are descended has been called Caucasian, be- cause tradition and the filiation of nations seem to refer its origin to that group of mountains situated between the Caspian and Black seas, whence, as from a centre, it has been extended like the radii of a circle. Various nations in the vicinity of Caucasus, the Georgians and Circassians, are still considered the handsomest on earth. The principal ramifications of this race may be distinguished by the analogies of language. The Ar- menian or Syrian branch, stretching to the south, produced the Assyrians, the Chaldeans, the hitherto untameable Arabs, who, after Mahomet, were near becoming masters of the world; the Phoenicians, Jews, and Abyssini- ans, which Avere Arabian colonies ; and most probably the Egyptians. It is from this branch, always inclined to mysticism, that have sprung the most widely extended forms of religion — the arts and literature have some- times flourished among its nations, but always enveloped in a strange dis- guise and figurative style. The Indian, German, and Pelasgic branch is much more extended, and was much earlier divided : notwithstanding which, the most numerous affi- nities may be observed between its four principal languages — the Sanscrit, the present sacred language of the Hindoos, and the parent of the greater number of the dialects of Hindostan ; the ancient language of the Pelasgi, common mother of the Greek, Latin, many tongues that are extinct, and of all those of the south of Europe ; the Gothic or Teutonic, from which are derived the languages of the north and north-west of Europe, such as the German, Dutch, English, Danish, Swedish, and other dialects; and moderately narrowed; the forehead is slightly arched; the face is large, and all its parts are fully developed ; the jaws are more or less prominent ; the skin is tawny, or clear mahogany or chesnut brown; the hair is black, soft, and curled. — There are thirty-four crania of this variety in the Hunterian Museum. (See Plate I. Mam- malia, Fig. 5. The portrait of Omai, a native of Ulietea, one of the Society Islands, brought to Enghmd in 177.'?, and carried back by Cook). — Eng. Ed. 44 MAMMALIA. finally, the Sclavonian, from which spring those of the north-east, the Rus- sian, Polish, Bohemian, &c. It is by this great and venerable branch of the Caucasian stock, that philosophy, the arts, and the sciences have been carried to the greatest perfection, and remained in the keeping of the nations which compose it for more than three thousand years. It was preceded in Europe by the Celts, who came from the north, whose tribes, once very numerous, are now confined to its most eastern extremity, and by the Cantabrians, who passed from Africa into Spain, now confounded with the many nations whose posterity have intermingled in that peninsula. The ancient Persians originate from the same source as the Indians, and their descendants to the present hour bear great marks of resemblance to the people of Europe, The predatory tribes of the Scythian and Tartar branch, extending at first to the north and north-east, always wandering over the immense plains of those countries, returned only to devastate the happier abodes of their more civilized brethren. The Scythians, who, at so remote a period, made irruptions into upper Asia ; the Parthians, who there destroyed the Greek and Roman domination; the Turks, who there subverted that of the Arabs, and subjugated in Europe the unfortunate remnant of the Grecian people, all swarmed from this prolific branch. The Finlanders and Hun- garians are tribes of the same division, which have strayed among the Sclavonic and Teutonic nations. Their original country, to the north and north-east of the Caspian sea still contains inhabitants who have the same origin, and speak similar languages, but mingled with other petty nations, variously descended, and of different languages. The Tartars remained unmixed longer than the others in the country included between the mouth of the Danube to beyond the Irtisch, from which they so long menaced Russia, and where they have finally been subjugated by her. The Mon- goles, however, have mingled their blood with that of those they con- quered, many traces of which may still be found among the inhabitants of lesser Tartary. It is to the east of this Tartar branch of the Caucasian race that the Mongolian race begins, whence it extends to the eastern ocean. Its branches, the Calmucs, &c., still wandering shepherds, are constantly tra- versing the desert. Thrice did their ancestors, under Attila, Genghis, and Tamerlane, spread far the terror of their name. The Chinese are the earliest and most civilized branch, not only of this race, to which they belong, but of all the nations upon earth. A third branch, the Mant- chures, recently conquered and still govern China. The Japanese, Co- reans, and nearly all the hordes which extend to the north-east of Siberia, subject to Russia, are also to be considered, in a great measure, as ori- ginating from this race ; and such also is esteemed the fact, with regard to the original inhabitants of various islands of that Archipelago. With the exception of a few Chinese literati, the different nations of the Mongoles are universally addicted to Buddism, or the religion of Fo. The origin of this great race appears to have been in the mountains of Atlai, but it is impossible to trace the filiation of its different branches with the same certainty as we have done those of the Caucasian. The history of these wandering nations is as fugitive a? their establishments; BIMANA. 45 and that of the Chinese, confined exclusively to their own empire, gives us nothing satisfactory with respect to their neighbours. The affinities of their languages are also too little known to direct us in this labyrinth. The languages of the north of the Peninsula beyond the Ganges, as well as that of Thibet, are somewhat allied to the Chinese, at least in their monosyllabic structure, and the people who speak them have features somewhat resembling other Mongoles. The south of this Peninsula, how- ever, is inhabited by Malays, v.'hose forms approximate them much nearer to the Indians, whose race and language are extended over all the coasts of the islands of the Indian Archipelago. The innumerable little islands of the southern ocean are also peopled by a handsome race, nearly allied to the Indians, whose language is very similar to the Malay ; in the inte- rior of the largest of these islands, particularly in the wilder portions of it, is another race of men with black complexions, crisped hair, and negro faces, called Alfourous. On the coast of New Guinea, and in the neigh- bouring islands, we find other negroes, nearly similar to those of the east- ern coast of Africa, named Papuas * ; to the latter, are generally referred the people of Van-Diemen's land, and those of New Holland to the Alfourous. These Malays, and these Papuas are not easily referable to either of the three great races of which we have been speaking; but, can the former be clearly distinguished from their neighbours, the Caucasian Hindoos and the Mongolian Chinese? As for us, we confess we cannot discover any sufficient characteristics in them for that purpose. Are the Papuas ne- groes, which may formerly have strayed into the Indian ocean ? We pos- sess neither figures nor descriptions sufficiently precise to enable us to answer this question. The northern inhabitants of both continents, the Samoiedes, the Lap- landers, and the Esquimaux, spring, according to some, from the Mongo- lian race, while others assert that they are mere degenerate offsets from the Scythian and Tartar branch of the Caucasian stock. We have not yet been able to refer the Americans to any of the races of the eastern continent ; still, they have no precise or constant character which can entitle them to be considered as a particular one. Their cop- per-coloured complexion is not sufficient ; their generally black hair and scanty beard would induce us to refer them to the Mongoles, if their de- fined features, projecting nose, large and open eye, did not oppose such a theory, and correspond with the features of the European. Their lan- guages are as numberless as their tribes, and no demonstrative analogy has as yet been obtained, either with each other, or with those of the old world -|~, * With respect to the various nations of the Indian and Pacific oceans, see the dissertation of Messrs. Lesson and Garnet in the Zoologie du Voyage de la Coquille, p. 1 — 113. For the languages of the Asiatics and their affinities, consult the Asia Polyglotta of M. Klaproth. t See the Voyage de M. de Humboldt, and the dissertations of Vater and Mitcliill. 4G MAMMALIA. ORDER II. QUADRUMANA. Independently of the anatomical details which distinguish it from man, and which have been given, this family differs from our species in a very remarkable way. All the animals belonging to it have the toes of the hind feet free and opposable to the others, and the toes are all as long and flexible as fingers. In consequence of this, the whole species climb trees with the greatest facility, while it is only with pain and difficulty they can stand and walk upright; their foot then resting on its outer edge only, and their narrow pelvis being unfavourable to an equilibrium. They all have intestines very similar to those of man ; the eyes directed forwards, the mammse on the breast, the penis pendent. The brain has three lobes on each side, the posterior of which covers the cerebellum, and the tem- poral fossEe are separated from the orbits by a bony partition. In every thing else, however, they gradually lessen in resemblance to him, by as- suming a muzzle more and more elongated, and a tail and a gait more like that of quadrupeds. Notwithstanding this, the freedom of their arms and the complication of their hands allow them all to perform many of the ac- tions of man as well as to imitate his gestures. They have long been divided into two genera, the Monkeys and the Lemurs, which, by the multiplication of secondary forms, have now be- come two small families, between which we must place a third genus, that of the Ouistitis, as it is not conveniently referable to the one or the other. Si MI A, Lin. The monkeys are all quadrumana, which have four straight incisors in each jaw, and flat nails on all the extremities-; two characters which ap- proximate them more nearly to man than the subsequent genera ; their molares have also blunt tubercles like ours, and their food consists chiefly of fruits. Their canine teeth, however, being longer than the rest, sup- ply them with a weapon we do not possess, and which require a hoUow in the opposite jaw, to receive them when the mouth is closed. They may be divided, from the number of their molar teeth, into two prin- cipal subgenera, which are again subdi^dded into numerous groups*. The * Buffon subdivided the monkeys into five tribes : the true monkeys, without tails ; the baboons, with short tails; the guenons, with long tails and callous buttocks; the sapajoHs, with long prehensile tails and no callus; the sagouins, with long tails, not prehensile and without callus. Erxleben, adopting this division, translated these names by simia, papio, cercopitliecus, cebus, and callithrix. Thus it is, that the names QUAURUMANA. ^7 Monkeys, properly so called, Or those of the eastern continent, have the same number of grinders as Man, but otherwise differing from each other by cliaracters, which liave formed the grounds of the following subdivisions : — The SiMiA, Erxl. — PiTHECus, Gcoffr. The Ourangs* are the only monkeys of the ancient continent which have no callus on the buttock ; their liyoid bone, liver, and ccecum resem- ble those of Man. Their nose is not prominent, they have no cheek- pouches, nor a vestige of a tail. Some of them have arms long enough to reach the ground when standing — their legs, on the contrary, are very short. S. safyrtis, L, ; Audeb., pi. 2; Fr. Cuv. pi. 2. (The Ourang- Outang-j-.) Of all animals, this Ourang is considered as approach- ing most nearly to Man in the form of his head, height of forehead, and volume of brain ; but the exaggerated description of some au- thors respecting this resemblance, are partly to be attributed to the cebus and callithrix, by which the antieiits designated monkeys of Africa and India, have been transferred to those of America. The genus Papio, founded solely on the shortness of the tail, could not be retained, as it violated natural affinities, and all the others required subdividing. It was also necessary to abolish the genus Ouistitis, which was comprised in that of the Sagonins, but which does not altogether corres- pond with the common characters of the other monkeys. * Orang (a) is a Malay word signifying riasonable being, which is applied to man, the onrang-outang, and the elephant. Outang means wild, or of the woods; hence Wild Man of the Woods. f The only good figure of the Ourang- Outang we had for a long time was that of Vosniaer, taken from a living specimen at the Hague. That of Biiflbn, Suppl. VIII. pi. 1, is every way erroneous; that of Allamand (Bufi'. d'Holl. XV. pi. 11,) is some- what better — it was copied in Schreber, pi. 2, B. That of Camper, copied ib., pi. 2, C, is tolerably exact, but is easily discovered to have been taken from the dead body. Bontius, Med. Ind. 84, gives a completely ideal one, although Linnasus took it for the type of his Troglodyte (Amaen. Ac. VJ, pi. 1, § 1). There ai-e some good ones in Griffith, and in Krusenstern's Voyage, pi. 94 and 95, but all of them fi-om young subjects. ^jl^ (a) The species which constitute the sub-genus "Orangs" of Cuvier,'are sepa- rated into two sub-genera by Geoffroy, who makes the Simla Satynis the type of his first sub-genus, Pithecus; and Simla Troglodytes that of his second sub-genus, Troglo- dj'tes. Besides the distinctions between these two species, described by both Cuvier and Geoffroy, there are two others, which may be easily ascertained on an examina- tion of the skeletons of both. In the Pithecus, or Simia SatjTus, the ribs are of the same number as those of the human body, namely, twelve on each side. But, in the Simia Troglodytes, the ribs on each side are thirteen, the extra pair being arti- culated with the first lumbar vertebra on each side. Between the sternum (breast- bone) of the two apes, a striking difference also prevails. That of the Simia Satyrus is much broader in proportion to its length; and the second, third, fourth, and fifth bones which compose it, are divided longitudinally into two parallel rows, the sepa- rate portions alternating with each other, leaving an indented suture between them, which is peculiarly manifest in the young animal. Now, in the Simia Troglodj'tes, the sternum is simply divided, in tlie ordinary way, into five separate portions which are entire; it is altogether much narrower or more compressed laterally than it is in the former species. (See several specimens in the Museum of the College of Sur- geons, in London. — See, also, specimens in the British Museum). — Eng. Ed. 48 MAMMALIA. fact of their being drawn from young individuals only ; and there is every reason to believe, that, with age, their muzzle becomes much more prominent. The body is covered with coarse red hair, the face blueish, and the hinder thumbs very short compared with the toes. His lips are susceptible of a singular elongation, and possess great mobility. His history has been much disfigured by mingling it with that of the other great monkeys, that of the Chimpanse, in particu- lar. After a strict and critical examination, I have ascertained that the Ourang-Outang inhabits the most eastern countries only, such as Malabar, Cochin China, and particularly the great island of Borneo, whence he has been occasionally brought to Europe by the way of Java. When young, and such as he appears to us in his captivity, he is a mild and gentle animal, easily rendered tame and affection- ate, which is enabled by his conformation to imitate many of our ac- tions, but whose intelligence does not appear to be as great as is reported, not much sui-passing even that of the Dog. Camper dis- covered, and has well described two membranous sacs in this animal which communicate with the glottis, that produce a hoarseness of his voice — he was mistaken, however, in imagining that the nails are always wanting on his hinder thumbs. There is a monkey in Borneo, hitherto known only by his skeleton, called the Potigo*, which so closely resembles the Ourang-Outang in the proportions of all his parts, and by the arrangement of the fora- mina and sutures of the head, that, notwithstanding the great pro- minence of the muzzle, the smallness of the cranium, and the height of the branches of the lower jaw, we are tempted to consider him an adult — if not of the species of the Ourang-Outang, at least of one very nearly allied to it. The length of the arms, that of the apo- physes of the cervical vertebree, and the tuberosity of his calcaneum, may enable him to assume the vertical position, and walk upon two feet. He is the largest monkey known, and in size is nearly equal to Man. Mr. J. Harwood, in the Trans. Lin. Soc. XV. p. 471, describes the feet of an ourang, fifteen English inches in length. This an- nounces a very great stature in the animal to which they belonged, and would have led him to the belief that the Pongo is the adult Ourang-Outang, were it not that the skeleton of the Pongo in the College of Surgeons, at London, has one lumbar vertebra more than those of the Ourangs. This, however, is no objection — the same variation is frequently observed in the human subject. The arras of the remaining Ourangs reach only to the knee. They * Audeb. Singes, pi. anat. 2. This name of Pongo, a corruption of Boggo, which is given in Africa to the Chimpanse, or to the Mandrill, was applied by Buffon to a pretended large species of Ourang-Outang — the mere imaginary product of his com- binations. Wurmb, a naturalist of Batavia, has transferred it to this animal, which he was the first to describe, and of which BufTon never had any idea. See Mem. of the Soc. of Batavia, vol. ii. p. 245. The thought, that it might be an adult Ourang, struck me on examining the head of an ordinary Ourang, whose muzzle projected much more than those of the very young specimens hitherto described. T described it in a memoir read before the Acad, des Sciences in 1818. Tilesius and Rudolphi appear also to have had it. See the Mem. of the Acad, of Berlin, 1824, p. 131. QUADRUMANA. 4-9 liave no forehead, and the cranium retreats from the crest of the eye-brow. The name of Chimpanses might be exclusively applied to them. S. troglodytes, L. (The Chimpanse)* is covered with black or brown hair. Could any reliance be placed on the accounts of tra- vellers, this animal must be equal or superior to man in stature, but no part of it hitherto seen in Europe indicates this extraordinary size. It inhabits Guinea and Congo, lives in troops, constructs huts of leaves and sticks, arms itself with clubs and stones, and thus re- pulses men and elephants; pursues and abducts, as is said, negro women, &c. Naturalists have generally confounded it with the Ourang-Outang. When domesticated he soon learns to walk, sit, and eat like a man. We now separate the Gibbons from tlie Ou- rangs. HiLOBATES, Illig. The Gibbons have the long arms of the true Ourangs, and the low fore- head of the Chimpanse, along with the callous buttocks of the Guenons, differing however from the latter in having no tail or cheek-pouch. They all inhabit the most remote parts of India. S. lar. L. ; Buff. XIV. 2 ; Onko, Fred. Cuv. pi. 5 and 6, (the Black Gibbon) is covered with coarse black hairs, and has a whitish circle round his face. H. acjilis, Fred. Cuv. pi. 3 and 4 ; Petit Gibbon of BufFon, XIV. 3, (the Browi Gibbon) is brown — the circle round the face is of a pale red; the lower part of the back is of the same colour. The young are of a uniform yellowish white — it is very agile, ami lives in pairs — its Malay name, Wouwou, is taken from its cry. iS. leucisca, Schreber, pi. 3, B, (the Cinereous Gibbon) is covered with a soft and ash-coloured wool. The visage is black — lives among the reeds, and climbs to the tops of the highest branches of the bam- boos, where it balances itself by its long arms. We might separate from the other Gibbons the Siamang. S. syndactila, Raff., Fred. Cuv., pi. 2, (the Siamang) has the second and third toes of the hind foot united by a narrow membrane, the whole length of the first phalanx. It is black — the chin and eyebrows red — lives in numerous troops, which are led by courageous and vigilant chiefs, which, at sunrise and sunset, make the forest ring with the most frightful cries. Their larynx has a membranous sac connected with it. All the ensuing monkeys of the eastern continent have the liver divided * This is the Quojas moron, or the Satyr of Angola, of Tulpius, who gives a bad figure of it, (Obs. Med., p. 271), and the I'ygmy, much better represented by Tyson, (Anat. of a Pygmy, pi. 1), copied by Schreber, pi. 1, B. Scotin had given a toler- able drawing of it, copied Amaen. Acad. VI. pi. 1, fig. 3, and Schreber, 1, C. An in- dividual that lived with Bufron, and which is still preserved in the ^Museum, is repre- sented, though badly, in tlie Hist. Nat. XIV. 1, where he is called Jocko. The same specimen is much better in Lecat (Traitfe du Mouv. Muscl. pi. 1, fig. 1), under the name Quimpcse. Audebert gives the same, but from the stuffed specimen only — he calls it Pongo. vol.. I. E 50 iMAMMALIA. into several lobes; the caecum tliick, short, and without any appendage; the hyoid bone has the form of a shield. Cercopithecus, ErxL, partim. Tlie long-tailed monkeys* have a moderately prominent muzzle (of 60") : cheek-pouches; tail; callosities on the buttocks; the last of the inferior molares with four tubercles like the rest. Numerous species, of every variety of size and colour, abound in Africa, live in troops, and do much damage to the gardens and fields under cultivation. They are easily tamed. Simia rubra, Gm. ; Buff. XIV. 30 ; Fred. Cuv. 24. (The Pa- tras). Red fawn colour above, whitish below , a black band over the • eyes, sometimes surmounted with white — from Senegal. Simm cethiops, L. ; Buff. XIV. 32; Fred. Cuv. 25. (The Col- lared Mangabey). A chocolate brown above ; below and the nape of the neck, whitish ; on the head a cap or coif of a lively red ; eye-lids white. Buffon says it is from INIadagascar, and Hasselquist from Senegal; and in fact Sonnerat declares, there are no monkeys in Madagascar. Simla fuliginosa, Geoff.; Buff. XIV. 32; Fred. Cuv. 25. (The Mangabey). A chocolate brown, uniform above, fawn coloured be- low; eye-lids white. Buffon says it is from Madagascar, and he believes it to be a variety of the preceding. Simia sabcea, Lin. ; Buff. XIV. 37 ; Fred. Cuv. 19. (The Green Monkey)-}-. It is greenish above, whitish beneath; face black; the tufts on the cheeks yellowish ; tip of the tail yeUow. From Senegal. Simia faunuSjGva. ; Malbrouc, B\iW.X.lY. 29; Simia cynosorus, Scopol.; Schr. pi. 14, C; Fred. Cuv. pi. 22, var. of the callithrix; Audeb. 4th fam. 2dsect.pl. 5%. Greenish above; limbs ash-co- loured ; face flesh-coloured ; no yellow on the tail ; one black, and one white band over the eye-brows; scrotum of a beautiful ultra- marine. Simia erythropyga, Fred. Cuv. pi. 21. (The Vervet) differs from the Malbrouc in the scrotum ; which is surrounded with Avhite hairs, the anus with red ones ; and from the Grivet {S. grisea) Fred. Cuv. 21, by a green scrotum, encircled with fawn-coloured hairs. Simla melarhina, Fred. Cuv. pi. 18; Buff. XIV. pi. 10. (The Talapoin). Greenish above ; tufts of the cheek yellowish ; a black nose in the middle of a flesh-coloured face. Sim. mona and *S'. monacha, Schreb. ; Buff. XIV. 3G; Fred. Cuv. 13. (The Mona). Body brown; limbs black; the breast; insides of the arms, and circumference of the head whitish ; black band across the forehead ; a white spot at each side of the root of the tail. * Cercopithecus, i. e. tailed monkey, a name used by the Greeks. t Callithrix, Pliny, 1. 8, c. 54, is the name of an Ethiopian monkey, furnished with a beard and a tufted tail, probably the Ouuuderott. Buffon arbitrarily applied it to this species.* X The Cercop. barhatus of Chisius, which Linn, cites as an example of his fuiinus, is rather an Ouavderou than a Malbrovc. QUADRUMANA. 51 Sim. (liana, Lin; Exquima, Marcgr.*; Audeb. 4th fam. sec. 2, pi. G, and Buff. Supp. VII. 20. (The Roloway). Blackish, speck- led with white above, beneath white ; crupper of a purplish red ; face black, surrounded with white ; a little white beard on the chin. Sim. eephus, Lin.; Buff. XIV. 34; Fred. Cuv. 17. (The Moustache). Ashy-brown; a yellow tuft before each ear; a clear blue band, resembling a reversed chevron, on the upper lip. *S'. petaurista, Gm. ; Audeb. ib. XIV; Fred. Cuv. 13. (The White-nosed Monkey). Black or brown, speckled with white ; white nose ; face black ; circumference of the lips and the eyes reddish. These last five species, all small, beautifully variegated in colour, and of a mild and gentle disposition, are very common in Guineaf. Semnopithecus, Fred. Cuv. Differs from the Long-tailed Monkeys, by having an additional small tubercle on the last of the inferior molares. They inhabit eastern coun- tries, and their long limbs and very long tail give them a very peculiar appearance. Their muzzle projects very little more than that of the Gib- bons, and, like them, they have callosities on the buttocks. They appear, likewise, to have no cheek-pouches ; their larynx is furnished with a sac. The one longest known is the Sim. nema?us, L. ; Buff. XIV. 41 ; Fred. Cuv. pi. 12. Remark- able for its lively and varied colouring ; body and arms grey ; hands, thighs, and feet, black ; legs of a lively red ; the tail and a large tri- angular spot upon the loins, white ; face orange ; he has a black and red collar, and tufts of yellow hairs on the sides of the head ; inhabits Cochin China;]:. Another species is remarkable for the very extraordinary form of the nose — it is the S. nasica, Schr. ; Buff. Supp. VII. 1 1 and 1 2. (The Kahau). Yellow tinted with red; nose extremely long and projecting, in the form of a sloping spatula. This monkey inhabits Borneo, lives in great troops, which assemble morning and evening, on the branches of the great trees on the banks of the rivers — its cry haJiau. It is also said to be found in Cochin China. S. entelhis, Dufres. ; Fred. Cuv. pi. 8 and 9. (The Entellus). A light yellowish grey ; black hairs on the eye-brows and sides of the head, directed forwards. From Upper Bengal. Is one of the spe- cies held in veneration by the Brahmins. * The figure annexed to the description of the Exquima in Marcgrave is tliat of an Oiiarine, and that of the Exquima is joined to the description of the Ouarine or Guariha. This transposition has produced many errors in synonjanes. f Pennant has described certain Guenons mthout thumbs, Sim. polycomos and Sim. ferruginea, from which Illiger has constructed his genus Colobus, but I have not yet been able to see them, and for this reason have not mentioned them. M. Temminck assures lis that their head and teeth resemble those of a Semnopithecus. X M. Diard having transmitted to the Museum several Doucs, fi-om Cochin China, it has been proved that they have callosities on the buttocks; a fact denied by Buf- fon, on account of his having seen but one specimen injured by stuflRaig. The genus Lasiopyga of Illiger must be suppressed, as it is based on this error, E 2 52 MAMMALIA. S. melalophos, RafF. ; F. C. pi. 7. ( Tlie Simpai). Fur of a very lively red ; beneath white ; face blue ; a crest of black hairs reaching from one ear to the other. .S*. comata, Desm. ; S. eristata, Raff. ; Fr. Cuv. pi. 2. Presbitis mitrata, Kotzeb. (The Croo). Fine ash colour below, and the tuft of the tail white; black crest on the eye-brows, and the hairs of the top of the head long and turned up, forming a tuft. S. maura, L. ; F. Cuv. pi. 10. (The Negro Monkey). All black, the young of a brownish yellow. The three latter species are from the straits of Sunda*. Macacus-|-. All the animals of this denomination have a fifth tubercle on their last molares, and callosities and cheek-pouches like a Guenon. The limbs are shorter and thicker than in a Semnopithecus ; the muzzle more pro- jecting, and the superciliary ridge more inflated than in either the one or the other. Though docile when young, they become unmanageable when old. They all have a sac which communicates with the larynx under the thyroid cartilage, and which, when they cry out, becomes filled with air. Their tail is pendent, and takes no part in their motions : they produce early, but are not completely adult for four or five years. The period of gestation is seven months — during the rutting season the labia pudendi, &c. of the females are excessively distended;];. They are generally brought from India. Sim. silenus and leonina, L. and Gin. ; Ouanderou, Buff. ; Audeb. 2dfam. sect. 1, pi. 3. (The Maned Macaque). Black; ash coloured mane and whitish beard which surround the head. From Ceylon. Sim. sinica, Gm. ; Buff. XIY. 30 ; Fr. Cuv. 30. (The Chinese Monkey). A lively fawn-coloured brovra above, white beneath; flesh-coloured face ; the hairs on the top of the head arranged in radii forming a sort of hat. From Bengal, Ceylon. S. radiata, Geoff". ; Fr. Cuv. 29. (The Cape Monkey). Differ- ing from the preceding in a greenish tint. Sim. cynomolgus and cynocephalus, Lin. ; Macaque, BufF. XIV. 20; Fr. Cuv. 26 and 27. (The Hare-lipped Monkey). Greenish above, yellowish or whitish below ; ears and hands black ; face and scrotum tawny §. The Aigrette, Sim. aygida, Lin., BufF. XIV. 21, appears to be a mere variety of this one, differing by a longer tuft of hair on the top of the head. * There is some variation in their Malay names. RafHes, (Linn. Trans. XIII) palls the S. cotiata, Chinkau; the S. maura, Lotong. Raffles calls the S. fascicularis, the lira. \ Macaco is the generic appellation of monkeys on the coast of Guinea, and among the negroes transported to the colonies. Marcgrave mentions a species, which he says has " nares elatas bifidas"- — and these vague words, copied from him only, have remained in the character applied to the Macaque of Buff., although it has nothing like it. X Hence the observation of jElian, that monkeys are to be seen in India which have a prolapsus uteri. § Add the Blark-faced Muratjuc, Fr. Cuv. Mammif. 2S, and the other species de- scribed in the same work. QUADRUMANA. ' 5S Some of the Macaques are distinguished by a short tail. M. rhesus; Rhesus, Audeb. fam. ii; Patas a queue courte, ib. pi. 4, and Buff. Supp. XIV. pi. 16; the first baboon figured by Buff. XIV. pi. 19*. (The Pig-tailed Baboon). Greyish; a fawn-co- loured tinge on the head and crupper, sometimes on the back ; face flesh-colour; tail reaching below the hamstrings. From Bengalf . Sim. menestrinus, L. ; Sim. platypigos, Schreb. ; Audeb. fam. ii, sect. 1, pi. 2.; Fr. Cuv. Mammif. under the name of Singe a queue de eochon. (The Brown Baboon). Deep brown above ; black band beginning on the head, and fading as it extends along the back ; yel- lowish round the head and limbs; tail thin and wrinkled ;{:. Inuus, Cuv. Mere Macaques, which have a small tubercle in lieu of a tail. aS". silvanus, pithecus and inuus, Lin. ; Buff. XIV. 7, 8 ; Fr. Cuv. Mammif. (The Barbary Ape). Completely covered with a light grey-brown hair, and of all monkeys, is the one that suffers least from our climate. He is originally from Barbary, but is said to have become naturalised in the most inaccessible parts of the rock of Gibraltar §. Cynocephalus, C. II The Dog-headed Monkeys, together with the teetli, cheek-pouches and callosities of the Inuus, Cuv., have an elongated muzzle truncated at the end, in which the nostrils are pierced, giving it a greater resemblance to that of a dog than of any other monkey ; their tail varies in length. They are generally large, ferocious and dangerous animals, found mostly in Africa. * The two specimens used by Audebert are still in the Museum. I have exa- mined them and find they are both of one species. f The Macaque a queue courte of Buff. Supp. VII. pi. 13, (Sim. erylrhaa, Schr.) appears to me to be a true Macaque {S. cynomolgus), whose tail had been amputated. X Add the Macaque de VInde, and the Macaque a face rouge, Fr. Cuv. Mammif. § The Pilheque of Buff. Supp. VII. pi. 4 and 5, was a young Magot(a). His Lit- tle Cynocephalus, ib. pi. 6, and the Great and Little Cynocephala of Prosper Alpin are also of that species. n<9>)xof is the Greek term for monkeys in general, and the one whose anatomy has been given by Galen was a Magot, although Camper thought it was an Ourang-Outang. M. de Blainville perceived this mistake, and I have proved it by comparing with these two species all that Galen has stated respecting the ana- tomy of his pithecus. II Cynocephalus, dog's head, a name well known to the ancients, especially as the dog played a conspicuous part in the symbols of the Egyptians, in which it repre- sented Tot or Mercury. ^ (a) The Pigmy, or Barbary ape, of which species a male and female are in the Surrey Zoological Gardens, is distinguished in India as an object of superstitious re- verence, to which temples have been raised. In the confined state these animals will- ingly received every sort of food, with the exception of that of animal; they scarcely ever eat any portion, before they broke the whole. The male was capricious, and sometimes ill tempered, and we have seen the female aljvays acting in such a man- ner that shewed fear as well as gentle submission; she usually approached the male by proceeding around him in a circular walk, and with her eyes constantly upon him, as if to watch the favourable moment for shortening the distance between them. The jealousy shewn by him when a visitor took notice of the female, was instantly mani- fested by repeated blows. — Enc;. En. 5't MAMxMALlA. C. papio, Desm. ; Sim. sphynx, Lin. ; Papion, Buff. (The Gui- nea Baboon). Yellow, verging more or less on a brown ; tufts of the cheeks fa\vn-colourecl; face black; tail long*. They are found of various sizes, owing probably to the difference of age ; when full grown, frightful from their ferocity and brutal lubricity. From Guinea. There is another neighbouring species with a shorter tail, a greener fur, whiter cheek-tufts and a flesh-coloured face, ^S*. cynoeephalus; the Babouin, Fr. Cuv. Mem. du Mus. IV. pi. 19. C.porcarms; Sim. porcariajBodd.; S.ursina, Fenn.; S.sphyn- giola, Herm. ; The Long-faced Guenon, Penn., and Buff. Supp. VII. pi. 15 ; Black Monlcey of Vaillantf ; Chacma, Fr. Cuv. Mammif. Black, with a green or yellowish glaze, particularly on the forehead ; tufts of the cheeks grey ; face and hands black ; his tail reaches his heel, and ends in a tuft of hair. The adult has a large mane — in every thing else, as to habits and form, he resembles the preceding. From the Cape of Good Hope. C. hamadryas; Tartarin of Belon, Ois. fol. 101, or Papion a perruque; Sim. hamadryas, L. ; Docj-faced Baboon, Penn. ; Singe de Moco, Buff. Supp. VII. \0\. A slightly blueish ash-colour; hairs of the ruff, and particularly those of the sides of the head, very long; face flesh-coloured. This great monkey is also among the most libidinous and horribly ferocious of his kind — lives in Arabia and Ethiopia. There is another species, the Phillippines, which should be dis- tinguished from other Cynocephala, which is totally black, and with- out a tail — S. nigra, Cuv. ; but whose head resembles that of the rest. The Mandrills, Of all the monkeys, have the longest muzzle (30°); their tail is very short ; they are very brutal and ferocious ; nose as in the preceding. Sim. maimon and mormon, Linn. ; Boggo, Choras, Buff. XIV. XVI. XVII. et Supp. VII. 9. (The Mandrill). Greyish brown, inclining to olive above; a small lemon-yeUow-coloured beard on the chin; cheeks blue and furrowed. The nose in the adult male becomes red, particularly at the end, where it is scarlet, which has been the cause of its being deemed, erroneously, a distinct species §. * Those wliich have been figured as having it short, as the Papions of BufF. XIV. pi. 13 and 14, &c. had it cut off. M. Brongnard was the first who gave a good figure of it, but under the improper name of Sim. cynoeephalus. His figure is copied by Schreber, pi. 13, B. See the diflerent Papios in the Mammif. Fred. Cuv. f All these factitious species have been established on the good or bad condition of individual specimens of the same species, or on their diflerence of age. X Copied by Schreber, but badly coloured. There is now a good figure of it in the Mammif. of Fred. Cuv. § We have seen, as well as M. Geoftroy, two or three Mandrills, or S. maimon, change to the Choras or S. mormon, in the menagerie of the Museum. The tuft of hair, which is frequently given as a character of the mormon, is often also in the QUADRUMANA. 55 The genital parts, and the circumference round the anus, are of the same colour. The buttocks are of a beautiful violet. It is difficult to imagine a more hideous or extraordinary animal. He nearly at- tains the size of a man, and is a terror to the negroes of Guinea. Many details of his history have been mixed up with that of the Chimpanse, and consequently with that of the Ourang-Outang. fSim. leucophcea, Fred. Cuv. Ann. du Mus. d'Hist. Nat. IX. pi. 37, from a young specimen from India, and Hist, des Mammif. from the adult. (The Drill). Yellowish grey ; face black ; tail very short and thin; in old ones the fur becomes darker, and the chin of a brilliant red. The Monkeys oi' the New Continent Have four grinders more than the others — thirty-six in all; the tail long ; no cheek-pouches ; buttocks hairy ; no callosities ; nostrils opening on the sides of the nose, and not underneath. All the great Quadrumana of America belong to this division. Their large intestines are less in- flated, and the ccecum longer and more slender than in those of the eastern continent. The tails of some of them are prehensile — that is, its extremity can twist round bodies with sufficient force to seize them as with a hand. They are more particularly designated by the name of Sapajous, Cebus, Erxleben*. At their head may be placed the Alouattes (Mycetes, Ulig.), which are distinguished by a pyramidal head, the upper jaw of which descends much below the cranium, as the branches of the lower one ascend very high for the purpose of lodging a bony drum, formed by a vesicular in- flation of the hyoid bone, which communicates with the larynx, and gives to their voice an astonishing volume, and a frightful sound. Hence their name of Howling Monkeys. The prehensile portion of the tail is naked beneath. There are several species, whose distinguishing characters are not yet well ascertained, for the colour of the fur on which they are established varies with the age and the difference of sexes. Simia seniculus, Buff. Supp. VII. 25. (Red Howling Monkey). It is often sent to us from the forests of Guiana, where it lives in troops ; size that of a large fox ; colour, a reddish chesnut, rather deeper at the head and tail. The AUouatte ourson (Stentor ursinus, Geoff.), Humb. Obs. Zool. I. pi. 30, must differ from it very slightly; but it would appear that there are many others, some of which are black or brown, others of a pale colour. In certain species this pale tint is peculiar to the females -f-. * Cebus or Cepits, Kyittos, names of an Etliiopian monkey, which, from the de- scription of Lilian, lib. xxvii. c. 8, must have been the Patas. t Marcgrave, Braz. 22(5, speaks of a black Guariba, with brown hands, that Spix thought he had found in his Senmdus niger. Mem. de Munic, for 1813, p. 333. Mycetes rufimanus, Kvihl. Marcgrave, 227, s])eaks of another species, all black and bearded, fig. p. 228, un- der the wrong name of Exquima, which must have been, it is probable, the Mycetes 56 MAMMALIA. The Common Sapajous have the head Hat, and the muzzle slightly prominent — facial angle 60°. In some of them, the anterior thumbs are either totally, or nearly so, hidden under the skin, and the prehensile part of the tail naked beneath. M. Geoff, has formed them into a genus by the name of Ateles*. The first species, the Chameh, Ateles pentadactylus, Geoff,, differs again from the others in having a slight projection of the thumb, though it is only of one phalanx, but without a nail; its fur is black. A second species, the Mikiri, Jt. hypoxanthus, Pr. Max. ; Brachyteles macrotarsus, Spix, pi. i., has also a very small thumb, and sometimes even a nail. The fur is yellowish, ferruginous to- wards the tail. These two species are separated by Spix under the name Brachyteles. They connect the Ateles with Lagothrix. The other Ateles to which alone Spix restricts that name — Coaita, Buff. — have no apparent thumb whatever. Such are the following: A. paniscus; Simla panisc. L. ; Coaita, Buff. XV. 1. (The Coaita). Completely covered with black hair, like the Cliamek, but without any visible thumb ; face, flesh-colour. A. ater, Fr. Cuv. Mammif. (The Cayou). Face black, like the rest of the body. A. marginatus, Geoff. The Chwva, Humb. or the Coaita a face bordee, Ann. Mus. XII. pi. 10. Black, with a border of white hairs round the face. A. belzehuth; Sim. beelzeb., Briss. The Marimonda, Humb. or Coaita a ventre blane, Geoff.; Ann. Mus. VII. pi. 16. Black above; white beneath; circumference of the eyes flesh-coloured. A. arachnoides, Geoff. Ann. ISIus. XIII. pi. V. (The Spider Monkey). Grey, fawn-coloured or red; eyebrows black. All these animals are natives of Guiana or Brazil ; their fore-feet are very long and slender, and their gait remarkably slowf. barhatus, Spix, pi. 32. The female, ib. pi. 33, is of a light yellowish grey. The male must be the Mycetes 7iiger of Kuhl and Prince IVIaximil. de Neuwied. The Caraia of d'Azzara, which is black, breast and belly of a dark red, the female brownish, may be refeiTed to this species. Pr. Max. has another Mycetes ursinus, which appears to be much browner than the ursinus of M. Geoflroy, and to approximate nearer to the M.fuscus, or the M. discolor of Spix, pi. 30 and 34. This latter rather appears to be the St.fuscus of GeofFroy. The Straw-coloured Alouatte, Stentor stravmieus, Geoff, and the Myc. stramineus, Spix, pi. 31, of a yellowish grey, appears from its cranium to be of a different spe- cies, but it may merely be the female of a preceding one. It is easily seen, also, that if their characters are so uncertain, their synonymes must be much more so. Add the St. flavicaudatus, Geoff, of a black brown, with a yellow streak on each side of the tail. * Ann. du Museum, VII. 260, et seq. f They exhibit some remarkable resemblances to man in tlieir muscles. Of all animals, they alone have the biceps of the thigh made like ours. QUADRUMANA. Di LAGOTHRix(a), Geoff. — Gastrimargus, Spix. Head round, like the Ateles ; a thumb developed like the Alouattes ; tail partly naked, like tlie one and the other. Such are the L. Humbol- dii, Geoff. ; the Caparo, Humb. ; Gast. olivaceiis, Spix, pi. 28 (the Cap- paro); and the Grison, (or Lax/, canus, Geoff.); or Gastr. infumatus, Spix, 29. (The Silver-haired Monkey). Monkeys from the interior of South America, said to be remarkable gluttons. The other Sapajous (Cebus, Geoff.) have a round head, distinct thumbs, and the tail hairy, though prehensile. The species are more numerous than those of the Alouatte, and are characterized with nearly as much difficulty. Some of them have the hairs on the forehead of a uniform length, such as the — Sim. appella, L. (The Sajou) ; and the S. capucina, L. ; Buff. XV. 4, 5, and 8, 9. (The Capuchin). Both of them of different browns ; in the first, the circumference of the face is blackish ; in the second it is whitish ; but the shade of colour in all the rest of their bodies varies between a brownish black and a fawn-colour, sometimes even a white. The shoulders and breast are however generally lighter, and the calotte and hands darker*. Others, again, have the hairs of the forehead so disposed as to form a kind of aigrette, such as the Sim. fatuellus, Gm. ; Buff. Supp. VII. 29. (The Horned Sajou). This animal has a tuft of black hairs on each side of the forehead f. The disposition of these monkeys is mild and gentle, their motions quick and light, and they are easily tamed. Their name of Weeping Monkeys is derived from their soft plaintive voice. * The Sajous and the Sais vary so much from a brown to a yellow, that, were there not intermediate varieties, we should be tempted to make many species of them. Such is the case with the Sim. trepida, syrichta, htguhris, flavia, L. and Schreb., as well as some of those distinguished by M. Geoffroy, Ann. du Mus. XIX. 1 1 1 and 112. Spix has recently, and in our opinion improperly, multiplied them still more. We would refer to the Sajou {Sim. appella, Lin.) the Cebus rohustus, Pr. Max., which appears to us to be an old one of that species. The Ceb. macroccphalus, Spix, pi. 1, does not seem to differ fi'om it, so far as regards the species. We refer to the Sai {S. capucina, Lin.) the Sai a gorge blanche, Buff. {S. hypolencos) ; the Cebus libi- dinosus, Spix, 2; the Ceb. xanthosternus, Pr. Max., or the Ceb. .rantkocephalus, Spix, 3; the Ceb. cucullalus, id. 6. We should be more inclined to consider as distinct species, the Sajoti a pieds dores, Fred. Cuv., the Sajou brun, id. or Ceb. unicolor, Spix, pi. 4; the Sim. flavia, Schreber, 31, B, from which the Ceb. gracilis, Spix, pi. 5, seems to differ only in the stuffing — but that we require numerous observations, made upon the spot which these ani- mals inhabit, before we can hope to establish their species in any other than an arbi- trary manner. t Here should come the Cebus cirrhifer, Geoff, and the Ceb. of the same name, of Pr. Max., btit which is different. Cib. cristalus, Fred. Cuv. ^^{a) The existence of this animal was not known until Humboldt discovered it in Soutli America: — He describes it under the name of Simla Lagothrica. A remark- ably fine specimen was presented lately to the Surrey Zoological Gardens, which was brought from Para, on the River Amazon, in Soutli America. Its habitation is now considered to be the northern portion of South America, between tlic Equator and five degrees of nortli latitude. — Eng. Ed. 58 MAMMALIA. Ill the Saimiri the tail is depressed, and almost ceases to be prehen- sile; the head is very much flattened; in the intcrorbitar partition of the skeleton there is a membranous space. There is only one known ; the (S/mm scmrea, Buff. XV. 10. (The Saimiri). Size of a squirrel ; of a yellowish grey ; fore-arms, legs, and the four extremities of a yellowish fawn-colour ; end of the nose quite black. Those of the American monkeys, whose tails are not at all prehensile, are called Sakis*. Several of them have the tail long and tufted, whence they have been also termed Fox-tailed Monkeys : their teeth project for- wards more than those of the others. They are the Pithecia of Des- marets and lUiger. Simia pithecia, L. ; Buff. XV. 12; Pithecia inusta, Spix, pi. 10. (The Yarke). Blackish ; circumference of the face whitish. Pith. Jiirsuta, Spix, pi. 8. (The Grey Sakis). Grey ; with yel- lowish hands. S'imia safanaSjUohnansegg; Humb. Obs. Zool. L. xxvii. (The Black Saki). All black. Pith, rtifiventris, Geoff.; Buff. Supp. VII. 31; Pith, capilla- mentosa, Spix, pi. 11. (The Red-bellied Saki). Brown, with a red belly. Spix distinguishes those species whose tails, although tufted, are shorter than the body, by the name of Brachiurus. His Br. Ouarahi, Sp. pi. 8, has a fawn-coloured body; head, neck, arms, and feet black. To this should be referred, provided always it is another species, the Sim. melanocephala, Humb. Obs. Zool. p. 29 ; yellow, with a black head. In some, also, the Callithrix, Geoff, or Sagouins, Fr. Cuv. the tail is slender, and the teeth do not project. The Saimiri were associated with them for a long time, but the head of the Sagouins is higher, and their canine teeth much shorter. Such are the Call, personata, Geoff., Spix, pi. 12; Call.nigrifrons, id. 15. (The Masked Monkey). A yellowish grey ; head and hands black. Call. liKjens; S. /« MAMMALIA. Mygale, Cuv. The Desmans differ from the shrews by two very small teeth placed be- tween the two great incisors of the lower jaw, and in their two upper in- cisors, which are triangular and flattened. Behind these incisors are six or seven small teeth and four bristled molars. Their muscle is drawn out into a little flexible proboscis, which they keep constantly in motion. Their long tail, scaly, and flattened on the sides, and their five-fingered feet all united by membranes, evidently proclaim them to be aquatic ani- mals. Their eyes are very small, and they have no external ears. Sorex moschatus, L. ; BufF. X. 1.; Pall. Act. Petrop. 1781, part II, pi. 5. (The Russian Musk Rat). Nearly as large as a shrew; above, blackish ; beneath, whitish ; tail not so long as the body by one-fourth. Very common along the rivers and lakes of southern Russia, where it lives on worms, the larvae of insects, and particularly on leeches, which, by means of its flexible snout, it easily withdraws from the mud. Its burrow, which is made in the beach, commences under water, and ascends to such a height as to be above its level in the greatest floods. This animal never comes voluntarily on shore, but numbers of them are taken in the nets of the fishermen. Its musky odour arises from a kind of pomatum that is secreted in small follicles under the tail, and it is so powerful as to be communicated to the flesh of the pike, w'hicli feeds on the musk rat. A small species of this genus is found in the rivulets of the Pyre- nees, whose tail is longer than its body, which M. Geoff", has made kno^vn, Ann. du Mus. tom. XVII. pi. iv. f. 1, Myg. pyrendica, H. Chrysochloris, Lacep. Have, like the preceding genus, two incisors above, and four below ; but their grinders are long, distinct, and almost all shaped like triangular prisms. Their muzzle is short, broad, and recurved, and their fore-feet have only three nails, of which the external, being very large, extremely arcuated and pointed, serves them as a powerful instrument for excavating and piercing the earth ; the others regularly decrease in size. The hind feet have five of an ordinary size. They are subterraneous animals, whose mode of life is similar to that of moles. To enable them to dig the better, their fore-arm is supported by a third bone placed under the cubitus. C. asiaticus; TaJpa asiatica, L. ; Schreb. CLVII; and better, BrowTi, 111. XLV. (The Golden Mole). A little smaller than the European mole ; no apparent tail ; is the only quadruped knomi that presents any appearance of those splendid metallic tints which bright- cimens or varieties of one and the same species, to which I also refer the S. giganteus, Isid. Geoff. Mem. du Mus. XV. pi. 4, fig. 3; perhaps even the S.flavescens, Isid. Geofl". ib. Seba figures it, Mus. I. pi. 31, f. 7 and 11— pL 63, fig. 5, and the white variety, I. pi. 47, f. 4. — Add the S. vmrinus, Lin. of Java, of the size of a mouse; grey; ears naked; tail round and nearly as long as the body. — The S. brevicaudus, Say, from North America; blackish, ears concealed, tail one-fourth the length of the body. — S. parvus, Id. with naked ears. — The S. suaveolcns. Pall., and the other species pointed out by him in his Zoography of Russia. This genus needs revision as much as that of the Bats. CARNARIA. < 4 en and adorn so many birds, fishes, and insects. Its fur is a green, changing to a copper or bronze colour; there is no conch to the ear, and no eyes can be discovered*. Talpa, Lin, The moles are universally known by their subterranean life, and by their form, which is eminently fitted for their mode of existence. A very short arm attached by a long scapula, supported by a powerful clavicle, furnish- ed with enormous muscles, sustains an extremely large hand, the palm of which is always directed either outwards or backwards ; the lower edge of this hand is trenchant, the fingers are scarcely perceptible, but the nails in which they terminate are long, fiat, strong, and sharp. Such is the in- strument employed by the mole to tear the earth, and throw it backward. Its sternum, like that of birds and bats, has a process which gives to the pectoral muscles the large size that is required for their functions. To pierce and raise up the earth, it makes use of its long pointed head, whose muzzle is armed at its extremity with a peculiar little bone, and its cervical muscles are extremely powerful. There is even a special bone in the cer- vical ligament. It has but little power behind, and moves as slowly above ground as it advances rapidly under it. Its sense of hearing is very acute, and the tympanum very large, although there is no external ear ; its eyes are so small, and so hidden by the hair, that for a long time their exist- ence was positively denied. In the genital organs there is this peculiarity — the bones of the pubis are not united, a circumstance which permits it to produce tolerably large young ones, notwithstanding the narrowness of the pelvis. The urethra of the female passes through the clitoris. She has six teats. The jaws are weak, and the food consists of worms, insects, and some soft roots. There are six incisors above, and eight below. The canines have two roots, which causes them to partake of the nature of false molars ; behind, there are four false molars above and three below, after which are three bristled molars. T. europcea, L. ; BuiF. VIII. xii. (The Common Mole). Point- ed muzzle ; fur thin and black ; individuals are found white, fawn- coloured, and piebald. This is an animal which is found very incon- venient by the havoc which he makes in gardens and other cultivated places. This species, according to Dr. Harlan, is also found in North America {a). * The Red Mole of America, Sebay, pi. xxxii. f. 1, {Talpa rubra, Lin.) is most pro- bably a Chryso asiaticus, drawn from a dried specimen of that species, for then the fur appears purple; the tucan of Fernandez, App. XXIV, which is considered as syno- nymous with it. 1^ (a) We have the authority of Dr. H. M'Murtrie against the existence of the common Mole in America. That which obtains the name of the common Mole in the United States is the Scalops Aqualicus, described in the succeeding page. — Eng. Ed. ^^ The common Mole, at the period when it builds its nest, (about the beginning of February), and brings forth its young, is an object peculiarly deserving the attention of the naturalist. The nest is always in a cavity formed in the midst of the hillocks, which are so frequently to be met with in the fields, and well known under the title 70 MAMMALIA. M. Savi has found a Mole in the Apennines that is perfectly blind, although otherwise similar to the common one; he calls it Talpa cceca. CONDYLURA, IlUg. The Condylures seem to combine the two kinds of dentition of the insec- tivora. In the upper jaw are two large triangular incisors, two extremely small and slender ones, and on each side a strong canine. In the lower one are four incisors slanting forwards, and a pointed but small canine. The superior false molars are triangular, and separated, the inferior trench- ant and denticulated. In their feet and the whole of their exterior they resemble the Mole, but their tail is longer, and what more particularly distinguishes them from the former is, that their nostrils are surrounded with little moveable carti- laginous points, which, when they separate, radiate like a kind of star. One species particularly is found in North America — Sorex cris- tatus, L*. (The Radiated Mole). Similar to the Mole of Europe, the nose excepted, but havhig a tail more than double the length of that of the latter. SCALOFS, CuV. The Scalops have the teeth very similar to those of the Desmans, except that the small or false molars are less numerous ; the muzzle is simply pointed, like that of the Shrews; their hands are widened, armed with strong nails fitted to excavate the earth, and exactly similar to those of Moles : in fact, their mode of life is the same ; their eyes are equally as small, and their ears quite as much hidden. The only species known is the S. aquaticus; Sorex aquaticus, L. ; Schreb. CLVIII. (The Ca- nadian Scalop). It appears to inhabit a great part of North America, along rivers, &c. Its external resemblance to the common Mole of Europe is so great, that it is easy to mistake the one for the other. * This is the Condylura of Illiger, hut the characters he indicates, taken from the figure of La Faille, copied Buff. Supp. VL xxxvi, 1, and on which he composed the name of the genus, are false. M. Desmarets was the first who correctly described the teeth of this animal. Dr. Harlan describes a species, Cond. macroura, which has but very short points about the nostrils, and a scaly compressed tail. He associates with it, as a third spe- cies, the Talf. longicaudata, Penn. Hist. No. 443, which he appears however not to have seen. of mole hills. Moss forms the principal lining of the nest. One of the most curious phenomena presented by the Mole at this period is the process of skinning a worm. The integument of the victim is stripped from end to end, and then the contents are squeezed out by pressure on the part of the mole. The subterranean burrows formed by these animals are mostly connected by avenues with the chamber where the nest is made; and in going to or from this chamber, the mole passes through a series of these avenues, where, it is supposed, that several means, known only to the contriver, are employed for catching worms, beetles, grubs, &c. The inconvenience to which Cuvier alludes, as being produced chiefly in cultivated places, consists, for the most part, in the loosening of the earth round the roots of plants, which always attends their operations in searching for food. — Eng. Ed. CARNARIA. 79 FAMILY III. CARNIVORA. Although the term carnivorous (Carnassiers) is applicable to all un- guiculated animals, not quadrumanate, that have three sorts of teeth, inas- much as they all feed more or less on animal aliment, there are, however, many of them, the two preceding families especially, which are compelled by weakness, and the conical tubercles of their grinders, to live almost en- tirely on insects. It is in the present family that the sanguinary appetite for flesh is joined to the force necessary to obtain it. There are always four stout, long, and separated canines, between which are six incisors in each jaw, the root of the second of the lower ones being placed a little more inwards than the others. The molars are either wholly trenchant, or blended merely with blunted tuberculous parts, but they are not bristled with conical points. These animals are so much the more exclusively carnivorous, as their teeth are the more completely trenchant, and the proportions of their re- gimen may be calculated from the extent of the tuberculous surface of their teeth, as compared with that portion which is trenchant. The Bears, which can live altogether on vegetables, have nearly all their teeth tuber- culated. The anterior molars are the most trenchant; next comes a molar larger than the others, usually furnished with a larger or smaller tuberculous heel ; and behind it one or two small teeth, that are perfectly flat. It is also with these small teeth in the back part of the mouth that the dog chews the grass he sometimes swallows. We shall call, with M. Fr. Cu- vier, this large upper molar, and its corresponding one below, lacerators (carnassiers); the anterior pointed ones, false molars; and the posterior blunted ones, tuberculous teeth. It is easy to conceive that those genera which have the fewest false mo- lars, and whose jaws are the shortest, are those best adapted for biting. It is upon these differences that the genera can be most safely esta- blished. It is necessary, however, that the consideration of the hind foot should be added to them. Several genera, like those of the two preceding families, in walking, or when they stand erect, place the whole sole of the foot on the ground, a fact proved by the total want of hair on every part of the sole. Others, and by far the greater number, walk only on the ends of the toes, by raising up at the same time the tarsus. They are much swifter ; 80 MAMMALIA. and to this leading distinction are added many others in the habits, and even in the internal conformation. In both the substitute for the clavicle is a mere bony rudiment suspended in the flesh. The Plantigrada Form this first tribe, which walks on the whole sole of the foot, a cir- cumstance which gives them a greater facility in balancing themselves upon their hinder feet. They partake of the slowTiess and nocturnal life of the Insectivora, and, like them, have no caecum : most of those that in- habit cold countries pass the winter in a state of lethargy. They all have five toes to each foot. Ursus, Linn. The Bears have three large molars on each side* in each jaw, altogetlier tuberculous, and of which the posterior upper, and anterior upper, are the longest. They are preceded by a tootla a little more trenchant, which is one of the lacerators of this genus, and by a variable number of very small false molars, which are sometimes shed at a very early period. This almost frugivorous sort of dentition is the reason why, notwithstanding their great strength, they seldom eat flesh, unless from necessity. They are large stout-bodied animals, with thick limbs, and a very short tail : the cartilage of the nose is elongated and moveable. They excavate dens or construct huts, in which they pass the winter in a state of somno- lency more or less profound, and without food. It is in these retreats that the female brings forth. The species are not easily distinguished by apparent characters. We have the U. arctos, L., Buff". VIII. xxxi. (The Brown or common Bear of Europe). Forehead convex : fur brown, more or less woolly when young, and growing smoother with age. Some of them are greyish, others almost yellow, and a tliird kind is browii, with shades border- ing on silver. The relative height of their legs is equally variable, and all without any fixed relation to age or sex. They have most com- monly, when young, a whitish collar, which, in some varieties, re- mains for a longer or shorter period, and even, for life. This animal inhabits the lofty mountains, and great forests throughout Europe, and of a great part of Asia ; the coupling season is in June, and the young are produced in January. It sometimes lodges very high up in trees; when young its flesh is esteemed a delicacy — the paws are considered good at all ages. It is thought that the Black Bear of Europe is a distinct species : those which have been described as such had a flat forehead, and the fur woolly and blackish ; their origin, however, does not appear to us to be very authentic f. * We shall hereafter omit the repetition of the words " on each side," &c., it be- ing understood that we speak of the molars on one side only, those of the other being the same. f We are not yet satisfied that the Grisly Bear of North America differs specifi- cally from the Brown Bear of Europe. P. S. Since the above note was written, General La Fayette has presented a Grisly Bear to the Menagerie du Jardin du Roi. In form and hair, some shades of colour- CARNARIA. 81 U. americanus, Gm. ; Fr. Cuv. Mammif. ; Schreb. pi. 141, B. (The North American Black Bear). A very distinct species, with a flat forehead, smooth and black fur, and fawn-coloured muzzle. We have always found the small teeth behind the canines more numerous in this bear, than in the European species. Individuals have been seen that were entirely fawn-coloured. Its usual food is wild fruits ; it devastates the fields, and, where fish is abundant, proceeds to the shores for the purpose of catching it. It is only for want of other aliment that it attacks quadrupeds. The flesh is held in great esteem. There is another Black Bear found in the Cordilleras, with a white throat and muzzle, and large fawn-coloured eyebrows, that unite on the forehead — U. ornatus, Fr. Cuv. Mammif. The East Indies also produce several bears of a black colour, such as the U. malaianus, Horsf. Java. (The Malay Bear). From the Pe- ninsula beyond the Ganges and the islands of the Straits of Sunda. Smooth; black; fawn-coloured muzzle ; a heart-shaped spot of the same colour on the breast. It is very injurious to the cocoa nut trees, which it climbs in order to devour their tops and drink the milk of the fruit. U. thibetanus, Fr. Cuv. Mammif. (The Thibet Bear). Black ; the under lip and a large mark in the form of a Y in white on the breast ; profile straighter and claws weaker. From the mountains in the north of India. But the most remarkable of these Bears of India is the U, labiatus, Blain.; L' Oars jongleur, Fred. Cuv. Mammif.; U. lomjirostris, Tied. (The Thick-lipped Bear). The cartilage of the nose dilated; the tip of the under lip elongated, both being moveable ; when old, very thick bushy hairs round the head. The facility with which the incisors are lost, occasioned it for a long time to be considered as a Sloth*. It is black; the muzzle and tips of the paws fawn-coloured or whitish, and a half collar or spot in the form of a Y under the neck and breast. This animal is a favourite with the Indian jugglers, which they lead about on account of its deformity. U. maritimus, L. ; Cuv. Menag. du Mus., 8vo., p. G8; copied, Schreb. pi. clxi. (The Polar Bear). This is another species, very distinguisl^able by its long and flattened head and its white and ing excepted, it closely resembles the Brown Bear; its nails, however, are much longer and more trenchant. It appears to be a distinct species. M. Horstield, Lin. Trans. XV. 332, describes a bear from Nepaul, of a light bay colour, whose nails are less trenchant than those of the other bears of India, and which appears to him a distinct species. I have neglected stating in the text that we have recovered many fossil bones of lost species of bears, the most remarkable of which are the U. spelaus, Blunienb., with a rounded forehead, and of a very large size; and the U. cuUridens, Cuv. See the fourth vol. of my " Ossemens Fossiles." * It is the Bradypus uisiiius of Shaw, and the genus Prochilus, Illig. See Jour, de Phys. of 1792, vol. xl. p. 136. VOL. I. G 82 MAMMALIA. smooth fur. It pursues seals and other marine animals. Exagger- ated accounts of its ferocity have rendered it highly celebrated (a). g^ (a) In the Zoological Gardens, Regent's Park, may be seen the following Bears: — Sloth Bears, Ursus lahiatus, Blain., male and female. They are the species usually exhibited by the Indian jugglers, and have been found milder in their disjiositions than most of the other Bears. They are from India. Malay Bear, or Malayan Sun Bear, Ursus Malaijanus, Horsfield. This bear was brought from Sumatra, and is found only in places near the equator. It feeds chiefly on vegetables, and is particularlj' fond of the young shoots of the cocoa nut tree. It is likewise fond of honey, and the tongue, as may be seen, is elongated, so as to adapt it admirably to the process of lapping. Spectacled Bear, Ursus ornatus of F. Cuvier. This Bear is a great curiosity; it is a native of the mountains of South America, and has been but recently described; this is tlie first of the species that has been seen in this country. American Black Bear, Ursus Americanus. This Bear is from North America, and feeds on vegetable roots and fruits; and, in its native state, resorts to the sea coasts for the purpose of consuming fish. It appears to be smaller in size than the Euro- pean bear. Cinnamon Bears, called also Chocolate Bears, are considered only as varieties of the Black Bears. The former, however, are distinguished from the latter by the marked difference of their habitats ; for, whilst the Black Bears keep to close and woody districts, the Cinnamon Bears live in the open and upland grounds ; the latter are described also as more powerful and vicious than the others in the native state. The European Brown Bear, Ursus arctos, Linnaeus. This ^bear is from Siberia, and its diet is altogether vegetable. The flesh of the young bears of this species is eatable. Siberian Bear, Urstis collaris, F. Cuvier. This bear is particularly distinguished by the white collar around his neck. But some naturalists doubt if the animal be not a mere variety of the Brown Bear. Grisly Bear, Ursus ferox, Lewis and Clarke. This is an object of great curiosity, inasmuch, as in all probability it is the largest and most powerful of the bear tiibe; it is certainly the most ferocious, and is described as possessing extraordinary tenacity of life. This specimen was brought from the rocky mountains in North America, about the year 1813, to England, and was placed in the menagerie of the Tower. It formed part of the munificent present, made by his present Majesty on his accession, to the Zoological Society. White or Polar Bear, Ursus maritimus, Gmelin. This is a remarkable female spe- cimen of the White Bear, which is found in no other part of the world except the coldest of the northern regions. This Bear appeared formerly to be the largest; but its size was greatly misrepresented by the older navigators. Captain Parry, in his north-west expedition, has not met with one which exceeded seven or eight feet. This bear preserves uniformly a white colour on every part of its external surface, except on the naked end of the snout, the lips, and the margins of the eyelids and claws. There is no doubt whatever, that the female Polar Bears, when pregnant, are subject to undergo hybernation ; and, it is probable, that the males merely suffer from the effects oi torpidity, the nature of which will be found explained in a previousnote to the Hedge- hog. The distinction pointed out in that note betiveen hybernation and torpidity affords a medium, whereby the conti-ary opinions of naturalists on this point may be recon- ciled. This Bear is chiefly hunted for its hide and fur. The accounts which we pos- sess of the Brown Bear, so common in the Scandinavian forests, are the result of a persevering scientific study of the habits of these animals. They consist, according to some, of two varieties of the Ursus arctos, the large Bear, or Bear of prey, in Swedish, Slag-Bjorn, which lives indiscriminately on animal and vegetable substances, is one ; and a smaller species, in Swedish, Myr Bjorn, which subsists en- tirely on ants or vegetable substances, forms the second. Other naturalists, however, are of opinion that there is only one real species in Scandinavia, and that it is omni- vorous, feeding on cattle indiscriminately, and on roots, leaves, small branches and berries of all sorts. One remarkable habit of this beast is, that about October every Year he cea?es to feed for the winter season; his stomach and intestines then become CARNARIA. 88 pROCYON, Storr. The Ratons or Raccoons have tliree back tuberculous molars, the su- perior of which are nearly square, and tliree pointed false molars in front, forming a continuous series to the canines, which are straight and com- pressed. Their tail is long, but the remainder of the exterior is that of a bear in miniature. They rest the whole sole of the foot on the ground only when they stand still; when they walk they raise the heel, P. lotor; Ursus lotor, L. ; Mapach of the Mexicans ; Buff. VIII. xliii. (The Raccoon). Greyish brown ; muzzle white ; a brown streak across the eyes ; tail marked with brown and white rings. This animal is about the size of a Badger, is easily tamed, and re- markable for a singular habit of eating nothing without having pre- viously dipped it in water. From North America — lives on eggs, birds, &c. P. cancrivorus; Ursus cancriv. L.; Buff. Supp. VI. xxxii. (The Raccoon Crab-eater). A uniform light ash-brown ; the rings on the tail less distinct. From South America. AiLuiius, Fred. Cuv. The Panda appears to approximate to the Raccoon by its canines, and what is known of its other teeth; with this exception, that it has only one false molar. The head is short ; tail long ; walk plantigrade ; five toes, with half retractile nails*. One species only is known, the A. refidgens, Fred. Cuv. Mammif. ; Hardwick, Linn. Trans. XV. p. 161. (The Shining Panda). Size of a large cat ; fur soft and thickly set ; above of the most brilliant cinnamon red ; behind more fawn-coloured ; beneath of a deep black. The head is whitish, and the tail marked with brown rings. This most beautiful of all known quadrupeds, and which inhabits the mountains of the north of India, was sent to Europe by my son-in-law the late M. Alfred du Vaucel. .IcTiDES, Valenciennes. The Benturong is somewhat related to the Raccoon by its teeth; but the three upper back molars are much smaller and less tuberculous ; and this is especially the case in the last one in each jaw, which is very small * General Hardwick has described the upper teeth of the Panda, Lin. Trans. XV. pi. ii. There are four square and tuberculous grinders, and one false trenchant mo- lar in front, at a short distance from the canine. quite empty, and collapse into a small compass within the abdomen, whilst the ex- ti-emity of the last bowel is blocked up by a piece of hard wadding, called in Sweden Tappen. In November, he retires to his den, which is usually prepared before-hand, and here he undergoes the state of hybernation. About the middle of the following April, the bear quits his den, voids the tappen, and bounds with fresh vigour into the forest in search of food. The tappen, when chemically examined, has been found to consist of the following ingredients : brown resin, green volatile oil, colouring matter of leaves, fat, starch, woody matter, with the acids and salts of trees in the Scandina- vian forests. We are unable to find any account of the substance called Tappen in the most complete systematic works on the subjects of comparative anatomy and ani- mal secretions. We have carefully consulted the great work of Berzelius, himself a Swede; but we can find no allusion to the substance amidst the vast details which he gives of the secretions of the Manunalia. — Eng. Ed. o 2 84 MAMMALIA. and nearly simple. It is covered with long hair, and has a tuft of it at each ear. The tail is long, hairy, and has a propensity to curl, as if pre- hensile. This animal is also one of those from India, for the knowledge of which we are indebted to the late M. du Vaucel. One species is the let. albifrons, Fr. Cuv., Ann. des Sc. Nat. IV. pi. 1. Grey; tail and sides of the muzzle black; size that of a large cat. From Bootan. let. ater, Fr. Cuv. Mammif. Black; muzzle whitish; size that of a stout dog. From Malacca*. NAsuAj.AS'^on-. The Coatis, to the teeth, tail, nocturnal habit, and slow dragging gait of the Raccoon, add a singularly elongated and flexible snout. The feet are semi-palmate, notwithstanding which they climb trees. Their long nails are used for digging. They inhabit the warm climates of America, and their diet is nearly the same as that of the Marten of Europe. Viverra nasua, L. ; Buff. VIII, xlviii. (The Red Coati). Red- dish fawn colour; muzzle brown; tail with brown rings. Viv. narica, L. ; Buff. VIII, xlviii. (The Brown Coati). Brown, white spots over the eye and snout. This is, perhaps, the only proper place for the singular genus of the KiNKAJOus or Potto, Cuv. — Cercoleptes, Illig. — which, to a planti- grade walk, adds a long prehensile tail, like that of the Sapajous, a short muzzle, a slender and extensible tongue, two pointed grinders before, and three tuberculous ones behind. Only one species is known, Viverra caudivolvula, Gm. ; Buff. Supp. III. 4; and better, Fr. Cuv. Mammif. From the warm parts of America, and from some of the great Antilles, where it is called Potto; size of a Polecat; hair woolly, and of a grey or yellowish brown; habits nocturnal, of a mild disposition, and lives on fruit, milk, honey, blood, &c. Meles, Storr. The Badgers, which Linnaeus placed with the Raccoons, among the Bears, have a very small tooth behind the canine, then two pointed molars, fol- lowed in the upper jaw by one that we begin to recognise as a lacerator, from the trenchant vestige it exhibits on its outer side; behind this is a square tuberculous one, the largest of all. Below, the penultimate begins to shew a resemblance to the inferior carnivorous teeth ; but, as there are two tubercles on its internal border, as elevated as its trenchant edge, it acts as a tuberculous one ; the last below is very small. These are animals with a rampant walk and nocturnal habits, like the preceding, whose tail is short, fingers considerably enveloped in the skin, and which are further conspicuously distinguished by a pouch situated be- neath the tail, and from which a greasy and fetid secretion oozes out. Their very elongated fore nails render them exceedingly dexterous in dig- ging the ground. M. europoea; Ursus meles, L. ; Buff. VII, vii. (The European r). Greyish above, black beneath, a blackish band on each * Add riclide dore, Fred. Cuv. CARNARIA. 85 side of the head. The American Badger {Mel. hudsonius) is not very different. GuLO, Storr. Linnajus also placed the Gluttons among the bears; but they approximate much nearer to the weasels in their teeth as well as in their habits ; the only relation they have to the former consisting in their plantigrade movement. They have three false molars above, and four below; in front, the carnivorous one, which is well characterized; and behind it, a small tuberculous one — the upper being more broad than long. Their su- perior carnivorous tooth has only one small tubercle on the inner side, and, in fact, the whole dental system is nearly the same as that of the weasels. The tail is of a middling size, with a plait or fold beneath, in place of a sac, and the port of the animal is very similar to that of the badger. The most celebrated species is the Glutton of the north, the Ursus gulo, L. ; Buff. Supp. Ill, xlviii. (The Common Glutton or Rosso- mak of Russia). About the size of the Badger ; usually of a fine deep maronne colour, with a disk on the back, of a darker brown ; sometimes, however, the shades are lighter. It inhabits the most glacial regions of the North, is considered very sanguinary and fe- rocious, hunts during the night, does not become torpid during the winter, and masters the largest animals by leaping upon them from trees. Its voracity has been ridiculously exaggerated by some au- thors. The Wolverene of North America ( Ursus luscus, Lin. Edw. 103) does not appear to differ from it in any constant character; its colours, however, are generally lighter. Hot climates produce some species which can only be placed near the Gluttons, as they differ from them merely in having one false molar less in each jaw, and in a long tail. Such are the animals termed by the in- habitants of South America Ferrets, which, having the teeth of our Fer- rets and Polecats, have, in fact, similar habits; they are distinguished from them, however, by their plantigrade movement. Viverra vittata, L. ; Buff. Supp. VllI, xxiii and xxv. (The Gri- son). Black; top of the head and neck grey; a white band, reach- ing from the forehead to the shoulders. Mustela harhara, L. ; Buff. Supp. VII, Ix. (The Taira). Brown ; top of the head grey ; a large white spot under the throat. These two animals are found in all the warm climates of America, and smell strongly of musk. Their feet are somewhat palmated, and it appears they have sometimes been taken for otters*. Ratelus, F. C. The Ratels have a false molar in each jaw less than the Grison, and their upper tuberculous tooth is but slightly developed, so that in the teeth * It is supposed, by the description given by Marcgrave of his cariqueiheiii, which name Buffon has applied to his saricovh'.nne,'Vo\. XIII. p. 319, that he meant to speak of the Taira. 86 MAMMALIA. they approach the Cat, while their whole exterior is that of the Grison or Badger. The legs are short; feet plantigrade, and five toes to each; nails very strong, &c. &c. One species only is known, the Viverra mellivora, Sparm. ; and f'iv. capensis, Schreb. pi. 125. (The Ratel or Honey Weasel). Size of the European Badger; grey above; black beneath, with a white line between these two colours ; sometimes it is nearly all white above. It inhabits the Cape of Good Hope, and digs up the earth with its long fore-claws, in search of the honey-combs of the wild bees. The DiGITIGRADA form the second tribe of the Carnivora — that which walks on the ends of the toes. In the first subdivision there is only one tuberculous tooth behind the upper carnivorous one ; these animals, on account of the length of their body, and the shortness of their feet, which permit them to pass through the smallest openings, have been styled vermiform. Like the preceding ones, they have no caecum, but do not fall into a lethargy during the winter. Linnaeus placed them all in one genus, that of MusTELA, Lin. Or the Weasels, which we will divide into four sub-genera. PuTORius, Cuv. The Polecats are the most sanguinary of all ; the lower carnivorous tooth has no inner tubercle, and the superior tuberculous one is more broad than long; there are only two false molars above and three below. These animals are externally recognised by their muzzle, which is shorter and thicker than that of the Weasel. They all diffuse an infectious odour. Mustela 2^utorius, L. ; Buff. VIL xxiii. (The Common Polecat). Brown ; flanks yellowish ; white spots on the head ; the terror of poultry-yards and warrens, M. furo, L. ; Buff. VIL xxv. and xxvi. (The Ferret). Yellow- ish, with rose-coloured eyes, and is perhaps a mere variety of the Polecat. It is only found in France in a domesticated state, and is employed to ferret out the rabbits from their holes. It comes from Spain and Barbary. M. sarmatica; TJ/e Perouasca; Pall. Spic. Zool. XIV. iv. 1; Schreb. CXXXII. (The Sarmatian Weasel). Brown; everywhere spotted with yellow and white. So beautifully is the skin mottled, that it is in high request among furriers. It is found throughout all southern Russia, Asia Minor, and the coast of the northern rivers of the Caspian sea. M. sibirica, Pall. Spic. Zool. XIV. iv. 2. (The Siberian Pole- cat). A uniform light fawn colour ; nose and circumference of the eyes brown ; end of the muzzle and the under part of the lower jaw white. CARNARIA. 87 It is also to this sul)divisioii tliut wo must refer two small Euro- pean species — M. vulgaris, L. ; Buff. VII, xxix, 1. (The Weasel). Of a uni- form red ; and the M. erminea, L. ; BufF. VII, xxix, 2, and xxxi, 1. (The Stoat or Ermine). Red in summer, white in winter ; end of the tail always black. The winter skin is one of the best known furs. We should also place near it the M. lutreola, Pall. Spic. Zool. XI. 1; Leche, Stock. Mem. 1739, pi. xi; Schreb. CXXVII. (The Mink or Norek, or Polecat). It frequents the shores of rivers, &c., in the north and east of Europe from the Arctic Ocean to the Black Sea, and lives on frogs and crabs. The feet are slightly palmated at the base of the toes, but the teeth and round tail approximate it nearer to the Polecat than the Otter. It is of a reddish brown ; the circumference of the lips and the under part of the jaw white ; it exhales a musky odour, and its fur is very 1)eautiful. The above animal is considered by some to be the same as the Polecat of the North American rivers, to which the name of Mink has been transferred, whose feet are likewise semi-palmated ; but the only white about it is on the point of the chin, and sometimes a nar- row line under the throat — it is a different species*. W^arm climates also have their Polecats or Weasels. Put. nudipes, Fred. Cuv. Mammif. (The Javanese Polecat). Golden-yellow ; head and tip of the tail white. Put. africanus, Desm. (The African Polecat). Reddish fawn colour above ; yellowish white below ; a red band reaching longitu- dinally along the middle of the belly from the fore to the hind legs. Put. str/atus, Cuv. (The Striated Madagascar Ferret). Size of the European Weasel ; reddish brown, with five longitudinal white stripes; the under part and the tail nearly all white. Put. zorilla; Zon7/e, Buff. ; Viverra zorilla, Gm. ; Buff. XIII. xl. 1 . (The Zorilla, or Cape Polecat). Irregularly striped with black and white; an animal that has been so far confounded with the mephitic weasels as to receive the name of Zorillo, or little Fox, which the Spaniards have applied to those fetid American animals. It approaches them in its claws, which are fitted for digging, but in every thing else resembles the Polecats. They indicate a subter- raneous habit, which might induce us to separate it from the other species. MusTELA, Cur. The true Weasels differ from the Polecats in having an additional false molar above and below, and in the existence of a small internal tubercle * When this page was written, I had no otlier knowledge of the Norek, or Mink of Europe, than what the description of Palhis afforded me. Having since then procured some specimens, I have ascertained that the white about tlie jaws is not pei-manent, and that very frequently the only white to be seen is at the end of the lower jaw, as in the American Mink. 1 now think they are both one species. 88 MAMMALIA. on their inferior carnivorous tooth, two characters which somewhat diminish the cruelty of their nature. There are two species in Europe closely allied to each other, the M. martes, L. ; Buff. VII. xviii. (The Pine Marten). Brown ; a yellow spot under the throat. Inhabits the woods. M. foina, L. ; BuiF. VII. xviii. (The Common Marten). Brown; the whole under part of the throat and neck white. Inhabits houses. Both species are very destructive. Siberia produces the M. zibellina, Pall. Spic. Zool. XIV. iii. 2; Schreb. CXXXVI. (The Sable). So celebrated for its rich fur; brown, spotted with grey about the head, and distinguished from the preceding ones by the extension of the hair to the under surface of the toes. It inha- bits the coldest mountains, and the hunting to obtain it, in the midst of winter and tremendous snows, is the most painful with which we are acquainted. It is to the pursuit of this animal that we owe the discovery of the eastern countries of Siberia(a). North America also possesses several Martens indicated by na- turalists and travellers, under the indefinite names of Pekan, Vison, Mink, &c. One of them, the White Vison of the furriers, Mus. leutreoce- phala, Harl., has as hairy feet and almost as soft a fur as the Sable, but is of a light fawn colour, and almost white about the head. That which we call the Pekan; Must, canadensis, Gm., and which comes from Canada and the United States, is of a brownish colour, mixed with white on the head, neck, shoulders and top of the back; nose, crupper, tail and limbs blackish*. Mephitis, Cuv. The Skunk, like the Polecat, has two false molars above and three be- low, but the superior tuberculous one is very large, and as long as it is broad, and the inferior carnivorous has two tubercles on its internal side ; circumstances which ally it to the Badger just as the Polecat appioximates to the Grison and Glutton. Independently of this, the anterior nails of the Skunk, like those of the Badger, are long and fitted for digging; they are moreover semi-plantigrade, and the resemblance extends even to the distribution of their colours. Amongst this family so remarkable for its stench, the Skunks are distinguished by a sort of stench far exceeding that of the remaining species. * It is the Pekan of Daubenton, but it has not always the white under the throat. There are several other species of Polecats or of Martens indicated by MM. Molina, Humboldt, and Harlan; but they require re-examination (6). ^" (a) The "painful" task here alluded to was imposed exclusively, during the more barbarous periods of Russian tyranny, on the unhappy exiles who were trans- ported on the most unjust pretences to the wilds of Siberia. These persons were under an obligation to furnish, within a given time, a defined number of sable furs. — Eng. Ed. ^' (b) A specimen of the Pekan or Fisher Marten may be seen in the Zoological Gardens, Regent's Park. Its name of Fisher is not appropriate, as it does not cat fish, but pursues the same prey as the Pine Marten. — Eng. Ed. CAllNARIA. 89 Skunks are generally striated with white stripes on a black ground, but the number of stripes appears to vary in the same species. The most common species of North America is the M. putorius; Viverra putor, Gm. ; Catesb. Carol. II. Ixii. Schreb. CXXII. (The American Skunk — the Fitchet of Pennant). Black, with stripes of white, larger or smaller, and more or less nu- merous ; the tail is black, and the tip white. The odour it produces resembles that of the polecat, mingled with a strong smell of garlic — nothing is more nauseous. It would seem that in South America the species most usually encountered has a white tail. The stripes on the back sometimes occupy its whole breadth ; it is the Viverra mephitis, Gm. ; BufF. XIII. xxxix, or the Chinche*. We may make a distinct subgenus of the Mydaus, Fred. Cuv. whose teeth, feet, and even colours, are similar to those of the Skunk, but whose truncated muzzle resembles a Hog's snout; the tail being reduced to a small pencil. One species only is known, the M. maliceps, Fred. Cuv., and Horsf. Java. (The Teledu). Black ; the nape of the neck, a stripe along the back, and the tail white ; the dorsal stripe sometimes interrupted in the middle ; not surpassed in stench by any of the Skunks (a). LuTRA, Storr. The Otters have three false molars in each jaw, a strong heel to the superior lacerator, a tubercle on the inner side of the inferior one, and a large tuberculous one above, nearly as long as it is broad. The head is compressed, and the tongue demi-asperate. They are otherwise distin- guished from all the preceding subgenera by palmated feet, and a hori- zontally flattened tail, two characters which render them aquatic. Their food is fish. L. vulgaris; Mustela Intra, L. ; BuiF. VIII. xi. (The Common or Greater Otter). Brown above, whitish round the lips, on the cheeks and the whole inferior surface of the body. It is sometimes found spotted and whitish. From the rivers of Europe. Several Otters differ but little from the above. That of Carolina, • It is better figured, Hist, des Mamniif. of Fred. Cuv. The Chili Skunk, Buff. Supp. VII. pi. Ivii, appears to be a mere badly preserved variety of the same. See my Recherches, Sur. Ossemens Foss. IV. 469. i^ (a) All these animals possess an orifice situated below the anus, which is connected with a peculiar gland: this gland secretes the unctuous matter from which the overpowering stench is exhaled; and if we are to believe in the representations of travellers, the secretions of these Skunks must be the most revolting of any fetid exhalation which nature has yet produced. Dogs are instantly stopped in their pur- suit by its emission, and if a man is so unfortunate as, when hunting them, to come in contact with the least particle of the fluid, which, when hard pressed in the chase, they arc able to discharge, the garment so infected can never be used again on ac- count of the impossibility of purifying it from the horrible stench. Molina, .speak- ing of the Chinge of Chili, affirms that the smell of the animals proceeds from a certain greenish oil ejected from a follicle or receptacle near the tail. — Eng. Ed. 90 MAMMALIA. L. lataxina, Fr. Cuv., becomes a little larger, is sometimes more deeply coloured, and has a brownish tint beneath ; very frequently, however, there is no difference even in the shades of colour. In Brazil there are others similar in every respect to those of Carolina. That of the East Indies, the L. nair, Fr. Cuv., (the Pondicherry Otter) appears a little smoother, and is somewhat pale about the eye-brows, but it is scarcely perceptible. The Indians employ it for fishing, as we do the dog for hunting. That of Java, L. leptonyx, Horsf. (the Javanese Otter), has a whiter throat, and this whiteness ascends on the sides of the head so as to surround the eye. In that of the Cape, L. capensis, Fr. Cuv,, the white on the throat, sides of the head and neck, is purer and more extended ; the end of the nose is even marked with it: what particularly distinguishes it, however, is that, at least at a certain age, it has no nails, a character on which M, Lesson has founded his genus Aonyx. Young individuals how- ever have been brought from the Cape that have nails ; it remains to be ascertained whether or not they are of the same species. Mustela lutra hrasiliensis, Gm. (The American Otter). Brown or fawn-coloured; throat white or yellowish; a little larger than the European Otter ; the body is also longer, and the hair shorter. It is distinguished by the end of the nose, not being naked as in most animals, but being covered with hair like the rest of the chanfrin. From the rivers of both Americas. Mustela lutris, L. ; Schreb. CXXVIII *. (The Sea-Otter). Size, double that of the European species ; body much elongated ; tail one-third the length of the body ; the hind feet very short. Its blackish fur, with a marked velvety character, is the most valuable of all the furs; it is often whitish on the head. The English and Russians go in search of this animal in the whole of the northern portion of the Pacific Ocean, for the purpose of making a traffick in its skin with China and Japan. It has no more than four incisor teeth below, but its grinders resemble those of the other Otters. The second subdivision of the Digitigrada has two flat tuberculous teeth behind the superior lacerator, which is itself furnished with a large heel. They are carnivorous, but do not exhibit a courage proportioned to their strength, and frequently feed on carrion. The caecum is always small. Canis, Lin. Dogs have three false molars above, four below, and two tuberculous teeth behind each of the carnivori ; the first of these upper tuberculous teeth is very large. Their superior carnivorous has only a small inner tubercle, but the posterior portion of the inferior is altogether tuberculous. The tongue is soft; the fore-feet have five toes, and the hind ones four. * This figure, apparently drawn from a badly prepared specimen, presents an ex- aggerated resemblance to the Seal, a circumstance by which some naturalists have been induced to believe it should be placed near that genus — its whole organization, however, is that of the Otter. See Ev. Home, Phil. Trans. 17^6. CARNARIA. 91 C. familiaris, L. (The Domestic Dog). Distinguished by his recurved tail, otherwise varying infinitely, as to size, form, colour, and quality of the hair. He is the most complete, singular, and use- ful conquest ever made by man ; the whole species has become his property ; each individual is devoted to his particular master, assumes liis manners, knows and defends his possessions, and remains his true and faithful friend till death ; and all this, neither from con- straint nor want, but solely from the purest gratitude and the truest friendship. The swiftness, strength, aiul scent of the Dog have ren- dered him man's powerful ally against all other animals, and were even, perhaps, necessary to the establishment of society. Of all animals, he is the only one which has followed man through every region of the globe. Some naturalists think the Dog is a Wolf, and others, that he is a domesticated Jackall; and yet, those dogs which have become wild again in desert islands resemble neither the one nor the other. The wild dogs, and those that belong to savages, such as the inhabitants of New Holland, have straight ears, which has occasioned a belief that the European races which approach the most to the original type, are the Shepherd's Dog and Wolf Doc/; but the comparison of the crania indicates a closer affinity in the Mastiff and Danish Dog, subsequently to which come the Hound, the Pointer, and the Ter- rier, differing between themselves only in size and the proportions of the limbs. The Greyhound is longer and more lank, its frontal si- nuses are smaller, and its scent weaker. The Shepherd's Dog and the Wolf Dog resume the straight ears of the wild ones, but with a greater cerebral developement, which continues to increase together with the intelligence in the Barhet and the Spaniel. The Bull Dog, on the other hand, is remarkable for the shortness and strength of his jaws. The small pet-dogs, the Pugs, Spaniels, Shocks, &c., are the most degenerate productions, and exhibit the most striking marks of that power to which man subjects all nature*. The dog is born with his eyes closed ; he opens them on the tenth or twelfth day ; his teeth commence changing in the fourth month, and his full growth is attained at the expiration of the second year. The period of gestation is sixty-three days, and from six to twelve pups are produced at a birth. The dog is old at fifteen years, and seldom lives beyond twenty. His vigilance, bark, singular mode of copulation, and susceptibility of education, are well known to every one. C. lupus, L.; BufF. Vll.i. (The Wolf). A large species, with a straight tail ; legs fawn-coloured, with a black stripe on the fore- legs when adult^ ; the most mischievous of all the carnaria of Eu- rope. It is found from Egypt to Lapland, and appears to have pass- ed into America. Towards the north, in winter, its fur becomes white. It attacks all our animals, yet does not exhibit a courage proportioned to its strength. It often feeds on carrion. Its habits and physical developement are closely related to those of the dog. • See Fr. Cuv. Ann. Mas. XVIII. p. 333, et scq. t This stripe is more or less strongly marked on the .Jackall. Mexican Wolf, &c. 92 MAMMALIA. C. lycaon, L. ; Buff. IX, xli. (The Black Wolf). Also inha- bits Europe, and is sometimes, though rarely, found in France*. The fur is of a deep and uniform black, with a little white at the end of the muzzle, and a small spot of the same colour under the breast. It is said to be more ferocious than the common wolf. C. mexicanus, L. (The Mexican Wolf). Reddish grey, mixed with black ; circumference of the muzzle, under part of the body, and the feet white ; size that of the Common Wolff. C. jubatus, Cuv. ; Agoura-Gouazou, Azzar. (The Red W^olf). A fine cinnamon-red; a short black mane along the spine. From the marshes of South America. C. aureus, L. ; Schreb. XCIV. (The Chacal or Jackal). Less than the preceding; the muzzle more pointed; of a greyish brown; thighs and legs of a light fawai colour ; some red on the ear ; the tail scarcely reaching further than the heel. It is a voracious ani- mal, which hunts like the dog, and in its conformation, and the faci- lity with which it is tamed, resembles the latter more closely than any other wild species. Jackals are found from the Indies and the environs of the Caspian sea, as far as and in Guinea; it is not cer- tain, however, that they are all of one species. Those of Senegal, for instance, C. anthus, Fr. Cuv. Mammif., stand higher, appear to have a sharper muzzle, and the tail a little longer. Foxes may be distinguished from the Wolf and Dog by a longer and more tufted tail, by a more pointed muzzle, by pupils, which, during the day, form a vertical fissure, and by the upper incisors being less sloping. They diffuse a fetid odour, dig burrows, and attack none but the weaker animals. This subgenus is more numerous than the preceding one. C. vulpes, L. ; Buff. VII. vi. (The Common Fox). More or less red ; tip of the tail white ; found from Sweden to Egypt. Those of the north have merely a more brilliant fur. There is no constant difference to be observed between those of the Eastern continent and those of North America. The Calopex, Schreb. XCI., or the Collier, which has the end of the tail black, and is found in the same countries as the common one; the Renard croise. Id. XCI. A, or the Cross Fox, which is only distinguished by a streak of black along the spine and across the shoulders ; the Fox the French fur- riers call the Turk, which is of a yellowish grey, with the end of the tail white, are, perhaps, mere varieties of the common one. The following species, however, are very distinct. [See App. VII. of Am. Ed.] C. Azurce,Vx.^idi:s.\ Aguarachai, A.ZZ. (The Brazil Fox). Grey; * We have seen four individuals taken and killed in France. It must not be con- founded with the Black Fox, among whose synonymes Gmelin has placed it. \_See Append. VI. of Am. Ed.'\ f This character is taken from a specimen brought from Mexico, and presented to the Cabinet du Roi by M. de Humboldt. Those which have been drawn by au- thors from the bad figure of Recchi, inserted in Hernandez, p. 479, must be reject- ed. Messrs. Say and Harlan, Faun. Amer., mention two other species of wolves, Can. latrans and Can. nubilus, which require to be examined and compared. \_See Append, ut sup. of Am. Ed. CARNARIA. 93 sides of the neck reddish; a black line commencing on the nape of the neck, and extending along the middle of the tail. C corsac, Gm. ; BufF. Supp. III. xvi, under the name of Adive. (The Corsac). A pale yellowish grey ; a few blackish waves at the base of the tail; tip of the tail black; jaw white. Common on the vast heaths of central Asia, from the Volga to India. It has the habits of the Fox, and never drinks. I suspect the Ahouhossein of Nubia — Canis pallidus, Ruppel, pi. xi — is the same animal. There is also in the prairies of North America, a little Fox, C. velox, Har. and Say; F. Am., 91, which lives in burrows, but which appears to differ from the Corsac by the colours : a blackish tail, &c. C. cinereo-argenteus, Schreb. XCII. A. (The Tri-coloured Fox of America). Ash-coloured above ; white beneath; a cinnamon-red band along the flanks. From all the warm and temperate parts of the two Americas. C. argentatus. (The Silver or Black Fox)*. Black; tips of the hairs white, except on the ears, shoulders, and tail, where they are of a pure black. The end of the tail is all white. From North America. Its fur is most beautiful, and very costly. C. lagopus, L. ; Schreb. XCIII. (The Blue Fox or Isatis). Deep ash-colour; the under surface of the toes hairy f; often white in winter. From the north of both continents, particularly from Norway and Siberia ; much esteemed for its fur. C. mesomelasX, '&c\\xeh.X.CY. (The Cape Fox). Fawn-coloured on the flanks ; middle of the nose black, mixed with white, termi- nating in a point behind; the ears red as well as the feet; the two posterior thirds of the tail black, &c. The interior of Africa produces Foxes remarkable for the size of their ears, and the strength of the hairs of their mustachios; they are the Megalotis of lUiger. There are two known, the C. megalotis, Lalande; a Cape species, something smaller than our common Fox, higher on its feet ; yellowish grey above, whitish beneath ; the feet, tail, and a dorsal line black. C. zerda, Gm., or Fennec of Bruce ; Bufl". Supp. III. xix. Ears still larger; a small species of an almost white fawni colour, which burrows in the sands of Nubia § ; its hair is woolly, and extends un- der the toes. Finally, we may place after the Dogs, as a fourth subgenus, distin- guished by the number of toes, which is four to each foot, the Hycena venatica, Bursch. ; H. picta, Temm. ; An. Gen. des Sc. Phys. III. (The Wild Dog of the Cape). It has the dental sys- * Gmel. has confounded it with the Black Wolf, under the name of Canis lycaon. f Several of the Foxes, and even the common one, have hair under their feet in the north. X Gmelin has confounded it with the Adive of BufFon, which is a factitious species, and does not differ from the Jackal. § Bruce's figure, copied by BufiTon, and subsequently by all his compilers, greatly exaggerates the size of the ears. We have at last a good figure and exact descrip- tion of this animal in the Voy. of Ruppel, Zoolog. pi. iii. 94 MAMMALIA. tem of the Dog and not that of the Hyena ; a long and thin form ; the fur mottled, with white and fawn colour, grey and black; size of the Wolf, large ears with black tips, &c. It is gregarious, and fre- quently approaches Cape Town, devastating its environs. ViVERRA. The Civets have three false molars above and four below, the anterior of which sometimes fall out ; two tolerably large tuberculous teeth above, one only below, and two tubercles projecting forwards on the inner side of the inferior carnivorous, the rest of that tooth being more or less tuber- culous. The tongue is bristled with sharp and rough papillae. Their claws are more or less raised as they walk, and near the anus is a pouch more or less deep, where an unctuous and frequently an odorous matter oozes from peculiar glands. They are divided into four subgenera. VivERRA, Cuv. In the true Civets the deep pouch situated between the anus and the organ of generation, and divided into two sacs, is filled with an abundant pommade of a strong musky odour, secreted by glands which surround the pouch. This substance is an article of commerce, and is used by the per- fumers. It was more employed when musk and ambergris were un- known. The pupil of the eye remains round during the day, and their claws are only semi-retractile. V. civetta,!..; Buff. IX, xxxiv. (The Civet). Ash-coloured, irregularly barred and spotted with black; the tail less than the body, black towards the end, with four or five rings near its base ; two black bands encircling the throat, and one surrounding the face ; a mane along the whole length of the spine and tail that bristles up at the will of the animal. From the hottest parts of Africa. V. zibetha, L. ; BufF. IX. xxxi. (The Zibet). Ash-coloured, spotted with black; black half-rings on the whole tail; black bands on the sides of the neck ; no mane. From the East Indies. Genetta, Cuv. In the Genets the pouch is reduced to a slight depression formed by the projection of the glands, and has scarcely any visible excretion, al- though an odour is diffused from it that is very perceptible. In the light the pupil forms a vertical fissure, and the nails are completely retractile, as in the Cat. V. genetta, L. (The Common Genet). Grey, spotted with brown or black, the muzzle blackish ; white spots on the eye-brows, cheeks, and each side of the end of the nose ; tail the length of the body, annulated with black and white, the black rings being from nine to eleven in number. Found from the south of France to the Cape of Good Hope, differing in the size and number of the spots in the bands along the shoulder and neck, as well as in the lines on the nape of the neck, &c.*. It frequents the edges of brooks, near springs, &c. The skin forms an important article of trade. * The best figure of a Genet is that given by Pennant, Synops. No. 172, Hist. CARNARIA. 95 y. Unsung, Ilardwick, Lin. Trans. XIII. pi. xxiv; Felis gracilis, Horsf. Java. (The Javanese Genet). Several irregular, brown, transverse bands on the body, and seven rings round the tail. r. fossa, Buff. XIII. XX. (The Fossane of Madagascar). Tail, flanks, and all above, fawn colour ; the legs and all beneath a yellow- ish white ; reddish brown spots, those on the back forming four lon- gitudinal bands; tail semi-annulated w^ith red, and only half the length of the body*. V. rasse, Horsf. Jav. (The Rasse). Legs brown ; body greyish brown, with small brown spots united on the crupper, and forming five longitudinal lines. Tail shorter than the body, annulated with black and white, the black rings six or seven in number -f. The hair is harsher than in the preceding species. The Paradoxurus, Fr. Ctiv. has the teeth and most of the characters of the Genets, with which it was a long time confounded; it is however more stout-limbed; the feet arc semi-palmate, and the walk nearly plantigrade ; but what particularly dis- tinguishes it is the spiral inclination of the tail, which is not prehensile. Only one species is known, the P. typus, Fr. Cuv. (The Pougoune of India). A yellowish- brown, with some spots of a deeper brown than the rest; the feet, muzzle, and part of the tail blackish; eye-brows white, and a white spot under the eye. The French of Pondicherry call it the Palm Martin or Marie des palmier s\,. Mangusta, Cuv. — Herpestes, Illig. The pouch voluminous and simple ; the anus pierced in its depth. The hairs are annulated with light and obscure tints, which determine their general colour on the eye. The Mangouste of Egypt, so celebrated among the ancients under the name of Ichneumon; Viverra ichneumon, L. ; Buff. Supp. Ill, No. 280, under tlie improper name of Fossane. It is the variety most frequently brought from the Cape. There is another taken from a young specimen, Brovra, 111. pi. xliii, still under the name of Fossane. It is distinguished by its whitish and not brown legs, and we have seen a similar one from Senegal. That of Buff. IX. xxxvi, has not the bands on the neck and shoulders sufficiently marked. The num- ber of black rings on the tail varies from nine to eleven. The Civette de Malacca of Sonnerat, Voy. II. pi. xxxix, which is the same as the Genette du Cap, Buff. Supp. VII. pi. Iviii, and the Chat bisaam of Vosmaer, of which Gmelin has made as many species, appear to be common Genets. * Description taken from the original sent to BufTon by Poivre, and engraved, Hist. Nat. XIII. pi. XX. The description of Daubenton is correct so far as regards the distribution of the spots; but he calls them Hack, whereas they are reddish. Be- .sides, this animal can hardly be the fossa of Flacourt, which that author states is the size of the Badger. The Fossane has the same furrow as the Genet, notwithstand- ing the assertion of Poivre to the contrary. t It is probably Vanimal du muse of La Peyronie, Acad, des Sc. 1728, pi. xxiv. p. 464, which had been confounded with the Zibelh— hut that animal is larger, and has other colours. To this division we must refer the Viv. fasciata, Gm. ; Buff. Supp. VII. Ivii. X It is the pretended Genette de France' oi Buffon, Supp. III. pi. xlvii, the Civctle a bandeau of Geoff. 96 MAMMALIA, xxvi. is grey, witli a long tail, terminated with a black tuft ; it is larger than our cat, and as slender as a marten. It chiefly hunts for the eggs of the crocodile, but also feeds on all sorts of small ani- mals; brought up in houses, it hunts mice, reptiles, &c. By the Europeans at Cairo it is called Pharaoh's Rat; by the natives, Nems. The antient tradition of its jumping down the throat of the croco- dile, to destroy it, is entirely fabulous. The Mangouste of India; Fiv. mungos, Liin.; BuiF. XIII, xix; and that of the Cape, Fiv. cafra, Gm.; Schreb. CXVI. B., are smaller, both having a pointed tail, and a grey or brown fur, the lat- ter being more of an ashy, and the former more of a fawn colour, having, besides, some red about the cheeks and jaws. The Mangouste of India is celebrated for its combats with the most dangerous serpents, and for having led us to the knowledge of the Ophiorhiza mangos, as an antidote to their poison. There is also the Mangouste of Java — H. Javanicus, reddish brown; cheeks of a chestnut-red; throat more fawn-coloured: a large one, from the marshes of the Cape — H. paludinosus, of an al- most uniform reddish-brown, verging to a black, a little lighter on the chin: a third from the Cape — H. penicillatus, of a greyish fawn colour, tip of the tail white: one from Senegal — H. albicaudus, grey, tail all white : it is difficult, however, to establish very specific differences between these animals. RyziENA, Illig. The Surikates have a strong resemblance to the Mangoustes, even to the tints and transverse streaks of the hair, but are distinguished from them, and from all the Carnivora of which we have hitherto spoken, by having only four toes to each foot. They also are higher on their legs, and they have not the small molar immediately behind the canine tooth. Their pouch extends into the anus. One species only is known, a native of Africa — Fiv. tetradactyla, Gm. ; Buff. XIII, viii, a little less than the Mangouste of India*. Grossarchus, Fred. Cuv. The muzzle, teeth, pouch, and walk of the Surikates, the toes and ge- nital organs of the Mangoustes. One species only is known — Crossarchus obscurus, Fred. Cuv., from Sierra Leone, of the size of the Surikate; greyish brown; cheeks a little paler, and a hairy tale. We should here mention a singular animal from the south of Africa, known only while young; which, to the five anterior toes, and the four hind ones, and the slightly elongated head of the ci- vets, adds the raised feet, the short hind ones, and the mane of the hyena; it also singularly resembles the striped hyena in the colours of its fur. The thumb of the fore foot is short and higher; it is the * The Zenik of Sonnerat, Voy. II. pi. xcii, appears to differ from the Surikate, merely because it is roughly drawn. CARNARIA. 97 Proteles Lalandii, Isid. Geoff". Mem. da jNTus. XI. 354, pi. xx. In- habits caverns. The individual specimens that have been examined, and which were all young, had but three small false molars, and one small tu- berculous posterior molar. It seems as though their teeth had never come to perfection, as often happens in the Genets*. * See my Ossemens Fossiles, torn. IV. p. (idr (a) In this second subdivision of the digitigrade animals, whicli is here con- cluded, are found many species particularly recommended to our attention. As a vast collection of dogs of different countries are now in the two Zoological Gardens, it may be convenient to our readers to give the simple classification of these interesting animals, as it has been recently established by M. F. Ciivier. He forms the whole species of dogs into three groups : — 1. The Matins, characterized as follows — head elongated, sides of the cranium approaching each other in the anterior direction, and the condyles of the inferior jaw horizontally directed with respect to the position of the teeth in the upper jaw. The specimens of this group are — the New Holland Dog, the French Matin, the Danish Dog, the Greyhound, including all the varieties of the latter, and the Albanian Dog. 2. Spaniels, in which the head is elongated, but not to the same extent as in the Matins, nor do the side bones of the head approximate each other, but they sepa- rate more widely, swelling out in such a way as to increase the anterior part of the cavity of the cranium, a circumstance that would admit of the supposition that these animals owe their superior intelligence to the greater developement of the hemis- pheres of the brain. This group includes the various spaniels, such as the King Charles's breed, the Water Spaniel, the Hound, Bloodhound, Foxhound, Harrier, and the Beagle, which is a particular breed of the Harrier, the Pointer, Turnspit, Shepherd's Dog, Wolf, Siberian and Esquimaux Dogs, the Alpine and Newfoundland Dog, the Setter, Terrier, and the Alco. 3. Dogues. In this third group the muzzle is shortened, the cranium is very high, and smaller than in other dogs, and the sinuses between the walls of the frontal bone vary considerably. It includes the Bull Dog, Mastiff, Pug Dog, Iceland Dog, Little Danish, Bastard Pug, the Artois, the Barbary, and Dog of Andalusia. Some Esquimaux, Australian, and other varieties of foreign Dogs, may be seen in both the Zoological Gardens. The Wolf Species, belonging to this subdivision, are found in various parts of the continent of Europe at present, but they offer this remarkable peculiarity in their history, that their race, which was once exceedingly nimierous and formidable in these countries, has been wholly extirpated from them. The last native wolf which is re- corded to have been seen here, was in 1710, in Ireland. A male and female wolf, the one a native of France, the other of Russia, are in the Zoological Gardens. The property possessed by Civet Cats, the genus Viverra of this subdivision, of secreting an odoriferous substance, which was once used in medicine, but is now ex- clusively employed in perfumery, merits some allusion. A deep bag, situated be- tween the anus and the organs of generation, is divided into two cavities, into which two glands secrete the peculiar matter called civet. The substance is a thick, unctuous matter, with an odour very much resembling that of amber. In the fresh state it is white, but, after some time, becomes yellow, and acquires a very agreeable odour. Chemical investigation has shewn that the odour depends on a volatile oil mixed with some other ingredients, from which it may be separated by distillation in water. The oil, when thus isolated, is of a clear yellow colour, has the strong odour ol civet, together with an acid and burning taste. We may add, in this place, that the secretion from the Skunks (see p. 88), has been found, on analysis, to con- sist of two oils, which may be separated from each other; the one is an oil resem- bling the amber in colour, giving out a most revolting garlic smell, so that in the smallest possible quantity it is perfectly insupportable, and communicates its stench even to water with which it is mixed. The thick oil, which is another of its ingre- dients, has no flavour whatever. — Exc. I-ln. 98 MAMMALIA. The last subdivision of the Digitigrada has no small teeth of any kind behind the large molar of the lower jaw. The animals contained in it arc the most cruel and sanguinary of the class. They form two genera. Hy^na, Storr. The Hyenas have three false molars above and four below, all conical, blunt, and singularly large ; their superior carnivorous tooth has a small tubercle within and in front, but the inferior has none, presenting only two stout trenchant points : with these powerful arms they are enabled to crush the bones of the largest prey. The tongue is rough ; each foot has four toes like that of the Surikate ; and under the anus is a deep and glandular pouch, which induced some of the ancients to consider them as hermaphro- dites. So powerful are the muscles of the neck and jaw, that it is almost impossible to wrest any thing from between their teeth that they have once seized, and, among the Arabs, their name is the symbol of obstinacy. It sometimes happens that an anchylosis of the cervical vertebrae is the consequence of these violent efforts, and this has caused it to be said that they have only one single bone in the neck. They are nocturnal animals, inhabiting caves ; are extremely voracious, and feed chiefly on dead bodies, which they seek for even in the grave. A thousand superstitious tradi- tions are connected with them. Three species are knoA\ii, the H. vulyaris, Buff. Supp. III. xlvi. (The Striped Hyena). Grey ; blackish or brown stripes crosswise ; a mane along the whole of the nape of the neck, and black, that stands erect when the animal is angry. It is found from India to Abyssinia and Senegal. H. brunnea, Thumb., Acad, of Stockh. 1820, part I. pi. ii; H. villosa, Smith. Lin. Trans. XV. pi. xix. (The Brown Hyena). Of a deep greyish brown ; black stripes on the legs only. From the south of Africa, where the inhabitants of the Cape call it le Loup du rivac/e, or the Shore Wolf. H. crocuta, Schreb. XCVI. B. (The Spotted Hyena). Grey or reddish, sprinkled with black spots. It is likewise from the south of Africa, and is the Tiger Wolf of the Cape. There have lately been found in several caverns of France, Ger- many, and England, many bones of a lost species of Hyena — //. spelcea, which appears to have resided there, and to have left the bones of many other animals, which bear evident marks of its teeth, and even its own faeces*. * See Buckland, Reliquiae Diluvianae, and Vol. IV, of my Oss. Foss. 2d ed. {H^" (a) The learned professor mentioned in the foregoing note, discovered, in 1822, in Kirkdale cave, Yorkshire, beneath a muddy surface, a great quantity of the bones of different animals, a remarkable proportion of which belonged to Hyaenas. The conclusions to which this discovery led were as follows : — that this cavern was, before the deluge, the retreat of Hyaenas, the species of which have been long ex- tinct; that the teeth and fragments of the bones with which the remains of the Hyae- nas were found blended, belonged to the elephant, rhinoceros, hippopotamus, horse, ox, deer, fox, water-rat, and several birds, all these animals having been dragged into the cave to be devoured by the Hyaenas. At least, this motive seems to have been strongly indicated by the fact, that the fragments shewed proofs of having been CARNARIA. 99 Felis, Linn. Of all the Carnaria the Cats are the most completely and powerfully armed. Their short and round muzzle, short jaws, and particularly their retractile nails, which, being raised perpendicularly, and hidden between the toes, when at rest, by the action of elastic ligament, lose neither point nor edge, render them most formidable animals, the larger species espe- cially. They have two false molars above, and two below : their superior carnivorous tooth has three lobes, and a blunted heel on the inner side, the inferior, two pointed and trenchant lobes, without any heel : they have but a very small tuberculous tooth above, without any thing to correspond to it below. The species of this genus are very numerous and various with regard to size and colour, though they are all similar with respect to form. We can only subdivide them by referring to the difference of size and the length of the hair, characters of but little importance. At the head of the genus we find F. leo, L. ; Buff. VIII. i. 11. (The Lion). Distinguished by its uniform tawny colour, the tuft of hair at the end of the tail, and the flowing mane which clothes the head, neck, and shoulders of the male. Of all beasts of prey, this is the strongest and most coura- geous. Formerly scattered through the three parts of the old world, it seems at present to be confined to Africa and some of the neigh - bouring parts of Asia. The head of the Lion is more square than that of the following species. Tigers are large, short-haired species, most commonly marked with vivid spots. F. tigrls, Buff. VIII. ix. (The Royal Tiger). As large as the Lion, but the body is longer, and the head rounder ; of a lively fawn colour above; a pure white below, irregularly crossed with black stripes ; the most cruel of all quadrupeds, and the scourge of the East Indies. Such are his strength and the velocity of his move- ments, that during the march of armies he has been seen to seize a soldier while on horseback, and bear him to the depths of the forest, without affording a possibility of rescue. F. onga, L. ; Azzar. pi. ix; Fred. Cuv. Mammif. (The .laguar). Nearly the size of the Royal Tiger, and almost as dangerous ; a lively gnawed, and even fractured by particular teeth. Amongst the remains were teetli and excrements of the Hyanas also, the existence of which has been explained on the principle that it is the ascertained habit of Hyasnas to devour the dead bodies of their own species, being, like wolves, gregarious, and hunting mostly in packs. Similar fossil remains of supposed antediluvian Hysenas have been found in France and Germany, in caves; but the circumstances under which they have been disco- vered lead to the conclusion that the bones either belong to animals that had fallen through fissures opening into these caves, or were carried by water through subter- ranean canals. The species, which is unknown as it existed previously to the deluge, is called H. SpeL-ea, Cave Hyana, and by means of that exact knowledge of the laws of animal organization which he so eminently possessed, Cuvier has been able to build up afresh the whole of the structure of this species, and has given the following description of the unseen animal in another of his great works : — size larger by a third proportion than the Hyaena rayee, Cains hyccnus; the muzzle, however, is shorter, and the teeth must have been much larger, from the appearance of their fragments, which consist but of stumps, than those of the existing races. — Eng. Ed. 100 MAMMALIA. fawn colour above ; the flank longitudinally marked with four rows of ocellated spots, that is, with rings more or less complete, having a black point in the middle ; white beneath, transversely striped with black. Sometimes individual specimens are found black, whose rings, of a deeper hue, are only perceptible in a particular light. F. pardus, L. ; the Pardalis of the ancients ; Cuv. Menag. du Mus. 8vo. I. p. 212. (The Panther). Fawn coloured above ; white beneath; with six or seven rows of black spots, resembling roses, that is, formed by the assemblage of five or six simple spots on each flank ; the tail is the length of the body, minus that of the head. This species is scattered throughout all Africa, the southern parts of Asia, and the Indian Archipelago. In some of them the ground of the fur is black, with spots of a deeper black — F. melas, Per., but they are not a distinct species. We have frequently seen black and fawn-coloured young ones suckled by the same mother*. F. leopardus, L. (The Leopard). From Africa ; similar to the Panther, but has ten rows of smaller spots -j-. These two species are smaller than the Jaguar. Travellers and furriers designate them indiscriminately by the names of Leopard^ Panther, African Tiger, &c.;J;. There is a third, peculiar to the distant parts of the East Indies, that is a little lower; tail equal in length to the body and head; spots smaller and more numerous ; the F. chalyheata, Herm. ; Schreb. CI.§. F. discolor, L. ; Buff. VIII. xix. (The Couguar or Puma). Red, with small spots of a slightly deeper red which are not easily perceived. From both Americas, where it preys on Deer, Sheep, &c.||. Among the inferior species we should distinguish the Lynxes, * Temminck calls this species Felis leopardus. t The same naturalist considers our Leopard as a variety of our Panther, and confounds them under his Felis leopardus. X Buffon has mistaken the Jaguar, wliich he took for the Panther of the eastern continent, and has not well distinguished the Panther and the Leopard, and for this reason we cannot positively quote his pi. xi, xii, xiii and xiv. of Vol. VI IL § It is to this species that Temminck atfixes the name of Panther, because he thinks Linnasus alluded to it, when speaking of his Felis pardus in the " cauda elon- gala." There is one thing very certain, and that is, that the Panther, so well known to the ancients, and which was so often produced at the Roman games, could not possibly have been an animal from the extreme parts of oriental Asia. The Ounce of Buff. IX. pi. xiii {Felis uncia, Gm.), diflers from the Panthers and Leopards by the inequality of the spots, which are more irregularly distributed, and partly crenate or annulated, Sec. It appears to be found in Persia. We only know it by the iigure of Buffon, and that which Mr. Hamilton Smith has inserted in the work of Griffith, taken from a specimen that was living in London. II That this animal, our common Panther, does not always confine itself to sheep, &c. is well known, and has lately been proved, January, 1830, by an unprovoked attack upon an unfortunate woman in Pennsylvania. The ferocious brute seized upon her as she was passing along the road, and killed her in an instant. See Griif., part V. p. 438 — An American trsnslation. caiinar;a. 101 which are remarkable for the pencils of hair which ornament their ears. Four or live different kinds of them are known in commerce by the name of Loups Cerviers, which have long been confounded by naturalists {Felis lynx, h.)., and whose specific limits are even not yet perhaps well ascertained. They all have a very short tail, and a skin more or less spotted. The most beautiful, which are as large as a wolf — F. cervaria, Temm., come from Asia by the way of Russia, and have a slightly reddish-grey fur, finely spotted with black. Others from Canada and the north of Sweden — F. borealis, Temm., have the fur very much tufted, extending even under the feet ; of an ash-coloured grey, and with scarcely any spots. The Lynx of the temperate parts of Europe — F. lynx, Temm., which has almost disappeared from its populous districts, but which is still found in the Pyrenees, in the mountains of Naples, and, as it is said, even in Africa; has a red fur, spotted with brown. In these three species or varieties, the end of the tail is black. It is thought there is a lynx of the south of Europe — Felis pardina, Oken, which may be considered distinct. It is smaller, not so hairy, fur red, mottled with black, and the tail spotted like the body. We find also in North America, the F. rufa, Guld. Schreb. CIX. B; F. montana, L. (The Bay Lynx.) A reddish fawn or greyish colour, mottled with brow^n; brown waves on the thighs ; tail annulated with black or brown ; ra- ther smaller than the Lynx*. F. chaus, Guld.; Schreb. CX. (The Chaus, or Lynx of the Marshes). Is of a yellowish grey-brown; the hind part of each leg blackish; tail reaches to the hamstrings, and is annulated at the ex- tremity with black. Inhabits the Caucasian marshes, those of Persia and of Egypt, pursues birds, &c. It is now thought we should separate from the above species the Booted Lynx — F. calhjata, Temm., Bruce, pi. xxx, which is some- what smaller, and has a little longer tail ; the external surface of its ears is red. It is, at least, a closely allied species, and has the same habits. F. caracal, L. ; Buff. IX. xxiv., and Supp. III. xlv. (The Ca- racal). Of au almost uniform vinous red. From Persia, Turkey, &c. It is the true Lynx of the ancients. The inferior species, which are deprived of the pencils on the ears, are more or less similar to our common cat ; such are F.pardalis, L. ; Buff. XIII. pi. xxxv. and xxxvi. (The Ocelot). Rather lower on its legs than most of the others ; grey, with large * M. Rafinisque also indicates a Lynx fasciatus, a //. aureus, a L.fluridanus, a /.. montanus, and M. Temminck a Felis aiirata, which must all belong to this little tribe. W% MAMMALIA. fawn coloured spots bordered with black, forming oblique bands on the flank. From America. F. mitis, Fr. Cuv. (The Chati). Marked with unconnected, triangular, fawn coloured spots, edged with black. F. cafra. (The Cat of Caifraria). Stands high on its legs ; grey, transversely striped with black. F. serval, BuflP. XIII. xxxv. (The Serval). Yellowish, with ir- regular black spots. From Africa. F. jacjnarondi, Azzara, Voy., pi. 9. (The Jaguarondi). Body long; and altogether of a blackish brown. From the forests of South America. F. catus, L. ; Buff. VI. i. et seq. (The Domestic Cat). Is ori- ginally from the forests of Europe. In its wild state it is of a grey- ish brown, with darker transverse undulations ; below pale ; the in- sides of the thighs and of all the feet, yellowish; three bands on the tail, its inferior third blackish. In a domestic state it varies, as is well known, in colours, in the length and fineness of the hair, but infinitely less so than the dog; it is also much less submissive and affectionate*. We might also place in a separate subgenus, a species whose head is rounder and shorter, and whose nails are not retractile, the Felis jubata, Schreb. 105, and better, Fel. (juttata, Id. 105, b, (The Hunt- ing Leopard), which is the size of the Leopard, but longer bodied, and stands higher ; the tail long, annulated at the end ; the fur fawn colour, mottled with small uniform black spots, a black streak reach- ing from the eye to the angle of the mouth. The disposition of this animal differs from that of the remainder of the genus in being ex- tremely mild and docile. The AMPHIBIA Will form the third and last of the small tribes into which we divide the Carnivora. Their feet are so short and so enveloped in the skin, that the only service they can render them on land, is to enable them to crawl ; but as the intervals of the fingers are occupied by membranes, they are excellent oars ; and, in fact, these animals pass the greater portion of their time in the water ; never landing, except for the purpose of basking in the sun, and suckling their young. Their elongated body; their very move- able spine, which is provided with muscles that strongly flex it ; theii- narrow pelvis ; their short hair, that adheres closely to the skin, all unite * The species, more or less allied to the cat, are very numerous in the two conti- nents; but all those that are given in catalogues are very far from being authentic, and sufficiently distinguished from each other. We may, however, consider as such, those of which we have good figures. The Margay, Buff.; Felis tlgrina, Gm., Buff. XIII.; Schreb. 106. — FeLmacroura, Pr. Max., Brazil, pl.xi. — Felis sumatra7ia,HoTsi. — Fel. javanensis, Id. — Fel. torquata, Fred. Cuv. — Fel. colocolo, Fred. Cuv. Mammif., &c. CARNARIA. lOJ to render them good swimmers; and all the details of their anatomy con- firm these first indicia. We have as yet distinguished two genera only, Phoca and Trichechus. PiiocA, Lin. Seals have six or four incisors above, four or two below, pointed canini and grinders to the number of twenty, twenty-two, or twenty-four, all trenchant or conical, and without any tuberculous part whatever ; five toes to all the feet, the anterior ones regularly decreasing in length from the thumb to the little toe, while in the hinder feet the thumb and the little toe are the longest, and the intermediate ones the shortest. The fore feet are enveloped in the skin of the body as far as the tarsus, the hinder ones almost to the heel. Between the latter is a short tail. The head of a seal bears a resemblance to that of a dog, whose intelligence and soft ex- pressive look it also possesses. It is easily tamed, and soon becomes at- tached to its keeper, or those who feed it. The tongue is smooth, and sloped at the end, the stomach simple, cgecum short, and tlie intestinal canal long, and tolerably regular. These animals live on fish ; always eat in the water, and close their nostrils when they dive by a kind of valve. As they remain a long time under water, it was supposed that the foramen ovale remained open, as in the human foetus — but it is not so : there is, however, a large venous sinus in the liver, which must assist them in diving, by rendering respiration less necessary to the motion of the blood. Their blood is very abundant and very black. Phoca, properly so called, or, without external ears. The true Phocae have pointed incisors ; all the toes enjoy a certain de- gree of motion, and are terminated by pointed nails planted on the edge of the membrane, which unites them. They are subdivided from the number of their incisors. The Caloce- PHALA, Fr. Cuv., have six above and four below; such is the Phoca vitulina, L.; Buff. XIII. xlv., and Supp. VI. xlvi; Ph. littorea, Thienem. pi. vi. (The Common Seal). From three to five feet in length; of a yellowish grey, more or less shaded and spotted with brown, according to its age ; sometimes brownish, with small yellow spots. Wlien very old it becomes whitish. Common on the coast of Europe in great herds. It is also found far to the north ; we are even assured that it is this species which inhabits the Caspian sea, and the great fresh water lakes of Russia and Siberia, but this assertion does not appear to be founded on an exact comparison. In fact, the European seas contain several Phocae, which have long been confounded, some of which are perhaps mere varieties of the others. Thus, some of them have the back covered with small clouded, confluent, browaiish spots, on a yellowish ground — Ph. hispida, Schreb. 8G*. These are the most common ones of the northern ocean. In others again the ground is dark, traversed with undulat- I suspect we should refer to it the Ph. scopulicola, Thieuem, pi. v. 104 MAMMALIA. ing lines, which sometimes forms rinji^s — Ph. annellata, Nils., Thie- nem., pi. ix — xii; Ph.foetida, Fabr*., &c. A species more easily recognised is the Ph. yroenlandica, and P. oceanica; Eged. Groenl. fig. A, p. 62; Lepechin, Act. Petrop. I, part I. pi. vi — vii. ; Thieneman, pi. xiv — xxi. (The Harp Seal). Yellowish grey, spotted with brown when young, afterwards marked by an oblique black or brown scarf on each flank ; tlie head of the old male is black ; length five feet. From the whole north of the globe. Ph. barbata, Fabr. ; Thienem., pi. i — iv. (The Bearded Seal). From the north, and surpasses all the preceding ones in its size, which is from seven to eight feet : it is grey ; browner above, with a longitudinal blackish line that forms a sort of cross upon the chanfrin. Its mustachios are thicker and stronger than the others. Ph. leueopla, Thienem., pi. xiii. (The White-nailed Seal). Is of a yellowish grey. Ph. Uujura, Cuv. (The Hare-tailed Seal). Has the tail white and woolly, &c.f . Stenorhincus, Fred. Cuv. Four incisors above, and four below, the molars deeply notched into three points. One species only is known, and that is from the Austral seas — Ph. leptonix,^\'dm. Size of the barbata; greyish above; yellowish beneath ; nails small. Pelagus, Fred. Cuv. Four incisors also, above ajid below, but their grinders are obtuse cones, with a slightly marked heel before and behind. There is one of them in the Mediterranean. Ph. monachus Gm.; Buff. Supp. VI. pi. xiiij. (The Monk). From ten to twelve feet in length, of a blackish brown, with a white belly. It is particularly found among the Grecian and Adriatic Islands, and is, most probably, the species best known to the antients. Stemmatopus, Fred. Cuv. Four superior incisors, and two inferior; grinders compressed, slightly trilobate, supported by thick roots. Such is the Ph. cristata, Gm. ; Phoca leonina, Fabr. ; Eged. Groenl., pi. vi. ; Dekay, New York Lye. I, pi. vii. (The Hooded Seal). Seven or eight feet long ; a piece of loose skin on the head, which can be in- flated at the pleasure of the animal, and is drawn over the eyes when * It is one of those represented by Fr. Cuv. under the name oi " Plwque commun." f I only wish to mention those species which I consider sufficiently ascertained. The long catalogues of the Phocae, recently published, seem to me to multiply them a great deal too much. X It is the same individual described by Hermann, Sec. des Nat. de Berl. IV. xii, xiii, under the name oi monarchus. CARNARIA. 105 it is menaced, at which times the nostrils also are inflated like blad- ders. From the arctic ocean*. Finally, the Macrorhinus, Fr. Cuv., has the incisors of the preceding, obtuse conical molars, and the muzzle resembling a short moveable pro- boscis or snout. The largest seal known is of this subgenus ; the Ph. leonina, L. ; Sea Lion of Anson; Sea JVolf oi Pernetty, &c. Peron's Voy. I. xxxii. (The Elephant Seal) (a). From twenty to twenty-five feet in length; brown, the muzzle of the male terminated by a wrinkled snout, which becomes inflated when the animal is angry. It is common in the southern latitudes of the Pacific Ocean, at the Terra-del-Fuego, New Zealand, Chili, &c. It constitutes an important object of the fisheries, on account of the oil in which it abounds. The Otaries, Peron. Seals ivith external ears Are worthy of being formed into a separate genus ; because, independently of the projecting external ears, the four superior middle incisors have a double cutting edge, a circumstance hitherto unknown in any animal ; the external ones are simple and smaller, and the four inferior bifurcated. All the molars are cimply conical, and the toes of the fore feet almost immov- able ; the membrane of the hind feet is lengthened out into a slip beyond each toe ; all the nails are flat and slender. Ph.jubata, Gm. ; Sea Lion of Steller, Pernetty, &c. ; BufF. Supp. VII. xlviii. From fifteen to twenty feet, and more, in length; fawn coloured; the neck of the male covered with hairs that are more frizzled and thickly set than those on the rest of the body. It might be said to be found in all the Pacific Ocean, were it not that those from the straits of Magellan seem to differ from such as are taken at the Aleutian islands. Ph. ursina, Gm. ; Buff. Supp. VII. xlvii. (The Sea Bear). Eight feet long, no mane, varying from brown to whitish. From the north of the Pacific Ocean. Other seals are found in that sea which only differ from the ursina in size and colour : such is the Petit phoque noir of Buffon (Ph. pusilla), Buff. XIII. liii; the Yellow Seal of Shaw, &c. * The mechanism by which this inflation is effected is not yet well understood. See Dekay and Ludlow, Annals of the New York Lyceum, Vol. I. pp. 94 and 99. f^ (n) A much more full and interesting account of the Sea Elephant, under the title of Plioca proboscidea, is given by two recent French travellers, Peron and Le Sueur. This is the species of seal which forms the great material of the English seal fishers off the islands in the neighbourhood of New South Wales. The fishery is now carried on periodically, and its object is to obtain the Sea Elephant, not on account of its flesh, but for the skin and oil which it is capable of yielding. The flesh is insipid and black, but still is consumed by the natives; the tongue alone is preserved by the English seamen; for, when properly cured, it is sold as a precious luxury. The fresh blubber of this animal is in the highest esteem amongst the sailors, as an easy, speedy, and most successful local remedy in all sorts of wounds. The travellers just mentioned were informed by the Englishmen engaged in this oc- cupation at the island of King, that the animal, as soon as it has been killed, is skinned and sliced into aniall cube-shaped pieces, which are boiled in cauldrons ai'- 106 MAMMALIA. Trichechus, Lin.* The Morse resembles the Seal in its limbs, and the general form of the body, but differs widely from it in the teeth and head. There are no in- cisors nor canini in the lower jaw, which is compressed anteriorly to pass between two enormous canini or tusks, which issue from the upper one, and which project downwards, being sometimes two feet long, and of a proportionable thickness. The enormous size of the alveoli, requisite for holding such tremendous canini, raises up the whole front of the upper jaw, giving it the shape of a huge inflated jowl, the nostrils looking upwards, and not terminating the muzzle. The molars are all short, obliquely truncated cylinders ; there are four of them on each side, above and be- low, but, at a particular age, two of the upper ones fall out. Between the canini are two incisors, similar to the molars, which most authors have not recognised as such, although they are implanted in the intermaxillary bone. Between these again, in the young animal, are two more small pointed ones. The stomach and intestines of the Morse are very similar to those of the seal. It appears that the fucus constitutes part of its food, along with animal matters. One species only is as yet ascertained, the Tricli. rosmarus, Lf. ; Buff. XIII. liv. ; and better. Cook, Voy. III. (The Sea Cow). It inhabits the Arctic seas, surpasses the largest ox in size, attains the length of twenty feet, and is covered with a short yellowish hair. It is sought for on account of its oil and tusks ; the ivory of which, although rough grained, is employed in the arts. The skin makes excellent coach braces t. ORDER IV. MARSUPIALIA. So many are the singularities in the economy of the Marsupialia, or pouched animals, as they are termed, which we formerly placed at the end * Trichechus, from Trix (hair), a name invented by Artedi for the sea cow. f Shaw, however, suspects, that there may be two, distinguished by the greater or less size of their trunks, and by their being more or less convergent. X Previous to my arrangement, the Lamantins and Dugongs, much more nearly allied to the Cetacea, were very properly united with the Morses. ranged along the shores, and the oil is afterwards put into casks. The Frenchmen state that the oil which they saw prepared by the English sailors was clear, and firee from that rancid odour which never can be removed almost from whale and fish oil, and that it appeared to them particularly useful as a lamp oil, in consequence of its sending forth no disagreeable smell, and also because a given quantity fed the lamp for a longer period than the same amount of other oils used for the same pur- pose. The Sea Elephants feed on cuttle fish and sea weed, and stones and gravel are found in their stomachs; very commonly, too, huge calcareous concretions, which, when seen by those who open them, excite astonishment as to the possibility of their being contained within a cavity apparently so small. — Eng. Ed. MARSUPIALIA. 107 of the Carnaria as a fourth family of tluit great order, that it appears to us they shoukl form a separate and distinct one, particularly as we observe in them a kind of representation of three very diiFerent orders. The first of all their peculiarities is the premature production of their young, whose state of development at birth is scarcely comparable to that of an ordinary foetus a few days after conception. Incapable of motion, and hardly exhibiting the germs of limbs and other external organs, these diminutive beings attach themselves to the mammas of the mother, and re- main fixed there until they have acquired a degree of development simi- lar to that in which other animals are born. The skin of the abdomen is almost always so arranged about the mammae as to form a pouch in which these imperfect little animals are preserved as in a second uterus ; and to which, long after they can walk, they always fly for shelter at the approach of danger. Two particular bones attached to the pubis, and interposed between the muscles of the abdomen, support the pouch. These bones are also found in the male, and even in those species in which the fold that forms the pouch is scarcely visible. The matrix of the animals of this family does not open by a single ori- fice into the extreme end of the vagina, but communicates with this canal by two lateral tubes resembling handles. The premature birth of the young appears to depend upon this singular organization. The scrotum of the male, contrary to what obtains in other quadrupeds, hangs before the penis, which, when at rest, is directed backwards. Another peculiarity of the Marsupialia is, that notwithstanding a general resemblance of the species to each other, so striking that for a long time they were considered as one genus, they differ so much in the teeth, the organs of digestion, and the feet, that if we rigorously adhered to these characters, we should be compelled to separate them into several orders. They carry us, by insensible gradations, from the Carnaria to the Roden- tia, and there are even some animals which have the pelvis furnished with similar bones ; but which, from the want of incisors, or of all kinds of teeth, have been approximated to the Edentata, where, in fact, we shall leave them, under the name of Monotremata. In a word, we would say that the Marsupialia form a distinct class, pa- rallel to that of quadrupeds, and divisible into similar orders : so that if we were to arrange these two classes into two columns; the Sarigues, the Dasyuri, and the Perameles would be opposite to the insectivorous Carnaria with long canini, such as the Tenrecs and the Moles ; the Pha- langers and the Potoroos, opposite to the Hedgehogs and Shrews ; the Kanguroo, properly so called, cannot be compared with any thing; but the Phascolomys should be opposite to the Rodentia. Finally, if we were to consider the bones of the pouch only, and regard as Marsupialia lost MAMMALIA. all the animals that possess them, the Omithorinci and the Echidnce would form a group parallel to that of the Edentata. Linnaeus arranged all the species he was accjuainted with under his ge- nus Didelfhis, a word signifying double uterus. The pouch in some re- spects is in fact a second one. The first subdivision of the Marsupialia is marked by long canini, and small incisors in both jaws, back molars bristled with points, and all the characters in general of the insectivorous Carnaria ; the animals that com- pose it are also perfectly similar to the latter in their regimen. DiDELPHis, Lin. The Opossums*, which, of all the Marsupialia, have been the longest known, form a genus peculiar to America. They have ten incisors above, the middle ones being rather the longest, and eight below ; three anterior compressed grinders and four posterior bristled grinders, the superior ones triangular, and the inferior oblong, which, with the four canini, make in all fifty teeth, the greatest number hitherto observed in quadrupeds. Their tongue is papillated, and their tail prehensile and partly naked. Their hinder thumb is long, and very opposable to the other four toes, from which circumstance these animals are sometimes styled Pedimana; they have no nail. Their extremely wide mouth, and great naked ears, give give them a very peculiar physiognomy. The glans penis is bifurcated. They are fetid and nocturnal animals, whose gait is slow ; they remain on trees, and there pursue birds, insects, &c., though not despising fruit. Their stomach is simple and small, their ccecum of a middling size, and without any enlargements. The females of certain species have a deep pouch in which are the mammae, and in which they can enclose their young. Did. vinjiniana, Penn. Hist. Quadr. 302-1-. (The Opossum). Almost the size of a cat ; fur, a mixture of black and white ; ears, one side black, and the other white ; head nearly all white. Inhabits all America ; steals at night into villagies ; attacks fowls, eats their eggs, &c. The young ones at birth, sometimes sixteen in number, weigh only a grain each. Although blind and nearly shapeless, they find the mammae by instinct, and adhere to them until they have at- tained the size of a mouse, which happens about the fiftieth day, at which epoch they open their eyes. They continue to return to the pouch till they are as large as rats. The term of gestation in the uterus is but twenty-six days*. Did. Azzarce, Temm. (The Gamba, or the Great Opossum of of Paraguay and Brazil). Differs from the preceding in the black * Carigueia, according to Marcgrave, is their Brazilian name, whence we have Sariguoi, Cerigon, Sarigue. They are called Micoure in Paraguay; Manicou in the islands; Opossum in the United States; Thlaqualzin in Mexico. f It is the Sarigue des Illinois, and the Sarigue a longs poils; BuiF. Supp. VII. p. xxxiii and xxxiv ; T)ul. marsiipialis, Schreb. pi. clxv. * See the letter of Dr. B. S. Barton to M. Kounie on the gestation of the Opossum. MARSUPIALIA. 109 which marks the muzzle and nearly the whole of the ears; the tail is also longer. Did. marsupialis, and Did, cancrivora, L. ; Buff. Supp. III. liv. (The Crah-eating Opossum). Size of the preceding; yellowish, mixed with brown, with brown hairs; a brown streak on the chanfrin. It frequents the marshes of the sea coast, where it feeds chiefly on crabs*. Did. opossum, Z. ; BufF. X. xlv, vlvi. (The Four-eyed Opossum). Chestnut above, white below, a white or pale yellow spot over each eye ; posterior third of the tail white ; larger than a large rat. Other species possess no pouch, having a mere vestige of it in a fold of the skin on each side of the abdomen. They usually carry their young on their backs, the tails of the latter being entwined around that of the mother. Did. nudicauda, Geoff. ; D. myosuros, Temm. (The Bare-tailed Opossum). Fawn-coloured: tail very long, and naked even at its base ; two whitish spots over each eye, one beneath. Did. caiiopolUn\, Did. philander, and Did. dorsigera, L. ; Buff. X. Iv. (The Cayopollin). A greyish fawn colour ; the circumfer- ence of the eyes and a longitudinal band on the chanfrin brown ; tail marked with black ; size that of the Norway rat. The superior third of the tail furnished with hairs. Did. cinerea, Temm. (The Cinereous Didelphis). A light ash colour, with blackish reflections ; some red on the breast ; the pos- terior half of the tail white ; of the same size as tlie preceding. From Brazil. Did. murina, L. ; BufF. X. lii, liii. (The Marmose)J. Fawn- coloured grey ; a brown stripe, in the middle of which is the eye ; tail immaculate : less than a rat. 7)?'cZ.6rflc/?2/Mra, Pall., Buff. Supp. VII. Ixi. (The Touan). Black, blackish; flanks of a vivid red; belly white; tail shorter than the body. Less than a rat. The three latter species are from South America. Finally, there is one known with palmated feet, which must be aquatic ; it is not ascertained whether or not it has a pouch — it is the * It is the pretended Great Oriental Philander of Seba, of which Linnseus has made his Did.marsupialus. Buftbii, who has described the male, Supp. III. pi. liii, erro- neously tliought the female had no pouch, which was the cause of the improper esta- blishment of a second species. Did. cancrivora. Gni., carcinophaga, Bodd. The Crab- eater is called at Cayenne pian or puant. t Cayopollin, the name of a species that inhabits the mountains of Mexico; it has, somewhat arbitrarily, been applied to this species in particular. X Ma)-mose, a name adopted by Buffon from a typographical error in the French translation of Seba, wlio assures us in the text that it is called Marmot in Brazil. The truth is, that the Dutch, in the time of Marcgrave, called it fVood-ltat, and the Brazilians Taibi; Rat-de-bois is also its name among the French at Cayenne. Seba must have rendered Bosch-ratte by Marmot. N. B. There has been found, in the plaster quarries near Paris, the fossil skeleton of a Didelphis allied to the Marmose. 110 MAMMALIA. Chironectes, Illnj*. Did. palmata, Geoff. ; Lutra memina, Bodd. ; La petite Loutre de la Guiane, BufF. Supp. III. xxii. Brown above, with three trans- verse grey bands, interrupted in the middle, and white below ; larger than a Norway rat. All the other Marsupialia inhabit eastern countries, New Holland par- ticularly, a land whose animal population seems chiefly to belong to this family. Thylacinus, Temmj-. The Thylacini are the largest of this first division. They are distin- guished from the Opossums by the hind feet having no thumb ; a hairy, non-prehensile tail, and two incisors less in each jaw; their molars are of the same number. They consequently have forty-six teeth ; but the ex- ternal edge of the three large ones is projecting and trenchant, almost like the carnivorous tooth of a dog; their ears are hairy, and of a medium size. One species only is known, the Did. cynocephala, Harris, Linn. Trans. IX. pi. xix, 1, and Ency. Method., Mammif. Supp. pi. vii, f 3. Size that of a wolf, but stands lower; grey; transverse black stripes on the crupper. It is very carnivorous, and pursues all small quadrupeds. From Van Dieman's Land. Phascogale, Temm. The same number of teeth as the Thylacini, but the middle incisors are longer than the others, and the back molars more bristled, circumstances whicli approximate them more closely to the Sarigues. They are also allied to them by their small size ; their tail, however, is not prehensile ; their hind thumb, though very short, is still very apparent. Did. penicillata, Shaw, Gen. Zool. I. ii, pi. 113; Schreb. CLII. B. L. Ash-coloured; tail furnished with long black hairs; size that of the Norway rat : lives on the trees in New Holland, and pur- sues insects. Dasyurus minimus, Geoff., Schreb. pi. 152, B. C. (The Dwarf Phascogalis), Scarcely larger than a mouse ; fur soft and reddish. From the south of Van Diemen's Land. Dasyurus, GeoffX. Two incisors and four grinders in each jaw less than the Opossums, so that they have only forty-two teeth ; their tail, every where covered with long hairs, is not prehensile. The thumb of the hind foot is reduced to a tubercle, or has even totally disappeared. They are from New Holland, where they feed on insects and dead bodies ; they penetrate into houses, * Chironectes, i. e. swimming with hands. f Thylacinus, from Thulacos, purse. A species of Thylacinus has also been found in the plaster quarries of Paris. X Dasyurus, hairy tail. See Mem. dc M.Geoff., Ann. du Mus. III. p. 353, and XV. p. 301. MARSUPIALIA. Ill where their voracity is very inconvenient, &c. Their mouth is not so wide, their muzzle not so pointed as those of the Opossums ; their hairy ears are also shorter. They do not climb trees. Did. ursina, Harr. Linn. Trans. IX. xix, f. 2, and Encycl., Supp. f. 6. (The Ursine Opossum). Long rough black hairs, with some irregularly placed white spots ; the tail half as long as the body, al- most naked underneath. Inhabits the north of Van Dieman's Land, and is nearly the size of the badger. Das. macrourus, Geoff., Peron. Voy. pi. xxxiii, Schreb. CLII, B, a. (The Long-tailed Dasyurus). Size of a cat ; tail as long as the body; fur brown, spotted with white, both on the body and tail. The tubercle of the thumb is still well marked in this species, but in the following ones it can no more be seen. Das. Maugei, Geoff., Voy. de Freycin. Zool. pi. iv, Schreb. CLII. B, b. (A kind of olive colour, spotted with white ; no spot on the tail; a little smaller than the preceding. Did. viverrina, Shaw, Gen. Zool. CXI ; White, Bot. Bay, App. 285 ; Schreb. CLII, B, c. Black, spotted with white ; no spots on the tail ; a third less than the first. Perameles, Geoff*. — Tiiylacis, Illig. The thumb of the hind foot short, like the first Dasyuri, and the two following toes united by the membrane as far as the nails ; the thumb and the little toe of their fore feet are simple tubercles, so that there seem to be but three toes. They have ten incisors above, the external ones sepa- rate and pointed, and only six below ; but their molars are the same as in the Opossums, so that they have forty-eight teeth. Their tail is hairy, and not prehensile. The great claws of their fore feet announce their habit of digging in the earth ; and the tolerable length of their hind ones, a swiftness of gait. P. nasutus, G., Ann. du Mus. IV. The muzzle much elongated; ears pointed; fur a greyish browni. At the first glance it resembles a Tenrec;|. The species belonging to the second subdivision of the Marsupialia have two broad and long incisors in the lower jaw with pointed and trench- ant edges sloping forwards, and six corresponding ones in the upper jaw. Their superior canini are also long and pointed, but all their inferior ones consist of teeth so small that they are frequently hidden by the gum ; they are sometimes altogether wanting in the lower jaw of the last subgenus. Their regimen is chiefly frugivorous ; consequently, their intestines, the caecum particularly, are longer than in the Opossum. The thumb is very large in all of them, and so widely separated from the toes that it seems to slant backwards almost like that of birds. It has no nail, and the two » Pera, purse, Melcs, Badger. See Mem. Geoff., Ann. du Mus. torn. IV. t The Perameh Bougainville of Quoy and Gaynard does not difler specifically from the nasutus. The Peram obesula, Geoff., is not so authentic. 112 MAMMALIA. following toes are united by the skin as far as the last phalanx. It is from this circumstance that these animals have received the name of Pha- langers *. Phalangista. Phalangista, Cuv. — Balantia, Illigf. The true Phalangers have not the skin of the flank extended; four back molars in each jaw, with four points in two rows ; in front a large one, conical and compressed, and between it and the superior canine are two small and pointed ones, to which correspond the three very small lower ones, of which we have just spoken. Their tail is always prehensile. The tail in some of them is in a great measure scaly. They live on trees in the Moluccas, on which they seek insects and fruit. At the sight of a man they suspend themselves by their tail ; and if he gaze at them steadily for some time, he causes them to fall through lassitude. They diffuse a very unpleasant odour, notwithstanding which their flesh is eaten. There are several of them known, of various sizes and colours, all of which are embraced under the Didelphis orientalis of Linnasus. M. Temminck thinks he can separate them into species as follows : Ph. ursina, T. (The Ursine Phalanger). Nearly the size of the civet; fur close, and of a blackish-brown; the young ones a fawn- coloured brown. From the woods of the island of Macassar. Ph. chrysorrhous, T. (The Golden- cruppered Phalanger). Size of a large cat ; fur of an ash brown ; white beneath ; a golden fawn colour on the croup. From the Moluccas. Ph. maculata, T. ; Buff. XIII. pi. ii ; Voy. de Freycin, pi. vii ; Voy. du Duperr. pi. iv. (The Spotted Phalanger). Size of a cat; whitish, irregularly spotted or marbled with brown. Ph. cavifrons, T. ; Buff. pi. x, the female ; and Voy. de Duperrey, the male. (The Hollow-fronted Phalanger). The male white ; the female fawn-coloured, with a brown stripe along the back. To these we must add Ph. Quoy, Voy. de Freycin., pi. vi. (The Q,uoy Phalanger). A greyish-brown ; a blackish-brown longitudinal band on the croup ; top of the head a cinnamon-red; cheeks, throat, and breasts white;};. In others, which have hitherto been found in New Holland only, the tail is hairy to the tip. Ph. vulpina; Did. leniurina and vulp in a, SliSiW \ Bruno oiWcq^. d'Az. ; White, Voy. 278. (The Fox-like Phalanger). Size of a stout cat ; greyish-brown, paler beneath ; tail nearly all black. * The name of Phalanger was given by Buftbn to two individuals he had observed, on account of the union of the two toes of the foot. That of Philander is not, as might be thought, derived from the Greek, but from tlie Malay word Pelandor, which means Rabbit, applied by the inhabitants of Amboyna to a species of Kanguroo. Seba and Brisson have used it indiscriminately for all the pouched animals. The Phalangers, in the Moluccas, are called Couscous or Coussous. The earlier travellers not having properly distinguished them from the Sarigues, gave cause to believe that this last genus was common to the two cmtinents. t Balantia, from Balantion, jiuvse or ])nuch. X A very distinct species. MARSUFIALIA. 113 Ph. Cookii, Cook's last Voy., pi. viii. (Tlie Phalanger of Cook). Less than a cat ; brown above, white underneath ; head and flanks red; posterior third of the tail white. Ph. BougainvilUi. (The Phalanger of Bougainville). Size of a squirrel; ash-coloured above, white underneath; the posterior half of the tail black; posterior half of the ear white.* Petaurus, ShauK — Piialangista, Illig. The Flying Phalawgers have the skin of the flanks more or less ex- tended between the legs, like the Flying Squirrels among the Rodentia, which enables them to sustain themselves for a few moments in the air, and make greater leaps. They also are only found in New Holland. Some of the species have inferior canines, but they are very small. Their superior canines, and their three first molars, above and below, are very pointed; each of their back molars has four points. ■!" Ph. pygmcea; Did, pygmcea, Shaw, Gen. Zool. pi. 114; Schreb. CLXIV, A. (The Flying Dwarf Phalanger). Of the colour and nearly the size of a mouse ; the hairs of the tail regularly arranged on its two sides like the barbs of a quill. Other species have no inferior canini, while the superior ones are very small. Their four back molars present four points, but they are slightly curved into a crescent, which is very nearly the form of those of the Ru- minantia. In the front there are two above and one below, less compli- cated. By this structure they are rendered still more frugiverous than all the preceding species. Ph. petaurus, Shaw, Gen. Zool., pi. cxii; White, "Voy. 288. (The Great Flying Phalanger). Resembles the Taguan and the Galeo- pithicus in size ; its fur is soft and close ; its tail long and flattened ; brownish-black above, white beneath. They are of various shades of brown; some are variegated, and others perfectly white. Ph. sciurea, Shaw, pi. cxiii, 3. (The Bordered Flying Phalan- ger). Size of the brown rat; ash-coloured above, white beneath; a brown line commencing on the chanfrin and running along the back; edges of the lateral membrane brown; tail tufted, and of the length of the body ; its posterior portion black. From the islands near New Guinea. P. peronii, Desm. (The Hairy-footed Flying Phalanger). A reddish-grey; front of the ears and under part of the body whitish; toes very hairy and brown ; tail black, longer than the body, and white at the end. Ph. macroura, Shaw, pi. cxiii, f, 2. (The Long-tailed Flying Phalanger). A deep brown above, white beneath ; size of the brown rat; tail slender, about half as long again as the body. Our third subdivision has the incisors and superior canines and the two * A new species brought to France by M. de Bougainville from his last expedition. t It is of this first division that Desmarets has made his genus Acrobate. VOL. I, I 114 MAMMALIA. toes united to the hind feet of the second ; but the posterior thumbs and inferior canini are wanting. It contains but a single genus. Hypsiprymnus, Illig.* The Potoroos are the last animals of this family which retain any trait of the general characters of the Carnaria. Their teeth are nearly the same as those of the Phalangers, and they still have pointed canines above. The two superior middle incisors are pointed, and longer than the others; the inferior ones are but two, and project forwards. In front they have a long trenchant denticulated molar, followed by four others, bristling with four blunt tubercles. What particularly distinguishes these animals is their hind legs, which are much larger in proportion than the fore ones, that have no thumbs, and the two first toes united as far as the nail ; so that, at a first glance, it seems as though there were but three toes, of which the inner one has two nails. They frequently walk upon two feet, at which times they employ their long and strong tail to support themselves. They have then the form and habits of the Kanguroos, from which they only differ in their superior canine tooth. They are frugivo- rous ; their stomach is large, divided into two sacs, and has several infla- tions ; but their caecum is rounded, and of a middling size. Hyps, minor; Macropus minor, Shaw; "N^Qiite, Bot. Bay, 286; Voy. de Freycin. pi. 10. (The Kanguroo Rat.) Size of a small rabbit ; of a mouse-grey. From New Holland, where it is called Po- toroo. It is the only species known. The fourth subdivision only differs from the third in the absence of all canines whatsoever. These are — Macropus, Shaw — Halmaturus, Illig.-f The Kanguroos, which present all the characters we have just assigned to the preceding genus, except that the superior canine is wanting, and that their middle incisors do not project beyond the others. The inequa- lity of their legs is still greater, so that on all fours they can only walk slowly and with difficulty ; they make vigorous leaps, however, on their hind feet, the great middle nail of which (almost in the shape of a hoof) also serves them for purposes of defence : for, by supporting themselves on one foot and their enormous tail, they can inflict a severe blow with the foot which is at liberty. They are very gentle herbivorous animals, their grinders presenting mere transverse ridges. They have five teeth in all, the front ones being more or less trenchant, and falling out with age ; so that in old kanguroos we frequently find but three. Their sto- mach consists of two long sacs, that are inflated at several places, like a colon. The csecum, also, is large, and has inflations. The radius al- lows a complete rotation of the fore-arm. In these two genera the penis is not bifurcated, but the female organs of generation are similar to those of other Marsupialia. Tpslprumms ; i. e. raised behind. f Halmaturus, tail fit for leaping. MARSUriALIA. 115 M. major, Shaw; Didelphis gigantea, Gm. ; Schreb. CLIII. (The Greater Kanguroo). Sometimes six feet in height. It is the largest of the New Holland animals, was discovered by Cook, in 1779, and is now bred in Europe. Its flesh is said to resemble ve- nison. The young ones, which at birth are only an inch long, pass into the maternal pouch, even when they are ohl enough to graze, wliich they effect by stretching out their necks from their pouch, while tlie mother herself is feeding. These animals live in troops, conducted by the old males. They make enormous leaps. It ap- pears that we have hitherto confounded, under this name, several species of New Holland and its neighbouring countries, whose fur, more or less grey, only varies by a trifling difference of shade.* There is another species much more anciently known : — M. Brunii; Did. Brunii, Gm.; Schreb. CLIII. ; called Pe/aw- dor Aroe, or the Aroe Rabbit, by the Malays of Amboyna. (The Kanguroo of Aroe). Larger than a hare ; brown above, fa^\ii-co- loured beneath. Found in the islands near Banda, and in those of Solor. European naturalists had not paid sufficient attention to the descriptions of the above species given by Valentine and Le Bruyn. M. elegans; Halma. elegans, Per. Voy. t. xxvii. (The Elegant Kanguroo). Size of a large hare ; transversely striped with brown on a greyish-white ground. Foimd at the island of St. Peter («). The fifth subdivision has two long incisors, without canines, in the lower jaw ; in the upper, two long incisors in the middle, a few small ones on the sides, and two small canines. It comprehends but one genus. * M. Geoff, distinguishes the Kanguroo enfume, in which the grey is deeper; the Kanguroo a moustaches, which has some white on the front of the upper lip ; the Kan- guroo a cou roux, a little less than the others, with some red on the nape of the neck. Messrs. Lesson and Garnot also describe a brown kanguroo, which they call Ouala- bate, Voy. de Freychi. pi. ix. We shall also probably be obliged to make new spe- cies of the Kanguroo roux-cannelle, (K. laniger, Quoy and Gaym.) Voy. de Freycin. pi. ix., and of the Kanguroo cendre-bleuafre ; but all these quadrupeds require to be examined at various ages ; and we must ascertain the influence of age and sex upon their colours, previous to a final establishment of the species. ^' (rt) This kanguroo is stiled by the traveller mentioned in the text (Peron), Itlaropus Fasciatus, the Fasicated Kanguroo. He gives a most interesting accoimt of the intelligence and affections of the females, as displayed towards the offspring, which in early life occupy so peculiar a position externally, to the body of the mother. The young of the opossumus have to undergo a similar process with that of the kan- guroos, and are received, at an early period of gestation, into the external pouch. The time at which the transfer takes place to the pouch is not yet ascertained; but the naturalists, who have carefully examined this subject, have found, that, when the young is seen first attached to the nipple, there is no face, and the nipple seems only to adhere to a round hole in the muzzle of the imperfect offspring. After this, the lips and jaws grow upon tlie nipple ; until at length, about half an inch of it remains in the young creature's mouth. A keeper of a kaiigui'oo in France, in the employ- ment of an ex- French princess, made notes of the gestation of a kanguroo, from which it appeared that the period had continued from the 6th of May to the Cth of October; and the young kanguroo did not finally quit the pouch till the following .January. Several kan^uroos have thrived and bred readily in the Zoological Gar- dens, where they are fed on grain, various common vegetables, and hay. — Eng. Ed. i2 116 MAMMALIA. Koala, Cnv. — Lipurus, Gold. — Phascolarctos, Blain. The Koalas have a short, stout body, short legs, and no tail. The toes of their fore feet, five in number, when about to seize any object, separate into two groups; the thumb and index on one side, and the remaining three on the other. The thumb is wanting on the hind foot; the two first toes of which are united, like those of the Phalangers and the Kan- guroos. One species only is knomi : — K. cinerea; Lipurus cinereiis, Gold.; Schreb. CLY, A, a. (The Koala). Ash-coloured; passes one part of its life on trees, and the other in burrows, which it excavates at their foot. The mother car- ries her young one for a long time on her back. Finally, our sixth division of the INIarsupialia, or the Phascolomys, Geoff".* Consists of animals which are true Rodentia, as respects the teeth and intestines, their only relation to the Carnaria consisting in the articula- tion of their lower jaw; and, in a rigorously exact system, it would be ne- cessary to class them with the Rodentia. We should even have placed them there, had we not been led to them by a regular uninterrupted series, from the Opossums to the Phalangers, from the latter to the Kanguroos, and from the Kanguroos to the Phascolomys ; and, finally, were it not that the organs of generation are every way exactly similar to those of the Marsupialia. They are sluggish animals, with large, flat heads, short legs, and bodies that look as if they had been crushed, without a tail ; have five nails on each of the fore feet, and four, with a small tubercle in place of a thumb, on each of the hind ones, all very long and fit for digging. Their gait is excessively slow. They have two long incisors in each jaw, almost simi- lar to those of the Rodentia ; and each of their grinders has two trans- verse ridges. They feed on grass ; their stomach is pyriform, and their caecum short and wide, furnished, like that of man, and' of the ourang-outang, with a vermiform appendage. The penis is bifurcated, like that of the opossums. One species only is kno\ra, the Plias, ursinus; Didelphis ursina, Shaw; Peron. Toy. pi. xxxviii, and called by naturalists the Wombat. Size of a Badger; fur abun- dant, of a more or less yellowish brown. It is found in King's Island, to the south of New Holland, where it lives in its burrow, and multi- plies with facility in Europe. Its flesh is said to be excellent.-j- * Phascolomys, a pouched rat, from phaslcolon and mus. f M. Bass has described an animal, externally similar to the Phascolomys, and to which he also gives the name of Wombat, but which has six incisors, two canines, and sixteen molars in each jaw. If there is no erroneous combination of the two dif- ferent descriptions, it will form an additional subgenus, to place near the Perameles. Illiger has already established it under the name of Amhlolis, from amblotus, abortus. See Petersb. Mem, 1803—1806, p. 444, and the Bulletin des Sc. No. 72, An. XI. RODENTIA. 117 ORDER V. RODENTIA. We have just seen, in the Phalangers, canini so very small, that we cannot consider them as such. The nutriment of these animals, accord- ingly, is chiefly derived from the vegetable kingdom. Their intestines are long, and their cscum ample ; and the kanguroos, which have no ca- nini whatever, subsist upon vegetables only. The Phascolomys might stand first in that series of animals of which we are about to speak, and which have a system of mastication still less complete. Two large incisors in each jaw, separated from the molars by an empty space, cannot seize a living prey nor tear flesh ; they cannot even cut the food, but they serve to file, and, by continued labour, to reduce it into se- parate molecules — in a word, to gnaw it ; hence the term Rodentia, or Gnavjers, which is applied to animals of this order. It is thus that they successfully attack the hardest substances, frequently feeding on wood and the bark of trees. The more easily to accomplish this object, the incisors have no thick enamel except in front, so that their posterior edges wear- ing away faster than the anterior, they are always naturally sloped. Their prismatic form causes them to grow from the root as fast as they wear away at the edge ; and this tendency to increase in length is so powerful, that if one of them be lost or broken, its antagonist in the other jaw, hav- ing nothing to oppose or comminute, becomes developed to a most mon- strous extent. The lower jaw is articulated by a longitudinal condyle, in such a way as to allow of no horizontal motion except from back to front, and vice versa, as is requisite for the action of gnawing. The molars also have flat crowns, whose enamelled eminences are always transverse, so as to be in opposition to the horizontal motion of the jaw, and to serve the better in trituration. The genera in which these eminences are simple lines, and the crown is very flat, are more exclusively frugiverous ; those in which the emi- nences of the teeth are divided into blunt tubercles are omnivorous ; Avhile the small number of such as have no points more readily attack other ani- mals, and approximate somewhat to the Carnaria. The form of the body in the Rodentia is generally such, that the hinder parts of it exceed those of the front; so that they rather leap than walk. In some of them this disproportion is even as excessive as it is in the Kanguroos. The intestines of the Rodentia are very long ; their stomach simple, or 118 MAMMALIA. but little divided ; and their cfficum is often very voluminous, even more so than the stomach. In the subgenus Myoxus, however, this intestine is wanting. In the whole of this class the brain is almost smooth and without con- volutions; the orbits are not separated from the temporal fossae, which have but little depth, and the eyes are altogether directed laterally. The zygomatic arches, thin and curved below, indicate the weakness of the jaws ; the fore-arms have nearly lost the power of rotation, and their two bones are often united ; in a word, the inferiority of these animals is visi- ble in most of the details of their organization. Those genera, however, which possess stronger clavicles, have a certain degree of dexterity, and use their fore feet to convey their food to the mouth. Some of them even climb trees with facility ; such are the SciuRUs, Lin. The Squirrels, which are distinguished by their strongly compressed inferior incisors, and by their long tail furnished with hairs. They have four toes before and five behind. The thumb of the fore foot is sometimes marked by a tubercle. They have in all four grinders, variously tuber- culated, and a very small additional one above in front, that falls at an early period. The head is large, and the eyes projecting and lively. They are light and active animals, living on trees, and feeding on fruits. SciuRus, Cuv. In the Squirrel, properly so called, the hairs of the tail are arranged on the sides, so as to resemble a large feather. There are a great many species in the two continents. Sc. vulgaris, Buff. VII. xxxii, Schreb., pi. 212. (The Common Squirrel). The back of a lively red; belly white; ears terminated by a tuft of hair. Those of the north become of a beautiful ash-blue colour on the back during winter, and at this period supply the fur known by the name of Petit-Gris (miniver), when stripped from the back, and vair when the Avhite part of the belly is attached to the portion from the back. The American species have no pencils to their ears. Such are Sc. cinereus, L. ; Petit-Gris of Buff. X. xxv. (The Grey Squir- rel of Carolina). Larger than that of Europe ; ash-coloured, with a white belly («). Sc. capistratus, Bosc. Sc. cinereus, Schreb. CCXIII, B. (The Masked Squirrel). Ash-coloured; head black; muzzle, ears, and belly white. Both these species vary in being more or less brown — they are sometimes entirely black. ^^ (a) There is an error in this description. The Sc. cinereus is the cat sqirrel, which is cinereous above; white beneath; with a tail less distichous than that of other species, longer than the body, and sti'iped with black; inhabits the northern and middle states of America. The animal described by Cuvier as S. chieriiis is the S. Carolinensis, the Little Grey Squirrel. — Eng. Ed. RODENTIA. 119 The greater number of the species belonging to the eastern con- tinent are also destitute of these pencils. One of the most beautiful is the Sc. maximus and macrourus , Gm. ;* Buff. Supp. VII. Ixxii. (The Large Squirrel of India). Nearly the size of a cat; above black; the flanks and top of the head of a beautiful bright maronne; the head, and all the under parts of the body, and the inside of the limbs pale yellow ; a maronne-coloured band behind the check. It inhabits the palms, and is extravagantly fond of the milk of the cocoa-nut. There are, also, several Squirrels in warm climates, that are re- markable for the longitudinal bands which vary their fur. Such are the Sc. getulus, L. ; Buff. X. xxvi. (The Barbaresque). The bands of which extend to the tail, and even on it. Sc. palmarum, L. : Buff. X. xxvi. (The Palmist). On which the stripes are confined to the back. It is probable that we shall have to separate from the squirrels certain species which have cheek-pouches, like the Hamsters, and pass their lives in subterraneous holes, the Tamice of Illiger. For instance the Se. striatiis, L. ; Buff. X. xxviii, (The Ground Squirrel). TNliich is found throughout all the north of Asia and America, particularly in the pine forests. The tail is more scantily supplied with hairs than that of the European Squirrel; the ears smooth, and skin bro\vn, ■with five black stripes and two white ones. We ought, also, most probably, to distinguish the Guerlingiiets, a spe- cies with a long and almost round tail, and an enormous pendant scrotum. They are found in both continents f. The following have been separated already. Pteromys, Cuv\. Or the Flying Squirrels, to which the skin of the flank, extending be- tween the fore and hind legs, imparts the faculty of supporting themselves for some moments in the air, antl of making very great leaps. There are long bony appendages to their feet, which support a part of this lateral membrane. There is a species in Poland, Russia, and Siberia. Sc. volans, L. ; Schreb. CCXXIII. (The Flying Squirrel). Ash- coloured, grey above; white underneath ; size of a rat; the tail only half the length of the body. It lives solitarily in the forests. One from North America. Sc. vohiccella, L. ; Buff. X. xxi. (The American Flying Squir- rel). Reddish-grey above; white beneath: size less than that of * A comparison of the figure of Pennant with that of Sonnerat is sufficient to prove that they represent the same animal. f Vie have found, however, in the Tamice and Gnerlinguets, the same kind of teeth as in the Squirrels and Pteromys. + Pteromys, Winged Rat. 120 MAMMALIA. the preceding; tail three-fourths as long as the body. It lives in troops in the prairies of the temperate regions of North America. There is one found in the Indian Archipelago, that is nearly the size of a cat ; the male is of a fine lively maronne above, and red underneath ; the female brown above, and whitish underneath. It is the Sc. petaurista, L. ; Buff. Supp. III. xxi, and VII. Ixvii. (The Taguan). The same Archipelago produces another small one, the Sc. sagitta, L. A deep brown above; white beneath; distin- guished from other species, the small ones especially, by its mem- brane, which, as in the Taguan, forms an extremely acute projecting angle behind the tarsus. M. Geoffroy has very properly separated from this genus the CiiEiROMYS, Cuv.* Or the Aye-Ayes, whose inferior incisors, much more compressed, and, in an especial manner, more extended from front to back, resemble plough- shares. Each foot has five toes, of which four of the anterior are exces- sively elongated, the medius being more slender than the others ; in the hind feet the thumb is opposable to the other toes ; so that they are in this respect among the Rodentia, what the Opossums are among the Car- naria. The structure of their head is otherwise very different from that of the other Rodentia, and is related to the Quodrumana in more points than one. There is only one species of the Aye-Aye known. It was disco- vered at Madagascar by Sonnerat. It is the Cheir. Madagascarien- sis; Sc. Madagascar., Gm. ; Buff. Supp. VII. Ixviii. (The Aye- Aye). Size of a hare, of a brown colour, mixed with yellow; tail long and thick, with stout black bristles ; ears large and naked. It is a nocturnal animal, to which motion seems painful; it burrows under ground, and uses its slender toe to convey food to its mouth. Linnseas and Pallas united in one single group, under the name of Mus. Lin. AH the Rodentia furnished with clavicles, which they could not distin- guish by some very sensible external character, such as the tail of the squirrel or that of the beaver, from which resulted the utter impossibility of assigning to them any common character; the greater number had merely pointed lower incisors, but even this was subject to exceptions. Gmelin has already separated from them the marmots, dormice, and the jerboas; but we carry their subdivision much further, from considerations founded on the form of their grinders. Arctom-ys,-}- Gm. The Marmots, it is true, have the inferior incisors pointed like those of the greater number of animals comprehended in the great genus Mus ; * Cheiromys, a rat with hands, -f- Arclomys, Bear Rat. RODENTIA. 121 but their grinders, like those of the squirrel, amount to five on each side above, and four below, all bristled with points ; accordingly, some species are inclined to eat flesh, and feed upon insects, as well as grass. There are four toes and a tubercle in place of a thumb to the fore feet, and five toes to the hind ones. In other respects these animals are nearly the direct reverse of the squirrels, being heavy, having short legs, a middle- sized or short hairy tail, and a large flat head, passing the winter in a state of torpor, and shut up in deep holes, the entrance of which they close with a heap of grass. They live in societies, and are easily tamed. Two species are known in the eastern continent. Arct. alpinus; Mus. alpinus, L.; Buff". VIII. xxviii. (The Al- pine Marmot). Large as a hare; tail short; fur yellowish-grey, with ash-coloured tints about the head. It lives in high mountains, immediately below the region of perpetual snow. Arc. hobac; M. bobac, L. ; Pall. Glir. V; Schreb. CCIX. (The Bobac). Size of the preceding; of a yellowish-grey, tinted with red about the head. Inhabits low mountains and hills, from Poland to Kamschatka, and frequently digs its burrow in the hardest soil.* America also produces some species. Arct. monax, Buff". Supp. III. xxviii. (The Maryland Marmot). Grey ; tail blackish, as well as the top of the head. Arct. empetra, Pall.; Schreb. CX. Less than the preceding; grey; red beneath. Spermophilus, Fred. Cuv. We apply this name to those Marmots that have cheek pouches. The superior lightness of their structure has caused them to be called Ground Squirrels. Eastern Europe produces one species. M. citillus, L. ; Buff". Supp. III. xxxi. (The Souslik or Zizel). A pretty little animal, of a greyish brown, watered or mottled with white, the spots very small, which is found from Bohemia to Siberia. It has a peculiar fondness for flesh, and does not spare even its own species. North America has several species of them, one of which is re- markable by the thirteen fawn-coloured stripes which extend along the back on a blackish ground. It is the Thirteen-striped Souslik, Arct. IS-lineatus, Harl. ; or Sciurus 13-lineatus, Mitchell; or Arct. Hoodii, Sabine, Lin. Trans. XIII. pi. xxixf . There is one of the Rodentia which it appears we must approximate to the Marmots, that is remarkable for living in large troops in immense burrows, which have even been styled villages. It is called the Prairie Dog, or Barking Squirrel, the latter appellation arising from its voice, * Russian travellers in Bucharia mention some other Marmots, /irct.fiilvus, Arct. lepto-daclylus, Arct. miisogaricus, which are not yet perhaps sufficiently distinguished from the Boubak or from the Souslik. t Add Arct. Parrii, Richards. App. Parry's Voy.— Several of the Marmots an- nounced in the travels of Lewis and Clarke, Parry, Franklin, &c. Arct. Franklinii, liichardsonii, pruinosa, seem to belong to this subgenus. See Sabine, Lin. Trans. XI n. pi. xxvii, xxviii, Sec. 122 MAMMALIA. which resembles the bark of a small dog. It is the Arct. ludovicianus of Say, Jour, to the Rocky Mountains, I. 451. M. Rafinesque, who states it has five toes to each foot, makes it the type of his genus Cynomys. Myoxus, Gm* The Dormice have pointed lower incisors, and four grinders, the crown of each of which is divided by enamelled lines. They are pretty little animals, with soft fur, a hairy and even tufted tail, and a lively eye, which live on trees like squirrels, and feed on fruit. Of the numerous order of the Rodentia, this is the only subgenus in which there is no caecum. They become torpid in winter like the Marmots, and pass through it in the most profound lethargy ')■. M.glis,!..; Buff. VIII. xxiv. (The Fat Dormouse) (a). Size of of a rat ; ashy grey-brown above, whitish underneath ; of a deeper brown around the eyes; tail very hairy the whole of its length, and disposed somewhat like that of a squirrel, and frequently a little forked at the extremity. It inhabits the south of Europe, and nestles in the hollows of trees and fissures of rocks. It sometimes attacks small birds. This is probably the rat fattened by the ancients, among whom it was considered a delicacy of the very highest de- scription J. M. nitela, Gm. ; Buff. VIII. xxv. (The Garden Dormouse). Somewhat less than the preceding; greyish-brown above; white un- derneath; black round the eye, which extends to the shoulder; tail tufted and black, tuft white. Common in the gardens of Europe, where it shelters itself in holes about the walls, and does much in- jury to trees. M. avellanarius, L. ; Buff. VIII. xxvi. (The Common Dor- mouse). Size of a mouse; cinnamon-red above; white beneath; hairs of the tail somewhat disposed like a feather. From the forests of all Europe. It constructs its nest of grass on low branches, to bring up its young; the rest of the time, and particularly during winter, it remains in the hollows of trees. § * Myoxus, Rat with a pointed nose. t So natural is this to them, that a dormouse from Senegal {M. Coupeii), which had never experienced it in its native country, fell into a profound sleep in Europe the moment it was exposed to the cold. I The M.dryas of some authors (Schreb. 220, B) does not appear to me to differ from the Fat Dormouse. § Add Myoxus Coupeii, Fred. Cuv. Mammif. ^^° (a) The instinct of the dormouse in providing for itself a proper retreat dur- ing the period of hybernation (see note, p. 71 of this volume) is often displayed with a prescience and circumspection which are scarcely credible in an animal usually rated at the lowest possible estimate in the scale of intelligence. A French natu- ralist has placed on record, in the Bibliotheque Universelle, an anecdote relating to a dormouse, which is at once curious and instructive. He placed four of these ani- mals in a cold temperature, which soon brought them into a state of lethargy, with the exception of one, which escaped secretly from the apartment. Some time after- wards, it was found in a deep cellar in the same house, where it had dug up the earth, and scraped the neighbouring wall, in order to heap up the mould and plaster, so as to form a mound of two feet in size. This mound was raised near a situation where KODENTIA. 123 We should place near the Dormice, the EciiiMYS, Geoff. — LoNCHKRES, Illig. Four grinders also, but formed in a peculiar way ; the upper ones con- sisting of two blades, bent into the shape of a V, and the under ones of one blade only that is bent, and of another that is simple. The fur of several species is very rough, and intermixed with flattened spines or prickles, like sword blades. From America. One of them, Ech. chrysuros; Hystrix chri/suros, Schreb. CLXX, B; Lerot a queue doree, Buff. Supp. VII. 72. (The Golden-tailed Echimys). More than twice the size of the brown rat; it is a beautiful animal, of a chestnut-brown colour; white belly; an elongated crest of hairs, and a white longitudinal band on the head ; the tail is long and black ; its posterior half is yellow. From Guiana. Ech. rufus; Rat epineux, Azzara, Voy. pi. xiii. (The Red Eclii- mys). Size of a rat, and of a reddish grey ; tail shorter than the body. It is found in Guiana, Brazil, and Paraguay. It excavates long subterraneous galleries. Others, again, have merely the ordinary kind of hair, more or less rough. The most remarkable is tlie Ech. dactyJicus, Geoff. (The Long-toed Echimys). Which is still larger than the golden-tailed one, and has the two middle toes of the fore feet double the length of the lateral ones. Its scaly tail is longer than .the body ; its fur is a yellowish grey, and the hairs on its nose form a crest directed in front.* Hyrdomys, Geoff. The Hydromys have many external points of relation to the Echimys, but they are distinguished from all other rats by their hind feet, two thirds of which are palmated ; their two molars have also a peculiar character in the crown, which is divided into obliquely quadi-augular lobes, whose sum- mits are hollowed out like the bowl of a spoon. They are aquatic. * Add the Echimys of Cayenne, the Silky Echimys. I suspect the Mus. para- doxus, Thomas, Lin. Trans. XI, (Heteromys, Lesson,) differs from the Echimys in its cheek-pouches only. However, not having seen its teeth, I cannot arrange it. a door admitted, hetween its lower edge and the floor, a current of air; and, in order to get rid of the inconvenience, the dormouse had previously fixed up a piece of board, which it absolutely detached from a shelf, and placed against the door. But this was not all. The dormouse, it was found, had untied a straw rope which encir- cled some bottles that lay in the cellar; of this it made a bed, which it lastly sur- rounded with a rampart curiously and ingeniously constructed; for this wall of se- cui-ity was composed of the fragments of the bottles literally broken for the purpose of being placed as a wall of separation between the bed of the dormouse and the rats that might chance to invade it. The dormice are found in great numbers, in bur- rows, on the highest of the rocks of the Alpine mountains. They come out in wet weather, and generally announce the approach of rain by a shrill, and very peculiar whistle. The inhabitants of the Alps regard their appearance abroad as faithful indications of the weather. Dr. M. Hall, in the paper on hybernation already alluded to, states, that dormice, supplied with cotton wool, make themselves nests, and be- come lethargic. — Eng. Ed. 124 MAMMALIA. Several of these animals have been sent to Europe from Van Dieman's land, some of which have the belly white, and others fawn- coloured, but aU of a deep brown above, with a long tail, which is black at the base, and the posterior half white. They are sometimes double the size of the brown rat. Hydromys leueogaster, and Hyd. chrysogaster, Geoff. An. Mus. VI. pi. xxxvi. C A PROMTS, Desmar. The Houtias have four molars every where with flat crowns, the enamel of which is folded inwards so that it forms three angles on the external edge, and a single one on the internal edge of the upper teeth, and the inverse in the lower ones. The tail is round and scantily philose ; they have, like the rats, five toes to the hind foot, and four, with the rudiment of a thumb, to the fore feet ; their form is that of a rat ; as large as a rabbit or hare. Two species are known. Cap. foitrnieri Desmar., Mem. de la Soc. d'Hist. Nat. de Par. I. 1823. (The Congo Houtia)*. Muzzle brown; the under part of the neck whitish ; tail brown, but half the length of the body. Cap. prehensilis, Pcessig. ; Houtia Carvalli. Less than the pre- ceding ; browai, with a whitish throat ; tail red, as long as the body, and partly naked at the end. Both species inhabit the island of Cuba, and, together with the Agoutis, at the time of the discovery, constituted the principal game of the inhabitants. Mus. Cuv. The Rats, properly so called, have three molars, of which the anterior is the largest; its crown is divided into blunt tubercles, which, by being worn, give it the shape of a disk, sloped in various directions ; the tail is long and scaly. These animals are very injurious, from their fecundity, and the voracity with which they gnaw and devour substances of whatever kind. There are three species which have become quite common in our houses, viz. M. musculus, L. ; Buff. VII, xxxix. (The Common Mouse). Known in all times and at all places. M. rattus, L. ; Buff. VII, xxxvi. (The Black Rat). Of which no mention is made by the ancients, and which appears to have en- tered Europe in the middle ages. It is more than double the size of the mouse, in all its dimensions. The fur is blackish. Several in- dividuals have been occasionally found connected by the interlacing of their tails; constituting what the Germans style the King of Rats.f M. decumanus, Pall. ; Buff. VIII, xxvii. (The Surmulot, or Common Norway or Brown Rat). ^Miicli did not pass into Europe till the eighteenth century, and is now more common in Paris and other large cities than the Black Rat itseK. It is larger than the * This is the Jsodon pilorides, Say. Zool. Journ. No. 2, p. 229. t See Bellerman on the King of the Rats (in German), Berlin, 1820. RODENTfA. 125 latter by one-fourth, and differs from it also by its reddish-brown hair.* These two large species appear to have originated in the East, and have been transported in ships, together with the mouse, to all parts of the globe. Eastern Tartary and China have a Rat equal to the Surmulot. M. caraco, Pallas, Glir. XXIII ; Schreb. clxxvii. (The Caraco Rat). Of a light colour ; tail a little shorter than the preceding, and the jaws stronger. There is another in India, one-fourth larger than the Brown Rat, the Rat perchal, Buff. Supp. VII. Ixix, which is of a reddish brown. There is a large one in the Indian Archipelago, the M. setifer, Horsf. Jav. Of a blackish brown. These last two species are set with rough bristles, which extend beyond the hairs. One of the largest and most mischievous rats known is the M. pilorides, Pall, and Gm. (The Musk-Rat of the Antilles). Fifteen inches in length, without the tail, which is" still longer than the body ; hair coarse, of a deep black above, and whitish beneath, j" Fewer species have been observed of the size of the mouse. M. cahirinus, Geoff,, Descr. de I'Eg. Mammif. (The Cairo Mouse). Spines on the back, in place of hairs; it is noticed by Aristotle. There is scarcely known in France more than one species which lives remote from houses — the M. sylvaticus. (The long-tailed Field-Mouse). The Mulot of Buff. VII, xli, which is hardly larger than the mouse, and is distinguished from it by its red fur. It does much injury to trees, and sometimes penetrates into gardens. It seems, however, that in some of the provinces there is a smaller and grey species, which has also been observed in England, (^M. messorius, Shaw, Vol. II. Part 1, Frontisp.), and a third still more diminutive — the Dwarf Field-Mouse, (M. pumilus, Fr. Cuv. Mam- mif). It remains for me to observe, that there are still numerous discoveries to be 'made in our country respecting the species of these very diminutive quadrupeds. J * It appears to belong to Persia, where it lives in burrows. It was not till 1727, that, after an earthquake, it arrived at Astracan, by swimming across the Volga. f Pallas and Gmelin erroneously describe it as being entirely white. The earlier historians of the colonies attribute to it the above colours, which are precisely such as we have seen on the animal. X To this division, most probably, belong the M. agrarius, M. minutus, M. sorici- nus, M. vagus, M. betulinus, M. striatus, M. barbants, Schreb. Here, also, should come the enormous 3fus giganteus, Hardw. Linn. Trans. VII. xxviii. There should be likewise added the Radiated Rat of the Cape, M. pumilio, Sparm. the M. cijanus, the Grey- Blue Rat of North America, Molina, and several other spe- cies, some of which are not even mentioned by authors, and others which are de- scribed with too little reference to other species. This is the reason why most of the rats of Azzara cannot be properly classed until they are re-examined. The same ob- servation applies to a great many of the Rodentia of M. Rafinesque. Their descrip- tions are too short to be of any use. 126 MAMMALIA. Warm climates produce rats similar in every particular to those of which we have just spoken, except that their tails are more hairy* (a). Gerbillus, Desm. — Meriones, Illig. The Gerbils have molars that differ very little from those of rats, merely becoming sooner worn, so as to form transverse elevations. Their superior incisors are furrowed with a groove ; their hind feet are some- what longer in proportion than those of rats in general, and their thumb and little toe slightly separated. Their tail is long and hairy. The sandy and warm paits of the eastern continent produce several species. G. indicus; Dipus indicus, Hardw., Linn. Trans. VIII, pi. vii; Herine, Fred. Cuv, Mammif. (The India Gerbil). Size of the fat Dormouse; fawn coloured above, whilisli beneath; tail longer than * Hypudtsus variegatus, Lichtenst. var. flava. — Meriones syenenses, Id. ; to wliich must be added the Arvicola messor, Le Comte, Arv. hortensis, Harl., or Sygmodov, Say; distinguished, however, by hairy ears, like the Otomys. Another group, with hairy tails also, but whose teeth wear away faster, will include the Hypudaus obesus, Lichtenst., the Mus ruficaudltus, Id. His Meriones sericeus should form a third, characterized by the projecting ridges of the molars, which al- ternately catch in each other. We then have to group the Neotoma floridanum of Say, or the Arvicola floridaiius of Harlan, and the Arvicola gossypina of Le Comte, two rats which, size excepted, are very similar even in their colours, whose teeth, provided with roots, if worn a little, have crowns formed like those of the Arvicola. These animals, however, previous to a definite classification, require to be com- pletely examined and compared, internally as well as \\ithout. ^^ (a) Amongst the specimens of this genus in the Zoological Gardens in Lon- don, are the Mus Rattus, a species so long known in this country as to be considered aboriginal to it. This rat was formerly very abundant, but for many years has been almost wholly displaced by the Surmiilot, M. deciimanus. Very lately, however, the M. ratlus has very unaccountably re-appeared in several places in London. A spe- cies not described by Cuvier is to be seen in the gardens in Regent's Park; it is the Gigantic Rat, M. giganteus, and was sent from Bombay by that great patron of sci- ence, the Earl of Clare. Here, also, are to be seen some Barbarymice, the M. bar- barus of Linnasus; since whose time the species entirely eluded all observation, imtil it was recently recovered by the Zoological Society. It is a species coiumon in Bar- bary. The Long-tailed Field-Mouse, M. sylvaticus, will also be found in the above collection. The singular nest of the Harvest-Mouse, M. messorius, has been ren- dered too interesting an object of contemplation, by White of Selborne, to be passed over. He found it suspended upon the head of a thistle, in a wheat-field. The nest was of the size of a cricket-ball, was perfectly round, and was composed of blades of wheat, which were platted together with wonderful art. What was most curious was the absence of any aperture in the ball, for exit or entrance; and yet, the particular nest which Mr. White examined contained eight young, which so completely occu- pied the cavity, that it was apparently impossible for the creatures to turn themselves, in order to seize the mother's teat; and still more was it difficult for the mother to find room in the nest. These nests, observes the author of the " British Naturalist," varj' in shape, being round, oval, or pear-shaped, with a long neck, and are to be distinguished from those of any other mouse, by being generally suspended on some growing vegetable — a thistle, a bean-stalk, or some adjoining stems of wheat, with which it rocks and waves in the wind; but, to prevent the young from being dis- lodged by any violent agitation of the plant, the parent closes up the entrance so uniformly with the whole fabric, that the real opening is with diflRculty found. — Eng. Ed. RODENTIA. 127 the body, and blackish towards the end. To this species should be approximated the G. meridianus ; D, meridianus, Schreb. 231. (The Torrid or Sand Gerbil). Which is about the same colour, but a little smaller. G. tamaricinus ; D. tamaricinus, Schreb. 232. (The Tamarisk Gerbil). The tail is annulated with brown. G. pyramidum ; D. pyramidum, Oliv. (The Gerbil of the Pyra- mids). The hind feet more elevated; size of the Garden Dormouse; its fur is red above, whitish beneath. There is one in Senegal of a livelier red and a purer white. Another at the Cape, a little larger, reddish, and the tail less hairy at the end. A third in Nubia, nearly half the size, of a light red above, and a beautiful white beneath. The Meriones, Fred. Cuv. The Meriones, which we separate from the other Gerbils, have the hind feet still longer, the tail nearly naked, and a very small tooth fronts the superior molars; characters which approximate them to the Jerboas. Their upper incisors are grooved, like those of the Gerbils, and their toes also are similar. There is a small species in North America, the Mus canadensis, Penn. ; Dipus canadensis, Sh. II, Part 1, pi. IGl; Dipus americanits. Barton. Size of a mouse; fawn-coloured grey ; tail longer than the body. An animal of the greatest agility, that shuts itself up in the earth, and passes the winter in a state of lethargy.* Cricetus, Cuv. The Hamsters have nearly the same kind of teeth as rats, but their tail is short and hairy, and the two sides of their mouth are hollowed, as in certain of the species of Simis, into sacs or cheek pouches (a), in which they transport the grain they collect to their subterraneous abodes. C. vulgaris; M. cricetus, L.; Marmotte d'AUemagne, ^'c; Buff. XIII, xiv. (The Common Hamster, or German Dormouse). It is larger than the rat; of a reddish-grey above, black at the flanks and underneath, with three whitish spots on each side. The four feet are white, as are also a spot under the throat, and another under the breast; some individuals are all black. This animal, so pleasingly diversified in its colours, is yet one of the most destructive that lives, on account of the quantity of corn which he collects, and with which he fills his burrow — a receptacle sometimes no less than seven feet deep. It is common in all the sandy regions that extend from the north of Germany to Siberia. * Add Gerhilhts lahradorius, Harl., ov M. lahrad., Sabine, Frankl. \'oy. p. C61. 1^^ (a) The cheek-pouches are bags situated between the cheeks and the jaws of several genera of animals belonging to the Quadrumana, as well as tliat now un- der consideration. These pouches, which are particularly fomied in the Hamsters, are destined to be receptacles for the food which the animals take in, and ultimately chew at their leisure. — Eno. Ed. 128 . MAMMALIA. This last country produces several small species of Hamsters, de- scribed by Pallas.* Arvicola, Lacep. The Campagnoles, like the rats, have always three grinders, but with- out roots, each one being formed of triangular prisms, placed alternately on two lines. They may be subdivided into several groups, viz. — Fiber, Ciiv. The Ondatras or Field Rats, with semi-palmated hind feet, a long, scaly, and compressed tail, of which one species only is well known. F. vulgaris; Castor zibeticus, L.; Mus zibeticus, Gm. ; Buff. X, i. (The Canadian Musk-Rat or Ondatra). As large as a rabbit, of a reddish-grey. In winter they construct, on the ice, a hut of earth, in which several of them reside together, passing through a hole in the bottom, for the roots of the acorus («), on which they feed. When the frost shuts up this hole, the musk rats are under the necessity of eating one another. It is this habit of building which has induced some authors to refer the Ondatra to the genus Castor. The second subdivision is that of Arvicola, Cuv. — Hypudjeus, Illig. Our common Field Rats, or ordinary Campagnoles, which have a hairy tail, about the length of the body, and without palmated feet. A. vulgaris; Mus amphibius, L. ; Buff, VII, xliii. (The Water Rat). A little larger than the common rat, of a deep greyish- brown ; tail the length of the body. Inhabits the banks of rivers, and digs in marshy places in pursuit of roots ; but it swims and dives badly (6). A. terrestris; Mus terrestris, Lin. (The Schermaus, or Digger Rat of the Americans). Seems to differ from the Water Rat only in being somewhat smaller; its tail, also, is shorter. It lives under ground, like the mole, but especially in the meadows of high grounds. It excavates galleries, and transports the earth which it raises from its hole to some distance from the opening. Its magazines, which are principally filled with the roots of the wild carrot, cut into two- inch pieces, are frequently two feet in diameter. * M. accedula. — M. arenarius. — M. phoeus. — M. songarus. — M. funmculus. See Pall. Glir. and Sch. f^ (a) This is the plant called Sweet Flag, and was considered by Linnasus to be the only aromatic one which grew in the northern regions. Notwithstanding the certainty of Cuvier's account, yet, it is laid down in Loudon's elaborate work entitled the " Encyclopaedia of Plants," that no cattle whatever eat this plant. — Eng. Ed. ^ (6) It would appear that the species called the Short-tailed Water-Rat is grega- rious, and that troops of them habitually migrate to places where suitable food maybe obtained. They have been known to be particularly partial to spots where the Eqid- setum limosum (Smooth Horse-Tail) is abundant. How such large companies as have been frequently observed, can change their localities without being seen in their transits, is a mystery which still remains unsolved. — Eng. Ed. RODENTIA. J 29 /I. arvalis; Mas arvalis, L. ; Buff. VII, xlvii. (The Campag- nol, or Little Field-Mouse, called also Mulot in some provinces, but improperly). Size of a mouse ; of a reddish-ash colour ; tail not so long as the body. It inhabits holes which it excavates in the earth, where it collects corn for the winter. The multiplication of this animal is sometimes so excessive as to cause much injury. A. oeconomicus, Mus oeconomicus, Pall. Glir. XIV, A. ; Schreb. cxc. (The Meadow Campagnol). A little darker coloured, and the tail somewhat shorter. It lives in a sort of oven-shaped cham-' ber, dug under the turf, from which several narrow and ramifying ca- nals run in various directions ; other canals communicate with a se- cond cavity, where it accumulates its provisions. From all Siberia. It is thought to have been found in Switzerland and in the south of France, particularly, as we are assured, in the potato fields.* Georyciius, Illig. Or the Lemmings, Cuv., have very short ears and tail, and the toes of the fore feet peculiarly well formed for digging. The two first species have five very distinct nails to each of the fore feet, like the rat-moles and the jumping-hares. G. lemmus; Mus lemmus, L. ; Pall. Glir. XII, A. B. Schreb. cxcv. (The Lemming). A northern species, as large as a rat, with a fur varied with black and yellow ; very celebrated in consequence of the migrations which it makes from time to time, at periods alto- gether unsettled, and in bodies infinite in their number. It is said, that, on such occasions, they proceed in a straight line, without any river, mountain, or other obstacle impeding them, and that they de- stroy every thing on their route. Their usual residence appears to be the shores of the Arctic Ocean. G. vulgaris; Mus aspalax, Gm., Pall. Glir. X, Schreb. CCV. (The Zocor). Reddish-grey; the three middle nails of the fore feet long, arcuate, compressed, and trenchant, for cutting earth and roots. The limbs are short; there is scarcely any tail; and the eyes are excessively small. From Siberia; where it always lives under ground, like the mole and rat-mole. It feeds principally on the bulbs of different liliaceaj (plants of the lily tribe). The third species, like the other animals comprised in the great genus of rats, has merely the rudiment of a thumb on the fore feet. G. hudsonius; Mus hudsonius, Gm., Schreb. CXCVI. (The Lemming of Hudson's Bay). A light pearly-ash colour ; without tail or external ears ; the two middle toes of the fore foot of the male seem to have double nails, because the skin of the end of the toe is * Here, most probably, would come the M. saxatilis, aUiariis, rutilus, gregalis, and socialis, Pall. Glir. But the M. lagurus and lorquatus come nearer to the Lemmings. There are several field-rats, or campagnols, in North America, such as the Jrvicola xanthogiiatha. Leach, Miscel. T, pi. xxvi. — Arvicola pe/msylvanica, Wilson, Amer. Ornith. VI, pi. 1, F. 3. — .4rr. palustris, Harl.&c. Better figures, and new and com- parative descriptions of tlie preceding species, are much wanted. Vol. I. K 1-JO MAMMALIA. callous, and forms a projection under the poiat of the nail — a struc- ture which has not been met with, except in this animal. It is the size of a rat, and lives under ground, in North America. Otomys, Fred. Cm. The Otomys are nearly allied to the field rats, and have also three grinders, but they are composed of slightly arcuated laminae, arranged in file.* Their incisors are grooved with a longitudinal furrow, and the tail is hairy, as well as the ears, which are very large. The species known is O. capensis, Fred. Cuv. (The Cape Oto- mys). Inhabits Africa. Size of a rat ; fur annulated with black and fawn colours; tail a third shorter than the body.-j- Dipus, Gm. The Jerboas ^ have nearly the same kind of teeth as the true rats, ex- cept that there is sometimes a very small one immediately before the up- per molars. The tail is long and tufted at the end; the head large; the eyes large and prominent ; but their principal character consists in their posterior extremities, which, in comparison with the anterior, are of a most immoderate length, and above all, in the metatarsus of the three middle toes, which is formed of one single bone, resembling what is called the tarsus in birds. It is from this disproportion of the limbs that they were named by the antients Biped Rats; and in fact they seldom move otherwise than by great leaps on their hind feet. There are five toes to each of the fore feet; and, in certain species, besides the three great toes to the hind feet, there are small lateral ones. They live in burrows, and fall into a deep lethargy during the winter. D. sagitta; M. sagitta, L. ; Buff. Supp. VI. xxxix and xl. The Jerbao has only three toes, and is the size of a rat ; a light fawn co- lour above ; white beneath ; tuft of the tail black, the tip white. Is found from Barbary to the north of the Caspian sea. D. hirtipes, Lichtenstein. (The Hairy-footed Jerboa). The head more compressed than in the others ; only three toes to the hind feet, as in the Jerboa, but they are more hairy. From Africa. § D. jaculus; M. jaculus. Pall. Glir. XX. Schreb. CCXXVIII. (The Alactaga). Two small lateral toes ; ears longer than those of the Jerboa, but]^has nearly the same colours. Pallas has observed them of three sizes, from that of a rabbit to that of a rat : they are * They are exact models, in miniature, of the grinders of the elephant. f It is the same animal described and represented in the essay on the genus of rats, by M. Brantz, Berlin, 1827, under the name of Etinjofis irrorata. X There has lately appeared an excellent paper on the Jerboas, by M. Lichten- stein, in which that learned naturalist describes and figures ten species. I can only refer my readers to the paper itself. It is inserted in the Journal of the Acad, of Berlin. § Add the t>ip. te.lum, D. pluturus, and D. lagopus of Eversman, Voy. de Mayen- dorf en Boucarie, p. 390. RODENT[A. 131 probably as many species.* One or the other is found frorn Bar- bary to the E-istern Ocean, and as far as the north of India. Helamys, F. Cuv. — Pedetes, IlUg.-\ We separate from the other Jerboas, and the whole of the genus Rats, the Jumping Hares, which, like the Jerboas, have a large head, and great eyes, a long tail, and the anterior part of the body extremely small in comparison to the posterior, although the disproportion is much less than in the true Jerboas. The peculiar characters of the Ilelamys are four grinders everywhere, each one composed of two lamina? ; five toes to tlie fore feet, armed with long and pointed nails, and four to their great hind ones, all separate, even to the bones of the i^etatarsus, and terminated by large nails, almost resembling hoofs. This number of toes is the inverse of that most common among the rats. Their inferior incisors are trun- cated, and not pointed like those of the true Jerboas, and of the greater part of the animals comprised under the genus of rats. One species only is known, the H. caffer.; Museaffer., Pall. ; Dipus caffer., Gm., BufF. Supp.VI. xli, and better, Fred. Cuv. Mammif. It is the size of a hare, of a light fawn colour, and has a long tufted tail, with a black tip. In- habits deep burrows at the Cape of Good Hope. Spalax, GuldcHstedt. The Rat-Moles have also been very properly separated from the Rats, although their grinders are three in number, and tuberculous, as in the true rats, and the hamsters, and are merely a little less unequal. Their incisors, however, are too large to be covered by the lips, and the extre- mity of the lower ones is in a sharp edge, and not pointed. Their legs are very short; each foot has five short toes, and as many fiat and slender nails. Their tail is very short, or rather there is none ; the same ob- servation applies to their external ear. They live under ground like the moles, raising up the earth like them, although provided with much in- ferior means for dividing it ; but they subsist on roots only. S. ti/phus; M. typhus, Pall. Glir. pi. viii, Schreb. 206. (The Zemni Slepez or Blind Rat-Mole). A singular animal, whose as- pect is utterly misshapen by its bulky head, which is angular on its sides, by its short feet, by the entire absence of a tail; but, above all, by its possessing no eye which can be seen externally, it having merely under the skin a small black point, which would seem or- ganized for an eye, without being able however to minister to vision, inasmuch as the skin passes over it without either opening or be- coming thinner, and not having in this spot less hair than any other part. It is rather larger than our rat ; its fur is smooth, and of an ash colour, bordering on a red. This is the animal, in the opinion of Olivier, to which the ancients alluded when they spoke of the mole as being perfectly blind. * Pallas has latterly distinguished the small Alactagas by the name of Dip. acontion. I Pedetes, Jumper, Helamyx, Jumpiiig-lxat. k2 132 MAMMALIA. The islands in the straits of Sunda produce a rat-mole as large as a rabbit, of a deep grey colour, with a white longitudinal stripe on the head, the Spalax javanus. From the rat-moles themselves should have been separated the Bathyergus, lllig. — Orycteres, Fr. Cuv. The Orycteres, which, with the general form, feet, and truncated inci- sors of that genus, have four grinders throughout. Their eye, though small, is visible, and they have a short tail. B . maritimus ; Mus maritmus, Gm. ; Taupe des dames, Buff. Supp. VI. xxxviii. (The Maritime Rat-j\Iole). Nearly the size of a rabbit ; the superior incisors furrowed with a groove, and the hair of a whitish grey. B. capensis; M. capensis, Gm. ; Taupe du Cap., BufF. Supp. YI. xxxvi. (The Rat-Mole of the Cape). Hardly as large as the guinea-pig; brown, with a spot round the ear, another round the eye, and a third on the vertex; the end of the muzzle white. The inci- sors are smooth. B. hottentottus. Less, and Garn., Yoy. de la Coquille, pi. ii. (The Hottentot Rat-Mole). Smaller; grey ; incisors smooth; hardly as large as a rat. We must approximate to the Rat-j\Ioles (Spalax and Bathiergus). Geomys, Rajin. — Pseudostoma, Say. — Asccmys, Lichten. The Geomys, which have four molars in compressed prisms throughout; the first double, the remaining three simple ; the upper incisors furrowed with a double groove in front ; five toes to each foot ; the three middle anterior nails, that of the medius particularly, very long, crooked, and trenchant. They are low animals, and have very deep cheek-pouches, which open ex- ternally, enlarging the sides of the head and neck in a singular manner. One species only is known. G. bursarius; Mus hursarius, Shaw.* (The Canada Hamster). Size of a rat; fur of a reddish-grey; tail naked, and but half the length of the body. Inhabits deep burrows in the interior of North America. DiPLOSTOMA, Rqfin. The Diplostomffi are in every respect similar to the Geomys, except that they have no tail.f These animals are also from North America. The species before us is reddish, and ten inches in length. We now pass to larger Rodentiaj than those of which we have hitherto • The figures of this animal, first published Trans. Lin. Soc. Vol. V. pi. viii, and Shaw, Vol. II. part 1, pi. 138, represent it with the internal skin of the cheek-pouches turned inside out, as though it had two sacs to the sides of the head. There is no- thing like it in nature. It is well represented, Acad. Berlin, 1822 and 1823, pi. ii. f M. llafinesque describes them as having only four toes to each foot. The Eu- ropean species has five, like the Geomys. IIODENTIA. V3'3 spoken, but of which several still have well developed clavicles. Of this number is the Castor, Lin. The Beavers are distinguished from all other Rodentia by their hori- zontally flattened tail, which is nearly of an oval form, and covered with scales. They have five toes to each foot : those of the hinder ones are connected by membranes, and that next to the thumb has a double and oblique nail. Their grinders, to the number of four throughout, and with flat crowns, appear as if formed of a bony ribbon reflected on itself, so as to shew one sloping edge at the internal border and three at the ex- ternal one of the upper row; in the lower ones it is exactly the reverse. Beavers are large animals, whose life is completely aquatic; their feet and tail aid them equally well in swimming. As their chief food is bark, and other hard substances, their incisors are very powerful, and grow as rapidly from the root as they are worn away at the point. With these teeth they cut trees of every description. Large glandular pouches which terminate on the prepuce produce a highly odorous oily substance, employed in medicine under the name of Castor {a). The organs of generation in both sexes terminate in the ex- tremity of the rectum, so that there is but a single external opening. C. fiber, Buff". VIII. xxxvi. (The Beaver). Larger than the badger, and of all quadrupeds the most industrious in constructing a dwelling, to efl'ect which these animals act in concert in the most solitary parts of North America. Beavers choose water of sufficient depth to be frozen to the bot- tom, and as far as possible, running streams, in order that the wood which they cut above may be carried downwards by the current to the spot where it is to be used. They keep the water at an equal height, by dams composed of all sorts of branches, mixed with clay ^^ (a) The pouches of the beaver here alluded to are found in both sexes, being situated in the male behind the prepuce, and in the female at the upper edge of the orifice of the vagina, where they open. They are composed of dense cellular tissue, forming several folds, between which the castor is inclosed, and to which it adheres. The two pouches lie parallel with each other beneath the skin; they hang together, and separate a little at one of the extremities, which is larger and more rounded than the other. Their outer surface is smooth, of a dark brown colour, and free from hairs. The castor completely fills the pouches, but has a cavity in the centre, which is a distinguishing character that shews the genuine from the artificial article. When examined in the animal, the secretion is soft, being of a consistence somewhat in- termediate between wax and honey; but, when taken out, it dries, but does not be- come hard. The best castor used to come from Russia, in roundisli, solid pods, smooth on the outside, and, when cut, presenting an orange-coloured surface. At present, the chief portion imported into this country is from Canada; it is brought in thin oblong pods, which are corrugated on the outside, and the castor contained in them is more deeply coloured than the Russian. Castor has a very peculiar, strong, and disagreeable odour; its taste is bitter, acrid, and slightly aromatic. CJiemistry has discovered in castor a variety of substances, of which castorine is the principal. Castor is employed in medicine as a powerful antispasmodic in hysteric cases, and its effect is described by physiologists as being specifically applied to what are called the cerebro-spinal nerves, or those which have a mixed origin from tlic brain and spinal marrow. When taken, even to a small extent, it manifests its influence in the urine by its veiy peculiar flavour; but its efficacy as a remedy has considerably fallen in credit. — Eng. Ed. 134 MAMMALIA. and stones, the strength of which is annually increased, and which finally, by the progress of vegetation, becomes converted into a hedge. Each hut serves for two or three families, and consists of two stories ; the upper is dry for the residence of the animals, and the lower un- der water for their stores of bark, &c. The latter alone is open, and the entrance is under water, having no communication with the land. The huts are a kind of rude wicker-work, being made of in- terwoven branches and twigs of trees plastered with mud. There are always several burrows along the bank, in which they seek for shelter when their huts are attacked. They only reside in these habitations during the winter; in the summer they separate, and live solitarily. The beaver may be easily tamed, and accustomed to feed on flesh. It is of a uniform reddish-brown colour, andthe fur, as is well known, is in great demand for hatters. It is sometimes found flaxen coloured, at others black, or even white. Notwithstanding we have carefully compared the beavers which burrow along the banks of the Rhone, the Danube, the Weser, and other rivers, with those of North America, we are unable to deter- mine whether the former are distinct species, or are prevented from building by the vicinity of man. Myopotamus, Commer. The Couias resemble the Beaver in size, in their four molars being compressed nearly alike, in their powerful yellow-tinted incisors, and in their five-toed feet, the hinder ones of which are palmated; but their tail is round and elongated. They are aquatic animals also. One only is known, the M. coipus; Mus coipiis, IMolin., Geoff. Ann. INIus. VI. pi. xxxv. (The Couia.) Which lives in burrows along the banks of rivers throughout a great part of South America. The fur, which is of a yellowish grey, mixed with down at the root, is employed by hatters, like that of the Beaver, and is consequently an important article of commerce. Thousands of their skins are imported into Europe Hystrix, Lin. The Porcupines are known at the first glance, by the stiff and pointed prickles, or quills, wdth which they are armed, like the Hedgehogs among the Carnaria. Their grinders are four throughout, with flat cro^vns, variously modified by plates of enamel, between which are depressed in- tervals. Their tongue is bristled with spiny scales, and their clavicles are too small to rest upon the sternum and scapula, being merely sus- pended by ligaments. They live in burrows, and have many of the habits of Rabbits. To their grunting voice, and thick truncated muzzle, are they indebted for being compared to the Pig, and for their corresponding French appellation of pore-epic. Porcupines, properly so called. Have the head more or less convex or vaulted, by the development of RODENTIA. 135 the bones of the nose. They have four toes before, and five behind, all armed with stout nails. H. cristata, L. ; Buff. XII., pi. li and lii. (The Common Por- cupine). Inhabits the south of Italy, Spain, and Sicily ; it is also found in Barbary. The spines are very long, and annulated with black and white ; a mane composed of long hairs occupies the head and neck. The tail is short, and furnished with hollow truncated tubes, suspended to slender pedicles, which make a noise when shaken by the animal. The chanfrin of the bony head is ex- tremely convex. There are other species not very different, but with a less convex head, in India and in Africa. We separate from the true Porcupines the Atherubus, Cuv. Where neither the head nor the muzzle is inflated, and in which wc observe a long non-prehensile tail ; the toes are like those of the true Porcupines. Hyst. fasciculafa, L. ; Buff. VII. 77; Schreb. 170.* (The Pencil-tailed Porcupine). The upper part of the spines on the back grooved, and the tail terminated by a bundle of flattened horny slips, constricted from space to space. Eretison, F. Cuv. The Ursons have a flat cranium ; the muzzle short, and not convex ; the tail of a middle size, and the spines short, and half hidden in the hair. One species only is known, the Hystrix dorsata, L. ; Buff. XII. Iv. (The Urson.) From North America. f Synetheres, F. Cuv. The muzzle short and thick ; the head vaulted in front, and the spines short ; the tail long, naked at the extremity, and prehensile, like that of an Opossum or Sapajou. There are only four toes, all armed with claws; they climb trees. Hi/st. prehensilis, L. ; Cuendu, Marcg., Hoitztlaquatzin, Her- nand.]: (The Prehensile-tailed Porcupine, orCoendou) (a). Hair of a brownish-black ; spines black and white. * This figure, copied from Seba, I, 52, i, is too short. That of Buff, is better, but the slips at the end of the tail are not represented wth sufficient distinctness. We can conjecture no reason by which De Blainville and Desmarets refer this spe- cies to the genus of Rats ; it has the teeth and other characters of the Porcupines, external as well as internal. t The pretended Coendou of Buffon is also an Urson, but a disfigured specimen that had lost its hair. See Buff. XII, 54. X This word, in the Mexican language, means Spiny Opossum. It is the long tailed Coendou of Buff. Supp. VII, 78; but the muzzle in the figure is too short. The figure of Hernandez conveys a much better idea of the animal. ^ (a) The chief peculiarity of the Coendou is, that, with the chief peculiarities of the llodentia, it possesses also a locomotive organ, of which all other species of Ilodentia have no trace. This is the prehensile tail, like some of the Simia, wliich, 136 MAMMALIA. Hystrix insidiosa, Lichtenst. ; the Couii/ of Azzara; Pr. Max. Brazil. America possesses one smaller, of which the spines are partly red or yellow, and hidden during a part of the year under its long greyish-brown hair. Lepus, Lin. Hares have a very distinctive character in their superior incisors, which are double, that is, each of them has a smaller one behind it.* Their molars, five every where, are individually formed of two vertical lamina soldered together, and in the upper jaw there is a sixth, simple and very small. They have five toes before and four behind ; an enormous cfficum, five or six times the size of the stomach, furnished internally with a spiral fillet, which traverses its length. The inside of their mouth and the under part of the feet are lined with hairs like the rest of the body. Lepus, Citv. Or the true Hares, have long ears ; a short tail ; the hind feet much longer than the fore ones; imperfect clavicles, and the infra-orbitary spaces in the skeleton reticulated. The species are numerous, and so like each other that it is difficult to characterize them. L. timidus, L. ; Buff. VII, xxxviii. (The Common Hare). Of a yellowish grey; the ears one-tenth longer than the head; ash coloured behind; black at the tips; tail the length of the thigh, white, with a black line above. Every one knows this animal, whose black flesh is agreeable food, and whose fur is useful. It lives solitarily, never burrows, sleeps on the open ground, when hunted describes large circles in the fields, and has never yet been domesticated. however, seems to be of little service to it, since it is heavy and ungraceful in its movements. Besides, the tail has this great peculiarity, which is found in no other animal, that the prehensile surface is above, instead of being as it uniformly isin all other animals with a prehensile tail; so that, when employed by the Coendou, it will be seen to curve in a direction exactly the reverse of that which takes place in the tails of the Simla. But the whole of its structure indicates its destiny to live in the woods and on trees; to select its permanent residence on the tops of trees, where it brings forth its young, because immediate nourishment is best attained in such a position. The spines, which almost wholly compose the external coat of the Coendou, adliere to the skin by a very narrow pedicle ; they are therefore verj' easily detached from the body. They are generally of a yellowish white colour at the root, black in the middle, and at the extremity white. The length of the body of the Coendou is about two feet, of the head four inches, of the tail a foot and three inches, and the height of the middle of the body twelve inches. The movements of the creature are slow, and it is like the Lemurs in taking exercise in the night only. It raises itself, as the Kanguroo does, on its hind feet, and with the fore feet grasps and carries food to its mouth. The species of Porcupines are numerous — they are found in Italy and Spain, having been originally brought to these kingdoms, as it is said, from Africa; they are common on the Mediterranean coast of Africa, in Guinea, and at the Cape of Good Hope; also in Asia Minor, South and North America. A Crested Porcupine may be seen in the Zoological Gardens, Regent's Park, which is a native of Northern Africa, and had been naturalized in Italy. When irritated, the Porcupine erects the spines on its body, and rattles those on its tail. — Eng. Ed. • There is even a period, when they are shedding their teeth, during which they appear to have three incisors, one behind the other, six in all. RODENTIA. 137 L. variabilis, Pall, Schreb. CCXXXV, B. (The Variable Hare), Somewhat larger than the Common Hare, with rather shorter ears and tail, the latter white at all seasons; the rest of the fur is grey in summer, and white in winter. This animal, which is found in the north, and on the higli mountains of the south of Europe, has the habits of the common Hare, but its flesh is insipid. L. cuniculiis, L. ; BufF. VI, 1. (The Rabbit). Less than the Hare; the ears somewhat shorter than the head; tail not so long as the thigh; fur of a yellowish grey; some red on the neck; throat and belly whitish ; ears grey, without any black ; some brown on the tail. This animal, said to be originally from Spain, is now spread throughout Europe. It lives in troops, in burrows, where it takes refuge as soon as it is pursued. Its flesh, which is white and agreeable, differs considerably from that of the Hare. In a domestic state the Rabbit multiplies prodigiously, and varies as to colour and fur. Other countries furnish several species which can only be distin- guished from that of Europe by the closest attention. Such are the L. tolai, Gm., Schreb. CCXXXIV. The Siberian Rabbit). Wliich is intermediate between the Hare and Rabbit as to propor- tions, and which occasionally surpasses the former in size. It makes no burrows, but seeks shelter in the clefts of rocks or other cavities. L. Americanus and Braziliensis, Gm. ; Lepus nanus, Schreb. CCXXXIV, B. (The American Rabbit). Nearly similar in size and colour to the European species ; feet reddish ; no black on either ears or tail. Nestles in the trunks of trees, and frequently goes up in their hollows as far as their branches ; its flesh soft and insipid.* L.capensis,Gvci', Geoff., Quadr. d'Egypte. (The African Hare.) Has ears a fifth longer than the head ; size and colour nearly those of the European species; the feet, however, are a little longer and somewhat reddish. It appears to be found from one extremity of Africa to the other ; at least the one from Egypt does not differ from that of the Cape. Lagomys, Cuv.\ Have moderate ears ; legs nearly alike : the infra-orbital hole simple ; clavicles nearly perfect, and no tail ; they often utter a very acute cry. They have hitherto been found in Siberia only, and it is Pallas (Glir. p, 1 et seq.) who has described them. Lepus pusilbis. Pall. Glir. I, Schreb. ccxxxvii. (The Dwarf Lagomys). Of a greyish-brown ; the size of a Water-Rat. Lives in small burrows, in fertile countries, on fruit and buds.j; * Add the Black-necked Rabbit of India, &c. f Lagomys, i. e. Rat- Hare. X Pallas describes another still smaller species from the nortli-eastern extremity of Asia, Lepus hyperboreus, Zoog. Russ. I, 152. 138 MAMMALIA, Lepus ogotonna, Pall. Glir. Ill, Schreb. ccxxxix. (The Grey Lagomys). A very light grey, with yellowish feet ; a little larger than the preceding; nestles among heaps of stones, in the fissures of rocks, &c., where it collects hay for the winter. Lepus alpinus, Pall. Glir. II, Schreb. ccxxxviii. (The Lago- mys Pica). Size of a Guinea-Pig, and of a yellowish red. Inha- bits the loftiest eminences of mountains, where it passes the summer in selecting and drying the plants of which it makes its provision for the winter. Its hay-stacks, which are sometimes six or seven feet high, are a valuable resource for the horses of the sable hunters. The fossil bones of an unknown species of Lagomys have been discovered in the concretions or osseous breccia of Corsica. Cuv. Oss. Foss. IV, p. 199. After the two genera of Porcupines and Hares, come the Rodentia, united by Linnaeus and Pallas, under the name of Cavia ; but in which it is impossible to find any other common and positive character than that of their imperfect clavicles, although the species of which they are com- posed are not deficient in analogy between them, as respects the structure of their body and their habits. They are all from the new continent. Hydrochcerus, Erxleb. The Cabiais have four toes before and three behind, all armed with large nails, and united by membranes ; four grinders throughout, of which the posterior are the longest, and composed of numerous, simple, and parallel laminae ; the anterior lamina forked towards the external edge iu the upper, and towards the internal one in the lower teeth. Only one species is knowni, the H. capyhara; Cavia capyhara,'L.\ Capybara, Marcg.; Capiy- goua, Azzar. ; Cabaia, Buff. XII, xlix. (The Capybara). Size of Siam Pig ; the muzzle very thick ; limbs short ; hair coarse, and of a yellowish brown ; no tail. Inhabits the rivers of Guiana and the Amazon, where it lives in troops. It is excellent game, and the largest of the Rodentia. The Beaver only approaches it in size. Cavia, Illig. — Ancema, Fr. Cuv. The Cobayes, vulgarly called Guinea-Pigs, are miniature representa- tions of the Cabiais; but their toes are separated, and each of their molars has only one simple lamina, and one that is forked on the outside in the upper ones, and on the inside in the lower. The species best known, C. cohaia, Pall. ; Mus porcellus, L. ; Buff. VIII. i. (The Gui- nea Pig) is now very much multiplied in Europe, where it is brought up in houses, because its odour is thought to drive away rats. Like all domesticated animals, it varies in colour. There is reason for believing it to proceed from an American animal called Aperea, which is of the same size and form, but with a uniform reddish-grey fur. It is found in the woods of Brazil and Paraguay. UODENTIA. 139 Kerodon, Fred. Cuv. The Mocos laave rather simpler grinders than the Cobayes, each being formed of two triangular prisms. The only species known is also from Brazil, somewhat surpasses the Guinea-Pig in size, and is of an olive-grey. Chloromys, Fr. Cuv. — Dasyprocta, Illig, The Agoutis have four toes before and three behind; four grinders throughout, almost equal, with flat crowns irregularly furrowed, rounded borders, notched on the internal edge in the upper jaw, and on the exter- nal one in the lower. In disposition, and in the nature of their flesh, they resemble Hares and Rabbits, which they may be said to replace in the Antilles and tropical portions of America. C. acuti ; Cavia acuti, L. ; BuiF. VIII. 1. 1, (The Common Agouti). The tail reduced to a simple tubercle ; fur brown. The male fawn coloured on the croup ; as large as a Hare. C. acuchi ; Cavia acuchi, Gm. ; Buff. Supp. III. xxxvi. (The Acouchi). Six or seven vertebras in the tail; brown above, fawn coloured beneath; size of a Hare. C. patagonicus ; Cavia patagonica, Penn. and Schreb. ; the Pampas Hare of the Creoles of Buenos Ayres. This animal appears to be a species of Agouti, with longer ears, and a very short naked tail; but its molars are not known. CCELOGENYS, Fr. CuV.* The Pacas, in addition to teeth very like those of the Agoutis, have a very small additional toe on the internal edge of the fore foot, and one on each side, equally small, on their hinder one, making five toes every where. Besides this, there is a cavity formed in their cheek which dips under the border formed by a very large and projecting zygomatic arch,-|- which gives a very extraordinary aspect to the bony head. Their flesh is said to be very good. There is one species or variety fawn coloured, and another brown, both of which are spotted with white, the Cavia paca, L. ; Buff. X, xliii. ; Supp= III. xxxv. Finally, there remains an animal perhaps nearly allied to the Cavias, and possibly more so to the Lagomys, or the Rats, which we are unable dispose of, on account of our ignorance of its teeth : this is the Chin- chilla, whose skins arrive in such abundance for furriers, but of which we have never yet been able to procure the entire body. It is the size of a Guinea-Pig or small Rabbit ; is covered with long and close hair of the * Ancema, without strength; Chloromys, yellow rat; Dasijprocia, hairy buttock; Coelogenys, hollow cheek ; Hydrochcerus, water-pig. t Dr. Harlan (Faun. Americ. p. 126) has made a new genus from a head pre- served in the Philadelphia Museum, which he names Osleopera; but, from the de- scription, it appears to us to be nothing more than that of the Paca. Desmarets has already made the same observation. 140 MAMMALIA. finest description, and the softest that is known among the furs of com- merce. The ears are large and half naked; the tail, one-third the length of the body, is furnished with stifFer hairs, so arranged as to give it the appearance of being laterally compressed. The fore feet have four toes with a vestige of a thumb ; llie hinder ones have only three. This quadruped inhabits the mountains of South America. The Viscache, as described by Azzara (Quadr. du Parag., French Trans. II, p. 41), and such as we have seen it figured, can hardly be any other than a large species of Chinchilla, with shorter and coarser fur.* (a.) ORDER VI. EDENTATA. The Edentata, or quadrupeds without teeth in the front of their jaws, will form our last order of unguiculated animals. Although united by a negative character alone, they have, nevertheless, some positive mutual relations, and particularly large nails, which embrace the extremities of the toes, approaching more or less to the nature of hoofs : and further, a slowness, a want of agility, arising from the disposition of their limbs, which is easily to be seen : but these relations still leave certain gaps be- tween them, which are of sufficient importance to require that this order should be divided into three tribes. TARDIGRADA. The Tardigrades form the first: they have a short face. Their name originates from their excessive slowness, the consequence of a construc- tion truly heteroclite, in which nature seems to have amused herself by producing something imperfect and grotesque. The only genus yet in existence is * The figures were conimunicated to us by M. Hamilton Smith and M. Brookes. It is the animal described imder the name of Gerboise geante, 'hy De Blainville, in Desmarets' Mammal. 315, and Nouv. Diet. d'Hist. Nat. XIJI., 117, and figured in the English translation of the present work, under that of Marmot Diana. ^^ (a) Several Chinchillas have been presented to the Zoological Gardens in London. As these were natives of the Alpine valleys of Chili, an early specimen was treated in winter with artificial warmth, and even a piece of fiannel was placed in its apartment; but this it shewed a disposition uniformly to reject. These animals have proved to be tranquil, and capable of being easily tamed. Their food consisted of dry herbage, various grains, and succulent roots. On one occasion, one Chinchilla, recently presented, was placed in the same cage with another which had been some time in the possession of the Society. The latter immediately flew upon tlie new comer, who would have fallen a victim to jealousy, had not the keeper inter- fered, and separated the combatants. This fact is in direct opposition to the descrip- tion of Molina, who says that the Chinchillas ai-e gregarious. — Eng. Ed. EDENTATA. 141 Bhadypus, Lin. The Sloths have cylindrical molars, and sharp canines longer than those molars, two niammje on the breast, and fingers united by the skin, and only marked externally by enormous compressed and crooked nails, which, when at rest, are always bent towards the palm of the hand, or the sole of the foot. The hind feet are obliquely articulated on the leg, and rest only upon their outer edge; the phalanges of the toes are articulated by a close ginglymus («.), and the first, at a certain age, become soldered to the bones of the metacarpus or metatarsus, which also, in time, for want of use, experience the same fate. To this incon- venience in the organization of the extremities is added another, not less great, in their proportions. The arm and fore-arm are much longer than the thigh and leg, so that, when these animals walk, they are compelled to drag themselves along on their elbows. The pelvis is so large, and their thighs so much inclined to the sides, that they cannot approximate their knees. Their gait is the necessary effect of such a disproportioned structure.* They live on trees, and never remove from the one they are on until they have stripped it of every leaf, so painful to them is the requisite exertion to reach another. It is even asserted that to avoid the trouble of a regular descent, they let themselves fall from a branch. The female produces but a single young one at a birth, which she carries on her back. The viscera of these animals are not less singular than the rest of their conformation. The stomach is divided into four sacks, analogous to the four stomachs of the Ruminantia, but without leaflets or other internally salient parts, while the intestinal canal is short and without a cfecum. M. Fr. Cuvier applies the name of Acheus to those species that have three nails to the fore feet ; they have a very short tail. Bradypus tridactylus, L. ; Buff. XIII. v and vi. (The Ai)(6). A species in which sluggishness and all the details of the organiza- tion which produce it are carried to the highest degree. The thumb * M. Carlisle has observed that the arteries of the limbs commence by splitting into an infinitude of ramifications, which afterwards unite in one trunk, from whicli the usual branches proceed. This structure being met with in the Loris, whose gait is almost equally sluggish, it is possible that it may exert some influence on this slowness of motion. Independently of this, the Loris, the Ourang-Outang, the Coaita, all very slow animals, are remarkable for the length of their arms. f^° (a) Ginglymus is a form of joint which resembles a hinge, and exists amongst animals under two forms. In the first one of the bones has a pulley like surface into which the other bone completing the joint is received. This is the state of the knee and elbow joints in the human body, and it has received the name of the angular ginglj'mus. The lateral or rotatory ginglymus is constituted by such a union as admits of the convex end or process of one bone in a hallow of another. — Eng. Ed. B^ (b) The name of Ai is given to the animal, because the plaintive sound which it emits is exactly imitated by pronouncing the vowels a and i. In falling from the branch, as is described above, this animal first rolls itself into a round ball ; and, previously to its fall, it may be taken whilst it is attached to the branch, so great is its apathy. — Eng. Ed. 14}^ MAMMALIA, and the little toe, reduced to small rudiments, are hidden under the skin, and soldered to the metatarsus and metacarpus; the clavicle, also reduced to a rudiment, is firmly united in the acromion. The arms are double the length of the legs ; the hair on the head, back, and limbs, is long, coarse, and inelastic, something like dried hay, which gives it a hideous aspect. Its colour is grey, the back being frequently spotted with white and brown. It is as large as a Cat, and is the only mammiferous animal known which has nine cervical vertebrse. There is an Ai called the Burned Back Ai, from the circumstance of having between the shoulders a black spot, surrounded with fawn colour ; but, according to Temminck, it is only a variety ; the ap- pearance alluded to resulting from the wearing away of the long hair on the shoulder. The Black Collared Ai, however, — Brad, tor- quatus, GeoiF. Ann. Mus., Schreb. LXXIVj A, is a species that is very distinct, even in the bony structure of the head. M. Fr. Cuvier applies the name of Bradypus to those species only which have two nails to the fore feet, the Chol.ispus, Illig. Their ca- nines are larger and more pointed^ and they are wholly destitute of a tail. There is but one known. B. didactylus, L. ; BufF. XIII, i. (The Unau). Wliich is somewhat less unfortunately organized than the Ai. Its arms are not so long, and its clavicles are complete ; there are fewer bones of the feet and hands which hecome soldered together; the muzzle is more elongated, &c. It is larger than the Ai by one half, and is of a uniform greyish-brown, which sometimes assumes a reddish tint. These two animals are natives of the hot parts of America, and, long ere this, would probably have been destroyed by the numerous Carnivora of that country, had they not possessed some means of de- fence in their nails.* Fossil skeletons of two animals of the order Edentata, of great size, have been discovered in America, one of which, the Megatherium (a), Cuv. Oss. Foss. Tom. v. Part i, p. 174, has a head very similar to that of the sloths, but is deficient in the canines, and approaches, in the remainder * It is singular that the B. dydactylus was not known before the time of Seha, and that for a long time naturalists obstinately persisted in referring it, on the authority of that ignorant collector, to Ceylon. Erxleben has maintained its African origin, having mistaken it for the Poto- of Bosmann, which is a Galago. (See this last ge- nus). It is a fact that the Unau is only found in South America. Shaw, Gen. Zool., under the name of Brad, ursintis, has described an animal of which Illiger has made his genus Prochylus. M. Buchanan, Trav. in the Mysore, Vol. II. p. 198, has shewn it to be a true bear; and in fact we have satisfied our- selves, by inspecting the cranium of the very individual described by Shaw, that it was a bear of the species tenned thick-lipped, which had lost its incisors. See Ursiis, &c. ^^ (a) The Megatherium is described as of the size of the Rhinoceros, uniting part of the structure of the Armadillo with that of the Sloth, and having claws of vast length. The Megalonix was an animal of the same description, but somewhat smaller. — Eno. Ed. EDENTATA. 143 of the skeleton, partly the sloths, and partly the ant-eaters. It is twelve feet long, and six or seven high. The other, the Megalonyx, lb. p. 160, is rather smaller, and the toes are the only parts of it that are well known, but they strongly resemble those of the preceding. The second tribe comprehends the EDENTATA ORDINARIA, Or the Ordinary Edentata, with a pointed muzzle. Individuals amongst them still have molars. They form two genera. Dasypus, Lin. The Armadillos, or Tatous,* are very remarkable among all the Mam- malia, by the scaly and hard shell, formed of compartments resembling little paving-stones, which covers their head and body, and frequently their tail. This substance forms a shield over the forehead, anotlier very large and convex over the shoulders, a third on the croup, similar to the second, and between the two latter, several parallel and moveable bands, which allow the body to bend. The tail is at one time furnished with successive rings, and at another, like the legs, merely with several tuber- cles. These animals have large ears, and sometimes four, and at others five great nails before, but always five behind. The muzzle is pointed, the grinders are cylindrical, seven or eight in number throughout, separ- ated from each other, and without enamel on the inside. The tongue is smooth, and but slightly extensible, and there are a few scattered hairs between their scales, or on those parts of the body not covered by the shell. They dig for themselves burrows, and live partly on vegetables, and partly on insects and dead bodies ; their stomach is simple, and there is no caecum. They all belong to the hot, or at least to the temperate parts of America. They may be divided into subgenera according to the structure of their fore feet and the number of their teeth. Most of them have only four toes to the anterior feet, the two middle ones of Avhich are the longest. In this number some Cachicamus, Cuv. Cachicames have only seven teeth on each side, and in each jaw. The muzzle is pointed; the tail long, and encircled with bony rings; such is Dasypis novemeinctus, L. ; Caehichame, Buff. X, xxx\'ii; Tatou a longue queue, Id. Supp. Ill, Iviii; Tatuete, Schreb. Ixxiii; Tatu- peba, Margr. (The Nine-banded, or Black Armadillo). With nine, sometimes eight intermediate bands, generally blackish ; the body fifteen inches in length, and the tail the same. Das. 7-cinctus; Schreb. LXXII; Tatou mulct, Azzar. (The * Tatou is their Brazilian name. The Spaniards called them Armadillo, from their armour; the Portuguese, Encubfrlo, for the same reason. They are also called Quirqnincho. Dasypus (hairy feet) was one of the Grecian appellatives of the hare or rabbit. 144 MAMMALIA. Seven-banded Armadillo). Has only seven bands, and is smaller ; its tail, also, is proportionably shorter. Apara, Cuv. The Apars have the toes of the Cachicames, and nine or t-^n teeth throughout. Das tricinctus, L. ; Tatou Apara, Margr. ; Apar, Buff. ; Mataco, Azzar. ; Schreb. LXXI, A. (The Three-banded Armadillo). Has three intermediate bands ; tail very short, and the compartments re- gularly tuberculated. By enclosing its head and feet between its plates, it possesses the faculty of rolling itself into a complete ball, like certain species of Oniscus. It is from Paraguay and Brazil, and is one of those found farthest to the south. Size middling. Other Tatous, as the Encouberts, Encoubertus, Cuv., Have five toes to the fore feet, the three middle of which are the longest. The greater part of their tail is covered with scales, arranged in quincunx. There are nine or ten teeth throughout. In this subdivision is Dasyp. sexcynctus and octodecimcinctus, L. : Encouhert and Cir- quinson, Buff. ;* Tatou poyou, Azzar. ; Buff. X. xlii, and Supp. III. xlii. The Six-banded Armadillo, or Encoubert {a), is distinguished * The Weasel-headed Tatou ofGrew; Cirquinson of Biifl'. ; Das.octodccivicinctus, L., is the Encoubert, or Six-bandedArmadillo; but Grew considered the rows of scales on the croup as movable. If we count them we shall find but sixteen, and his own figure exhibits no more. ^^ (a) This is the Weasel-headed Armadillo, D. musielinus, called Porjou (Yel- low-hauded), and Encoubert by the French. One of these Armadilloes was recently in the Zoological Gardens, Regent's Park, the habits of which, as carefully observed, very much resemble those of an Encoubert, in the Jardin des Plantes of Paris, which have been very well described by M. Fred. Cuvier. Before giving the descrip- tion of this naturalist, we may observe, that the specimen in our Zoological Gardens bred yomig ones there without the slightest incoiivenience. This is an animal, per- haps, the most easy of all to transport from its native climate of South America, and it may be useful to captains of vessels plying on that station to be informed that a little food (it is not much matter if it be animal or vegetable), with milk, will satisfy this animal, and it can also endure, without any loss of health, very close confine- ment. M. F. Cuvier, in his able history of the Mammalia, gives the fullowing ac- count of the specimen to which we have just alluded: — " Were we to judge of the intellectual faculties of the species by the individual now under consideration, wc should conclude the Encoubert possesses them in a very limited degree. When he is set at liberty, he goes running to the right and to the left, digging in one corner, and then suddenly stopping to run and scratch in another. A sudden noise startles him ; he stops to listen, but he does not seem to perceive the presence of a new ob» ject, nor to distinguish a person from a stone; when he runs, he goes indiscrimi- nately against every thing in his way, and passes over it', or by the side of it, with equal indifference, whether the obstacle be a piece of wood, or an animal. His in- difference in this respect is such, that I should be inclined to attribute it only to his inexperience, to the continual slavery in which he had lived, and to the habit he had contracted, of being touched and carried about in the hand from one place to another. But he never learnt to distinguish the hand that fed him, and remained as unfamiliar with the person who had the care of him as with any other individual. In this re- spect I cannot compare him better, than to the animals of the lower classes; yet^ EDENTATA. 145 from all tlie rest of the genus by having a tooth on each side in the intermaxillary hone. The shell has six or seven hands; its com- partments are smooth, large, and angular; the tail is of a middling length, and annulated only at the base ; there are five toes to each foot. The Pichiy, D'Azzara, would resemble the Encoubert, only that its intermaxillary bone has no teeth, that its posterior shield is denticulated, and that the parts not defended by the shell are fur- nished with longer and more thickly set hairs than the others. A neighbouring species is the Hairy Tatou of Azzara. A third subdi- vision of the Tatous, or the Cabassous, Cuv., Has five toes to the fore feet, but directed obliquely, so that the thumb and index are slender, and the latter the longest; the middle one has an enormous trenchant nail; the following one has also a nail, but a shorter one, and the last toe is the shortest of all. This form of the fore foot enables these animals to divide the earth, and burrow into it with rapidity, or at any rate to cling to it with such tenacity that it is extremely difficult to tear them from it. They have but eight or nine teeth on each side, and in each jaw. Das. unicinctus, L. ; Le Cabas-sou propre, BufF. ; Tatouay, Azz. (The Tatouay of D'Azzara). Has twelve intermediate bands ; the tail long and tuberculous ; the compartments of the bands and shields square, broader than long; five toes every where, of which the four anterior have enormous nails with trenchant external edges. It at- tains a great size. Priodontes, Fr. Cuv. These, with toes still more unequal, and with nails more enormous than those of the Cabassous, have throughout as many as twenty-two or twen- ty-four small teeth — ninety -four or ninety-six in all. Such is the Dasypus gigas, Cuv. ; Tatou geant, Geoff. ; Great Tatou, Azzar. Deuxieme Cabassou, BufF. X. xlv. (The Giant Armadillo). Twelve or thirteen intermediate bands ; the tail long, and covered with tiled scales ; the compartments square, more broad than long. It is the largest of the Tatous, being sometimes more than three feet in length, exclusive of the tail. Finally, we should place after the other Tatous, as a very distinct sub- genus, the Clamyphores. Clamypiiorus, Harl., Which have ten teeth throughout, and five toes to each foot; the nails of the fore feet very large, crooked, and compressed, furnishing, as in the Cabassous, a powerfully trenchant instrument. The back is covered with a suite of transverse rows of scaly plates, without any solid shell before or behind, forming a sort of cuira which is only attached to the body along the spine. The hinder part of the body is truncated, and their curved there are even among the insects, some which seem to liave received the faculty of judging and of discriminating in a higher degree than this animal.— Eng. Ed. VOL. I. I- 146 MAMMALIA. tail partially attached to the under part of the body,* One species only is known, the C. trudcatus, Harl.,-f- which is five or six inches in length, and is found in the interior of Chili, where it passes the most of its time under ground. It appears that the fossil bones of a Tatou of gigantic size, being ten feet long exclusive of the tail, have been found in America. See Cuv. Oss. Foss. V. part 1, p. 191, note. OrycteropuSjJ Geoff. The Orycteropes were for a long time confounded with the Ant-Eaters, because they consumed the same kind of food, had the same form of head, and a tongue somewhat extensible ; but they are distinguished from them by being furnished with grinders and flat nails, formed for digging, and not trenchant. The structure of their teeth differs from that of all other quadrupeds; they are solid cylinders traversed like reeds, in a longitudi- nal direction, with an infinitude of little canals. Their stomach is simple, and muscular near the pylorus, their cacum small and obtuse. There is only one species known. Gryct. capensis; Mijrmecophega capensis, PaU. ; Buff. Supp.VI. xxxi. (The Cape Orycteropus). Called by the Dutch of that co- lony, the Earth Pig. It is an animal about the size of the badger, or larger ; stands low ; has short hair, and is of a brownish-grey. The tail is not so long as the body, and is covered with equally short hairs. It has four toes before, and five behind. Inhabits holes, which it excavates with great facility. The flesh is eaten. The other ordinary Edentata have no grinders, and, consequently, no teeth of any description. They also form two genera. Myrmecophaga, Lin. The Ant-Eaters are hairy animals, with a long muzzle terminated by a small toothless mouth, from which is protruded a filiform tongue suscep- tible of considerable elongation, and which they insinuate into Ant-hills and the nests of the Termites, whence these insects are withdrawn by be- ing entangled in the viscid saliva that covers it. The nails of the fore feet, strong and trenchant, and varying in number according to the species, serve to tear up the nests of the termites, and afford a good means of de- fence. When at rest these nails are always half bent inwards, corre- sponding to a callosity of the tarsus ; hence the animal can only bring the side of the foot to the ground. The stomach of the ant-eater is simple and muscular towards its pylorus ; their intestinal canal moderate, and without a caecum. § * We only know this animal by the description of Dr. Harlan, Ann. of the New York Lye. I. p. 235, and pi. xxi. I Its osteology, as given by M. Yarael (Zool. Journ. No. 12), is closely allied to that of the Cabassous. Over each eye-brow there is a singular ridge. X Orycteropus, v.'hich has the feet fitted for digging. § Danbeuton has discovered in the M. didactyla two very small appendages, which, in strictness, may be considered as caeca. I have ascertained that there are none in the Tamandua. KDENTATA. 147 They all inhabit the hot and temperate parts of the new world, and pro- duce but a single young one at birth, which they carry on their back (a). M.juhata, BufF. X. xxxix, and Supp. III. Iv. (The Tamanoir). More than four feet long, with four nails before and five behind; the tail is furnished with long hairs vertically directed, both above and beneath ; the fur is of a greyish-brown, with an oblique black band edged with white on each shoulder. It is the largest of the ant- eaters ; and it is asserted that it even defends itself against the ja- guar. It inhabits low places, never climbs trees, and moves slowly. M. tamandua, Cuv. ; M. tetradactyla, and M. tridactrjla, L. ; Schreb. LXVI. (The Tamandua). Has the form and feet of the preceding, but less than half its size ; the tail, on which the hair is short, is prehensile and naked at the end, and enables the animal to suspend itself to the branches of trees. Some of them are of a yel- lowish-grey, with an oblique band on the shoulder that is only visible by a reflected light ; others are fawn-coloured with a black band ; some are fawn-coloured and striped, with the croup and belly black; and, finally, some are entirely blackish. Whether these differences belong to species or not is as yet unknown. M. didactyla, L. ; Buff. X. xxx. (The Two-toed Ant-eater). The size of a rat, with woolly hair, fawn-coloured; a red line along the back : the tail is prehensile, and naked at the end ; only two nails before, one of which is very large ; four behind.* Manis, Lin. The Pangolins,']- commonly called the Scaly Ant-eaters, are destitute of teeth, have a very extensible tongue, and live on ants and termites like true ant-eaters ; but their body, limbs, and tail, are clothed with large trenchant scales arranged like tiles, Avhich they elevate in rolling them- selves into a ball when they wish to defend themselves from an enemy. There are five toes to each foot. Their stomach is slightly divided in the middle, and there is no cacum. They are confined to the old continent. M. pentadactyla, L. ; M. hrachyura, Erxl, ; Buff. X. xxxiv. (The Short-tailed Pangolin). Three or four feet long; the tail sliorter than the body. From the East Indies. It is the Phattagen of ^lian, lib. xvi. cap. vi. M. tetradactyla, L. ; M. maeroura, Erxl. ; Phatagin, BufF. X. * The Mtjrme. tridacttjla, L. ; Seba, pi. F., is only a Tamandua badly drawn. The M. striata, Shaw, Buff". Supp. III. pi. Ivi, is a coati, disfigured by the stuffer. f PangoeUng, according to Seba, in the language of Java, signifies an animal that rolls itself into a ball. In Bengal it is called £arf^arA-j/a or Stone Reptile; it is also called the Land Carp. The Dutch sailors called it the Devil of Formosa. ||^g° (a) The great Ant-eater commences his task by scratching with his long claws the ant-hill, and then with the filiform tongue, which is mentioned by Cuvier, and which may be elongated to an extent of more than two feet, and wet with saliva, he receives the ants: they quickly and completely cover the tongue, which he then withdraws, swallowing myriads in a single gulp. This process is repeated until no more ants arc to be found. The ant-eater climbs trees also for wondlice and wild honey. — Eng. Ed. 148 MAMMALIA. xxxiv. (The Long-tailed Pangolin). Three or four feet in length ; the tail double that of the body, and the scales armed with points. From Senegal, Guinea, &c.* The third tribe of the Edentata comprehends those animals, designated by M. Geoffrey, under the name of MONOTREMATA. So called, because they have only one external opening for the seminal fluid, urine, and other excrements. Their organs of generation present extraordinary anomalies ; for though they have no pouch under the belly, their pubis is furnished with the same supernumerary bones as the Mar- supialia ; the vasa deferentia terminate in the urethra which opens into cloaca ; the penis, when at rest, is drawn into a sheath, which opens by a hole near the bottom of the cloaca. The only matrix consists of two canals or trunks, each of which opens separately and by a double orifice into the urethra, which is very large, and terminates in the cloaca. As naturalists have not yet agreed as to the existence of their mammae, f whether they are oviparous or viviparous remains to be ascertained. J The singularities of their skeleton are not less remarkable; a sort of clavicule especially, which is common to both shoulders, placed before the ordinary clavicle, and analogous to the fourchette in birds. Finally, be- sides their five nails to each foot, the males have a peculiar spur on the hinder ones, perforated by a canal, which transmits the liquid secreted by a gland situated on the inner surface of the thigh. It is asserted, that the wounds it inflicts are envenomed. These animals have no ex- ternal conch to their ears, and their eyes are very small. The Monotremata are only found in New Holland, and have only been discovered since the settlement of the English. Two genera of them are known. Echidna, Cuv. — Tachyglossus, lUig. The elongated slender muzzle of the Spiny Ant-eaters, terminated by * We have verified the habitat of the Long-tailed Pangolin, by the statement of M. Adanson and other travellers. f M. Meckel considers as such, two glandular masses he found greatly developed in a female Ornithorhynchus. ]\I. Geoffroy thinks they are rather glands, analogous to those on the flanks of the Shrews. X Travellers have lately asserted, that it has been ascertained that these animals produce eggs. Should this prove to be the case, the Monotremata must, in some sort, be considered as a separate class of animals; but it is to be wished that some able anatomist would exactly describe these eggs, their internal origin, and their development after being produced. We must expect it from some one among the numerous physicians who daily visit the colony of Port Jackson. As to the anatomy of the Ornithorhynchus, see the detailed monography on that subject, published by M. Meckel, also the Memoirs of Sir Ev. Home, my Lessons of Comparative Anatomy, Vol. V., and the Memoirs of Geofiroy St. Hilaire, Mem. du Mus. tome XV. EDENTATA. 140 a small mouth, contains an extensible tongue similar to that of the Ant- Eaters and Pangolins, and like these, they feed on Ants. They have no teeth, but their palate is furnished with several rows of small recurved spines. Their short feet have each five very long and stout nails fitted for digging; and the whole upper surface of the body is covered with spines like that of tlie Hedgehog. It appears, that when in danger, they also possess the faculty of rolling themselves into a ball. Their tail is very short; their stomach ample and almost globular, and their caecum moderate; the penis is terminated by four tubercles. There are two species. E. liystrix; Ornithorhynchus hystrix, Home; Myrmeeopliaga aculeata, Shaw. (The Spiny Echidna). Completely covered with large spines. E. setosa ; Ornithor. setosus, Home. (The Bristly Echidna). Is covered with liair, among which the spines are half hidden. Some naturalists consider it as a mere variety from age. Ormthorhynciius, Bhimcmh. — Platypus, Shaw. The elongated, and at the same time singularly enlarged and flattened muzzle of the Ornithorhynchi presents the closest external resemblance to the bill of a duck, and the more so as its edges are similarly furnished with a small transverse laminae. They have no teeth except at the bot- tom of the mouth, where there are two throughout, without roots, with flat crowns, and composed like those of the Orycteropus, of little vertical tubes. There is a membrane to the fore feet, which not only unites the toes, but extends far beyond the nails ; in the hind feet the membrane terminates at the root of the nails; two characters, which, with the flat- tened tail, make them aquatic animals. Their tongue is in a manner double : one in the bill bristled with villosities ; and a second on the base of the first, which is thicker, and furnished anteriorly with two little fleshy points. The stomach is small, oblong, and has the pylorus near the cardia. The caecum is small ; and many salient and parallel laminae are visible in the intestines. The penis has only two tubercles. The Ornithorhynchi inhabit the rivers and marshes of New Holland, in the neighbourhood of Port Jackson. Two species only are known, one with smooth, thin, reddish fur, the Ornithorhyncus paradoxus (a), Blumemb., and the other with blackish-brown, flat and frizzled hair. Probably these are only varieties of age. Voy. de Peron, I. pi. xxxiv. |^° {a) The problem which is here alhuled to remains up to the present time unsolved; at least, the state of the controversy is this — that whilst several naturalists, those who examined the animal formerly, and in our own day, agree that it belongs to the Mammalia, it is contended by one, the most experienced of them all, we al- lude to Geoffroy St. Hilaire, that tliere is nothing in its anatomy to justify such a decision. The very recent investigations of Mr. Richard Owen, of the Royal Col- lege of Surgeons, have led him to bear testimony to the existence of the milk glands for supporting the young. In live instances he has seen tliese glands under different degrees of development, and describes an areola on the external surface of the skin on the glands, consisting of minute orifices, from which, in one instance, he was able by pressure to extract drops of oil, and which he found by injection to be con- tumous with minute passages through the lobules constituting the gland. The 150 MAMMALIA. ORDER VII. PACHYDERMATA. The Edentata terminate the species of unguiculated animals, and we have just seen that there are some of them whose nails are so large, and so envelope the extremities of the toes, as to approximate them, in a cer- tain degree, to the hoofed animals. They still, however, possess the faculty of bending these toes round various objects, and of seizing wuth more or less force. The total deficiency of this faculty characterizes the hoofed animals. Using their feet merely as supporters, they are never furnished with clavicles; their fore-arm is always in a state of pronation, and they are reduced to the necessity of feeding on vegetables. Their forms, like their habits, present much less variety than those of the Un- guiculata, and they can hardly be divided into more than two orders, those which ruminate, and those which do not ; but these latter, which we designate collectively by the term Pachydermata, admit of a subdivision into families. The first is that of the Pachydermata, which have a proboscis and tusks. FAMILY I. PROBOSCIDIANA.* The Proboscidians have five toes to each foot, very complete in the skeleton, but so encrusted by the callous skin which surrounds the foot, that their only external appearance is in the nails attached to the edge of this species of hoof. They have no canines or incisors, properly so called, but in their incisive bone are implanted two tusks, which project from the mouth, and frequently attain to an enormous size. The magnitude re- • The Proboscidians have various affinities with certain Rodentia; 1, their great incisors; 2, their grinders frequently composed of parallel laminae; 3, the form of several of their bones, &c. absence of a nipple has been offered as a reason against the supposition that the young of this creature are fed from the mother's breast; but anatomical examinations have demonstrated that such appendages are by no means indispensable to such a process, and the manner in which the breast of the Ornithorhyncus is formed justi- fies the belief, that by muscular pressure against the ribs alone, the milk, or what- ever be the nature of the fluid, may flow out in sufficient quantity for the wants of tlie young. A warm controversy is still carried on between M. Geoffroy and Mr. Owen, but all the new facts which are now in course of being collected respecting this animal, seem to strengthen the opinion of its being mannniferous. — Eng. Ed. PACIIYDERMATA. 151 quisite for the alveoli of these tusks renders the upper jaw so high, and so shortens the bones of the nose; that the nostrils in the skeleton are placed near the top of the face; but in the living animal they are con- tinued out into a cylindrical trunk, or proboscis, composed of several thousands of small muscles, variously interlaced, extremely flexible, en- dowed with the most exquisite sensibility, and terminated by an appendage resembling a finger. This trunk gives to the Elephant almost as much skill as the perfect state of his hand confers on the Monkey. With it he seizes every thing he wishes to convey to his mouth, and pumps up his drink, which he instantly jerks into his gullet, curving this admirable organ in it, and in this manner supplies the necessity of a long neck, which would be utterly unable to support his vast head and heavy tusks. Within the parietes of the cranium, however, are several great cavities, which render the head lighter; the lower jaw has no incisors whatever; the intestines are very voluminous, the stomach simple, CEecum enormous, and the mammse, two in number, placed under the chest. The young suck with the mouth, and not with the trunk. But one living genus of the Proboscidiana is known, that of Elephas, Lin. Or the Elephant,* which comprehends the largest of the terrestrial ]\Iammalia. The astonishing nature of his trunk, an instrument at once agile and powerful, the organ of touch as well as of smell, forms a singu- lar contrast with his clumsy aspect and heavy proportions ; and as this is joined to a very imposing physiognomy, it has contributed to give exag- * The ancient history, as given by Cuvier, is extremely curious. " Homer speaks frequently of ivory, but knew not the animal whence it was derived. The first of the Greeks who saw the elephant, were Alexander and his soldiers, when they fought with Porus; and they must have observed them well, for Aristotle gives a complete history of this animal, and much truer in its details than those of our moderns. After the death of Alexander, Antigonus possessed the greatest ninnber of elephants. Pyrrhus first brought them into Italy 472 years after the foundation of Rome: they were disembarked at Tarentum. The Romans, to whom these animals were entirely strange, gave them the name of Leucanian Bulls. Curius Dentatus, who captured four of these animals from Pyrrhus, brought them to Rome for the ceremony of his triumph. These were the first which were there exhibited, but afterwards they be- came in some measure common. Metellus having vanquished the Carthaginians in Sicily, conducted their elephants to Rome on rafts, to the number of a hundred and twenty according to Seneca, of a hundred and forty two according to Pliny. Clau- dius Pulcher had combats of the elephant in the circus in 655; and similar combats, either of elephant against elephant, of the elephant against the rhinoceros, the bull, or the gladiator, were exliibited by Lucullus, Pompey, Ctesar, Claudius, and Nero. Pompey harnessed them to his car during his triumph for Africa. Germanicus ex- hibited some which danced in a rude fashion. In the reign of Nero they were seen to dance on a rope, carrying at the same time a Roman knight. One may read in jElian the extraordinary feats they were brought to execute. It is true they were trained to them from their earliest age, and lEAmn says even, expressly, that these dancing elephants were brought forth at Rome. This assertion, with the confirma- tion it has received in our own day from the experiments of Mr. Corse, leads us to hope it will be possible to multiply this useful animal in a state of domestication." 152 MAMMALIA. gerated notions of the intelligence of these animals. After studying them for a long time, we have not found it to surpass that of the Dog, or of many other carnivorous animals. Naturally of a mild disposition, Elephants live in herds, which are conducted by old males. Their food is strictly vegetable. Their distinctive character consists in the grinders, the bodies of which are composed of a certain number of vertical lamina, each one being formed of a bony substance, enveloped with enamel, and cemented toge- ther by a third substance, called cortical; in a word, similar to those we have already seen to exist in the Cabiais and other Rodentia. These grinders succeed each other, not vertically, or as our permanent teeth succeed the milk ones, but from behind forwards, so that as fast as one tooth becomes worn, it is pushed forward by that which comes after it; hence it happens that the Elephant has sometimes one, sometimes two grinders on each side, or four or eight in all, according to his time of life. The first of these teeth are always composed of fewer laminae than those which replace them. It is asserted that certain Elephants thus shed their teeth eight times — their tusks, however, are changed but once. The Elephants of the present day, clothed with a rough skin nearly destitute of hair, are only found in the torrid zone of the eastern conti- nent, where hitherto only two species have been ascertained. E. indicus, Cuv.; Buff. XI. i, and Supp. III. lix. (The Ele- phant of India). An oblong head, with a concave forehead; the crowTi of the grinders presenting transverse undulating fillets, these being sections of the lamina that compose them, and being worn by trituration. This species has rather smaller ears than the next one, and has four nails to the hind foot. It is found from the Indus to the Eastern ocean, and in large islands in the south of India. They have been used from the earliest ages as beasts of draught and bur- den, but it has hitherto been found impossible to make them propa- gate in a domestic state, although the assertion respecting their modesty and repugnance to copulate before witnesses is wholly with- out foundation. The females have very short tusks, and in this respect, many of the males resemble them, E. africanvs, Cuv.; Perrault, Mem. pour I'Hist. des An., and F. Cuv. Mammif. (The African Elephant). A round head; con- vex forehead; large ears; the crowns of the grinders divided into lozenges ; it appears very frequently to have but three nails to the hind foot. Found from Senegal to the Cape of Good Hope. Whether they ascend the eastern coast of Africa, or whether they are replaced there by the preceding species, is not known. The tusks of the female are as large as those of the male, and the weapon itself, generally speaking, is larger than in the Indian species. The ALfrican Elephant is not now tamed, though it appears that the Car- thaginians employed it in the same way that the inhabitants of India do theirs. In nearly every part of the two continents, are found, under ground, the bones of a species of Elephant allied to that of India, but with narrower and straighter coronal fillets, the alveoli for lodg- PACHYDERMATA. 153 ing the tusks much longer in proportion, and the lower jaw more obtuse. A specimen recently taken from the ice on the coast of Si- beria, by Mr. Adams, appears to have been thickly covered with hairs of two kinds, so that it is possible this species may have lived in cold climates. It has long disappeared from the face of the earth (a). See Cuv. Oss. Foss. tom. I. The second genus of the Proboscidiana, or the Mastodon, Cuv. Has been completely destroyed, nor is there a single individual living. It had the feet, tusks, trunk, and many other details of conformation in common with the Elephant; but differed from it in the grinders, the crown of which, from above the gum, being bristled with large conical points, presented, in proportion to their detrition, larger or smaller disks, which represented sections of those points.* These teeth, which suc- ceed each other from behind, like those of the Elephant, presented also so many more pairs of points as the animal was the more advanced in age. M. giganteum, Cuv. loc. cit. The great Mastodon, in which the sections of the points are lozenge-shaped, is the most celebrated species. It equalled the Elephant in size, but with still heavier proportions. Its remains are found in a wonderful state of preserva- tion, and in great abundance throughout all parts of North America. They are infinitely more rare in the old continent. M. angustidens, Cuv. loc. cit., or the Narrow- toothed Mastodon, whose grinders, narrower than those of the preceding species, when worn down formed trefoil-shaped disks, and have thereby been con- founded by some authors -with the teeth of the hippopotamus, was a third less than the great mastodon, and much lower on its legs. Its remains are found throughout the greater part of Europe and of South America. In certain places, the teeth, tinged with iron, be- come of a beautiful blue when heated, forming what is called the oriental turquoise (6).'f * This conformation, common to the Mastodon, Hippopotamus, Hog, &c., has occasioned the erroneous idea of the first being carnivorous. t Other less widely dispersed species have been discovered; see Oss. Foss.: and very lately some remarkable ones have been brought from the Burmese empire, a description of which we are expecting from M. Buckland, Mast, latidens, M. elephan- toides, &c. ^T (a) Bishop Heber described an Elephant which he saw in the Himalayan mountains, about the size of an Ox, and as " shaggy as a poodle-dog." On the Oyster banks off Hasburgh, on the coast of Norfolk, many hundreds of the grind- ing teeth of Elephants have been found, nor is there a county in England in which such teeth have not at some time or another been detected. — Eng. Ed. |gg° (6) Fragments of the teeth of this animal have been found in Norfolk crag, the only instance yet known in Great Britain. The Indians of North America are persuaded that the Great Mastodon exists in the living state in the unexplored re- gions of that country. — Eng. Ed. 154 MAMMALIA. FAMILY II. PACHYDERMATA ORDINARIA, Or the ordinary Pachydermata, which have either four, or three, or two toes. Those in which the toes make even numbers have feet somewhat cleft, and approximate to the Rurainantia in many respects by the skeleton, and even by the complication of the stomach. They are usually divided into two genera. Hippopotamus, Lin. Four nearly equal toes, terminated by little hoofs to each foot ; six grinders throughout, of which the three anterior are conical ; the three posterior bristled with two pairs of points, which, when worn, assume a trefoil shape; four incisors to each jaw, the superior of which are short, conical, and recurved, the inferior cylindrical, long, pointed, and sloping forwards; a canine tooth on each side above and below, the superior straight, and the inferior very large and curved, the two wearing each other by constant attrition. These animals have a very massive body without hairs ; very short legs ; the belly reaching nearly to the ground ; an enormous head, termi- nated by a large inflated muzzle, which incloses the apparatus of their large front teeth ; the tail short; the ears and eyes small. Their sto- mach is divided into several sacs. They live in rivers, upon roots and other vegetable substances, and exhibit much ferocity and stupidity. One species only is known. H. amphibius, L. ; Buff. Supp. III. 4 and 5. (The Hippopota- mus). Now confined to the rivers of the middle and south of Africa. It formerly found its way into Egypt by the Nile, but has long dis- appeared from that country (a). The bones of a species of Hippopotamus very similar to that of Africa, and those of two or three other successively smaller ones, have been found in Europe. See my Rech. sur les Oss. Foss. torn. 1. Sus, Lin. The Pigs, or Hogs, have, on all their feet, two large middle toes armed with strong hoofs, and two much shorter lateral ones that hardly reach the ground; there is a variable number of incisors, the inferior of which al- ways slant forwards ; the canines project from the mouth, and curve up- E^° (a) The hippopotami were found to be quite formidable, as enemies, in the ri- vers of South Africa, by the late British expedition, which sailed under the command of Captain Owen. These animals cast their young in November, and at certain pe- riods of their growth are used as food by the Indians. — Eng. Ed. rACIIYDERMATA. 155 wards; the muzzle terminates by a sort of truncated button fitted for turning up the earth ; tlie stomach is but slightly divided. Hogs, properly so called, have twenty-four or twenty-eight grinders, of which the posterior are oblong with tuberculous crowns, and the anterior more or less compressed, and six incisors in each jaw. S. scropha, L. ; Buff. V. xiv. and xviii. The Wild Boar, which is the parent stock of our domestic Hog and its varieties, has pris- matic tusks that curve outwards and slightly upwards ; the body short and thick; straight ears; the hair bristled and black; the young ones called Macassines are striped black and white. It does great injury to fields in the vicinity of forests, by tearing up the ground in search of roots. The Domestic Hog varies in size, in the height of its legs, in the direction of its ears, and in colour, being sometimes white, and at others black, red, or varied. Every one is acquainted with the great utility of this animal, from the facility with which it is fed, the agree- able flavour of its flesh, the length of time it can be preserved by means of salt, and finally, from its fecundity, which greatly surpasses that of any other animal of its size, the female frequently producing as many as fourteen at a litter. The period of gestation is four months, and they produce twice a year. The hog continues to in- crease in size for five or six years, begins to be prolific at one, and sometimes lives for twenty. Although naturally savage, the wild boars and hogs are social animals, and know how to defend them- selves against wolves by forming a circle, and shewing a front to the enemy in every direction. Voracious and clamorous, they do not even spare their own young. This species is spread throughout the globe; and none but Jews and Mahometans refuse to eat its flesh. S. larvatus, Fr. Cuv. ; S. africanus, Schreb. CCCXXVII; SangUer deMadaxjascar, Daub. MDCCCLXXXV; Samuel Daniels, Afric. Sceneay, pi. xxi. (The Masked Wild Boar.) Tusks like the common Hog; but on each side of the snout, near the tusks, is a large tubercle, nearly similar to the mamma of a woman, supported by a bony prominence, which gives the animal a very singular ap- pearance. It inhabits ]\Iadagascar and the south of Africa. S. hahirussa, Buff. Supp. III. xii. (The Babiroussa.) Higher and lighter on the legs than the others ; the tusks are long, slender, and turned vertically upwards ; the upper ones inclining spirally backwards. From some of the islands in the Indian Archipelago. We may separate from the Hogs the Phacoch.^rus, Fred. Cuv.* The wart-bearing Hogs have the grinders composed of cylinders, ce- mented together by a kind of cortical substance, very similar to the transverse laminae of those of the Elephant, and like them succeeding each other from behind. The cranium is remarkably large ; the rounded tusks, inclined laterally upwards, are of a frightful magnitude; and on * Phaco chorus, Hog with a wart. 156 MAMMALIA. each of their cheeks hangs a thick fleshy lobe, which completes the hideousness of their figure. They have only two incisors above, and six below. Those brought from Cape Verd generally have the incisors very com- plete— S. africanus, Gm. : in such as are from the Cape of Good Hope — S. cethiopicus, Gm. : Buff. Supp. III. xi, they are scarcely visible, some vestiges however exist under the gum. This difference may arise from age, which may have worn them away in the latter, or it may indicate a different species, more especially as the head of those from the Cape of Good Hope is somewhat larger and shorter. With still more propriety do we separate from the Hogs the DicoTYLEs, Cuv.* Or the Pecaries, which have, it is true, grinders and incisors very similar to those of the Hog properly so called, but whose canines, directed like those of animals in general, do not project from the mouth, they have no external toe to their hind foot. There is no tail, and upon the loins is a glandular opening from which a fetid humour is excreted. The metatar- sal and metacarpal bones of their two great toes are soldered together into a sort of cannon bone, like those of the Ruminantia, with which their stomach, divided into several sacs, gives them also a remarkable relation. It is singular that the aorta of these animals is often found very much enlarged, but without there being any fixed situation for the enlargement, as though they were subject to a kind of aneurism. Only two species are known, both from South America, which were ascertained by Azzara: Linnaeus confounds them under the name of Sus tajassu. Die torquatus, Cuv. ; BufF. X. iii. and iv. (The coloured Pecari, or Patira.) Hair annulated with grey and brown ; a whitish collar, stretching obliquely from the angle of the lower jaw over the shoul- der ; half the size of the Wild Boar. Die. lahiatus, Cuv. ; the Tagnieati, Taitetoc, Tajassou, &c. ; larger, brown, and with white lips. Here may be placed a genus now unknown in the living creation, which we have discovered, and named Anoplotherium. It presents the most singular affinities with the various tribes of the Pachydermata, and approximates in some respects to the order of the Ruminantia. Six incisors to each jaw, four canines almost like the in- cisors, and not projecting beyond them, and seven molars throughout, form a continuous series without any intervening space, a diposition of the teeth seen in Man only. The four posterior molars of each side are similar to those of the Rhinoceros, the Daman, and the Palaeotherium ; that is, they are square above, and form double or triple crescents below. Their feet, terminated by two great toes, as in the Ruminantia, differ in this — the bones of the metatarsus and metacarpus always remain separate, * Dicotyle, double navel, from the opening on the back. PACHYDERMATA. 157 or without being soldered together as a cannon bone. The composition of their tarsus is the same as in the Camel. The bones of this genus have hitherto only been found in the gypsum quarries near Paris. We have already ascertained five species : one the size of a small Ass, with the low form and long tail of the Otter — A. commune, Cuv., to the internal edge of whose fore foot was affixed a small accessary toe : another of the size and light carriage of the Gazelle — A. medium : a third of the size, and about the proportions of the Hare, with two small accessory toes to the sides of the hind feet, &c. See Cuv. Rech. Oss. Fos. torn. III. The ordinary Pachydermata which have not cloven feet, comprehend, in the first place, three genera, very similar to each other in their grinders, having seven upper ones on each side, with a square crown and various salient lines, and seven lower ones, the crown of which forms a double crescent, and the last of all a triple one ; but their incisors vary. Rhinoceros, Lin. The species of this genus, in this particular, even vary among themselves. They are large animals; each foot is divided into three toes, and the bones of the nose, which are very thick, and moulded into a sort of arch, sup- port a solid horn which adheres to the skin, and is composed of a fibrous and horny substance, resembling agglutinated hairs. They are naturally stupid and ferocious, frequent moist places, and feed on herbs and branches of trees. Their stomach is simple, intestines very long, and the caecum extremely large. Rh. indicus, Cuv.; Buff. XI. vii. (The Rhinoceros of India.) Has, in addition to its twenty-eight grinders, two strong incisors in each jaw, two other small ones between the lower, and two still smaller again outside of the upper ones. It has but one horn, and the skin is remarkable for the deep folds into which it is thrown be- hind and across the shoulders, and before and across the thighs. It inhabits the East Indies, and chiefly beyond the Ganges. Rh. javanus, Cuv. ; Fr. Cuv. Mammif. (The Rhinoceros of Java.) With the large incisors and single horn of the preceding, has not so many folds in the skin, though one of them on the neck is larger; but what is most remarkable, is, that the whole skin is covered with small compact angular tubercles. It has hitherto been found in Java only. Rh. sumatrensis, Cuv.; Bell. Philos. Trans. 1793; F. Cuv. Mammif. (The Rhinoceros of Sumatra.) The same four great incisors as the preceding, but there are scarcely any folds of the skin, which moreover is hairy, it has a second horn behind the common one. Rh. africanus, Cuv. ; Buff, Supp. VI. vi. (The Rhinoceros of Africa.) Furnished with two horns, like the preceding; has no fold of the skin, nor any incisor teeth, its molars occupying nearly the whole length of the jaw. Tliis deficiency of incisors might warrant its separation from its congeners. 158 MAMMALrA. There have been found under ground, in Siberia, and in different parts of Germany, the bones of a two-horned Rhinoceros, the cranium of which, besides being much more elongated than that of any living species, is also distinguished by a bony vertical partition that supported the bones of the nose. It is a lost species; and a nearly entire body, which was taken from the ice on the banks of the Vilhoui in Siberia, showed that it was covered with tolerably thick hair. It is possible then that its habitat was to the north, like that of the fossil Elephant. In Tuscany, and in Lombardy, there have been disinterred, still more recently, other Rhinoceros bones, which seem to approximate much nearer to that of Africa. Some have been found in Germany with incisors like the Asiatic species; and lastly, some of their bones have been discovered in France, which announce a size hardly superior to that of the Hog. (a) Hyrax, Hermann. The Damans, as they are termed, have long been placed among the Ro- dentia, on account of their very small size ; if, however, we examine them closely, we shall find, with the exception of the horn, they are Rhinoce- roses in miniature, at least they have exactly similar molars ; but their upper jaw is furnished with two strong incisors curved downwards, and at an early age with two very small canines ; the lower one has four incisors, but no canines. All of them having a sort of very small hoof, thin and rounded, with the exception of the inner toe of the hind foot, which is armed with a hooked and crooked nail. The muzzle and the ears are short; they are covered with hair, and have a tubercle in lieu of a tail. Their stomach is dinded into two sacs, and besides a large caecum and several dilations of the colon, there are two appendages about the middle of the latter analogous to the two c«ca of birds. There is one species known which is as large as a Rabbit, of a greyish colour, and tolerably common among the rocks of all Africa, where it frequently becomes the victim of birds of prey, and which also appears to inhabit some parts of Asia; at least we cannot per- ceive any certain difference between the Hyrax capensis and the H. syriacus, Buff. Supp. VI. xlii, xliii, and VII. Ixxix.* The Pal^otherium, Cuv., Is also a lost genus, with the same grinders as the two preceding, six in- cisors, and two canines in each jaw, like the Tapirs, and three visible toes (*) I have strong doubts of the authenticity of the Hyrax hudsonius, Bewick 407, and Schreb. CCXL. c. It has only been seen in a Museum. ^^ (a) The teeth of the fossil Rhinoceros have been found in England, and Dr. Buckland gives a section of one in his Relig, ZJi/ay., which was taken ovit of Kirkdale cave. All these remains belong to diluvial deposits, or to those changes which were effected by the deluge. It is remarkable that the circumstances under which the bones of the Rhinoceros are found, serve to justify the conclusion, that these animals lived in troops with the Elephant. — Eng. Ed. PACHYDERMATA. 159 to each foot ; they had also, like the Tapirs, a short fleshy proboscis, for the muscles of which instrument the bones of the nose were shortened, leaving a deep notch underneath. We discovered the bones of this genus mixed with those of the Anoplotherium in the gypsum quarries (a) near Paris. They also exist in many other parts of France. Eleven or twelve species are known already. At Paris alone we find them the size of a Horse, of a Tapir, and of a small Sheep, while near Orleans are found the bones of a species that must have been as large as the Rhinoceros. These animals appear to have frequented the shores of lakes and marshes, for the rocks which con- ceal their bones also contain fresh water shells. See my Oss. Foss. tom. III. The LOPHIODON, ClW., Is another lost genus, which appears to be closely allied to the preceding one ; its inferior grinders, however, have transverse ridges. Ten or twelve species have been extracted from our old fresh water formations, the same in which the Palaeotherium is found. See my Oss. Foss,, tom. III. To these genera should succeed the genus Tapir, Lin. The Tapirs, in which the twenty-seven molars, before they are worn, all present two transverse and rectilinear prominences ; in front, there are, in each jaw, six incisors and two canines, separated from the molars by an empty space. The nose resembles a small fleshy proboscis; there are four toes to the fore feet, and three to the hind ones. For a long time but a single species was known, T. americamts, L. ; Buff. Supp. VI. i. (The American Tapir). Size of a small Ass ; skin brown and nearly naked : tail moderate ; neck fleshy, forming a sort of crest on the nape. Common in wet places, and along the rivers in the warm parts of South America. The young ones are spotted with white like the fawn. The flesh is eaten. Within a few years a second species has been discovered in the old continent. T. indicus, Farkharie, Sot. Asait., tom. XIV. ; Horsfield, Jav. Miaha, Fr. Cuv. Mammif. (The Tapir of India). Larger than that of America, of a black-brown ; the back of a whitish grey. It inhabits the forests of Malacca, island of Sumatra, &c. i^ (a) These quarries occur in detached hills, along the course of the Maine and Seine, near Paris, and they consist of alternating beds of gypsum and argillace- ous with calcareous marl. The animal alluded to, is of the size of the horse, is supposed by Cuvier to have inhabited marshy ground, and to have fed on the roots and stems of succulent plants. Another animal is mentioned by Cuvier, as re- sembling in its size, and light figure, the Antelope; this species he considers to have browsed on aromatic plants, or on the buds of young trees; it was probably, con- tinues Cuvier, a timid animal, with large moveable ears, like those of the deer, which could be sensible to the slightest sound that indicated danger. — Eng. Ed. 160 MAMMALIA. Fossil Tapirs are also scattered throughout Europe ; and among others is a gigantic species, which in size must have nearly equalled the Elephant (a). Tap. giganteus, Cuv. Oss. Foss,, tom. II.* FAMILY III. SOLIPEDES. The Solipedes are quadrupeds which have only one apparent toe, and a single hoof to each foot, although under the skin, on each side of their metatarsus and metacarpus, there are spurs representing two lateral toes. One genus only is known, that of Equus, Lin. The Horse has six incisors in each jaw, the crowns of which, at an early age, are marked with a fossula, and six molars throughout, with a square crown, marked hy laminae of enamel which dip into them, with four crescents, and in the upper ones, with a small disk on the inner edge. The male has also two small additional canines in the upper jaw, and sometimes in both, which are almost always wanting in the female. Between these canines and the first molar is that unoccupied space which corresponds to the angle of the lips where the bit is placed, by which alone Man has been enabled to subdue these powerful animals. The stomach is simple and moderate, but the intestines are very long, and the caecum enormous. The mammae are between the thighs. E. cahallus, L. ; Buff. IV. i. (The Horse). This noble asso- ciate of Man, in the chase, in war, and in the works of agriculture, the arts, and commerce, is the most important and carefully attended of all the animals which we have subdued. It does not seem to exist any longer in a wild state, except in those places where Horses formerly domesticated have been set at liberty, as in Tartary and America ; there they live in troops, each of which is led and defended by an old male. The young males, forcibly expelled as soon as they become adults, follow the troop at a distance, until they are able to attract some of the younger mares. The domestic colt sucks six or seven months, and the sexes are * Dr. Roulin has lately discovered in the Cordilleras a new species of Tapir, black and covered with hair; tlie bones of its nose are more elongated, which somewhat approximates it to the Palaeotherium. M. Schleyermacher has obtained a lower jaw bone of the great fossil animal that was supposed to be a gigantic Tapir. It turns out that it is possessed of enormous canines, which must have projected from the mouth; consequently, it must form a separate genus. Its size may have been greater than that of the Hippopotamus by one half. ^" (a) There is a model in most museums of a tooth of this animal, which was found in a perfectly fresh state in Grenoble. The tooth itself is in the collection of Mr. Bakewell, the distinguished geologist. — Eng. Ed. PACHYDKKMATA. IGl separated at two years; at three they are broken in, and it is not until they are four that they arc rode, at which time also they can propagate without injury to themselves. The period of gestation is eleven months. A Horse's age is known by the incisors (a). Themilk teeth begin to grow about fifteen days after the colt is foaled ; at two years and a half the middle ones are replaced; at three and a lialf the two following ones ; at four and a half the outermost or the corners. All these teeth, with an originally indented crown, gradually lose that mark by detrition. When seven or eight years old they are entirely effaced, and the Horse is no longer marked. The lower canines are produced at three years and a half, the upper ones at four ; they remain pointed till six ; at ten they begin to peel off. The life of the Horse seldom extends beyond thirty years. Every one knows how much this animal varies in size and colour. The principal races even exhibit sensible differences in the form of the head, in their proportion, and in their fitness for the various uses to which they are applied. The most beautiful and swift is the Arab, which has been instru- mental in improving the Spanish race, and along with the latter has contributed to form the English ; the largest and strongest are from the coasts of the North sea; the smallest from the north of Sweden and Corsica. Wild Horses have a large head, frizzled hair, and un- graceful proportions. E. hemionus, Pall., Schreb. (The Dzigguetai). A species which, as to its proportions, is intermediate between the Horse and the Ass, and lives in troops in the sandy deserts of central Asia. It is of an Isabella or light bay colour, with a black mane, and a dorsal line of the same colour ; the tail is terminated by a black tuft. It is pro- bably the Wild IVIule of the ancients. E. asinus, L. ; Buff. IV. xi. (The Ass). Known by its long ears, the tuft which terminates the tail, and the black cross on the shoulders, which is the first indication of the stripes that distinguish the following species. Originally from the great deserts of central Asia, it is still to be found there in a wild state, and in innumerable troops, ranging from north to south according to the season ; hence it thrives but poorly in the more northern climates. Every one is acquainted with its patience, sobriety, robust temperament, and the services it renders to the peasantry. The hoarseness of its voice, or bray, depends upon two small peculiar cavities situated at the bot- tom of the larynx. E. zebra, L. ; Buff. XII. i. (The Zebra). Nearly the same form as the Ass ; the whole animal being perfectly regularly marked with black and white transverse stripes : it is originally from the whole ^^ (rt) These we call nippers in England; the term being certainly more in ac- cordance with the browsing action of the animal, than the name of incisors. A plate of the state of these teeth in different stages, will be found amongst the illustrations to the present volume. — Eng. Ed. VOL. I. N 162 MAMMALIA. soutli of Africa. We have seen a female Zebra successively pro- duce with the Horse and the Ass. E. quaccha, Gm. BufF. Supp. VII. vii. (The Couagga). Re- sembles the Horse more than the Zebra, but comes from the same country. The hair on the neck and shoulders is brow^l, with whitish transverse stripes; the croup is of a reddish-grey; tail and legs whitish. The name is expressive of its voice, which resembles the barking of a Dog. E. montanus, Burchell; the Onagga or Dauw, Fred. Cuv. Mammif. (The Onagga). An African species, smaller than the Ass, but having the beautiful form of the Couagga; its colour is Isabella, with black stripes, alternately wider and narrower, on the head, neck, and body. Those behind slant obliquely forwards; legs and tail white. ORDER VIII. RUMINANTIA.* This order is perhaps the most natural and best determined of the class, for nearly all the animals which compose it have the appearance of being constructed on the same model, the Camels alone presenting some trifling exceptions to the general characters. The first of these characters is the absence of incisors, except in the lower jaw, where they are nearly always eight in number. A callous pad is substituted for them above. Between the incisors and the molars is a vacant space, where, in some genera only, are found one or two canines. The molars, almost always six throughout, have their crown marked with two double crescents, the convexity of which is turned inwards in the upper, and outwards in the lower ones. The four feet are terminated by two toes and two hoofs which face each other by a flat surface presenting the appearance of a single hoof which has been cleft, whence the name of cloven-footed, bifurcated, &c., which is applied to these animals. Behind the hoof are sometimes found two small spurs, the vestiges of lateral toes. The two bones of the metatarsus and metacarpus are united into one called the cannon (a), but in certain species there are also ves- tiges of lateral metatarsal and metacarpal bones. * The Pecora, Lin. 5®" (a) The cannon bone, it is well known, of the horse, is the shank-bone of the leg, and, when fitted with the pastern, the two constitute a perfect hinge, destined to be a medium of extension and of flexion of the limb, whUst no lateral motion is ad- mitted by them. — Eng. Ed. RUMINANTIA. Wo The term Ruminaiitia indicates the singular faculty possessed by these animals of masticating their food a second time, by bringing it back to the mouth after a first deglutition, a faculty depending upon the structure of their stomachs. Of these they always have four, the three first being so disposed that the food may enter into either of them, the oesophagus ter- minating at the point of communication. The first and largest is called the paunch (a) ; it receives a large quan- tity of vegetable matters coarsely bruised by a first mastication. From this it passes into the second, called the honeycomb or bonnet, the parietes of which are laminated like a honeycomb. This second stomach, very small and globular, seizes the food, moistens and compresses it into little pellets, which afterwards successively ascend to the mouth to be re- chewed. The animal remains at rest during this operation, which lasts until all the food first taken into the paunch has been submitted to it. The aliment thus re-masticated descends directly into the third stomach, called the leafiet (feuillet), on account of its parietes being longitudinally lami- nated, or like the leaves of a book ; and thence to the fourth or the cail- lette, the sides of which are wrinkled, and which is the true organ of di- gestion, analogous to the simple stomach of animals in general. In the young Ruminantia, or so long as they subsist on the milk of the mother, the caillette is the largest of the four. The paunch is only developed by receiving increased quantities of grass, which finally give it an enormous volume. The intestinal canal is very long, though there are but few en- largements in the great intestines. The ciscum is likewise long and to- lerably smooth. The fat of ruminating animals hardens more by cooling than that of other quadrupeds, and even becomes brittle. It is called tal- low. Their mamma are placed between the thighs. f^ (a) The paunch is in latin called rumen, or ingluvies; in this bag the food is macerated after very slight mastication; it is divided externally into two saccular portions, and its inner coat is covered with a vast number of papillae : it is in this cavity that all those morbid concretions are found, of which naturalists give us the descriptions, such as the haiiy balls of the cow, the spongy balls of the chamois, the Bezoar stones of the wild goats, &c. The second stomach is called the honey-comb bag, or king's hood, and in latin reticulum, which is smaller than the other, and has its internal coat arranged into small cells. From the reticulum the food is passed back into the mouth, by means of an anti-peristaltic motion of this second stomach, through the oesophagus. But this latter process is effected slowly, and during the time that the animal is at its ease. After being the second time masticated, the food is once more swallowed, that is to say, it is passed through the aesophagus from the mouth. Now, as this latter tube communicates with three of the stomachs, the contents of the mouth may be sent into any of the three, at the discretion of the animal; and, after the second mastication, it is always passed into the third stomach, which is usually termed the omasum, or manyplies: this stomach is the smallest sto- mach, and resembles a roUed-up hedgehog; its internal coat has broad duplicatures. Here the food undergoes some change, whilst it remains only a short time, and is then finally passed into the fourth stomach, the ahomasum, which, in its structure, and particularly in respect of its villous lining membrane, and in its function, exact- ly corresponding with the same organ in man and the other mammalia. — Enc. Ed. 164 MAMMALIA. Of all animals, the Ruminantia are the most useful to man. He can eat it all, and it is from that he procures all the flesh which constitutes his aliment. Some serve him as beasts of burden, others with their milk, their tallow, leather, horns, and other substances. The two first genera have no horns. Camelus, Linn. The camels approximate to the preceding order rather more than the others. They not only always have canines in both jaws, but they also liave two pointed teeth implanted in the incisive bone, six inferior incisors, and from eighteen to twenty molars only ; peculiarities which, of all the Ruminantia, they alone possess, as well as that of having the scaphoid and cuboid bones of the tarsus separate. Instead of the large hoof flat- tened on its internal side, which envelopes the whole inferior portion of each toe, and which determines the figure of the common cloven foot, they have but one small one, which only adheres to the last phalanx, and is symmetrically formed like the hoofs of the pachydermata. Their tumid and cleft lip, their long neck, prominent orbits, weakness of the crupper, and the disagreeable proportions of their legs and feet, render them some- what deformed, but their extreme sobriety, and the faculty they possess of passing several days without drinking, make them of the highest im- portance. The faculty just mentioned probably results from the large masses of cells which cover the sides of their paunch, in which water is constantly retained or produced. The other Ruminantia have nothing of the kind. The camel urinates backwards, but the direction of the penis changes in coitu, which is effected with much difficulty, and while the female lies down. In the rutting season a fetid humour oozes from their head. Camelus, Cuv. Camels, properly so called, have the two toes united below nearly to the point by a common sole, and the back furnished with lumps of fat. They are large animals of the old continent, of which two species are known, both completely reduced to a domestic state.* C. bactrianus, E. ; Buff. XI. xxii. (The Two-Humped Camel). Originally from central Asia, and which is found much less southerly than the C. dromedarius, L. ; Buff. XI. ix. (The One-Humped Camel). Which has spread from Arabia into all the north of Africa, a great part of Syria, Persia, &c. The first is the only one employed in Turkistan, Thibet, &"c. ; it is sometimes led as far as lake Baical. The second is well known for crossing the desert, and as the only means of communication between the countries which border on it. * Pallas, on the authority of the Buchares and Tartars, states, that in the deserts of central Asia, wild camels are still to be found; we must recollect, however, that the Kahnucs arc in the habit of giving freedom to all sorts of animals from a reli- gious principle. UUMINANTIA. 165 The two-humped Camel walks with less difficulty than the other in humid grounds; it is also larger and stronger. At the regular period it sheds the whole of its hair. It is the single-humped Camel that is the most abstemious. The Dromedary, properly speaking, is a lighter variety of it, and better calculated for journies. The flesh and milk of the Camel serve as food, and its hair for garments, to the people who possess it. In stony countries both species are useless (a). AUCHENIA, Illig. In the Lamas the two toes are separate, and are deficient in the humps. But two distinct species are known, both from the western continent, and much smaller than the two preceding ones. Camelus llacma, L. ; Guanaco, Buff. Supp. VI. xxvii. (The Lama). As large as a Stag; the hair coarse and of a chestnut colour, but varying when domesticated. It was the only beast of burden in Peru as the time of the conquest. It can carry a hundred and fifty pounds, but makes short journeys. The Alpaca is a va- riety with long woolly hair. Cam. vicunna, L. ; BufF. Supp. VI. xxviii. (The Paco, or Vi - cugna). The size of a Sheep, covered with fawn coloured wool, extremely soft and fine, of which valuable stuff's are manufactured. MoscHus, Lin. The Chevrotains, or Musks, are much less anomalous than the Camels, differing from the ordinary Ruminantia only in the absence of horns, in having a long canine tooth on each side of the upper jaw, which in the E^ (o) The formation of the Camel's foot prevents it from being capable of tra- velling over a stony or rough road, or any ground that is moist. Its feet are adapted solely to the nature of the way which it traverses, and it is by this peculiarity of adaptation that naturalists are enabled at once to explain why it is that up to this hour the camel still continues an exclusive inhabitant of the desert, whilst every other animal has left the same aboriginal seat in central Asia to accompany man in his migrations. But the still more wonderful peculiarity of the camel, is the struc- ture of its stomach, or rather the first of the stomachs, called the paunch, in which the cells described by Cuvier receive and retain a great quantity of water, at least as much as is sufficient to supply the animal for several days. A large camel carries from seven to twelve hundred weight on his back, at the rate of more than ten leagues on an average every day; they feed in their journeys, to a great extent, on thorny plants, but they are supplied usually with dates by their leaders. In the ab- sence of such aliment, they patiently continue their course. The privation of nutri- tious food leads to the absorption of the boss upon their backs. Their sense of smelling is so extremely acute, in reference to their immediate wants, that they never fail to distinguish, at a considerable distance, the existence of fresh water. The camel is easily taught to lie do^vn in such a manner as that its burden is easily at- tached to it; but, if after having received the destined freight it finds that it cannot endure the weight with facility, it abstains from rising in the erect posture, and will not do so until a portion of the load is taken oft". Travellers tell us, that if the dri- ver sings a merry tune the camel undergoes the fatigues of the jom-ney with much greater readiness and ease. We may add that, in modern acceptation, the name of Dromedanj (or cornier) is applied to all the varieties of the Arabian camels, or those with only one hump. — Eng, Eu. 166 iMAMMALIA. male issues from the mouth, and finally in having in their skeleton a slender peronaeus, which is not found even in the Camel. These are animals Avhich are quite delightful by their lightness and elegance. M. MoscJiiferns (a), L. : Buff. Supp. VI. xxix. (The Musk Ox). This is the most celebrated species, and the size of a Goat, has scarcely any tail, and is completely covered with hairs, so coarse and brittle, that they might be termed spines. What particularly distin- guishes it, however, is the pouch situated before the prepuce of the male which produces that odorous substance so well known by the name of Musk. This species appears to belong to that rugged and rocky region from which descend most of the Asiatic rivers, and which is spread out between Siberia, China, and Thibet. Its habits are so- litary and nocturnal, its timidity is extreme. It is in Thibet and Tunkin that it yields the best musk ; in the north it is almost in- odorous. The other Musks have no musk-pouch, and inhabit the warm parts of the old continent;* they are the smallest and the most elegant of all the Ruminantia."!" All the rest of the Ruminantia, the males at least, have two horns, that is to say, two prominences of the frontal bones which are not found in any other family of animals. In some, these prominences are covered with an elastic sheath com- posed as if with agglutinated hairs, which increases by layers and during life ; the name of horii is applied to the substance of this sheath, and the sheath itself is called the corn creuse, or hollow horn. The prominence it envelopes grows with it, and never falls. Such are the horns of Oxen, Sheep, Goats, and Jntelopes. In others, the prominences are only covered with a hairy skin, conti- nuous with that of the head; nor do the prominences fall, those of the Giraffe excepted. Finally, in the genus of the Stags, the prominences covered for a time with a hairy skin, similar to that on the rest of the head, have at their base a ring of bony tubercles, which, as they enlarge, compress and obli- terate the vessels of that skin. It becomes dry and is thrown off; the * The moschus americanus established from Seba, is merely the young or the female of one of tlie Guiana Deer. The same may be said of the M. delicatulus of Shaw, Schreb. 245, D. It is the fawn of an American Deer. t Moschus pygmoeus, Buff. XII. xiii. — Moschus memina, Schreb. CCLX. iii. — Moschus juvanicus, Buff. Supp. VI. xxx. t^° (a) This is the Musk Ox, from which the musk of commerce is taken, and the bag or pouch which contains it is peculiar to the male. The situation of this pouch has been already described in the above account; with respect to its structure it consists of several membranes laid upon each other, and covered by skin and hairs. Internally a number of little cells are found, into which the musk is secreted. It is employed but on the continent at present, more than in these countries, as a power- ful anti-spasmodic; it is needless to add, that its chief employment is in perfumery. — Eng. Ed. RUMINANTIA. 1G7 bony prominence being laid bare, at the expiration of a certain period separates from the cranium to which it was attaclied, falls, and the animal remains defenceless. Others, however, are re-produced generally larger than before, and destined to undergo the same revolutions. These horns, purely osseous, and subject to periodical changes, are styled antlers. Cervus, Lin. The Stags are the whole of the Ruminantia which have heads armed with antlers; the females, however, the Rein-Deer alone excepted, are always without them. The substance of these antlers, when completely developed, is that of a very dense bone without pores or sinus. Their figure varies greatly according to the species, and even in each species at different ages. These animals are excessively fleet, live commonly in the forest, and feed on herbs, leaves, buds of trees, &c. We distinguish in the first place those species whose antlers are either wholly or partially flattened, viz. C. alces, L. ; Elk or Elend, in the north of Europe ; Moose- Deer of the Americans; Original of the Canadians; Buff. Supp. VII. Ixxx. (The Moose). As large as a Horse, and sometimes larger ; stands very high ; the muzzle cartilaginous and inflated ; a sort of goitre, or pendulous swelling, variously shaped, under the throat ; hair always very stiff, and of a more or less deep ash-colour. The antlers of the male at first simple (en dague), and then divided into narrow slips, assume, in the fifth year, the form of a triangular blade, denticulated on the external edge, and mounted on a pedicle. They increase with age, so as to weigh fifty or sixty pounds, and to have fourteen branches to each horn. The Moose lives in small troops, and inhabits the marshy forests of the north of both conti- nents. Its skin is valuable for the Shamoy manufactures. C. tarandus, L. ; Buff. Supp. III. xviii., bis. (The Rein-Deer). Size of a Stag, but has shorter and stouter legs ; both sexes have antlers, divided into several branches, at first slender and pointed, and terminating by age in broad denticulated palms ; the hair, which is brown in summer, becomes white in winter.* The Rein-Deer is confined to the glacial countries of both continents, and is the animal so highly celebrated for the services it renders the Laplanders, who have numerous herds of them, which in the summer they lead to the mountains, and in winter bring back to the plains. They are their only beasts of burden and draught ; their flesh and milk serve them for food, their skins for clothing, &c. C. dama, L., BufF. VI. xxvii and xxviii. (The Daim or Fallow- Deer.) Less than the Stag; in winter of a blackish brown, in sum- mer fawn coloured, spotted with white ; the buttocks always white, bordered on each side with a black stripe; tail longer than the Stag's, black above, white underneath. The horn of the male has a round * It is probably owing to this change that the ancients were induced to believe that the tarandus could assume any colour it wished. 1G8 MAMMALIA. base, with a pointed antler, and throughout the rest of its length it is flattened, with the outer edge denticulated. After a certain age it shrinks, and splits irregularly into several slips. This species, which is the Platiteros of the ancients, has become very common in all Europe, although it seems to be originally from Barbary*. A black variety without spots is sometimes to be found. Those species which have round antlers are more numerous ; such as inhabit tem- perate climes also change their colour, more or less, during the winter. C. elaphus, L. ; BufF. VI. ix. x. xii. (The Common Stag) (a). A fawn coloured brown in summer, with a blackish line along the spine, and on each side a range of small light yellow spots ; in winter of a uniform greyish brown ; the crupper and tail always of a pale yellow. It is a native of the forests of all Europe, and of the temperate parts of Asia. The antlers of the male are. round, and appear in the second year, at first simple, and then with tines or branches on their inner face, which increase in number as they advance in age, forming a kind of palm with many small points. When very old the Stag becomes blackish, and the hairs on the neck lengthen and stand erect. The horns are shed in the spring, the old ones losing them first ; they are reproduced in the summer, during the whole of whicli period they live separately. "Wlien they are grown again, the rutting season commences, which lasts three months, and during which period the males become furious. Both sexes unite in large herds to pass the winter. The hind carries eight months, and brings forth in May. The fawn is spotted with white. The Stag-hunt, which is regarded as the noblest of sports, is become the subject of an art, which has its theory and its voluminous nomenclature, in which the most familiar objects are expressed in the most strange terms, or entirely altered from their usual import. C. canadensis, Gm. ; C. strongyloceros, Schreb. 246, A. 247, F. G; Wapiti, &c. (The Elk.) A fourth larger than the Elk of Europe, and nearly of the some colour, but the disk of the crupper broader and paler ; the antlers equally round, but more developed, and without a palm. Inhabits all the temperate parts of North America. C. virginianus, Gm. ; Schreb. CCXLVII. H. (The Virginia, or * Since the publication of the second ed. of my Oss. Foss., we have received a wild C. dama, killed in the woods to the south of Tunis. ^g° (a) The antler of the Stag is a real bone; it falls off every year and is re- newed. It is so united to the bone of the forehead that it ought to be regarded as a portion of it, yet it is separated every season, in consequence of the absorption of the substance at its bottom which unites it to the bone of the forehead. The suc- ceeding antler is at first no more than a piece of cartilege, which gradually becomes bone. Castration impedes the growth, and either alters the appearance or stops al- together the renewal of the horn. The shavmgs of the horn of the Stag, commonly called Hartshorn, are used in medicine: it cons.sts of the raspings of the internal part of the horn, one hundred parts of which yield twenty-seven parts of gelatine. An alkaline salt is obtained from the horns, and from that again the volatile liquid is obtained, called spirit of hartshorn.— Eng. Ed. RUMINANTIA. 1G9 Louisiana Deer), Less than the Fallow Deer of Europe, and ol' a more graceful figure; the muzzle more pointed; of a light lawn colour in summer, reddish-grey in winter; the under part of the throat and tail white at all times ; inferior third of the tail black with a white tip. The horns of the male, shorter than in the European species, are round, smooth, whitish, they bend outwards, forming an arc of a circle inwards and forwards ; the tines are inserted into their posterior face, that at the base excepted ; they sometimes amount to five or six*. The species inhabiting warm climates do not change their colour. There are several of these in South America, of which we have as yet no complete account, nor sufficiently comparative characters. Such are C. paludosus, Desm. ; Gauzou-Pouco, or Great Red Stay, Azz. It appears to have straighter horns than the preceding ; skin of u bright bay, with a black stripe on the forehead, and black rings round the point of the feet. It prefers marshy grounds. C. campestris, Fr. Cuv. ; Guazouti, Azz. Antlers short and straight, with tines front and back, which become numerous (Oss. Foss. IV. pi. iii. f. 46 — 48); fawn coloured; belly, inner sides of the thighs, buttocks and tip of the tail, white. f There are also several in the East Indies. C. axis, L. ; BufF. XL xxxviii, xxix. (The Indian Stag or Axis.) Fawn coloured at all times, spotted with pure white ; under part of the throat and that of the tail white ; tail fawn coloured, edged above with white ; round antlers, which become very large with age, but which never have more than one tine near the base, and the point forked. Originally from Bengal, but propagating easily in Europe. It was known to the Romans. Several other Stags with two tines like the Axis are found in India, which have been distinguished but lately. There is one of them, C. Aristotelis, Cuv. ; which has long hairs on the neck and throat, and which, inhabiting the north of India, must correspond with the Hippelaphus of Aristotle J. C. capreolus, L. ; BufF. VI. xxxii, xxxiii. (The Roebuck of Europe.) With but two tines to its antlers; of a fawn coloured grey ; buttocks white ; without lachrymal sinuses, and scarcely any tail. Some individuals are of a very vivid red, and others black- ish. This species lives in couples ; inhabits the high mountains of the temperate parts of Europe ; sheds its antlers towards the close of autumn, reproduces them during the winter; copulates in November, and is gravid five months and a half. The flesh is held * See my Oss. Foss. IV. pi. v. f. 1 — 17. The Cervus mexicanus, Penn, and Oss. Foss. pi. V. f. 23, in.iy l)ave been a very old Virginia Stag. • f Add Cervus vriuoralls, Ham. Smith. Also Cerv. macrotis, Say. X Add the C. hippelaphus ; C. Wallichii ; C. Mariannus ; C. Lechenaulti ; C. Pe- ronii ; C. cquinus ; and with respect to these species, see my Oss. Foss. torn. IV. and the fignre of Hamilton Smith in the work of Griffith. Vol, I. o 170 MAMMALIA. in much more esteem than that of the Deer. There are none in Russia. C. pygargus, Pall., Schreb. CCLII. (The Roebuck of Tartary). Similar to that of Europe, but the horns are more spinous at the base; the hair is longer; and it is almost as large as the Deer. It inhabits the high grounds beyond the Volga. It appears that there are some Roebucks in America, whose antlers always remain simple or without tines. C. rufus, F. C. ; Gouazoupita, Azz. Hair red; lips, hinder part of the belly, and under part of the tail, white. Canines in both jaws. Inhabits the forest.* We might separate from the other Roebucks certain small species of India, which have sharp canines, and antlers supported by pedicles which are covered by hairs on the forehead. Such is C. muntjac, Gm. ; Buif. Supp. VII. xxvi. (The Kijang, or Indian Roebuck.) Smaller than that of Europe. Found in small herds at Ceylon and Java-f Camelopardalis, Lin. ; BufF. Supp. VII. Ixxxi. The Camelopardalis is characterized in both sexes by conical horns, always covered with a hairy skin, and which are never shed. Their bony nucleus, when young, is articulated with the os frontis by a suture. On the mid- dle of the chanfrin is a tubercle or third horn, broader and much shorter, but likewise articulated by a suture. It is moreover one of tlie most re- markable animals in existence, from the length of its neck and the dis- proportioned height of its fore legs. Only one species is known, C. girafa, F. Cuv. Mammif. (The Giraife). Which is confined to the deserts of Africa, and has short grey hair sprinkled with fawn coloured angular spots, and a small fawn coloured and grey mane. It is the tallest of all animals, for its head is frequently elevated eighteen feet from the ground. Its disposition is gentle, and it feeds on leaves. The Romans had Giraffes in their games. Helio- dorus gives a good description of it, and one or two were brought into Italy in the middle century. Several have lately been sent to Europe from Egypt, j The RUMINANTIA WITH HOLLOW HORNS Are more numerous than the others, and we have been compelled to divide them into genera from characters of but little importance, drawn from the form of their horns and the proportions of their different parts. * Add the Gouazou-Bira (C. neviorivagus, F. Cuv.); the Nouazou-Apara {C. sim- plicicornis, Ham. Smith). t Add C. philippimis, Ham. Sm. — C. moschatus, Id. &c. X M. GeofFroy Saint Hilaire, from some differences in the spots, and in the cur- vature of the cranium of the few individuals in Europe, thinks that the Giraffe of Nubia and Abyssinia is not of the same species as that from the Cape. RUMINANTIA. 171 To these M. GeofFroy has advantageously added those afforded by the substance of the frontal prominence or the bony nucleus of the horn. ANTILOPE*. The substance of the bony nucleus of the horns of the Antilopes is solid, and without pores or sinus, like the antlers of the Stag. They resemble the Stags moreover by their carmiers, by the lightness of their figure, and their swiftness. It is a very numerous genus, which it has been found necessary to divide, and principally according to the form of the horns. a. Horns annulated, with a double curvature directed forwards, inwards, or upwards. A. dorcas, L. ; Buff. XII. xxiii. (The Gazelle). Round, large and black horns, and the size and graceful shape of the Roebuck; light fawn colour above ; white beneath ; a brown band along each flank ; a tuft of hair on each knee, and a deep pouch in each groin. It inhabits the north of Africa, and lives in large herds, which form a circle when they are attacked, presenting their horns at all points. It is the usual prey of the Lion and Panther. The soft expression of its eye furnishes numerous images to the Arabian poets. A. corinna, Gm. ; Buff. XII. xxvii. (The Corinna). Only differs in the horns, which are much more slender. It is perhaps a mere variety of sex. A. kevella, Gm. ; Buff. XII. cclxxv. (The Kevel). Also very similar ; but its horns are compressed at the base, and have a greater number of rings. The only mark in which it is even pretended that it differs from the Ahu of Kajmpfer, or the Tseyrain of the Persians and Turks (A. subgutturosa, Gm.), is a slight swelling under the throat of the latter. A, (jutturosa. Pall. ; the Dseren of the Montgoles ; Hoang Yang, or Yellow Goat of the Chinese; Schreb. CCLXXV. Nearly similar colours, and the same kind of horns as the Gazelle properly so called ; but it is nearly as large as the C. dania, and there is a considerable protuberance in the male produced by the larynx, and a large pouch under the belly. The female has no horns. This species lives in herds, in the barren plains of central Asia, and avoids both the forest and water. A. euchore, Forster; the Pouched Gazelle; Buff. Supp. VI. pi. xxi. (The Springbock). The south of Africa is filled with herds of this species. It is larger than the Gazelle, but of the same form and colour ; it is distinguished by a fold of the skin of the croup covered with white hairs, which opens and enlarges at every bound the animal makes. * This name is not antient; it is a corruption of Antholops, a word found in Eustathius, who wrote in the time of Constantine, and which seems to refer to the beautiful eyes of tlie animal. The common Gazelle was well described by yEliaii imder the name of Dorcas, which is properly that of the Roebuck. He calls it tlie Dorcas of Lybia. Gaxel is an Arabic word. 172 MAMMALIA, A. saiga, Pall.; the Coins of Strabo; Schreb. CCLXXVI. (The Saiga). Wliich inhabits the heaths of the south of Poland and Russia, has horns similar to the Gazelle, but yellowish and transpa- rent. It is as large as the Deer, fawn coloured in summer, and of a whitish grey in winter ; its cartilaginous, thick and vaulted muzzle, with very expanded nostrils, compels it to retrograde in feeding. The herd sometimes consists of more than ten thousand individuals. A. dama, Pall., Acad, of Berl. 1824, pi. iii. and iv. (The Nan- guer). Size of the C. dama ; white ; the forehead, neck and part of the back red; horns small and slender. From Nubia and Senegal*. b. Horns annulated, and with a triple curve. A. cervicapra. Pall., BufF. Supp. VI. xviii and xix. (The An- telope of India). Is also very like the Gazelle, but its horns have a triple flexure. They are used in India as weapons, formed by uniting them pair to pair, with the points opposed. They are de- ficient in the female. A. addax, Lichtenstf. Acad. Berl. 1824, pi. xi, and Ruppel. pi. vii. (The Antelope of Nubia). Also three curves in its horns, which are longer and more slender than those of the preceding; its body is whitish, tinged with grey on the back, and has a large brown spot on the forehead. c. Horns annulated, with a double curve, butbending in an opposite direction to those of the preceding ones, the points directed bachvards. — The Damalis of Smith, in part. A. bubalis, L. ; Bubalis of the antients; Bull'. Supp. VI. xiv: vulg. the Barbary C'oiv. (The Bubalis, of the antients). More heavily formed than the others; the head long and thick; as large as the Stag; fawn coloured, except at the end of the tail which is terminated with a black tuft. Common in Barbary. A. caama, Cuv. ; vulg. Cape Stag of the Dutch ; Buff. Supp. VI. pi. XV. (The Caama). Similar to the preceding, but the curves of (he horns more angular ; the circumference of their base, a band on the bottom of the forehead, a line on the neck, a longitudinal stripe on each leg, and tlic tip of tlie fail black. Common at the Cape. * The only ■ specimen known to BufFon (toni. XII. pi. xxxiv) was a young one with horns curved simply forwards, which induced him to believe it was the Dama of Pliny. f M. Lichtenstein gave it this name, under the idea that it is the same as the Addax or Strepsiceros of Pliny. It is seen on several of the antient monuments of Egypt. To this subdivision also belong the Kevil gris, F. Cuv. Mammif. — The Purple Antelope or Bonte-Bock of the Hollanders (A pygarga), Schreb. CCLXXIII. — The Black footed Antelope or Pallah, Sam. Daniels, Afric. Seen. pi. ix (A melampus, Lich.) ; Schr. 274. — The Coha (A. senegaleiisis), of which we have nothing but the horns. Buff. XII. pi. xxxii, 2, unless it be the same as the Pallah. — The A. suturosa. — The A. myiilopes, H. Smith, and perhaps the Koh of Buff, which is probably the A.aden- ola, Ham. Smith. RUMINANTIA. 17:> d. Small, straight, or but slightly carved horns, less than the head — in the greater number of species found only on the male. A. lanata, Desmar. ; Reebock or Roebuck of the Dutch of the Cape. (The Woolly Antelope). Somewhat smaller than the Deer; hair woolly; grey ahove, white heueath; some black on the external face of the limbs, and at tlie extremity of tlie lower jaw. A. mergens, Blainv. ; Duiker-Bock of the Dutch. (The Plung- ing Antelope). A light fawn coloured brown ; some wliite beneath the under jaw; a black line on the external face of the limbs. It derives its name from the manner in which it plunges into the bushes when pursued. A. oreotragus, Forst. ; the Klip-Springer of the Dutch : Buff. Supp. VI. pi. xxii; Schr. 259. (The Rock-Springer). Distin- guished by its stiff brittle hair, w^hich is of a greenish yellow.* The smallest antelopes are comprehended in this division. A. grimmia, L. ; F. Cuv. Mammif. (The Grimme). Fawn-co- loured grey; the forehead blackish; a small tuft of hair on the top of the head. A. pygmcea, Pall. ; F. Cuv. Mammif. f (The Guevei). Ash- coloured; a pale line along each side of the forehead, which is blackish. €, Annulated horns with a simple curve, the points directed forwards. The Redunc^ of Smith. A. redunca, Buff. XII. pi. xlvi; Schreb. 265. (The Nagor). Reddish-brown. From Senegal.;}; /. Horns annulated, straight or but slightly curved, and longer than the head. The Oryx of Smith, in part. A. Oryx, Pall.-, erroneously termed Pasan by BuiF. Supp. VI. pi. xvii; Cape Chamois of the Dutch. § (The Oryx, or Long- horned Antelope). As large as a stag, with slender horns two or three feet long, straight, pointed, round, the lower third obliquely annulated, and smaller in the female ; hair ash-coloured ; head white, barred with black; a black band on the spine and one on each flank; a deep chestnut spot on the shoulder, and one on the thighs ; tail long and blackish, and the hairs of the spine directed towards the neck. It is found to the north of the Cape, and in the interior of Africa. The length of its hoofs, which is greater than in the other * Add ^. quadriscopa, Ham. Smith. t Tlie figure of Schreb. 260, B, is too red; in that of Shaw, Gen. Zool. Vol. II. Part II. pi. clxxxviii. the horns are too large. X Add the Ritbock {A. eleotragus). — The Ourehi {A. scoparia). It is very neces- sary to observe that many antelopes, while young, have horns of this form bent for- wards. § M. Lichtenstein has remarked, that as this antelope with long straight horns is only found in the south of Africa, it is not probable it is the Oryx. It is rather the following species. 174 MAMMALIA. species, enables it to climb rocks, and it prefers mountainons dis- tricts.* A. gnzella, L. ; Ant. leueoryx, Licht., Acad. Berl. 1824, pi. i. (The Algazel). Horns long, slender, and slightly curved into an arc of a circle ; hair whitish, variously tinged with a fawn or reddish colour. Found in North Africa, from Nubia to Senegal. It is often sculptured on the monuments of Egypt and Nubia; and M. Lichtenstein thinks it is the true Oryx of the antients.f /a), Buff. XII. pl.xl. — The Bosch-Bock {A. sylvatica), Buff. Supp. VI. xxv. RUMINANTIA. 175 ish-grey stripes crossed with white ones; large horns, which are pe- culiar to the male ; they are smooth, with a triple flexure, with a single longitudinal ridge slightly spiral; a small beard beneath the chin ; a mane along the spine : it lives isolated to the north of the Cape. i. Horns bifurcated. Antilocapr/E of Ord. — ■Dicranoceros of Ham. Smith. Of all the forms of hollow horns tliis is the most singular ; a compres- sed fork is given off from their base or trunk, almost like the tine or ant- ler of a deer; the pointed tips curve backwards. The most known spe- cies is, A. furcifera, Ham. Smith, Lin. Trans. XIII. pi. ii; the Cabril of the Canadians. It inhabits the vast prairies of the middle and western parts of North America, where it roams in large herds. Its size is about that of the roebuck ; hair thick, undulated, and reddish ; the tine of the horns is about the middle of the height.* k. Four horns. — Tetracera, Leach. This subdivision, lately discovered in India, was not unknown to the antients. ^lian speaks of it, 1. XV. c. xiv, by the name of the Four- horned Oryx; the anterior pair are before the eyes, the posterior com- pletely behind the frontal. A. chiearra, Hardw. ; Lin. Trans. XIV. pi. xv; and F. Cuv. Mammif.-f- (The Tchicarra). About the size of a roebuck, and of an almost uniform fawn colour. The female has no horns. Found in the forests of Hindostan. J I. Tivo smooth horns. A.picta, and traxjo-camelus, Gm.; Buff. Supp. VI. pi. x and xi. (The Nylgau). As large as a stag, or larger; the horns short and bent forwards ; a beard under the middle of the neck ; hair greyish ; double, black and white, strongly marked rings on all the feet just above the hoof. The female have no horns. This species is from India. A. rupicapra, L. ; Buff. XII. pi. xvi ; Ysard in the Pyrenees. (The Chamois). The only ruminating animal in the west of Europe * The A.palmata, Smith, lb. pi. iii, is only known to me hy its horns, which have the antlers close to tbe base; perhaps they had been cut off. Some authors have considered these antelopes also as the Mazcmes of Hernandez. f I should remark here, in relation to the obseiTations at page 523, Lin. Trans., torn. XIV, that it was not the fault of the late M. du Vaucel, that the figure and de- scription of the Tchicarra were attributed to him in the Hist, des Mammif. His consignments were not always complete; a drawing frequently arrived without any description or explanation, and his premature death prevented lum from supplying what was deficient in his memoirs. X The y/. A-cornis, Blainv., is only known to me by a cranium, the anterior horns of which are proportionally larger, Jour.de Phys. Aout 1815. Perhaps it is merely a difference arising from age. 176 MAMMALIA. that can be compared with the antelope, having, however, peculiar characters: its straight horns are bent suddenly backward like a hook ; behind each ear, under the skin, is a sac, whose only external opening is a small orifice.* Its size is that of a large goat. The hair is of a deep brown, with a black band descending from the eye towards the muzzle. The swiftness of its course among rocks and precipices is wonderful, and it remains in small herds in the middle region of the highest mountains. M, Smith separates from the antelopes, under the generic name of Ca- TOBLEPAs, the A. gnu, Gm. ; Buff. Supp. VI. pi. viii and ix. (The Gnou or Niou). A very extraordinary animal, which, at the first glance, seems to be a monster composed of parts of different animals. It has the body and croup of a small horse, covered with brown hairs ; the tail furnished with long white hairs, like that of the horse, and on the neck a beautiful straight mane, the hairs of which are white at the base and black at the tip. The horns, approximated and en- larged at the base like those of the Cape Buffalo, descend outwardly, and turn up at the point ; its muzzle is large, flat, and surrounded with a circle of projecting hairs; under the throat and dewlap is an- other black mane; the feet have all the lightness of the stag's. Horns in both sexes. Inhabits the mountains to the north of the Cape, where it is rather rare, although the antients appear to have had some knowledge of it.-j- The three remaining genera have the bony core of the horns principally occupied with cells, which communicate with the frontal sinuses. The direction of their horns furnishes the characters of the divisions. Capra, Lin. The Goats have the horns directed upwards and backwards; the chin generally furnished with a long beard, and the chanfrin almost always concave. C. cegragus, Gm. ; Cuv. Menag. du Mus. 8vo. II. 177. (The iEgagrus or Wild Goat). Appears to be the stock of all the va- rieties of our domestic goat. It is distinguished by its horns, trench- ant in front, very large in the male ; short, or altogether wanting in the female, which is also sometimes the case in the two species of Ibex. It lives in herds on the mountains of Persia (where it is known by the name oi paseng), and perhaps on those of other coun- * It was, perhaps, a mistaken idea respecting the indication of tliis orifice which led the antients to say, that, according to Empedocles, goats breathed through the ■ ears. f This species most probably gave rise to the catoblepas. See Pliny, lib. VIII. exxxii, and /Elian, lib. VIII. c. v. The most complete work on the subject of the antelopes is that of M. Ham. Smith, inserted in the work of Griffith, and I regret that the want of sufficient objects for observation have prevented me from giving all its details. RUMINANTIA. 177 tries, even in the Alps. The oriental bezoar («) is a concretion found in its intestines. The Goats, and our domestic species (Capra hircus, L.) vary in- finitely in size, colour, and in the length and fineness of the hair ; in the size of the horns, and even in their number. The Angora Goats in Cappadocia have the softest and most silky hair. Those of Thibet are renowned for the admirably fine wool which grows among their hair, with which the celebrated Cachemires are manufactured. There is a race in upper Egypt with short hair, convex chanfrin, and pro- jecting lower jaw, which, possibly, is hybrid. The Goats of Guinea, called Mambrines, and of Juida, are very small, the horns inclining backwards. All these animals are stout, capricious, and fond of wandering ; sensible of their mountain origin, they prefer dry and wild places, feeding on coarse grass, and shoots of young trees. They do much injuryto the forests. The kid only is eaten, but their milk is useful in several diseases (6). The female can produce at seven months ; her period of gestation is five, and she generally has two kids at a birth. C. ibex, L.; Buff. XII. pi. xiii; Schreb. CCLXXXI. (The Ibex). Large horns, square in front, marked with transverse and prominent knots. It inhabits the most elevated summits of the highest ranges of mountains in the whole of the old continent. C. caucasica, Guldenst., Act. Petrop. 1779, II. pi. xvi, xvii; Schr. CCLXXXI. B. (The Caucasian Ibex). Distinguished by its large triangular horns, obtuse, but not square in front, and knotty like those of the preceding. The two species mix with the domestic goat.* Ovis, Lin. Sheep have their horns directed backwards, and then incline spirally, more or less forwards ; the chanfrin is generally convex, and there is no beard. They are so slightly entitled to a generic separation from the goats, that with the latter they produce mongrels capable of reproduction. As in the goats, there are several wild races or species very nearly allied. Ov. ammon, L. ; Pall. Spic. XI. i ; Schr. CCLXXXVIII. (The Argali of Siberia). The male of which has very large horns, with * Add the Bouquetin d'Ethiopie, F. Cuv. Mammif. — The African Maned Ibex, Tachhaitse, S. Daniels, Afric. Scenery, pi. xxiv. J^° (a) The oriental bezoar is a greenish-black concretion, formed of concentri- cal strata, and is generally found to he a deposit surrounding a small bit of rice- straw as its nucleus. The bezoar, called the western, is found in the stomach of a South American species of camel. Bezoar stones were formerly in vast repute as antidotes against poisons, and were objects of superstitious veneration. — Eng. Ed. j^° {b) Goats' milk owes its peculiar odour to an acid, which is blended with it, and its great repute as nourishing food for children and weakly persons, to the large proportion of caseous matter which it contains. The colour of the goat's hair ap- pears to be connected with the flavour of the milk, for, in the milk of those that are of a deep colour, the flavour is much stronger than in that of goats with lighter hair, —Eng. Ed. 178 MAMMALIA. the base triangular, angles rounded, flattened in front, and striated transversely; those of the female are compressed and falciform. In summer the hair is short, and of a fawn-coloured grey ; in winter it is thick, rigid, and of a reddish-grey, with some white about the muzzle, throat, and under the belly. There is always, as in the stag, a yellow space about the tail, which is very short. This animal in- habits the mountains of all Asia, and attains to the size of the fallow deer. Ov. mtisimon, Pall.; Mufione of Sardinia; MuffoU de Corse; Buff. XI. pi. xxix; Schreb. CCLXXXVIII. A. (The Mouflon or Mufion of Sardinia). Appears to differ from it only in its inferior size, and in the deficiency or smallness of the horns in the female. It is said to be also found in Crete. There are some varieties to- tally or partially black, and others more or less white. It is pro- bable that the Ov. montana, Geoff., Ann. Mus. II. pi. Ix; Schr. CCXCIV. D. (Tlie IVIouflon of America) is a species of Argali, which may have crossed the sea on the ice. Its horns are very stout, and are more perfectly spiral than those of the common species.* Ov. tragelaphus, Cuv. ; Penn. XII; Shaw, pi. ccii, 2; Schr. CCLXXXVIII. B. (The Mouflon of Africa). Soft and reddish hair, with a long mane hanging under the neck and another at each ' ankle ; the tail is short ; it appears to be a distinct species. It in- habits the rocky districts of all Barbary; and M. Geoffrey has ob- served it in Egypt. It is from the Mouflon or the Argali that we are supposed to de- rive the innumerable races of our woolly animals, which, next to the dog, are most subject to vary. We have some of them in Europe with common and fine wool ; large and small ; with large or little horns, wanting in the females, or in both sexes, &c. &c. The most interesting varieties are those of Spain {a), which have a fine curly fleece, with large spiral horns on the male, now beginning to be dif- fused throughout Europe, and that of England, whose wool is fine and long. The most common variety in southern Russia has a very long tail. * This is identical with the Ods ammori, L. ^^ (a) The principal of these is the Merino breed, which, up to 1786, were pecu- liar to Spain. In that year a flock was brought into France, and was placed on the national farm of Rambouillet, where they still remain. George the Third adopted the plan, after the example of France, of importing Merino sheep, and presenting them to private agrtcultuvists. In 1792, Lord Auckland, our ambassador at Spain, obtained, by order of his Majesty, forty of the best Spauisli sheep, in exchange for eight English coach horses; they were placed in Oatlands, and superintended by Sir Joseph Banks. But the results of this and similar experiments, so far as England is concerned, must be regarded as failures: in this country the wool was always coarser on the Merino than the article which came from Spain, whereas, the wool of the Merino imported into Germany was the finest and best of all. The wool from our colonies of New South Wales bids fair to be the most superior that has hitherto been employed in England. — Eng. Ed. RUMINANTIA. 179 Those of India and of Guinea, which also have long tails, are dis- tinguished by their long legs, very convex foreheads, pendent ears, want of horns, and short hair. The north of Europe and of Asia has almost every where a breed of small sheep with a very short tail. In the race of Persia, Tar- tary, and China, the tail is transformed into a double globe of fat ; in that of Syria and Barbary it is long, but loaded with an immense mass of the same substance. In both, the ears are pendent, the horns of the males large, those of the females moderate, and the wool is mixed with hair. Sheep are valuable for their flesh, suet, milk, skin, wool, and dung; well managed flocks carry fertility every where. Lambs are weaned at two months, are castrated at six months, and shed their milk teeth between the first and third year. The ewe can bear at a year, and produce from ten to twelve lambs. The period of gestation is five months, and two lambs are produced at a birth. The ram is mature at eighteen months, and is let out to thirty ewes — he is fat- tened at eight years. Bos, Lin. Oxen have the horns directed laterally, inclining upwards or forwards, in the form of crescents ; they are large animals, with a broad muzzle, short and thick body, and stout legs. B. taurus, L. ; Bufl". IV. xvi. (The Common Ox). Its specific characters are a flat forehead, longer than broad, and round horns, placed at the extremities of the salient line or ridge which separates the forehead from the occiput. In the fossil crania, which appear to have belonged to tiiis species in a wild state (the Urus of the an- tients), the horns curve forwards and downwards ; but in the num- berless domestic varieties, they have very different directions and sizes — sometimes they are even totally wanting. The common races of the torrid zone have, all, a lump of fat upon the shoulders, and some of thom are not larger than the Hog. The utility of these animals for labour, and the value of their flesh, fat, milk, and hide, are known to every one : even their horns are used in the arts. The period of gestation is nine months. The cow can bear at eighteen months — the bull is mature at two years ; he is cut at two and fat- tened at eight years. B. urus, Gm. ; Urus or Bison of the ancients ; Zubr of the Po- landers; Gesn. CLVII. (The Aurochs). Generally, but errone- ously, considered as the wild stock of our horned cattle. It is distinguished from them by its convex forehead, which is wider than it is high, by the insertion of its horns below the occipital crest, by the length of its legs, by an additional pair of ribs, by a sort of curly wool, which covers the head and neck of the bull, forming a short beard under the throat, and by its grunting voice. It is a savage animal that has now taken refuge in the great marshy forests of Lithuania, of the Krapacs, and of Caucasus, but which formerly 180 MAMMALIA. inhabited all the temperate parts of Europe. It is the largest quadruped proper to Europe. B. bison, L. ; B. americanus, Gm. ; Buff. Supp. Ill, v. ; F. Cuv. Mammif. (The Bison of America, or Buffalo of the Anglo-Arae- cans). The bony head very similar to that of the Aurochs, and covered like it, the neck and shoulders also, with frizzled wool, which becomes very long in winter ; but its legs, and particularly its tail, are shorter. Inhabits all the temperate parts of North America. Crosses with cows. B. bubalus, L. ; Buff. XI. xxv. ; Wild Ox of Arachosia of Aris- totle. (The Buffalo). Originally from India, and brought into Egypt, Greece, and Italy, during the middle century; has a convex forehead, higher than wide, the horns directed sideways, and marked in front by a longitudinal ridge. This animal is subdued with diffi- culty, but is extremely powerful, and prefers the marshy grounds and coarse plants on which the Ox could not live. Its milk is good, and the hide very strong, but the flesh is not esteemed. There is a race of them in India, whose horns include a space of ten feet from tip to tip : it is called Ami in Hindostan, and is the Bos ami of Shaw. B. frontalis, Lambert, Linn. Trans. VII. pi. 4; and F. Cuv. Mammif. (The Gyall or Jengle Ox). Resembles the domestic Ox in the greater part of its characters, but its horns are flattened from before backwards, and are without angular ridges. They are di- rected sideways and more or less upwards, but not backwards. The hair is short and black, except on the forehead, and on a line along the back, where it is grey or faun-coloured, and on the legs, where it is white. It is a domestic race in the mountain districts of the north-west of India, and which is perhaps descended from a cross between the Buffalo and the common species. B. grunniens, Pall. ; Grunting Cow of Tartary, &c. ; Sch. CCXCIX. A. B. (The Yack, or Horse-tailed Bufi'alo). A small species, with the tail completely covered with long hairs like that of the Horse, and a long mane on the back. Its head appears to re- semble that of the Buffalo, but the horns have not been sufficiently described. This animal, of which jElian has spoken, is originally from the mountains of Thibet. Its tail constitutes the standards still used by the Turks to distinguish the superior officers. B. caffer, Sparm. ; Schr. CCCI. (The Cape Buffalo). Very large horns, directed sideways and downwards, ascending from the point, flattened, and so wide at their base that they nearly cover the forehead, merely leaving between them a triangular space, the apex of which is above. It is a very large animal, of an excessively ferocious disposition, inhabiting the woods of Caffraria. B. moschatus, Gm. ; Schr. CCCII. ; La Tete, Buff. Supp. VI. iii. (The Musk Ox of America). The horns approximated and directed as the preceding, but meeting on the forehead in a straight line; those of the female are smaller and more widely separated; CETACEA. 181 the forehead is convex, and the end of the muzzle furnished with hairs. It stands low, and is covered with tufted hair that reaches to the ground. The tail is extremely short. It diffuses more strongly than any other species the musky odour common to all the genus. It is only to he met with in the coldest parts of North America, though it seems that its cranium and hones have been carried by the ice to Siberia. The Esquimaux make caps of the tail, the hairs of which, falling over their face, defend them from the Musquitoes. ORDER IX. CETACEA. The Whales are mammiferous animals without hind feet; their trunk is continuous, with a thick tail, terminating in an horizontal, cartilaginous fin, and their head is united to the trunk by a neck, so thick and short, that no contraction of it can be perceived; it is composed of a very slen- der cervical vertebrae, which are partly cemented to one another. The first bones of the anterior extremities are shortened, and the succeeding ones flattened and enveloped in a tendinous membrane, which reduces •them to true fins. Their external form is altogether that of fishes, the tail fin excepted, which in the latter is vertical. They always therefore remain in the water ; but as they respire by lungs, they are compelled to return frequently to its surface to take in fresh supplies of air. Inde- pendently of this, their warm blood, their ears, with external, though small, openings, their viviparous generation, the mamms through the medium of which they suckle their young, and all the details of their anatomy sufficiently distinguish them from fishes. Their brain is large, and its hemispheres well developed; the petrous bone, or that portion of the cranium which contains the internal ear, is separated from the rest of the head, and only adheres to it by means of ligaments. There are no external ears, nor hairs upon the body. The form of their tail compels them to flex it from above downwards to produce a progressive motion ; it also greatly aids them in rising in the water. To the genera hitherto described of the Wliales, we add others formerly confounded with the Morses. 182 MAMMALIA. FAMILY I. HERBIVOROUS WHALES. Their teeth have a flat crown, which determines their mode of life, and tliis induces them to leave the water frequently, to come on and crawl and pasture on the shore. They have two mammie on the chest, and mustachio-like hairs; two circumstances which, when observed from a distance as they raise the anterior part of the body vertically above the water, may give them some resemblance to woman or man, and have probably occasioned those fabulous accounts of Tritons and Sirens which some travellers pretend to have seen. Although in the cranium the bony nostrils open towards the top, the orifices in the skin are pierced at the end of the muzzle. Their stomach is divided into four sacs, of which two are lateral, and they have a large ceecum. Manatus, Cuv. The Lamantins, or rather the Manati or Cow-whales, have an oblong body, terminated by an elongated oval fin; the grinders, eight in number throughout, have a square crown, marked with two transverse elevations ; there are neither incisors nor canines in the adult; but when very young, we find two very small pointed teeth in the intermixillary bones, which, soon disappear. Vestiges of nails are discoverable on the edges of their fins, which they employ with tolerable dexterity in creeping and carrying their young; hence the comparison of these organs with hands, and the name of Manatus applied to this animal, of which Lamantin is a corrup- tion. From their manner of living, they are also called Sea-Ox, or Sea- Cow, and from their mammae, Mermaid, &c. — Trichechus manatus (a), Lin. ; Buff. XIII. Ivii. They are found near the mouths of rivers in the hottest parts of the Atlantic Ocean, and it appears that those of the American rivers are specifically diiferent from those of Africa.* They grow to the length of fifteen feet. Their flesh is used as food (6). Halicore, Jllig.-f — DuGONG, Lacep. The Dugongs have grinders composed each of two cones laterally See Oss. Foss., torn, first part. f Halicore, Maid of the Sea. ^ (a) This is tlie Trichecus Manatus of Linnffus, a species belonging to the genus Trichecus, which he placed in his order Bruta. — Eng. Ed. f^ {b) At Table Bay, in the Cape of Good Hope, a British establishment is sta- tioned for the Whale fisherj-, the piincipal species taken being called the Cow- Whales. These animals are annually accustomed to go into the bays on the above coast for the purpose of obtaining a medium of slill water and sand, which is said to be essential to the parturition of all the black Whales.— Eng. Ed. CETACEA. 183 united; the teeth implanted in the incisive bone are permanent, and grow to such a size as to become true pointed tusks, but of whicli the greater portion remain covered by thick fleshy lips, bristled, and with mustachios. The body is elongated, and the tail terminated by a crescent-shaped fin. One species only is known, the Hal. dugong; Siren; Sea-Cotv, &c. ; Renard, Poiss. des Indes, pi. xxxiv, "f. 180; Home, Phil. Trans, and F. Cuv. Mammif. (The Dugong). It inhabits the Indian Ocean, and is frequently con- founded by travellers with the Manatus. Stellerus, Cuv — Rytina,* lllig. The Stelleri appear to have but a single compound grinder on each side, with a flat crown, and bristled with plates of enamel. Their fins have not even the little nails observed on those of the INIanatus. Accord- ing to Steller, the first, and hitherto the only one- who has described them, tlieir stomach also is much more simple. One species only is known, which is confined to the northern part of the Pacific Ocean, f FAMILY II. CETACEA ORDINARIA. The Ordinary Whales are distinguished from the preceding by the singular apparatus from which they have received the name of Blowers. (Souflfieurs). As a large quantity of water passes into their huge mouths along with their prey, some way was necessary by which they could get rid of it; accordingly, it passes through the nostrils by means of a peculiar disposition of the velum palati, and is accumulated in a sac situated at the external orifice of the cavity of the nose, whence, by the compression of powerful muscles, it is violently expelled through a narrow opening on the top of the head. It is in this way they produce those jets d'eau observed by navigators at so great a distance. Their nostrils, continually bathed by waves of salt water, could not be lined with a membrane sufficiently delicate to enable them to detect odours, and accordingly, they have none of those projecting laminae found in the nasal cavities of other animals; the olfactory nerve is absent in several, and if there be any which enjoy the sense of smell, they must have this nerve mostly in an obliterated state. Their larynx, of a pyramidal form, penetrates into the posterior nares to receive air and conduct it to the lungs, without compelling the • Rytina, wrinkled, t Nov. Comm. Petrop. II., 294, et seq. It has never been figured. 184 MAMMALIA. animal to raise its head and throat above the water for that purpose : there are no salient laminae in the glottis, and the voice is reduced to a simple lowing. They have no vestige of hairs, but their whole body is covered with a smooth skin, under which is that thick layer of blubber abounding in oil, the principal object for which they are pursued. Their mamms are near the anus, and their fins are incapable of grasping. Their stomach is divided into five and sometimes into seven distinct sacs ; instead of one single spleen, they have several, small and globular ; those which are possessed of teeth, have them all conical and alike ; they do not chew their food, but swallow it rapidly. Two small bones suspended in the flesh, near the anus, are the only vestiges of posterior extremities which remain in them. Several have a vertical fin on the back, composed of a tendinous sub- stance, but unsupported by bone. Their eyes, flattened in front, have a thick and solid sclerotica ; (a) the teguments of the tongue are soft and smooth. These may be once more subdivided into two small tribes : those in which the head bears the usual proportion to the body, and those in which it is immoderately large. The first comprehends the Dolphins and the Narwhals. DoLPHiNUs, Lin. The Dolphins have teeth in both jaws, all simple, and almost always conical. They are the most carnivorous, and, in proportion to their size, the most cruel of their order. They have no c«cum.* Delphinus, Cuv. The Dolphins, properly so called, have a convex forehead, and the muzzle forming a kind of bill, in front of the head, more slender than the rest. D. delphis, L. ; Lacep. Get. pi. xiii. f. 1. (The Common Dol- phin). The snout depressed and armed on each side of the jaw with from forty-two to forty-seven teeth, slender, arcuate, and pointed ; black above, white beneath ; from eight to ten feet in length. This animal, found in numerous bodies in every sea, and celebrated for the velocity of its motion, which sometimes precipitates it on the decks of vessels, appears really to have been the Dolphins of the antients. The entire organization of the brain seems to indicate the docility they attributed to it. * There is no family of the Mammalia more difficult to observe, of which we have more imperfect descriptions, and whose synonymes are more fluctuating than that of the Cetacea. I have endeavoured to select authentic species. 6^ (a) This is the next covering of the eye after the outer one w hich we see ; it is the hardest envelope of the eye. — Eng. Ed. CETACEA. 185 D. tursio, Bonnaterre; vulg. le Souffleur ; Lacep. XV. f. 2. (Tlie Great Dolphin). Snout short, broad, and depressed; from twenty- one to twenty-four teeth throughout, conical, and often blunted. In- dividuals have been seen fifteen feet in length, and it appears that they are found in the Mediterranean as well as in the Ocean.* D. duhius, Cuv. Only thirty-six or thirty-seven teeth through- out, but as fine and pointed as those of the Common Dolphin, which it also resembles in its colours, D. frontalis, Duss. Very similar to the preceding, but coloured somewhat differently, and has thirty-four teeth throughout. Dis- covered by M. Dussumier, at the Cape de Verd Islands. D. frontatus, Cuv. But twenty-one teeth throughout, larger than those of the preceding; the muzzle is also longer and more compressed; its origin is not known. D. plumbeus, Dussum. The muzzle with the same compressed form, but armed throughout with thirty-seven teeth. From Mala- bar.-j- D. velox, Dussum. A somewhat longer muzzle, and forty-one teeth throughout. From Ceylon. D. lomjirostris, Dussum. Surpasses even the Common Dolphin in the number of its teeth, having from fifty-five to sixty throughout. From the coast of Malabar, j; M. de Blainville separates from this first division of Dolphins, under the name of DELniiNORHYNCHUS, those species in which the snout, though long and slender, is not separated from the forehead by a decided furrow. One of them, D. micropterus, Cuv., was thrown upon the coast of France; it is remarkable for its dorsal fin, which is also placed very far back. It grows to the length of fifteen feet, and loses all its teeth at an early age. § D. rostratus, . Cuv. A slender muzzle, and externally all of a piece with the head; twenty-one teeth throughout. Its dorsal fin is of the usual size.|| * The Whale or Capidolio of Belon, and the Orca, of the same author, which very probably is that of the antients, belong also to the division of the Dolphins with snouts, and are much larger than the above mentioned species; but their charactei's are not sufficiently determined. The Dauphin feres of Bonnaterre is prpbable re- ferrable to one of the two. t I suspect this D. plumbeus to be the same as the D, malaianus of MM. Lesson and Gamier, Voy. de la Coq. pi. ix. f. 5. X We cannot, in this work, give a place to species which have been only seen at a distance, and of which no part has been produced; we therefore mention, merely as indications, the D. albigena, Quoy and Gaym., Voy. de Freyc. pi. xi. or D. super- ciliosns. Lesson and Gam., Voy. de la Coq. pi. ix. f. 2. — The D. cruciger, Quoy and Gaym. lb. f. 3 and 4, which is at least closely allied to the D. bivittatus, Less, and Gam. f. 3. — The D. hmatus, Less, and Gam. f. 4. — Still less can we admit species which have not even been figured. § Blainville, Nouv. Bullet, des Sc. IV. p. 139, and Fr. Cuv. Mammif. under the improper name of D. de Dak, which belongs to the Hyperoodoji. N.B. The D. rostratus of Shaw is the gangeticiis. 11 Add the Dauphin couronne, Freminville, Nouv. Bullet, des Sc. IH. No. 56, pi. 1, f. 2. VOL. I. Q 18G MAMMALIA. D. gan(jel:icus, Roxburg (The Dolpliin of die Ganges), shoulil be distinguished from this first group. Its spiracle is longitudinal, and the jaws slender and inflated at the end. It ascends the Ganges to a great distance, and is probably the Platanista of Pliny. Phoc;ena, Cvv, Marsouins or Porpoises* have no rostrum, but a short, and uniformly convex muzzle. D. phoccena, L. ; Lacep. XIII. f. 2. (The Common Marsouiu or Porpoise, of the English). The teeth compressed, trenchant and rounded, from twenty-two to twenty-five on each side in each jaw; blackish above, white beneath. It is the smallest of the Cetacea, seldom exceeding four or five in length ; very common in all our seas, where it is found in large troops. D. capensis, Dussumrem. (The Cape Porpoise). Similar to the preceding, but has twenty-eight teeth throughout, cylindrical, slightly pointed, and not compressed like those of the common species. From the Cape seas. D. orca and D. gladiator ; Buts-kopf and Schwerd-fisch of the Dutch and Germans; Lacep. XV. 1, and not so well, V. 3. (The Grampus). f Teeth, thick, conical, and slightly hooked, eleven every where; the posterior ones flattened transversely; the body black above, white underneath ; a white spot on the eye in the form of a crescent; the dorsal fin elevated and pointed. It is the largest of Dolphins, being frequently found from twenty to twenty-five feet in length, and is the most relentless enemy of the AVhale. They attack it in troops and torment it until it opens its mouth, when they devour the tongue. Z). aries, Risso ; Ann. Mus. XIX. pi. i. fig. 4. A smaller spe- cies sometimes seen upon the coast of France, which at an early period loses the upper teeth and preserves only a few of the lower ones. Its dorsal fin is lower and further back than that of the Grampus,!; D. glohiceps, Cuv.§ Ann. Mus. XIX. pi. i. fig. 2 and 3; D. de- ductor, Scoresby. (The Round-headed Grampus). Has the top of the head so arched as to be globular ; long, pointed, pectoral fins ; it is more than twenty feet in length ; black, with a white stripe from the throat to the anus. It lives in troops of several hundreds, led * Porpoise, from porcus piscis, hog-fish. f Grampus, a corruption of the French words grand poisson. Bu/s kopf, or rather Boots kopf, signifies that its head is made like a long-boat Schwerdfisch, Sword-fish, from its dorsal fin. X The Epaulard venlru of Bonnaterre, Lacep. XV. 3, copied from Hunter, Phil. Trans, presents a similar form; but Hunter's specimen was eighteen feet long, and ours never exceeds ten. The D. griseus, Ann. Mus., XIX. pi. i. f. I. is merely a bad drawing of this D. aries, lb. f. 4. The true anes of the antients is the Grampus. § It is the head of the D. globiceps deprived of its teeth, which is engraved in Bortnaterre, Cetol. pi. vi. f. 2: and in Lacep. pi. ix. f. 2, under the name of Cachalot swinewal; and in Camper, Cet. pi. xxxii, xxxiii, and xxiv, under that of the Toothless Narwhal, CETACEA. 187 by the old males, and is sometimes thrown upon the coasts of Europe. It has from nine to thirteen teeth throughout, but loses them all with age. Delphinapterus, Lacep. Only differs from the Porpoises in having no dorsal fin. D. leucas, Gm. ; D. albicans, Fabr. ; Huid fisk of the Danes ; Scoresby, Arct. Reg. II. pi. xiv. (The Beluga, or White Grampus). Nine teeth throughout, thick and blunt at the end; skin of a yellowish white ; head, externally convex, like that of a Porpoise ; as large as the Grampus. Found in the Frozen Ocean, whence it often ascends rivers to some distance.* D. leucoramphus, Peron. ; Voy. de la Coq. pi. ix.f Inhabits the South seas ; the head is convex and pointed ; the muzzle, a part of the pectoral fins, and the whole under part of the body of a beautiful white. The back is blue, and it has from thirty-eight to forty-two teeth throughout. The D. phocoenoides is a species of this subgenus, discovered by M. Dussumier at the Cape ; it has the round head, and the compressed and obtuse teeth of the Porpoise. J Hyperoodon, Lacep.^ The Hyperoodons have the body and muzzle very similar externally to those of the Dolphin properly so called ; but the cranium is elevated at its edges by vertical bony partitions ; they are generally found to have but two small teeth in front of the lower jaw, which do not always appear ex- ternally ; their palate is studded with small tubercles. One species only is known, which attains a length of from twenty to twenty-five feet, and perhaps more. It is taken in the British Channel and the North Sea, and is often called the Baleine a bec.\\ * Rondelet, under the name of peis-rmtlar and of senedeile, represents a Cetaceous animal very similar to the Beluga; but he does not say it is white. He also applies to it the Italian name of capidoUo. It would be one Delphinapterus more, if the figure were not ideal; but ] fear such is the case, and the more so as this name of jtnilar and that of capidolio belong properly to the Cachalot. Besides this, the Beluga has occasioned the formation of a little white Cachalot, from the circumstance of so soon losing its upper teeth. See its head, Voy. de Pallas, Atl. pi. Ixxix. f The muzzle in this figure is too pointed. The White Dolphin with black ex- tremities of Commerson must be nearly allied to it. X M. Rafinesque speaks of a Dolphin with two dorsal fins, and MM. Quoy and Gaymard saw one they have named Z). r7«'«oceros, Voy. de Freycinet, II. f. 1; but they saw it at a distance, and half merged in the waves, so that tliere may have been some optical illusion. § Hyperoodon, teeth in the palate. II This animal, described by Baussard, Jour, de Phys. March 1789. ( Delph. eden- tulus, Schr.) to which Bonnaterre has transferred the name of buts-kopf, which be- longs to the Grampus, is the same as the Two-toothed Dolphin of Hunter; Bausard expressly mentions its two teeth. It is also the Balcena rostrata of Klein and of Chemnitz, Besch. der Berl. ges. IV. p. 183; of Pennant, Brit. Zool. No. V; of Pon- toppidan, Nor. II. 120; the Bottle- head oi Dale, &c. Chemnitz found one of tlu' teeth. See Oss. Foss. toni. V. p. 1. f. 324. 188 MAMMALIA. MoNODON, Lin. The Narwhals have no teeth properly speaking, but mere long, straight and pointed tusks, implanted in the intermaxillary bone, and directed in the line of the axis of the body. The form of their body and that of their head greatly resemble that of the Porpoises. One species only is well known, the M. imonoceros, L. ; Scoresby, Arct. Reg. pi. xv.* (The Nar- whal). Whose tusk is spirally furrowed and sometimes ten feet in length, was for a long time called the horn of the Unicorn.(a) This animal has, it is true, the germs of two tusks, but it is very seldom that both become equally developed. That of the left side usually attains its full growth, while the other remains hidden in its alveolus.f According to the description of the Narwhal, it is hardly more than twice or thrice the length of its tusk; Ihe skin is marbled with brown and a kind of white; the muzzle is arched; mouth small; spiracle on the top of the head, and no dorsal fin, but merely a salient crest along the whole length of the spine. The tusks are some- times found perfectly smooth.]; The other Cetacea have the head so large as to constitute one third or one half of the length of the whole body) but neither the cranium nor the brain participate in this disproportion, which is altogether owing to an enormous development of the bones of the face. Physeter, Lin. The Cachalots, § or Spermaceti Wliales, are Cetacea with a very vo- luminous head, excessively enlarged, particularly in front, in w^hose upper * The Narval microcephale, Lacep. pi. v. f, 2, is nothing more than a common Narwhal, not quite so badly figured as in pi. iv. f. 3, which is copied from a bad drawing of Klein, Pise, per Pulm. Resp. pi. ii. fig. c, from an individual captured in the Elbe in 1736, afterwards stuflfed and exhibited in Dresden. Anderson gives a rather better figure of the same individual. Fr. Tr. II. p. 108. t We have found this small tusk in several crania, and verified the statements of Anderson on this subject. It is prevented from being developed by its internal cavity becoming too rapidly filled with the matter of the ivory, which thus obliterates its gelatinous core. X The Monodon spurhis of Fabricius, or Anarlcalc of Greenland, (Ancylodon Illi- ger) which has but two small curved teeth in the upper jaw and a dorsal fin, cannot be far removed from the Hyperoodon. Val, wale, in all the languages derived from the Teutonic, signifies Whale, and is often employed for the Cetacea in general; nar, in the language of the Icelanders, means cadaver, or dead body, and it is pretended that such is the food of this genus. § Physeter as well as physalus, signifies blower. Cachalot is the name used by the Biscayans ; from cachau, which in the Cantabrian dialect means tooth. |^° («) Our sailors still call the Narwhal the Sea Unicorn; it yields merely three tuns of oil, and is not pursued on this account. — Eng. Ed. J^W («) The Cachalots are with the Greenland Whales {B. mysticetus), the only Whales which are pursued by the Whale-fishers: they are gregarious, and live in groups of no less than two hundred, consisting of females guided by a male. The quantity of oil yielded by the Cachalot is as small as three tuns, and would be deemed unworthy of the trouble required in catching it, were it not in the first place CETACEA. li>9 jaw there is neither whalebone nor tooth, or if any, very small, and not projecting; the lower jaw, narrow, elongated, and corresponding to a fur- row in the upper one, is armed on each side with a range of cylindrical or conical teeth, which, when the mouth is closed, enter into correspond- ing cavities in the upper jaw. The superior portion of their enormous head consists almost entirely of large cavities, separated and covered by cartilages, and filled with an oil which becomes fixed as it cools, well known in commerce under the very singular name of spermaceti, a sub- stance for which they are principally sought ; the body not having much blubber. These cavities, however, are very much distinct from the true cranium, which is rather small, is placed under their posterior portion, and contains the brain as usual. It appears that canals, filled with this spermaceti, or white of the whale, or adipocire as it is called, are distri- buted to several parts of the body, communicating with the cavities which fill the mass of the head; they even ramify through the blubber that is found beneath the whole of the skin. The odorous substance, so well known under the name of amhergris, appears to be a concretion formed in the intestines of the Cachalot, parti- cularly during certain states of disease, and it is said, chiefly in the cascum. The species of the Cachalots are far from being well ascertained. That which appears to be the most common, the macrocephalus of Shaw and Bonnaterre, (Lacep. X.)* in lieu of a dorsal fin, has a mere callous prominence. There are from twenty to twenty-three teeth on each side of the lower jaw, and some small conical ones hidden beneath the gum in the upper one. Its spiracle is single, and not double as in the greater part of the other Cetacea; neither is it symmetrical, but is directed towards the left, and terminates on that side, on the front of the muzzle, which is truncated.f In ad- dition to this, it is said that the left eye is much smaller than the other, and that the whalers always endeavour to attack the animal on that side. If this species alone furnishes, as is asserted, all the spermaceti and ambergris of commerce, it must be very widely dif- fused, for these articles are drawn from the North and the South. Cachalots, without dorsal fins, have been taken even in the Adriatic. J The * It is not the macrocephalus of Linnaeus. t We have verified on two crania this want of symmetry in the spiracle, announced by Dudley, by Anderson, and by Swediauer, which inclines us to credit the inequality of the eyes mentioned by Egede. + We perceive no real difference between this Cachalot, of which we have good y figures and several parts of the skeleton, and that of Roberson, Phil. Trans._ Vol. LX. / of which Bonnaterre has made a specie^, under the name of trumpo, which is applied, at Bermuda, to a Cachalot, without any more precise indication. As to the Little Cachalot, P. catodon, Lin., no other difference is mentioned be- for the spermaceti, which is a well known principal ingredient in the soothing oint- ments, and is sometimes employed inwardly to alleviate a cough, and next, for the ambergris, which is a sort of Bezoar concretion, commonly evacuated by the Cacha- lot, and being of a light specific gravity, is found floating on the surface of tlie sea, which the animal habitually frequents. It was formerly employed in medicine, as an excitant of the nerves, and was used in numberless ofhcinal preparations. — Eng. Ed. 190 MAMMALIA. Physeter, Lacep. Is a Cachalot with a dorsal fin. Two species only are distinguished among them, microps, and tursio or mular, and those, from the very equivocal character of teeth, arcuated or straight, sharp or blunt.* They are found in the Mediterranean as well as in the Arctic Ocean. Those of the latter are said to be the most inveterate enemies of the Seals. Balden A, Lin. The Whales are equal in size to the Cachalots, and in the proportional magnitude of the head, although the latter is not so much enlarged in front; but they have no teeth. The two sides of their upper jaw, which is keel-shaped, or like a roof reversed, are furnished with thin, compact, transverse laminae, called whalebone, formed of a kind of fibrous horn, fringed at the edges, which serve to retain the little animals on which these enormous Cetacea feed. Their lower jaw, supported by two osseous branches arched externally and towards the summit, and completely un- armed, lodges a very thick and fleshy tongue, and when the mouth is closed, envelopes the internal part of the upper jaw, and the whalebone with which it is invested. These organs do not allow whales to feed on such large animals as their size might induce us to imagine. They live on fish, but principally on Worms, Mollusca, and Zoophytes, selecting, it is said, the very smallest, Avhich become entangled in the filaments of the whalebone. Their nostrils, better organised for the sense of smell than those of the Dolphins, are furnished with some ethmoidal plates, and ap- pear to receive some small filaments from the olfactory nerve. Their ceecum is short. Bal. mysticetus,-\ L. ; Lacep. Cet. pi. 2 and 3, under the name of Nord-Caper, and Scoresby, Arct. Reg. II. pi. 12. (The Great sides that of size, than that the teeth are sharper, a circumstance that may depend upon age. It is not even certain that those which have been produced are not those of some large Dolphin. The Physeter macrocephahis of Linnaeus, Cach. cylindrique of Bonnaterre, (genus Physalus of Lacep.) would have a good character in the distant location of its spi- racle; but this species merely rests on a bad figure of Anderson, and no one has ever seen any thing like it. The albicans of Brisson, huid-fisk of Egede and Anderson, converted by Gmelin into a variety of the macrocephalus, is the beluga dolphin, which sheds its teeth at a very early age, a fact we have ascertained. * The only one tolerably well ascertained, is from a bad figure of Bayer, Act. Nat. Cur. III. pi. 1, taken from an animal thrown on shore at Nice. The name mular has been very vaguely applied to it; the mular of Nieremberg is a Cachalot, it is true; but there is nothing to prove it is one species more than another. As to the different indications of the Cachalots of authors, see my Oss. Foss. torn. V. p. 328, et seq. Add to them the figure given in the Journ. des Voyages, of February, 1826, and that in the Voy. de Freycinet, pi. xii. With respect to the Ca- chalots described by M. de Lacepede, Mem. du Museum, torn. IV. from Japanese drawings, the very nature of the document on which they rest forbids me from giv- ing them a place here. t The phalaina of Aristotle and iElian, which was an enemy of the Dolphin, ap- pears to have been a large cetaceous animal armed with teeth; the only true Whale known to Aristotle was his mysticeius, which had, says he, setae in the mouth in place of teeth; most probably the Whale, with the wrinkled throat, of the Mediterranean. CETACEA. 191 Greenland (a), or Common Wliale).* It has long been considered the largest of all animals ; but from the late observations of Captain Scoresby, it appears that it scarcely ever exceeds seventy feet, a length frequently surpassed by the wrinkle-bellied whales. It has no dorsal fin. To procure its fat or blubber, which is sometimes several feet in thickness, and contains immense quantities of oil, whole fleets are annually equipped. Formerly sufficiently bold to venture into our seas, it has gradually retired to the extreme North, where the number is daily diminishing. Besides oil, it produces for the market black and flexible whalebone, eight or ten feet in length, each individual having from eight to nine hundred strips on each side of the palate. One hundred and twenty tuns of oil are obtained It is thought, however, that Juvenal alludes to the common Wliale in the following line, " Quanto delphinis balaena britannica major," but the Latins applied the term Balaena, in a general way, to all the great Cetacea, just as the people of the North do that of the Whale, or Wall, and its dei-ivatives, a remark essentially requisite to those who study their writings. * The old figure of Martens, re-copied Lacep. I. pi. 1, and in all other authors, icpresents the head too long. i^° (a) The Mysticetus and the Cachalots are the only species of Whale pur- sued by the Whale shipping expeditions to the Arctic regions, from this and other countries. The Whale ships from Great Britain are generally vessels of from three to four hundred tons. They collect usually in April, at the Shetland Islands, from which they advance northwards, and gain the fishing station in about a month. This is the common practice, but some vessels start before April, and others again proceed to the fishing stations every month from April to October. Whale ships formerly anchored on the east coast of Greenland, but that station having been deserted by the Whales, the ships now resort to the great inland sea called Biffin's Bay, which they reach by passing through Davis's Straits, quite on the other side of Greenland. Hull is the principal port of the Whale fishery: Peterhead, in Scotland, is the next. At first, the sole object in view in the taking of Whales, was their flesh; but now their value chiefly consists in the blubber and the whalebone which it yields. With respect to the latter, it is the peculiar substance found in a series of laminas or blades in the jaws where the teeth should have been. The number of these blades in each jaw is about three hundred. The blubber, or oleaginous substance, which consti- tutes the most valuable portion of the animal, is situated under the skin, and may be described as a wrapper around the whole of the body, of the thickness of from eight to twenty inches: its colour is represented by Captain Scoresby as of a yellow- ish white, yellow, or red. In the very young animal it is always yellowish-white. In some old animals it resembles the colour of the salmon. It swims in water. Its thickness all round the body is eight, or ten, or twenty inches, varying in different parts, as well as in different individuals. The lips are composed almost entirely of blubber, and yield from one to two tuns of pure oil each. The tongue is chiefly com- posed of a soft kind of fat, that aflfords less oil than any other blubber. The blubber, in its fresh state, is without any unpleasant smell; and it is not until after the ter- mination of the voyage, when the cargo is unstowed, that a Greenland ship becomes disagreeable. With respect to the method of killing the animal, it is well known that this is ac- complished by the harpoon. This is flung from the ships or boats, and the fish, in almost every instance, remains about half an hour, but sometimes a good deal longer, underwater, after being struck; and then it often rises at a considerable distance from the spot from which it had made its descent. Immediately after it re-appears, the assisting boats make for the place with their utmost speed, and as they reach it, each harpooner plunges his harpoon into its back, to the amount of three, four, or more, according to the size of the whale and the nature of the situation. Most fre- quently, however, it descends for a few minutes after receiving the second harpoon, 192 MAMMALIA. from a single whale. Sliell-fisli attach themselves to its skin, and multiply there as on a rock, and some of the Balanus family even penetrate into it. It is asserted that these enormous animals feed exclusively on very small Mollusca, which swarm, it is true, in the seas they inhabit. Their excrement is of a beautiful red colour, and affords a tolerable die for linen.* Other species (Bal.enoptera, Lacep.) have a dorsal fin: they are also again subdivided into such as have a smooth belly, and those in which it is wrinkled. The Bal.^noptera, ivith a smooth belly. Are closely allied to the whales, properly so called. One only is cited, the Balcena physalus, Finnfisch of the Dutch ; copied from Martens, by Anderson, Bonnaterre, and others ; Lacep. I. fig. ii. (Razor- back of British sailors, or Giblar.) As long as the common whale, * It is from an erroneous interpretation of certain passages of Martens and Zorg- drager, that naturalists have made a peculiar species of the Nord- Caper, which should be a northern whale more slender than the common one; but in the Antarc- tic Seas there is a species very similar to the Common Whale, which the Hollanders of the Cape also call Nord-Caper. See Oss. Foss. p. 361, 363. and obliges the other boats to await its return to the surface, before any further at- tack can be made. It is afterwards actively plied with lances, which are thrust into its body, aiming at its vitals. At length, when exhausted by numerous wounds and the loss of blood which flows from the huge animal in copious streams, it indicates the approach of its dissolution by discharging from its blow-holes a mixture of blood along with the air and mucus which it usually expires, and finally jets of blood alone. The sea to a great extent around is dyed with its blood, and the ice, boats, and men, are sometimes drenched with the same. Its track is likewise marked by a broad pel- licle of oil, which exudes from its wounds, and appears on the surface of the sea. Its final capture is sometimes preceded by a convulsive and energetic struggle, in which its tail, reared, whirled, and violently jerked in the air, resounds to the dis- tance of miles. In dying, it turns on its back or on its side; which joyful circum- stance is announced by the capturers with the striking of their flags, accompanied with three lively huzzas. Whenever a whale lies on the surface of the water, un- conscious of the approach of its enemies, the hardy fisher rows directly upon it, and an instant before the boat touches it, buries his harpoon in its back. The wounded whale, in the surprise and agony of the moment, makes a convulsive effort to escape. Then is the moment of danger. The boat is subjected to the most violent blows from its head, or its fins, but particularly from its ponderous tail, which sometimes sweeps the air with such tremendous fury, that both boat and men are exposed to one common destruction. The whale on being struck, immediately dives down into the water with great velocity. It appears, from the line which it draws out, that it goes down at the rate of eight or ten miles an hour. The moment that the wounded whale disappears or leaves the boat, a jack or flag, elevated on a stafi", is displayed, on sight of which, those on watch in the ship give the alarm, by stamping on the deck, accompanied by a simultaneous and continued shout of ' a fall.' At the sound of this the sleeping crew are roused, jump from their beds, rush upon deck, with their clothes tied by a string in their hands, and crowd into the boats. With a tem- perature at zero, should a fall occur, the crew would appear on deck, shielded only by their drawers, stockings, and shirts, or other habiliments in which they sleep. The alarm of ' a fall ' has a singidar efiect on the feelings of a sleeping person, un- accustomed to the whale-fishing business. It has often been mistaken as a cry of distress. A landsman, in a Hull ship, seeing the crew, on an occasion of a ' fall,' rush upon deck, with their clothes in their hands, and leap into the boats, when there was no appearance of danger, thought the men were all mad. CETACEA. 193 but more slender; very common in the same latitudes, but shunneel by the fishermen on account of its extreme ferocity, and the paucity of its blubber (a) ; to capture it is a difficult, and for small vessels a dangerous undertaking, on account of the violence of its motions when attacked. It is far from certain that it is not a Juharta, and ignorantly described, vsrhose name has been corrupted. The BALiENOfTERA, with a Wrinkled belly, or the Rorquals.* Have the skin of the underpart of the throat and chest folded longitudi- nally into plica, forming very deep wrinkles, and consequently suscepti- ble of very great dilatation, the use of which in their economy is unknown. It appears that the seas of Europe contain two species. Bal. hoops, L.; Juharte of the Biscayans; Lacep. I. f. 3. — IV. f. 1 and 2.— V. f. 1, and VIII. 1 and 2. (The Jubarta or Finner). Superior in length to the common whale, but has all the dangerous propensities which are attributed to the razor-back. Bal. musculus, Lin. ; Lacep. pi. vi. and vii. (The Rorqual of the Mediterranean). Which only differs from the Jubarta in some of the details of its proportions {b).'\- * Rorqual, whale with tubes, from its plicae. f The BalcBna rostrata of Hunter, of Fabricius and of Bonnaterre, or the Boops, is very different from that of Pennant and of Pontoppidan, which is the Hy- PEROODON. The Balana gibbosa and the gibbosa B. or nodosa of Bonnaterre, should be better determined; but they are only known through Dudley, Phil. Trans. 387, and we are not sure they were precisely in their natural state. See Oss. Fos. loc. cit. E^° (rt) The RazorbacJc is considered by our sailors as a dangerous sort of whale to attack, as, when struck with the harpoon, it is so swift in its flight, that it runs off from tire ship at the rate of nearly four hundred and eighty fathoms an hour, so that he very often breaks the line attached to the harpoon, or obliges the crew to cut the line, lest the boat should be sunk. The quantity of oil which this whale yields is no more than from ten to twelve tuns; the oil is, besides, of inferior quality. For these reasons the Razorback is not pursued by the whale catchers, except by mistake, a misfortune which is by no means of rare occurrence. The broad-nosed whale, B. wMsmhis, the beaked whale, B. rostrata, the finner, B. boops, are only varieties of the Razorback. — Eng. Ed. g^ (6) At this point, where the description of the mammalia terminates, it is proper for us to notice the recent attempts which have been made in this country to establish a new principle of classification amongst the mammalia. The most im- portant, and, as some believe, the most profound of those arrangements, is that of the learned entomologist, William M'Leay, esq., who, in his singular work, entitled Hora; Entoviologica, presents us with its details. The bases of his system are; — 1. That all natural groups, whether kingdoms or any subdivision of them, return into themselves; a distribution which he expresses by circles. 2. That each of these circles is formed precisely oi five groups, each of which is resolvable into five other smaller groups, and so on. 3. That proximate circles or larger groups are connected by the intervention of lesser groups, which he denominates osculant. 4. That there are relations of analogy between the corresponding points of conti- guous circles. But the most interesting portion of Mr. Mac Leay's speculations on the mammalia is that which discusses the analogies subsisting, according to him, between the prin- cipal groups of mammalia, and tliose into which the class of birds is resolvable. We give the statement of the author — ' Every manmiiferous animal maybe reduced to these five orders; that is, may VOL. I. R ]94 MAMMALIA. he assimilated in a greater or less degree, to one or otner of tiie following typical forms; viz. Man, the Lion, the Horse, the Whale, and the Mouse. I shall shew hereafter how these five orders form a continued series returning into itself, so as to be a natural group. In the mean time I must recall to the attention of the reader the orders of birds, as defined and arranged by Mr. Vigors; and to which definitions and arrangement I have just applied so severe a test, only to con-oborate their ac- curacy, and to make them display additional harmony. ' When we have heard the Parrot, or Mainate, speaking; when we have witnessed the former feeding itself as it were with a hand; when, in short, we have reflected on the remarkable intelligence and developnient of brain throughout the whole order of Insessores, to which both birds belong, there has been no one, perhaps, dull enough not to compare them to Primates. I allow, indeed, that it is difficult to follow the opinion of the great naturalist of France, who, ignorant of the true nature of rela- tions of analogy, imagined that the Psittaceous tribe of birds ought to occupy the first step in the scale of nature below man; but we cannot help adopting the notion of Linnaeus, in the ' Systema Naturae,' that, although not near him In construction, they are yet analogous to him in various important respects. And, adopting this notion, we must place the whole order of Insessores, to which Psittacus belongs, op- posite to the Primates, of which Man forms the type. ' The analogies existing between birds of prey and carniverous quadrupeds having been noticed by Aristotle, who called both groups Gampsonucha, were enlarged upon by Plutarch. Among a host of moderns, who have been struck with the resem- blance, I may particularly mention Linnaeus, who, in his ' Systema NaturEe,' has expressly called his Accipitres ' Feris analogi;' and Buffbn, who has treated the subject at length, and with his usual eloquence. I conceive, therefore, that no one can object to the propriety of my placing the Ferae opposite to the Raptores. ' The analogy between aquatic birds and aquatic mammalia scarcely requires the mention of the authority of Linnaeus to make it be granted. It is indeed so evident, that Hermann, according to his custom, takes it for a relation of affinity. In both orders the anterior appendages of the vertebral axis dwindling into fins, and the two undivided posterior appendages being placed so far behind on the axis as to shew that both were intended for motion in the water rather than on land, are circum- -stances of themselves sufficient to authorize the placing of the Cetacea opposite to the Natatores. ' Two orders still remain in each class to be considered: the Glires and Ungulata among the mammalia; and among birds, the Rasores and Grallatores. The relations of analogy pointed out by Linnaeus between mammalia and birds are, as Hermann has obsen'ed, not always correct : and his errors have arisen from the misfortune of his not detecting the natural group of Aristotle and Ray, which the latter has called Ungulata. Having only been able to seize Aristotle's subdivision of this group, he lost the parallelism of analogy, and fell, as I shall hereafter shew, into very glaring mistakes. In the ' Systema Naturae,* however, he has mentioned that very striking analogy which appears between his groups of Gralla; and Bruta: that is, according to the parallelish of analogy between the orders of Grallatores and Ungulata, since the Bruta, as we have seen, do not form an order, but only a natural subdivision of the Ungulata. That this analogy is denionstrably true, I deduce from the following facts. Of their respective classes, the orders of Ungulata and Grallatores contain examples of the longest legs in proportion to the body — witness Camelopardalis and Haemantopus. Both orders present us, in groups not exactly aquatic, with instancss of the toes soldered together, as in the horse; or connected together by a web, as in the Flamingo. Both orders present us with the greatest elongation of muzzle or fa- cies — witness Myrmecophaga, or Antilope (particularly A. huhalus, L.), and Scolopax; and also with the most depressed form of muzzle — witness Hippopotamus and Pla- teala, which genera also afford us the truest specimens of Wading Vertebrata. In both orders we have the most elongated claws — witness Megalonyx and Parra. Both orders afford us the swiftest animals in running — as the Horse and Tachydromus; and the most pugnacious on account of love — as the Bull and Machetes. The Bull, moreover, and the Butor (or Bostaurus, for hence comes the bird's name), afford us the loudest and hoarsest voice of their respective orders: where we have also the most remarkable instances of the upper and under mandibles touching each other merely at their base and point; as Myrmecophaga, or the whole of the ta men ouk nmphoclouta of Aristotle, and Anastomus, Illig. Both orders exhibit ornamental ap- pendages to the head— as the antlers of the stag aiid the crown of the crane; and CETACEA. 195 both orders afford us the only instances of true horns — as Bos or Rhinoceros, and Palamedea, L. To see a hundred instances of resemblance, it is only necessary to walk into a museum. I shall, therefore, only further say, that both orders contain polygamous animals, are generally gregarious, and more graminivorous than grani- vorous, being essentially inhabitants of marshes and savannahs. Thus, then, with Linnaeus, J place the Bruta, or rather the whole order of Ungulata to which they belong, opposite to the Grallatores. ' Four orders in each class being now disposed of, it follows by parallelism of ana- logy, that the Glires ought to be placed opposite to the Rasores. But, setting this theory aside, is this' position true in fact?* ' Linnaeus, from the above-mentioned error in his series of affinity, considered tJie Rasores to be analogous to his group of Pecora. But this group, according to Aris- totle and Ray, is only a subdivision of Ungulata, which have, I consider, been now proved to be analogous to the Grallatores, If, therefore, Linnaeus be right in mak- ing his Bruta analogous to the order of Wading Birds, it follows that his Pecora must be so also. ' The analogy of the Rasores to the ruminating animals was first, I believe, men- tioned by Linnaeus in the ' Systema Naturas.' It has since his days been copied and copied, until now it almost becomes a sort of heresy to inquire into its accuracy. I am not, however, aware that any reason for this analogy has ever been assigned, beyond the fact, that one order aflbrds the principal part of those birds which are do- mesticated by man for purposes of food ; and the other, the principal part of quadru- peds which are destined to the same purpose. Now, granting even this domestica- tion not to be the work of art, but to be an analogy really existing in nature, I would observe, setting the whole family of Anatidae aside, that the Glires afford us many eatable or domesticated animals, such as the Capromys and rabbit: and the Gralla- tores afford us similar instances in the Snipe and Psophia. If some Rasores be said, like the Pecora, to have ornamental appendages to the head, so it must be remem- bered has the crowned cane; whereas no rasorial bird is truly horned, like the Pala- medea. But it may be worth while to take into consideration successively the grand characteristics of the Rasores, as given by ornithologists to distinguish them from all other birds. ' The Rasores are, properly speaking, frugivorous birds; by which I do not mean eating fruits only, but all manner of seeds or grain. Now, this character of being frugivorous applies much more to the Glires than the Ungulata, which are truly herbivorous, and only feed on grain in an artificial or domesticated state. To begin, then, with the rasorial or scratching powers of gallinaceous fowls; these are certainly the most burrowing of frugivorous birds: now the most burrowing of frugivorous quadi'upeds are certainly not the Ungulata, but the Glires. These birds are charac- terized by the shortness of their wings and the weakness of their pectoral muscles. Now, if we inquire whether it is among the Glires or Ungulata that we find the cor- responding appendages of the vertebral axis, that is, the fore feet most shortened, the answer will be, certainly not among the Ungulata! where, on the contrary, the Girafle has them extraordinarily lengthened: but among the Glires we have the Jerboa, in this respect almost a bird. In general, moreover, this latter order is distin- guished, like the Rasores, by the strength of those muscles of the two posterior ap- pendages of the vertebral axis or hind feet, tliat contribute to locomotion. Grega- rious habits (Ustinguish the most of the Rasores; so they do in a still more extra- ordinary maimer the Glires. Many are insectivorous in both orders, and some are omnivorous. The muzzle or facies of Glires is short and round, very like that of Ferae, there being a direct relation between these two orders. The facies of Rasores is also short and round, very like that of Raptorcs (the order analogous to that of Ferae) : and there is also a direct relation between these two orders. Many Rasores perch and nestle on trees; so do many of the Glires. The Rasores generally feed on hard grain, which they pick up with their hooked beak, and masticate in a triturating gizzard: the Glires feed also on hard substances, which they gnaw with their strong hooked incisors, and masticate with their grinders. In both orders the thumb is * ' The autient name of Struthio Camelus, as well as the form and habits ef the ostrich, show indeed a relation of analogy to the camel ; but then we are to recollect, in the first place, that the ostrich is at the osculant point, or confines of the orders of Grallae and Rasores; and secondly, that such slight variations of the parellelism of analogy often appear, although I think it possible that even these aie subject to rule.' 196 MAMMALIA. very often rudimentary. In both orders the tail varies from an extraordinary lengtli, as in the squirrel and pheasant, to being very short, as in the hare and partridge. No orders in their respective classes present the tail so spread out and flattened as the Glires and Rasores — witness the beaver and peacock. In both orders the sense of hearing is much developed. In both orders we find animals, such as squirrels and pigeons, with their toes perfectly free; and others, as Hydromys and Phasianus, which have them united at the base by a membrane. Castor is an aquatic animal, having some relation to Cetacea; Struthio is a terrestrial animal, approacliing to Notatores. And so on, relation comes so fast upon relation, that I know not how we can for a moment hesitate to place the Glires opposite to the' Rasores. ' I conceive it now to be demonstrated, that, so far as relates to the analogies ex- isting in nature between the orders of Mammalia and Aves, we ought to place them thus: — Animals typically. 1. Fer^ carnivorous 1. Ratobes. 2. Primates omnivorous 2. Insessores. .3. Glires frugivorous 3. Rasores. 4. Ungulata frequenting the vicinity of water .... 4. Grallatores. 5. Cetacea aquatic 5. Natatores. JIuJMM Jo AU Ijndi}7i.Fuhluhed by beo Bc-ndei . BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH OF JOHN JAMES AUDUBON Probably there never has been a great naturalist who did not love his particular pursuit, for its own sake, with a passionate enthusiasm, without regard to profit or fame. Audubon is an illustrious example of this. Indeed, nothing short of an absorbing devotion to ornitholo- gy could have s>ipported him amid the difficulties and toils which he has had to encounter in his career. In an autobiographical meaioir prefixed to the descriptive letter-press of his celebrated work, Tlie Birds of America, he declares that in his childhood he made the pro- ductions of nature around him his very playmates, and that he soon formed such an intercourse with them as savoured more of frenzy than of mere friendship. This is language that might seem to con- tain fully as much of exaggeration as of truth, were it not that the whole of his after career bears ample testimony to its accuracy. The power of his early impressions has never slacken&d. He has for years continued to expose himself to all weather and climates, in fur- therance of his pursuit ; and when he has at any time gained an object which he thinks worthy of being described and exhibited, he sits down to study and to draw it, with an intenseness of application, which is even more exhausting than his active exertions. Like his forerunner, Wilson, he has explored the forests, mountains, and shores of America, snatching the feaiful joy of wandering beyond the limits of civilization, with no other companions than dog and gun ; his fires have lighted up woods, and shone in waters, which never before felt the presence of cultivated man — where the Rose-breast sung him to repose at night, and the Wood-thrush waked him with its native strains. But the few particulars Avhich we are about to state of his history — these being chiefly gathered from his own account of him- self— will aftbrd a more striking idea of his inextinguishable and un- ceasing devotion to the study of the feathered creation. Audubon declares, that during his early years, none but aerial com- panions suited his fancy ; and tliat when removed from the woods, the prairies, and the brooks, or shut up from the view of the wide Atlantic, he experienced none of those pleasures most congenial to his mind. No roof seemed so secure to him as that formed of the dense foliage under which the feathered tribes were seen to resort, or the caves and fissures of the many rocks to which the dark-winged cormorant and the curlew retired to rest, or to protect themselves from the fury of the tempest. His father, it appears, possessed a kindred fan- cy, and was to the boy a valuable preceptor. He often accompanied the 198* MEMOIR OF JOHN JAMES ATTDUBON. young" naturalist, procured birds, and pointed out the beauty and soft- ness of their plumise, the mmifcstations of their pleasure or sense of danofer, and their always perfect forms as well as splendid attire. And then their habits, their haunts, their change of livery, and everything connected with their history, were appropriately made tiiemes for fixing the student's raind upon the Great Creator. Indeed our orni- thologist, on* proper occasions, never fails to express happily a be- coming religious feeling. Audubon continues to say, that a vivid pleasure shone upon the days of his early youth, attended with a calmness of feeling, that seldom failed to rivet his attention for hours, whilst he gazed upon the pearly and shining eggs, as they lay imbedded in the softest down, or among dried leaves and twigs, or were exposed upon the burning sand or weather-beaten rocks of the Atlantic shores. He looked upon them as flowers yet in the bud. He watched their opening, to see how Nature had provided each ditferent species with eyes, either open at birth, or closed ; to trace the slew progress of the young toward per- fection, or admire the celerity with which some them, while yet un- fledged, removed themselves from danger to security. In all this minute detail, and love to dwell upon the particulars of the history of the feathered creation, we see the enthusiast and the origin of great contributions to science ; for there could be nothing more natural than that his passion should increase with his age. For a number of years, however, our young ornithologist was far from being gratified with his acquisitions; nor is it probable that such an ardent enthusiast and expanding capacity for contemplating na- ture, will ever be satisfied, since the wider and higher the domain of nature is traversed, its beauties and wonders, according to a rapid ratio, increase. We like him, when speaking of these early years, and confessing, that the moment a bird was killed for the sake of forward- ing his researches, however beautiful it had been in life, the pleasure arising from the possession of it became blunted, for he felt that its vesture was sullied, and that it no longer was fresh from the hands of its Maker. He wished to obtain all the productions of Nature, but he wished life with them. To the present day, we find him speaking of the necessity of resorting to deadly means to secure the objects of his study, as costing him pain ; and this tender feeling is even more apparent from the affecting manner in which he describes the speci- men than from any direct attestation. For example, in one of his late Tolumes,when describing the means he adopted to take the life of a noble Golden Eagle, viz. with the fumes of charcoal, to avoid injuring his plumage, and to spare it unnecessary pain, he adds, that he entered the little apartment in which the experiment had been made, and found the eagle, after having been exposed to its effects for hours, "with his bright, unflinching eye turned towards him as lively and vigorous as ever ;" evidently by the manner of desc^ription showing how it went to his heart to have been obliged thus to treat his precious victim. But the very circumstance of his pleasure being blunted when con- templating a dead creature, and its plumage appearing thereafter sullied and abused, was the occasion of his liecoming, as a delineator of birds, the most successful and finished that ever existed. Cuvier said, that it was not only as a philosopher, but as an artist, that Audu- MEMOIR OF JOHN JAMES AUDUBON. 199* bon was distinguished. In fact, as a draughtsman of the feathered tribes he never had an equal ; for his works in this department breathe all the freshness, character, and vigour of Nature. His own account of his first attempts and his progress in this way is interesting. Desirous to possess every one of the featliered creation, together with her other productions, but desiring life with them, he turned U> his father and made known to him this anxiety. His father brought forward a book of illustrations ; and although what the young natural- ist saw was not what he longed for, it infused into him a new life and hope ; it suggested and created the ambition to copy Nature. To Nature accordingly he went, and he strove to imitate her, as in the days of his childhood he had at first tried to raise himself from the ground and stand erect, before he possessed the strength necessary for the success of such an undertaking. Nothing but disappointments attended the efforts of his pencil for many years. His productions were even worse than those which he regarded as imperfect in the book given him by his father. He gave birth, to use his own words, to a familyof cripples. Su maimed were mostof the figures, that theyre- sembled the mangled bodies on a field of battle, compared with the in- tegrity of living men. But still, such was the ardour and firmness of his ingenuous spirit, that though irritated by disappointments and the difficulties attending his efforts, he never for a moment relinquished the desire of obtaining perfect representations of nature. The worse his drav^'ings were, the more beautiful did the originals appear to hira, and the more passionate his ambition to accomplish his object. His time was entirely occupied in this way; hundreds of rude sketches were annually produced by him, and for a long time, they made bon- fires on the anniversaries of his birth-day. Audubon's conduct throughout his noviciate, so to express his early progress as an ornithologist, and an artist, is worthy of univer- sal imitation. He never desponded amid difficulties, but received new impulses from every obstacle with which he was beset: and if any reflecting and enlightened person at that period watched narrow- ly his proceedings and feelings, it is imjwssible that they should not have predicted most favourably of his future career. He possessed all the genius and all the qualifications for a first-rate explorer of the treasures and beauties of creation, and for expatiating upon these, to he delight and improvement of mankind. We cannot suppose that .lis father was not such such a considerate spectator, but webhallsoon see that there were not many of his friends that possessed an encou- raging taste or judgment on the subject. P.itiently, and with great industry, did the young ornithologist ap- ply himself to his pencil. Many plans were successfully adopted to forward his efforts ; many masters guided his hand. At the age of seventeen, he retirrned from France, whither he had gone to receive the rudiments of his education, and by this time his drawings had assumed a form which, we may presume, though modestly alluded to by himseif, approached near to perfection, when we learn that D.ivid, the most celebrated historical painter of his day in France, had guided his hand. The skill vvhich the youth had acquired in drawing the " eyes and noses belonging to giants, and heads of horses represented in ancient sculpture," as he describes the models which David gave 200* MEMOIR OF JOHN JAMES AUDUBON. hirn to copy, was, on his return to the woods of the New World, trans- ferred to his favourite pursuit. He accordiu.^ly commenced a col- lection of drawings, which he afterwar.ls published — viz. " Illustra- tions of The Birds of America." It would appear, although we have not any particular information on the subject, that Audubon's family were in the enjoyment of a competency such as to enable him to pursue his studies much more exclusively than falls to the lot of many aspiring youths. His father, he tells us, gave him what the Americans call a beautiful " plantation" in Pennsylvania, which was refreshed during the summer heais by the waters of the Schuylkil River, and very favourably situated for the encouragement of his pursuits. There he set himself to work with as little concern about the future as if the world had been made for him. His rambles invariably commenced at day-break; and to return wet with dew, and bearing a feathered prize, was, and ever will be, the highest enjoyment of his life. He was not, however, incapable of cherishing the ordinary sentiments of humanity, and accordingly lie took to himself a partner for life. But it is not matter of wonder that he should have had worldly difficulties to combat, whatever may have been his patrimony. For a period of twenty years, a succession of vicissitudes attended his career. He tried various branches of com- merce, but they all proved unprofitable, doubtless because his whole mind was devoted to rambling in search of subjects connected with natural history. He had also to struggle against the will of all who at that period called themselves his friends, excepting his wife and children. At length he became so irritated by taunts and remon- strances, that he broke through all bonds, and gave himself entirely up to his loved pursuits. He undertook long and tedious journeys, ransacked the woods, the lakes, the prairies, and the shores of the ocean. Years were spent away from his family. Yet, he declares, he had all this while no other object in view than simply to enjoy the sight of Nature ; to become in any degree useful to mankind had never occurred to him, indeed, until he accidentally formed an ac- quaintance with Lucian Bonaparte, another eminent ornithologist, at Philadelphia, to which place Audubon had proceeded, with the design of advancing farther along the coast. Up to this period Audubon appears to have had no instructor, and indeed no naturalist as a friend or adviser on the subject of ornitholo- gy. Lucian Bonaparte, however, it must be presumed, did not with- hold his best advice and directions. He also introduced the enthusiast to the Natural History Society of Philadelphia. But the patronage he most needed, he soon found was to be sought elsewhere. He therefore visited New York, where he was received with a kindness well calcu- lated to elevate his depressed spirits. He afterwards ascended the Hudson, glided over many a broad lake, and sought the wildest soli- tudes of the pathless forests. In these forests, he first contemplated a visit to Europe again, and to fancy his drawings imder the multiplying efforts of the graver. His days and nights were filled with happy dreams and pleasing visions. He read over the catalogue of his drawings, and began to suppose it possible that an unaid e d and unconnected individual like him- self might be able to accompli^ such a grand scheme. Chance alone MEMOIR OF JOHN JAMES AUDUBON, 20P had divided the productions of his pencil into three different classes, depending upon the magnitude of the objects which they represented. He arranged these as well as he could into parcels of five, each of which now forms a Number of his Illustrations. He coniinued to improve the whole as much as was in his power, daily retiring farther from the haunts of man, determined to leave nothing undone, which his labour, time, and purse could reach. Eighteen months elapsed, while he was thus ardently and arduously engaged. He then returned to his family, at the time living in Louisiana, and after having explored every portion of the vast woods around, sailed for the Old World. But before following him to England, let us observe, what he him- self has told about his mode executing the original drawings from which the Illustrations have been taken. " Merely to say," he thus proceeds, " that each object of my Illus- trations is of the size of Nature, were too vague, for, to many it might only convey the idea that they are so, more or less, according as the eye of the delineator may have been more or less correct in measure- ment, simply obtained through that medium ;*'and of avoiding error in this respect, I am particularly desirous. Not only is every object, as a whole, of the natural size, hut also every portion of each object. The compass aided me in its delineation, regulated, and corrected each part, even to the very foreshortening, which now and then may be seen in the figures. The bill, the feet, the legs, the claws, the very feathers, as they project one beyond another, have been accurately measured. The birds, almost all of them, were killed by myself, after I had ex- amined their motions and habits, as much as the case admitted, and were regularly drawn on or near the spot where I procured them. The positions may, perhaps, in some instances, appear oiUre ; but such supposed exaggerations can afford subject of criticism only to persons unacquainted with the feathered tribes ; for believe me, nothing can be more transient or varied than the attitudes or positions of birds. The Heron, when warming himself in the sun, will some- times drop its wings several inches, as if they were dislocated. The Swan may often be seen floating, with one foot extended from the body; and some Pigeons, you well know, turn quite over when play- ing in the air. The flowers, plants, or portions of trees which are attached to the principal objects, have been chosen from amongst those in the vicinity of which the birds were found, and are not, as some persons thought, the trees or plants upon which they always feed or perch." It is this extreme fidelity in the minutest points, and asso- ciations, together with his exquisite colouring, that renders Audubon's delineations of the feathered tribes unsurpassed and unmatched. The admirer of the most fascinating works of man can never con- ceive, without being particularly told (and this is impossible), how much anxiety or whatdisheartening occurrences have been experienced in the course of the labour, by him who produced them. Audubon mentions one accident, which we must recount to the reader, as an example of the sort of obstacles which such enthusiasts encounter ; and surely nothing but a passion, which to tamer minds is unintelli- gible, could meet and overcome similar annoyances and drawbacks. Our naturalist had left a particular place situated on the banks of the Ohio, to proceed to Philadelphia on business. He looked to his draw- 202* ilEMOIR OF JOHN JAMES AUDUBON. ings before departing, placed them in a wooden box, and gave them in charge to a relative, with injunctions to see that no injury should happen to them. He was absent for several months; but when he returned, it was not long, as may be presumed, ere he looked after his treasure. The box was produced and opened : and " reader," he says, " feel for me." A pair of Norway rats had taken possession of the whole, and had reared a family amongst the gnawed bits of paper, which, but a few months before, represented nearly a thousand in- habitants of the air! The catastrophe nearly overcame him; but after several sleepless nights and miserable days, his spirits rallied. He took up his gun, his note-book, his pencils again ; he went once more forth into the woods as gaily as if nothing had happened ; nay, he declares how he felt pleased to think, that he might now make much better drawings than before ; and ere a period not exceeding three years had elapsed, he had his portfolio filled again. Having in vain tried to publish his Illustrations in America, Au- dubon sailed for England. He arrived at Liverpool, and from the letters which he brui%ht over with him soon procured a host of friends there, and afterwards in Manchester and Edinburgh. In the latter city several Philosophical Societies, and others belonging to the fine arts, spontaneously and gratuitously enrolled him as a member. He also commenced in Edinburgh, the publication of his Illustrations, and afterwards carried it on in Loudon. To Britain, he acknowledges that he owes nearly all his success. It was that country that first fully appreciated and encouraged his efforts. She furnished the artists through whom his productions were jjresented to the world; she granted him the highest patronage and honour ; and to Britain he ever will bear the deepest gratitude. France too, was not insensible to his merits. In 1828, when he visited that country. Baron Cuvier read a iiighly laudatory report of the "Birds of America," before the Institute, and there he also received a number of subscribers to his magnificent work. On returning to his native land, he found a kind and encouraging reception. There, where he is still pursuing his wonted studies, or at intervals giving to the world his Illustrations, and his Biography of the illustrated birds, he has acknowledged that a support now equal to what he received in Europe is afforded him. It is believed that he had earned a moderate competency some years ago. His fame as an enthusiastic, jjenetrating, and scientific observer is established beyond all cavil, 'i'hat fame is on the in- crease ; wherever he goes the sympathy and good wishes of many go with him ; the consciousness of which cannot but be a sweet reward to a genius and a cheerful disposition, such as Audubon is known to possess in an eminent degiee. Audubon is now a man beyond the meridian of human life; but he scruples not to penetrate still the trackless and immeasurable woods of America, encountering dangers and pHvations which few are ca- pable of conceiving, who have not witnessed the awful grandeur of an American wilderness, where the deep silence is only disturbed, by day, by the scream of the Vulture, the Eagle, or the Raven, and by night, the dreary hootings of the great-eared Owl and his cungeners, while at every step he is liable to tread on the poisonous Rattlesnake, or other noxious reptiles. The mountains and rocks, the rivers, lakes* MEMOIR OF JOHN JAMES AUDUBON. 203* and ocean, are also the varying scenes of his researches and discovered treasures. It is not long since we heard of him from the icy regions of Labrador, and again from the burning sands of Florida — countries sufficiently distant from each other in reality, but standing side by side in the history of this unwearied traveller, who seems to have sur- rendered his soul to one pursuit. The wild sort of delight which the sight of Nature in her happiest aspects awakens in his bosom, is wor- thy of being marked by the reader of his works. In one of his late volumes, he speaks of the cheering trills of the winter Wren, of the clear notes of the Kobin, and the rolling melody of the Rose-breast, filling him with such emotions that he burned with the thirst of knowledge, and longed to learn from their own lips what every one could teach of the Avondrous works of Heaven. When he saw the water birds, towering on firm and graceful wing, away to regions where none have followed, he' longed to " take the wings of the morn- ing" and pursue them to the lands where the presence of man has never disturbed their quiet abodes. It is curious to observe what an ornithological aspect his favourite taste gives to most of his descrip- tions. In the second volume of his Biography of Birds, there are such passages as the following: — " The prudent Raven spread her pinions, launched from the crag, and flew away before us; the golden Eagle, soaring aloft, moved majestically in wide circles; the Guillemots set on their eggs on the shelvy precipices, or plunging in the water, dived and rose again at a great distance ; the broad-breasted Eider- duck covered her eggs among the grassy tufts." " Far away stood the bold shores of Nova Scotia, gradually fading in the distance, of which the grey tints beautifully relieved the wing-like sails of many a fishing bark." At one place he found the nests ot Gulls on almost every tree of a wood that covered several acres; and he exclaims, " What a treat, reader, was it, to find birds of this kind, lodged in fir-trees and sitting comfortably on their eggs !" He gives an account of the breeding habits of the tree and the fox-coloured Sparrows, two beau- tiful way-farers so well known in the United States of America, but which remain only a short season there, indulging in little more of song than a plaintive farewell ; yet in the northern regions they are over- flowing with melody. Of the latter species, Audubon says — " Would that I could convey to your mind the effect which it produced on my feelings, when wandering on the desolate shores of Labrador ! That, I could intelligibly tell you, of the cheerful notes of its unaffected warble, as it sat perched on the branch of some stunted fir ! There for hours together, was continued the delightful serenade, which kept me lingering near the spot. The brilliancy and clearness of each note, as it flowed through the air, were so enchanting, the expression and emphasis of the song so powerful, that I never tired of listening." Audubon has of late years introduced to the notice of his readers, several birds which were never known before to visit the United States. He has also added much to what was known of certain spe- cies previously described. The architecture of the feathered tribes has much engaged his attention ; and, as in every other branch of his pursuit, he has here given many new as well as highly satisfactory and interesting particulars. Indeed, from what has been stated above re- garding his ardour, and from the quotations inserted, there cannot 204* MEMOIR OF JOHN JAMES AUDUBON. remain a doubt in any mind, of his eminence in ornithological science, delineation, and description. Before concluding this Biographical Sketch, it is proper to refer to one sort of charge that has by some been very industriously made, to the disadvantage of Mr. Audubon. His veracity has been assailed. It has been presumed by those who had no means of forming a de- cided opinion for themselves, that lie has frequently given way to a practice, which travellers, and American wonder-tellers, as much as any, are supposed to indulge in. On some points there has been something like a paper war, where our ornithologist's name had to stand in the breach between the hostile parties. It is believed, indeed, that he himself does not evince extreme solicitude about this attack — a system of conduct which not only intimates that he is a man of su- perior prudence, but which is strongly presumptive of his honour and credibility. It is unphilosophical,itis unmanly, to found such serious allegations as now alluded to, upon ignorance, or in the absence of evidence on the subject of dispute. At the same time, any assailants are very likely to be covered with shame, in the case of random accusations. For example, it seems that Audubon had long suspected that birds, which, like the Black Vulture, feed on carrion, were guided to their ban- quet by the sense of sight and not of smell; in fact, that the latter sense was wanting, or defective ; a defect, considering the diet of such creatures, which would be rather a blessing than a privation. It had been before remarked that birds in India, of the kinds concerned, move directly to their prey, though the wind bears the fragrance in an opposite direction. The experiments instituted by our naturalist con- firmed him in his former supposition, which he disclosed in the Edin- burgh Philosophical Journal. Hence a warfare between the eyes and the nose took its rise — the advocates of the latter charging Audu- bon with a want of veracity, merely because the conclusions which he drew from what he considered to be facts,were contrary to their con- clusions. The question, however, was at length completely set at rest by some of his friends, who instituted a series of observations and ex- periments which have fully established that the vultures do not de- pend upon the sense of smell in searching for their food ; and in op- position to those who considered these birds epicures, it has been shewn, that it was a matter of indifference to them whether their meal was fresh, or in the early or latter stages of decay. It is pleasant to know that it has not been thought beneath the dignity of scientific inquiry, to have for its object the removal of a calumny against a good man's reputation ; and while we wish that he may long enjoy life and health, to the extendsion of the boundaries of science, we confidently hope and believe that his name will descend to posterity, as that of one of the most illustrious naturalists of the present day, without a stain upon it. SECOND GREAT DIVISION THE ANIMAL KINGDOM. OF THE OVIPAROUS VERTEBRATA IN GENERAL. Although the three classes of the Oviparous Vertebrata differ greatly from each other in their quantum of respiration, and in all that relates to it, that is to say, the power of motion and the energy of the senses, they present several common characters when opposed to the Mammalia, or Viviparous Vertebrata. The hemispheres of their brain are very slender, and are not united by a corpus callosum ; the crura of the cerebellum do not form that protube- rance called the pons Varolii; the tubercles, called nates — at least in two of these classes — become greatly developed, contain a ventricle, and are not covered by the hemispheres, but are visible below, or on the sides of the cere- brum; their nostrils are less complex; the ear has not so many small bones, and in several these bones are totally wanting ; the cochlea, when it exists, which is only the case in birds, is much more simple, &c. Their lower jaw, always composed of numerous species, is attached by a concave facet to a salient process, which belongs to the temporal bone, but separated from its petrous portion ; the bones of their cranium are more subdivided, although they occupy the same relative places, and fulfil similar functions ; thus the OS frontis is composed of five or six pieces, &c. The orbits are merely separated by an osseous lamina of the sphenoidal bone, or by a membrane. When these animals have anterior extremities, besides the clavicle, which is frequently united to its fellow on the opposite side, and is then called fourchette, the scapula also rests upon the sternum, by a very broad and long coracoid apophysis. The larynx is more simple, and has no epiglottis ; the lungs are not separated from the abdomen by a per- fect diaphragm, &c. To render all these affinities sensible, however, it would be necessary to enter into anatomical details, which would be quite inconvenient in this first part of our work. It will suffice, that we have here pointed out the mutual analogy of the Ovipera, which, as regards the 198 OVIPARA. plan on which they are constructed, is greater than that of any one of them with the Mammalia. Oviparous generation essentiallyconsists in this circumstance — that the young animal is not attached through the medium of a placenta to the pa- rietes of the uterus, or of the oviduct, but remains separated from it by its most external envelope. Its aliment is prepared before hand, and en- closed in a sac attached to its intestinal canal ; this is what is called the vitellus, or yolk of egg, of which the young animal is a sort of appendage, at first imperceptible, which is nourished and augmented by absorbing the fluid of that yolk (a). Such of the Ovipara as breathe with lungs have, ^^ (a) It is from the inner surface of the membrane of this vitellus, that a nou- rishing fluid is absorbed, this fluid being transmitted by a peculiar duct to the intes- tinal canal. The following facts regarding the eggs of birds have been collected by Dr. Burns of Glasgow, whose researches we have, in several instances, repeated, and found to be correct. As the following account embraces the various species of eggs, it may be convenient for us to remind the reader that the three classes of Oviparous Vertebrata animals consist of— 1. The Birds; 2. The Reptiles; and 3. The Fishes. * In the eggs of fowls, we observe the following circumstances. Upon removing the porous shell, we find the albumen enclosed in a membrane, consisting of two layers, and called sacciform by Laviell6. These are separated from each other at the large end of the shell, so as to form a small sac, called the folliculus aeres. The albmnen is divided into three strata; the first, or cortical, is most liquid; the second or middle, is more abundant, and thicker than the first, but less so than the third or central. The middle and central strata are enclosed in a delicate membrane, called leucilyme by Levielle, which separates them from the cortical. Within the albumen we have the vitellus or yolk, which is enclosed in a vascular membrane, called chlo- rilyme, or membrana vitelli, which again is enveloped by a membrane common to it and the intestines of the chick, called entro-chlorilyme. To each end of the vitellus, we have connected a portion of the central albumen, called chalaza ; and in each of these a membranous substance is discovered, attached to the membrane of the vitellus, and a vascular structure, which can absorb the albumen into the vitellus, to contribute to the nutrition of the chick. Upon the vitellus, we observe the cicatri- cula, or small sac, called by Harvey the eye of the egg, and which was supposed to contain the foetus, the rudiments of which are allowed by Malpighi, Haller, and Spallanzani, to be pre-existent to fecundation. This cicatricula was considered as analogous to the amnion, and supposed to contain a transparent fluid, called by Harvey colliquamentum candidum, or liquor amnii. More modern observations ascertain that the embryo is not formed in the cicatricula, but very near it on the vitellus, and that the amnion enclosing it can at first scarcely be distinguished from the embryo. The cicatricula soon disappears. Harvey's account must therefore be transferred to the amnion. During incubation, the vitellus becomes specifically lighter than the albumen, and rises towards the folliculus aeris. Two arteries and two veins go from the meseraic and hypogastric vessels of the foetus, to the mem- brane of the yolk, and are supposed to absorb the vitellus, which therefore is carried to the vena portse of the chick, and nourishes the foetus. There is also a connexion betwixt the intestines and the vitelline membrane, by means of a ligamentous sub- stance, which was supposed by Haller and Vicq. D'Azyr to be a tube, and called vitello-intestinal canal, for it is said that air has been passed through it. It was supposed to absorb the yolk, by many villi on the inner surface of the vitelline mem- brane; but these are said by Levielle not to be vessels, but soft lamellated plates. At the end of the second day, red blood is observed on the membrana vitelli. A series of dots are formed, which are converted first into grooves, and then into ves- sels, which go to the foetus. This appearance has been called figura venosa, and the marginal vessel, vena terminalis. The vitello intestinal ligament, and these vessels, form an umbilical cord. But besides these, we find, after the fourth day, a vascular membrane at the umbilicus, called membrana umbilicalis, which rapidly increases. OVIPARA. 199 ill addition, in the egg, a highly vascular membrane, which appears to be suhservient to respiration ; it is connected with the bladder, and is analo- and comes presently to cover the inner surface of the memhrane of the shell. It h the chorion, and has numerous vessels ramifjang on it, like the chorion of the sow, and connected in like manner with the foetus. The blood of the umbilical artery is dark coloured, that of the vein bright As incubation advances, the amnion enlarges, and comes in contact every where with the chorion. The albumen is all consumed, being taken into the vitellus, which is in a great measure absorbed; and what re- mains is taken, together with the sac, into the abdomen of the chick, and the parie- tes close over it. On the 21st day, the chick breaks the shell and escapes. By in- creasing or diminishing the temperature within a certain extent, the process may bo somewhat accelerated or retarded. The eggs of large birds require a longer time to be hatched; those of the ostrich, for example, take six weeks. ' Hence it appears, that the vitellus and albumen contribute to the increment of the foetus, whilst the exterior membranes act as lungs, the air being transmitted tlii-ough the pores of the shell. ' Sir Everard Home has lately investigated more minutely, by means of the microscope, the structure of the egg. The yolk is enclosed in two layers of mem- brane, the outermost very thin and delicate; the internal one, on the contrary, thick and spongy, with a small aperture, or deficiency, at one spot. Here the gelatinous molecule, from which the embryo is to be formed, is found placed on the surface of the yolk. It is not quite so large as the opening in the membrane, and, therefore, seems to be surrounded by a margin, or an areola. In its passage along the oviduct, the yolk comes to be surrounded by the albumen, which presently is covered with a very fine membrane. During this descent are also formed the chalazes, which ter- minate in that double membrane which is added when the egg has reached the lower end of the oviduct, and which is distinct from, and exterior to the fine membrane already noticed. In four hours after the commencement of incubation, the outer edge of the areola had become enlarged, and that part next the molecule darker. One end of the molecule appeared like a white line, which is the rudiment of the embryo. In eight hours the white line had extended, and rudiments of the brain and spinal marrow could be discerned, surrounded by a membrane which afterwards becomes the amnion. The areola had extended, and the surface beyond the line which had formed its boimdary had acquired the consistence of a membrane, and was circumscribed by a distinct line. This he calls the outer areola. In thirty-six hours, a vesicle had begun to protrude under the inner areola, apparently at the ter- mination of the spinal marrow. In sixty hours, auricles and ventricles were seen, the former filled with red blood; a trunk from the left ventricle gives off two large vessels which send branches over the whole areolar membrane. The vesicle some- what enlarged. In three days, the vesicle, still more enlarged, had forced its way through the external covering of the yolk, whereby a part of the albumen was ad- mitted to mix with the yolk. In four days, the vesicle was still larger, and its vessels contained red blood. On the fifth, it was of great size, very vascular, and its cavity contained a fluid. On the sixth, it had expanded, like a double nightcap, over the yolk, and its coverings were beginning to enclose the embryo. This vesicle. Sir Everard, in another place, compares to the bag which, in the human subject, and in quadrupeds, is to become the urinary bladder. This increases with such rapidity that it bursts the amnion, and the arteries lying on its two sides are carried directly to the chorion, and there the placenta is formed in the empty space between the two edges of the chorion. Phil. Trans. 1823, Part II. p. 339. Vide also a paper by Dutrochet on the envelopes of the foetus, in the Bull, de la Soc. de Med. 1819, No. 8. And :\Iem. de la Societe d'Emulation. Tom. VIII. pp. 3, 760. ' The eggs of fishes have a general resemblance to those of fowls, and consist of a vitellus and albumen, with their membranes; but in place of being furnished with a shell they have a tough, or sometimes a horny covering; and some, as those of the shark, torpedo, &c. are quadrangular in shape. The yolk is connected to the intes- tines of the foetus, and its membrane is very vascular. As in fowls, so in fishes, it is ultimately enclosed within the abdomen of the young. In the skate, mmierous blood vessels are fonned in the albumen, which supply the place of gills, and are supposed by Dr. Monro, to be afterwards covered and converted into gills. The two functions of a placenta, then, are still more distinctly fulfilled here than even in 200 OVIPARA. gous to the allantoid of the M'ammalia. It is neither found in fishes nor in the batrachians, which latter, when young, respire, like fishes, by branchiae. fowls, for the apparatus for nutrition and respiration has different or distinct termi- nations ; whereas in fowls and quadrupeds, all the vessels enter at one place. A similar fact is observed in the ova of frogs, for the umbilical cord in the tadpole goes to the head. ' The egg of the serpent is nearly the same with that of the fish, and is enclosed in a flexible membrane. The foetus is coiled up spirally within it, and the chorion is vascular, as in the egg of the fowl. ' The adder is a viviparous animal; its uterus is membranous, and divided, I find, into eight or nine cells, each of which, in September, contains an ovum as large as a chesnut. This consists of an exterior membrane, which encloses a foetus about six inches long, and coiled up. About an inch from the tail, the umbilical cord passes out, which consists of vessels that go to ramify on the exterior membrane, which resembles the chorion of the sow. There is also a connexion with a vitellus, which is as large as a hazel nut. ' The coluber natrix is said, by Valmont-Bomare, to have a placenta and cord within the egg, but this is contrary to the general structure of eggs ; most likely the chorion has been taken for the placenta. The eggs of reptiles are often deposited in packets, the eggs being glued together. ' The egg of the turtle is as large as a hen's, and is enclosed in a covering like parchment. It is deposited in the sand, and is hatched in about twenty-four days. The egg of the alligator is similar in structure to that of the turtle: it is rather larger than a goose's egg, and covered with a thin skin, so transparent, however, that the foetus may be seen through it. ' Those animals which are called oviparous, hatch their eggs out of the body, either by sitting on them, as we see in fowls, or by exposing them to the heat of the sun, as the turtle, crocodile, and many serpents. Oviparous fishes, which compre- hend all those called osseous, expel their ova into the water, where they are fecun- dated by the male, but without copulation. Many fishes leave the sea, and come up file rivers to spawn. Others remain in the ocean; and the eggs, specifically lighter than the water float on the surface. Many fishes attach them to marine plants, and in some cases the ova are fixed to the body of the parent. The ova are covered with a kind of mucus, which has been supposed to defend them from the water. ' The ova of frogs, &c. are likewise fecundated and hatched out of the body. They are enveloped in a glairy matter, which, perhaps, contributes to their increase; for during incubation, the egg both enlarges and changes its shape. ' Those animals which hatch their eggs within the body, are called ovo-viviparous, such as cartilaginous fishes, as the shark, skate, torpedo, &c. The scorpion and venomous serpents also belong to this class. Ovo-viviparous animals expel the young fully formed, and therefore have been sometimes considered as having uteri like quadrupeds, and a cord attached directly to it. Spallanzani at first supposed that the foetus of the torpedo was attached directly to the uterus, but afterwards found that it was contained in a distinct ovum. Experiences, p. 294. See also Cuvier Legons d'Anat. Comparee, Tom. V. p. 132. The shark is said to have an uterus like the bitch, and Belon says he saw a female delivered of eleven young at- tached by a cord. Its mode of gestation most likely is similar to the torpedo. This class expel their young often very quickly. A female syngnatus hyppocampus was observed to expel at least a hundred in a very short time. ' Analogous to ovo-viviparous animals, are those which receive the ova into cells on the surface of the body, where they are hatched. This is well seen in the pipa, a species of toad. Even the tadpoles are said to be metamorphosed in these cells. The oppossum tribe has a modification of this gestation; for in them the foetus, when very small, is expelled into a bag situated on the belly, and immediately at- taches itself to a nipple. The utero-gestation of the oppossum of North America lasts only from twenty to twenty-six days, and the embryo, when expelled, does not exceed a grain. It remains in the sac about fifty days, and acquires the size of a mouse. In other animals, as for instance the bat, the young, after birth, attach themselves to the nipple, partly for the convenience of being transported or carried about. OVIPAKA. 201 Many of tlie cold-blooded Ovipara do not bring forth their young until they are developed and extricated from their shell, or other membranes, which separated them from the mother. These are called /aZse Ovipara. ' 111 plants we find likewise a placenta or structure, intended for the nourishment and respiration of the foetus. To take the kidney bean for an example, we find within the membranous covering two parenchymatous lobes, or cotyledons; and at the margin betwixt these, there is the corculum or cicatricula. DLiring incubation, we find that this sends up a small shoot called the plumula, and down a radical into the earth. But to support the plant until the root and leaves are capable of main- taining it, we find the cotyledons rise up out of the earth, on each side of the plu- mula, forming what are called seed leaves. These both serve for the respiratory organs, and also supply pabulum, which is absorbed by proper vessels, and in con- sequence thereof they presently are destroyed. When there are more lobes than two in the seed, there are a corresponding number of seed leaves. In many cases these cotyledons do not rise out of the ground, but the plumula alone appears. This is the case with the garden pea, but the cotyledons still perform the functions below the ground, and exist till the foliage of the plant, or adult organs, be formed. The greatest part, then, of a vegetable seed or ovum, consists, like the eggs of fowls, of an apparatus intended for the nutriment and respiration of the foetus, whilst the embryo itself is very small. The cotyledon consists, in many cases, of a fari- naceous substance. In other seeds it is oily and farinaceous, and in some is almost all oily. ' Vegetable ova sometimes are contained in a dry pericarpium, and are shed into the earth when it bursts. But others have an apparatus provided, not only for their present growth, but also for accelerating their incubation in the earth. In stone fruit and nuts, we find that vessels pierce the shell at the bottom, and pass on toward the top, and reach the kernel or lobes, which are contained within the shell, envelop- ed in a soft membrane. They are inserted very near the embryo. Now, for the farther support of these parts, we find that stone fruits are covered with a quantity of nutritious matter. The almond, for example, has its ligneous nut covered with a substance about an inch thick, enclosed in a proper membrane. The rhamnus lotus has the stone surrounded with farinaceous matter, which tastes like gingerbread. Other seeds are contained in a parenchymatous or succulent substance, as the apple or pear; or in a firm white substance, like cream or man-ow, or in a mucilaginous matter as the gooseberiy, or in an organized pulp as the orange and garcinia man- gostona. Some are deposited in a luscious fluid at first, which ultimately becomes farinaceous, as the plantain.' P,02 CLASS II. BIRDS (AVES). Birds are Oviparous Vertebrata, with double systems of circulation and respiration, organized for flight. Their lungs, undivided and attached to the ribs, are enveloped by a membrane pierced with large holes, which allow the air to pass into several cavities of the chest, lower part of the abdomen, arm-pits, and even into the interior of the bones, so that not only is the surface of the pulmonary vessels bathed in the external fluid, but that also of an infinitude of ves- sels in other parts of the body. Thus, in certain respects, Birds respire by the branches of the aorta, as well as by those of their pulmonary artery, and the energy of their irritability is in proportion to their quan- tum of respiration.* The whole body is so constructed as to profit by this energy. Their anterior extremities, destined to sustain them in flight, could serve them neither for standing, nor for prehension ; they are therefore bipeds, and pick up objects from the earth with their mouth; their body, consequently, must necessarily hi inclined before their feet, the thighs directed forwards, and the toes elongated, to form a sufficient base for it. The pelvis is very much extended in length, in order to furnish points of attachment to those muscles which support the trunk upon the thighs. There is even a series of muscles reaching from the pelvis to the toes, passing over the knee and heel, in such a way as that the simple weight of the bird flexes the toes ; it is thus that they are enabled to sleep in security, while perched on one foot. The ischia, and particularly the ossa pubis are lengthened out behind, and the interval between them is widen- ed, in order to allow the necessary space for the development of the eggs. The neck and the bill are elongated to reach the ground, but the former has the requisite flexibility for bending backwards when at rest, — con- sequently, it has many vertebrae. The trunk, on the contrary, Avhich serves as a point d'appui to the wings, must need have but little mobility ; the sternum, particularly, to which are attached the muscles for depressing the wings in flight, is of great extent, and has its surface still more * Two common Swallows consume as much pure air as a Guinea-Pig. Lavoi- sier, Memsires de Chiinie, I. 119. BIRDS. 203 enlarged by a salient process in its middle. It is originally composed of live pieces : a middle one, of which this salient lamina makes a part ; two triangular, anterior, lateral ones, for the articulations of the ribs, and two posterior, which are lateral and bifurcated, to increase its surface. The greater or less degree of the ossification of the notches of these last, and the interval they leave between them and the principal bone, determine more or less the flight in birds. The diurnal Birds of prey, the Swallows and the Humming-birds, lose, as they grow old, all traces of these un- ossified spaces. The /o?!giia,Gm.). — Le Tyran a ventre jaune {Lan. suffuraceus, Gm.) Enl. 29G, the same as the Garlti or Geai a ventre jaune, de Cayenne {Cormsftavus, Gm.) Enl. 249. — The Muse, velaia, Spix, 22. — Muse, polyglotta, Id., 24. — Muse, similis, Id., 25, of which his Muse, riifna, lb. 131, is the young. — The Muse, cinerea, Spix, 20, 2. — Le Tyran a ventre blanc. {Lan, tyrannus, Gm.) Enl. 537 and 67G, Vieill. Galer. 133. — Muse, cinerascens, Spix, 22. — Le Tyran a queue rousse (Muse, audax, Gm.), Enl. 453, 2; Wils. Am. II. xiii. 1. — Le Petit tyran {Musc.fero.r, Gm.), Enl. 571, 1, or Muse, furcata, Spix, 19. The Muse, veta/a, Spix, 18. — Le Tyran a queue fourehue de Cayenne (Muse, tyrannus, Gm.),Enl. i7l,2.—Le tyran. a q.f. du Mexiqiie {Muse, forficata, Gm.), Enl. 677. The Fork-Tailed Tyrant of Brazil (Muse, longicauda, Spix, 17), Zool. Journ. II. pi. iv. — Le Tyran a huppe verte {Muse, crinila, Gm.), Enl. 569; Wils. Am. II. xiii. 2? (a) § We should first of all distinguish the Rui des Gohe mouehes, Bufif. ( Todus regius, Gm.) Enl. 289. Then v,e have the crested species, and which have long feathers in the tail, such as the MourheroUe de paradis (Muse, paradisi and Todus paradisiacus, Gm.), Enl. 234. N.B. All these figures represent females; the tail of the males is much longer. — Le Petit MoucheroUc Paradis or Schet of Madagascar (Muse, mutata). Two birds which Buflbn describes elsewhere under the name of Vardiole or Pie de Paradis. — Then follow those species without crests, whose tail feathers are somewhat elongated; the Moucher, Yetapa {Muse, psalura, T.), Col. 286 and 296, or Muse, risora, Vieill. 131; Le Moucher a queue de coq; Galliia of Azz.; Muse, alector, P. Max.; Col. 155, Vieill. U2.—Plathyrk. filieauda, Spix, 14. Some species are distinguished by a membranous circle round the eye : Muse, me- t®' («) Add also Muse. vcrtieaUs, Am. Orn. Bonap. I. pi. ii. f. 2.— Eng. Ed. PASSERIN.E. 237 Some species, allied to the Muscipetae (Platyriiynciius), are dis- tinguished by a still broader and more depressed bill *. Others, whose bill is also broad and depressed, are remarkable for their long legs and short tail. Two or three only are known, all from America; they feed on ants, which caused them to be united to the little tribe of Thrushes called Ant-catchers-f-. MUSCICAPA, Cuv. The Fly-catchers, properly so called, have shorter mustachios and a narrower bill than the Muscipetce; it is still, however, depressed with an acute ridge above, straight edges, and a sliglitly hooked point. Two species of this subgenus are found in France during the summer, and lead a melancholy life on high trees. The most com- mon is, M. grisola, Gm. Enl. 5G5, 1. (The Grey Fly-catcher). Grey above, whitish underneath, with a few greyisla spots on the breast. In some countries it is kept in houses to destroy flies. The other, M. albicollis, Tem. ; Gobe-mouche a collier, Enl. 563, 2 and 3; and better. Hist, des Ois. tom. IV. in 4to. pi. 25, f. 2, the male in wedding plumage ; Naum. 65, in its different states. (The Col- lared Fly -catcher). Very remarkable for the changes of the male's plumage. Similar in winter to the female ; that is, grey, with a white band on the wing. In the pairing season it becomes agree- ably variegated with pure black and white ; calotte, back, wings, and tail, black ; the forehead, collar, and all the upper part of the body, Jutioptera, Gm. ; Eiil. 567, 3. — M. telescophthalma, Less, and Gam., Voy. de Duperr., Zool.,p]. xviii. Others are remarkable for a long, flat, and obtuse bill, similar to that of the Todies; but with a notch, which is wanting in the true Todies, whose feet also are differently forijied. T. cinereiis, Desmar. or T. melnnncephahts, Spix, ix. 2. The young is T. cinereus, Spix, x. 1, and T. macuhttus, Desm. — T. griseus, Desm. Finally, a multitude of other species, as the mantele, Vaill. 151, or Mi/sc. borhonica, Enl. 573, \.—M. cristata, Enl. 573, 2, and Tchitrec, Vaill. Afr. III. 142, l.—Musc. cisruha, Enl. 666, 1. — Todus leucocephalus. Pall., Sp., VI. pi. iii. f. 2, or Muse, domini- cana, Spix, 29, 2. M. albiventer, Id. 30, is its female. — T. sylvia, Desm. — Platyrldn- cliiis chrysoceps, Spix, XI. 2. — Plat, riificauda, lb. 1. — Plat, hirwidinaceus, Spix, 13, 1. — Plat, cinereus, lb. 2. — Muse, barbata, Enl. 830, 1, of which M. xanthopygus,Sp\x, IX. 1, appears to be the female. — Muse, coronata, Enl. 675, 1. — The molenar, Vaill. 160, 1, 2, or M. pistrinaria, Vieill. — The G. m. a lu7iettes, lb. 152, 1. — M. flammiceps, Tem. Col. 144, 3.—M. mystax, Spix, 31. — M. murantla, Enl. 331, 1.— i>/. querula, Vieill. Am. 39, from which the Plat, cinereus, Spix, XIII. 2, scarcely differs. — M. cucullata, Lath., &c. N.B. The Mils, barbata has become the genus Tyrannula, Swainson; and the M. querula the Myiagra of Vigors and Horsfield. * It is from this division that M. Vieillot has made his genus Platyrhynchos, Gal. 126. Such are Muse, aurantia, Enl. 831, 1. — Todus vmcrorhynchos, Lath. Syn. I. pi. XXX. or Todus rostratus, Lath., Desmar. and particularly Todus platyrhynchos, Pall., Spic, VI. pi. iii. c. We see that many of the Muscipetae have been placed among the Todies, and although Pallas basset us the example of doing so, the notch in the bill, and the separation of the external toe forbid it. Add, Plat, olivaceus, T. Col. XII. 1, or sulfurescens, Spix, XII. — Plat, cancromus, Id. lb. 2. t Here come Turdus auritus, Gm., Enl. 822, and Vieill. Gal. 127, the same as Pipra leucotis, but which is neither a Thrush nor a Pipra, and Pipra namia, Enl. 823, 1. 2. It is upon this distinction that Vieill. has founded his genus Conopophaga, Galer. 127. a large spot on the wing, a smaller one in front, and the external edge of the tail, white. It builds on the trunks of trees*. A species subject to the same changes has lately been discovered; the back of the neck of the male, however, in tlie pairing season, being as black as the back, and wanting the little white spot on the edge of the wing. It is the M. luctuosa, Tera.; Naum. 64; Edw. 30, 1. The female, Enl. 6G8, 1. Which is found farther north than the preceding. A small reddish species has lately been discovered in Germany. M. parva, Bechst. ; Naum. 65, 3. The bill of the Fly-catchers becomes more and more slender, and finally approaches that of several species of Regulus f. Some species, in which the ridge is somewhat higher, and arched to- wards the point, lead to the forms of the Saxicola J. Various genera or subgenera of birds are closely allied to certain links in the series of Fly-catchers, although they greatly exceed them in size, viz. * The antients knew this bird by the names of Sycalis and Ficedula, in its ordi- nary plumage, and by that of Melancorliynchos and Atricapilla, in its beautiful livery; but as the name of Bec-figue (Becca-fico), which corresponds to ficedula, is given in the south, and in Italy, to various species of Faiivet and Anthus, naturalists have ap- plied the united attributes of these birds to a certain state of this Fly -catcher, and formed the imaginary species presented by this same name of Bec-figue in Bulfon, and in those who have followed him. It is very certainlj^ the M. albicoUis, and not the M. lucluosa, that is the Beccu-fico of Aldrovandus, Ornith. II. 758 and 759. f We also refer to the true Fly-catchers, the Gillit {Muse, bicolor), Enl. 675, I. — Le Print, Vaill. 161; Enl. 5G7, 1 and 2 {M. senei;alerisis, Gm.). — M. albicapilla, Vieill. Am. 37.— M armillata, lb. 4, 2.—M. dlops, Tern. 144, \.—M. eximia, lb. 2. — M. ventralis, Id. Col. 275, 2. — M. virescens, lb. 3. — M. obsoleta, lb. 1.— i»f. flabel- lifera, lb., Gmel. Lath. Syn. II. part I. pi. 49.— it/. scrita,\a.\\\. Afr. 154.— il/. ruti- cilla, Gm. Enl. 556: Vieill. Am. 35 and 36; Wils. I. vi. 6. — Platyr. paganus, Spix. — PI, marinus. Id. 2.—Pipra elata. Id. VIII. 2.— (a) X Such are the Oranor, Vaill. IV. 155, and several neighbouring species, similar to the Miisc. ruficUla, so far as regards the distribution of colours, but differing in the bill, such as Muse, miniatu, Tem. or Tardus speciosus. Lath. Col. 156. — M. flam- mea, Forst. Zool. Ind. 25 and Tem. Col. 263, or Parus mahtbaricus. Lath. — M. hya- cinthina. Col. 30. — The Azuroux (31. azurea), Vaill. Afr. 158, 2. — M. 7iigerrima,\\e'\\\. Diet. Spix, 18, 1. — M. galeata, Spix, 17, a different species. — M. stellata, Vieill., Vaill. 157, 2. M. longipes, or the Mh-o-Miro of New Zealand, Less, and Garn. Voy. de Duper. Zool. pi. 19, 1. M. chrysomelas, lb. pi. 18. — M. nivea, Spix, 29, 1. M. ieterophis, Vieill., Diet. — M. mirundinacea, Tem. Col. 119.— The Muse, multicolor, Gm. Lath. Syn. 2, L., is so intermediate between the Fly-catchers and the Mot. phoeni- curus, that we hesitate to assign its position. The species of this type which have the strongest bills appear to constitute the Drimophyles of M. Temminck. N.B. The Mus flabellifera has become the genus Ripidura of Vig. and Horsf. and the M. ruticilla, the Setophaga of Swainson. The M. sternura, T. Col. 167, 3, is the Sternura of Swains.: and the species whose head is enlarged by feathers, such as the M. australis, White, p. 239, his genus, Pachicephala. The neigh- bouring genus, Seisura, is formed from the Tnrdus volitans, Lath. ^^ (a) Here should come the genus Vireo, Vieill. (Muscicapa, L., &'c.) These have a bill like the Muscicapa, but it is shorter, not so much depressed, but rather compressed; bristly at base; upper mandible curved at the tip; tongue bifid at the tip. The colour of all the species is olive, more or less inclining to yellow. — Eng. Ed. passekin/T:. ^39 Gymnocei'Iialus, Geojj'. Or the Bald Tyrants. They have a bill similar to that of the Tyrants, except that its ridge is somewhat more arcuated; a great part of their face is destitute of feathers. One species only is known, which is the size of a rook, and the colour of Spanish snufF. From Cayenne*. Cephalopterus, Geoff. In this subgenus, on the contrary, the base of the bill is furnished with feathers which open at top, and form a large panache resembling a parasol. One species only is known ; it is as large as a jay, and l)lack ; the feathers at the bottom of the breast form a sort of pendent dew- lap. From the banks of the Amazon; Cephalopterus ornatus, Geoff., Ann. du Mus. XIII. pi. xv; Coracina cephaloptera, Vieill. Galer. 114; Temm, Col. 255; Corac ornata, Spix, LIX. Ampelis, Lin. The Crown-Birds have the depressed bill of the Fly-catchers in general, but it is somewhat shorter in proportion, tolerably broad, and slightly arcuated. Those in which it is the most pointed and strong, have still a decidedly insectivorous regimen : they are called Piauhau, from their note — the QuERULA, Vieill. They inhabit America, where they pursue insects, in flocks, in the woods f. The Common Crown-Birds, Whose bill is rather weaker, besides insects, feed on berries and tender fruits. They inhabit the moist grounds of America, most of the males being remarkable, at the pairing season, for the brilliancy of their purple and azure plumage. During the rest of the year both sexes are grey or brown. A. carnifex, L. ; L'Ouette, Enl. 378; Spix, V. The calotte, rump, and belly scarlet ; the rest brownish red ; fourth quill of the wing narrowed, shortened, and tough, or something like horn. A. pompadora, L. ; Le Pompadour, Enl. 279. A fine light purple ; wing-quills white ; the barbs of the great coverts are stiff and arranged on two planes in an acute angle, like a roof. • It is the Choucas chauve, Buff., Enl. 521 {Corvus calvus, Gm.), the Oiscau won pi-re of tlie negroes of Cayenne, Vaill., Ois. cl'Ani. et des Indes, pi. xxix. ■f Here comes the Common Piauhau ; black, with a purple throat {Muse, mbrkollis, Gm.), Enl. 381; Vieill. Gal. 115, and the Great Piauhau, entirely pm-ple {Cotinga rouge, Vail., Ois. de I'Afr. et des Indes, pi. xxv and xxvi, Coracias militaris, Shaw). La Cotinga gris {Amp. cinerea), l'>nl. 699, is more nearly allied to the Piauhaus than the common Crown-birds. The Piauhau « gorge aurora {Coracias scutata, Lath, or Coracina sculata, T.), Col. 40, has a narrower bill, and approaches more to Cephalopterus. 240 BIRDS. A. cotinga, Ij., Ze C'orJow ftZew, Eiil. 186 and 188. Of the most beautiful ultramarine, with a violet breast, frequently traversed by a large blue band and spotted with dark yellow*. Tersina, Vieill. This subgenus consists of crown-birds whose bills are a little wider at their basef. Ceblepyris;};, Cuv. Has, in addition to the bill of the crown-birds, a singular character, which consists in the somewhat prolonged, stiiF, and spiny stems of their rump feathers. They are found in India and Africa, where they feed upon ca- terpillars which they collect upon the highest trees, but they have nothing of the lustre of the true crown birds. Their tail, somewhat forked in the middle, is sloped on the sides §. We may also separate from them, BoMBYCiLLA, Briss. The Chatterers, in which the head is ornamented with a toupet of fea- thers somewhat longer than the rest, possess, moreover, another singu- lar character in the secondary quills of the wing, — the ends of the stems being enlarged into an oval, smooth, and red disk. There is one in Eu- rope named, we know not why, A.garrulus, L. Enl. 261. (The Bohemian Chatterer). Some- what larger than a finch; plumage of a vinous grey; throat black; tail black, edged with yellow at the tip ; wings black, variegated with white. This bird visits Europe in flocks, at long intervals, and without regularity, from which circumstance, its presence, for a long time, was considered as an evil omen. It is very stupid, is easily captured and brought up ; eats of every thing, and a great quantity. It is thought to build its nest in the extreme north. The flesh is esteemed a great delicacy. There is another species in America, extremely similar, but rather smaller, Ampelis garrulus, b, Lin. ; Amp. Americana,Vf\\s. I. vii. 1 ; Bomhycilla carolinensis, Wils. ; Bomb, cerfron/m, Vieill., Gal. 118; Vaill. Ois. de Par., I. pi. 50. There is also one in i^tdia., B. phcenicoptera, Tern.', Col. 450, which has no appendages to the wings, and the tips of whose tail and little wing-coverts are red. * Add A. cayana, Enl. 624. — A. maynana, Enl. 299. — J. cucuUata, t., Col. 363, Swains. Zool. 111. 37. — A. caprea, Merremic, Av., 1, 2, appears to be a variety of the carnifex. t A. tersa, Gm., La Tersine, BufF., Vieill. 119, or Procne tersine, Tem. Col. 5, or Procnias hirundhiacea, Swains. Zool. 111. 21. X The Greek name of an unknown bird. Vieillot has since given to this genus the name of Campephaga. § Such are the Muse, cnna, Gm., Enl. 541, or the Echenilleur cendre, Vaill. Afr., pi. clxii. Vieill., Galer. 130; the Echenilleur noir, Vaill. Ixiv. His Ech. janne pl.lxiii. istheyoung of the Tiirdusphoenicopterus,Tem., Col. 71. — \dd Cebl.fimbriatus, Tem., Col. 249, 250. PASSERINE. 241 Hofraansegg and Illigcr, with equal propriety, separate from the crown- birds Procnias, H of man. The commissure of whose bill, which is weaker and more depressed, extends under the eye. They inhabit America, and feed on insects. We may subdivide them still more. The Procnias, properly so called, have the throat furnished with fea- thers. One species, Ampelis carunculata, Gm., Enl. 793, is distinguish- ed by a long, soft caruncle on the base of the bill. In the perfect state it is white, at all other times greenish. The AvERANOS (Casmarhynchos, Tem.) are ProcnicK with a naked throat. In one species, the naked portion of the male's throat is covered with fleshy caruncles. It is the Averano of Buff. IV. p. 457 ; Amp. variegata, Lin.; Col. 51. Another, Procn. araponga, Pr. Max. Col. 368, and 383, or Cas- mar ecarunculatus, Spix, 4, only has some very small, thinly scatter- ed feathers in that place. These birds are white in their perfect state ; the young male and the female are greenish. Finally, directly after the crown-birds should come Gymnoderus, Geoff. In which the bill is only a very little stronger ; but the neck is partly naked, and the head covered with velvet feathers. The species known is also from South America. It is mostly frugivorous, is of the size of a pigeon, black, with bluish wings ; it is the Gracula nudicollis, Sh, ; the Corvus nudus and the Gracula fetida, Gm. Enl, 609*. EDOLlusf , CtiV. Belong also to the great series of the Fly-catchers ; the bill is depressed and emarginate at the end ; its upper ridge is acute ; but what distin- guishes it is, that both mandibles are slightly arcuated throughout their length ; the nostrils are covered with feathers, and there are, besides, long hairs forming mustachios. The species are numerous in the countries bordering on the In- dian Ocean. They are generally of a black hue, have a forked tail, and live on insects; some of them, it is said, sing as sweetly as the Nightingale i;. * The species of Vaill., Ois. de TAmeriq. et des Indes, pi. xlv. and xlvi. is, per- haps, different. N. B. Vieillot unites Graculus, Gymnoderus, and Ceplialopterus, in his genus Co- RACINA. t Vieillot has preferred the name of Dicrurus. + Species. Lanius forficatns, Gm., Enl. 189, Vaill. Afr. IV. 166, and Vieill. Gal. 141. — Lanius malaharicus, Shaw, Vaill. IV. 175, Sonnerat, Voy. aux Indes et a la Chine, pi. xcvii, which is also the Cnculus paradiseiis, Briss. IV. pi. xiv. A. 1. — La- nius ccerulescens, Gm., Edw., pi. xlvi. Vaill. Afr. IV. 172. — Corvus balicasshis, Gm., 242 PiiiBALURA, Fieill. The ridge of the bill arcuated as in Edolius, but the bill itself is one half shorter than the head. The species known (Ph. flavirostris), Vieill. Gal, 74; Tern. Col. 118; Ph. cristata, Goains. Zool. 111. pi. 31, is from Brazil. The tail is much forked ; the plumage is spotted with black and yellow ; the feathers of the head with red, recalling to our minds certain Ty- rants and Fly-catchers. Tanagra, Lin. The Tanagers have a conical bill, triangular at its base, slightly arcuated at its ridge, emarginate near the end; wings and flight short. They re- semble the finches in habits, and feed on grain as well as on berries and insects. The greater number become remarkable in museums from their bright colours. We subdivide them as follows*: Bullfinch Tanagers. A short bill, when viewed vertically, shewing an enlargement on each side of its base; the tail proportionably shorter -f-. Grossbeak Tanagers. The bill conical, thick, convex, as broad as it is high, the back of the upper mandible rounded j. Tanagers, properly so called. A conical bill, shorter than the head, as broad as it is high, the upper mandible arcuated, somewhat pointed §. Enl. 603.— The Drongohn, Vaill. IV. 171.— The Droiigo bronze, Id. 176, and several new species. N. B. The Bec-de-fer o{ YaiU. Afric. 79, from .which Illiger has made his gemis Sparactes, and which is copied in Vieill. Gal., pi. cxli, having been examined by Temminck, is found to be a Pogonias, to whicla other feet had been added, together with a crest. This was done by a dealer, in joke, to impose upon the late M. Raie de Breukelewaerd, a rich Dutch amateur. * For this genus, and those of Pipra and Todus, see the work of M. Desmarest and of Miss Pauline de Courcelles, now Madame Knip. t Tanag.violacea, Enl. 114, 1, 2. — T. cayennensis, lb. 3. — Pipra musica, Enl. 809, 1. — Tan. diademata, Natterer, Col. 243, or Lindo bleu of Azz., or Bouvreuil azure, Vieill. Gal. 54. — The Lindo bleu dare of Azz. (Tan. chrysogaster,C\iv.). — Ta7i. viridis, Vieill. Col. 36, 3. X Tan. magna, Enl. 205. — Tan. atra, Enl. 714, 2. — Coracias caxjennensis, Enl. 616. — Tan. flammiceps, Pr. Max. Col. 177. — Tan. superciUosa, Spix, 57, 1. — Tan. psitta- cina, lb. 2. — Tan. atricollis, Id. 56, 2. It is on this division that Vieillot has found- ed his genus Habia. § Tan. talao, Enl. 127, 2.— tricolor, Enl. ZZ.—mex'.cana, Enl. 290, 2, and 155, 1. — gyrela, Enl. 133, 2.—Cayana, Enl. 201, 2, and 290, l.—episcopus, Enl. 178.— coelestis, Spix, 55, l.—varia, Desm. (Motacilla velia, L.), Enl. 669, 3, of which the T. Schrankii, Spix, 51, is probably the young. — T. punctata and siaca, Enl. 133, L.— T. multicolor, Vieill. Gal. 76, or Fring. zena, L. Catesby, I, 42. — T. thoracica, Tem. Col. 42, l.—T. citrinella, Ih. 2.— T. vittata, lb. 48.-7'. penicillata, Spix, 49.-7'. auricapilla, Id. 52. — T. vittata, T. Col. 48, — T. leucoptera, or Oriolus leucopterus, Lath, Syn. PASSl^RIN/E. 24; Oriole Tanagers. Tlie bill conical, arcuated, pointed, and notched at the end*. Cardinal Tanagers. Bill conical, somewhat vaulted, an obtuse salient tooth on the sidef . Ramphoceline Tanagers J. A conical bill, the branches of whose lower mandible are enlarged behind §. TuRDUs, Lin. The Thrushes have a compressed and arcuated bill, but its point is not hooked, and its emarginations do not form such deep notches as in the Shrikes ; as we have already stated, however, there are gradual transitions from one genus to the other. Their regimen is more frugivorous, generally feeding on berries. Their habits are solitary. The term Thrush is more particularly reserved for those species in which the colours are uniform, or are distributed in large masses. The most widely disseminated is, T. merula, L., Naum. 71. (The European Blackbird). The male (Enl. 2), is entirely black, with a yellow bill; the female (Enl. S.'iS), is brown above; reddish brown beneath; the breast spotted with brown. It is a very mistrustful bird, but is easily tamed, and can be taught to sing well, and even to speak. It remains in Europe during the whole year. A neighbouring species, which, however, is a bird of passage, and prefers the mountains, is, T. torquatus, L. : Le Merle a plastron hlanc; Enl. 168 and 182 ; * The T. gularis, Enl. 156 — pilcata, 720, 2, and specuUfera, Spix, 36, 1, approach the Molacillee by their more slender bill. T. nigrkollis, 720, 1, is a true motacilla, a sort of Regulus with a rather large bill. t T. cristaia, Enl. 7, 2, and 301, 2, of which the T. hrunnea, Spix, 49, 2, is the young. — nigerrima, Enl. 179, 2, and 711. — oUvarea. — arcMepiscopus, Desm. Spix, 5G, 2. — Ta>i. rufiventer, Spix, 50, 1. — nifgularis, Id., 56, 5. — Saira, Id. 48, 1. — viridis, lb. 2. This division has been named Taciiyphonus, by Vieillot, Gal. 82. But we should also refer to it his genus Pyranga, which is solely founded on an individual deformity. We shall name his species Tail, cynnictera. The Palmiste, Buff. Enl. 509, 1 {Turd, palmariim, Gm.), Vicill. Am. II. 69, also belongs to it; its notch is scarcely sensible, and it almost wholly disappears in a neighbouring species, of which Vifeillot has made his genus Ictekia, let. dumicola, Vieill., Am. and Gal. pi. Ixxxv, or Pipra polyglotla, Wils. I. vi. 2. This species leads to Ploceus. Tanagra mississipiensis, Enl. 742, or T. cestiva, Wils. Am. VI. 3, 4. — T. rubra, 156, \.—T. ludoviciana, Wils. 111. xx. 1. N. B. Swainson separates the T. tatao, and some others, from the Tanagers, under the name of Agl aia, and makes a genus of my Tanagers a bee fin, called Spermagra. X From this Vieill. has made his Jacapa, or Ramphoceles, Galer. 79. § Tanagra jacapa, Enl. 128. — T. hrasiUa, Enl. 127, 1. — T. nigrogtdaris, Spix, 47. N. B. The Tanagra atricapiUa, 809, 2, and i\\Q gnyanncnsis are Shrikes. The T. r.ristatella, Spix, or Fringilla cristaia, Gmel., T. graminea and T. ruficoUis, Spix, 53, are Buntings. 244 BIRDS. Naum. 70. (The Ring Ouzel). Feathers black, partly edged with white ; the breast marked with a shield of the same colour. The high mountains in the south of Europe contain two species, the Merle de Roche; T. saxatilis,!^.; EnL562; Nanm. 73; and the Merle bleu; T. cyanus, L. ; Enl. 250; Naum. 72, from which the Merle solitaire; T. solitarius, L., does not differ*. The first, which is most frequently found in the North, is the best known; it builds on inaccessible cliffs, in ruins, and sings well. The head and neck of the male are of a blue ash colour, the back brown, rump white; beneath, and the tail, orange 'j'. The name of Grives is given, in France, to those species, whose plum- age is what is termed in that country grivele, that is to say, marked with small black or brown spots. There are four of them in Europe, all with brown backs and spotted breasts ; they are singing birds, which live on insects and berries, migrate in large flocks, and whose flesh is an agree- able food. T. viscivorus, L. ; La Drenne. (The Misle Thrush). Enl. 489; Frisch, XXV ; Naum. 66, 1. Is the largest; the underpart of its wings is white ; it is extremely fond of the misletoe, and contributes to the dissemination of that parasitical plant. T. pilaris, L. ; La Litorne, Enl. 490 ; Frisch, xxvi ; Naum. 67, 2. Which is chiefly distinguished from the Viscivorus by the ash colour on the top of its head and neck. T. musicus, L.; La Grive, properly so called, Enl. 406; Frisch, xxvii ; Naum. 66, 2. Underpart of the wings yellow ; the best songster of the four, and the one most commonly eaten. T. iliacus, L.; Le Mauvis, Enl. 51, Frisch, xxviii; Naum. 67, 1. (The Mavis.) The smallest of the whole number; under part of the wings and flanks red J. The species of the genus Thrush, foreign to Europe, are very nu- merous. We will particularly notice T. polyglottus, L. ; Catesb. xxvi. (The Mocking-Bird). From North America; ash-coloured above, paler beneath, with a white barnd on the wing. It is celebrated for the astonishing facility with which it imitates, on the instant, the notes of other birds, and even all kinds of sounds §. * Observation of Bonnelli. t It is possible, as is observed by Shaw, that it was by coufoanding it with the Siberian Jay, that Linnaeus attributed to it the habits of a Havpy, and at one time calls it Corvus, and at another, Lanius uifaustus. We may approximate to the saxatilis the Rocar, Vaill. Afr. 101 and 102— the Es- pionneur, Id. 103. The foreign species, allied to the Solitary Thrushes by their speckled plumage, are, Tw-dns manilknsis, Enl. 636; probably the same as T. violaceus, Sonnerat, 2d Voy., pi. cviii.— r. eremila, Enl. 339. — T. varius, Horsf. — Myiothera Andromeda:, Tem. Col. 392. X Two additional species have been taken, though very rarely, in Germany; the Thrush, with the back mid flanh spotted with red {T. nmimanni), Naum. 68, and that with a black breast and throat {T. Bechsleinii). Naum. 69. § The Little Mocking Bird (7". Orpheus), Edw. 78; Le Moqueur de St. Domingue {T.dominicus), Enl. 558, 1, are very closelv allied to it, as well as the T. gilmis, Vieill.Am. 68. PASSERIN.E. 24a Some of these birds appear to approach the Shrikes in habits, although there is nothing in the form of their bill which can distinguish them from other Thrushes*. There are no sensible characters by which we can distinguish certain African Thrushes, which live in flocks, as numerous and noisy as Star- lings; feed on insects, and do much mischief in gardens. Several of them are remarkable for the brilliant tints of their plumage, which is of a browned steel colourf , and one of the former, for its cuneiform tail, which is one-third longer than the body|. We consider it proper to approximate to it the Thrush of New Guinea, whose tail is three times the length of the body, and has a double tuft on the head, which has been considered a Bird of Para- dise— Paradiscea gularis, Lath, and Shaw; Par. nigra, Gmel. ; Vaill. Ois. de Par. 20 and 21 ; Vieill. Ois. de Par. pi. viii. and Galer. 107, but only on account of the singularity and the incom- parable magnificence of its plumage§. Add, of species foreign to Europe, with the breast or under part of the body spot- ted: T. nifus. Gm., Enl. 645, and Vieill. Am. 59.— T.fuscatus, Vieill. Am. 57, bis.— T. minor, Gm , or T. mustelinus, Wils., or Gr. tannee, or Gr. solitaire, Vieill. Am. 62 and ^Z.— Linlerpres, Kuhl., Col. 458. With the throat only spotted, at least in the adult, T. migratorius, L. Enl. 556; Catesb. 29; Vieill. Am. 60, 61.— T. ocrocephalus, Col. 136.— T. plumbeus, Enl. 560, Vieill. Am. 58.-7'. Fukhmdiee, T.— T. olivaceus, Gm.— The grivron, Vaill. Afr. 98. — T. campestris, Pr. Max. With the flaulvs only spotted, T. puncfatus, Sh. Zool. N. Holl. I. pi. ix, which is the genus CiNCLOsoMA, Vig. and Horsf., Lin. Trans. XV. p. 219. Of those foreign birds not spotted underneath, T. brasiliensis, Lath. — T. perspicil- latus. — T. melcaioiis, or Reclamcur of Vaill., or T. vociferans, Zool. 111. 179. — T, nceviiis, Vieill. Am. 66.— T. lividus, or Chathird of Wils. 14, 2.— T. citrinus, Tem. Col. 445.— r. rubripes, Id. 409. — T. leucogaster, Enl. 648, 1.— T. madagascariensis, Enl. 557, \.—T. australasia;, Sh. Nat. Miscel. 10\3.—Malun(s frenatus, Tem., CoL 385. — r. pectoralis, Enl. 644, 1. — T. cinnamomeus, Enl. 560, 2. — T. riififrons, Enl. 644, 10. These last three species have been improperly referred by Buffon to the Ant-catchers. N. B. Turdus aurocapillus, Lath., Enl. 398, 2, and Vieill. Am. 64 {Motac. aurocap., L.), is a true Motacilla, and must be placed with the Fauvets. — Turdus calliope (Lath. Syn. Supplement, fig. of the title), should go with the Redbreasts. — Turdus caijanus, Enl. 515, is a female Ampelis — T. guyanensis, Enl. 398, fig. 1, is a female of the Tanagra doviinica, Enl. 156, 2, of which Vieill. has made his Dulus palmarum. Gal. 146. * We have already spoken, while on the Shrikes, of some species usually placed among the Thrushes, such as Turdus zeilonus, Enl. 272. It seems, we might also approximate to it the T. cafer, Enl. 563, Vaill. 107, which differs veiy little even in colouring from the Laiiius jocosus, Enl. 508. These two species would also take along with them the T. capensis, Enl. 317, Vaill. 105, and the T. chrijsorrhceus, Tem., Vaill. 107. On the other hand, it would be difificult to separate from the zeilonus, the Haiisse- rol voir, Vaill. Afr. 110, and the Cravate noir, Id. 115. t Particularly Turdus auratus, Enl. 540 {Nabirop, Vaill. Afr. 89), and Turdus nidens, Enl. 561, {Couigniop, Vaill. 90.) Here also come the Oranvert (T. chrysogaster, Gm. Enl. 358); the Spreo {T. bicolor, Gm.), Vaill. Afr. 88; the jau7wir (T. morio), Enl. 199, Vaill. Afr. 83, or the Corims rufipenms, Sh.; and probably the Eclatant, Vaill. 85, and the Choucador, Id. 86, [CorvHS splendidns, Sh.) + Turdus ceneus, Enl. 220 {Vert dore, Vaill. 87). § Vieillot has given to this bird the generic name of Astrapia. N.B. I think it is proper to approximate to the Thrushes, which are allied to the Shrikes, the Muscicapa carinata, Swains. Zool. 111. 147, of which Vigors and Hors- field make their genus Monarcha. 246 BIRDS. Other Thrushes, with brilliant plumage, have the feathers of the occi- put pointed like the Starling; they are the Stournes or Lamprotornis of Teniminck*. Some of them have so slender a bill, that they approach the Saxicolse — (the TuRDOiDES, or Ixos, Temm.f); others, again, have a slender but strong and straight bill, and among them are some with a widely forked tail (Enicures), T-X There are some of them also, distinguished by the height of their legs, which gives them the appearance of waders; they are the Grallines of Vieill. Galer. 150; or the Tanypus of Oppel. Mem. de I'Acad. de Munich, 1812, pi. viii. The Criniger, Temm., comprehends those Thrushes which have very strong setae on the bill, and whose feathers on the back of the neck sometimes have a setaceous termination. Such is the Criniger harhatus, Col. 88. Buffon has very properly separated from the Thrushes, the Myothera,|1 lUig. The Ant-catchers are known by their long legs and short tail. They live on insects, and chiefly on ants. . They are found in both continents. Those of the eastern world, however, are remarkable for the bril- liant colours of their plumage : they are the Breves of Buffon § — Corvus brachyurus, Gm., Enl. 257 and 258; Edw. 324, to which have been lately added several other beautiful species ^. We must also add the Azurin — Turdus cyanurus, Lath, and Gmel. ; Corvus cyanurus, Shaw, Enl. 355**, which only differs in the tail being somewhat pointed. * Turdus mauritianus, Gm., Enl. 648, 2, and Col. 149. — T. cantor, Sonnerat, Voy. 1. pi. bcxiii. — Lamprotornis metalUcus, Tem. Col. 266. We should distinguish the Lampr. erythrophris, on account of its beautiful red eye-brows formed of cartilagi- nous feathers, t Such are the Podobe {T. erythropterus, Gm.), Enl. 334.— The Janfredic, Vaill. Afr. Ill; the Grivethi, Id. 118; the Coudor, Id. 119; the Turdus trichas, Enl. 709, 2. The Terat-botdan {Tardus orientalis, Gm. Enl. 273, 2) approximates this group to the straight-billed Shrikes. Add Ixos chalcocephalus, Tem. Col. 453, 1 ; — /. squammatus, lb. 2 ; — R. atriceps, Col. 137; and particularly T. dtspar, Col. 137, which has red cartilaginous feathers under the tliroat, similar to the appendages of the wing of the Chatterer. X Mnicurus coronatus, Tem. Col. 113, or Tiird. Leschenaultii, Vieill. Gal. 145, or Motacilla speciosa, Horsf. ; JEiiic. velatus, Tem. Col. IGO. There is quite as much reason for approximating them to the straight-billed Shrikes. II Vieill. has changed this name into Myrmothera. § Vieillot has given to these birds the name of Pitta. \ Such as the Pitta erythrogaster, Cuv., Enh 2X2;— P. gi gas, Tem. Col. 217 ; — P. cyanoptera, Id. lb., 218; — P. superciliosa, C. — P. strepitans, Leadbeater, Col. 333. N.B. The Breve des Philippines, Enl. 89, is not, as Vaillant says, that of Angola, Edw. 324, with the head of a Thrush artificially attached to it; we have a natural specimen of the same. ** The Azurin is not from Cayenne, as Buffon declares it to be, but from the East Indies. It is the Pitta cyanura, Vieill. 153. Add Myiothera affinis, Horsf., and even his Turdus cymieus, which is the Brive-bleuel, Tem. Col. 194, but which leads to the straight-billed Shrikes. The Pitta ilwracica, Tem. Col. 76, which Messrs. Horsf and Vigors make the type PASSERINE. 247 The species belonging to the new continent are much more nume- rous, their tints are of a deeper brown, and they vary as to strength, and tlic length of the bill. They obtain their living from the enormous ant- hills which abound in the woods and deserts of this part of the world ; the females are larger than the males. These birds seldom fly, and have a sonorous cry, which, in some species, is even extraordinary. Among those with a thick and arcuated bill, we remark, M. rex ; Turdus rex, Gm. ; Corvus grallarius, Shaw, Enl. 702. (King of the Ant-catchers). The largest of all, and stands the highest: its tail, on the other hand, is the shortest, and at the first glance it might be taken for a wader ; it is about the size of a quail, and its grey plumage is agreeably chequered. It is more solitary than the others*. The species with a straighter, but still tolerably strong bill, are allied to the Shrikes with a similar onef . Others have a slender, sharp bill, which, with their striated tail, ap- proximates them to the Wren J. The Ortiionyx, Tem., may be approximated to the Ant-catchers. They have the bill of a Thrush, but it is short and slender ; their legs are long, the nails almost straight, and the quills of the tail terminate in a point like those of the creepers. We must also separate from the Thrushes : of tlieir genus Thimalia, is but a little removed from the azurin, if we except its sombre hues and its bill, which latter diminishes more regularly in front, and thereby approaches the Tanagers. * M. Vieillot has taken his genus Grallaria, Galer. 154, from this bird. Add the Grcaid beffroi {Turdus tbmiens), Enl. 706, 1, of which Vieill. makes his genus MvoTHERA: its bill is smaller; — Myrmotliera guttata, Vieill. Gal. 155. t Such are the Tetema {Turdus-colma, B.), Enl. 821;— the Paltcour {T. formici- vortis), Enl. 700, 1;— the Petit beffroi {Turdus lijicatus), Enl. 823, 1;— the Thamno- philus stellaris, Spix, 39;-^-Tha7n7i. myotherinus, Id. 42. The M. let(cophris, Tem. Col. 448, although from Java, seems to approach this group. The Brachyptcryx montana, Horsf. Jav. also approximates to it in the height of its legs, but its tail is longer in proportion, and the bill is somewhat allied to that of the Saxicolae. X Such are the Bamhla {Turd, bambla), Enl. 703;— the Arada {T. canlans), Enl. 70(), 2. Here comes the genus Rhamphocene, Vieill. 9, 128. We are compelled, however, to replace among the Thrushes, several species which Buffon arranged with the Ant-catchers, on account of some relative similarity of colour, viz. the Carillonneur {T. tintinnahilatus), Enl. 700, 2;— the Merle a cravale {T. cinnamoimcs, Enl. 560, 2;— those of the pi. Eul. 644, 1 and 2, which, contrary to all appearances, he considers as varieties of the formicivurus. I place in the same class the Thamnophiliis griseus, Spix, 41, 1, and 48,' 2; — striatus. Id., 40, 2; — melano- gaster, Id. 43, 1. The Myothera capistrata melanothorax, Tem. Col. 185, [and M. obsultta, Bonap. I. p. 1, 2.] We must also send back to the Thrushes, notwith- standing their smallness, the long-tailed species, called by Buffon FourmiUiers ros- signols {T. coroya and T. alapi, Gm.), Enl. 701, as well as the Myiothera malura, Natterer, Col. 353, and the M. ferrugiiiea and rufimargi)iata, Col. 132, which are even closely allied to the T. punctatus and grammiceps ; — the M. galaris and pyrrho- genis, Tem. 442, 448. The Myiothera mentalis and strictothorax, Natterer, Col. 179, as it appears to me, should be placed among the Shrikes. There is no group which has been more overload- ed with species foreign to it than that of the Ant-catchers. We nnist confess, how- ever, that it is not more rigorously limited than the other groups of the Dentirostres. 248 BIRDS. CiNCLUs,* Bechst. Or the Water-Thrushes, which have a compressed, straight bill, witli mandibles of an equal height, nearly linear, and becoming sharp near the point; the upper one hardly arcuated. There is but one in Europe. Sturnus cinclus, L. ; Turdus eindus, Lath.; Enl. 940; Vieill. Gal. 152. (The Water-Thrush). Legs rather long, and a rather short tail, which approximate it to the Ant-catchers. It is brown, with a white throat and breast, and has the singular habit of de- scending into the water, not swimming, but walking about on the bottom in search of the little animals which constitute its food. Africa, and the countries bordering on the Indian Ocean, produce a genus of birds neighbours of the Thrushes, which I shall call PHILEDONf. Their bill is compressed, slightly arcuated throughout its length, and emarginate near the point ; nostrils large, and covered by a cartilaginous scale; their tongue terminated by a pencil of hairs. The species generally remarkable for some singularity of conformation, have been bandied about by authors in all kinds of genera. Some of them have fleshy bobs at the base of the bill;|. In others, portions of the skin on the cheeks are divested of feathers] |. Even in those which are completely feathered, we still observe, at times, a singular disposition of the plumage§. * Vieillot has changed this name into that of Hydrobata. t Commersou had an idea of thus naming the Polochion {Merops ruphiccensis, Gm.), which is of this genus. See Buff. Hist, des Ois. VI., 4to. p. 477. Vieillot places the greater number of these birds in his genus Polochion, and in Latin he prefers calling it Philemon rather than Philedon, Gal. 189. The genus Meliphaga of Lewin also is comprised in it. X Here comes the New Holland bird called, by Daudin, Omith. II. pi. xvi, Pie a pendeloques, or Corvits paradoxus, Vieill. Gal. 94, the same as the Merops caruncu- laitis of Phillip., of Latham, and of Shaw, but which has not the feet of a Merops, and whose bill is notclied, the tongue pencillated, and nostrils without feathers. The Sturnus carunculatus. Lath, and Gm., or Gracula carunculata, Daud. and Shaw, (Lath. Sjn. Ill, pi. xxxvi), and the Certhia carunculata, Lath, and Gm. (Vieill. Ois. Dor. II, pi. Ixix), also appear to me to belong to it. The latter bird, it is said, sings delightfully, and belongs to the Friendly Islands. It is from this sub-division that Vieillot has taken his genus Creadion, Gal. 94. II The Merops phri/gius of Shaw, Gen. Zool. VIII, pi. xx; — the Goruch, Vieill. Ois. Dor. II, pi. Lsxxviii. (C. gorucJc, Sh.); — the Fuscalbin, Id. lb. pi. Ixi. (C luna- ta); — the Gracule, Id. lb. pi. Ixxxvii. (C. graculina); — the Polochion of Buff. [Me- rops moluccensis, Gm.); — the Ph. a oreilles jaunes, Less. Voy. de Duperrey, pl. 21, bis, and some new species belong to this division. § Particularly in the Merops Nova Hollandia, Gm. and Brown, 111. ix., or Merle a cravate frisee, VaLll. Afr., or Merops circinnatus, Lath, and Shaw, Gen. Zool. Vlll. pl. xxii. They are the feathers of the ears which become frizzled, as they descend almost in front of the breast. — Melliph. auricornis, Swains. Zool. 111. p. 43. Add Certh. auriculata, Vieill. Ois. Dor. 85. — C. Nova Hollandia, lb. 7. The species of this genus which have none of these singularities, are the Certhia xan- totus, Sh. Vieill. Ois. Dor. II, pl. 84.— C. australasiana, lb. 55.— C. mcllivora, lb. 86.— C. carulea, lb. 83. — C seniculus, lb. 50. I am even of opinion that the Cap noir, Vieill. pl. 60, {Certhia cucullata, Sh.) belongs to them, notwithstanding the length PASSFRIN^. ."^49 ElULABES, CuV. The Mainates are closely allied to those of the preceding one. Their bill is nearly that of a thrush ; their nostrils are round and smooth. Their distinguishing mark consists in broad strips of naked skin on each side of the occiput, and a bald spot on the cheek. LinniEUs has confounded two species of them under the name of Gra- cula religiosa*. E. indicus, Enl. 268, the species of India, is the size of a thrush; black, with a white spot near the base of the great feathers of the Aving : the feet, bill, and bald parts of the head, yellow. The Java species, E. javanicus, Vieill. Gal. 95, has a broader bill, the commissure extending higher up, more hooked at the end, and without a notch — consequently, it should come after Colaris, Cuv. ; but in every thing else it is precisely similar to the other, and particularly in the strips of bare skin about the head]-. Of all birds, this one is said to imitate most completely the language of man. Gracula X, Cuv. The Martins form another genus allied to the thrushes. The species inhabit Africa and the countries bordering on the Indian Ocean. Their bill is compressed, very little arcuated, and slightly emarginate ; its com- missure forms an angle like that of the Starling. The feathers on the head are almost always narrow, and there is a naked space round the eye. They have the habits of Starlings ; and, like them, pursue insects in flocks. One species is occasionally seen in Europe ; it is the Turdus roseus, L. ; Pastor roseus, Meyer; Merula rosea, Naum. 63; Enl. 251; VaiU. Afr. (The Rose-coloured Thrush). A bril- liant black ; back, rump, scapulars, and breast of a pale rose ; fea- of its bill. — Merops niger, Gm., or fasciculatus, Lath., or Gracula nobilis, Merrem. Beytr. Fasc. I, pi. ii, is still more likely to be one of them — at all events it is no Merops. I also place in this genus the Verdin de la Cochhichine, Enl. 643, which is the second Turdus malabaricus. No. 125 of Gm. — for the first, No. 51, is a Gracula, (hiv. ; — and the Certh. cocincinica, Sh. Vieill. 77 and 78. — Add the Philed. cap negre, Tern. {Certhia atrlcapilla. Lath.), Col. 335, 1. — Philed. moustac. (Melliph. mystacalis, Tem ), lb. 2.— the Philed. grivele (Melliph. maculata, T.), Col. 29, 1.— the Phil, reti- cule (Melliph. reticulata), lb. 2. — the Ph. djoues blancl.es (M. leucotis), Col 435. — the Ihil. Dumerilii, Voy. de Duperr. pi. xxi., and perhaps the fV/i it e- headed Ixos, Ruppel, Av. 4. N.B. The Creadion, or Pie a pendeloques is the genus Anthoch.€RA of Swain- son, to which he joins the Merops phrt/gius, &c. The long and slender-billed Phile- dons, such as the Certhia ci/cullata, Vieill. form the genus Myzomela of Swainson. • This appellation of religious was only given to it on account of a peculiar trait in its character, related by Bontius (Med. Ind. Or. p. 67), and foreign to its natural habits. I have made it my generic name by translating it into Greek. f Nothing can possibly be more perplexing to classifiers, than this difference be- tween the bills of two such similar birds. X Vieillot has changed this name into that of Cridotheres, Galer. 148. VOL. I. Y 250 BIRDS. thers of the head narrow, and lengthened out into a tuft. It is of great use in warm climates, by destroying Grasshoppers*. Another species, {Paradiscea tristis, Gm. ; Gracula tristris, Lath, and Shaw; Gracula grylUvora, Daud.) Enl. 219, has become ce- lebrated for similar services rendered to the Isle of France. It feeds, however, on every thing, builds on the Palms, and is very easily tamed and trained. Its size is that of a Thrush; brown, blackish about the head; a spot near the tip of the wing; the lower part of the abdomen and the tips of the lateral tail quills are whitef. Manorhina, Vieill. The bill much compressed, but little arcuated, and slightly sloped; large nostrils, almost entirely closed by a membrane, which reduces the opening to a narrow slit ; the neck is short. The feathers on the fore- head, which are as soft as those of young birds, grow partly on the nostrils;];. * Since my first edition was published, I have satisfied myself of the certainty of the generic affinity of this sjiecies with the Gracula, Cuv. -f It is difficult to imagine how Linnaeus was induced to make it a Bird of Para- dise. To this genus also belong the Gracula nislalella, Enl. 507, and Edw. 19, which can hardly be considered a variety of the common one; — the Porte-lambeaux, Vaill. Afr. pi. xciii and xciv, which is the Gr. carunculata, Gm., or the Gr. larvala, Shaw, or the Sttcnius gallinaceus, Daud. ; — the Mart'm-brame, Tardus pagodarum, Vaill. Afr. 95, and Vieill. Gal. 148. The first T. malabaricus, the T. ginginianus, the T. doviiiii- canus, Enl. 627, 2; the Martin gris de Fer, Vaill. Afr. 95, 1, and the Sturnits ser/ccus, Gm., also belong to it, as well as some new species. I also refer to it, conjecturally, the Twdus ochrocephaliis, Lath. {Stum, ccylatiicus, Gm.), Brown, 111. xxii. N.B. We cannot ascertain what type was taken by Linnseus and his followers for their genus Gracula. Linnaeus first formed it, in his tenth edition, of seven^very discordant species, viz.: 1, religiosa, Eulabes, C; 2,fetida, which I suspect to be the Col nu, that is to say, allied to Ampelis; 3, harita; and 4, quiscula, which belong to Cassicus; 5, cristatella, which is a Gracula, Cuv.; G, smdaris, or rather so/ari*, which is a straight-billed Shrike, and the same bird as T. mindanensis, Enl. 627, 1 ; finally, 7, Atiliis, which is a Thrush. In the 12th ed. he added the Goulin gracula calua, and placed the common gracula, Cuv. among the birds of Paradise. Gmelin, in imitation of Pallas, added a xanthornus (Gr. longirostra)*. He also placed there the Martin porte-lambeaux {Gr. carunculata), still leaving the common one among the Birds of Paradise; finally, he placed there the Gr. caijenneimis, which is a Creeper. M. Latham has transferred to it the Gr. tristis, the Col nu (Gr. nuda) and one of my Philedons (Gr. icterops)\. Daudin has placed some species after the said Gracula, which in fact resemble it, and two of which Gmelin had left among the Thrushes (Turdus pagodarum and malabaricus). Finally, Shaw has put the finishing touch to the matter, by transferring to the genus in question three Barita, (his Gr. strepera, varia, and fibicen,) and adding to them the Talapiot, which is a Creeper or a Nuthatch (Gr. picoides). Genera, thus formed, certainly excuse, if they do not justify, the ill humour of the enemies of systems. See the Mem. of M. Lichtenstein, Acad, of Berlin, 1817. X Manorhina viridis, Vieill. Gal. 149. — Merops albifrons, Shaw. * I do not know the Gracula sturnina of Pallas. t Neither do I know the Grac. melanocephala and viridis of Latham; but I suspect they also belong to my Philedons. PASSKRIN/E. 251 PVRRIIOCOKAX*, CuV. Tlie Chocards have the compressed, arcuated, and sloped bill of the Thrushes ; but their nostrils are covered with feathers, as in th$ Crows, with which they were, for a long time, united. There is one in Europe about the size of the Corv. monedula. Corvus pyrrhocorax, h. ; Chocard dcs Alpes, Enl. 531; Vieill. Galer. 106; Naum. 57, 1. All black; the bill yellow; feet brown at first, then yellow, and in the adult, red; it builds in the rocky fis- sures of the highest mountains, whence, in the winter, it descends into the valleys in large flocks. It feeds on insects, snails, grain, and fruit, and does not despise carrion. There is another in India, Pyrr hexanemus, Cuv. ; the Sicrin, Vaill. Afr. pi. Ixxxii. Dis- tinguished by three barbless stalks as long as the body ; they grow on each side among the feathers which cover the ear. I can find no character sufficient to warrant their removal from the Thrushes, Oriolus, Lin. Or the Orioles, whose bill, similar to that of the Thrushes, and is merely a little stronger ; the feet a little shorter, and the wings a little bnger, ill proportion. Linnaeus, and most of his followers, improperly united Cassici with them, to which they have no other resemblance than that of colours, O. galhula, L. ; Le loriot d' Europe, Enl. 26; Golden Thrush, Yellow Thrush of the Germans, &c. Somewhat larger than the Thrush; the male is of a fine yellow; wings, tail, and a spot be- tween the eye and the bill, black ; tip of the tail yellow. During its two first years, however, the yellow is replaced by an olive, and the black by a brown, which is always the state of the female. This bird suspends its skilfully wrought nest to branches of trees, feeds on cherries, and other fruits, and, in the spring, on insects. It is very shy, remains in France but a littl^ time during the summer, and travels in pairs, or by threes. India produces some species tolerably similar to the preceding -j-, but we must particularly distinguish from among that number the Oriolus regens, Col. 320 — Serieula regens, Less, which is of the finest silky black, with beautiful orange yellow, velvet feathers on the head and neck, and a large spot of the same colour on the wingi. Gym N OPS, Cuv. The same strong bill as the Orioles ; the nostrils round, without scales * Vieill. has adopted this name and genus. t Oriolus cliiiiensis, Enl. 570; — Or. melanocephalus, Enl. 79, or Loriot rieur, Vaill. Afr. 263;— the Loriot d'or, Vaill., 260; Vieill. Gal. 83;— the Coudougnan, Vaill. 2, 61; — the Oriolus xanthonntus, Horsf. Jav. X ^I. Lesson (Voy. Duperr., pi. xx.) gives as its female, a Thrush- coloured hird which differs considerably in its proportions. Y 2 252 BIRDS. or surrounding membrane ; a great part of the head divested of fea- thers*. Some of them have prominences on the billf . In these the tongue is pencillated as in Philedon. M^NURA, Shaw. The Lyres, whose size has induced some authors to refer them to the Gallinaceas, evidently belong, by the separation of their toes, (the first joint of the external and middle ones excepted), to the order of the Passerinae, and approach the Thrushes in their bill, which is triangular at the base, elongated, slightly compressed, and emarginate near the point. The membranous nostrils are large, and partly covered over by feathers, as in the Jays. They are distinguished by the great tail of the male, which is very remarkable for the three sorts of feathers which compose it, viz. the twelve common ones very long, with very fine and widely sepa- rated barbs ; two more in the middle, only one side of which is furnished with thickly set barbs, and two external ones curved into the figure of an S, or like the arms of a lyre, whose internal barbs, large and thickly set, form a kind of broad riband, while those that are external are very short, becoming longer only near the tip. The female has only twelve quills of . ordinary structure. This singular species, Mcenura lyra, Vieill. Ois. de Par. pi. xiv. XV. and Gal. 192, Sh. Nat. Misc. 577, inhabits the rocky districts of New Holland ; its size is somewhat less than that of the Phea- sant. MOTACILLA, Lin. The Warblers form an excessively numerous family, known by the bill, which is straight, slender, and similar to a bodkin. When slightly de- pressed at its base, it approaches that of the Flycatchers; when it is com- pressed, and its point curved a little, it approximates to the straight billed Shrikes. An endeavour has been made to divide them as follows : — Saxicola;};, Bechst. The Mill- clappers have the bill a little depressed, and rather broad at the base, which particularly allies these birds to the last small tribe of the Flycatchers. They are lively, and stand tolerably high. The French species build on the ground, or under it, and feed exclusively on insects. There are three species in France. Motacilla rubicola, L. ; Le Traquet, Enl. 678; Naum. 90, 3, 1,5. (The Mill-clapper). A small brown bird, with a red breast, » The Goulin gris (Gr acula calva, Gm.), Enl. 200 ;— the Goulin vert {Mifio Dii- montii, Less.), Voy. de Duperr., pi. xxv;— the Goulin olive (Gracula cyanotis, Lath.; Merops cyanotis, Shaw). f The Corbicalao, Vaill., Ois. d'Am. et des Indes, pi. xxiv. (Merops corniculaius, Lath, and Shaw), and a neighbouring species, whose larger tubercle is directed to- wards the front (Mer. monachus, Lath.) These two New Holland birds are neither Horn-bills nor Bee-eaters, for their external toes are not more united than those of the most common Passerinae. N. B. The Or. regens is the Melliphaga regia of Lewin, and the Sericuhts chryso- cephalus of Swainson. The Corhicalao forms the genus Tropidorhynchus of Swainson. X Vieill. has changed this name to Motteux (iENANTHE). PASblilllN.^:. ^OL> black throat, and some white on the sides of the neck, on the wing, and on the rump. It is constantly Hitting about the bushes, and its weak note resemblse the tick-tack of a mill, whence its name. Mot.ruhetra; Le Tarier, Enl. ib. 2; Naum. 89, 3, 4. Closely resembles the preceding; but the black is on the cheek instead of being under the throat. It is somewhat larger, and keeps more on the ground. Mot.cenanthe; Le Motteux, or cul-blauc, ^n\. 554 ; Naum. 89, 1, 2. (The Wheat-Ear). The rump, and the half of the lateral tail feathers, white. The male is ash coloured above, reddish-white beneath ; the wing, and a band over the eye, black. In the female, all is brown- ish above, and reddish beneath. It is found in the ploughed fields, where it feeds on the worms turned up with the furrow. AVe should distinguish from them, Saxieola strapaslna, T. ; M. roux, BufF. ; Naum. 90, 1, 2. A species from the south of Europe that sometimes visits France. There is a bird in the south of France that should be placed near this species, which is black, the rump, and the two superior thirds of the tail, white, and which has been referred to the Thrushes. It is the Turdus lencurus. Lath., Synops. II. pi. 38*; or the Saxieola cachinnans, Tem. Sylvia f. Wolf and Meyer. — Ficedula, Bechst. The bill a very little narrower at the base than in the preceding. They are solitary birds, generally building in holes, and feeding on insects, worms, and berries. There are four species in France. Mot. ruhecula, L. ; Rouge-fforc/e, Enl. 3G1, 1; Naum. 75, 1, 2. (The Stonechat). A brown-grey above; throat and breast red; belly white; builds near the ground in the woods, is prying and familiar. Some of them remain during the winter, and seek for refuge from the extreme cold in houses, where they soon become tamed. Mot. succica, L. ; Gorge-hleue, Enl. 3G1, 2; Naum. 75, 3, 4, 5. Brown above, blue throat, red breast, white belly; rarer than the preceding; builds on the edge of woods and marshes. Mot. phoenicurus, h.; Rossignol de muraille, Enl. 351; Naum. * Add to the Saxicolae, Mot. capatra, Enl. 235; — M. fulicata, Enl. 1S5, 1; — M. jMlippensis, Ib. 2; — i\\e patre, Vaill. Afr. p. 180. And to the Wheat-ear, M. leucothoa, Enl. 583, 2;— the imitateur, Vaill., Afr. 181, Id.; — the familier, Id. 183; — the montagnard, Id. \M;--i\iQ fourmillier, 186; — Mot. leucomela, Falc. Voy. Ill, xxx, and Col. 257, 3. Add, Saxic. aurita, t.. Col. 257, 1 ; — S. monacha, Col. 359, 1 ;— 5. deserti, lb. 2 The Mot. cyanea, Gm., Lath., Syn. II. pi. liii. has the bill of a Saxieola, and only differs from it in having a rather longer tail. Vieill. Gal. 163, has placed it in his genus Mekion or Malurus, afterwards converted into a receptacle for all kinds of birds with elongated and cuneiform tails, such as the Merion bride, Tem. Col. 385, which is a Thrush ; — the M. natti: and the M. leucoptere, Quoy and Gaym. Voy. de Freycin. pi. 23, which approach the CWy; \.\\e flfiteur oi Vaill". (M. africmia), Afr. 112, which is closely allied to the Si/nalla.ies, &c. t liubiette, name of the Red-throat in some provinces of France. 25 !> BIRDS. 79, 1, 2. Brown above; throat black; breasts, rump, and lateral quills of the tail, light red; it builds in old walls, and has a soft song, with something of the modulations of the Nightingale. Mot. erithacus, tytys, (jibraltariensis, atrata, Gm. ; Edw. 29 : Naum. 79, 3, 4. Differs from the preceding, and principally in the breast, which, as well as the throat, is black. It is much more un- common*. CuRRUcA, Bechst. A straight bill, slender throughout, slightly compressed before; the upper mandible a little curved near the point. The most celebrated of this subgenus is, Mot. luscinia, L. ; Enl. 615, 2; Naum. 74, 2. (The Nightin- gale). A reddish brown above; whitish grey beneath; the tail somewhat redder. Every one knows this songster of the night, and the varied melody with which it fills the woods. It builds on trees, and does not begin to sing until the young ones are hatched. The male, then, as well as the female, is occupied in providing them with food. The eastern part of Europe produces a Nightingale, which is a little larger, and whose breast is slightly variegated with greyish tints. Mot. philomela, Bechst.; Naum. 74, 1. The remaining species have the common name of Fauvettes; they are, nearly all, good singers, lively and gay in their habits; they are con- stantly flitting about in pursuit of insects, and build nests in bushes, mostly in the vicinity of water, among reeds, &c. I place a species at the head of the list, which is so large that it has been almost always classed with the Thrushesf . It is. Tardus arundinaceus, L. ; Sylvia turdoides, Enl. 515; Naum. 81,1. (River Nightingale). Reddish-brown above ; yellowish be- neath ; throat white ; a pale streak over the eye ; a little less than the Mavis, (Turd, iliactis, L.) and the bill almost as much arcuated. It builds among the reeds, and feeds almost exclusively on aquatic insects. Mot. arundinacea, Gm. ; La Petite Rouserolle, Naum. 81, 2. Similar to the preceding in habits and colour, but not so large by a third. Mot. salicaria, Gm. ; La fauvette de Roseaux, Enl. 581, 2. Still smaller than the last, and the bill proportionably shorter ; an olive- * Add the blue bird of Amer. Mot. stalls, Enl. 590; Mot. Calliope, Lath. Syn. Supp. I, front., and a great number of other species described by Wilson. — f There are, in foreign countries, some intermediate Fauvettes between the Mot. arundinacea, Gm., and the Turd, arundinaceus, L., and between the former and the Mot. salicaria, Gm., so that, in my opinion, it is impossible to separate the latter from the Fauvettes, although I acknowledge the result is an almost insensible tran- sition between the Thrushes and the Motacillse, just as there is between the latter and the straight- billed Shrikes, and between the Thrushes and the Shrikes with ar- cuated bills. All these genera are closely allied. PASSEKIN.E. 255 grey above; very pale yellow beneath; a yellowish streak between the eye and the bill. There are also several small Spotted Fauvettes, inhabiting marshes, &c., which were long confounded under that general name, (Mot,, ncevia, Gm.) and which are not yet satisfactorily distinguished*. Of the above, we will merely notice the F. cysticole — {F. cysticola. Tern.) Col. 6, 3, with a fawn-coloured back, spotted with black, a light fawn colour beneath ; the tail cuneiform, each feather of which has a black spot on its inferior surface. This species is from the south of Europe, and makes its nest by approximating the leaves of a tuft of grass or carex, which it sews together by means of the fila- ments of various seeds -f-= Among the species which prefer the dry grounds, we observe first, Mot. atricapilla, L. ; Fauvette a tete noire, Enl. 580, 1 and 2; Naum. 77, 2, 3; Roux, 205, bis. Brown above; whitish beneath; a black calotte on the male, a red one on the female. Mot. orphea, Tem. ; La Fauvette, Enl. 579, 1 ; Naum. 76, 3, 4; S. grisea, Roux, 213. One of the largest; ashy brown above, whitish beneath ; some white on the tip of the wing ; two-thirds of the external quills of the tail white, the succeeding one marked with a spot at the end, and the rest with a selvege. There have been distinguished within the last few years, Sylvia nisoria, Bechst. ; Fauvette rayee, Naum. 76, 1,2; Roux, 222. Which has much less white on the tail, the abdomen of the female being transversely undulated with grey ; the largest of the European species. Mot. curruca, L. ; Brit. Zool. pi. v. No. 4; Frisch. 21; Naum. 77, 1 ; Roux, 216. (The White Throat of the EngUsh). Smaller than the preceding ones, and the bill more slender, but the same white on a great part of the first quill of the tail. The head is ash coloured, back brownish. Mot. Sylvia, Gm. ; S. cinerea; Fauvette roussutre, Naum. 78, 1, 2; Riet-vinh, Nosem. II, pi. 97; Enl. 579, 3; Roux, 220. Red- dish brown-grey above, white beneath ; the white on the tail as in the two preceding ones ; the quills and coverts of the wings edged with red. Mot. salicaria, L. ; Sylv. hortensis, Bechst. ; La petite Fauvette, Naum. 78,3; Nosem. 72; Enl. 579,2; Roux, 221. Has no * See the S. phragmitis, Naum. 82, 1; — S. cariceli, Id. 2, 3; — S. aqualica, Id. 4 and 5 \—S.fluviaUlis, Id. 83, 1 ■,—S. locustella, Id. 84, 2, 3. Compare them with the S. locustella, Roux, 229;— S. Schceiwhenus, Id. 230;—.?. paludicola, Id. 231;— 5. cysticola, Id. 232 ; as well as the figures of BufF., Brisson, Bechstein, &c. There is no genus among Birds which stands more in need of a monography and an approxi- mation of the synonymes of different authors, than this. Add to the aquatic Fauvettes of Europe, Si/lr. galactodes, T. Col. 251, 1; — S. luscinioides, Savi. Egypt. Ois. XIII, A; — .S'. ceitl, Marmora or la Bouscarle, Enl. 6, 55, 2; Roux, 212; — .S'. melanopogon, Tem. Col. 245, 2. t See Notizia siil nido del Beccamorchino {Sylvia cysticola, Tem.) by M. Paul Savi. Pisa, 1823. 256 BIRDS. white on the tail, and is of a hrownisli grey, or olive above, and of a yellowish white beneath*. Bechstein has separated from the other Fauvettes his Accentor, which is the Fauvette des Alpes, BufF. — Mot. alpina, Gm. ; Enl. 668, or the Pe^o^ Vieill. Gal. 156; Nauni.92, if (2); because the edges of its slen- der bill, which is more exactly conical than that of the other Motacilla, are slightly depressed. It is an ash-coloured bird, with a white throat, sprinkled with black ; two rows of white spots on the wing ; some bright red on the flanks. It is found in the pastures of the upper Alps, where it feeds on insects, and whence, in winter, it descends into the villages in search of grain, &c. I think I have observed the same bill in the Fauvette d'hiver. Mot. modularis, L.; Traine-buissons, &c.; Enl. 615, 1; Naum. 92, 3, 4;}:. The only species that remains in France during the winter, and that in some measure relieves the dreariness of the sea- son by its delightful notes. It is of a fawn colour, spotted with black above, and a slaty ash colour beneath. It builds twice a year, and in the summer proceeds to the North, and seeks the mountain forests. During the winter, when insects are not to be had, it is contented with grain. The gizzard of these two birds is more fleshy than that of the other Fauvettes §. We may add to them, Ace. montanellus, Tern.; Naum. 92. A bird from the south-east of Europe, which does not visit France. We may also distinguish some long and cuneiform tailed foreign Motacillse, which have been long left among the Fauvettes ||. Some of the species are very skilful in the construction of their * The descriptions of the Fauvettes are so vague, and the greater part of their figures — those of Nauman excepted — are so bad, that it is ahnost impossible to de- termine their species. Each author arranges them differently. Our descriptions, therefore, may be confidently depended upon, but our synouymes not so much so; we think, however, we agree with Mess. Nauman and Roux. To the species abovemeutioned, must be added: Sijlv. ruscicola, Roux; — S. passe- rina, Col. 24, 1 ;— 5. sarda, Ih. 2;—S. Nuttereri, lb. Z\—S. subalpina, Boimelli, or Leucopogon, Meyer, Col. 6^ 2 and 251, 2 and 3, Roux, 218. N. B. According to Savi, the S. passerina, Tem. Col. 29, 4, is the young male of the S. subalpina —The Pitchon {S. ferruginea), Enl. 635, 1; Roux, 219. The small species lead to Regulus. t It is also the Sturnus montamis, and the S. coUaris of Gmelin. X I see this approximation has been adopted by Mess. Temm. and Nauman. § Nitsch., ap. Naum., 11, p. 939. II Mot. fuscala, Gm. Enl. 584, I; — Molacilla macrotira, Gm. Enl. 752, 2; or the Capolier, Vaill. 129, 130, \ ■,—Malurus galactodes, T., Col. 65, \\—Mal. marginalis, T. lb. 2; — Mai. damans, Ruppel. pi. 2; — Mai. squamiceps, Id. xii. — Mot. suhfiava, Gm. Enl. 584, 2, probably the same as the Citrin, Vaill., Afr., 127;— the Double sourcil, Id. 128. It is partly from this subdivision that Mess. Vieill. and Temui. have taken their genus Merion or Malurus ; I should not, however, like (he former, place it in the Mot. cyanea, Gm. which has the bill of a Sasicola. N. B. The Malurus galactodes, Tem. has become the genus Megalurus of Vi- gors and Horsfield. PASSERINE. iiOl nests, with cotton or other filaments, which tliey arrange witli much art*. Regulus, Cuv. The bill slender, forming an exceedingly perfect and very sharp point- ed cone; when viewed from above, its sides appear slightly concave. They are small birds, which live among trees and pursue Gnats. There is in France, Mot. regulus, L. ; the Roitelet, Enl. 651, 3; Naum. 93, 1, 2, 3. The smallest of the European birds ; an olive colour above, a yel- lowish white beneath ; head of the male marked with a beautiful spot of a golden yellow, edged with black, the feathers of which are erectile. It constructs on trees a globular nest, with a lateral open- ing, suspends itself to the branches in every position like a Parus, and keeps near our houses in winter f. A still smaller species has lately been observed, the yellow of which inclines more to orange, and which has a black streak before and behind the eye. — Regulus ignicapillus, Naum. 93, 4, 5, 6. Motac. trochilus, L. ; Le Pouillot, Enl. 651, 1; Naum. 80, 3. Somewhat larger than the Roitelet, of the same colour, but without the crown ; its habits are similar, but it has a more agreeable song, and disappears in winter. Motac. hypolais; Le grand Pouillot, Bechst. Ill, xxiv; Enl. 581, 2; Naum. 81, 1. Is still a little larger, and the abdomen more of a silvery appearance ;;|:. The species foreign to Europe are extremely numerous, and are very often agreeably coloured §. Troglodytes, Cuv. The only difference between the Wrens and the present subgenus is, that in the latter the bill is still a little more slender and slightly arcuated. But one species is found in Europe. Mot. troglodytes, L. ; Roitelet, Enl. 651,2; Naum. 83, 4. (The European Wren). Brown, transversely striated with black; some white on the throat and the edge of the wing ; a turned-up and short * Certain Fauvettes, European as well as foreign, such as tlie S. sarda, have a little circle round the eye. They form the genus Zosterops of Vigors and Hors- tield. t Add the Roitelet otnnicolor, Vieill. Galer. 166. + Add of European species: Mot. sibilatrix, Col. 245, 3; Naum. 80, 2;—M. filtis, Naum. 80, 'i;~M. riifa, Naum. 80, 4. § Such are the Tscheric, Vaill. Ill, 121;— the Cou-jaune {Mot. perisilis), En). 685, 5; — Mot. eestiva, Enl. 58, 2; — the Mot. ludoviciana, Enl. 731, 2; — the Fig. h poitrine jaune {Mot. mystacea), Enl. 709,2, Edw. 237, 2; — the Fig. cendre du Canada {M. Canadensis), Enl. 685, 2; — the Fig. de Visle de France (M. mauritiana), Enl. 705, 1; —the Plastron voir, Vaill. Ill, \2'i;— Sylvia venusta, Tern. Col. 293, 1 ;— .S". speciosa, lb. 2; — S. palbehrosa, lb., &c. &c. Those whose_^bill is somewhat broad at the base, are closely allied to the narrow-billed Flycatchers. For the catalogue of species in the United States, see the Catalogue of Species by M. Ch. Bonaparte, Lye. New York, .July 11, l.S2f.. p. 76. et scj. 258 BIRDS. tail. It builds on the ground, and cheers us with its pleasing song even in the middle of winter (a). MOTACILLA, BecllSt. The Wagtails, to a still slenderer bill than that of the Fauvettes, add a long tail which they are continually raising and depressing, long legs, and scapular feathers sufficiently extended to cover the tip of the folded wing, which gives them an affinity with the greater number of Waders. MoTACILLA, CuV. The true Wagtails still have the nail of the thumb curved like the rest of the group. They live along the shores of water courses. That of France {Mot. alba and cinerea, L.), Enl. 652, is ash- coloured above, white beneath; a calotte on the occiput; throat and breast, black. The south of Europe produces one which, when old, has a black back, but resembling the preceding when young. It is the Mot. luguhris, Roux, 194. BuDYTES*, Cuv. In addition to the other characters of the true Wagtails, the nail of the thumb is here elongated and but slightly arcuated, which approximates these birds to the Larks. They generally remain in pastures, and pursue insects among the cattle. The most common is, Mot.fava; Bergeronnette de print ems; Enl. 674, 2. Ash-co- loured above, olive on the back, yellow beneath ; the eyebrow and two-thirds of the lateral quills of the tail white f. Anthus, Bechst. The Meadow Larks were long united to the Larks {Alauda), on ac- count of the long nail of their thumb; but their slender and emarginated bill approximates them to the other warblers, at the same time that their secondary quills and coverts, which are as short as usual, will not allow them to be confounded with budytes. Those which still have the nail somewhat arcuated are in the habit of perching. A. arboreus, Bechst. ; Alauda trivialis and minor, Gm. ; the Pipi, Enl. 660, Ij:; Naum. 84, 2, Roux. Olive-brown above, reddish- * Budytes, from its being seen among cattle, t Add the Mot. boarula, L. Edw., 259, and Vieill. Gal. 162. X Under the false name of Farlouse; the Pivote ortolane, BufF. Enl. 642, 2 (Mota- cilla maculata, Gm.), is the young bird. See Roux, 288. grf {a) The Wrens foreign to Europe are allied to the Ant-catchers on the one hand, and to the Creepers on the other. Add the Thriotore a long bee {Thr. longi- rostris, Vieill. Gal. 168, or Kampijlorhynchus scolopaceus, Spix, 79). [Add Trog. aedon, Wils. I, jil. iii, f. 3; — Trog. palusiris {Thyothorus arundinaceus, Vieill.), Wils. II, pi. xii, f. 4; — Trog. ludovicianus (Sylvia ludoviciaiia. Lath,), Wils. II, pi. xii, f. v.— Eng. Ed.] PASSLRIN.'E. 259 grey beneath ; breast spotted with black ; two pale, transverse bands on the wing. The thumb nail of others is exactly that of an alauda, and they gene- rally remain on the ground. J. pratensis,Bechst.; Alatida pratensis, Gm.; Alouette de pre, Enl. G61, 2*; Naum. 84, 3 and 85, 1. Olive-brown above, whitish beneath ; brown spots on the breast and flanks ; whitish eyebrows ; edges of the external quills of the tail white. It prefers low or in- undated meadows, and builds among reeds and tufts of grass. It becomes excessively fat in autumn by feeding on grapes, and is sought for at that period in France by the name of Bec-figue and Vinettef. We shall terminate this family of the Dentirostres with some birds distinguished from all preceding ones by their two external toes, which are united at their base for about a third of their length, a circumstance which approximates them to the family of the Syndactyly PiriiA, Lin. The Manakins have a compressed bill, higher than it is broad, and emarginated; large nasal fossae. Their feet and tail are short; the ge- neral proportions of their form have long caused them to be considered as very similar to the titmouse. At their head, but in a separate group, should be placed, RupicoLA, Briss. The Rock Manakins, or Cocks of the Rock, which are large birds, and have a double vertical crest on the head, formed of feathers arranged like a fan. The adult males of the two American species, Pipra rupicola, Gm. Enl. 39 and 747; Vieill. Gal. 189, and Pip. peruviana, Lath. Enl. 745, are of a most splendid orange colour; the young of an obscure brown. They live on fruit, scratch the ground like the common hen, and construct their nests with pieces of dry wood, in the depths of rocky caverns. The female lays two eggs. Calyptomenes, Horsfield. Only differs from the preceding by the feathers on the head not being dis- posed like a fan; this same character, in a minor degree, may be observed in the Pip. peruviana. There is a species found in the archipelago of India of the most beautiful emerald green— CaZ. viridis, Horsf. Jav., which is not larger than a thrush. * Improperly called Alouette pipi; Nauman refers this figure to his A,> thus aqua- ticus, of which he thinks it is the young male. We may observe, that the synonyines of this subgenus are not less obscure than those of the Fauvettes. t Add the AMus aquaiicus, Naum. S5, 2, 3i;-La Rousseline {Anth. Campestrts) Enl. 661, 1; Naum. 84, 1; or Alcmda mosellana, Lath., of ^v•hlch the young is called Fist in Provence, Enl. 654, 1 (Molac. massllicnsis, Gm.) See Roux, p. 292;-the Anth Richardi, Vieill. Id. 101, and Ronx, 189, 190. Among those foreign to Europe place the Alauda capensis, Enl 50 i, 2;-AL rufa, lb. 238, 1; probably the rubra, Edw. 207 •,—Aiithus rufulus, Vieill. Gal. 161. GOO PiPRA, CuV. The Manakins, properly so called, are small', and remarkable in general for their lively colours*. They live in small flocks, in forests, on low grounds. EuRYLAiMUs, Horsf. Toes similar to those of the Manakins and the Rock Manakins : but the bill, as strong as that of the Tyrants, is enormously broad and depress- ed, the base even surpassing the width of the forehead. The point is a little hooked, and slightly emarginate on each side ; the ridge is blunt. These birds inhabit the archipelago of India. The ground of their plumage is black, variegated with patches of bright colours, and they have something of the air of the Bucco, a genus of a very different order. They live near the water, and feed on insects (a)f . FAMILY II. FISSIROSTRES. The Fissirostres form a family, numerically small, but very distinct from all others in the bill, which is short, broad, horizontally flattened, slightly hooked, unemarginate, and with an extended commissure, so that the opening of the mouth is very large, which enables them to swallow with ease the insects they capture while on the wing. They are most nearly allied to the Flycatchers, and to the Procnias in particular, whose bill only differs from theirs in being emarginate. Their decidedly insectivorous regimen eminently qualifies them for birds of passage, which leave us in the winter. * Pipra militaris, Sh. Nat. Misc. 849;— P/p/a caudala, Sh. Nat. Misc. 153, Spix. 6; — Pipra filicauda, Spix, 8;— Pipra pareola, Enl. 637, 2, aud 303, 2;—superba, Pallas, Sp. 1, pi. iii, f. 1 ; — erythrocephala, Enl. 34, 1 ; — aureola, 34, 3, and 302; — rubrocapilla, Col. 54, 3, or cornuta, Spix, 7, 2; — coronata, Sp. 7, 1, 2; — serena, Enl. 324, 2, and Vieill. Gal. 12;—gutturalis, 324, 1; leucocapilla, 34, 2; manacus, 302, 1, and 303, 1 ; strigilata, Pr. Max. Col. 54, 1, 2. f Todus macrorhynchos, Gm., Lath., Syn.'II, pi. xxx, and Col. 154, under the name of Euryl. nasutus ; — Euryl. javanus, Horsf., and Col. 130 and 131, under the name oi Euryl. Horsfieldii; — Eur. cucullatus, Tera. Col. 261; — Eur. BlainviHii, Less, and Gam. Voy. de la Coquille, pi. xix, f. 2. The character of the bill is excessively developed in the Eur. corydon, Tern. Col. 297. |^° (fl) Vieillofs genus Icteria properly comes in this place. It is characterised as follows : — Bill strong, convex, curved, compressed, nearly entire, and bristly at its base; mandibles nearly equal, the edges being somewhat inverted; nostrils round, aud half covei-ed by a membrane; tongue slightly bifid at the tip. One species only is known, and it is described by Wilson as the Pipra pohjglotla. — Eng. Ed. PASSErUN.E. 261 They are separated, like tlie birds of prey, into two divisions, the diur- nal and the nocturnal. The genus HiRUNDO, Lhl. Or the Swallow, comprehends the diurnal species, all of which are re- markable for their dense plumage, extreme length of wing, and velocity of flight. Among them we distinguish Cypselus, Illiger. The Martinets have, of all birds, the longest wings in proportion to their size, and the greatest powers of flight. Their tail is forked; their ex- tremely short feet have this very peculiar character, that the thumb is di- rected forward almost as much as the other toes, and the middle and ex- ternal ones consist each of only three phalanges like the internal one. The shortness of their humerus, the breadth of its apophyses, their oval fourchette, their sternum not emarginate beneath, — all indicate, even in the skeleton, their fitness for vigorous flight; but the shortness of their feet, together with the length of their wings, prevents them, when on the ground, from rising, and consequently, they pass their lives, if I may so express it, in the air, pursuing in flocks, and with loud cries, their insect prey through the highest regions of the atmosphere. They build in holes of walls, or fissures in rocks, and climb along the smoothest surfaces with great rapidity. The common species, Hirundo apus, L., Enl. 541, 1, is black, with a white throat. That from high mountains, Hirundo melha, L. ; Edw. 27; Vaill. Afr. 243; Vieill. Gal. 121, is larger, brown above, and white be- neath, with a brown collar under the neck (o). Hirundo, Cuv. The Swallows, properly so called, have the toes and sternum disposed like those of the Passerinae generally. In some of them the feet are in- vested with feathers down to the nails ; the thumb still exhibits a dispo- sition to incline forward; the tail is forked, and of a moderate size. H. urhica, L. ; Hirondelle de fenetre, Enl. 542, 2. (The Mar- tin). Black above; underneath, and the rump, white. The sub- stantial nest it constructs of earth, at the angles of windows, under eaves of houses, &c. is well known to every one*. Others have naked toes, and the forks of the tail very often extremely long. * Add Hirundo cayennensis, Enl. 725, 2; — Hit: ludoviciana, Nob. Enl. 725, 1, and Catesby, 1, 51 — Hir. montana; — the same as the rupestris. ^^ (rt) Add Hir. sinensis; — the Martinet a croupe blanche, Vaill. Afr. 244, 1? — the Martinet velocifere, Id. lb. 244, 2? — the Martinet a moustarhes [Cyps. mystaceus, Less, and Gam.), Voy. de la Coquille, No. 122;— the M. Coiffe {C. comatus, T.), Col. 268;— the M. longipenne (Hir. lons:ipennis, T., Col. 83, 1. [Add Cyps. pelagicus, Wils. V. pi. xxxix. f. 1.— Eng. Ed.] 2G2 BIRDS. H. rustiea, Enl. 543, 1. (The Chimney Swallow). Black above; forehead, eyebrows, and throat, red, all the remaining under part white. The name is derived from its usual place of residence. H. riparia; Hirondelle de rivage; Enl. 453, 2. (The Sand Martin). Brown above, and on the breast; the throat, and under- neath, white. It lays in holes along the banks of rivers. That it becomes torpid during the winter, and even passes that season under water in the bottom of marshes, appears to be certain. Among the Swallows foreign to Europe, we should remark, Hir. esculenta, L. (The Salanganes). A very small species from the Archipelago of India, with a forked tail ; brown above ; be- neath, and the tip of the tail, whitish ; celebrated for its nest, com- posed of a whitish gelatinous substance, arranged in layers, and con- structed with a particular species of fucus, with slender and whitish stalks, which it previously grinds and macerates. The renovating qualities attributed to these nests in China have rendered them an important article in the commerce of that country *. They are dress- ed like mushrooms. There are some swallows in foreign countries, in which the tail is nearly square"!", and others where it is short, square, and the quills ter- minating in a point;};. Caprymulgus§, Lin. The Goatsuckers have the same light, soft plumage, shaded with grey and brown, that characterizes the nocturnal birds. Their eyes are large ; the bill with a commissure extending still higher up than that of the swal- low, and furnished with stiff mustachios, is capable of engulphing the largest insects, which are retained there by a glutinous saliva; the nos- trils, formed like small tubes, are at its base. Their wings are long; their feet short, with feathered tarsi, and their toes united at their base by a short membrane. The thumb itself is thus united to the internal toe, and can direct itself forwards ; the middle nail is often dentated on its * Here come: Hir. americana, Wils. V, xxxviii, 1, 2, or mfa, Vieill. Am, 3; — an- other, Hir.rufa, Enl. 721, \;~Hir.fulva, Vieill. Am. 32;—Hir.fasciata, Enl. 724, 2; — Hir. violacea, Enl. 722, or //. purpurea, Wils. V, xxxix, 1, 2; — Hir. chalyhoea, Enl. 545, 2; — Hir. sevegalensis, Enl. 310; — Hir. capensis, Enl. 723, 2; — Hir. ivdica, Lath. Syii. II, pi. Ivi; — Hir. panayana, Sonner, Voy. I, pi. Ixxxvi; — Hir. subis, Edw. 120; — Hir. amhrosiaca, Briss. II, pi. xiv. fig. 4; — Hir. tapera, lb., fig. 3; — Hir. nigra, Id., pl. xlvi, fig. 3; — Hir. daurica; — Hirondelle a front roux, Vaill. Afr. 245, 2; — Hir. de marais, Id. lb. 246, 2;— Hir. huppee, Id. lb. 247 ;— Cyps. senex. T. 397 i—Hir. fucata, Tem. Col. 161, \;—Hir. jugnlaris, Pr. Max., Col. ib. 2;—Hir. javanica, Lath. Col. 83, 2;— Hir. melanoleuca, Pr. Max., Col. 209, 2,— Hir. minuta, Pr. Max., Col. Ib. 1 ; — Hir. hicolor, Vieill. Am. 31, or H. viridis, Wils. V, xxxviii, 3. f Hir. dominicensis, Enl. 545, 1; — Hir. torquata, Enl. 723, 1; — Hir. leucoptera, Enl. 546, 1; — Hir. francica, Enl. 544, 2; — Hir. borboniea) — H. americana; — Hir. fauve, Vaill. Af. 246, 1. X Hir. acuta, Enl. 544, 1 ,—Hir. pelassia, Enl. 726, 1 and 2, and Wils. V, xxxix, 1 ; — Cypselus giganteus, Tem. Col. 364; — Hir. albicollis, Vieill., Galer. 120, or Cyps. col- laris, Pr. Max., Col. 195. § Caprimulgus, Goatsucker, ^gothelas, names which derive their origin from the whimsical idea entertained by the vulgar, of their sucking goats, and even cows. N. B. M. Vigors and Horsfield make a genus (iEGOTHELEs) of the Caprimulgus Nova-HoUandia; Philip., Bot. B. 270. passerin.t:. 263 inner edge, and tlie external toe has but four phalanges, a conformation very rare among birds. Goatsuckers live solitarily, and never venture abroad, except at twilight, and in the night during fine weather. They hunt Phalenae and other nocturnal insects, and lay a small number of eggs on the bare ground, without taking any pains in the construction of a nest. The rushing of the air into their immense mouth, while on the wing, produces a very peculiar humming sound. There is but one spe- cies in Europe, Capr. europceiis, L.; Enl. 193. (European Goatsucker). Size of a thrush; of an undulated greyish-brown, mottled with blackish brown ; a whitish band reaching from the bill to the back of the neck. It builds in the furze or long grass, and lays only two eggs. America produces several of these birds with a round or square tail, one of which is as large as an owl, Caprim. grandis, Enl. 325 ; and another, C. vociferus, Wils. V, xli, celebrated on account of its loud and peculiar cries in the spring of the year*. One of them is found in New Holland. There are some also in Africa*!", part of which have a pointed tail J, and others, whose forked one affords an additional indication of the affinity between this genus and that of the swallows§. There is even one in America, the forks of whose tail are longer than the body II ; the middle nail of these fork-tailed species is not dentated. One species, likewise from Africa, but with a round tail, is very remarkable for a feather twice the length of the body, which arises from near the carpus of each wing, and is barbed only near the end : the Caprim longipennis, Shaw, Nat. Miscell. 265. PoDARGUS, Cuv. The Podarges have the form, colour, and habits of the Goatsuckers; but the bill is stouter, and there are neither membranes between the toes, nor is the middle nail dentated**. P. Cuvieri; P. cendre; Vieill. Galer. 123. Variegated with ash, whitish and blackish colours ; size of a Rook. P. javanensis, Horsf. Jav. Red, varied with brown; a white band along the scapulars. P. cornutus, T., Col. 159. Red, varied with white; large tufts of feathers at the ears. * Add Capr. virginianns, Edw. 63, or americanus, Wils. V, xl, 1 , 2, which appears to me at any rate very nearly allied to the guyanensis, Enl. 733; it has heen confounded with the vociferus; — Cap?: caroUnensis, Catesb. 8, Wils. VI, liv. 2, a species very closely allied to that of Europe; — C.jamdicensis, Lath., Syn. II, pi. Ivii; — C.rufus, Enl- 735 ; — C. semitorquatus, Enl. 734; — C. cayennensis, Enl. 760; — C. acutits, Enl. 752; — C Nattercri, Col. 107 i—C.diuriius, Pr. ]\Iax., Col. 182;~-C. mystavaiis, Tem. t C. infuscatus, Ruppel., pi. vi; — C. isabellintts, T. Col. 379;— C. eximius, Ruppel. , Col. 398. X C. climacuriis, Vieill. Galer. 122. § Capr.furcatus, Cuv. Vaill Afr. 47; — C.pectoralis, Id. lb. 94. II C. psalums, Tem. Col. 117, 151. ** M. Vigors considers this subgenus as connecting Caprimulgus with Ulula. J?G4 FAMILY III. CDNIROSTRES. The Conirostres comprehend genera with a strong bill, more or less conical, and unemarginate ; the stronger and thicker their bill, the more exclusively is grain their food. The first genus to be distinguished is, Alauda, Lin. The Larks are known by the nail of their thumb, which is straight, strong, and much longer than the others*. They are granivorous birds, and pulverators. They build on the ground, and generally keep there. The bill of the greater number is straight, moderately stout and pointed. Al. arvensis; Alouette des champs, Enl. 368, 1; Naum. 100, 1. (The Sky Lark). Universally known by its perpendicular mode of soaring, accompanied by its varied and powerful song, and by the abundance with which it is procured for our tables. It is brown above ; whitish underneath ; spotted throughout, with a deeper shade of bro\vn ; the two external quills of the tail white outside. Al.cristaia; Le Cochevis, Enl. 503, 1; Naum. 99, 1. (The Crested Lark). Nearly the same size and plumage ; but it has the power of erecting the feathers on its head into a tuft ; not so common as the preceding, and frequents the vicinity of villages and copses. Al. arborea ; Al. nemorosa ; CujeUer ; Enl. 503, 2; Naum. 100, 2. (The Wood Lark). Has a small, but not so strongly mark- ed tuft ; it is smaller, and is otherwise distinguished by a whitish streak round the head, and a white line on the little coverts, it prefers the heaths in the interior of the forests"}". We sometimes see in Europe, Al. alpestris, Al.fiava, and Al. sihirica, Gm. ; Alouette a hausse- colnoir, Enl. 652, 2; Naum. 99, 2, 3; AYils. I. v. 4. From Si- beria and North America; forehead, cheeks, and throat, yellow, with black streaks ; a large, black, transverse spot on the top of the breast; a small pointed tuft behind each ear of the male. Some of them have so stout a bill, that, with respect to it, we might approximate them to the Sparrows. Such are Al. calandra; La Calandre ; Enl. 363, 2; Naum. 98, 1. The largest of the European species; brown above; white beneath; a * This character is more or less marked in Budytes, Alauda, Anthus, of which we have already spoken, and in the Emberiza nivalis, which we have yet to mention. t Add, of European species, the Girole {jII. italicn); — the Coqtiillade {Al. undata), Enl. 662; the Short-tced Lark, Al. brachydactyla, Naum. 98, 2. Species foreign to Europe, the Bateleuse, Vaill. Afr. 194; — the Dos rou.r. Id. 197; — the Calotte rousse. Id. 198. N. B. The AL mas^va, Catesh. I, 33, is merely the Stnrnns ludovicianus. PASSERINE. 265 large blackish spot on the breast of the male. From the south of Europe, and the deserts of Asia. But especially, Al, tartarica, and mutahilis, and Tanagra sibiriea, Gm. — Alouette de Tartaric, Sparm. Mus. Carls, pi. xix. ; Vieill. Galer. 160. The plumage of the adult black, undulated above with grey. It occa- sionally wanders into Europe *. In others, the bill is elongated, slightly compressed, and arcuated, which connects them with Upupa and Promerops. Such is Al. africana, Gm.; Le Sirli, Enl. 712; Vieill. Galer. 159. Common in all the sandy plains of Africa; its plumage scarcely differs from that of the Arvensis f . Parus, Lin. The Titmouse has a slender, short, conical and straight bill, furnished with little hairs at the base, and the nostrils concealed among the feathers. It is a genus of very active little birds, which are continually flitting and climbing from branch to branch, suspending themselves therefrom in all sorts of positions, rending apart the seeds on which they feed, devouring insects wherever they see them, and not sparing even small birds when they happened to find them sick, and are able to put an end to them. They lay up stores of seeds, build in the holes of old trees, and lay more eggs than any of the Passerinae. There are six species of Parus, properly so called, in France. P. major, L. ; La Charbonniere, En\. 3. 1; Naum. 94, 1. (The Great Titmouse). An olive colour above; yellow beneath; the head, as well as a longitudinal band on the breast, black : a white triangle on each cheek. Very common in copses and gardens. P. ater, L. ; La petite charbonniere, Frisch, I. pi. xiii. 2; Naum. 94, 2. Smaller than the preceding; an ash colour in place of the olive, and whitish instead of the yellow. Prefers the great pine forests. P. palustris, L.; La Nonncttc; Enl. 3, 3; Naum. 94, 4. (The Marsh Titmouse). Ash- coloured above; whitish beneath ; a black calotte. P. cceruleus, L. ; La Mesange a tete blcue; Enl. 3, 2 ; Naum. 95, 1,2. (The Blue-headed Titmouse). Olive above; yellowish beneath ; top of the head a fine blue; the cheek white, surrounded with black; forehead white. A pretty little bird, very common in the underwood. P. cristatus, L. ; Le M. huppee, Enl. 502, 2. (The Crested Tit- mouse). Brownish above ; whitish beneath ; throat and circumfer- ence of the cheek, black ; a little tuft mottled with black and white. P. caudatus, L. ; Le M. a longue queue, Enl. 502, 3 ; Naum. 95, 4, 5, 6. (The long-tailed Titmouse). Black above; wing coverts, * Add, tlie Tracal, Vaill. Afr. pi. cxci;— the Al. gros bee, Id., pi. cxciii. f Add, ///. bifusciata, Rupp. pi. 5; Col. 393. N.B. Swainson separates from Alauda the Bateleur of Vaill. pi. 194, under the name of Brachonyx; his SentineUc, 195, under that of Macronyx; and of my division with long beaks he makes his Certhilauda. VOL. 1. Z 266 BIRDS. brown ; upper part of the head and all beneath, white : tail longer than the body. It builds its nest on the branches of small trees, and roofs it over*. The Bearded Titmouse Differs from the true ones in the upper mandible of the bill, the end of which is slightly bent upon the other. There is but one in France. Par. biarmicus, L. ; La Moustache, Enl. 618, 1 and 2; Vieill. 69; Naum. 96. (The Bearded Titmouse). Fawn coloured; head of the male cinereous, with a black band which surrounds the eye, terminating in a point behind. It builds among the thickest rushes, and is found, though rarely, throughout the whole of the eastern continent. Remiz. The bill more slender and pointed than that of the common Titmouse, and there is generally more art displayed in the construction of its nest. There is but one found in France. Par. pendulinus; Le Remiz; Enl. 618, 3; Vieill. 70; Naum. 79. Cinereous ; wings and tail brown ; a black band on the fore- head, which, in the male, is continued to behind the eyes. This little bird, inhabiting the south and east of Europe, is celebrated for the pretty, purse-shaped nest, formed of the down from the poplar and willow, and lined with feathers, which it suspends to the flexible branches of aquatic trees -f-. Emberiza, Lin. The Buntings have a very distinct character in their conical, short, and straight bill, the upper mandible of which is narrow, sinks into the lower, and has a projecting, hard tubercle on the palate. They are granivorous, and unsuspicious birds, which run into every snare that is laid for them. E. citrinella, L. ; Bruant commun ; Enl. 30, 1; Naum. 102, 1,2. (The Yellow Bunting). Fawn-coloured back, spotted with black; head, and aU the under part of the body, yellow ; the inner edge of the two external quills of the taU, white. It builds in hedges, and * Several species of the European Titmouse are also represented in the work ot M. Roux, pi. cxvii — cxxiv. Add, Parus bicolor (Catesb. I, 57); — P. cyanus (Nov. Comm. Petrop. xiv, pi. xiii, fig. 1, and 23, fig. 2), and P. salbyensis (Sparm. M. Carls., pi. xxv), which appear to Bechstein to be the two sexes of one and the same species. VieiU. Gal. 68; Naum. 95, 6; — P. atricapillus (Briss. iii, pi. xxix, fig. 1); —P.sibiricus (Enl. 70S, fig. 3), and P. palustris, B. (Enl. 502, 1), which are three varieties, or verj' closely allied species; — P. atriceps, Horsf.; Col. 287, 2. The Parus malabaricus (Sonner. Voy. II, pi. ex, 1), and the coccineus, (Sparm. Mus. Carls. 48, 49), P.furcatus, Col. 287, 1, are Saxicolas or Flycatchers, neighbours to the Oranor, Vaill., or Mot. riiticilla, L., or Turdus speciosus, Lath. It may be ob- served, that in every instance where the characters of a bird are not well defined, it h.is been bandied about from one genus to another. t Parus narbonensis (Enl. 708, 1), appears to be the female of the pendulinus; add, the Parus capensis, (Sonner. Voy. II. pi. cxii.), whose nest, made of cotton, and shaped like a bottle, has a kind of spout on the edge of the neck for the male to perch on. PASSERINE. 267 approaches our dwellings in winter, in numberless flocks, along with the Finches, &c., when the snow covers the ground. E. cia, L.; Bruantfou; Enl. 30, 2; Naum. 104, 1, 2. (The Foolish Bunting). Differs from the preceding, in being reddish- grey beneath, and having the sides of the head whitish, surrounded by black lines, forming a triangle. From mountainous districts*. E. cirlus,L.; Bruant des haies; Enl. 653; Naum. 102, 3, 4. (The Hedge Bunting). Throat black; sides of the head yellow. Builds in the underwood on the borders of fields f. E. schceniclus, L. ; B. de roseaux; Enl. 247, 2; Naum. 105. (The Reed Bunting). A black calotte on the head; spots of the same colour on the breast ; back red. Builds at the foot of a bush on the brink of a stream, &c. % The largest species in France is, E. miliaria, l..; LeProyer; Enl. 233; Naum. 101, 1. (The Common Bunting). Brownish-grey, every where spotted with a deeper brown. Builds in grass, among grain, &c. The most cele- brated for the flavour of its flesh is, E. Jiortulana, L. ; Enl. 247, 1; Naum. 103. (The Ortolan). The back olive-brown ; throat yellowish ; the inner side of the two external feathers of the tail white. Builds in hedges : is very fat, and common in autumn 1 1 . E.melanocephala, Scop.; Naum. 101, 2; Fring. crocea, VieilL, Ois. Tab. 27. (The Black-headed Bunting). Fawn-colour above ; yellow underneath; black head. Is sometimes seen in the south of Europe. Also, E. pithyornis, Pall.; Naum. 104, 3. (The Pine Bunting). The throat, and a streak on the side of the head, red chesnut colour. M. Meyer distinguishes those Buntings which have the nail of the thumb elongated, like that of the Lark, by the name of Plectropiianes. Such is * The Emb. lotJiaringica, Enl. 511, 1, is the same. f The Emb. passerina is also referred to it; and perhaps the Emb. provincialis, Enl. 656, 1, and lesbia, lb. 2, are only accidental varieties of the same. See Roiix, p. 176 and 178. X M. Wolf thinks that the Evib. chlorocephala, and the Emb. badensis, should be united with it. II The Emb. melbensis, Sparm. Mus. Carls., 1, 21, is merely a young Ortolan. Notwithstanding all the synonymes we have pointed out, we are still compelled to remove from this genus the Emb. brumalis, which is the same bird as the Fringill. citrinella, Enl. 658, 2; — E. rubra, the same as Fring. erijthrocephala, Enl. 665, 1, 2; — all the widows, as I shall hereafter remark; — E7nb. quadricolor, Enl. 101,2; — Emb. cyanopis, Briss. III. pi. viii, fig. 4; — Emb. cixrulea, Id. lb. xiv, 2, the same as cija- ■nella, Sparm. Carls. II, 42, 43, which are three cross-bills; — Emb. quelea, Enl. 223, \;—Emh. capensis, Enl. 158 and 56i;— Emb. borbonka, Enl. 321, 2;— Emb. hrasiUcn- sis, lb. I, which are four Finches; — Emb. cms, Enl. 158, which is a Linnet; — and, finally, Emb. oryzivora, Enl. 388, which has the bill of a Linnet, independently of the species I have not been able to examine. But we must certainly place in the genus Emberiza, the Emb. gubernator, T., Col. 63, the same as the Emb. cristatella, Vieill. Gal. 67;— Emb. striolata, Ruppel. Av., pi. 10, a;— EtmS. casta, Id. lb. b;— The Ta- nagra cristatella, graminea, ruficollis, Spix, 53, are also Buntings. The Emberizoides, Tern., Col. 114, appear to be long and taper-tailed (elagce) buntings, whose bill approaches somewhat to that of the finches. z 2 268 BIRDS. Emb. nivalis, L.; Bruant de neige; Enl. 511; Naum. 106 and 107. (The Snow Bunting). Known by a broad longitudinal white band on the wing. A northern bird, which becomes nearly all white in winter*. To this we should add, Fring. laponica, Gm., or calcarata, Pall. Fr. Tr, III., pi. 1, 1; Grand Montain oi BufF. ; Naum. 108. (The Lapland Bunting). Spotted with black, on a fawn-coloured ground, the throat and upper part of the breast of the male, black. Inhabits the same countries as the preceding ; is sometimes, but rarely, seen in France during the winter. Fringilla, Lin. The Sparrows have a conical bill, more or less thick at base ; but its commissure is not angular. They feed generally on grain, and are, for the most part, voracious and noxious. We subdivide them as follows : — PLOCEusf, Cuv. The Weavers are provided with such a large bill, that they have been partly classed with the Cassici; but its straight commissure distinguishes them from the latter. The upper mandible is moreover slightly convex. They are found in both worlds, and most of those in the eastern con- tinent are very skilful in the construction of their nest, which they form of intertwined blades of grass, from which circumstances they receive their name. Such is Loxia phiUppini,lj. ; Toucnam-Courvi des Philippines ; Enl. 135. YeUow, spotted with brown; black throat. Its nest, which is a sus- pended sphere, is pierced by a vertical canal, opening underneath, and communicating with a cavity on the side in which the young ones are lodged :};. Some of them form a single mass of a great number of individual nests, which contains several distinct apartments. Such is Loxia socia, Lath.; Paters. Voy. pi. xix. (The Republican). An olive brown; yellowish beneath; head and quills brown or blackish. Among those of the western continent, we may remark, Oriolus niger, Or. oryzivorus, Corvus surinamensis, Gm. ; Ma7i- * The Emb. montana, and the Emh. mustelina, are merely different states of the Snow Bunting. t Plokiis, Weaver, — Vieill. has adopted this name and genus, Gal. pi. Ixxxiv. N. B. The Emeerizoides of Temm. have become the Tardivola of Swainson, and the Emb. oryzivora forms the genus Dolichonyx of the same naturalist. X Add, the Capmore, Buff. (Oriolus textor, Gm.), Enl. 375 and 376;— FringiUa ery- throcephala, Enl. 665, Vieill. Ois. eh. 28; — the pretended Tangara de malimbe, Daud. An. Mus. I, p. 148 pi. x, or Malimbe huppe, Vieill. Ois. ch. 42 and 43; — the Malimbi'. orange. Id. 44; — Malimbe a gorge noir. Id. 45; — the Tisserin a front d'or {Ploc. auri- frons, Tem. Col. 175, 176); — the Baglafecht {Lax. abyssinica);—ih.e. Nelicourvi {Lo.v. petisilis), Sonn. Voy. II, pi. cix; — the iVorabee {Fring. abyssinica, Gm.), Vieill. Ois. ch. 28; — Fring. eryihrocephala, Gm.; Vieill. lb. 28. We might distinguish the Ploc. alecto, Tem. Col. 440, which has an inflation at the base of the bill. PASSEKIN/E. 269 geur de riz; Cassique noir, &c. ; Enl. 534; Brown, 111. X; Wils. Ann. Ill, xxi, 4, (the Rice-Eater), which, in immense flocks, de- vastates the fields of several of the warmer portions of America. Its colour is a changeable black, reflecting all the magnificent tints of burnished steel*. PyRGiTA-f-, Cuv. In the Sparrows proper the bill is shorter than in the preceding birds, conical, and merely a little convex near the point. Fringilla domestica, Enl. 6, 1; Naum. 115, (The Common Sparrow). Builds in holes of walls, and infests inhabited places by its audacity and voracity. Brown, spotted with black above, grey underneath ; a whitish band on the wing ; sides of the calotte red in the male ; his throat black. There is a species, or a variety, in Italy, of which the male's head is entirely chesnut colour — Fr. cisalpina, Tem. ; Fr. Italice, Vieill. Galer. 63. The black on the throat sometimes extends to the breast; it is then the Fr. hispaniolensis. Fr. montana; Le Friquet; Enl. 267, 1; Naum. 116, 1, 2. The Mountain Linnet remains further from our habitations. It has two white bands on the wing, a red calotte, and the side of the head white, with a black spot ;};. * Nomenclators have not yet succeeded in putting in order the black birds of America, more or less nearly allied to the Cassici, for the want of sufficiently de- tailed descriptions. We think it right to indicate the principal ones here, and at the same time to point out such of their synonjTnes as appear to be the most clearly as- certained. 1. The Cassique noir a mantelet, as above. 2. The bird mentioned above, well drawn, but painted without its reflected tints, Enl. 534, and quoted under Oriohis niger. The Oriolus litdovicianus, Enl. 646, is only an albino variety of the same. It is evidently the Corims surinamensis, Brown, III, pi. X. The Little Choucas of Jamaica, Sloane, Jam. II. 299, pi. cclvii, 1, quoted by Pennant as Gracula barita, and as quiscata, is the same bird agaiji. On the other hand, it is impossible to doubt that Latham had it before him when ho described his Oriolus oryzivorous. 3. The true Carouge noir, with purple changes, bill rather short, but very straight, given as a Tanager, Enl. 710, and from which the Tan. bonariensis has been made; but this figure really represents the Oriolus minor. The fig. 2, Enl. 606, is given, but erroneously, for the female, which has a very different appearance. 4. A true Icterus, of a deep black, with violet reflections, sharp-pointed and some- what arcuated bill, whose tail is hollowed out like a boat. It is the Boat-tailed Grakle of Penn. and Latham, which both those gentlemen consider as synonymous with the Gracula barita, and yet it certainly is the bird of Catesb. pi. 12, of which Lin. made his Gracula quiscala; but Catesby has given a bad drawing of the bill. 5. A black bird, with violet and green reflections, somewhat cuneiform (etagee) tail, and the bill of an Icterus, but more arcuated near the point, &c. (a). f Pyrgita, the Greek name for the Domestic Finch. X The Hambouvreux, Buff". {Loxia hamburgia, Gm.), is merely the Friquet, disfi- gured by Albin., Ois. Ill, pi. 24. We should add to the ordinary Sparrows, the birds that have been scattered about by naturalists as follows, viz., Fringilla arcuata, Enl. 230, fig. 1, where it is much too red; its true tints are those of the Sparrows; — Fr. crucigera, Tem. 269; — Emberiza ^^ (n) The bird quoted from Wils. Ill, xxi, 4, is not a Ploceus. It is the Quis- calus versicolor, Bonap., or the Gracula quiscala, L. — Eng. Ed. -270 Fringilla, Cuv. The bill of the Finches is somewhat less arcuated than that of the Sparrows, a little stronger and longer than in the Linnets. Their man- ners are more lively, and their song more varied than those of the former. There are three species in France : Fring. ccelehs, L. ; iPinfow ordinaire, Enl. 54,1; Namn. 118. (The Chaffinch). Brown above ; beneath, a vinous-red in the male, greyish in the female ; two white bands on the wing ; some white on the sides of the tail. Feeds on all sorts of grain, and builds indis- criminately on all kinds of trees. No bird contributes more to en- liven the country. Fring. montifringilla, L. ; Pinion de montagne ; Enl. 54, 2; Naum. 119. (The Mountain Finch). Black, mottled with fawn colour above; fawn-coloured breast; under part of the wing of a beautiful lemon. This bird, which varies greatly, builds in the thickest forests, and never visits the plains till winter. Fring. nivalis, L. ; Niverolle, Briss. Ill, xv, 1; Naum. 117. (The Snow Finch). Brown, mottled with a paler tint of the same colour above; whitish beneath; head ash coloured; coverts of the wings, and nearly all the secondary quills, white. The throat of the male black. It builds among the rocks of the upper Alps, where it only descends in the middle of winter to the lower mountains (a). Carduelis, Cuv. The Linnets and Goldfinches have an exactly conical bill", without the least convex protuberance at any point. They live on grain. Those which have a little longer and more pointed bill, are styled Goldfinches. Fring. carduelis, L. ; Enl. 4; Naum. 124, 1, 2. (The Common Goldfinch). One of the prettiest birds in Europe. Brown above, whitish beneath ; the mask of a beautiful red ; a fine yellow spot on the wing, &c. It is also very docile, quickly learns to sing and to play all kinds of tricks. It prefers the seeds of thistle, eryngium, &c.*(6). LiNARiA, Bechst. The Linnets also have an exactly conical biU, but it is shorter and more capensis, c, Enl. 389, 2, and g, Enl. 664, 2; — Tanagra silens, Enl. 742, of which Vieill. has made his genus Arremon, Gal. 78; — Fring. elegans, Enl. 205, 1, Vieill. Gal. 64; — Le pape, Emberiza ciris, Enl. 159, which forms the genus Passerina, Vieill. Gal. 66;—Loxia oryx, Enl. 6, 2;—Lox. ignicolor, Vieill. Ois. Chant. 59;— Loxia dominicana, Enl. 55, 2, and the other species, Enl. 103; — Fringilla cristata, Enl. 181;— the Dioch {Emb. quelea), Vieill. Ois. Chant. 23;— the Dioch rose. Id. 24; — Lox. capensis. The latter begins to approach the Grosbeaks (a). * Add, Fr. psittacea, Lath. Syn. II, p. 48;— Fr. melba, Edw. 128 and 272;— Fr. coccinea, Vieill. Ois. ch. pi. xxxi; — Fr. leucocephala, Lath. Id. 26;— fV. magellanica, Id. 30. KiF («) Several American species are described by Wilson. — Eno. Ed. ^ (b) Add, Pyr. orythrophthalma, Wils. II, pi, x, f. 5 ;— P. tfo'aca, Wils. p. xxii, f xiv. — Eng. Ed. PASSERINiE. 271 obtuse than in the Goldfinches. They feed on seeds of plants ; those of flax and hemp in particular, and are easily kept imprisoned. There are some species in Europe, brown, tinted with red, which are more peculiarly styled Linnets. The quantity of red in the young birds and females is very various, and sometimes is totally wanting. The bill of the fitst is almost as pointed as that of the Goldfinch. It is, Fr. linaria, L. ; The Siserin; Enl. 485, 2 ; Vieill. Gal. 65 ; Naum. 126. (The Redpoll). Brown, spotted with black above; two white bands across the wing ; black throat ; top of the head, as well as the breast of the adult male, red; the rump is sometimes of the same colour. A northern bird, of which it is supposed two races have lately been detected, a large and a small one *. Fr. cannahina, L. ; Enl. 485,1; Naum. 121. (The Linnet). Back, fawn-coloured brown ; quills of the wing and tail, black, edged with white ; whitish underneath ; a fine red on the head and breast of the old male ; bill grey. Builds among vines, bushes, &c. An intermediate species, most nearly allied however to the second, Fring. montium, Gra., Naum. 122, is occasionally seen from the North. Its bill is yellow, and there is some red on the rump of the male. There are other species more or less greenish, which are called by the French Serins or Tarins. The Fring. spinus, L. ; Turin commun, Enl. 485, 3; Naum. 125. (The Siskin). Also has a bill more like that of the Goldfinch, and is even similar in many points to the Redpoll. It is of an olive co- lour above ; yellow beneath ; calotte, wings and tail, black ; two yel- low bands on the wing. It builds on the very summits of the tallest pines. The other species have the shorter bill of the Linnet. Fring. eitrinella, L. ; Le Venturon, Enl. 658, 2; Vieill. Gal. 62; Naum. 124, 3, 4.' Olive above; yellowish beneath; back of the head and neck ash coloured. Fring. serinus, L.; Le Cini, Enl. 658, 1; Naum. 123. Olive above; yellowish beneath; spotted with brown; a yellow band on the wing. Two birds from the mountains of the south of Europe, about the size of the Fr. spinus. Fring. canaria, li.; Enl. 202, 1. (The Canary Bird). Is larger, and the facility with which it breeds, in a state of confinement, toge- ther with its melodious and powerful song, have disseminated it every where, and caused it to vary so much in colour, that it is difficult to ascertain its original hue. It mixes with most of the other species of this genus, and often produces hybrids with them, which are more or less fruitful -j-. * See the Mera. de M. Vieillot, Acad, do Turin, torn, xxiii, p. 193, et seq. t Among the birds foreign to Europe, which cannot be distinguished from the Linnets by any generic character, we place, Fring. lepida ; — Fr. tristis, Enl. 202, 2; —Fr. iricra, Enl. 364;— Fr. nilens, Enl. 224;— F. senegalla, Vaill. Ois. ch. pi. ix;— F.amandava, Enl. 115, 2 and 3; — F. granatina, Enl. 109, 3; — F. bengalus; — F. ango- 272 BIRDS. Vidua*, Cm. The Widows, as they are termed, are birds of Africa and India, which have the bill of a Linnet, sometimes a little more inflated at the base, and distinguished by having some of the quills of the tail, or of its upper co- verts, excessively elongated in the males f. ^ There is a gradual transition, and without any assignable interval, from the Linnets to J, COCCOTHRAUSTES, CuV. Or the Grosbeaks, whose exactly conical bill is only distinguished by its excessive size. Loxia coccotJiraustes, L. ; Enl. 99 and 100; Naum. 114. (The Common Grosbeak). Is one of those that are most truly worthy of the name. Its enormous bill is yellowish ; back and calotte brown ; rest of the plumage greyish ; throat and quiUs of the wings, black ; a white band on the wings. It inhabits the mountain forests, builds lensis, Enl. 115, 1; — Carduelis cucullata, Swains. Zool. 111. There are other species also, called astrih, bengalis and senegallis, in the work of Vieillot, entitled Ois. chant. de la zone torride, such as the Fr. bicolor, pi. ix; — Fr. tricolor, pi. xx; — cinerea, 6; — cterulescens, 8; — melpoda, 7; — viridis, 4; — erythronotos, 14; — quinticolor, 15; — rubri- ventris, l^;— frontalis or Lox. frontalis, L. 16; — F. guttata, 3; — add Fring. melanotis, Temm. Col. 151, 1; — Fr. sanguinolenta, lb. 2; — Fr. polyzona, lb. 3; — Fr. otoleucus. Tern, Col. 269, 2, 3;— fr. simplex, Lichtenst. Col. 358;— Fr. lutea. Col. 365;— Fr. ornata, Pr. Max. Col. 208. The pretended Emberiza oryzivora, Enl. 388, has also the same bill ; but the stiff and pointed quills of the tail distinguish it. Numerous Finches are described by M. Ch. Bonaparte, Ann. of New York Lye. II. December, 1826, p. 106, et seq. * It is not easy to see why Linnasus and Gmelin arranged them with the Bunt- ings, by the names of Emberiza regia, (Enl. 8, 1);— £?«6. serena, (lb. 2);—Emb. paradisea, (Enl. 194);— £«6. panayensis, (Enl. 64:7);— Emb. longicauda, (Enl. 635). Add, Fritigilla superciliosa, Vieill. Gal. 61. If we do not leave the Widows with the Linnets, there is no other place for them except among the Grosbeaks. t In the Veuve a epaulettes {V. longicauda), the coverts only are elongated; in the others, it is the quills. N. B. The Emb. principalis, (Edw. 270), and the Emb. vidua, (Aldrow. Orni. II, 565), appear to me to be the same bird in different states of plumage. The Emb. psittacea, Seb. I, pi. Ixvi, fig. 5, is not very authentic. The angolensis, Salem. Orni. 277; the Feuve chrysoptere, VieiU. Ois. ch. pi. xli, and the Lox. macroura, Enl. 283, 1, which, perhaps, do not differ from it, are not Widows, but common Grosbeaks. X This transition is effected, in the species I have been able to examine, in the fol- lowing order, the bill always increasing in size: Loxia quadricolor , (Embr., Lin.) 101, 2, the same as the Gros bee longicone, Tem. Col. ;— L. sanguinirostris, Enl. 183, 2;— Z. molucca, Enl. 139, 2;— Z. variegata, Vieill. 51;— Z. punctulata, lb. 1;— Z. maja, Enl. 109, \;—L. striata, Enl. 153, 1;— Z. nitida, VieHl. 50;— Z. malacca, Enl. 139, 3;—L.astrild., Enl. 157, 2;— Z. bella, Vieill. 55;— Z. cantans, Id. 57 ;—L. oryzivora, Enl. 152, l;—L.fuscata, Vieill. pi. ]xn;—L.cyanea, Id. 64;— L. atricapilla. Id. 53; — Z. nigra, Catesb. 1, 68; Vieill. Gal. 57;— Z. brasdiana, Enl. 309, 1 ;— Z. Ludovi- czawa, Enl. 153, 2; Vieill. Gal. 58;— Z. pe/roma {Fring. peironia, L.), Enl. 255;— Z. chloris, Enl. 267, 2;—L.hamatina, Vieill. pi. Ixvii, where the bill is too slender; L. guttata. Id. 68, is a variety of the same; — Z. quinticolor, Id. 54; — Z. fasciata, Brown, lU. xxvii; — Z. madagascariensis, Enl. 143, 2; — Z. ccerulea; — Z. cardinalis, Enl. 37; — Z. melanura; — Z. coccolhraustes, Enl. 89 and 100; — L. ostrina, Vieill. Ois. ch. 48, Gal. 60;— Z. rosea, Vieill., pi. Ixui. • !SS^ Add, L.vespertina, Bonap. II, pi, xiv, £ 1; — L. ludoviciana, Wils. II, pi. xvii, f- 1; — L. carulea, Wils. Ill, pi. xxiv, i vi; — L. purpurea, Wils. I, pi. vii, f. 4. — Eng.Ed. > ' i' f > PASSERINE. 273 upon the beech, and fruit trees, and eats almonds and all sorts of fruits. There are two species with smaller bills in Europe. Loxia chloris, L.; Le Verdier, Enl. 672, 2; Naum. 120. (The Green Grosbeak). Greenish above; yellowish beneath; external edge of the tail, yellow. Inhabits the underwood, &c,, and eats all sorts of seeds. Fring. petronia, L. ; La Soulcie, Enl. 225; Naum. 116, 3, 4. (The Ring Finch). Which is commonly classed with the Finches, whose colours it bears ; but independently of its great bill, a whitish line round the head, and a yeUowish spot on the breast, afford evident marks of distinction*. There are some species that should be distinguished from the Grosbeaks. PiTYLUS, Cuv. The bill quite as large, slightly compressed, arcuated above, and some- times a salient angle on the middle of the edge of the upper jaw -j-. Naturalists have long separated from them, Pyrrhula. The Bullfinches, which have a rounded, inflated bill, arched in every direction. There is one in France. Loxia pyrrhula, L. ; Enl. 145; Vieill. Gal. 56; Naum. 111. (The Common Bullfinch). Cinerous above; red beneath; calotte black ; reddish grey superseding the red in the female ; builds on various trees, and among the bushes along the road. It is naturally a sweet songster, is easily tamed, and may be taught to speak. There is a race of them known, a third larger J. LoxiA§, Briss. The Crossbills have acompressed bill, and the two mandibles so strongly curved, that their points cross each other, sometimes on one side, some- times on the other, according to the individuals. This singular bill ena- bles them to tear out the seeds from under the scales of the pine-cones. Hie European species is very common wherever there are large woods of evergreens ; it is, Zox?a CMrmrosim, L.; Enl. 218. (The Crossbill). The plumage of the young male is of a vivid red, with brown wings; that of the adult, and of the female, is greenish above, yellowish beneath. Two * It is very evident, that the petronia is not less a Grosbeak than the chloris. + Such are Lox. grossa. Enl. 154; — L. canadanensis, Enl. 152, 2; — L. crytromelas. Lath. II, pi. xlvii, and Vieill. Gal. 59; — L. portoricensis, Daud. Ornith. II, pi. xxix, or Pyrrhula auranticoUis, Vieill. Gal. 55. X Add, Lox. lineola, Enl. 319, \;—M. minuta, lb. 2;—L. collaria, Enl. 393, 3;— L. sihirica, Falk. Voy. Ill, pi. xxviii; — Pyr. cinereola, Tern. Col. II, 1: — P. falci- rostris, lb. 2; — P. orthaginea, T. Col. 400; — P. mysia, Vieill. Ois. ch. pi. xlvi, and the pi. lix and Ix of Spix. [Add, P. frontalis, Bon. I, p. vi, f. 1, 2. — Eng. Ed. § Loxia, from the Gr. loxos, (curve), the name invented for this bird by Conrad Gesner. Linnaeus applied it to the Grosbeaks generally. 274 BIRDS. races of them, also, are known, which diflPer as to size, and even, as it is said, in their notes, and in the form of the bill, Lox. curviros- tra, Naum. 110, and Lox. pytiopsittacus, Bechst., Naum. 109*. We cannot remove from the Bullfinches and the Crossbills CoRYTHUSf, CuV. The point of whose completely arched biU curves over the lower mandible. The most known species, Loxia enucleator, L. ; Enl. 135, 1; or better, Edw. 123, 124; Vieill. Gal. 53; Naum. 112. The Pine Grosbeak inhabits the north of both continents, and lives in the same way as the Crossbill. It is red, or reddish, the feathers of the tail and wings black, edged with white J. The north of the globe produces neighbouring species of equal beauty as to colour, individuals of which sometimes find their way into Germany §. CoLius II, Gm. The Colies also approximate considerably to the preceding birds. Their bill is short, thick, conical, and somewhat compressed, its two mandibles being arcuated, but without extending beyond each other; the quills of their tail are cuneiform, and very long ; their thumb, as in Cypselus, is capable of being directed forwards like the other toes; their fine and silky feathers are generally cinereous. They inhabit Africa and India, climb something in the manner of Parrots, live in flocks, build many of their nests on the same bush, and sleep suspended to its branches in crowds, with the head downwards. They feed on fruit**. Here also come the BuPHAGA, Briss. The Beef-eaters form a small genus in which the biU is of a moderate length, cylindrical at the beginning, and inflated (both mandibles) near the end, which terminates in a blunt point. They use it to compress the skin of cattle in order to force out the larv» of the CEstrus lodged in it, on which they feed. One species only is known, and that is from Africa; brownish. * Add, Lox. leucoptera, Lath. Vieill. Gall- 53, and Wils. Am, Ornith. \ ConjtJius, Greek name of an unknown bird. Vieillot has changed this name into that of Strobiliphaga. X Loxia flamengo, (Sparm. Mus. Carl. pi. xvii), appears to me to be a mere albino variety of the enucleator. The Lox. psittacea of the Sandmch Islands, Lath. Syn. II, pi. xlii, or PsiTTACiROSTRA icterocephala, Temm. Col. 457, appears to differ from Corythus only in a little greater prolongation of the curved point of the bill. § Lox. erythrina, Pall, or Fringilla flammea, L., Naum. 113, 1, 2; — Lox. rosea, Pall. Naum. 113, 3; — Fr. purpurea, Wils. I, vii, 4. II Koloios, the Greek name of a small species of Crow. ** Col. capensis, Enl. 282, 1; Vaill. 258, and the young, 256. This latter is the C. siriatus, and the C. panayensis ; — Col. erythropus, Gm.; leuconotus, Lath, Vaill, 257 i— Col. gularis, Vaill. 259. I place near the Colies the birds called Merion natte (Malurus texlilis, Less.), and Merion kucoptere {M. leucopierus, Id.), Voy. de Freycin. pi. 23. PASSERINiE. 275 with a moderate sized cuneiform tail ; as large as a Thrush. Buphaga africana, Enl. 293; VaiU. Afr. pi. 97; VieiU. Gal. Cassicus, Cuv. The Cassiques have a large and exactly conical bill, thick at base, and very sharp at the point; small round nostrils, pierced on the sides; the commissure of the mandibles forms a broken line, or is angular like that of the Starlings. They are American birds, whose manners are similar to those of the last-mentioned ones, living like them in flocks, frequently constructing their nests close together, and sometimes with much art. They feed on grain and insects, and do great injury to cultivated grounds. Their flesh is bad. We subdivide them as follows : Cassicus*, properly so styled. The base of the bill mounts on the forehead, encroaching on the plumage, and forming a semicircular notch in it. The largest species belong to this subgenus -j-. Icterus J. The bill arcuated throughout its length, and only forming a small acute notch in the feathers on the forehead §. XanthornusjI Only diff'ers from the preceding in the perfect straightness of the bill**. * Vieill. has adopted this name and genus. f Cassicus bifasciatus, Spix, LXI, a; — Cassic. avgustifrons, Id. LXII; — Cass, niger- rimus, Id. LXIII, 1; — Oriolus cristatus, Enl. 344; — y 328; — hcmorrlious, 482;— per- skus, 184. — A black species, with metallic reflections, the plumes of whose neck are erectile, and form a kind of mantle. It is the Grand troupiale of Azz. Voy. Ill, p. 1C7. X Vieillot has changed the French term of the above subdivision, Troupiale, into Carouge, which I had adopted for the followng subgenus. He translates Carouge by PejiduUnus, Galer. pi. 186. § Oriolus varius, Enl.' 607, I;— Or. cayanus, 535, 2;—0r.capensis, Enl. 607. (N. B. It is from Louisiana, and not from the Cape) ; — Or. chrysocephalus, Merr. Beytr. I, pi. iii, Vieill. Gal. 86; — Or. dominicensis, Enl. 5, 1; — and a species of a changeable black, whose tail assumes all kinds of shapes, according to the direction of its lateral feathers, which are sometimes in the same plane with the rest, and at others turned up, &c. (Quiscalus versicolor), Vieill. Gal. 108; Wils. Ill, xvi, 3. It appears to be both the Gracula quiscala, L., Catesb. pi. xii, and the Gracula hartta, Lath. I, pi. xviii, or the Pie de la Jamaique: it is found in all the Antilles, Carolina, &c. It has been confounded with the Rice Eater (Ploceus niger). We should separate the Icterus sulcirostris, Spix, LXIV, the lower jaw of whose much larger bill is obliquely furrowed at base. II M. Vieill. calls these birds, Baltimore and Yphantes, Galer. pi. Ixxxvii. He se- parates some of them, which he names more particularly Troupiales, or Agelaius, pi. lxxx\'iii. ** Oriolus icterus, Enl. 532; — Oriolus minor and Tanagra honariensis, Enl. 710; the same bird; — Oriolus citrinus, Spix, 76; — Le Car. gasquct. Quoy and Gaym. Voy. de Freycin. pi. xxiv: — Oriolus phaniceus, Enl. 402; — Or. americanus, 236,2; — Or. leucopterus, Lath. Syn. I, frontisp.; — Or. banana, Enl. 535, 1; — Or. cayenensis, lb. 2; —Or. icterocephalus, 342; — Or. xanthocephalus, Ch. Bonap. I, IV, 1, 2;— Or. mexi- canus, Enl. 533;— Or. xanthornus, 5, 1;— Or. baltimore, 506, 1; Vieill. Galer. 87, and Wils. I, 1, 3; — Or. spurivs, Enl. 2, and Wils. I, iv, 1 — 4; — Or. melancholicus, Enl. 448, of which Or. guyanensis, Enl. 536; Vieill. Galer. pi. 88, is the adult. Add, Or. agripemiis, Bonap. {Enl. oryzivora, of others), the common Reed Bird iu America. — Eng. Ed. 276 BIRDS. We should distinguish among the number a species with a some- what shorter bill, which therein approaches the FringiUa, Cuv. Icterus pecoris, Tem. ; Emberiza pecoris, Wils. II, xviii. 1, 2, and Enl. 606, 1. (The Cow Bunting). A violet black ; head and neck a brown-grey. Lives in flocks among the cattle; but the most pe- culiar trait in its habits is that, Hke the cuckoo, it lays its eggs in other birds' nests*. [OxYEYNCHus, Teu. The conical and pointed bill of Xanthornus, but it is shorter than the head. The species known, Oxyr. fiammiceps, T. ; O. cristatus, Swains. 111. Ill, 49; Col. 125, has a partly red tuft on the head, like several of the Tyrants. The Dacnis, Cuv. — Pit-Pits, Buff. Resemble Xanthorni in miniature in their conical and short beak. They connect that subgenus with Regulus. The species known, Mot. cayana, L. ; Enl. 669; Vieill. Gal. 165, is a small blue and black bird. Sturnus, Lin. The Starlings only differ from the Xanthorni in having a bill that is depressed, especially near the point. S. vulgaris, L. ; Enl. 75 ; Naum, 62. (The Common Starling). Black, with violet and green reflections, every where spotted with white or fawn colour. The young male is of a brown grey. It is found in great numbers throughout the whole of the eastern continent, feeds on insects, and is of use to cattle by relieving them from their attacks. It flies in large and crowded flocks, is easily tamed, and may be taught to sing and even to speak. It leaves France in win- ter. Its flesh is disagreeable f . We can find no sufficient character to enable us to distinguish from the * Gmel. cites fig. 606, 1, of the PI. Enl., as Oriolus minor; it is a mistake. f Add the Sturnus unicolor of the south of Europe, Tem. Col. 3 ; Vieill. Gal., pi. xci; — St. capensis, Enl. 280, from which the St. contra, Albin. Ill, 21, does not differ, but which is from the Indies, and not from the Cape; — St. militaris, Enl. 113; — St. ludovicianus, Enl. 256, the same as the Alauda magna, Gm. Catesb. 1, 33, or the Stoiirnelle a collier, Vieill. Gal. pi. xc, and Wils. Ill, xix, 2; — the Etourneau a camail rouge {Oriolus ruber, Gm.), Sonner. Nouv. g. pi. Ixviii, or Amhlyramphus tricolor, Leach, Zool. Misceh, pl. xxxvi; a beautiful species from the steppes of Buenos Ayres, and not fi-om India, as stated by Sonnerat. N. B. The St. cinclus forms, as we have seen, a genus allied to the Thrushes; the S, sericeus. Brown, III, 21, is rather a Gracula, Cuv.; the St. collaris is the same as the Fauvette of the Alps {accentor). The St, carunculalus should, I think, go along with Philedon. The species of Osbec, Hernandez, &c. are not well authenticated; as to those of Pallas, it is to be regretted that we have no figures of them. The Stournes of Daudiu must be replaced with the Thrushes, or the Philedons, and his Quiscales, partly with the Graculae, Cuv. and partly with Cassicus. Daudin, generally speaking, completed the confusion of this genus, sufficiently entangled by his predecessors. PASSERINiE. 277 Conirostres, with certainty and precision, the different genera of the family of the Crows, all of which have a similar internal structure and external organs, only differing in a (generally) greater size, which sometimes ena- bles them to hunt small birds : their strong bill is most commonly com- pressed on the sides. These genera are three in number, the Crows, Birds of Paradise, and tlie Rollers. CoRVus, Lin. The Crows have a strong bill, more or less laterally flattened, nostrils co- vered with stiff feathers, which incline forwards. They are very cunning, their sense of smell is extremely acute, and they have, generally, a habit of purloining articles totally useless to them, such as pieces of money, &c., and even of hiding them. We more particularly call Crows or Ravens the large species, whose bills are the strongest in proportion, and in which the ridge of the upper mandible is the most arcuated. Their tail is either round or square. C. corax, L. ; Naum. 53, 1 ; Vaill. Afr. pi. 51 *. (The Raven). Is the largest of the Passerine which inhabit Europe. Its size is equal to that of the Cock. Its plumage is entirely black, the tail is rounded, and the back of the upper mandible arcuated near the point. It is a more solitary bird than the other species, flies well and high, scents carrion at the distance of a league, and feeds also on all kinds of fruit and small animals. It sometimes carries off poultry, builds on the tops of high trees or rocky cliffs, is easily tamed, and may be taught to speak tolerably well. It appears to be found in every part • of the globe. In the north its plumage is frequently varied by a mixture of white (Ascan. Ic. Nat. pi. viii) ; it is then the Corvus leu- cophceus, Temm., Vieill. Gal. 100. C. corone, L. ; La Corneille, Enl. 495; Naum. 53, 2f. (The Carrion Crow). A fourth smaller than the Raven ; the tail more square, and the bill less arcuated above. C.frugilegus, li.; ZeFrewx, Enl. 484; Naum. 55. (The Rook). StiU smaller than the preceding, with a straighter and more pointed bill. The circumference of the base of the latter, except when very young, is divested of feathers, which is probably occasioned by its habit of thrusting it into the ground in search of food. These two species live in large flocks, numbers of them building together. They feed as much on grain as on insects, and are found throughout all Europe ; remaining in the winter, however, only in the warmer districts. C. comix, L. ; Corneille mantelee, Enl. 76; Naum. 54. (The " N.B. Enl. 495 appears to be nothing more than a C. corone, and 483 a young Rook. M. Temminck thinks that the quoted fig. of Le Vaillant is a particular spe- cies peculiar to Africa, which he names C.montanus. f M. Temminck thinks there is a difference between the Crow of Europe and that of the Cape (Vaill. 52), which he calls C. segetum. 278 BIRDS. Royston Crow). Cinereous ; head, wings, and taU, black. It is less frugivorous, frequents the sea shore, and feeds upon shell fish, &c. Nauman assures us that it often couples with the Black Crow, and that the offspring reproduces. C. monedula, L. ; Le Choucas, &c., Enl. 525; Naum. 56, 1. (The Jackdaw). A fourth smaller than the preceding ones ; about the size of a pigeon : of a less intense black, which, around the neck and under the belly even, verges on cinereous; sometimes all black. It builds in steeples, old towers, &c., lives in flocks, feeds on the same substances as the Crows, and is frequently found with them. Birds of prey have no enemy more vigilant than the Jackdaw*. Pica, Cuv, The Pies are less than the Comix; the upper mandible is also more arcuated than the other, and the tail long and cuneiform. Corvus pica, L. ; Enl. 488 ; Naum. 56, 2. (The Magpie of Eu- rope). A beautiful bird, of a silky black colour, with purple, blue, and gold reflections ; the belly is white, and there is a large spot of the same colour on the wing. Its eternal chattering has rendered it notorious. It prefers living in inhabited places, where it feeds on all sorts of materials, sometimes attacking the smaller birds of the poul- try yards -j". Garrulus, Cuv. The two mandibles of the Jays are but little elongated, terminating in a sudden, and nearly equal curve ; when the tail is cuneiform it is not very long, and the loose and slender feathers of the forehead stand more or less erect when the bird is angry. Corvus glandarius, h.', Enl. 481 ; Naum. 58, 1. (The Jay of Europe). Is a fine bird of a vinous grey, with mustachios, and the quills of the tail, black ; particularly remarkable for a large spot of dazzling blue, striped with a deep shade of the same colour, which marks a part of the wing coverts. It feeds chiefly on the acorn, and of all birds shews the greatest penchant for imitating all kinds of • The Jackdaw terminates the tribes of the true Crows, because its upper mandible is hardly more arcuated than the lower one. Add to tliis tribe the Corvus jamaicensis, or Corneille a duvet hlanc; — Le C.dauricus, Enl. 327; the C. scapulatus, Daud. Vaill. 53, which M. Temm. thinks differs from the preceding; the albicollis, Lath., or CorUvau, which, from its high, compressed, trenchant-hacked bill, might constitute a separate subgenus, VaiU. 50; — the C. splendens of India, Vieill. Col. 425, remarkable for the instinct which prompts it to search for lice among the feathers of the Vulture (the Chagoun), who willingly permits it; — the C columhianus, Wils. Ill, xx, fig. 2; — the C. nasicus, Tern. Col. 413;— the C. ossifragus, Wils. V, xxxviii, f. 2, if it really differ from the comix. f Add the Corvus senegalensis, Enl. 538 ; — C. ventralis, Sh. ; Vaill. Afi-. 58 ;— C. erythrorhijnchos, Enl. 622, and better, Vaill. Afr. 57;— C. cayanus, Enh 378;— C. pe- ruvianus, Enl. 625;— C. cyaneus, Pall. Vaill. Afr. 58, 2;— C. rufus, Vaill. Afr. 59;— the Acahe, Azz. {Corvus pileatus, Illig.), Col. 58, or Pica chrysops, Vieill. Gal. 101 ; — the G. gubernatrix, Tem. Col. 436; — the Corv. azureus, T. Col. 168; — the Pie geng. {C.cyanopogon, P. Max.), Col. 169. PASSERIN/E. ^/y sounds. It builds in the woods of Europe, and lives in pairs or in small flocks*. CARYOCATACTEsf, CuV. The Nutcrackers have the two mandibles straight, equally pointed, and without any curve. There is only one species known. Corvus caryocatactes, L. ; Enl. 50 ; Naura. 58, 2 ; Vieill. Gal. 105. (The Common Nutcracker). Brown; the whole body spot- ted with white. It builds in the hollows of trees, in dense mountain forests, climbs trees and perforates their bark like the Woodpeckers, feeds on all kinds of fruit, insects, and small birds. Flocks of them sometimes descend into the plains, but at very irregular intervals. It is celebrated for its confidence J. Temia§, Vaill. The tail and carriage of the Pies, with an elevated bill, whose upper mandible is arched, the base furnished with velvet feathers, ailmost like the Birds of Paradise. The most anciently known, Corvus varians, Lath. ; Vaill. Afr. 56 ; Vieill. Gal. 106, is of a bronze green. It is found in Africa and in India||. Glaucopis**, Forster, The same bill and carriage, but there are two fleshy caruncles under the base of the former. The species known, Glaucopis cinerea, Lath. Syn. I, pi. xiv, is from New Holland, and is the size of a Pie ; blackish, with a cunei- form tail. It feeds on insects and berries, and perches but seldom. Its flesh is highly esteemed. * Add, Corvus crisiatu's, Enl. 529, VieilL Gal. 102; Corv. Stellcri, Vaill. Ois. de Par. &c. I, AAi—Corv. sihiricus, Enl. 608;— C. canadensis, Enl. 530, and a variety, Y\e\\\.i9,;—C.cristatellus, or C. cyanoleucos, P.Max; Col. 193 ;—C.ultramarinus,T. Col. iZ9;—C.torquaius, T. Col. ii;—C.floridanus, Ch. Bonap. I, xiii, 1. f Vieill. has changed this name into Nucifraga. X N.B. The Corvus hottentottus, 226, appears to us to be allied to the Tyrants; — C. balicassius, 603, is a Drongo; — C. calvus, Enl. 521, a G ymnocephalus ; C. Novm Guinea, Enl. 629, and C. papuensis, Enl. 639, belong to Graucalus, Cuv.;— C. specio- sus of Sh. is the Rollier de la Chine, Enl. 620, and belongs to the Deniirostres. Tem. makes a Pyroll of it, Col. Enl. iOl -.—CJlaviventris, Enl. 249, is a Tyrant;— C. mexi- canus is probably a Cassicus or a Weaver, and C. argirophtalmus. Brown, 111. 10, is certainly one;— C. rufipennis, Enl. 199, is a Thrush, the same as Turdus morio;—C. cyanurus, Enl. 355, C. hrachyurus, Enl. 257 and 258, and C. grallarius, of Shaw, Enl. 702, are Ant-catchers; — C. carunculatus, Daud., a Pluledon. We have approximated C.pyrrhocorax, Enl. 531, to the Thrushes, and C. graculus, Enl. 255, to Upupa. We are of opinion that C. eremita does not exist. The C. ca- riboeus, Aldrov. 788, is a Bee-eater, the account of which has been stolen by Duter- tre to describe an object of which he had no recollection: finally, C. gymnocephalus, Tem. Col. 327, appears to us to belong to the family of the Dentirostres. § Vieillot has changed this name into Crypsirina, Gal. 106; Horsfield into that of Phrenotrix. Temrainck unites Temia with Glaucopis. II Add Glaucopis leucoptera, Tem. Col. 285;— Gl.tcmnura, Id. Col. 337. •* Bechstein siibstitutes the term Calloeas for that of Glaucopis. 280 BIRDS. CoRACiAS*, Lin. The Rollers have a strong bill, compressed near the point, which is a little hooked. The nostrils are oblong, placed at the edge of the feathers, but without being covered by them; the feet short and stout. They be- long to the eastern continent, and are like the Jays in their habits, and in the'^loose feathers on the forehead. Their colours are vivid, but rarely harmonious. Some peculiarities of their anatomy approximate them to the Kingfishers and Pies, such as two emarginations in their sternum, a single pair of muscles to their inferior larynx, and a membranous stomach f. The Rollers, properly so called, Have a straight bill, every where higher than wide. There is one in Europe. Coracias garrula, L. ; Enl. 486. (The Common Roller). Sea- green; back and scapulars fawn-coloured; pure blue on the tip of the wing ; about the size of the Jay. It is a very wild bird, although sociable enough with its fellows, noisy, builds in the hollows of trees, and migrates in winter. It feeds on worms, insects, and small frogs. There are some Rollers foreign to Europe, which have a square tail;;};; the external quills in that of the European species, however, are somewhat elongated in the male, the first indication of their great length in several others §. CoLARis II, Cuv. Differs from Coracias in a shorter and more arcuated bill, and particu- larly in the enlargement of its base, which is more broad than high**. ParadisjEa, Lin. The Birds of Paradise, like the Crows, have a strong, straight, com- pressed bill, without any emarginations, and with covered nostrils; but the influence of the climate they inhabit, an influence extended to birds * This name, consecrated by the authority of Linnaeus, has been changed by Vieillot into that of Galgalus, which, among the ancient Latins, belonged to the Oriole. f Nitsch, ap. Nauman, II., p. 156. X Coracias bengnlen.iis, Enl. 285, is evidently the same as the indica, Edw. 326, and as the fig. of Albin, 1,17, quoted under caudaia; — Coracias viridis, Nob.; Vaill. 1,31; VieilLGal. 1 10;— C. rminc^fj/, Vaill., pi. G. § Coracias ahyssinica, Enl. 626, and its variety C. senegala, Enl. 326, Edw. 327. C. catcdafa is merely an individual of the same species, disfigured by the addition of the head of a hengalensis (Vaill. loc. cit., p. 105). — Cor. cyanogaster, Nob., Vaill., loc. cit. pi. xxvi. N. B. Cor. caffra, where Shaw quotes Edw. 320, can only be a Thrush {Turdus nitens) ; — C. sinensis, Enl. 620, by its emarginated beak also approaches either the Thrushes or the Shrikes. M. Shaw thinks that C. viridis, Lath, is an Alcedo. — C. strepera and C. varia, Lath, are Cassicans; C. militaris and C. scutata, Shaw, Piauhaus; — C. mexicana, Seb. 1, pi. Ixiv, f. 5, is the Jay of Canada; — C.cayana, Enl. 616, aTanager. II Col/iris is the Greek name of an unknown bird. — Vieillot has changed it into that of EURYSTOMUS, *• Coracias orientalis, Enl. 619; — Cor. madagascariensis, Enl. 501; — Cnr. afra, Lath. Vaill. loc. cit., pi. xxxv. passerinjE. 281 of several other genera, gives a velvet tissue to the feathers which cover tiiese nostrils, and frequently a metallic lustre, at the same time that it singularly devclopes the feathers which cover several parts of the body. They are natives of New Guinea and of the adjoining islands; and as it is difficult to obtain them except from the savage inliabitants of those countries, who prepare them for the purpose of plumes by cutting off the wings and feet, it was thought for some time that the first species was really destitute of those members, and lived constantly in air, supporting itself there by its long feathers. Some travellers, however, having suc- ceeded in obtaining perfect individuals of certain species, it is now known that their feet and wings indicate their claim to the place we have assigned to them. They are said to live on fruits, and to be particularly fond of aromatics. The feathers on the flanks of some of them are silky, and singularly extended into bunches longer than the body, which give such a hold to the wind that they are very often swept away by it. There are also two bearded filaments adhering to the rump, which are as long, and even longer than the feathers on the flanks* P. apoda, L.; Enl. 254; Vaill. Ois. de Par. pi. 1; Vieill. Ois. de Par. pi. 1. (The Emerald Bird of Paradise, the most anciently celebrated). Size of a thrush ; maronne ; top of the head and neck yellow; circumference of the bill and throat of an emerald green. It is the male of this species which is ornamented with those long bundles of yellowish feathers, employed by the ladies as plumes. There is a somewhat smaller race. P. rubra, Vaill. pi. 6; Vieill. pi. 3. The fascicles'of flank fea- thers of a beautiful red, and the filaments broader and concave on one side. In others we stiU find the filaments, but the feathers on the flanks, although somewhat elongated, do not extend beyond the tail. P.regia, Enl. 496; Vaill. 7; Vieill. 5, and Galer. 96. (The Manucode(a).) Size of a finch; a fine purple maronne; white belly; a band across the breast, the tips of the flank-feathers, and the barbs which widen the extremities of the two long filaments, emerald- green f. P. magnifica; Sonnerat, 98; Enl. 631; Vaill. 9; Vieill. 4. Maronne above ; green beneath and on the flanks : quills of the wings yellow ; a fascicle of straw-coloured feathers on each side of the neck, another of a deeper yellow opposite to the fold of the wing. Some have the slender feathers on the flanks, but they are short, and the filaments on the rump are wanting. P. aurea, Gm. ; P. sexsetacea, Shaw ; Sonnerat, pi. 97; Enl. 635 ; Vaill. 12 ; VieUl. 6, and Galer. 97. Size of a Thrush ; black ; * M. Vieillot ha3 made a genus of my first division, which he calls Samalia. t Vieillot makes his genus Cincinnurus of this species. I^T (rt) Manucodervata signifies, it is said, at the Moluccas, bird of God. This title is common to all the birds of Paradise. VOL. I. A A a golden-green spot on the throat ; three feathers from each ear ex- tended into long filaments, terminated by a small disk of barbs of the same colour as the spot on the throat*. Others again have no filaments, nor are the feathers of the flanks elon- gated. In P. superba, Sonnerat, 96; Enl. 632; VaiU. 14; Vieill. 7; Ga- ler. 98 -f-, the feathers of the scapulars are prolonged, however, into a kind of mantlet which can be laid so as to cover the wings, and those of the breast like a sort of pendent and forked coat-of-arms. With the exception of this latter, which is of a brilliant burnished steel-green, the whole of the plumage is black. P. aurea, Sh. ; Oriolus aureus, Gm. ; Edw. 112; VaiU. 18; Vieill. 11, has none of the preceding extraordinary developments of plumage, and is only distinguishable by the velvet feathers which cover its nostrils. The male is of the brightest orange ; the throat, and primary quills of the wings, black; in the female, a brown takes place of the orange ;J;. FAMILY IV. TENUIROSTRES. This family comprehends the remaining birds of the first division; those in which the bill is slender, elongated, sometimes straight, and sometimes more or less arcuated, and without any emargination. They are to the Conirostres nearly what the Motacillae are to the other Den- tirostres. SiTTA, Lin. The Nuthatches have a straight, prismatic, pointed bill, compressed near the point, which they employ like the Woodpeckers to perforate the bark of trees, and in withdrawing the larv« contained in it ; but their tongue is not extensible, and, although they climb in every direction, they have but one toe behind, which, it is true, is a strong one. The tail is of no use in supporting them, as is the case with the Woodpeckers and True Creepers. There is but one in France. S. europcea, L. ; Enl. 623, 1 ; Naum. 139. (The European Nut- " This species constitutes the genus Parotia, Vieill. Gal. 97. t This species forms the genus Lophorina, Vieill. Gal. 98. X I refer the Farad, gulari.s, Lath., or nigra, Gm.; Vaill. 20 and 21; Vieill. 8, 9, and the leucoptera, Lath, to the Thrushes; — the Par. Chahjboea, Enl. 633; Sonn. 97; Vaill. 23; Vieill. 10, to the Cassicans; — the cirrhata, Aldrov. 814, is too much muti- lated to be characterized, and the fureata, Lath., appears to be an imperfect spe- cimen of the superba. PASSERIN.^. 283 hatch). Bhiish ash colour above ; reddish beneath ; a blackish band descending behind the eye; size of a Rouge-gorge*. It has been thought necessary to separate from the Sittas, the XENOPS-f-, nUg. Which only differs from them in the bill being rather more compressed, and the inferior ridge more convex j. Anabates, Temm. In which, on the contrary, the superior ridge of the bill is somewhat convex, almost like the bill of a thrush which has no emargination. The tail, in some, is long and cuneiform, and occasionally worn, a proof that it supports them in climbingH. Synallaxis, Vieill. A straight bill, but little elongated ; very much compressed, slender, and pointed; the tail generally long and pointed§. There are even some of them in which the stems of the tail-quills are very stout, and project beyond the barbs ^. Those birds which have received the name of Certhia, Lin. Or the Creepers, have an arcuated bill, but that is almost the only com- mon character they possess. We separate from them, in the first place, Certhia, Cuv. The True Creepers, so called from their habit of climbing trees, like Woodpeckers, in doing which they make use of their tail as a prop or sup- porter ; they are known by the quills of the tail, which are worn, and ter- minate in a stiff point, like those of the same birds. There is one found in Europe, C. familiaris, L. ; Enl. 681, 1; Naum. 140. (The European • Add the S. a sourcil hlanc {S. canadensis, Briss.) Knl. 623, 2; — the Black- headed N. {S. melanocephala, L.), Catesb. I, xxii; Vieill. Gal. 171 ; — S. frontalis, Swains. Zool. 111. 2, or S. velata. Tern. Col. 72, 3, or Orthorynchus fronlalis, Hors£ Jav.; — S. chri/soptera, Lath., 3dSupp. 327;—^. pusilla. Id. f Vieillot has changed this name into Neops. X Xenops rutilus, Licht., Col. 72, 2, or Neops ntficauda, Vieill. Gal. 170; — Xenops Hofmanseggii, Col. 150, 1, Vaill. Prom. 31, 2;— Xenops anabatoides. Col. 150, 2. II Anahates cristattts, Spix, 84; — An. rvfifrons. Id. 85, 1; — Phili/dor riificoUis, Id. 75; — Phil, albogularis, Id. 74; — Phil, superciliaris, Id. 73; perhaps the same as the Anabates amaurotis. Tern. Col. 238, 2; — Sphenura striolata, Spix, 83, 2, or Anabates strivlatus. Tern. Col. 23, 1. § Synallaxis rvfcapilla, Vieill. Gal. 174, or Parulus ruficeps, Spix, 86, from which the Syn. albescens, Tem. Col. 227, 2, and the cinerascens, lb. 3, do not appear to me to differ specifically ;—5?/7!. rutiUms, Col. 227, \;—Syn. tessdlata, Col. 311, \;—Syn. setaria, lb. 2;— Prinia familiaris, Horsf. Jav.?— The Flufeur, Vaill. Afr. 112, or Mn- lurtis africanus. Swains. 111. 170, merely has a somewhat higher bill. ^ Dendrocolaptes sy Melius, Tcmm. Col. 72, 1. Vaill. Prom. 31, 2. 284 BIRDS. Creeper). A small bird with whitish plumage, spotted with brown above ; rump and tail tinged with red. It makes its nest in the hol- lows of trees, and climbs with great rapidity, searching for insects and larvas in the cracks of the bark, under mosses, &c.* America produces several True Creepers of a large size, called, Dendrocolaptes-|-, /ferTK.— Grimpars, Vaill. Whose tail is the same, but their bill is much stronger and widerlj;. There is even one of them which approaches the Nuthatches in its straight and compressed bill ; it might be taken for a Sitta with a worn tail§. The bill of another, twice as long as the head, is only arcuated at the endl|." That of a third is long, slender, and as much arcuated as in Me- lithreptus ^. TiCHODROMA **, Illig. In the WaU Creepers the tail is not worn, although they climb along walls and rocks just as the common Creepers do upon trees; but they cling to them with their great claws. The bill is triangular and depressed at base, very long and very slender. One species only is known, which inhabits the south of Europe, Certhia muraria, L. ; Enl. 372; Naum. 141. It is a pretty bird of a light ash colour, the coverts and edges of a part of the wing- quills bright red. The throat of the male is blackf f . Nectarinia, Ulig. Tail not worn, nor are these birds climbers, but their moderately long, arcuated, pointed and compressed bill, resembles that of the Creepers. They are all foreign to Europe. • Add, C. cinnamomea, Vieill. Ois. Dor. 62, andGaler. 173; — Motacilla spinicauda, Lath. Syn. II, pi. 52? f Dendrocnlaptes, the Greek name of the Woodpecker. Vieillot has changed it into Dendrocopus, Gal. 175, and applied it to another division. X The Picucule, Buff. {Gracula cayennensis, Gm.; Grac. scandens, Lath, and Sh.). Enl. 621, and Vieill. Ois. Dor. 76, to which the Dendroc. decumanus, Spix, 87, and falcirostris, 88, are at least closely allied. Add, the Grand Grimpart, Vaill. 42; — Dendrec. ienuirostris, Spix, 91, 2;— Z). bivittatus, 90, \;—D. Wagleri, 90, 2;— the Gr. maille, Vaill. 29, 2; — the Grimpart flambe, Vaill. Prom. 30, or Dend. platyroslris, Sjnx, 89;— the Gr. enfume, Vaill. 28. N. B. The Fhiteiir of Vaill. Afr. 112, is the genus Dasyornis of Swainson. The Dendrocolapfes Sylviellus, Tem. is his genus Sittasomus and the Certhia maculata of Wils. Ill, xix, 3, his genus Oxyglossus. The Dendrucolaptes procurvus, Tem., is the genus Xiphorhynchus, Swains., and the Talapiot, his genus Dendroplex. § The Talapiot, Buff.; Oriolus picus, Gm. and Lath.; Gracula picoides, Sh., Enl. 605, or Dendrocolapfes guttatiis, Spix, 91, 1. il The Nasican, Vaill., Prom., etc., 24. ^ The Grimpart promerops {Dendrocolaptes procurvus), Tem. Col. 28, or Dendroco- pus falcularius, Vieill. Gal. 175, ** These birds are called Echelettes in some of the French provinces. Vieillot has changed this name into Picchion, and that of Illiger into Petrodroma. ft Certh.fusca, Lath. Vieill. 65, appears to me to belong to this subgenus. PASSERINyE. 285 The name of Guitguits is more particularly applied to certain small species, the males of which are ornamented with lively colours. Their tongue is filamentous and bifid*. We may separate from them the largest and least beautiful species, whose tongue is short and cartilaginous. Merops rufus, Gm. ; Enl. 739; Figulus albogularis, Spix, 78. A bird from South America, the size of a Kingfisher, reddish above, with a whitish throat, which constructs a nest with earth upon shrubs, arched over like an ovenf . Dictum J, Cuv. The tail not worn, neither do they climb; their sharp pointed, arcuated bill, which is not longer than the head, is depressed and widened at base. They inhabit the East Indies, are very small, and generally have some scarlet in their plumage. Melithreptus, Vieill. In the Heorotaires the tail is not worn ; bill extremely long, and curved almost into a semicircle. From the South Sea Islands. One of them, Certhia vestiara, Sh.; Vieill. Ois. Dor. II. pi. 52, and Gal. 181, is covered with scarlet feathers used by the Sandwich islanders in the manufacture of the beautiful mantles of that colour, which they so highly prize §. CiNNYRis|l, Cuv. In the Soui-mangas the tail is not worn ; edges of the two mandibles of • Ccrfh. cyanea, Enl. 83, 2; Vieill. 41, 42, 43, and Gal. 17 6 i—cesrulea, Edw. 21, Vieill. 44, 45, 46, two American species, to which we must probably add some from the East, most of which are red, as C. sanguinea, Vieill. &&; — C. cardinalis, Id. 54, 58; — C. horbonica, Enl. 681, 2; — Vieill. Gal. 167, has given to these birds the name of COEREBA. N. B. C. armillata, Sparm. 36; — C. cayana, 682, 2, &c., are mere varieties of the cyanea, or of the carulea. t This bird is the type of the genus Ophie or Opetiorhynchos of Tem.; Fur- NARius, Vieill. Gal. 182. The genus Figulus, Spix, does not differ from it. Add the Picchion-baillon, Vieill. Gal. 172; — Pomatorhinos montanus, Horsf. Jav. ; — Po- mat. iurdimts, T. Col. 441 — Pom. trivirgatus, T. Col. 443; — CUmacteris picumnu's, Tem. Col. 281, \;—Clim. scandens, lb. 2;— Certhia flaveola, Edw. 122, 362, Vieill. 51; — C. varia {Mot. varia, L.), Edw. 30, 2; Vieill. 74, which is the Mniotille varie, Id. Gal. 169; — C. semitorquata, Vieill. 56; — the Promerops olivdtre, Vaill. Huppes et Prom. pi. V. (Mer. olivaceus, Sh.) — Here, also, is the place, I suspect, for the C. vi- rc7is, Vieill. 57 and 58, and sa?inio, Id. 64, which I have not seen, but which are dis- tinguished by their slightly forked tails. X The name of a very small bird in the Indies, according to jElian. To this sub- genus belong, Certh. erythronotos, Vieill. II, 35. The C. cruentata, Edw. 81, is probably a different age of the same; — C, rubra, Vieill. pi. liv, of which the C. ery- thropygla. Lath. 2d supp., is probably the female; — the Necturiiiia rubicosa, Tem. Col. f. 2 and 3, does not appear to differ from it; — C. taniata, Sonner. II, Voy. pi. cvii, fig. 3; — C. canlillans, lb. Id. 2; — Motacilla hirtmdinacea, Sh. Nat. Misc. No. 114. § Add, Cerlh. obscura, Vieill. Ois. Dor. II, pi. liii; — C. pacifica. Id. pi. Ixiii; the other species of this naturalist belong to very different genera, chiefly to the Phile- dons, &c. II The Greek name of some very small unknown bird. The natives of Madagas- car call them Soui-mingat, i. e. cat-sugar. Vieillot has adopted the above name and genus, Gal. 177. 286 BIRDS. the long and very slender bill, finely serrate ; the tongue, which is sus- ceptible of protrusion, terminates in a little fork. They are small birds, the males of which, during the pairing season, are ornamented with me- talUc colours, approaching in lustre to those of the Humming-bird, of which, in this respect, they are the representatives in the eastern conti- nent, they being principally found in Africa and the Archipelago of India. They live on the nectar of flowers, which they suck up with their bills ; their disposition is lively, and their notes very agreeable. The beauty of their plumage has made them a common ornament of our cabinets, but as it is very different in both sexes during the winter, &c., it becomes an ex- tremely difficult matter to characterize the species. The tail, in most of them, is equal*. In some, the two middle feathers are the longest in the malef . We may also distinguish those which have a straight bill, or one that is nearly soj. Arachnothera, Temm. The long and arcuated bill of the Cinnyris, but stronger, and without emargination ; the tongue short and cartilaginous ; they are only found in the Archipelago of India, and feed on spiders§. Trochilus, Lin. The Colibris, or Humming-birds, so celebrated for the metallic lustre of their plumage, and chiefly for those plates, brilliant as precious stones, which are formed by scaly feathers of a peculiar structure, on their throat or head, have a long slender biU, enclosing a tongue, which they can pro- * Certh. splendida, Sh. Vieill. 82;— C. caffra, Edw, 347;— C. superba. Vieill. 22:— C. lotenia, Enl. 575, 2, 3, Vieill. 34; — ametystina, Vieill. 5 and 6; — chalybaa, Enl. 246, 3, Vieill. 10, 13, 18, 24, 34, 80:— omnfco/or, Seb. I, 69, 5 ;—caprea, Vieill. 23;— purpurata, Edw. 265, Vieill. 11; — cyanocephala, \iei\\. 7; — Z. zeilonica, Enl. 576, 4, Vieill. 29, 30; — dubia, Vieill. 8l;—senegalensis, VieiU. 8;—sperata, Enl. 246, 1, 2; Vieill. 16, 32, of which the lepida of Sparm. 35, is the female; — madagascariensis, Vieill. 18; — currucaria, Enl. 576, 3, Vieill. 31; — riibro-fusca, Vieill. 27 i—fuliginosa, Vieill. 20;—maculata, Vieill. 21 i—venusta, Vieill. 79;— gutturalis, 578, 9;—Nectari- 7iia Solaris, Tem. Col. 341, 3;— ej-imia, Tern. Col. 138, 1, 2;—pectoraUs, Id. Col. 138, 3;— lepida, Lath. Col. 126, 1, and Vieill. Gal. 177, 2;—Hasselti, T. Col. 376, 3;— coccinogaster, Tem. Col. 388, 3; — Cinn. eques, Less, and Garn. Voy. de la Coq. pi. xxxi, f. 1 ; — javanica, Zool. 111. 121 ; some of which birds are probably mere varieties of the others. t Certhia famosa, L., Enl. 83, \;—C. pulchella, Enl. 670, 1;— C. violacea, 670, 2; the Siicrier cardinal, Vaill. Ap. 291; — the Sucrier figuier. Id. 293, f. 2; — Nectarinia metaUica, Licht. Ruppel. pi. vii, and Col. 347, l\—Nect. mystacalis, T. Col. 126, 3;— N. Kuhlii, T. Col. 376, 1, 2. X Cinnyris elegans, Vieill. Gal. 177, or Certh, rectirostris. Id. Ois. Dor. II, pi. Ixxv. § Arachnothera longirostra, Tem. Col. 84, 1 ; — A. inomata, Id. lb. 2. N. B. After all these distinctions, we have still to remove from the great genus Certhia, the C. lunata, Vieill. 61;— C. Nova-Hollandia, J. White, New S. W. pi. xvi andlxv; Vieill. 57 and 71; — C. australasiana, Vieill. 55; — C. carunculata, Vieill. 69, 70;— C. auriculata, Vieill. 85;— C. cocincinica, Enl. 642; Vieill. 77, 78;— C. spiza, Enl. 578, 2, Edw. 25; — C. seniculus, Vieill. 50; — C. graculina, Vieill. 87;— C. goruck, Vieill. 88;— C. carulea, Vieill. 83; — C. xatithotis, Vieill. 84;— C. melliiora, Vieill. 86; which, by their emarginated bill and pencil-like tongue, are all Philedons. PASSERIN^E. 287 trude at will, like that of the Woodpeckers (and by the same mechanism), and which is split almost to its base, forming two filaments, employed, as is asserted, in taking up the nectar from flowers. They also, however, feed on small insects, for we have found their stomach filled with them. Their very small feet, broad tail, excessively long and narrow wings, short hu- merus and large sternum, which is without emargination, all contribute to form a system adapted for great power of flight, similar to that of the Swallows. The narrowness of their wing is caused by the rapid abbre- viation of its quiUs. By these means, they balance themselves in air with nearly as much facility as certain flies, and it is thus that they hum about flowers, and fly with more proportionate rapidity than any otlier bird. Their gizzard is very small, and they have no caecum, an additional mark of their affinity with the Woodpeckers. They live singly, defend their nests with courage, and fight desperately with each other. The name of Trochilus, Lac, is especially reserved for such as have the bill arcuated; some of them are distinguished by the prolongation of the intermediate quills of their tail. We will mention one of the largest and most beautiful. Troch. pella; Colibri Topaze, Enl. 596. Purple-maronne ; head, black; throat of the most brilliant topaz-yellow, changing into green, surrounded by black*. The lateral quills of the tail are very long in others-j- ; several have tails moderately forked J; in the greater number it is round or squareS. We call, Orthorhynchus {Fly-Birds), Lacep. Such as have a straight biU; some of them have tufted heads]]. Others have tufts or elongated feathers on the sides of the head^, and among them are found some with a pointed and very long tail**. • Add, Tr. superciliosus, Enl. 600, 3; Vieill. 17, 18, 19;— Tr. leucurus, Enl. GOO, 3;— rr. squalidus, Natterer, Col. 120, f. \;—Tr. brasiliensis, Lath. Col. 120, f. 2. f Tr. forficatus, Edw. 33-, Vieill. SO;~polithmus, Edw. 34, Vieill. 67, and particu- larly the magnificent Peruvian species, with the refulgent gold tail, Tr. chrysurus, Guv. X Tr. elegans, Vieill. 14. § Tr. mango, L., Enl. I, 680, 2 and 3, Vieill. 7;—Tr. navius, Dumont, Col. 120, f. 3; — Tr. gutturalis, Enl. 671;— Tr. taumantias, Enl. 600, 1; — Tr. violaceus, Enl. 600, 2; — Tr. cinereus, Vieill. 5;—Tr. melanogaster, Vieill. 75; — Tr. jugularis, Sli. Edw. 266, 1, Vieill. 4;— Tr. holo-sericetis, Sh., Vieill. 6 and 65;— Tr. puncfalus, Sli., Vieill. 8;—Tr. pectoralis, Sh. 9 and 10;— Tr. aurulentus, Sh., Vieill. 12;— Tr. aureo- viridis, Sh., VieUl. 15; — Tr. hirsutus, Gm., or brasiliensis, Sh., Vieill. 20; — Tr. albus, Vieill. II; — Tr. viridis, Vieill. 15; — Tr. margaritaceus, Enl. 680, 1, Vieill. 10; Tr. multicolor, Gm., or Harlequin Hummingbird, Lath. Supp. pi. cxi, Vieill. 79; — Tr. la- zulus, Vieill. Gal. 179. II Tr. cristatus, Edw. 37; Enl. 227, 1; Vieill. 47, 48;— Tr. pileatus, (piiniceus, Gm.) Vieill. 63;— Jr. Lalandii, Vieill. 18, f. 1 and 2;— Or^/ior. stephanioides. Less. and Garn. Voy. de la Coquille, pi. xxxi, No. 2. ^ Tr. ornafus, Enl. 640, 3; Vieill. 49, 50;— Tr. chalybeus, Vieill. 66, f. 2;—Tr. petasophorus, P. Max. Col. 203, Z;—Tr. scuiatus, Natter., Col. 299, 3; — Tr. viagnifi- cus, lUig. Col. 299, 2;— 7V. mesoleucos, Tern. Col. 317. ** Tr. bilophus, Temm. N. B. M. Swainson has named those Humminghirds, the middle quills of whose tail are elongated, PiIjETOrnis; those with a round or square tail, Laaipornis; the straight-billed ones, in which the quills of the wings are inflated, Campylopterus; and those with a forked tail, Cynanthus. 288 BIRDS. The stems of the primary wing-quills are singularly widened in some of them*, and among those which have none of these ornaments, we may still distinguish the fork-tailed species ■{■, some of which have their very long lateral quills widened at the end|. Among those which have a square or slightly emarginated tail, there is one worthy of notice from its extreme smallness, the Troch. minimus, Enl. 276, 1; Edw. 105; Vieill. 04. It is of a violet-grey colour, and about the size of a Bee. Another, on the contrary, because it is the largest of the whole genus, the Troch. gigas, (the Gigantic Fly-Bird), Vieill., Gal. 180, which is almost equal in size to the Hirundo apus^. Upupa (The Puets), Lin. In this genus we will first place, Fregilus|| (The Cranes), Cuv. Where the nostrils are covered with feathers directed forwards, from which circumstance several authors have placed these birds with the Crows, which they also somewhat resemble in their manners ; their bill is a little longer than the head. Corvus graculus, L. ; Le crave d" Europe, Enl. 255; Naum. 57, 2; Vieill. Galer. 163. (The European Crow). The size of a Crow; black; red feet and bill; wings reaching to the end of the tail or extending beyond it. It inhabits the highest ridges of the Alps and Pyrenees, building there among the cliffs or in the fissures of the rocks like the Chocard ; it is less common, however, and does not so often unite in flocks. It feeds both on fruit and insects, and when it descends into the valleys, snow or bad weather may be ex- pected**. * Tr. latipennis, Enl. 672, 2; Vieill. 21;— Tr. ensipennis, Swains. Zool. 111. 107;— Tr. fakatus, lb. 82. t Tr. mellivorus, Enl. 640; Edw. 35, Vieill. 23, 2i;—Tr. amethystinus, Gm. Enl. 672, l;~Tr.furcatus, Enl. 509, 2; Vieill. Si-.—Tr.forficatus, Vieill. 60;— Tr. sma- ragdo-saphirinus, Vieill. 36, 40;— 2V. coluhris, Edw. 38; Catesb. 65; Vieill. 31, 32, 33; —Tr. Matigeanus, Vieill. 37, 38;— Tr. Langsdorfii, Vieill. 66, \;—Tr. enicurus, Vieill. 66, 3; — Tr. mediastinus, Tern. Col. 317;— Or^/jor. cora, Less, and Garn. 34, 4. I Tr. platurus, Vieill. 52. § Other species witb square, or but slightly enfiarginated tails: Tr. mosquitus, L.; Enl. 227, 2;— Tr. carhimculus, Vieill. 54;— ^r. ourissia, Enl. 227, 3;—Tr. mellisugus, L.; Enl. 640, 2;—Tr. rubineus, Gm. Enl. 276, 4, VieOl. 27;— Tr. auritus, Sh. Vieill. 25;— Tr. collaris, VieUl. 61, G2;—Tr. superhus, Sh. ; longirostris, Vieill. 59; Col. 299, \;—Tr. mellivorus, I, Enl. 640, 2;—Tr. leucogaster, Gm. Vieill. 43;— Tr. imbricatus, Gm. Vieill. 221;— Jr. albirostris, Vieill. 45;— Tr. viridis, Vieill. 41;— Tr. maculafus, Vieill. U;—Tr. saphyrinus, Sh. Vieill. 35 and 57, 2;—Tr. squamosus, Tem. Col. 203, 1;—Tr. albicolUs, I, Col. 203, 2;—Orthor. Amasili, Less, and Garn. Voy. de la Coq. 31, 3. II Vieillot has changed this name for Coracias, which, according to Linnaeus, is that of the Rollers. •» It is impossible to say what combination of the history of this bird with im- perfect figures, perhaps of some Curlew, gave birth to the ideal species of the Crave huppe or Sonnettr {Corvus eremiUi, L.), a pretended bird of Switzerland, which lias never been seen by any one since Gesner. But the Corv. affinis. Lath., appears to be a true Fregihis, and we have a totally black species from New Holland. PASSERIN/E. 289 Upupa (The Puets, properly so styled). The Puets, or Hoopoes, have an ornament on the head formed of a double range of long feathers, which they can erect at will. There is one in Europe, U. epopSfh.', Enl. 52; Naum. 142. (The Hoopoe), A vinous- red ; wings and tail black ; two transverse, white bajids on the co- I'erts of the wings, and four on the quills of the wing. It geeks in- sects in humid earth, lays its eggs in holes of trees oi of walls, and leaves France in winter*, U, capensis, Enl. 697. (The Cape Hoopoe), More particularly allied to Fregilus by the anterior, short, and immovable feathers of its tuft, which incline forwards and cover the nostrils, Prombbops, Bri89. No crest on the head, and a very long tail; the tongue, extensible and forked, enables it, as is affirmed, to live on the nectar of flowers, like the Cinnyris and the Humming'birdsf. EpimachusJ, Cu9. The bill of the Upupa and Promerops, along with scaly or velvet fea- thers, which partially cover the nostrils, as in the Birds of Paradise ; they are natives of the same countries, and their plumage equally brilliant. The flank-feathers of the male are ako moxe ot less elongated, Upupa magna, Gm . ; V. Bitperha, Lath, { L'epimaque a pare, frish, Enl. 6o9; Vaill, Prom, 13,' Black; tail tapered, thrice the length of the body; the feathers on the flanks elongated, turned up, friz- zled; the edges of a burnished §teei blue, whith also glisten on the head and belly §, Naturalists have distinguished the square-tailed gpecies, Ptiioeis of Swainson, such as, Ep. albust Paradis. alba, Blumeu, Abb. 00; Valll. Ois, de Par, pl, 16 and 17, and better Promer, 17; Vieill, pi, 13, and better » Add the Aftkm spesies, Upum mitm, VML Prom, pi, fi, and Gal. pi. I84j VaiU. Prom, U. f VieilL Gaier, pL dxsxv, has elwnged Prmerops into FahineUus, Tlie only one *reil known is the Upupa profnerom or Murops mffer, Enl, i(>37, which is the Sucrier du protea, VmW. AtV. 13<>. M. Vaill, is of oi>iniou that the Up.fuxca, Grn., or papu~ ensis, LatL B»L 833, fe tlj« female at the npimaque a parments frhh, Enl. 639,-- The Up. paradism, Seh, I, pi. %yi%, 8, is the Muscirapa paradhl, with an )U-diaw« bjll. The Up. mrantia, Sfeb, I, \%vi, 3, according to all appgaranee a Cassjcus, The pigjckam, Sgb, J, xJv, 3, is not from Mexico as Se})a makes it out, by applying to it 0. passage of Nieremherg, lib, %, c, 44, i« which he merely speaks of a Duck, I anv in dovibt wh^her to plaee here th,e Prmneiops cocruleus, Shaw; rrom, bleu, Vieill, f Upupa hidiea, Lath,, or to approximate it to the Up, eryfhrorhynclws, X Epimacfim, th« Greek najne of a very beautifnl East- Indian bird, of undeter- mined speeies, § I hardly kno* whether I should place the Pronuirar, Vaill. 8 and Oj— the Pro- merup, Vaill, 1 J and 12, ajid his Protnerop$ s>Jfleur, 10, here, or near the Up. erythw rhyncJws, These beautiful birds of New Guinea, which are very rare in our collec- tions, are usually deprived of tJieir feet, which renders it impossible to cIass tl>em with certainty, VOL. r, B B 2S0 BIRDS. Gal. 185, (the Epimaque, witli twelve filaments), which, for a long time, was placed among the Birds of Paradise, on account of the long bunches of white plumes which decorate its flanks, the stems of these plumes being continued out, forming six filaments on each side. The body is usually of a violet black, and the feathers on the bottom of the breast have an edging or border of emerald green. It appears, however, that there are varieties with an entirely white body. The primaries of the wing are short, and much less numerous than in birds generally. Epim. ma(jnificus, Cuv.; Epimaque prom'efil, Vaill., Prom. 16. Velvet-black ; tail, slightly forked ; head and breast of a most bril- liant steel-blue ; feathers on the flanks long, fringed, and black. Epim. regius, Less, and Gam., Voy. de Duperr. pi. 28; Ptiloris paradisceus, Swains. A purple black ; top of the head and upper part of the breast of a fine brilliant green; feathers on the flanks rounded and edged with green. The second and smallest division of the Passeriu^e comprehends those in which the external toe, which is nearly as long as the middle one, is united to it as far as the penultimate articulation. We make but a single group of them, the '' SYNDACTYL/E, Which has long been divided into five genera, an arrangement to which we adhere. Merops, Lin. The Bee-eaters have an elongated bill, triangular at hase, slightly arcu- ated and terminating in a sharp point. There is a double emargination on each side of the hind part of the sternum. Their long, pointed wings, and short feet, render their flight similar to that of Swallows. They pur- sue insects in great flocks, especially bees, wasps, and hornets; and it is remarkable, they are never stung by them. There is a species, common in the south of Europe, but rare in our latitude, the M. apiaster, L. ; Guepier commun, Enl. 938; Naum. 143; Vaill., Guep., 1 and 2. (The Common Bee-eater). A beautiful bird with a fawn-coloured back; front and belly of a sea- green blue ; throat yellow, surrounded with black. It builds in holes excavated by itself along the banks of streams, which are from four to five feet in depth. The young birds remain a long time in this retreat with their parents, which induced the ancients to believe that the former supported the latter when worn out with age. The two middle quills of its tail are somewhat lengthened, the first indication of a much greater elongation in the greater part of the species foreign to Europe*. * Such arc, Mer. viridis, 740, Vaill. 4 -—orimtus. Lath. ; superbus, Nat. Jlisc. 78 ; — senegalensis, Enl. 314, and badius, 252, Vaill. 12, 13 ; superciUosus, 259, Vaill. 19. —M. nubicus, Vaill, 5, Enl. 649 ; tliis individual had been deprived of its long quills. — M. Savignii, Vaill. 6.— J/. Cuvieri, Vaill. 9, and Swains. 111. 76, under the name ot SavigrJi. — M. Lamark, Viiill. 10. PASSE RINjE. • 291 The tail of several species, liowever, is nearly square* or sliglitly forked f, tliougli this sometimes depends upon their condition when killed. We should approximate to the Bee-eaters certain long-tailed hirds, with metallic-coloured plumage, hitherto classed with Promerops, but whose two external toes are almost as extensively united as those of the former J. There appears to be none of this genus in America, where they are re- presented in some respects by the . Prionites, llVig. Tlie !Motmots have the feet and carriage of the Bee-eaters, but differ in the bill, which is stronger, the edges of both mandibles being serrated, and in their tongue, which, like that of the Toucans, is barbed. They are beautiful birds, as large as the Magpie ; the plumage on the head, loose as in the Jays, and a long cuneiform tail ; the stems of tlie two mid» die quills being stripped of their barbs (in the adult) for a short distance near the extremities, gives to the whole a singular appearance. They fly badly, are solitary, build in holes, feed on insects, and even on small birds §. Alcedo, Lin. The Kingfishers have shorter feet than the Bee-eaters, and the bill, wliich is straight, angular, and pointed, much longer; the tongue and tail are very short. There are two emarginations in their sternum., as in those of the Bee-eaters and the Rollers. They feed on small fish which they capture by precipitating themselves into the water from some branch where they have remained perched, watching for their prey. Their sto- mach is a membranous sac. They nestle like Bee-eaters in holes on the • Merops pMUppinuSjEnl. 57; — M. cayennensis, 454. (N. B. That it is not from Cayenne). — M. nubicns, 649; — M. erytropterus, 318; — M. malimhicus, Sh. or birnlor, Daud. Ann. du Mus. I, Ixii, and Vaill. 5, Vieill. Gal. 186; — AL gularis, Nat Misc. 387;— M. amicius, T. Col. 310;— il/. Daudin, Vaill. 14.-3/. coromandus, Lath. Son- nerat, Voy. 2, 105, or G. cytrin, Vaill. 11; — M. quinticolor, Vaill. 16; — M. minulut, Vain. 17;— M. Lechenaud, Vaill. 18;— 3/. Bullock, Vaill. 20. f M. taiva, Vaill. 8. — M. urica, Swains. Zool. 111. S. N. B. The Merops congener, Aldr. I, 876, is not -very authentic; — the cafer, Gm., is the Uptipa promerops; — the brasiliensis, Seb. I, Ixvi, 1, is most probably an Icterus; — the M. monaclius, cornicu- latus, cyanops, are Gj'mnops; — the Mer. plirugius, cincinnaius, cucullatus, cyanops, gar- rulus, fasciculatus, carunculatus, of Lath., appear to us to be Philedons; we have even ascertained this to be the fact with respect to most of them; — the M. cinereus, Seb. XXXI, 10, is a long-tailed Cinnyris or Soui-nanga- ' X The Promerops moqueur, Vaill. Prom. 1, 2, and 4 {Upupa erythrorhynchos, Lath.) The young bird has a, black bill. — The Prom, namaquois, Vaill. 5 and 6, or Falcin. cyanomelas, Vieill. § The Blue-headed Motmot, or the Houtou of Guyana, Guira, guaynumbi of the Brazilians, according to IMarcgrave (Rhamphastos momota, Gm.), or Pr. hrasiliensis, Illig. Enl. 370; Vaill. Ois. de Par. &c. I, pi. xxxvii and xxxviii; — the Motmot atite rousse, or of Peru; Motmot doinbey, Vaill. loc. cit. pL xxxix, and Vieill. Gal. pi. cxcj — Pr. Marcii, Spix, 9; — the Tutre of Paraguay, Azz. No. 52, are, to say the least, closely allied to it Motmot, according to Fernandez, is the Mexican name of the first. Prionitis, from jjrion, saw, a name given by Illiger. M. Vieillot has changed it into Baripuonus. Ti p. 9 292 BIED8. banks of streams, and are found in both continents. The European species, A. ispida, Enl. 77; Naura. 144. The size of a Finch; greenish, waved with black above ; underneath, and a band on each side of the neck, reddish ; a wide band of the most beautiful atjuarnarina blue along the back. The species foreign to Europe have almost all also a smooth plumage variegated with different shades of blue and green. They may be distinguished among themselves by the bill, which in some is simply straight and poijited as in the common species*, and, in others, hks an inflated lower mandible f. Of those found in New Holland and its neighbouring countries, some have a mandible hooked at the point];. The greyish and dull plumage of several of the latter is an indication of their not visiting tlie water ; and, in fact, they feed on insects, whence th^y have been called King-hunters. Ceyx, Lacep, King-fishers with the usual bill, but in which the internal toe is defi cient. Three species are found in India §- ToDUS, Lin. The Todies are small birds of America, resembling the King-fishers in their general form, as well as in their f&et and elongated bill; but the latter is horizontally flattened, and obtuse at the point. The tarsus .also is higher, and the tail not .so short. They feed on flies, and build on the ground IJ. We termiaate the history of this ordjer with the most singular of its ge- * Ak. {afro, Sh.) maxima^ EnL (>79i—aleyon, 715 iind 593, and Wils,, Am. Ill, jcxxiii, 1; — twqnateL, 284; — rudis, 62 and 716; — hieolor, 592; — amert'cann, 591; — be»- ■ga'ensis, Edw. II ; — cceruieo-eephata, Enl. 356, 2; — eristata, 756, 1 ; — madrigaseariensitf 778^ 1; — purpurea, 778, 2; — supercUiosa, 756, 1 ^ui 2;— leinerifrons, Vieill. Gal. 187; jB£r», Horst Jav., and T. Col. 28.9, 1; — sem-torquata, Swaias> IlL 154: — asiatioa, lb. 50. -j- Al. capenns, 599; — atricafaUa, G7 Z',—smirn€wis, 232 and 894, one of Ae tw« species distinguished by Aristotle; — dea, 116, of which Vigors makes bis geuus Ta- KTSIPTERA; — chlorecephala, 783, 2; — coromanda, Somer. 218; — leucocephata {jav^ niea, Sh.), 757; — senegaknsh, !)9i and 356; — cancrophaga, ^\l $3i; — vielanorhynoa, T.Col. 391; — omnirolvr,T. Col. \Zb;—diops, Id.Col. 212;— Daeefo eoncreta, Id. CoL 346; — Dacelo cinnamominfis, Swains. 111. 67- It is from this division that RL Leach has made liLs genus Dacelo- N.B. In several of the :fig. Enl. the hills are not stifEciently injSiatei % Akcdofram {giganUa, Sk), Enl. 663; "V'ieilL Gal. l%^i■,— Dacelo puhAetIa, Horst Jav, and T. Col. 262; — Dae. Gaudichaud, Qiioy and Gaym. Voy. de Freyein. pL xxr. N.B. M. Lesson sepaiates the cpecies -with denticalated bills from ti'.e King-fish• ncra, a genus which has not as much resemblance to the other Syndacty- la^ as they have to each other, and one which may very properly be made to form a particular family. It is the BucEROs, Lin. Tlie Hornbills are large birds of Africa and India, whose enormous dentated bill is studded with excrescences, which sometimes equal in size the bill itself, and which are always of considerable extent above. Tliis renders them very remarkable, and allies them to the Toucans, while, at the same time, their carriage and habits approximate them to the Crows, and their feet to the Bee-eaters and the King-fishers. The shape of these excrescences on the bill varies with age, and in the very young bird they are not even visible ; the interior is generally cellular. The sternum is slightly emarginated behind on both sides. The tongue is small, and placed at the bottom of the throat; they live on all sorts of food, eat soft fruits, hunt mice, small birds, reptiles, and do not even despise carrion *. emaiginated bill and the external toe free, such as the Todus resrus, Enl. 2S9; — para- disaug, lb, 2U;—leucocephalus, Pall. Spic. VI, iii, 2;— the two Platyrhinci of Des- marets, which are the 7'od, rostratns and nasulus of Shaw, or Tod, platijrhynchos and macrorhynchos, Gm. Vieill. gives the first, Gal. 126. • Hornbills with excrescences. Buc. rhinoceros, Enl. 934, Vaill. Callans, 1 and 2; D. africanus, VailL, pL 17, f. 2, may be a mere variety from age; nigcr, Vaill. 13, according to Tem, isa badly preserved specimen of the same; — monoceros, Sh. Enl. 873; Vaill. 9, 10, 11, \2;— cassidis, Tcmm. Col. 2\Q;—malaharicus, Lath. VI, ii, or albirnstrh, Sh.; Vaill, Col. 14 ;~biicci7iator, T, Col. 2S4;—givgianus, Sonn. Voy. 1 1, pi, cxxi ! Vaill. 1 5 ; — hicornis, Vaill. 7, the adnlt female ; cavatus, Id. 4, is the male at a middle age. The pi. 3 and 5 are altered specimens of the same — B. hydro- corax, Enl. 282, the young bird; Col. 283, the adult; — violncens, Id. 19; — abyssinicus, Enl, 779, the middle age; Vaill. Afr. 230, 231, the adult; Vieill. Gal, \'d\;—sulcatus, T, Col. 69;—p(i7iayensis, Enl. 780, the female, and 781, the old male; Vaill. Col. 16, 17, and 18; wanillensis, Enl. 891, should be the young bird;— /dida^us, Vaill. Afr, 2Z?i;—exaratus, T, Col, 211. Hornbills without excrescences. B. jnvanicns, Vaill. Cal. 22, the young male ; Afr, 239, the old male, same as the Cal. de Waidjiou, Labill. Voy., B. undulatus, Vaill. Cal, 20 and 21, are females of the same; B. erythrurhi/nchos, Enl. 260; Vaill. Afr. 238, tlie young one;~hastatvs, Cuv.! Enl. 890, Vaill, 236, 237 ;— corona^o*, Vaill, Afr. 231, 235 i—bengakusts, Cal. 23. N.B. The B.galeatus, of which we only have the head, Enl. 933, and which Vail- lant erroneously considers as an aquatic bird, is a true Hornbill, but whose excres- cence on the beak is invested with an excessively thick horn, the anterior portion of it particularly. See the general article on the Hornbills, by Temminck, in the text of the Planches Colorices. P. S. It is to General Hardwick that we are at length indebted for a know- ledge of the B.galeatus, which proves to be, in fact, a true Hornbill, with along cu- neiform tail; black; white belly; the tail yellowish, with a black band near the end. Lin, Tr. XIV,pl. xxviii. 29 !■ BIRDS. ORDER III. ■SCANSORI^ (a).— CLIMBERS. This order is composed of those birds whose external toe is directed back- wards, like the thumb, by which conformation they are the better enabled to support the weight of their bodies, and of which some of the genera take advantage in clinging to the trunks of trees, and climbing them. It is from this that they have received the common name of Climbers, which, in strictness, is not applicable to all of them, as there are many which are true Climbers, yet which, by the disposition of their toes, cannot belong to this order, as we have already seen in the Creeper and Nuthatch. The birds of this order usually build their nests in the hollows of old trees ; their powers of flight are middling ; their food, like that of the Passerinse, consists of insects or fruit, in proportion as their biU is more or less stout; some of them, the Woodpeckers for instance, have peculiar means for obtaining it. The hind part of the sternum, in most of the genera, has a double emargination ; but, in the Parrots, there is merely a hole, and very often that is completely filled up. Galbula, Briss. The Jacamars are closely allied to the King-fishers by their elongated sharp-pointed bill, the upper ridge of which is angular, and by their short feet, the anterior toes of which are almost wholly united; these toes, how- ever, are not precisely the same as those of the Kingfishers ; their plum- age, moreover, is not so smooth, and always has a metallic lustre. They are solitary birds, that live in wet forests, feed on insects, and build on low branches. The American species have a longer and perfectly straight bill*. There are some species in the Archipelago of India, whose sliorter, stouter, and slightly arcuated bill, approximates them to the Bee- eaters. Their anterior toes are more separate. They constitute the Jacamerops of Vaillant 'J-, who even gives a figure of one that has no ridge above J. • Alcedo paradisaa {Galbula paradiscca, Lath.), Enl. 271; — Alcedo galbida, L. (Galb. viridls, Lath.), Enl. 23S;—Galb. ruficauda, Nob. Vaill. Ois. de Par. &c. II, pl.l ; or G. macroura, Vieill. Gal. 29;~-Galb. albirostris, Lath. Vaill. pi. lij Vieili. Ois. Dor. I, pi. iv ; Galb. albiventris, Vaill. xlvi. f Alcedo grandis, Gm.; Galbula grandis, Lath. Vaill. pi. liv. X The Grand Jacamar, Vaill. I, cit. pi. liii. Jacamaciri is the Brazilian name of these birds, according to Marcgrave. Galbula, among the Lati.\s, appears to have indicated the Oriole, it wa8 Moehriiig who transfer- red it to the Jacmirtrs. ^g° (a) FroD \iy& Latin verb scando, to climb. CLIMBERS. 295 Finally, there are others — the Jacamar'Alcyon, which have only- three toes. They inhabit Brazil*. Pic'jsf , Lin. The Woodpeckers are well characterized by their long, straight, angular bill, the end of which is compressed into a wedge, and fitted for splitting the bark of trees; by their slender tongue, armed near the tip with spines that curve backwards, -which, by the action of the elastic horns of the hyoid bone, can be thrust far out of the bill, and by their tail, composed of ten quills J with stiff and elastic stems, which acts as a prop in support- ing thera while they are climbing. They are Climbers par excellence : they wander over trees in every direction, striking the bark off with their bills, and insinuating their long tongue into its cracks and crevices to ob- tain the larvffi of insects, on which they feed. This tongue, besides its armour, is constantly moistened with a viscid fluid, secreted by large sa- livary glands : it is drawn back into the bill by two muscles, which are wound round the trachea like ribands ; in this state of retraction, the horns of the hyoid bone ascend under the skin and round the head, as far as the superior base of the bill, and the sheath of the tongue is doubled into folds in the bottom of the throat. Their stomach is nearly membranous, and they have no casca, still they also eat fruit. Fearful and wary, they pass most of their time in a solitary manner; but during the pairing season they may frequently be heard summoning their females by loud and rapid tapping on a dry branch. They build their nests once a year in holes of trees, and each sex alternately broods upon the eggs. There are six or seven species in Europe. P.ma-dius,L.; Grand Pic noir, Enl. 596; Naura. 131. (The Great Black Woodpecker). Almost as large as a crow, and entirely black ; a beautiful red forms a calotte in the male, but a mere spot on the occiput in the female. It prefers tlie pine forests of the north. P. viridis; Pic vert, Enl. 371 ; Naum. 132. (The Green Wood- pecker). Size of a turtle- dove ; green above; whitish beneath; the calotte red ; rump yellow ; one of the most beautiful birds of Europe. The young are marked with black spots beneath, and with white ones on the mantle. It prefers inhabiting the woodland plains, and is partial to the beech and elm. It also seeks food on the ground. P. canus, Gm.; Edw. 65; Naum. 133. A species closely allied to the preceding, but smaller, more of an ash colour, the bill more slender, and with a black moustache. The only red about the male is on the top of the head, and there is none on the female. It is not found far to the south, and is more rarely seen in France than the preceding, of whose habits it partakes. Its favourite food consists of ants. • Vaill. Jac. Sup. f. 1, and Spix, 57, 2, by the name of Alcyon iridactyla. t Picus, the Latin name for these birds, given to them, it is said, by a king of Latium. X Strictly speaking, they aie twelve; but the lateral ones, which are verv small, are not counted. 296 BIRDS. P. major; L'Epeiche, Enl. 196; the male, 595, the female, Naum. 134. (The Great Spotted Woodpecker). Size of a Thrush, varied with hlack and white above ; black back and rump ; white be- neath ; red about the anus ; a spot of the same colour on the occiput of the male. The calotte of the young bird is almost wholly red; it prefers evergreen trees, frequently approaches our dwellings, but scarcely ever lights on the ground. P. medius; Mot/en Epeiche, Enl. 611; Naum. 136, f. 1 and 2. Somewhat less ; the whole calotte red in both sexes; rump black; under part of the tail reddish. Inhabits temperate and southern Europe. P. minor; Petit Epeiche, Enl. 598 ; Naum. 136, f. 2 and 3. (The Little Spotted Woodpecker). Size of a finch ; variegated with black and white above; greyish-white beneath; some red on the head of the male only. From the north and middle of Europe. It is assert- ed that it searches for ants on foot, whence it has been called Grass- p&cker; but Naumann assures us that such is not the fact. P. leuconotos, Bechst, ; Naum. 135. A spotted Woodpecker from the north-east of Europe, somewhat larger than the major, and very similar to it; but the lower part of tlie back and rump are always white, and the calotte of the male red. It sometimes wanders as far as Germany. The species foreign to Europe are very numerous, and have a great mutual resemblance, which even extends to certain distributions of colour; the red on the head for instance*. • Species analogous to the Black Woodpecker: P.pikafus, L. Enl. 718; — P. linea- ills, L. Enl. 717;— P. principalis, L. Enl. 690;— P. galeatus, Natter. Col. 171, four closely allied species, to one of which probably belongs the P. melanoleucos, Gm. ; Lath. Syn. I, 2, t. xxv;— P. rubricollis, Gm. Enl. C12;— P. robuslus, Spix, 44 ;— P. albi- rostris, Id. 45; — P. validus, T. Col. 378, and the female, 402; — P. erythrocephalus, L. Enl. 117;— P. pidvemleyitus, T. Col. 389;— P. concretus, Reinw. Col. 90;— P. chilensis, Voy. de la Coq. 32; — P. torqnalus, Wils. Am. Ill, xx, 3;— P. duvnnicanus, Spix, 50. Species analogous to the Green Woodpecker: P. percussus, T. Col. 390 and 424, the female; — P. bengale/isis, L. Enl. 095, of which P. aurcMtiiis, Gm. Briss. IV, pi. vi, f. 1, is probably a mere variety; — P. goensi.t, Gm. Enl. 696; — P. aurulentus, lUig. Col. 59, fig. 1. or macrocephahis, Spix, 53, 2; — P. puniccns, Horsf. Col. 423; — P. pentalis. Col. .384;— P. ceijlonvs, N. Nat. Forsch. 14, pi. 1 ;— P. goerlan, Gm. Enl. 320;— P. manil- lensisyGm.; Sonner, pi. xxxvi; — P. semgalensis, Gm. Enl. 345, f. 2; — P. passerinus, Gm.; Briss. IV, t. iv, f. 2; — P.luzonicus, Nob. Sonn. pi. xxxvii; — P. minintus, Gm. Ind. Zool. t. VI;— P. chlorocephalus, Gm. Enl. 784;— P. e.ralbidus, Gm. Enl. 509;— P. cinnamomeus, Gm. Enl. 524; — P. palalaca, ,Nob. Enl. 691; — P. jumana, Spix, po~ chraceus amlflavieuns, Id. 51. Species analogous to the Spotted Woodpeckers: P. ru JnVcn^m, Vieill. Gal. 27 ; — P. hirundinaceus, L. Enl. 694;— P. vurius, Gm. Enl. 785;— P. villosus, Gm. Enl. 754; Wils. I, ix, 3;— P. iindosus, N. Enl. bZZ;—P.pubescens, Gm. Catesb. 31, 11 ; Wils. I, ix,4. Species with a transversely striped bill: P. moluccensis, Gm. Enl. 748, f. 2; — P. hi- co/or, lb. f. \;—P.rufns, Gm. Enl. 694, f. 1, closely allied to the P.undatus, Gm.; Edw. 332;— P. carolinus, Gm. Enl. 597 and 6e«o«apGoon, T,, Col. 2So;'~vergicolor, T., Col. 3Q9i-~3fi/stacopfiaaes, T,, C«l. 315, VailL jpl C -—aiiro-tirens, T , Vaill. pL E. t Tamati.^. the Uraziliati jianie of one of these birds, aceordiog to Maregrare. In Parag:uay, Azzara says, they are called Qimurus, It is to them that Tenioiijuek applies the term Cap iTi. % Bucco macrorhyuchos, Enl. 689;— »iefa»o&>ttcft$, EnL <58S, 2j — cellmis, Enl. 395; —UuiMtia, EnL 74fi, 1; VieilL GaL 34 (Tasmtia fjiaculala, Nob.); — Cap. melamtis, T., Col. ^A:;—Cypltos macjodact yhis, Spix, 39, 2. § Curourou expresses tlieir cry, aud is their Bxaziliaa Jiame; that of Trogon was conferred on them by Moehring. II In American Trogou cunu^cui, EnL 452, Vaill., cww-ow, l,2',—Tr.rosa{ba,Ya)lh 6, or variegatus, Spi,x, 38;--j,7w/«, EnL 195; VailL 3, 4; Spix, 36 ;—violaceu..% Nov. Comm. Petr. XI, pL xvi, f. S;—sMgi!atus, EnL 1€5;—ru/us, Enl 736; Vaill. Sj— Tr. atrieoUis. VieilL GaL 31, or oranga, VailL 7, 8, J 5, or sidjwacews, Spis, 3,8i~7>, domkeUus, VailL 13; — Tr. albiveuter, VailL 5, *• la Asia: Trogon fasciatiLS, Ind. ZooL pL y;— T. oreskios, T. CoL 181 j—T, Beiuwardii, T. CoL 124;— 2'- Duvaucelii, 1. Col. 291, VatlL 14;— T. coadm, T. CoL 321;— 7', Tcmmmcku, VailL 12. In AJricas Tr. nurim, VailL Afr. 228, 229, ajid Cour. 30 and 11. We may be allov.'fd to doubt if the Trogon viauilalux, Bro^vn, IlL XIIJ, hg a ixm C4)uroua)jj- S()2 BIRDS. One of them is remarkable for the figure of its tail; TV. temnu- rus, T., Col. 326; and another for the length of the tail coverts, which nearly equals that of the body, Tr. pavonius, T., Col. 372; Spix, 35. It is celebrated in the mythology of the Mexicans, and . much in request among them for ornamental purposes. Crotopiiaga, Lin. The Ani* are known by their bill, which is thick, compressed, arcu- ated, entire, elevated, and surmounted with a vertical and trenchant crest. Two species are known, both from the hot and low districts of America. Their tarsi are strong and elevated, the tail long and rounded, and the plumage black. Crolophaga major, and Croto. ani, Enl. 102, fig. 1 and 2, Vieill. Gal. 43. These birds feed on insects and grain, and. fly in flocks, several couples laying their eggs, and even brooding over them in the same nest, which, together with the branches that support it, is of a size proportioned to the number of couples that have constructed it. They are easily tamed, and may be even taught to speak, but their flesh has a disagreeable odour. RAMPHASTOSf, Ll7l. The Toucans are distinguished from all other birds by their enormous bill, which is almost as thick and as long as their body, light and cellular internally, arcuated near the end, and irregularly indented along its edges; and by their long and narrow tongue, fringed on both sides with barbs like a quill. They are confined to the hot climates of America, where they live in small flocks, feeding on fruit and insects; they also devour other birds' eggs during the season of laying, and their newly-hatched young. The structure of their bill compels them to swallow their food ■without mastication. When they have seized it, they toss it into the air" to swallow it with more facility. Their feet are short, and their wings have but little extent; their tail is tolerably long. They build in the hollows of trees. The Toucans, properly so called. Have a bill larger than their head; they are generally black, with lively colours on the throat, breast, and rump. These parts of their plumage were employed, formerly, in a kind of embroidery ;[. * Jni, Anno, names of these birds in Guiana and Brazil. Crotopiiaous was formed by Brown (Nat. Hist. Jamaic), from the circumstance of the Ani in lliat island flying on the cattle in pursuit of the Tabauus and the TicL Kroton {musca canitia). f Toucan from their Brazilian name Ttica; Rhamphastos, a name invented by Lin- naeus, from ramphos (bill), on account of the enormous size of that organ. X Ramphastos toco, Enl. 82, Vaill. 2; — car'nialus, Wagler, Edw. 329; — tvcanus, Enl. 307; — piscivorus, L., or Callorlii/ncJms, Wagler, Edw. C4-; — maximus, Nob. Vaill. Touc. pi. vi;—pecloralls, Sh. or Tiic'ai, Lich. Enl. 26d;—Aldrovandi, Sh. Alb. II, 25; —crylhrorhynclios, Sh. Enl. 2(i2, Vaill. Z;—VaUantU, Wagler, Vaill.;*;— Tocarc?, Id. '^'aill. 9; — vitelUnns, Id. Vaill. 17, Swains. ZooL 111. 66 j — dkolorus, Wagler, or chloiorhynclioa, Temm. Vaill. 8. CLIMBEUS. 303 PTERocLossrs, 77%. — Aracari, Buff. The bill not so tbick as the head, and invested with a more solid horn; their size is less, and tlie ground of their plumage green with some red or yellow on the throat and breast*. PS5TTACUS, Lin. The Parrots have a stout, hard, solid bill, rounded on all sides and en- veloped at base by a membrane in which the nostrils are pierced, and a thick fleshy and rounded tongue; two circumstances which give them the greatest facility in imitating the humaa voice. Their inferior larvnx, which is complicaced and furnished on each side with its three muscles, also contributes to this facility. Their vigorous jaws are set in motion by a greater number of muscles than is found in other birds. Their in- testines are very long, and they have no caecum. They feed on all sorts of fruit, climb among the branches of trees by the aid of their bill and claws, and build their nests in the cavities of trees. Their voice is natu- rally harsh and disagreeable, and they are almost universally ornamented with the brightest colours, hardly any of them being found beyond the torrid zone. They exist however in both continents, the species of course differing in each. Every large ioland even has its peculiar species, the short wings of these birds not alJov.ing them to cross any great extent of water. The Parrots, consequently, are very numerous; they are sub- divided by tlie forms of their tails and some other characters. Among those which have a long cuneiform tail, we first distinguish Ara, Kuhl. The Aras, or Maccaws. whose cheeks are divested of feathers. They are American species, most commonly very large, and their plumage extremely brilliant, on account of which many of them are sent alive to Europe-f. The other long-tailed Parrots have the common name of CORNURUS, Kuhl, Or Paroquets. Le Vaillant divides them into the Ara-Paroquets, Wliich have a naked space round the eye ; they inhabit America like the ' * Ramph. viridis, Enl. 727, 72S, Vaill. 16, M \— aracari, Enl. 1G6, Vaill. 10, 11, Vieill. Galer. Zd;— piper ivoms, L., or CuUIc. WagJer, Enl. 577, 729, Vaill. 13 and 14; —Plerogl. sidcatus, Swains. Zool. 111. 44, Col. :i56;—picatus, Albin. II, 25;— Az- zara:, Vaill. Suppl. A; — inscriptus, Swains. Zool. 111.90; — 6a!7/o«i, Vaill. 18; — macuU- rosir!.s, VaiU. 15, and Suppl. A A. t Psitl. viacao, L., Vaiil. 1; — Ps. aracanga, Enl. 12, Ya.\\\. 2 \—Ps. tricolor, Vaill. r> ; — Ps. hyacinthinus, Lath., or Auodorhynchus Maiimiliani, Spix, XI; — Ps. ararauna, Enl. 36; — Ps. mllitaris, Vaill. 4; — Ps. severus, Vaill. 8, 9, 10; — Ps. macawuanna, Enl. 8G4, Vaill. 7; — Arara purpureo-dorsalis, Spix, XXIV. X Ps. guyamiensis, Enl. 167, 407; Vaill. 14, 15; — Ps. squamosus, Shaw, Miscell. U,(i\;—Ps. vittattis, Vjiill. 17;— Pi. versicolor, Enl. 144, Vaill. 16;— P<. solstilialis, Vaill. 16 — 19; oi Aratlnga chryso-cephalus, Spix, XIV. Hii Aratiiiga liUeus is a varietv. Arbow-taii,ed Paroquets, Where the two middle quills extend far beyond the others*. Such is the first species known in Europe, where it was brought by Alexander; Psittacus Jlexandrf, L,, Enh 6i2. It is of a ftnt green, with a red collar on the neck, and a black spot under thi throat. The third subdivision of Le Vaillaat is the PABoauETs, with a tail widened near the endf. And the fourth, that of the Common^ Paboqubts, whose tail is almost equally cuneiform :|:. To these may be added, those species whose tail is square ; the two middle quills of which are elongated, the lengthened part, however, being without barbs, except .at the tips IJ, Among the short and equal-tailed Paroquets, we distinguish the Cockatoos % Marked by a crest formed of long and narrow feathers, placed on two » It in tWs division whisb furnished MM, Vigors and Hon&eli with thm gesiw PaIz-eornis, We shouM place in It, Ps. iorquatus, BrJss,, Enl 551 -—Ps. Akxandrl, L., Enl 642. Vsill 30; Edw. 202, tbeyowng of wWeh, according to Kubl, h Ps.eupatria, h,, VsJJl 73, Eat i^di^Pt. annulatus, Beeljst., Vaill, 75, 76}— P#, enjlhrocephahs, h., gingianus, Lstjj,, VaiU, 45, Ed«r, 233i--P*, malaceends, Gnielj — Ps, harrahandi. Swains. Ill, 59, or barbu- latus, Beehst,, Bnl, 8S8, Vaill 72;— Ps. benguhmis, Gm,, Enl, S8«, Vajll. 74j— ps. papuensh, Sonner, Nouv. Guin, lll',^^Ps. rufirostris, EnU 5W',-^Ps, hmmatodm, Bnl. 61, or cyanoeephalus, En). 192, or mpluccanus, Enl, 743, or cijanoga-Unr, Shaw, Gen. Zool. VIIJ, pblix, and J. White, p, 140, ail varieties of age. MM, Vigor* 8nd Horsfield having observed in this last eertain setse under the tip of the tongne, erected it into a genus by the nar/ie of TRicHOGt-ossus. It would be a matter of some interest to sscertaia if many other Paroquets do mt possess this same cJm- racter. f Ps. niger, Esb i500, Edw, 5;— P«. msa, Vaill. 5\',—Ps, masmrinus, 3, Enl. 5, Vaill, ISd'.^Ps, erythropeterus, Shaw, Nat. Miscejl,, 6535--P*. eiimlus, Vaill 28, 29, gh. Misc. 9d;—Pi; Pennanti, Lath,, S. White, p, 174 and 75, or ehgans, Gm., Vaill. 78, 79, or gbrloms, Shaw, 5^',—^Ps. Brownii, Knlil, VaJll BQ',^Ps. seapulatus, Bechst, Vaill, 55, 56, Enl 240;-=-P«. tuhuensis, Lath,, or at/opurpurcus, Sb,, Ler,, Mus., 34;--P.'. amboinmm. Gib,, Enl. 240, and J. White, p. J 68, 169. It js from this division that MM. Vigors and Horsfleld kave made their genua pLATYCEBeUS. X Pa. guaruba, Kohl, or lutew, Lath,, Vaill 20, or Aratinga caroling, Spix, xiif— Ps, guyammk, Gm,, ox ma-crognathos, Spix, xxv; — P?, ludomelanu.s, Enl. 499, ot carO' llmisli, Wits. Ill, xsvi, \;-^Ps. pcrtinax, Enl 528, Vaill 34, 37;— P«. aureus, l> , Vaill 41, Edw. 2^5-— Ps, ca«/c«/«rf<(, Enl 767, Vaill 40^— F». eruginosug, Edw, J77;-'P5. buecaUs,V Hill 61',— Ps. vlrescens, Enl 395, Vaill 59;=-P*. sosova, Enl, 456, 2, Vaill 58, 59, and Ps, tovi, Enl J90, !;=-/>«, mnnus. Bnl 768, Vaill 38;— Pg. ponticerianns, Enl 517, Vaill. 31;— P«, xnnlhosomus, Bechst,, Vaill, 61;— Pi, mpistratm, Bechst,, Edw, 232, Vaill 47;— Ps. onuitm, Enl 553, Vaill. 52, Edw, XTi-j-^Ps. marginatus, VaiJl 60, or oUvaceus, Enl.287;--P«, tmcrorhi/ncfius, Enl 713, or Vaill 8d;—Ps. graudis, Enl 518 and 683; better, Vaill 126, 127, 123;— Ps. inearnalus, Vaill 46;-=-P*. borneus, Vaill 44;— Ps. Mova-Ouinea, Vaill 49;^' P$. eonelmius, Vaill 48;™Ps. pusjllus, Vaill 63{— P/». humeraUs, Vaill 50;=^P*, <:f/sco/or, V. 62;— P* mdnktus, S)i. 673{— Ps, chrysQ§tomus, Kubl, pi J^=^Prf, ;;«/- (pW/u», Vaill 68;^P»-. zonarius, Sh. 657, t) Ps. si-tmus, Tern. Col 15. ^ VjeSilot has named this division P.f,ycTotofWt'g, CLIMBERS. 305 lines, which can be raised or depressed at the will of the bird. They in- habit the most remote parts of India; tlie plumage of the greater num- ber is white, and of all the different species they are the most docile. They prefer marshy grounds*. There are some species lately discovered in New Holland, whose tufts are more simple, less mobile, and composed of broad feathers of a mode- rate length. They live chiefly on rootsf. In others, the crest merely consists of a few pendent feathers, furnished with slender barbs near the tips only, which form a kind of tufted buncli;^;. But in the greater number, there is no ornament whatever on the head. The species best known for its aptness in learning to speak is, Psitt. erythacus; Jaco ; Eul. 311; Edw. 163; Vaill. 99 — 103. (The Grey Parrot). Cinereous, with a red tail. From Africa. The species with the green plumage are the most numerous!]. The name of Loris has been applied to those species, the grouiid of whose plumage is red, which have a tail somewhat wedge-shaped, and which closely approach certain Paroquets. They are only found in the East Indies §. There are some small species with a very short tail, PsiTTAcuLus, Kuhl, which are also, but improperly, called Paroquets **. All this variety of size and colours can hardly authorize any generic di.sti]ictions. There are only the * Ps crislntus, Enl. 265;— P*. philippinanim, Enl. 191; — Ps. 7nalarrens/s, Enl. 49fi;—Ps. svlfnreiis, Enl. 14;— P.«. gaJeritus, White, 237;— P*. nasicus, T. Col. 331. t Ps. Banfcsii, Lath. Syn. Supp. 109, Shaw, Misc. 50; — Ps. fu/ierens, Shii\v, Misc. IPf):— Ps Cookii, Tem., or Leuchii, Kuhl, pi. iii;— Ps. roseus, Kuhl, Col. 81. This division has become the genus Calyptorhynchus of MM. Vigors and Hors- field. X Ps. gnleaius, Lath , Suppl. II Ps. melmwcephahis, Enl. 527; Vaill. 119, \2(i;—Ps. signatns, Vaill. 105;— Ps. menstruus, Enl. 384; Vaill. 114, ox fluvirosiris, Spix, xxxi; — Ps. piirpureiis, Enl. 40S; Vaill. 115;— Ps. sordidus, Vaill. 104;— Ps. amazonicus, Enl. 13, 120, 312; Vaill. 98, 99;— Ps. asfivus, Enl. 547, 879; Vaill. 110 and 110 bis ,—Ps. ccerulifrmis, Sh., Edw. 230; Vaill. 135;— Ps. ci/amtis, Tem., or brasiliensis, Lin., Edw. 161; Vaill. 106; — Ps. dominicensis, Enl. 792, or viiiaceus, Pr. Max., or columbinus, Spix, xxvii; — Ps. Dufresninniis, Kuhl, Vaill. 91 ; — Ps. aitfiimn'ilis, Edw. 164; Vaill. Ill; — Ps. hava- veiisis, Enl. 360; Vaill. \22;—Ps. leitrocephalus, L., Enl. 335,548, 549; Vaill. 107, 108. lOS bis, 109;— P.«. albifrons, Mus. Carls. 52-- Ps. pulvcrnlentus, Enl. 861; Vaill. 92;—Ps.festiviis, Enl. 840; Vaill. 129;— Ps. acci/,itri>ius, Enl. 520, and Spix, xxxii, a;— Ps. senega//us, Enl. 288; Vaill. 116, 118;— Ps. LevtiUln>,/ii, Lath., or /»- fuscatus, Sh.; Vaill. 130, U\\—Ps. grimaneiis, Enl. 862; Vaill. 121;— Ps. sinensis, Edw. 231, Enl. 514, Vaill. 132;— Ps. Geoffroii, Vaill. 112, 113, or Ps. persovalus, Sh.; —Ps. xanthops, Spix, xxvi; — Ps. vtitratus, Pr. Max., Col. 207, or mditaca, Spix, xxix and xxx; — Ps. diadema, Spix, xxxii. § Ps. unicolor, Vaill. 125; — Ps. domicelln, Enl. 119; Vaill. 94, 95;— Ps. I ri, Enl. 158; Vaill. 123, 124;— Ps. ffarru/us, Enl. 216; Vaill. 96;— Ps. cyanuius,Sh. ; Vaill. 97. *• Ps. passerinus, Enl. 455, 1; Shaw., Misc. 893, and Spix, xxxiii; — Ps. tui, Enl. 456, 1; Vaill. 70;~Ps. melanoplerus, Enl. 591, 1; Vaill. 69; Sh. 132;— Ps. pileatus, Enl. 744; Vaill. 135;— Ps. Barrabandi, Vaill. 134;— Ps. cavus, Enl. 791, 2; Sh. 42.5; — Ps. swinderniunus, Kuhl, pi. ii ; — Ps. galgidus, Enl. 190, 2; — Ps. phitippeiisis, Enl. 520;— Ps. vernalis, Mus. Carls. 29;— Ps. indicus, Edw 6;— P.s. torqiiatiis, Sonner., N. Guin., 393;— Ps simpler, Kulil, Sonner., lb. 38, 1;— P.s-. pullaris, Enl. 60; — Ps. mirro;iter>is, Sonner. 41; — Ps. taitianus. Cm. Enl 455, 2; \s.\\\. 65, or Ps. pnriiki/rus, Sh. Misc. 7; — Ps. sparm(mni, Mus. Carls. 27; V'aill. QG; — Ps.frivgilluceus, Vaill. 71, or porph rocephulus, Sh. Misc. 1; — Ps. pliigy, VailL 64; — Ps. lanlhupteri' giu.'!, Spix, xxxiv, 12; — Ps, gregarius, Spix, xxxiv, 3, 4 VOL. 1. C C 306 Paroquets a trompe, fuill. Whicli possess characters sufficiently well marked to be taken from the others. Their short, square tail, and their tuft composed of long and narrow feathers, assimilate them to the Cockatoos. Their cheeks are naked as in the Ara, but their enormous upper mandible, and the very short lower one, which cannot be made to close completely, their cylindri- cal tongue, terminated by a small horny knob, split at the apex, and sus- ceptible of being greatly protruded beyond the bill, their legs, naked a little above the heel, and finally, their short and flat tarsi on which they often rest in walking, distinguish them from all other Parrots. But two species are known, both natives of the East Indies*. A subgenus might also perhaps be made of the Pezoporus, Ulig. — Perruches, Ingambes, Vaill. Which have a weaker bill, more elevated tarsi, and straighter nails than the other Parrots. They walk about on the ground, and seek their food among the grassf. There are two African birds, closely allied to each other, and generally placed among the Scansoriae, which appear to me to have some analogy with the Gallinacese, and especially with the Hoccos, They have the tail and wings of the Hoccos, and, like them, perch on trees ; the bill is short, and the upper mandible gibbous ; there is a short membrane between the fore-toes, but the external one, it is true, is often directed backwards like that of the Uhilas. Their nostrils, also, are simply pierced in the horn of the bill, the edges of the mandibles are dentated, and the sternum (at least that of the Touraco) has not those large emar- ginations so common in the Gallinaceas. There are two genera of these birds: the first is, CORYTHAIX]:, Illig. Or the Touracos, in which the bill does not mount on the forehead, anii the head is furnished with an erectile tuft. The most common species, Cuculus persa, L. ; Enl. 601; Vaill., Prom., &c., 16 and 17, is found in the vicinity of the Cape of Good Hope. It is a beautiful green, with part of the quills of the wings crimson. It builds in hollow trees, and feeds on fruit jj. The second is the • Psiftacus aterrhnns, Gm., or Ps. gisns, Lath., Edw. 316; — Ps. goliath, Kuhl, or rAra nr,ir a trompe, Vaill. per I, pi. xii and xiii; — L'Jra gris a trompe, Id. lb. pi. ii, is perhaps a variety of the same. The name of trompe is not exactly coiTect. The tongue is not hollow, and in fact all that can be properly styled tongue, is the little horny piece which invests the extremity of the cylinder. See Geoff. Saint Hill, Ap. VI, Gal. 4. From this subdivision M. Vieillot has made his genus Microglossu.", Galer. pi. 1. f Ps. formosus, Vaill. I, 32; Sh. Misc. 228;— P*. Nora-Zelandiee, Lath., Mus. Carls. 28; — Ps. cornutus, Lath., Syn. Supp. Ill, pi. viii. X Vieillot has changed this name into Op^Thus. II Add the Touraco-giant, Vieill. Prom, and Guep. pi. 19;— the Touraco Pauline, GALLINACE^. S07 MusoPHAGA, Isert. Or the Plantain-eaters, so called, because their principal food is the fruit of the banana. They are characterised by the base of the bill forming a disk, which partly covers the forehead. The species known is M. violacea, Vieill. Galer. 47; Touraco violet, Vaill., Promer., &c., pi. 18. Circumference of the eyes naked and red; violet- coloured plumage ; occiput and primary quills of the wings crimson ; a white line passes below the naked space round the eye. Inhabits Guinea and Senegal. ORDER IV, GALLINACEiE.— Gallin,ij (a), Lin. These birds are so called from their affinity with the Domestic Cock, and, like it, generally have the upper mandible arched, the nostrils pierced in a broad membranous space at the base of the bill, and covered by a car- tilaginous scale ; the heavy carriage, short wings, and the bony sternum diminished by two emarginations, so wide and deep, that they occupy nearly the whole of its sides, its crest being truncated obliquely forwards, so that the sharp point of the fourchette is only joined to it by a liga- ment,— these various circumstances, by greatly impairing the strength of the pectoral muscles, render it difficult for them to fly. Their tail gene- rally consists of fourteen quills, and sometimes of eighteen. The lower larynx is very simple,. and consequently there are none of them that sing agreeably. They have an extremely large crop, and a very vigorous giz- zard. With the exception of the Hocco, they all lay and hatch their eggs on the ground, on a few carelessly arranged blades of straw or grass. Each male usually has several females, and takes no sort of trouble either with the nest or the young ones, which, commonly, are very nu- merous, and most usually able to run as soon as they have left the shell. This order is chiefly composed of one very natural family, remarkable for having furnished us with most of our domestic poultry, and abundance of excellent game; in it the anterior toes are united at their base by a short membrane, and indented along the edges : these it is impossible to divide into genera, except by means of very unimportant characters, Temm., Col, 23, or Opathus erythrolophus, Vieill. Galer. 49; — the Touraco iiun {Phasianns africanus, Lath.) Vaill. 20, or Musopkage varie, Vieill. Galer. 48. (a) Gallus, the cock. — Esc. Ed. c c 2 308 BIRDS. drawn from some of the appendages of the head. In order, however, to avoid an excessive multiplication of beings, we shall associate certain ge- nera with them, whose feet are deficient in fhat membrane, some of which, the Pigeons, connect the Gallinaceae with the Passerinae, while the others, the Hoazins, Buff., somewhat approximate to the Touracos. A LECTOR*, Merr. The Hoccos are large Gallinaceae of America, which resemble Turkeys, with a broad, rounded tail, formed of large and stiff quills. There is a singular conformation in the trachea of several of them. They live in the woods, feed on buds and fruit, perch and build on trees, are very social, and easily domesticated. Gmelin and Latham have divided them into Hoccos and Yacous, but upon very undetermined characters. We subdivide them in the following manner: The Hoccos, properly so called, Buff. — Mitous, of Brazil, &c. — Crax, Lin. Have a strong bill, its base surrounded with a skin, which is sometimes highly coloured, in which the nostrils are pierced; on the head is a tuft of long, narrow, erect feathers, curled at the tips. They are the size of Turkeys, and, like them, fly up into trees. They are hred by the Ame- ricans; and individuals are sometimes sent to Europe, so variously co- loured, that we are at a loss how to characterize their species. The most common, or Crax alector, L. ; Mitou-Poranpa, Marcgr. ; Buff. Ois. II, pi. xiii; Vieill. Galer. J 99. Black; the lower part of the belly white ; cera of the bill, yellow. The trachea makes but one slight curve before it enters the thorax. Some of these hirds, such as Crax globicera, L,, Enl. 86; Edw. 295, 1, have a larger or smaller globular tubercle on the base of the bill. Among both of these species individuals are to be found in which the body is irre- gularly striped with white or farni colour. Albin. II. 32f. The whole upper part is sometimes fawn-coloured;{:. Those of Peru, Crax rubra, L., Enl. 125, are all of a vivid chestnut colour above, the head and neck being variegated with black and white||, OURAX, Citv. The Pauxi § have a shorter and thicker bill, the membrane of its base as well as the greater part of their head being covered with a short and dense plumage resembling velvet. The most common species, * J'ertor is the Greek name of the cock. t This appears to be the true Mexican Hoa::!n of Hernandez. J Sucli is the female described by Azzara, Voy. IV. p. 169. From the accounts of other travellers, it appears that the females, also, are fawn-coloured. II See also Cra.r fasnolata, Spix, LXII, a;—C. Blum-nharhii, Id. LXIV. Add, Crax glob'dosa, Id. LXV and LXVI;— C. rubiros'rls, Id. LXVII. § Pauxi is the name by which Hernandez designates them. Ourax, the Athenian name for the Heath-Cock. GALLTVACE.E. 309 Crax pmixi, L. ; Pierre, Src. ; Enl. 78; Vieill. Galer. 200, (the Stone Bird), has an oval tubercle on the base of its bill, of a light blue colour and a stony hardness, almost as large as its head. This bird is black ; the lower part of the belly and the tip of the tail white. It lays its eggs on the ground. Its original habitat is not exactly known. The trachea descends externally along the right side to behind the sternum, where it inclines to the left, and ascends to enter the thorax, through the fourchette. All its rings are com- pressed. There is another species, which, instead of the tubercle on the bill, has a red salieni crest. The belly and tip of the tail are chest- nut colour. It is the true Mittu of Marcgrave ; Ourax miitu, Tera. Col. 153; Crax (jaleala, Lath.; Crax tomentosa, Spix, Ixiii*. Penelope, Merr. The Guans or Yacousf have a slenderer bill than the Hoccos; the circumference of the eyes is naked, as well as the under part of the throat, which is generally susceptible of being inflated. Several varieties of colour are found also among these birds, be- tween which it is very difHcuIt to establish specitic limits. Those which have a tuft are sometimes of various shades of brown or bronze — Penelope jacupema, Mer. II, xi; sometimes spotted on the breast — Penelope cristata, L., Edw. 13|;; sometimes black, with the same spots, and more or less white on the tuft and coverts of the wings — Penelope leucolophos, ^ler. II, xii, or Pen. cuma- nensis, Gm.; Jacq. Beytr. pi. 10; Bajon, Cay. pi. 5, or Pen. jacu- tinga, Spix, pi. Ixx. Some of them are intermediate between these two extremes, — Pen. pipile, Jacq. Beytr. pi. xi. The trachea, at least in the first, descends under the skin far be- hind the posterior edge of the sternum, ascends, is again flexed, and then continues its course towards the fourchette, through which, as usual, it gains access to the lungs. A species almost without crest, Pen. marail, Enl. 338, Vieill. Gal. 198, greenish-black, with a fawn-coloured belly, appears very distinct. Its trachea, in both sexes, forms a curve at the upper part of the sternum, just before it dips into the thorax. Ortalida, Merr. Or the Parraquas, only differ from the Yacous by having but little of the naked space on the throat, and about the eyes. • Add, Crax ttiherosa, Sp. LXVII, a,—Cr. uramulum, Id. LXII. N.B. The Charamcl, Buff. {Crax voci/erans), founded on a vague indication of Hernandez, cap. XLI, is not authentic. Sonnini even ihinVs it maybe the Falco vulturinus. The Curacara of Buff, and Dutertre is the A^mri (Psophia). t Gouan and Yanou are the names of these birds in Guiana and Brazil. That of Penelope, given to them by Merrem, designated among the Greeks a species of duck, ■which, according to them, had saved the wife of Ulysses from drowning, when a child. X The P.janiaza, jacucaca, jacupeba, jncuhemha, guttata, and arra cuan, of Spix, LXVII I — LXXV, closely approach the P. cristata, if they are not mere varietits of il. The P. marail, Vieill. Gal. 19S, corresponds most with (he jacupeba. 310 BIRDS. Only one species is known; of a bronze-brown above, whitish- grey beneath ; top of the head red — Catraca, Buff. ; Phasianus mot- mot, Gm., and Phas. parraqna, Lath., Enl. 146*; Bajon, Cay. pi. 1. The cry of this bird is very loud, and articulates its name. The trachea descends under the skin as low as the abdomen, and then ascends to enter the thorax. With these different Hoccos naturalists usually associate the OnsTHOcoMus, Hoffmanseg. — Hoazin-j-, Buff. The Hoazin, an American bird of similar carriage, with a short and thick bill, the nostrils pierced in the horn, and destitute of membrane; the head ornamented with a tuft of long and very narrow and slender fea- thers, Avhich is distinguished from all the true Gallinaceje by having no membrane between the base of the toes. It is the Phasianus cristatus, L. ; Enl. 337; Vieill. Galer. 193; greenish-brown, variegated with white above; front of the neck and tip of the tail fawni-coloured ; the belly chestnut. It is found perching along the margin of inundated places in Guiana, where it feeds on leaves and the seeds of a species of Arum. Its flesh smells strongly of castor, and is only employed as a bait for particu- lar fishes. Pavo, Lin. The Peacocks, so called from their cry, are characterised by an aigrette or crest on the head, and by the coverts of the tail of the male being larger than its quills, and capable of being erected so as to form a circle. The shining, lax, and silky barbs of these feathers, and the ocellated spots that decorate their extremities, are well kno\\-n in the P. cristatus, L.; Paon domesfiqne, Enl. 433 and 434. (The Common Peacock). A species in which the head is ornamented with an aigrette of vertical feathers widened at the tip. This su- perb bird, originally from the north of India, was introduced into Europe by Alexander. Its magnificent plumage is even surpassed in brilliancy by that of the wild ones. A rich blue supersedes the gold-green specks along their back and on their wings; their tail also is more plentifully furnished with feathers. The Pavo spiciferus, improperly styled by LinnjBUS P. muticus, for it also has spurs, is a distinct species. The feathers of its ai- grette are long and narrow; its neck is not blue, but green, watered and gilt; the tail almost as magnificent as that of the common s^pe- cies;;]:. Vieill. Galer. 202; Shaw, Nat. Misc. 641. Another species. ♦ N.B. The fig. in the PI. Enl. is bad, inasmuch as it represents the tail pointed. f This tenn was applied to the above bird by Biiffon, without any proof, from an indication of Hernandez, Mex. 320, ch. 10. Vieill. Galer. 193, calls it flasa cristaia, and improperly represents the bill as notched near its commissure. It forms a genus very distinct from that of any other of the Gallinaceae, and when its anatomy is known, may become the type of a parti- cular family. X It was only known, for a long time, by a bad drawing from Japan, in the six- teenth century (Aldrov. II, av. 33, 34), but Messrs. Duvaucel and Diard having sent several of the birds from Sumatra to France, M. Vieillot has given his figure from them. GALLINACEyl!. 311 P. bicalcaratus and thibetanus, Gm. ; VEperonnier, Enl. 492 and 493 ; Vieill. Galer. pi. 203 (The Chinquis), is much smaller, and has a short thick tuft on the head ; each of the tarsi of the male is armed with two spurs; the coverts of the tail, which are not so long, are marked with double spots, and those of the scapulars with simple ones, presenting a dappled appearance*. A neighbouring species Polypi, albocellatum, T., is marked with simple blue spots, sur- rounded by a whitish circle. A third, Pol. chalcurum, T., has blue quills, but its coverts are only marked with fawn-coloured and black stripes. LoPHOPHORUs, Tern. The head surmounted with an aigrette similar to that of the Peacock, and a flat tail, the coverts of which are not prolonged, otherwise resem- bling the preceding birds in the lustre of the metallic colours of the male. The circumference of the eye, and even the cheeks, are naked as in the Pheasants, and the tarsi are armed with strong spurs. A species is known from the mountains of the north of India. L.refuhjens, T. ; Phasianus impeyanvs, Lath. Syn. Snpp. pi. 114; il/oraawZ, Sonnin. ; Vieill. Gal. 208. Black; size of a Turkey; the aigrette and dorsal feathers of changeable colours, reflecting tints of gold, copper, sapphire, and emerald; quills of the tail red. The young and the female are brown, dashed with grey and fawn col our 'j*. Meleagris:|:, Lin. The Turkeys have their head and upper part of the neck invested with a plumeless and papillated skin ; an appendage under the throat, which hangs along the neck, and another conical one on the forehead, which, in the male, when excited by passion, becomes so inflated and long, as to hang over the point of the beak. From the lower part of the neck of the adult male hangs a tuft or tassel of stiff" hairs; the coverts of the tail shorter and stiffer than in the Peacock can be erected and displayed in the same way. The tarsi of the male are armed with weak spurs. But one species was known for a long time. Meleagris galh-pavo, L.; Enl. 97- (The Common Turkey). Introduced into Europe from America in the sixteenth century. The size of this noble bird, and the goodness of its flesh, have rendered it extremely common. The Wild Turkey of America, Vieill. Gal. 201, is of a greenish-brown, with a copper gloss. A second spe- cies, however, M. ocellata, Cuv. Mem. Mus. VI, pi. 1 ; Col. 112, has lately been * M.Temminck makes a genus of it by the name of Polyplectrum; Vieillot has changed it into Diplectron. t lEW&n appears to have previously known and described it, Hist, anno L. XVI, c. 2. Add the Inphophore, Cuv., Tern. Col. pi. 1, with a pendent crest, black body, and the edges of the dorsal feathers white; discovered by M. Duvaucel. It is, per- haps, the I'ltasianus leucomelanos of Lath. The female is brown, edges of the feathers on the breast whitish. X Meleagris is the Greek name of the Guinea-Hen, erroneously applied by Lin- naeus to the Turkey. 31^ BIRDS. described almost equal to the Peacock in tlie brilliancy of its colours, and particularly in the sapphire-coloured spots, surrounded with cir- cles of gold and ruby, which decorate the tail, which, as to shape, resembles that of the Common Turkey. It was captured in the bay of Honduras. NuMiDA*, Lin. The Guinea-fowls, or Pintados, have a naked head, fleshy wattles at the bottom of the cheeks, a short tail, and the cranium generally sur- mounted with a callous crest. Their feet are without spurs; their short, pendent tail, and the quantity of feathers on the rump, give a spherical air to the body. The common species, N.meleagris, L. ; Enl. 108, (The Common Guinea-Hen), ori- ginally from Africa, has a slate-coloured plumage, every where sprinkled with small, white, round spots. Its noisy and quarrelsome disposition render it a very unwelcome guest in poultry-yards, al- though its flesh is excellent. In a wild state they live in large flocks, and prefer the vicinity of marshes. There are also two species, N. cristata and N. mitrata, Pall., Spic. IV, pi. ii and iii, fig. 1 ; Vieill. Galer., pi. ccix, in the first of which the head is ornamented with a plumed crest, and in the second with a conical helmet. A third has lately been discovered in which the helmet is very small, and which has a small tuft on the base of the bill, composed of short stems, almost without barbs. N. ptylorhyncha, Licht. The great genus, Phasianus, Lin. Or that of the Pheasants, is characterized by the cheeks being partly des- titute of feathers, and covered with a red skin, and by the tectiform tail,, in which the feathers are variously disposed. We first distinguish Gallus, The Cock, in which the head is surmounted with a vertical and fleshy crest, and each side of the lower mandible furnished with fleshy wattles. The quills of the tail, fourteen in number, are elevated on tv.^o vertical planes, placed back to back ; the coverts of that of the male are extended into an arch over the tail proper. The species so common in our barn yards. Phas. gallus, L. ; Enl. 1 and 49, (The Common Cock and Hen) varies infinitely as to colour, and even greatly as to size; in some races the crest is replaced by a tuft of feathers, or a top-knot; in others the tarsi, and even the toes, are feathered; in one race the crest, wattles, and periosteum of the whole skeleton, are black, and in others, by a kind of monstrosity, we find five, and even six toes, for several generations. • These birds were called Meleagrides by the ancient Greeks, who supposed them to have sprung from the metamorphosis of Meleager's sisters. They looked upon the spots on the feathers as traces of tears. The Romnns called them African hens, itc. They have been found nowhere by the moderns except in Guinea. GALLlNACEiE. 313 Several species of Wild Cocks are known. The first, Gallus Sonneratii, Tern. Col. 232 and 233, (The Jungle Cock), was described by Sonnerat, Voy. II, Atl. 117, 118, and is very re- markable for the feathers on the neck of the male, the steins of which widen at the bottom into three successive disks of a horny nature. The crest is denticulate. It is found in the ghauts of Hiiidostan. Two others have been brought from Java by M. Lechenaud, one of which, Gall. Bankiva, Tern., has a denticulated crest like the preceding; all the feathers of the neck being long, pendent, and of the most beautiful golden red; it appears to me to bear the greatest resemblance to our Domestic Cock. The other, Phas. varius, Shaw, Nat. Misc. 353 ; Ajamalas; Gall.furcatus, Tem. Col. 374, is black, with a cupreous-green neck, speckled with black ; the crest entire, and a small kind of dewlap, without latei-al wattles. Pheasants, properly so called, Have a long cuneiform tail, each of its quills being inclined on two planes, and covering each other like tiles. The most common, P.colchicus, L.; Enl. 121 and 122, (The Common Pheasant of Europe), was brought into Europe by the Argonauts, as it is said, from the banks of the Phasis. It is now spread throughout all temperate Europe, where it requires, however, a great deal of care. The head and neck of the male are of a deep green, M-ith two small tufts on the occiput; the rest of the plumage is of a golden fawn co- lour, speckled with green. The female is brownish, speckled and variegated with a darker brown. China has lately furnished us with three other species, which, with the Peacock, form the ornaments of our aviaries, viz. Ph. torquatus, which scarcely differs from the common one, ex- cept in having a brilliant white spot on each side of the neck. Ph. nycthemerus, L. (The Silver Pheasant). "White, with very fine blackish lines on each feather, and the belly entirely black. Ph. pictus, L. ; Enl. 217. (The Golden Pheasant). So remark- able for its magnificent plumage; the belly is of a bright red; a beautiful crest of a golden colour hangs from the head; the neck is clothed with a collerette of orange, speckled with black ; the upper part of the back is green, the lower part and the rump yellow; the wings red, with a beautiful blue spot; the tail very long, brown, spotted with grey, &c. It appears to me that Pliny's description of the Phoenix, lib. x, cap. 2, was taken from this beautiful bird. The females of all these species have shorter tails than the males, and the plumage variously marked with different shades of grey or brown*. One of the most singular of all birds is, • Add, the Fahan versicolor, — Pfias. Diardi, Tem., discovered by Messrs. Diard and Duvaucel, Vieill. Gal. pi. cev. 31't BIRDS. Ph. Argus, L. ; VAnjus, Yieill. Galer., pi. cciii. (Tlie Argus). A large Pheasant from the south of Asia, whose head and neck are nearly naked. The tarsi are without spurs ; a very long tail to the male ; the secondary quills of the wings excessively elongated, mdened, and covered throughout with ocellated spots, which, when spread, give to the bird a most extraordinary aspect. It inhabits the mountains of Sumatra, and of some other countries of the south east of Asia. It forms the genus Argus, Tern., Gallin. There is reason to believe that a bird exists in the interior of China, the feathers of whose tail are still more elongated, attaining a length of four feet, whitish, changing to red on the edges, with numerous transverse black or chestnut lines. It is thought to be figured on some of the Chinese paper hangings. M. Temminck caWs it Phasianus superbus ; Gall. II, p. 336. The HouppiFERES, Tern., Have the naked cheeks common to all this genus, the vertical tail ?.nd arched coverts peculiar to the Cock, and feathers on their head which they can erect, forming an aigrette similar to that of the Peacock. The inferior edge of the naked skin on the cheeks, which is salient, supplies the place of wattles. The tarsi are armed with strong spurs. Only one species is known ; it is from the straits of Sunda, is the size of a Cock, of a brilliant black, with a golden red rump ; the two superior tail-coverts yellowish or whitish, the flanks spotted with white or fawn-colour; Ph as. Ignitus, Sh. Nat. Misc., 321 ; VieilL, Galer., pi. ccvii. The female is brown, finely striped with black above, and dashed with white beneath. She has also a crest. Tragopan, Cuv. The head of the male is more fantastically ornamented than any other bird ; it is almost naked, and behind each eye is a small slender horn ; a wattle under the throat susceptible of inflation; the tarsi of both sexes armed with short spurs. Only one species is known, a native of the north of India, the Nepaul or Faisan cornu, BuiF. ; Penelope satyra, Gm. ; Meleagris satyrus, Lath. Edw. 116; VieilL, Galer. 206. As large as a Cock; of a brilliant red, sprinkled with small white tears. The female and the young are of different shades of brown*. We should separate from the Pheasants, the Cryptonyx-j-, Tern. In which the nakedness of the head is confined to the circumference of the eye ; the tail is moderate and plane, and the tarsi without spurs ; the principal character, however, consists in the absence of the thumb nail. There is only one species well known, the male of which has a * The Tragopan of Pliny, lib. x, c. 49, was probably imagined from this bird, t Vieillot has changed this name into Liponyx. There is a species of Cnjptonyx at Malacca, mentioned by Dussumier, which is black, crestless, and without the papillated space about the eye. GALLINACE.E. SI 5 long tuft of slender red feathers, and long upright filaments, without barbs on each eye-brow. It is the Roiiloul de Malacca, Sonner. Voy. II, pi. 100; Cript. coronatus. Tern., Col. 350 and 351; Co- lumba cristata, Gm. and Lath.; Phasianus cristatus, Sparm., Mas. Carls. Ill, 64. Green; somewhat larger than a Quail. The fe- male, which merely has a vestige of a tuft, is the Telrao viridis, Lath., Syn. II, pi. 67*. Tetrao, Lin. The Grous also is a great genus, characterized by a naked aud most generally red band, which occupies the place of the eye-brow. It is di- vided into subgenera as follows: — Tetrao, Lath. The feet of Grous are covered with feathers, and are without spurs. Those to which this name is more particularly applied have a round or forked tail and naked toes. There are two large species of them in France. T. urogallus, L. ; Grand Coq de Bruyeres; Enl. 73 and 74. (The Great Heath-Cock, or Cock of the Woods, or Caper-Cailzie). The largest of all the GallinaceK, and superior in size to the Turkey. Its plumage is slate-coloured, transversely and finely striped with black; the female is fawn-coloured, the cross lines brown or blackish. Found in the heart of mountain forests, builds among the heath- grass, or in newly cleared grounds, and feeds on berries and buds. Its trachea makes two curves before it dips into the lungs. The flesh is delicious. T. tetrix, L.; Coq de Bouleau; Enl. 172 and 173; Frisch. 109; Naum. 1st Ed., 18, f. 37 and 38. (The Black Cock). The male is more or less black, with some white on the coverts of the wings and under the tail, the two forks of which diverge laterally. The female is fawn-coloured, with black and white stripes crossing it. Their size is that of the Cock, and they are found in mountain forests. An intermediate species appears to exist in the north of Europe, — T. intermedins, Langsdorf, Mem. de Petersb., tom. Ill, pi. xiv; Sparm. M. Carls., pi. xv, which is larger than the preceding, with the tail less forked, and the breast spotted with white. Found in the marshy districts of Courland, Ingria, &c.'j- In the woods of temperate Europe we find, T. honasia, L. ; La Gelinotte; Poule des Coudriers\; Enl. 474 and 475; Frisch. 112; Naum. 20, f. 39, (the Hazel Grous), * The Colimba cristata, B., Gm., Lath., Syn. II, pi. Iviii, appears closely allied to it ; but the figure represents it as having a large nail to the thumb. This is perhaps an error, as in the Galer. Vieill., tom. II, pi. ccx. t It appears to be at once the Telras a plumage variable, and the Tetras a queue pltine, of Buflbn. I BoNASiA, or BoNASA, name of the Gelinotte in Albertus Magnus and other au- thors of the middle ages. SIO BIRDS. ■which is but a little larger than the Partridge, and is prettily varie- gated with brown and white, grey and red; a large black band near the tip of the tail; throat of the male black, and his head slightly tufted*. America produces some neighbouring species, such as Tet. canadensis and canace, L. ; Gelinotte noire d'Amer., Enl. 131 and 132; Edw. 118 and 71. Brown, verging more or less on a black ; tip of the tail red. In some, the feathers on each side of the neck of the males are turned up like a mantle, or two scrolls : their habits have an affinity with those of the Turkey. Such are, Tetr. umhellus and togatus, Gm. ; Coq. de Bruy. a fraise, Enl. 104; Edw. 248; Wils. pi. xlix; called Pa/-ir/d^^e in New England, and Pheasant in Pennsylvania. Variegated with red, grey, and black : a large black spot at the bottom of the neck, on each side ; a black band edged with white on the tip of the tail ; lower part of the tarsi naked. Found in the mountain forests; the voice of the male in the nuptial season resembles the roll of a dTum. Tetr. cnpido, Gm., Catesb. Suppl. 1; Wils., pi. xxvii; Vieill. Galer. 219. (The Pinnated Grous). Variegated with brown and fawn colour ; tail brown ; tarsi feathered down to the toes ; the fea- thers on the bottom of the male's neck turn up into two pointed scrolls, beneath which is a naked skin, which, in the genial season, he inflates like a bladder; his voice sounds like a trumpet. Found on extensive plains, and is such delicious food that laws have been passed to preserve the breed f. The name of Lagopus. The Lagopede, Snow-Partridge, or Ptarmigan, is more particularly applied to those species which have a round or square tail; whose toes are feathered as well as the legs. The most common become white in winter. Tetr. lagopus, L. ; Lagopede ordinaire^, Enl. 120 and 494 ; Brit. Zool. pi. M, 3, M, 4; Naum. 1st Ed. Supp. 61, f. 115, 116. (The Ptarmigan or White Grous, or Partridge of the Pyrennees). Its summer plumage is fawn coloured, marked with small black lines §. From high mountains, where it remains during the winter, in holes which it forms under the snow. * Ihti Attagns of Buff., Attagen of Aldrov., Ornitb., II, p. 75; Gdbwtte hvppee, Briss-, appears to me after much research, even in Italy, to be nothing more than a young or female Gelinotte. It is the same individual painted by Frisch., pi. cxii. The Tetrao cidius, Gm. (Sparm. Mus. Carls., p. 16) is only an albino variety of the Gtlinotte. Neither iiave I any confidence in the authenticity of the I'etr. nemes- sianns, nor in that of the Tetr. betiiihuis of Scopoli. They are females, or the young of the Tetr. tetrix, or disfigured Gelinottes. f Add, Tet. urophasianus, Bonap. Ill, pi, xxi, f. 2; — Tci. olsciirus, Bonap. Ill, pi. xviii. :|; Lagopus— hare's foot, hairy foot — is the ancient name of this bird. § In tliis summer livery it is the Tetr. rupestris, Lath. GALLINACE^. 31 « Tetr. albus, Gm., called of Hudson's Bay; T. saliceti, Tem., Edw. 72; Frisch. 110, HI. (The White Ptarmigan). From the whole north; is larger, and its summer plumage more red; its belly remains white*. There is a Ptarmigan in Scotland, however, which does not change its plumage in winter; it is, Tetr. scoticus, Lath.; Poule de marais ; Grous, Sec; Albin. 1, 23, 24; Brit. Zool. pi. M. 3; Vieill. Galer. 221. (The Red Ptar- migan, or Water Fowl). Above, variegated with fawn colour, brown and black; a deep red, striped with blackish beneath; legs cine- reous, and but few feathers on the toes. We may separate by the name of Ganga or AxTAGENf . — Pterocles, Tem. Those species which have a pointed tail and naked toes. The circum- ference of their eyes only is naked, but it is not of a red colour ; their thumb is very small. Tetr. alchata, L. ; Gancja, Enl. 105 and IOC; Edw. 249+. The size of a Partridge; the plumage scalloped with fawn colour and brown; the two middle quills of the tail much elongated and terminating in a point; throat of the male, black. Found in the south of France, and all round the Mediterranean §. Perdix, Briss. The Partridges have the tarsi naked like the toes. Among them the Francolinus, Te7n. Is distinguished by a longer and stronger bill; a larger tail, and, gene- rally speaking, by stout spurs. The south of Europe produces one, Tetrao francolinus, L.\\; Enl. 147, 148; Edw. 246. With red feet; neck and belly of the male, black, with round white spots; a bright red collar**'. * The summer plumage forms the Tetr. lapponicus, Lath. t Altayen, the Greek name of a heavy bird, somewhat larger than the Fartndge, fith the plumage of a Woodcock, probably designated the Ganga. t Gaii'^a is its Catalonian name; Alchala, or rather Chala, its name among the Arabs, Add of those species which have filaments to the tail, Tetr. senegalus, or Plerodes <^uliutus,T:em, Enl. 130, and the female 3i5;— Pterocles esiisliis, Tem Coll. 3o4 and 360:— Of those whose tail is simply pointed, Tetr. arenanus, Pall., ^ov. Com. P.trop XIX, pi. viii, or Pterocles arenanus, Col. 52 and 53, the same as the Prrdix arraSmca, hAh.;— Pterocles LiclUeusleinii, T. Col. 355 and 3U1. The male 355 is at all events closely allied to the Tetr. iudkus, Lath.; Sonner. II, Q6;-Pterocles co- rvHutus, Tem. Col. 339 and ZW;— Pterocles quadricinclus, Tem. or Oenas buimtus, Vieill. Galer. 220;— finally, the largest species, the Tetr. fasianellus, Gm., or Long- tailed Gelinotte of Hudson's Bay, Edw. 117. , u- j i. i| Fruncollno, the name of the Wind made for the purpose of kilhng the bird whose appellation it bears, is applied in Italy to several specie-s, such as the Gelinotte and "'**"Tdd the Tetrao poniicerianus, Sonner. Voy. II, 11, 165; Tem. Col. 213 ;-/)«- lalus, Briss., pi. xxviii, A, fig. 1 ; Vieill. Galer. 213; the same as the niadagaicanensis, Sonn, II, 1G6, pi. xcvii. S18 BIRDS. Some of these birds, foreign to Europe, are remarkable for a double spur*, or for the naked skin of their throat f. In others these characters are united J, and in certain large billed species the spurs are altogether wanting §. The Common Partridges Have a somewhat weaker bill ; the spurs of the males are either short, or mere simple tubercles; they are deficient in the female. Tetrao cine reus, L. ; Enl. 27; Frisch. 114; Naum. 1st ed. pi. 3, f. 3. (The Grey Partridge). Bill and feet, ash-coloured; head, fawn-coloured; the plumage of various shades of grey; a maronne spot on the breast of the male. This common bird, which consti- tutes so important an item in the luxuries of the tables of Euro- peans, lives and builds in their fields. Tetr. rufus, L. ; Enl. 150. (The Red Partridge). Bill and feet red; brown above; flanks speckled with red and cinereous; throat white, surrounded with black; prefers the hills and rising grounds. The flesh is white and dry. The south of France produces Perdix (jrceca, Briss. ; Per. saxatilis, Meyer ; La Bartavelle, Enl. 231; Frisch, 116. Which only differs from the Red Partridge in its superior size and more ash-coloured plumage. It is found along the great mountain ranges) |. COTURNIX. Quails are smaller than Partridges, with a slenderer bill and shorter tail: no red eye-brow nor spurs. Every one knows Tetrao coturnix, L. ; Enl. 170; Frisch, 117; Naum. 4, f. 4. (The Common Quail). Back brown, waved with black ; a pointed white stripe on each feather; throat brown; eye-brows whitish. Found in the fields of Europe, and celebrated for its migrations; during which this heavy bird finds means to cross the Mediterra- nean^. * Tefrao Ucalcaratus, L.; Enl. 137; — Perdix Clappertoni, Rupp., pl.ix, can hardly be said to diifer from it; — spadiceus, Sonn. II, 169; — zeUonensis, Ind. Zool. pi. xiv. — The Perdix cruenta, Tern. Col. 322, has three and even four spurs, and bright co- lours foreign to the rest of the genus. t Tetrao rubicollis, Enl. ISO. X Tetrao nudicolUs. § Tetran jauaiiiciis, Brown, 111., xvii, (a bad figure) ; there is a better one, Col. 148, under the name of Perdrix ajanham, Temm. II Add the Red Partridge of Barbary, a very distinct species (Tetr. petrosus, Gm.), Edw. 70;— the Perdrix de monfaigne (Tetrao montaiius), Enl. 136, Frisch. 114, B, is only, according to Bonnelli, a variety of the Grey Partridge; — the Perdrix de haye, Tem. Col. 328 and 329; — Perd. personala, Horsf Jav.; — Perd, a gorge rousse {Perd, gularis, T.);—Perd. oculea, ld.;—Perd.fusca, Vieill. GaL 212. ^ Add the petite Caille de la Chine {Tetr. chinensis, L.), Enl. 126, F, 2, of which the Tetr. mamllensis, Gm., Sonner. Voy. I, pi. xxiv, is the female; — the Caille australe {Perd. attstralis, T.), Vieill. Galer. 215;— the Caille nattee {Perd. texfilis Tem.), Col. 35;— the Tetr. coromandeliciis, Sonner. II, 172;— 7. striatus, Sonner. II, pi. xcxviii, and Temm. Col. 82, very different from that of Lath. Syn. II, pl.lxvi;— the Perdrix de givgi {Tetr. gingicus), Sonner. II, p. 167, also appears to belong to this subgenus. GALLINACE^. 319 The Colins, Partridges, and Quails of America, Have a stouter, shorter, and more convex bill; the tail is somewhat larger*. They perch on bushes, and even on trees, when they are pur- sued. Several of them migrate like the Quails of Europe. It is impossible to avoid separating from the whole genus Tetrao the Tridactyles, Lacep. — Hemipodius, Tern., In which the thumb is wanting, and whose compressed bill forms a little projection under the lower mandible. They cannot, however, be properly classed until their anatomy is better known. They are polygamous, and inhabit sandy districts. Some of them, the Turnix, Donnat. — Ortygis, IlUg. Have still all the appearance of Quails ; their toes are completely sepa- rated down to the very base, and are without the small membranes. The natives of Java preserve one species for fighting, as Cocks in England; it is the Hemip. pugnax, T. Col. 602-{-. Others, such as the Syrriiaptes, niig. Are so far removed from the general type of the Gallinace^, that we are tempted to doubt the propriety of placing them in this order. Their short tarsi are covered with feathers as well as the toes, which are also very short and united partially in their length ; their wings are extremely long and pointed. One species only is known, and that is from the deserts of central Asia — Tetrao paradoxus, Pall. Voy., Fr. Trans. 8vo, tom. III. pi. 1, page 18; Vieill. Galer. pi. 222; the Heteroclite, Tem, Col. pi. 95. It is equally necessary to separate from Tetrao, the * Among the species, the size of the Partridge, we may remark the Tocro, or Perdrix de la Guiane, Buff. {Tetr. giiyanensis, Gm.), or Perd. dentata, Tem., or Odo7i- tophorus rttfus, Vieill. Galer. pi. ccxi, which is not a Tinamou, as Gmelin asserts. Among those the size of the Quail: Tetrao mexicanus, Enl. 149, Frisch. II, the same as inanjlantHciis, Albin. I, xxviii, and as virginia7ius, or Perdix borealis, Vieill. Galer, 2\i\—Tetr. Falklandicus, 'En\.221;—Tctr. crislatus, Enl. llfi, f. 1 ;— the Colin Son- nini {Perd. Sonnini, T.), Col. 75, and Jour, de Phjs. II, 217, and pi. 2;— the Colin a aigrette de Califurnie, Tetr. californius, Sh., Nat. Misc. IX, pi. 345, and Atl. Voy. de la Perouse, pi. xxxvi; — the Perd. rousse-gorge {Perd. cavibeyensis, Tem.), Col. 447; — Perd. ausiraits, Vieill. Gal. 215. t Add Tetrao nigricollis, Enl. 171; — Tetr. andalusicus, Lath. Syn. II, part 2, fig. of the title page; — Tetr. luzotiietisis, Sonn. Voy. I, pi. xxiii;— Hemipodius nigrifrons, Tem. Ill, 610, and Vieill. Gal. 2\8\— Hemip. thoracicus, Tem. Ill, 622, or Turni.-c macu- latus, Vieill. Gal. pi. 211 ;— Hemip. Meiffrenii, T. Col. 60, 1, of which Vieill. Gal. 300, makes his genus Torticelle, and places it among the Waders, inasmuch as the lower part of the tibia is without feathers; — the Hemip. nivosus, Swains. Zool. Ill, 163, must also belong to it;— the Tetr. suscilator, or Reveil-matin of Java is also a Turnix. See Bontius, Med. Ind. p. 65. 320 TiNAMus, Lath — Ckypturus, lUig — Ynambus*, Azz. The Tinamoos constitute a genus of American birds very remarkable for a slender and long neck (although their tarsi are short), covered with feathers, the tips of whose barbs are slender and slightly curled, which gives a very peculiar air to that part of their plumage. The bill is long, slender, and blunt at the end; somewhat arched, with a little groove on each side ; the nostrils are pierced in the middle of each side, and pene- trate obliquely backwards. Their wings are short, and they have scarcely any tail. The membrane between the base of the toes is very short. Their thumb, reduced to a spur, cannot reach the ground. The circum- ference of the eye is partly naked. They either perch on low branches of trees, or hide among tall grass; they feed on fruit and insects, and their flesh is good. Their size varies from that of the Pheasant down to that of the Quail, some of them are even still smaller. One portion of them, — the Pezus of Spix, — is furnished with a small tail concealed under the feathers of the rump-j". In the other, — the Tinamoos of Spix, there is no vestige of a tail;};. Their nostrils are placed a little farther back. We should distinguish the Rynchotus, Spix, whose bill, which is stronger, has no groove, and is slightly arcuated and depressed; the nos- trils are pierced near the base 1|. CoLUMBA, Lin. The Pigeons may be considered as forming a slight transition from the Gallinaceas to the Passerinae. Like the former, their bill is vaulted, the nostrils perforated in a broad membranous space, and covered with a carti- laginous scale, which even forms a bulge at the base of the bill; the bony sternum is deeply and doubly emarginated, although in a direction some- what differently ; the crop extremely dilated, and the lower larynx furnished with but a single proper muscle ; but there is no other membrane be- tween the base of their toes than that which results from the continuity of the edges. Their tail is composed of twelve quills. They fly well, live in a state of monogamy, build on trees, or in the crevices of rocks, and lay but few eggs at a time, generally two ; it is true they lay fre- * Except his Choro, which is a Gallinula, and his Uru, which is the Tocro already tpoken of among the Partridges. f Tetr. major, Gm., or Tin. IradUensis, Lath., or the Tm. magoua. Tern.; Buff. Enl. 476, and much hetter, Hist, des Oi.s. IV, 4to, pi. xxiv; it is the Pezus serratus, Spix; — Tetr. einereus ; — Tctr. variegatns, Enl. 328, from which the Tin. undulatus, T., or Crijpturn sijlvicola, Vieill. Gal. 216, can differ but little; — Tin. apequia (T. obso- htiis. Tern.), Col. 196;— 77n. tafaupa, Swains. 111. 19, or T. plumbeus, T. Col. 196, or PiZKS niaviba, Spix, 78, a;—Tinanitts noctivogus, Pr. Max , or Pczus zabelt, .Sp. 77; — Ti7i. macaco, ox vermicide {T. a(/spersus,T.), Col. 369, or Pezus vapura, Sp. 78; — Telr. sori, Gm., or Tin. sovi. Lath. Buff., Enl. 829. j Tin. inambui, Azz. {f. mactilosus, L), or T. major, Sp. 80; — T. medius, Spix, 81; — 7'. boraqtdra, Sp. 79; — T. carope (T. pavoninus, T.), of which the Tinam. minor, Sp. SI, ap'i'cars to be the female. These three species are verj- similar. II The Tinamou isabelln {T, rvftscens, T.), Col. 412; or Rhinchotus fascialus, Spix, 76. GALL1NACE.E. 321 quently. The male hatches as well as the female. They nourish their young by disgorging macerated grain into their crop. They form but one genus, which naturalists have attempted to divide into three subgenera, from the greater or less strength of the bill, and the proportions of the feet. The Columbi-Gallines, Vaill. Approximate more nearly than the other subgenera to the ordinary Gallinacese, by their more elevated tarsi and their labit of living in flocks, seeking their food on the ground, and never perching. Their bill is thin and flexible. One species is even allied to the Gallinaceae by the caruncles and naked portions of skin that distinguish its head ; it is the Columba carunculata, Tem. pi. 11; Cohwibi-galline, Vaill. 278. A second is, at all events, connected with them by its size, which about equals that of the Turkey ; it is the Crowned Pic/eon of the Archipelago of India; Goura, Tem.; Colombihocco, Vaill.; Col. coronaia, Gm.; Sonn. 104; Enl. 118; Tem., Pigeons, pi. 1; Vieill. Galer. 197. Altogether of a slate-blue, with some chesnut and white on the wing ; the head ornamented with a vertical tuft of long slender feathers. It is bred in the poultry yards at Java, &c., but does not propagate in Europe*. A third claims an alliance with them, from the long pendent fea- thers which ornament its neck, like that of the Cock. It is the Pigeon de Nincombar ; Col. nincobarica,'h.; Enl. 491; and is of the most brilliant golden-green, with a white tail. Found in several parts of Indiaf. The Columba, Or Common Pigeons, have shorter feet than the preceding birds, but the same thin and flexible bill. Four wild species are found in Europe. Col. palumbus, h.; Le Ramier, Enl. 31G. (The Cushat). Is the largest, and inhabits the forests, preferring those with green trees. It is ash-coloured, more or less blue ; breast of a vinous red, and is distinguished by white spots on the sides of the neck and on the wing. Col. cenas, L.; Le Colombin; Frisch, 139. (The Stock Dove, or Lesser Cushat). A slate-grey, the breast vinous ; sides of the • This large Crowned Pigeon constitutes the genus gotira, or Lophyrus of Vieill. Galer. pi. 197. f Species placed in this genus which are not, perhaps, sufficiently determined: Columba cijanocephala, Enl. 174; Vaill. 281; Tem. Z;—Col. montana, Edw. 119; Tem. 4;— Co/, martinica, Enl. 141, 162; Vaill. 282; Tem. 5 and 6;—Col. enjthrothorax, Tem. 7;— Col. cruenta, Sonn. 20, 21; Tem. 8 and 9;— Col. jamdicensis, Tem. 10; — Col. ialpacoti, Tem. 12;— Col. passerina, Enl. 243, 2, Catesby, 26;— CoZ. minuta, Enl. 243, \:—Col. hottentotta, Tem.; Vaill. 283;— Co/, cobocola, and Col. griseola, Spix, LXXV, 2(a). |^° (a) The C. passerina and squamosa form the genus Cham^pelia of Swain- son; the C. cinerea, T., the genus Peristera, and the C. migratoria, the genus EOTOPISTES. ' VOL. I. P D neck a changeable green ; somewhat smaller than the preceding, but has similar habits. Col. livia, Briss. ; Biset, or Pigeon de roche; Enl. 510. (The Biset, or Rock Dove). Slate-grey; circumference of the neck a changeable green ; a double black band on the wing ; rump white. This species is the parent stock of our Common Pigeon, and most probably of all our innumerable domestic races, in whose production the mixture of some neighbouring species may also have had some influence. Col.turtur,!..; Tourterelle; En\. 394. (The Turtle Dove). A fawn-coloured mantle spotted with brown ; neck bluish, with a spot on each side speckled with white and black. The smallest of the wild European species. It inhabits the woods like the Cushat. Col. risoria, L. ; Rieuse; Enl. 244; Frisch, 44; Tem. 44. (The Ring Dove). Appears to be originally from Africa. It is of a flaxen colour, paler beneath ; a black collar round the neck*. The species of this division are numerous, and may be still more sub- divided, according as their tarsi are covered with feathers or not, and from the naked space found round the eyes of some of them-f-. Some have even caruncles, and other naked parts on the head. Such is the Gol, auricou; Col. auricularis, Tem. 21. • Other Columbs with a square or round tail, Col. spadicea, Tem. 1; — Col. esnea, Enl. 164; Tem. 3 and 4; Voy. de Freycin. 29, of which, according to Temminck, Col.pacificais the male: — the Col. oceanique. Less, and Garn., Voy. de Duperre 41, is a neighbouring species; — Col. arcuatrix, Vaill. Afr.; Tem. 5; — C. armillaris, Tem. 6; C. litloralis, Sonn. 103; Tem. 17;— C. chalcopfera, Tem. 8;— C. cristata, Tem. 9; C. caribaa, Tem. 10; — C. leucocephala, Cutesh. 65; Tem. 13; — C. speciosa, ^ni. 213; Tem. 14;— C. corensis, Tem. 15;— C. gninea, Edw. 75; Vaill. Afr. 265; Tem. 16; — C. madagascarievsis, Enl. II; Vaill. Afr. 266 ; Tem. 17; — C. gymnophthalmos, Tem. 18; — C. Francice, Conner. 101; Tem. 19; — C. rubri-capilla, Sonner. 57; Tem. 20;— C. elegans, Tem. 22;— C. cincta, Tem. 23;— C. rufina, Tem. 24;— C. leucoptera, Edw. 76; Tem. 25 ■,—C. javanica, Enl. 177; Tem. 26; Sonner. 66;—C.jamboo, Tem. 27 and 28; — C. violacea, Tem. 29;— C. melanocephala, Enl. 21i; Tem. 30;— C. lar- vata, Vaill. Afr. 269; Tem. 31;— C. holosericea, Tem. 32;—C.sinica, Albin. Ill, 46; C. viridis, Enl. 142; — C. erythroptera, Temm. 55; — C. mystacea, T. 56; — C. superba, T. 33:— C. Uivipanistria, Vaill. 272; Tem. 36;— C. cwrulea, T. 37;— C. afra, Enl. 160; Vaill. 271; Tem. 38 and 39;— C. Geoffrey, T. 57;— C. cinerea, T. 58, and the female, Col. 260;— C. bitorquata, T. 40;— C. vinacea, T. 41 ;— C. tigrina, Sonner. 102; C. cambaycnsis, Vaill. 270; T. 45; — C. malabarica, or the Col. brame, T. ; — C. alba, Tem. 46; — C. squamosa, T. 59; — C.malancensis, Mus. Carls. 67; Edw. 16; Tem. 47; —C. macroura, Enl. 329;— C. porpliyrea, Tem. Col. 106;— C. dilopha, T, Coh 162;— C.magyiifica, T. Col. 163;— C. locutrix, Pr. Max. Col. 166;— C. leucomela, T. Col. 186;— C. scripta, T. Col. 187;— C. Dussumieri, T. Col. 188;— C. leucotis, T. Col. 189; —C. xanthura, Cuv.; Col. 190;— C. piciurata, T. Col, 242;— C. perspiciUata, Col. 246; — C. liictnosa, Reinw.; Col. 247; — C. hyogasfra, R.; Col. 252; — C. monacha, R.; Col. 253;— C. humilis, T. Col. 258; — C. pinon, Quoy and Gaym., Voy. Freychin. 28; C. pampusan, lb. 30; — C. araucana. Less, and Garn., Voy. de Duperr. 40; — C. cya- novirevs, lb. 42;— C. Zoa, lb. 29 (a). _ _ . t M. Swains, calls Ptilinopus those species which have feathered tarsi, such as the C. purpurala, T. Col. 34, &c. ^g° (a) Add, CoL fasciata, Bonap. I, pi, Ixxvii, f. 3; — Col. zenaida, Bouap, II, pi. XV, f. 2.— Eng. Ed. GRALLATORI^. 323 We can also separate some species with pointed tails*. But the best of all the divisions that have been made among the Pigeons, is that of, ViNAGO, CuV. CoLOMBARsf, Vaill. Known by the bill, which is thicker, formed of a solid substance, and compressed on the sides ; the tarsi are short, the feet wide and well bor- dered. They all feed on fruit, and inhabit forests. But few species are known, all of which are from the torrid zone of the eastern continent J. Some of them have a pointed tail§. ORDER V. GRALLATORI^.— Grall.^, Lin. The birds of this order derive their name from their habits, and from the conformation which produces these habits. We may know them by the nudity of the lower part of their legs, and, more frequently, by the height of their tarsi — two circumstances which enable them to enter the water to a certain depth without wetting their feathers, and to wade through it and seize fish by means of their neck and bill, the length of which is usually proportioned to that of the legs. Those which are fur- nished with a strong bill feed on fish and reptiles : those with a weak one on worms and insects. A very few feed partially on grain and herbs, and they alone live at a distance from the water. The external toe is most commonly united at its base with that of the middle one, by means of a short membrane ; sometimes there are two similar membranes, and, at other times, these are entirely wanting, and the toes are completely sepa- rated; it sometimes also happens, though rarely, that they are bordered all along, or palmated to the very end; in fine, the thumb is deficient in se- veral genera — circumstances, all of which have an influence on their mode • Col. migratoria, Enl. 176; Frisch, 142; Tern. 48 and 49;— Co?, carolinensis, lb. 175; Tem. 50; Catesb. 24; Edw. 15;— Co/. Reivwartii, Tern. Col. 248;— C. hume- ralis, lb. 191; — C. amboinensis, lb. 100;— 5. lophotes, lb. 142;— C. venvsta, lb. 341, 1, or Col. strepitans, Spix, Ixxv, 1; — Col. dominicensis, lb. 487; Tem. 51;— Co/, ca- pensis, lb. 140, &c. ; Vaill. 273, 274; Tem. 53, 54j— C. Maugei, Tem. 52 ;— Col. macquaria, Quoy and Gaym. Voy. de Freyc. 31. t Vinago, the Latin name of the C. anas — Vieill. has changed it into Treron. X Col. abyssinica, or Wallia of Bruce, Vaill. 276, 277 ; Tem. 8 and 9 \—Col. aus- tralis, Enl. 3; Tem. 3 •,—Col. aromatica, Enl. 163; Tem. 57; Brown, Zool. 111. 20; Col. vernans, Enl. 158 ; Tem. 10 and II ; Col. militaris, Tem. 1 and 2 ; — C. psitta- cea, Tem. 4 ;— C. calva, Tem. 7 ;— C. olax, T. Col. 241 ;— C. Capellei, lb. 143. § Co/. oj-y«ra, T., Col. 140. D d2 321 BIRDS. of life, and this is more or less aquatic. Almost all these birds, the Os- triches and Cassowaries excepted, have long wings, and fly well; during this action they extend their legs backwards, differing in this from all others, which fold them under the belly. In this order we establish five principal families, and some insulated genera. FAMILY I. BREVIPENNES. These birds, although similar in general to the other Grallatoria, differ from them greatly in one point — the shortness of the wings, which ren- ders flight impossible. The bill and regimen give them, in other respects, numerous affinities with the Gallinaceas. It seems that the muscular powers which nature distributes would be altogether inadequate to the task of putting in motion wings so vast as a bird of this bulk would require to sustain it in the air. The sternum is a simple buckler, and is deficient in that ridge which is found in all other birds. The pectoral muscles are very thin, but the posterior extremities regain the powers which the wings have lost — the muscles of the thighs, and of the legs in particular, being enormously thick and stout. The thumb is always deficient*. They form two genera. ^ Struthio, Lin. The Ostriches have wings furnished with loose and flexible feathers, but still sufficiently long to increase their speed in running. Every one knows the elegance of these slender-stemmed plumes, the barbs of which, although furnished with little hooks, always remain separate, contrary to what takes place in most other birds. Their bill is horizontally depress- ed, of a moderate length, and blunt at the end ; their tongue short, and rounded like a crescent, their eye large, and the lid fringed with lashes; their legs and tarsi very long. They have an enormous crop, a large stomach between the crop and gizzard, voluminous intestines, long caeca, and a vast reservoir in which the urine accumulates as in a bladder, — be- ing the only birds which can be said to urinate. The penis is very large, and frequently exposed f. • The number of the phalanges is as follows, commencing with the internal toe : Ostrich, 4, 5 : Nandou and Cassowary, 3, 4, 5. Which amounts to the numbers common among birds, t For the genito-urinary organs of birds, and those of the Ostrich in particular, consult the Mem. of Geoffroy Saint-Hilaire, Mem. du Mus., torn. XV. GRALLATOKIi^. «i>^5 But two species are known, which might constitute two genera. Struthio camelus, L.; Enl. 457*. (The Ostrich of the Eastern Continent). The feet have but two toes, the external of which is one half shorter than its fellow, and has no nail. This bird, so highly celebrated from the earliest ages, abounds in the sandy de- serts of Arabia and Africa. It attains the height of six or eight feet, lives in great troops, lays eggs, each weighing nearly three pounds, which, in very hot climates, it is contented with exposing in the sand to the warmth of the sun; but over which, either on one side or the other of the tropics, it broods with great care, defending them cou- rageously every where. The Ostrich feeds on grass, grain, &c., and so obtuse is its sense of taste that it swallows pebbles, pieces of iron, copper, &c. Wlien pursued it dashes stones behind it with great violence. No animal can overtake it in the race. Struth. rhea-f, L.; Nandou, Churi, &c., Hammer. An. Mus. XII, xxxix; Vieill. Galer, 224. (The American Ostrich). Is about one half smaller, with more thinly furnished feathers, of a uniform grey colour, and particularly distinguished by its three toes all having nails. Its plumage is greyish, browner on the back: a black line along the back of the neck in the male. It is as common in the southern parts of South America, as the preceding one is in Africa. Its quills are used only in brooms. "VAIien taken young it is easily tamed. Several females, it is said, lay, in the same nest, or rather, the same hole, yellowish eggs, which are hatched by the male. It is only eaten when very young. Casuarius, Briss. The Cassowaries have wings still shorter than those of the Ostrich, and which are totally useless for running. There are three toes to all the feet, each furnished with a nail ; the barbs, of their feathers are so poorly provided with barbulae, that at a distance they resemble pendent hairs. Two species are known, each of which might also constitute a genus. Struthio casuarius, Jj.; EmeuX, Enl. 313, and better, Frisch, 105 §. (The Emeu or Cassowary). The bill laterally compressed; head surmounted by a bony prominence, covered with a horny sub- stance ; skin of the head and top of the neck naked, of an azure-blue and a fiery red colour, with pendent caruncles like those of the Tur- key. The wing has some stems without barbs, which serve the bird as weapons in combat; nail of the internal toe much the strongest. It is the largest of all birds, next to the Ostrich, and differs conside- • See also the beautiful figure drawn by Marecbal in tlie Menag. du Mus. of La- cep. and Cuvier, copied Vieill. Galer. pi. 223. f Brisson and Buffon, following Barr^re, have improperly applied to it the name of Tonyou, or rather of Touiouiou, whicli belongs to the Jabiru. It is the genus Rhea of Brisson. The Portuguese of Brazil have transferred to it the name of Emeu, which properly belongs to the Cassowary. I Cassuwaris, the Malay name of this bird. According to Clusius, Erne, or Emeu, is its peculiar appellation in Banda. § There is also an excellent figure of it by Marechal in the Menag. du Mus., co- pied Viell. Galer. pi. 225. rably from it in its anatomy, for its intestines are short, and the casca small; the intermediate stomach between the crop and gizzard is wanting, and its cloaca is not larger in proportion than that of other birds. It feeds on fruit and eggs, but not grain. The female lays a small number of green eggs, which, like the Ostrich, she abandons to the solar heat. Found in different islands of the Archi- pelago of India. Cas. Novce-Hollandice, Lath.; Voy. de Peron, Atl. part 1, pi. xxxvi; Vieill. Galer. pi. 226*. (The Cassowary of New Holland). A depressed bill; no helmet on the head; a little naked skin about the ear; plumage brown and better supplied; more barbs to the feathers ; no caruncles or spurs on the wing ; nails of the toes about equal. Its flesh resembles beef. Its speed is greater than that of the swiftest greyhound. The young ones are striped with brown and black f. FAMILY II. PRESSIROSTRES. This family comprises genera with long legs, without a thumb, or in which the thumb is too short to reach the ground. The bill is moderate, but strong enough to penetrate the earth in search of worms ; hence we find those species in which it is weakest frequenting meadow^s and newly- ploughed grounds to obtain that sort of food with more facility. Such as have stronger bills also feed on herbs, grain, &c. r •• This constitutes the genus Emou, or Dromaius of Vieillot If N.B. I cannot place here species so little known, and even so badly authenti- cated, as those which form the genus Didus of Linnaeus. The first, or the Didus ineptus, is only known from a description drawn up by the first Dutch navigators, and given by Clusius, Exot., p. 99, and from an oil painting of the same period, copied by Edwards, pi. 294: for the description of Herbert is puerile, and all others are copied from Clusius and Edwards. It seems that the spe- cies has completely disappeared, nothing remaining of it at the present day but a foot preserved in the British Museum (Shaw, Nat, Misc. pi. 143), and a head in very bad condition in the Ashmolean Museum of Oxford (Id. lb. pi. 166). The bill bears some resemblance to that of the Penguins, and the foot, if it were palmated, would be like that of the Aptenodytes. The second species, Didus soHtarius, rests on the bare testimony of Leguat, Voy. I, p. 98, a man who has disfigured the very best known animals, such as the Hippopo- tamus and the Lamantin. The third, Didus nazaremus, is only known from the account of Franfois Cauche, who considers it to be the same as the D. ineptus, giving it however but three toes, while all the others allow the former to possess four. No one has been able to obtain a sight of any of these birds since the time of the above-named travellers. Of all birds, that which has its wings the most completely reduced to a simple vestige, is the Apteryx, represented by Shaw, Nat. Misc. 1055 and 1057. Its general figure is that of an Aptenodytes, its size that of a Goose. The feet would be those of the former, were they not described as wanting the web. The bill is very long, slender, marked with a longitudinal groove on each side, and having a membrane at base. The wing is reduced to a little stump, terminated by a hook. From New Holland. GRALLAT0R1,E. 327 Otis, Lin. The Bustards, in addition to the massive carriage of the Gallinaceae, have a long neck and legs, with a moderate bill; their superior mandible is slightly arcuated and arched, which, as well as the very small membranes between the base of the toes, again recal the idea of the Gallinaceae. But the nakedness of the lower part of their legs, their whole anatomy, and even the flavour of their flesh, place them among the Grallatoriae, and as they have no thumb, the smaller species approximate closely to the Plo- vers. Their tarsi are reticulated, and their wings short ; they fly but seldom, hardly ever using their wings, except, like the Ostriches, to as- sist themselves in running. They feed indifferently on grain and herbs, worms and insects. O. ^arc^a, L.; Enl. 245. (The Great Bustard). Has the plumage on its back of a bright fawn-colour, crossed with numerous black streaks, the remainder greyish. The feathers of the ears of the male, which is the largest bird in Europe, are lengthened out on both sides, forming a kind of large mustachios. This species, which is considered as being among the best game of that continent, fre- quents its extensive plains, building on the ground among the corn. 0. tetrax, L. ; Enl. 25 and 10. (The Little Bustard). More than a half smaller, and much less common than the tarda; brown above, sprinkled with black; whitish beneath; neck of the male black, with two white collars. The bill of most species foreign to Europe, is more slender than that of the Little Bustards which belong to it. Among the former we may remark, O. houbara, Gm. ; Le Houhara, Desfontaines, Acad, des Sc, 1787, pi. x; Vieill. Galer. pi. ccxxvii. (The Houbara). So called on account of the ruif of elongated feathers which ornaments both sides of its neck. From Africa and Arabia*. CHARADRIUsf, Lin. The Plovers, also, have no thumb ; the bill is moderate, compressed, and enlarged at the point. They may be divided into two subgenera: viz. CEdicnemusJ, Tern. In which the end of the bill is inflated above as well as beneath, and the fossae of the nostrils only extend half its length. They are larger species which prefer dry and stony places, and feed on snails, insects, ike. They have some affinity with the smaller species of Bustards. Their • I leave among the Bustards all Latham's species, such as the /Ifra, Lath. Syn. II, pi. Ixxix; — the beiighalensis, Edw. 250; — the Arabs, Id. 12; — but I Avithdraw the (Edicnemus, which, on account of its compressed bill, enlarged at the end, begins the following genus : — Add, Otis nuba, Rupp. pi. 1; — Ot. denhami ; — Ot. torquatu, Cuv., a new species from the Cape. t Charadrius, the Greek name of a nocturnal aquatic bird, comes from Charadra. Gaza translates it by Hiaticula. X (Edicnemus (swelled leg), a name invented by Belon for the Thick-knee. 328 BIRDS. feet are reticulated, and there is a short membrane between each of their three toes. Charadrius cedicnemus, L.; (Edic. crepitans, Tern.; Courlis de terre; Enl. 919; Frisch, 215; Naum. Ed. I, 9, f. 13. (The Thick- knee). Size of a Woodcock ; a fawn-coloured grey, with a brown streak on the middle of each feather ; white belly ; a brown streak under the eye*. Charadrius, Cnv. The bill of the True Plovers is only inflated above, and has two-thirds of its length on both sides occupied by the nasal fossce, a peculiarity which renders it weaker. They live in large flocks, and frequent marshy bottoms, where they strike the earth with their feet, in order to set in motion the worms on which they feed. The species of France are only birds of passage, during the autumn, and in the spring: near the sea coast, some of them remain until the beginning of winter. Their flesh is excellent, and, with various other species, they form a tribe with reticulated legs, the most remarkable of which are : Char, pluvialin, L., Enl. 904; Frisch, 216; Naum. 1, c. 10, f. 14; Wils. Am. VII, lix, 5. (The Golden Plover). Blackish; the edges of its feathers dotted with yellow ; white belly. It is the most common of all, and is found throughout the whole globe. The north produces one which scarcely differs from it, except in its black throat; it is the Char, apricarius, Edw. 140; Naum. 11, f. 15; Wils. Am. VII, Ivii, 4. Some authors assert it is the young of the other. Char. morineUus, L. ; Le Guignard, Enl. 832; Naum. 12, f. 16,67. (The Dotterel). Grey or blackish; feathers edged with fulvous-grey ; a white streak over the eye ; breast and upper part of the belly of a bright red ; lower part of the belly white. Char, hiaticula, J-i.; Pluvier a collier, Enl. 920; Frisch, 214; Brit. Zool. pi. P ; Wils. Am. V, xxxvii, 2. (The Ring Plover). Grey above; white beneath; a black collar round the lower part of the neck, very broad in front ; the head variegated with black and white ; bill yellow and black. Three or four species or races are found in France, diff'ering in size, and in the distribution of the colours on the headf . This same distribution, with but little va- riation, is found in several species foreign to EuropeJ. * Add the CEdicnime tachard (CEd. mactdosus, Cuv.), Col. 292; — the CEd. a longs pieds {CEd. loiigipes, Geoff), Vieill. Gal. 228, or CEd. echasse, Tern. Col. SSfi;— the (Ed. a gros bee {CEd. magnirostris, Geoff), Col, 387, might, from the form of its bill, be placed at the head of a particular series to which would belong a closely allied species with a slightly reciurved upper mandible; CEd. recurvirostris, Cuv.; — Char, crasdroslris, Spix, 94. t Ch. minor, Meyer, Enl. 921 ; Wils. VII, lix, 3; Naum. 15, f. 19, or Ch. curonicus. Lath., with an entirely black bill; — Ch. cantianus, Lath., or albifrons, Meyer, of which the Ch. agyptius may possibly be the female. Its collar is interrupted. X Char, vociferus, Enl. 286; Wils. VII, lix, 6;— Char, indicus, Lath. ;—C/iar. Axa- rai, T. Col. 184;— CAar. melanops, Vieill. Gal. 235, or Ch. nigrifrons, Cuv., Am. Col. GRALLATORIiE. 32S Many Plovers have scutellated legs ; they form a small division, most of its species having spines to their wings, or fleshy wattles on the head ; some of them have both these characters*. Vanellus, Bechst. — Tringa f, Lin. The Lapwings have the same kind of bill as the Plover, and are only distinguished from them by the presence of a thumb ; but it is so small that it cannot reach the ground. In the first tribe, that of the Lapwing-Plovers (Squatarola, Cuv.), it is even scarcely visible. It is distinguished by the bill, which is inflated underneath, and its nasal fossae being short like that of an (Edicnemus. The feet are reticulated: all those of France have the tail striped with white and black, forming, as is asserted, but one species, whose great di- versity of plumage has occasioned its multiplication. It is always found with the Plovers. Tringa squatarola; Le Vanneau gris, Enl. 854. (The Grey Lapwing). Greyish above, whitish with greyish spots beneath, is the young bird before it has moulted. The Variegated Lajnving (^Tringa varia), Enl. 923, white, spotted with greyish, blackish, mantle dotted with white, comprises the two sexes in their winter plumage. The Fanneau Suisse {Tringa helvetica, Enl. 853, Naum. Ed. I, 62, f. 117), black and white spots above, black beneath from the throat to the thighs, and is the male in his wedding livery. Vanellus, Cuv. The true Lapwings have a rather more decidedly marked thumb, the tarsi scutellated, at least partially so, and the nasal fossae extending two- thirds the length of the bill. They are equally as industrious in the pur- suit of worms as the Plovers, procuring them in the same manner. The European species, Tringa vanellus, L. ; Enl. 240 ; Frisch, 213; Naum. 14, f. 18, is a pretty bird, as large as a Pigeon, of a bronze-black, with a long and slender crest. It arrives in France in 47, 1; — Char. Wilsonii, Wils. IX, Ixiii, 5. — Add, of closely allied species, although without collars, Ch, pecuarius, T. Col. 183; — Ch. nivifrons, Cuv.; — Char, ruficapil- lus, T. Col. 47, 2;— C/i. monachus, Tem.;—Ch. griseus, Lath. («)• • Species with unarmed, scutellated feet: Ch. coronaius, Enl. 800; — Ch. melano- cephalus, Enl. 919; Savigny, Egypt., Ois., pi. vi, f. 4; of which Vieillot makes his genus Pluvianus, Gal. pi. xxiii — its bill is somewhat stouter than the others. Armed species: Char, sphiosus, Enl. 801; — Ch. cat/anus, Enl. 833. Species with wattles: Char, pileaiiis, Enl. 834;— C/i. bilobus,En\. 880. The Char, cristatiis, Edw. 47, appears to be the same as the spinosus. f Tringa, or rather Tri/nga, the Greek name of a bird the size of a Thrush, ■which frequents the shores of rivers, and is constantly moving its tail, Arisf. It was Linnaeus who applied it thus; but he placed many other birds in his genus Tringa, besides the Lapwings, the Sandpipers, {Calibris, Cuv.) especiallj'. B^ (a) Add, Ch. semipalmatus, Wils. VIII, pi. lix, f. 3;—Ch. melodus, Wih. V, pi. xxvii, f. 3. — Eng. Ed. the spring, lives in tlie fields and meadows, builds there, and departs in autumn. The eggs are considered a great delicacy*. Warm climates, also, have some species of this bird, whose wings are armed with one or two spurs, and others which have caruncles or wattles at the base of the biU : their tarsi are scutellated. They are very noisy animals, screaming out at every sound they hear. They live in the fields, and defend themselves against birds of prey with much courage f. Hematopus, Lin. The Oyster-catchers have a somewhat longer bill than the Plovers or the Lapwings ; it is straight, pointed, compressed into a wedge, and suffi- ciently strong to enable them to force open the bivalve shells of the ani- mals on which they feed. They also seek for worms in the earth. The nasal fossce, which are very deep, are only half the length of the bill, the nostrils resembling a small slit in the middle. Their legs are of a mode- rate length, their tarsi reticulated, and their feet divided into three toes. Hcematop. ostralegus, L.; Enl. 929; Brit. Zool,, pi. D; Catesb. 1, 85, is the European species, also called Pie de mer on account of its black plumage; the belly, throat, base of the wings and tail being of a fine w^hite. The white on the throat disappears in summer. It is about the size of a duck ; bill and feet red. There is a species in Brazil with a longer bill, and no white un- der the throat, the Hcem. palliatus, Tem., which Wils. VIII, Ixiv, 2, confounds with the common one ; another in the Malouines, where the black extends farther down on the breast, the Hcem. luctuosus, Cuv. ; and a third in the antarctic hemisphere, which is entirely black, the Hcem. niger, Cuv.; Hcsm. ater, Vieill. Gal. 230; Quoy and Gaymard, Voy. de Freycinet, pi. xxxiv. It is impossible to avoid placing near the Plovers and Oyster-catchers, the CuRSORius, Lac. — Tachydhomus, Illig. Whose bill, more slender, but equally conical, is arcuated, has no groove, and is moderately cleft ; the wings are shorter, and their legs, which are longer, are terminated by three toes without membranes, and without a thumb. There has been seen both in France and England, although very • Add the Vanneau a echarpe {Vann. cinctits), Less, and Gam. Voy. Duperr. pi. xliii; — Le V. a pieds jaunes [Vann. ftavipes), Savigny, Egypte, Ois. pi. 6, f. 3. t They are the first nine species of Parra, Gmel., particularly Parra cayennen- sls, Enl. '836;— P. goe7>sis, Enl. 807; — P. senegalla, Enl. 3C2; — or better, yanellus albicapillus, YieiU.f Gal. 236; — P. ludoviciana, Enl. 835, from which Fann. gallina- ceus, Tem., does not perhaps specifically differ, &c. ; their habits, legs, bill, form, and even the distribution of their colours, resemble those of the Lapwings and Plovers, and there can be no possible reason for placing them among the Jacanas, whose characters diflfer on almost everj- point. Add, Tr. macroptera, a new species from Java; grey head and belly black; armed, and with caruncles ; the wings extending considerably beyond the tail. GRALLATORLE. 331 rarely, a species belonging to the north of Africa, of a light fawn colour, with a whitish belly, the Charadrius gallicus, Gm. ; Curso- rius isabelUnus, Meyer, Enl. 795 ; and another has been brought from India of a brownish-grey, with a red breast, the Ch, coroman- delicus, Curs, asiaticus, Lath. Vieill. Gal. 232; Enl. 892. Each of them has a black streak and a white one behind the eye. Their name is derived from the swiftness with which they run. Nothing is known with respect to their habits*. As far as we can judge from their exterior, it is here that we can most conveniently place the Cariama, Briss. — Microdactylus, Geoff. — DicHOLOPHUsf, Illig. Whose bill is longer and more hooked, the commissure extending under the eye, which gives them somewhat of the physiognomy and disposition of birds of prey, and approximates them somewhat to the Herons, Their extremely long and scutellated legs are terminated by very short toes, slightly palmated at the base, and by a thumb which cannot reach the ground. One species only is known, and that is from South America, the Micro cristatus, Geoff. ; Palamedea cristata, Gm. ; Saria, Azzar. ; Ann. du Mus. d'Hist. Nat. XIII, pi. xxvi; Col. 237, and Vieill. Gal. 259. It is larger than the Heron, and feeds on lizards and in- sects, which it hunts for on high grounds, and along the edges of forests. Its plumage is a fawn-coloured grey, waved with brown; some slender feathers on the base of the bill form a light tuft which inclines forwards. It flies but seldom, and then badly; its loud voice resembles that of a young Turkey. As its flesh is much es- teemed, it has been domesticated in several places. FAMILY III. CULTRIROSTRES. This family is recognised by the thick, long, and strong bill, which is most generally trenchant and pointed, and is almost wholly composed of the birds comprised in the genus Ardea of Linnaeus. In a great num- ber of species, the trachea of the male forms various curves ; their cceca are short, and even the true Herons have but one. • Add the Coure-vile a ailes violettes {Curs. Chakopterus, T.), Col. 29S;— the C. (i double collier (C. bicinctus, T.), Man. Orn.; — Curs. TemlncJcii, Swains. Zool. 111. 106. t Microdactylus, short-finger. Dicholophus, crest in two rows. Ifa-ma/opus, blood- coloured feet. M. Vieillot has preferred the barbarous name of Cariama, which must be pronounced qariama. 332 BIRDS. We subdivide it into three tribes, the Cranes, the true Herons, and the Swans. The first tribe forms but one great genus. Grus, Lin. The Cranes have a straight bill, but slightly cleft; the membranous fossae of the nostrils, which are large and concave, occupy nearly one half of its length. Their legs are scutellated, and the toes moderate; the ex- ternal ones but slightly palmate, and the thumb hardly reaching to the ground. A more or less considerable portion of the head and neck is destitute of feathers in nearly all of them. Their habits are more terres- trial, and their food more vegetable than those of the following genera: consequently, they have a muscular gizzard, and long cceca. Their lower larynx has but one muscle on each side. At the head of this genus we place with Pallas*, PsopHiA, Lin. Or the Trumpeters, which have a shorter bill than the other species; the head and neck are merely invested with down, and the circumference of the eye is naked. They live in the woods, and feed on grain and fruit. The species best known is from South America, and is called the Trumpeter (Psophia crepitans, L.), Enl. 169, from its faculty of producing a low deep sound, which at first seems to proceed from the anus. It is the size of a capon; the plumage is blackish, which, on the breast, reflects a brilliant violet hue ; the mantle is ash-co- loured, shaded above with fawn colour. It is a very grateful bird, and as susceptible of attachment to man as a dog. It is even said to be so docile as to take the command of the poultry yard. It flies badly, but runs fast, and builds on the ground at the foot of a tree. Its flesh is eaten f. Certain Cranes, foreign to Europe, with a shorter bill than is found in those that belong to it, should come next. Ardea pavonia, L. ; Grue couronne, Enl. 265, and the young, Vieill. 257. (The Crowned Crane). Figure, light and graceful; four feet in height ; ash-coloured, black belly, fawn-coloured rump, and white wings ; its naked cheeks are tinged with white, and a bright rose-colour, and its head is crowned with a bundle of yellow, slender feathers, which it opens and displays at pleasure. This beautiful bird, whose voice resembles the clang of a trumpet, in- habits the western coast of Africa, where it is frequently kept in the huts, and fed on grain. In a wild state it frequents inundated places, and preys on small fish. Ardea virgo; Demoiselle de Numidie, Enl. 246. (The Numi- • Spicil. Zool. IV, 3. _ X At Cayenne, according to BarrSre, it is called Agami; Caracara in the Antilles, according to Dutertre. As the name of Trumpeter is also given in Africa to a Calao, Fermin (Descrip. de Surin.) absurdly transfers to the Agami the character of both bills at once. The Agami was for a long while confounded with the Macucagua of Marcgrave, which is a Tinamou. Psophia is a name coined by Barrfire from the Greek Psopheo, to make a noise. Add, Psophia viridis, Spix, 83, and Ps. leucoptera, Id. 84. GRALLATORIJE. S33 dian Crane). Similar to the preceding in form, and almost in size ; asli-coloured; a black neck with two beautiful whitish aigrettes, formed by the prolongation of the slender feathers which cover the ears. Those which have been observed in a state of captivity were remarkable for their fantastic and affected gestures*. The Common Cranes have a bill as long as the head or longer. Ardea grus, L. ; Grus cinerea, Bechst, Enl. 769; Frisch, 194; Naura. Ed. I, 2, f. 2. (The Common Crane). Four feet and up- wards in height; ash-coloured; black throat; top of the head, red and naked; the rump ornamented with long, recurved and frizzled feathers, partly black. This bird has been celebrated from the ear- liest ages for its regular migrations from north to south in the au- tumn, and vice versa in the spring, which it effects in immense and well-ordered bodies. It feeds on grain, but prefers the worms and insects of marshy grounds. This species is often mentioned by the ancient writers, because the course of its migrations seems to be through Greece and Asia Minor f. Between the Cranes and Herons, we must place Ard. scolopaeea, Gm. ; Le Courlan, or Courliri, Enl. 848 J, whose bill, thinner and more cleft than that of the Cranes, is in- flated near the last third of its length, and whose toes, aU tolerably- long, are without any intervening membrane whatever. It has the habits, and is the size of a Heron; the plumage is brown, with two white pencils on the neck. Ard. helias, L. ; Le Caurale (Eurypyga, Blig.^) ; Oiseau du soleil, &c., Enl. 702. (The Sun-Bird). The commissure of its bill, which is more slender than that of the Cranes, but furnished with similar nasal fossae, extends to beneath the eyes, like that of the Herons, but the bill itself is destitute of the naked skin at its base. It is about the size of a Partridge, and its long slender neck, broad and open tail, and rather short legs, give it a very different appear- ance from that of any other Wader. Its plumage, shaded in bands and lines with brown, fawn-colour, red, grey and black, recalls to our minds the colouring of the most beautiful of the nocturnal Lepi- doptera. It is found on the banks of the rivers in Guiana. The second tribe is more carnivorous, and is known by its stronger bill and larger toes : we may place at its head, * The anatomists of the Institute had applied to this bird, on account of its ges- tures, the names of Scops, Oliis, and Jsio, by which the ancients designated the Dues of Europe (Bubo). Buffon, who had so well refuted this error as regarded die Dues, falls into it himself, from forgetfulness, when speaking of the ^rd. virgo^ f To this genus also belong Ard. canadensis, Edw. 133; the Grue a collier, Enl. 865, and the Crane of India, Edw. 45, {/ird. antigone) Vieill, Gal. 256; — the Grue blanche, Enl. 889, {Ard. americana) and the Ard. gigantea, Pall., It, II, No. 30, t. I, which does not appear to us to differ in the least from the white one; — finally, the Ard, carunculata, which is not a Heron, as supposed by Gmelin. X Vieillot has made his genus Akamus, Gal. p. 252, from this bird; Spix, pi. 91, calls it Ridlus ardeo'idcs. § Vieillot has changed tliis name into that of Helias. 334 Cancroma, Linn. The Boat-bills, which would closely approach the Herons inthe strength of their bill and in the regimen resulting therefrom, but for the extraor- dinary form of that organ, which we shall find, however, by close examin- ation, to be nothing more than the bill of a Heron or Bittern, very much flattened. In fact, it is very wide from right to left, and is formed like two spoons, the concave sides of which are placed in contact. The man- dibles are strong and trenchant, the upper one having a sharp tooth on each side of its point ; the nostrils, situated near its base, are continued on in two parallel grooves to near the point. There are four toes to the feet, long, and almost without membranes, and accordingly we find that these birds perch upon trees on the banks of rivers, whence they preci- pitate themselves upon the fish, which constitute their customary food. Their gait is slow, and, in their attitudes, they resemble the Herons. The species known is, Cancr. cochlearia, L. ; Enl. 38 and 369; Vieill. Gal. pi. 249. (The Boat-bill). Size of a hen ; whitish ; grey or brown back ; red belly; a white forehead, followed by a black calotte, w^hich, in the adult male, is changed into a long tuft : inhabits the hot and marshy parts of South America. Then comes, Ardea, Cuv. Or the Herons, the cleft of whose bill extends to beneath the eyes ; a small nasal fossa continuing on in a groove close to its point. They are also distinguished by the internal edge of the nail of the middle toe, which is trenchant and denticulated. Their legs are scutellated ; the thumb and toes tolerably long, the external web considerable, and the eyes placed in a naked skin which extends to the biU. Their stomach is a very large, but slightly muscular sac, and they have but a very small caecum. They are melancholy birds, which build and perch on the banks of rivers, where they destroy great numbers of fish. Their dung burns the trees. There are many species in both continents, which can only be divided by a reference to some details of plumage. The true Herons have a very slender neck, ornamented below with long pendent feathers. Ard. major and Jrd. cinerea, L. ; Enl. 755 and 787; Frisch, 198, 199; Naum. Ed. I. 25, f. 33, 34. (The common Heron.) Bluish ash colour; a black tuft on the occiput; forepart of the neck white, sprinkled with black tears ; a large bird, whose depredations on the fish, in the rivers of Europe, render it highly prejudicial. It was formerly much celebrated for the sport it afforded to falconers. Ard. purpurea, Enl. 788; Naum. Ed. I. Supp. 45, f. 89, 90*. * The Ard. purpurea, purpurata, rtifa, Gm., and the afticona, Lath., according to Meyer, are mere varieties of the purple Heron. Add, A.herodias, Gm.; Wils. VIII, Ixv, 2, the young of which is, perhaps, Enl. 858; — A. cocoi, Lath,; Spix, XC, under the false name of Ard. maquari; — A. sibila- GRALLATORT^. 335 (The purple Heron.) Grey and red, or purple r belongs also to ' Europe. The name of Crab-eaters, (Crabiers,) has been applied to the smallest Herons, with shorter feet. The species most common in France, and found in its mountain districts, is, Ard, minuta and danuhialis, Gm. ; Le Blongios; Enl. 323; Frisch, 207; Naum. Ed. I, 28, f. 37. Fawn coloured; calotte, back, and quills black. It is hardly larger than a Rallus, and frequents the vicinity of ponds, The Onores, to the form of the Crabeaters, add the size of the true Heron, and the colour of the bitterns*. The Egrets are Herons whose feathers, on the lower part of the back, at a certain period become long and attenuated. The most beautiful species, whose feathers are employed for the pur- pose which the name of these birds indicates, are: Ard. garzetta, Enl. 901. (The little Egret.) But half the size of the Heron. It is all white, and its slender feathers do not ex- tend beyond the tail. Jrd. alba, Enl. 886. (The Great Egret.) This one is also en- tirely white, but larger. Both these species are found in Europe ; there is a third, whose tarsi are shorter, and whose attenuated fea- thers extend considerably beyond the tail; it is the Ard. egretta, Enl. 925 f. We have also thought it proper to approximate to the Egrets the Ard. comata, Gm. ; Enl. 348; Naum. Ed. I, 22, f. 45. (The Crab-eater of Mahon.) A bird of southern Europe, with a reddish- brown back, and wings, belly, and tail, white. The adult has a yellowish neck, and a long tuft on the occiput J. The feathers on the neck of the Bitterns are loose and separated, which increases its apparent size. They are usually spotted or striped. trix, T. Col. 271; — ^. ludoviciann, Gm. Enl. 909, from which the A. virescens does not specifically differ; — J. Nova-Guince, Lath. Enl. 926, approaches somewhat to the A. scolopacea, Gm. in the bill. * A.lineala, Gm. Enl. 860; — A. tigrina, Id. Enl. 790, which appears to be the young of A.flava, Gm. f Temminck thinks that the A. alba is the young of the A. egretta, and that the pi. Enl. 901, does not represent the Little Egret of Europe, but that of America. X From the exact observations of Meyer, the A. caslanea, Gm. or the ralloides^^ Scopol.; — A. sqiiaiotta; — A. MarsigUi; — A. pumila, and even A. erythropus, and A. ma- laccensis, Gm. Enl. 911, are all mere varieties, or different ages of the Crab-eater of Mahon, or A. comata. The A. senegalensis, Enl. 315, is also a young offspring of the same bird. It is perhaps the true Crane of the Balearic Islands of Pliny, XI, 37. Add, A. caudidiss'ima, Wils. LXIII, 4; — the Garde hoeuf, A. bubukus, Savign. Eg. Ois., pi. viii; — A. leucocephala, Gm. Enl. 910; — A. jugularis, Forster, or ^ularis, Bosc, Act. de la Soc. d'Hist. Nat. fol. pi. ii. or albicollis, Vieill. Galer. 253; — A. earulea, Enl. 349, of which the A. aquinoctialis, Catesb. may probably be the young, notwithstanding the difference of colour; — A. rufcscens, Gm. Enl. 902 ; — A. leucogaster, Enl. 350;—^. agami, Enl. 859 (a). (a)^^ Add A. Pealii, Bonap. and R. ludoviciana, Wils. VIII, pL Ixir, f. 1. "-Eng. Ed.] Ard. stellaris, Enl. 789; Frisch, 205; Naura. Ed. I, 27, f. 36. (The European Bittern.) A golden fawn-colour, spotted and dotted with black ; bill and feet greenish ; is found among the reeds, whence it sends forth that terrific voice which has entitled it to the name of Bos-taurus. Its attitude, when at rest, is singular ; the bill being raised towards the heavens*. The adult Night-Heron, with the port of the Bitterns and a bill proportionably thicker, has a few slender feathers on the occiput. There is but one species found in France, Ard. nycticorax, L. ; Bihoreau d' Europe -f, Enl. 758; Frisch, 203; Naum, Ed. I, 26, f. 35. (The Night-Heron). The male is w^hite; back and calotte black; the young bird, Enl. 759, grey, with a brown mantle and a blackish calotte J. "We must observe, however, that these various subdivisions of the Herons are of but little importance, and are by no means well marked. The third tribe, besides having a thicker and smoother bill than is found in the second, has tolerably strong and almost equal membranes between the base of its toes. CiCONIA, CuV» The Storks have a thick bill, moderately cleft; neither fossae nor grooves; the nostrils pierced towards the back and near the base; and the bottom of which is occupied by an extremely short tongue. Their legs are reticulated, and the anterior toes strongly palmated at base, par- ticularly the external ones. The light and broad mandibles of their bill, by striking against each other, produce a clash which is almost the only sound that proceeds from these birds. Their gizzard is but slightly mus- cular, and their caeca so small that they are scarcely perceptible. Their lower larynx has no proper muscle ; their bronchias are longer than com- mon, and composed of rings more complete than usual. There are two species in France, _^ Ardea ciconia, L., Enl. 866; Frisch, 196; Naum. Ed. I,~227fi 31. (The White Stork.) "S\liite; quills of the wings black; feet and bill red. A large bird, held in great veneration by the people, a distinction arising from the fact that it destroys snakes and other • Add, /^. Minor, Wils. VIII, Ixv, 3, or A. stellaris, B. Gm.; Edw., 136;—^. undulnta, Gm. Enl. 768; — A. phiUppensis, Gm. Enl. 90S (a). t According to Meyer, the results of whose labours we still foUow, the Ard. grisea, A. maculata, and the A. hadia of Gmel. are different states of the A. nycti' corax. X Add, A. pileata, Lath, or A. alba, B.; Gm., Enl. 907; — A. caledonica, Lath.; — A. cayennensis, Enl. 899, or violacea, Wils. VIII, Ixv, 1, of which A. jamaicensis, Gm. is the young;— ^. sihilatrix, T. Col. 271. — The Pouacre, Buff. {Ard. Gardeni, Gm.) Enl. 309, appears to be the young of an ash-coloured Night Heron, with a bronze-black calotte and black. It is the same as the A. maculata, Frisch, 202. (a) ^^ Add, also, A. violacea, Wils. VIIT, pi. Ixv, f. 1 ;—^. cs. Foss. torn. I, and the young, Savign.Descript. de lEgypte, Hist. Nat. des Ois., pi. 7, (The Sacred Ibis), is the most celebrated species. It Avas reared in the temples of ancient Egypt, with a degree of respect bordering on adoration; • This is another of these distinctions and names borrowed by Vieill. (Gal. 246) without any acknowledgment, althjiugh my 7nemoir upon the Ibis, in which I esta- blish it, is dated fifteen years prio/ to any of his writings upon birds. GRALLATORIA^r 31-1 and, when dead, it was embalmed, because, according to some, it devoured serpents, whicb otherwise might have been dangerous to the country; according to others, because it bore some relation in its plumage to one of the phases of the moon; while a third class of authors were of opinion that its appearance announced the overflow of the Nile*. The Tantalus of Africa was for a long time considered as the Ibis of the Egyptians; it is now known to be a bird of the present genus, as large as a hen, with white plumage, the tips of the wing-quills excepted, which are black ; the barbs of the last coverts are slender, and of a black colour, with violet reflec- tions, and cover the tips of the wings and the tail. The bill and feet, as well as the naked part of the head and neck, are black ; this part, at an early age, is covered with small blackish feathers, or, at all events, its upper surface is thus furnished. Found throughout Africa f. Otiiers have scutellated legs; their bill, most commonly, is more slender. lb. rubra; Scol. rubra,!,.; Tantal. ruber, Gm. ; Enl. 80 and 81 ; Wils. VIII, Ixvi, 2. (The Red Ibis). A bird found in all the hot parts of America, remarkable for its bright red colour ; the tips of the wing-quills are black. The young ones, at first covered with a blackish down, become cinereous, and, when ready to fly, whitish; in two years the red makes its appearance, and continues to increase in lustre with age. This species does not migrate, and lives in flocks in marshy spots in the vicinity of estuaries. It is easily domesti- cated. Scol. falcinellus, L. ; Courtis vert, Enl. 819; Naum. Ed. I, Supp. 28, Savig. Eg. Ois. pi. vii, f. 2. (The Green Ibis). A purple brown-red; mantle of a deep green; the head and neck of the young marked with whitish dots. It is a beautiful bird of southern Europe, and of northern Africa, and most probably the species denominated by the ancients the Black Ibis'^. NUMENITTS§, Cm\ The Curlews have the bill arcuated like that of the Ibis, but it is more slender, and round throughout its length ; the tip of the upper mandible * Savigny, Mem. sur I'lbis. t There is a neighbouring species in the Moluccas, which has a longer bill, the coverts less slender, and partly varied with white; long and pointed feathers on the upper part of the breast (fb/s moliicca, Cnv.), and another in Bengal, with but slightly attenuated ash-coloured coverts (Ibis bengala, Cuv.)- Add, lb. papulosa, T. Col. 304;— r««^ calvns, Gm., Enl. Ii67 •,—Ibis nudifrons, Spix, 86;— 76. oxijcercus, Id. 87;— T. albicollis, Gm., or Curicaca of Margr., Enl. 97G;— Tatit. cayenncnsis, Gm., Eiil. 820 , — Ibis plumbens, T. Col. 235 ; — Tant. melaiiopis, Gra., Lath. Ill, •p\.\yi\\x;—Ib.chalcnptern, Vieill. Gal. 246, or Tant. hogedash, Lath. X Add, Tantalus ulbus and T. coco, Gm.; Enl. 915; T. crislatiis, Id.; Enl. 841;— Ibis leiicopt/gus, Spix, 88, if it should not prove to be the young of the ruber; — Tant. leucocejihalHs, Lath. Ill, pl.lxxx, 2 (o). § Numenius, derived from neonii'nie, new moon, on account of its crescent-sh ped bill. (a) The T.ftisciis of Gin. is the young of the T. albus, Id.— Eng. Ed. 342 BIF.DS. extends beyond the end of tlie lower one, and projects a little downwards in front of it. The toes are palmated at their base. Scol.arcuata,!..; Enl. 818; Frisch, 224; Naum. 5, f. 5. (The Curlew of Europe). Is the size of a Capon; brown; the edges of all the feathers whitish ; rump white ; tail striped with white and brown. It is eaten as game, of a tolerably good taste. Common along the coast of Europe, and in transitu in the interior. Its name is derived from its cry*. Scol. Phceopus, L.; Petit CourUs ; Enl. 142; Edw. 307; Frisch, 225; Naum. 10, f. lOf. (The Whimbrel). Half the si^e of the preceding, but has nearly the same plumage j;. ScoLOPAXJl, Cuv. The Woodcocks, or Snipes, have a straight bill, the nasal furrows ex- tending to near its point, which is a little inflated externally, to reach be- yond the lower mandible, and on the middle of which there is a simple groove; this point is soft and very sensible, and when dried, after death, assumes a punctured appearance. Their feet are not palmated. A pe- culiar character of these birds consists in their compressed head, and large eyes placed very far back, which gives them a singularly stupid air, an indication which they do not contradict by their habits. Scol rusticola,L.; La Becasse; Enl. 885 ; Frisch, 126, 227; Naum. Ed. I, I, f. 1. (The Woodcock). The well-known plumage of this bird is variegated above with grey, red, and black spots and bands; grey beneath, with transverse blackish lines. Its distin- guishing character consists of four broad, transverse, black bands; which succeed each other on the back part of the head. During the summer it inhabits lofty mountains, and descends into the Avoods in the month of October. It lives either singly or in pairs, particu- larly in bad weather, and feeds on worms and insects. Few of them remain on the plains during summer §. Scol. galUnaijo, L. ; La Becassine, Enl. 883; Frisch, 229, Naum. 3, f. 3. (The Common Snipe). Smaller than the preceding, but with a longer bill ; is distinguished by two broad, longitudinal black bands on the head, by the neck spotted with brown and fawn- colour, by a blackish mantle with two longitudinal fawn-coloured bands, by its brown wings watered with grey, by a whitish belly, the * Add the CourUs a mrches etrnites of the Cape {Xtim. virgalus, C), Enl. 198; — the C. a m. it. of India {N. iinea/ux); Le C. « long bee d'Amerique; — the Num. longi- rostri.i, Wils. of America, Am. Orn. II, xxiv, 4; — Ni/m. borealis, Id. vii, Ivi, 1. i Phaopus (ash-coloured foot), a name composed by Gesner. X Add the Num. tenuirostris, Ch. Bonap. ; — ihc Num. rufus, Vieill. Gal. 245; — the Cniirlis demi-bec (Nu7n. brenirostri.i, T. ), Col. 381. N. B. In this genus, and almost in the whole of this family, the bill becomes lengthened by age. II Scol' pax, the Greek name of the Woodcock, from scolops, stake, on account of its straight and pointed bill. Vieillot has changed it into Rusticola. § Add a closely allied species of North America (Seal, minor, Gm.), Arct. Zool. IT. pi. xix; Vieill. Gal. 242; Wils. VI, xlviii, 2;— Scol. sabini, Vig., Lin. Trans. XIV, pi. xxi, if a true species. GRALLATORLE. 343 flanks watered with bro^vn, &c. It frequents marshes, edges of ri- vulets, &c., and ascends out of sight, pouring out its piercing note from a great distance, wliich sounds like the bleating of a goat. It is found in nearly the same state in all parts of the globe. Scol. major, Gm. ; La double Becassine ; Frisch, 228 ; Naum. 2, f. 2. (The Great Snipe). Is distinguished from the preceding by being a third larger, and by the grey or fawn-coloured undula- tions above being smaller, and the brown ones beneath larger and more numerous. Scol. galUnida, Gm.; La Sonrcle ; Enl. 884; Frisch, 2.31: Naum. 4, f. 4. (The Jack Snipe). Nearly one lialf smaller iliau the Scol. (jallinacjo ; has but one black band on the head; fhf ground of the mantle reflects a bronze-green; a grey demi -collar on the neck; the flanks spotted like the breast with brown; it remains nearly the whole year in the marshes of Europe*. We should dis- tinguish from all others, the Sc. grisea, Gm. ; Wils. VII, Iviii, 1; Sc. Pat/kullii, Nils. Orn. Suec. II, pi. 2, and in summer plumage, Scol. Noveboracensis, hath. (The Red-breasted Snipe), which differs in the external toes being semi-palmated. It is more ash-coloured in winter, and more red- dish in summer, the rump always white, spotted with black. It is also seen in Europe I". RhyncHjEaJ, Cuv. Birds of Africa and India, whose nearly equal mandibles are slightly arcuated at the end, and in which the nasal fossa extend to the tip of the upper one, which has no third groove. Their feet are not palmated. To the port of Snipes they add more lively colours, and are particularly re- markable for the ocellated spots which decorate the quills of both wings and tail. These birds' are found of various colours, and Gmelin, consider- ing them as varieties, unites them under the name of Scol. capensis, M. Temminck also considers them as different ages of one bird§. * Add the Becassine mitette of Eur., Scol. Brehmit, Kaup., Isis., 1823; — Scol. pa- ludosa, Gm. Enl. 895, which is the Sc. gaUinago, Wils. VI, xlvii, 1; — Scol. gigantea, Tern. Col. 403. The Brunette of Buffon, Scol. pusilla (Dunlin, of the English), is only the Tritiga alpinn, Gm. t It appears that Vieillot restricts the name of Scolopax to this suhdi\'ision, that is, if, as I think, his pi. 241 represents this bird; it is not, however, exact. M. Leach makes his genus Macroramphus of it. X Vieillot has adopted this name and genus, Gal. pi. 240. § Seal, capensis, d, Gm. Enl. 922, should be the adult; Scol. capensis, g, Enl. 881, or Ri/nchera variesata, Vieill. Galer. 240, the young, and Enl. 270, an intermediate age.' The Chevalier vert, Briss. and Buft: {RaUus benghalens-s. Gm.), Albin, III, 90, is also of this genus, and does not even appear to differ from the variety represented, Enl. 922. N. B. This last plate is the only one that gives a correct representation of the bill peculiar to this little subgenus. Add, a very distinct species from Brazil, Rhynchcea hilarea, Val., Bullet, des Sc. de Ferussac, c. 2. 344 LiMOSA*, Bechst. The Godwnts have a straight bill, longer than that of the Snipes, and sometimes even slightly arcuated near the top. The nasal groove ex- tends close to the tip, which is blunt and somewhat depressed; no third groove or punctation on its surface. The external toes are palmated at the base. Their form is more slender, and their legs longer than those of Snipes; they frequent salt marshes and the sea-shore. Scol. leucophcea, Lath., and laponica, Gm. ; Barge ahoyeuse ; the young, Brit. Zool. pi. xiii; Briss. V, pi. xxiv, f. 2; the adult in summer plumage, Enl. 900 f . (The Common Godwit). In winter, a deep brown-grey, the feathers edged with white; the breast, a brown-grey; whitish above; rump wOiite, striped with brown, &c. In summer it is red, with a brown back. The tail is always striped with white and black. Scol. cegocephala and belgiea, Gm.; Limosa melanura, Ijeisler ; in winter plumage, Enl. 874; in that of summer, lb. 916. (The Black-tailed Godwit). In winter a cinereous g^rey, browner on the back; white belly; in summer, head, neck, and breast, red; the mantle, brown spotted with red; beneath, striped with brown, red and white bands; tail always black, edged with white at the tip. These two birds are double the size of the Woodcock, and their changes of plumage have occasioned various multiplications of the species. The last, during the summer, covers the plains of northern Holland. Its cry is very shrill, and resembles that of a goat J. Calidris||, Cuv. — Tringa, Temm. The bill of the Sandpipers is depressed at the end, and the nasal fossae are very long, as in the Godwits, but this bill is not usually longer than the head; their slightly bordered toes have no membranes at their base, and their thumb can hardly reach the ground ; their moderately long legs and short figure give them a heavier carriage than that of the Godwits. They are also much smaller. Trinqa grisea, Tr. cinerea, and Tr. canutus, Gm. ; La Maubeche, Enl. 366; Edw. 276; Wils. VII, Ivii, 2; the Sandpiper and Canute of the English. Winter plumage, ash-coloured above, white beneath, with blackish spots on the front of the neck and breast. In its summer livery, Tr. islandica, Gm., or Tr. rufa, Wils. VII, * Vieillot has changed this name into Limicula, Gal. 243. t Gmelin has made the young of this hird a variety of the following species, and quotes the fig. of Brisson, by the name of Sc I. f^lott'.s, which is a Ruff. The adult is his Scol. Inpoiiha. The l/mio.in Meyeri, Leisl. and Temm., is this species in its winter livery, and Lim. rufa, the same in its summer plumage. X Add, Srol. fedon, L. ; Wils. VII, pi. Ivi, 4, or the Barge marhree, Limicula mar- morata, Vieill. Galer. 243. We might distinguish the .Scol. tereh, or Sc. cinerea, Gm. ; Guldenst., Nov. Act. Petrop. XIX, pi. xix, whose bill is curved upwards, and whose feet are semi-palmated. It leads to the Recur' iros/res. 11 Calidris, " an ash-coloured and spotted bird, frequenting rivers and woods," Aristotle. Brisson has applied it to the Great Sandpiper. GRALLATORT^. 345 Ivii, 5, it is spotted above, fawn-colour and blackish ; underneath red. The Tr. ncevia, Enl. 395, is an intermediate state. The coverts of the tail are always white striped with black, and its quills grey. Nearly as large as a Snipe. Tr. maritima, Brun. ; 2V. nUjricans, Montag., Lin. Trans. ^V, pi. 11, f. 2; Brit. Zool. in fol., pi. c. 2, f. 1. (The Purple Sand- piper). Somewhat less than the preceding; grey; the mantle black- ish ; wings undulated with whitish ; whitish belly. It is common on the coast of Holland, rare in France. Always settles on stones*. Arenaria, Bechst. — Calidris, Vigors. The Sanderlings resemble the Sandpipers in every point but one, viz. they have no thumb, as is the case wdth the Plovers. The species known, Charadrius calidris, Gm. Briss. V. pi. xx, § 2; Vieill. Gal, 234, is, in winter, greyish above; front and un- derneath white; blackish wings, varied with white; Wils. VII, lix, A. In summer, its back is spotted with fawn-colour and black, and its breast dotted with blackish, — Char, rubidus, Wils. VII, Ixiii, 3-j-. Pelidna, Cuv. The Sea-Larks are merely small Sandpipers, with a bill somewhat longer than the head. The borders of their feet are insensible. Tringa cinclus and alpina ; Alouette de mer (the Sea-Lark, or Small Sandpiper), is a third smaller than the Great Sandpiper, and like it, in winter, is ash-coloured above, white beneath, and the breast shaded with grey ; in summer its plumage is fawn-coloured above, spotted with black, small black spots front of the neck and breast, and a black patch under the belly. It is then the Tr. alpina, Gm., or Tr. cinclus, B. Enl. 852; Wils. VII, Ivi, 2. The Tr. cinclus, L., Enl. 851, is an intermediate state J. The CocoRLi only differ from the Sea-larks by their bill being slightly arcuated. The species known, Scolopax suharcuata, Gm.; Numenius afri- canus, Lath.; Naum. 21, f, 28 and 20; f. 27 (Red Sandpiper), is, in winter, blackish above, undulated with grey and whitish beneath ; in summer the back is spotted with black and fawn-colour, the wings are grey, and the head and under part of the body red. It is found everywhere, though very rarely. The * Add, of European species: Tr. Temminckii, Leisler, Col. 41, 4; — Tr. minula, Leisl. Naum. 21, f. 50. Of species foreign to that continent: Tr. !euco/-tera,Gvn., Lath. Syn. Ill, pi. \KX-!iu;—Tr. albescens, Tern. Coh 41, \ -.—Tr. maculosa, \ie\U. Diet.; — Tr. pusilla, Wils. pi. xxx\-ii, 4. Add, Tr. islandka, L., Wils. VIII, p. Ivii, f 2, 5.— Eng. Ed. f It has been confounded with the Small Sandpiper, in its winter plumage, or Tr. arenaria. Brisson, in particular, gives the figure of the one, and the description of the other. The Calirlris Iringoides, Vieill. Gal. 234, seems to be a bad figure of this bird in its summer livery. X This is most probably the place for the Tringa macroplera, Spix, XCII (n). ^g° (a) Add, Am. Spec. Tr. Schimii, Brehm. ; — Tr. pecloralis, Bonap.; — Tr. platijrhinca, Tem. — Eng. Ed. S46 Falcinellus*. Falcinelles have a bill somewhat more arcuated than that of the Co- corli ; the thumb, moreover, is deficient. One species only is known, Scol. pygmcea, L., a native of Africa, but which" has sometimes been seen in Europe. Machetes f, Cuv. The RufFs are true Sandpipers in their bill and carriage; the mem- brane between their external toes, however, is nearly as extensive as in Totanus, Limosa, &c. One species only is known, the Tringa pugnax, L., Enl. 305, 306. (The RufF.) It is somewhat smaller than a snipe, and cele- brated for the furious combats which take place among the males in the nuptial season. At this period the head is partly covered with red papillae, the neck is surrounded with a thick collar of feathers, so variously arranged and coloured, and projecting in such fantastic positions, that no two individuals can be found alike ; even before this epoch there is so much diversity in their plumage, that many imaginary species have been described by naturalists [f. Their feet are always yellowish, which, with their bill and their semi-palmated external toes, furnish a mark which may assist us to recognize them. This bird, common to the whole north of Europe, is also found on the coast of France, particularly in the spring, but it does not build there (a). There are some small birds in America resembling the Sandpipers, whose feet are semi-palmated anteriorly (the Hemipalama, Bonap.); Tringa semi-palmata, Wils., VII, Ixiii, 4; Tringa brevirostris, Spix, xciii. It appears that it is near the Sandpipers we must place the EURINORHYNCHUS, WilsOn. Which is distinguished from them by its depressed bill, widened at the end almost like that of the Spoonbill, the only known species of which, Platalea pygmcea, L. ; Eurinorhynchus griseus, Wils., Thunb., Acad., Suec, pi. VI, is one of the rarest in existence, for only a single individual has been found: it is grey above, white beneath, and hardly as large as a Pelidna. * Vieillot has changed this name into Erolia. It is not, as has been asserted, destitute of a thumb. f Greek, Machetes, pugnator. Greek, Pelidnos, fuscus. X The Chevalier varie, BuflF., Sp. IV; Briss. V, pi. xvii, 2, {Tringa litlorea, L.; Tringa ochrapus, B.; littorea, Gm.). The Chevalier, properly so called, Buff. Esp. II, Briss. V, pi. xvii, fig. 1, quoted by Gmel. under Scol. calidris; the true Sand- piper, Briss. V, pi. XX, fig. 1, {Tringa calidris, Gm.): the birds of Frisch, pi. 238, are all ruffs in different states of plumage, many other varieties of wliich might still be represented. According to Meyer, the Tringa grenovicensis, Lath, is also a young Ruff. (a) A true Ruffvi-as shot on Long Island in May 1830. GRALLATORIS. 347 PiiALAROPUS*, Briss. Small birds, whose bill, though flatter than that of the Sandpipers, is similarly proportioned, and has the same grooves; the toes also are bor- dered with wide membranes like those of Fulica. The species known, Phal. fulicarius, Bonap. ; Trimja labata and Tr. fulicaria, L. f, has a very large bill for a member of this family. In winter, it is ash-coloured above ; beneath, and the head, whitish; a black band on the neck : it is then the Tr. lobata, Edw. 308. In summer it becomes black, streaked with fawn colour above, and reddish be- neath; there is at all times a white band on the wing, which is blackish : it is then the Phalaropus rufus, (Red Phalarope), Bechst. and Meyer; Trincja fulicaria, L., Edw. \42X\ Crynwphile rovx, Vieill. Gal. 270. This bird is rare in Europe. Strepsilas§, lUig. The Turn-stones stand rather low ; the bill is short, and the toes are without membranes, like those of the true Sandpipers ; but this bill is conical, pointed, without any depression, compression, or inflation, and the nasal fossae do not extend to more than half its length. The thumb barely reaches the ground. Their bill, which is stronger and stifl'er in proportion than that of the preceding birds, enables them to overturn stones, beneath which they find worms. The mantle of one species is varied with black and red ; head and belly white; cheeks and breast, black: it is disseminated through- out both continents, and is the Tringa interpres, L., Enl. 856. There is also one varied with grey and brown, which is perhaps but the same species at a different age — Enl. 340 and 857; Vieill. Gal. 23711. ToTANUS^, CuV. The bill of these birds is slender, round, pointed and solid; the nasal fossa? do not extend beyond the half of its length, and the upper mandible is slightly arcuated near the end. Their form is light and their legs long; but a small part of their thumb rests on the ground; their external web is well marked. Each of the species is found throughout almost the whole of the globe. Scol. glottis, L. ; Chevalier atix pied verts; Albin. II, 69; Al- drov. Orn. Ill, 535 ; Brit. Zool. pi. c. 1 ? As large as a Limosa, » Vieillot has changed tliis name into Crymophile, Gal., pi. 270. t Meyer hnproperly confounds this bird, Edw. 308, with the Tringa hi/perborea and the Tringa fusca, which have the bill of a Tetanus, and of which we make our LoiilPES. X Gmelin has increased the confusion by quoting this bird as a variety of the hyperborea. § Vieillot has changed this name into that of Arenaria, Gal. pi. 237. II See Edw. HI; Naum. Suppl. 62, f. 118; Wils. VII, hni, 2. The Chevalier varie, Enl. 300, referred by Meyer to Strepsilas, is merely a Ruff. ^ Totano, the Venetian name of a Limosa or Totanus. 318 BIRDS. bill thick and strong, a brown ash colour above and on the sides; edges of the feathers dotted with brown; white rump and belly; tail marked with narrow and irregular grey and white stripes ; the feet green. In summer the neck and breast are spotted with browni; in winter the whole under part of the body is white. It is the largest of all the European species. Scol. fusca, L.; Cheval noir; Barcje brune; BufF. Enl. 875; Frisch, 236*, has the graceful form of the Godwit, and in summer is a blackish brown above and slate-coloured beneath ; the feathers bordered or dotted on the edge with whitish ; the rump white, and the tail striped with brown and white, two characters which exist more or less in all the species of Europe ; feet of a reddish brown. In winter the belly and breast become white, when it is almost ash- coloured above, with red feet. It is then Le Grand Chevalier a pieds rouges, Scol. calidris, L., Enl. 876'j". Tringa, gamhetta, Gm. ; Le Chevalier aux pieds rouges, or Gam- hette; Enl. 845; Frisch, 240, Naura. 9, f. 9. In summer, brown above, with black spots, and some few white ones, on the edges of the feathers ; white beneath with brown spots, particularly on the breast and neck ; red feet ; numerous brown and white stripes on the tail. In winter its spots are nearly effaced, and the mantle is of an almost uniform grey; in this state it is the fig. Enl. 827. Its size is a fourth less. Totanus stagnatilis, Bechst. ; Chevalier a longs pieds, Bonelli. Something smaller than the preceding, but has longer and more slender legs : in summer its back is brown, with irregular black spots ; its belly white, and brown spots mark the neck and breast. In winter the mantle becomes of a uniform grey, and the under part of the body white. The stripes on the tail are irregular and parallel to its edges. Tringa ochropus, L. ; Le Becasseau; Enl. 843. A bronze-black above, the edges of the feathers dotted with whitish; white beneath, spotted with grey on the forepart of the neck and on the sides ; only three black bands on the lower half of the tail; feet greenish; still smaller than either of the two preceding ones. It is much esteemed as game, and is common along the banks of rivulets in Europe, al- though it is rather a solitary bird. Tringa glareola, Gm.; Beccasseau des hois, chiefly differs from the preceding in having from seven to eight blackish stripes along the whole length of the tail. The pale spots on its back are broader. The spots on the neck and breast almost totally disappear in winter. Tringa hypoleucos, L. ; Tot. macularius, Wils. VII, Hx, 1, 2? (a); La guignette, Enl. 850. The smallest of the European species, * According to Meyer, the Scol. curonica and canlahrigiensis, and the Tringa atra, Gm. should he referred to this bird. The two fii-st are the young ones, f Under the wrong name of Barge grise. («) C^° This mark of doubt may be removed: it is not the Tut. maculariiis, Wils. — Eng. Ed. GRALLATOKI.E. 349 being about as large as a Pelidna (Tr. alpina, Gm.); a bronzed greeiiisli-brown, with transverse, lawn coloured and black marks on the wings; beneath and in front, white; rump, and the middle quills of the tail, colour of the back, the lateral ones only being striped with black and white as in the other species. The feathers of the bill as well as the small wing-coverts, when young, have a light fawn coloured edging. Its habits are the same as those of .the pre- ceding. Among the species foreign to Europe, we should particularly no- tice that of North America, with the large bill and semi-palmated feet, Scolopax scmipahnata, L. ; Ency. Method. PI. Ornith., pi. Ixxi, fig. 1; Wils. VII, Ivi, 3, which is nearly as large as the one first named, with a shorter and thicker bill, plumage brown-grey above, whitish beneath; brownish spots on the neck and breast; toes well bordered with equal and considerable membranes *. The LoBiPEsf, Cuv. The Lobipedes, we think, require to be separated from the Phalaropes, because, although the feet are similar, the bill is that of a Tetanus; such is, Tringa hyperhorea, L. ; Lobipede a hausse-col; Enl. ^QQ, of which the Tringa fusea, Edw. 40, is probably the female or the young. This little bird, which is grey above, white beneath, and has its scapulars tinged with red, has a broad red gorget rouud its Avhite throat J. HiMANTOPUS 11, Briss. The bill round, slender, and pointed, even more so than that of a Te- tanus, and the usual nasal grooves occupy but half its length. The exces- sive length and tenuity of the legs, which are reticulated and destitute of a thumb, and the weakness of their bones, which is so extreme as to ren- " It is on this character that M. Ch. Bonaparte founds his subgenus Catoptro- PHORUS. Add to the common species, Tot. speculifenis, which resembles the vevil- ■palmiilus, but stands higher, and has a longer bill, with the usual feet; — Tot. vo'ife- rus, Wils. VII, Iviii, 5, or Tot. mclonoleiicos, Ord. ]h.;—Tot. flavipes, Wils. LVIII, 4; — Tot. soUtmius {Tot. glareolus, Wils.), Wils. VII, Iviii, 3. llie Tot. Bartramius, Wils. VII, lix, 2, has a proportionally shorter bill than the other species, although in everything else its characters are the same. N.B. This genus, mixed up by Buifon, with several varieties of RufFs, has been distributed by Linna-us, witliout any reason, among his two genera Scolopax and Tringa. This confusion is not vet dissipated, as I had no opportunity of observing all the foreign species. It is easy to see, however, that I could not retain the genus Atites of Illiger. I should also observe, that the most exact descriptions will not suffice for distinguishing the spe- cies with certainty, until those of my Totanus are separated from my Sandpipers and Godwits, according to the forms of the bill, as above mentioned. It is this which has prevented me from giving all the synonymes of Bechstein and Meyer. f M. Vieillot, to have the air of producing a change, retains here the name of Phalaropus. X Add, the Phal. frenatus, Vieill. Gal. pi. 271, ot Phal. lisere, T. Col. 270; Wils, IX, pi. l.xiii, f. 3? It is the subgenus Holopodius of Ch. Bonap. § llimaiitoptis, feet like a string (alluding to their weakness), is the name given to this bird in Pliny. 350 BIRDS. der walking painful to them, are what principally distinguish the species of this subgenus, and give rise to their name. One species only is known in Europe, — Charadrius himantopus, L., Enl. 878, which is white, with a black calotte and mantle, and long red feet ; it is a rare bird, whose habits are but imperfectly known *. This is perhaps the only place for the Recurvirostra, Lin. Or the Avosets, although their feet, which are webbed nearly to the ends of the toes, almost entitle them to a situation among the_Palmipedes, yet their high tarsi and half naked legs, their long, slender, pointed, smooth, and elastic bill, together with their mode of life resulting from this con- formation, equally approximate them to the Snipes. What particularly characterizes, and even distinguishes them from all other birds, is the strong upward curve of their bill. Their legs are reticulated, and their thumb much too short to reach the ground. The European species, — Recurv. avocetta, L., Enl. 353, is white; a black calotte and three bands on the wing of the same hue ; feet lead-coloured ; it is a pretty bird of a graceful form, found in winter on the sea-shore. The American species, — R. americana, Wils. VII, Ixiii, 2; Leach, Zool. Misc., pi. 101, diifers from it in a red hood. The coasts of the Indian seas produce a third, which is white, with black wings and red feet, the R. orientalis, Cvcv.\ FAMILY V. MACRODACTYLI. This family is furnished with very long toes, fitted for walking on the grass of marshes, and even for swimming, in those numerous species especially, in which they are bordered. There are no membranes, how- ever, between the bases of their toes, not even between the external ones. The bill, more or less compressed on the sides, is lengthened or shortened according to the genus, never, however, becoming as slender or as weak as that of the preceding family. The body of these birds is also singu- larly compressed, a circumstance which is owing to the narrowness of the sternum ; their wings are moderate or'short, and their flight feeble. They all have a lono: thumb. » Add. Him. nigrkollis, Wils. VII, pi. Iviii, 2, and Vieill. Gal. pi. 229._ f Vieillot has changed this name into Recuivir. leucocephala, Gal. pi. 2i GRALLATor.LE. 351 They have been divided into two tribes, according to the armature or non-armature of their wings ; but this character is liable to exceptions. Jacanas*, i?;m.— ParraJ: , Lin. The Jacanas are greatly distinguished from the other Grallatoriae, by having four very long toes, separated down to their root, the nails of which, that of the thumb in particular, are also extremely long and pointed, from which peculiarity they have received their vulgar name of Surgeons. The bill is similar to that of the Lapwings, in its moderate length, and iu the slight inflation of its end. Their wing is armed with a spur. They are noisy and quarrelsome birds, which inhabit marshes of hot climates, where they walk with great facility on the grass, by means of their long toes. America produces some species, in which the base of the bill is covered by a flat, naked membrane, which extends to part of the forehead. P.jacana, L., Enl. 322. (The Common Jacana). Black, with a red mantle; the primary wing-quills green; fleshy wattles under the bill; very sharp-pointed spurs. It is the most common species iu all the hot climates of America ;{;. Some of the same description are also found in Asia, P. cenea\\ ; P. svperciliosa, Horsf. (the Eronzcd Jacana birds), with a black body reflecting blue and violet tints; mantle bronze-green; rump and tail blood-red; anterior quills of the wiiig green; a white streak behind the eye. Its spurs are blunt and small. Others have been discovered in the east, in which this membrane is de- ficient, and which are otherwise remarkable for some singular diii'erences in the proportions of their quills. P. chinensis; Jacana aloncjue queue; Encycl. Method. Orn., pi. 61, f. 1; Vieill. Gal. 265. (The Long-tailed Jacana). Jirown ; head, throat, front of the neck, and coverts of the wings, white ; back of the neck furnished with silky feathers of a golden yellow ; a small pediculated appendage to the end of some of the wing- quills; four quills of the tail black, and longer than the body. The Chi- rurgien de Lu^on of Sonnerat (P. luzionensis), is the young oi the same: independently of some difference in the colours, it has not yet acquired its long tail. * Jacana, or Jahana, is properly, in Brazil, the name of the Gallinula. The -bur- geons are there called Aquapuazos, because they walk over the aquatic plants called Aquape (Azzar.). It is possibly through an error of transcription that one of liieui in Marcgrave is named Aguapeccaca. f Parra is the Latin name of some unknown bird. X The /. varie (P. variabilis), Enl. 846, is only the common species at an early age. The P. brasilieiisis, and the P. nigra, exist only on the somewhat equivocal authority of Marcgrave. The P. viridis, which also rests on the description of Marcgrave, appears to me, from the description itself, to be a Porphyrio. The P. africana. Lath., scarcely differs. As for the P. chavaria, see the following f.rtick' on the Palamedese. II ^'itiliot lias changed this specific name into melancldoiis, Gai. 2G4. It is also the P. superciliusa, Horsf. Jav. 552 BIRDS. The East produces others, which are tufted, and in which the spur on the wing is deficient, P. galUnacea, Tem. 4G4. Palamedea, Lin. The Kamichi represent, in many respects, the Jacanas, but on a very large scale, in the two strong spurs of each of their wings, in their long toes and strong nails, that of the thumb in particular, which is long and straight as in the Larks ; but their bill, whose aperture is small, is but slightly compressed, and is not inflated; the upper mandible, also, is tomewhat arcuated. Their legs are reticulated. The species known, P. cornuta, L., Enl. 451; Vieill. Gal. 261; Anhima in Brazil; Camouche at Cayenne, Src, is larger than the Goose, blackish, with a red spot on the shoulder, and a singular appendage on the top of the head, consisting of a long, slender, mobile and horny stem. There are no membranes between the toes. This bird is found in the inundated places of South America, and has a very loud cry. They live in pairs with great fidelity. It has been said that it hunts reptiles, but though its stomach is but slightly muscular, it rarely feeds on any thing but aquatic plants and seeds*. A distinct genus has been made of another, Chauna-}-, Ulig. Parra chavaria, L. ; Chdia of Paraguay, Azzar. ; Col. 219; Vieill. Gal. 267, which has no horn on the vertex, and whose occi- put is ornamented with a circle of erectile feathers. The head and upper part of the neck are only covered with down, and it has a black collar. The rest of its plumage is lead-coloured, and black- ish with a white spot on the tip of the wing, and a second over the base of some of the large quills. The external toes are con- siderably palmated. It chiefly feeds on aquatic plants, and the Indians of Carthagena always keep some of them among their geese and chickens, as it is sufficiently courageous, according to them, to repulse even the Vulture. A singular circumstance at- tending this bird is, that air is every where interposed between the skin and muscles, even on the legs, in such a quantity as causes it to crackle under the finger. Although there is scarcely any part of the leg naked in J Megapodius, We still think it should be placed near Palamedea. It is a genus lately discovered in New Guinea, in which the bill is arched and slightly com- pressed, the membranous nostrils occupying about the one half; the legs are strong, high, and scutellated ; the thumb and toes long, and termi- nated by large nails somewhat flattened ; the tail is short, the circumfe- rence of the eye partly naked, and there is a small tubercle on the carpus, * Bajon., Mem. sur Cayenne, 11, 2S4. t Vieillot has changed tliis name into Opistolophus. X There is scarcely any part of the leg naked in the Rullus Crex. GRALLATORI^. 35S the first and slight vestige of tlie spur pf the Palamedeae. Tlie membrane between the external toes is very short; between the internal ones it is somewhat larger. The eggs are very disproportionate in size to that of the bird. One species is tufted almost like the Chavaria, — the Megap. Du- perrey, Less, and Garn., Voy. de Duperr. ZooL, pi. 37- Two others, the M. de Freycinet and M. de Lapeyrouse, Quoy and Gaym. Voy. de Freycin, pi. 28 and 27, and Col. 220, are destitute of the tuft*. A fourth, which is smaller, the Alcctelie de Durville, Voy. de Dup., pi. 38, appears to have no tail. Of the tribe whose wings have no armature, Linnaeus comprises in his genus Fulica such as have their bill prolonged into a sort of shield, which partly covers the forehead; and, in his genus Rallus, those in which tliis peculiarity does not exist. R.\LLUs, Lin. The Rails, which, in other respects, have a strong, mutual resemblance, present bills of very different proportions. Among the species in which it is longest, the Rallus, Bechst., is placed Ral. aquaticus, L. ; Rale d'eau d' Europe, Enl. 749 ; Naum. 20, f. 41. (The Water Rail). A fawn-coloured brown, spotted with blackish above ; bluish ash colour beneath ; the flanks striped with white and black ; it swims very well in ponds and rivulets, and runs lightly over the leaves of aquatic plants ; it feeds on small shrimps, and its flesh has a marshy odourf . Other species have a shorter bill, Crex, Bechst., among which we iRnd Ral. crex, L.; Le Rale de genets, Enl. 750; Frisch, 212, B; Naum. 5, f. 5. Fawn-coloured brown, spotted with black above; greyish beneath : flanks streaked with black ; red wings. It lives and builds in the fields, running through the grass with great cele- rity. Its name, Crex, expresses the sound of its note. It has been called the ■Quail-King, because it arrives and departs with those birds, and leads a soUtary life on the same grounds, from which arose the conjecture that it was their leader. It feeds on grain, as well as on worms and insects. Ral. porzana, L. ; La Marouelte, Enl. 751 ; Frisch, 211 ; Naum. • The Megap. Duperrey is called Tavon in Manilla. Although liardly as large as a partridge, it lays an egg equal hi size to that of a goose. Add the Megap. a piedt rouges, Col. 411. f There is a variety or species at the Cape, Rallus carukscetis, Cuv., the black and white stripes of whose abdomen are merely a little more extended. Add, of the Water Rails: Ral. virgi7uanus, Edw. 729; Wils. LXII, 1; — crepitans, lb. 2; — lovgi- rostris, Enl. 849; — variegatus, Enl. 775; — philippensis, Enl. 77'i;—torquatus; — stria- tus; — the Fulica cayennensis (which is a true Rail), Enl. 352, as well as the Gallinula gigas, Spix.xcix; — sarracura, Id.XCVIII; — mangle, Id. XCVII; — rujiceps, Id. XCVI, and carta, Id. XCV. — The Ral. Justus, Enl. 773, begins to have a shorter bill. VOL. I. F I 354 BIRDS. 31, f. 42. (The Little Spotted Rail). A deep brown dotted with white ; flanks marked with whitish stripes ; found in the vicinity of ponds; it constructs a nest with reeds, that has the form of a wherry, which it fastens to the stem of some one of those plants ; it is a good swimmer and diver, and does not leave France till the middle of winter*. FuLicA, Lin. The Coots may be divided as follows, from the form of the bill and the appliances of the feet. Gallinula, Briss. and Lath, Or the Water-hens, have the bill very similar to that of the Ground- Rail, from which these birds are distinguished by the shield on the fore- head, and by very long toes, furnished with a very narrow border. Fulica chloropus, L. ; La Poule d'Eau commune, Enl. 877; Frisch, 209; Naum. 29 and 38. (The Water-Hen). A deep brown above; slate-grey beneath, with some white on the thighs, along the middle of the lower part of the abdomen, and on the ex- ternal edge of the wing. The young, Fulica fusca, Gm., Poulette d'eau, Buff., are more lightly coloured, and have a larger frontal escutcheon -j-. PoRPHTRio, Briss. The bill higher in proportion to its length ; very long toes, without any very sensible border ; the frontal shield large, rounded in some, and square above in others. These birds stand on one foot, using the other to con- vey their food to the bill. Their colours are usually fine shades of blue, violet, and aqua-marina. Such is, Fulica porphyrio, L. ; Poule Sultans Ordinaire; Edw. 87, a beau- tiful African bird, now naturalized in several islands and coasts of the Mediterranean J. Its beauty would render it an ornament to our pleasure grounds. * There are two other Rails in Europe with short bills, smaller than the porzana, R. BailUoni, Vieill. Diet, and R. pusillus, Naum. 32, f. 43. Among these short- billed Rails maybe placed the Ral. caye7men.ns, Enl. 753 and 3G8j — minulus, Enl. SAT -y—jarnaicensis, Edw. 278; — noveboracensis, Vieill. Gal. 266; — nigro-lateralis, Lich- ten.; — carolinus, Edw. 144; Wils. 48, 2;— Gallinula curizona, T. Col. 417; — G. rubigi- Hosa, Id. Col. 387. The Ral. bengalensis, Gm., is a Rliynchaa. f The Poule d'eau ardoisee de Vlnde, Vieill. Gal. 268, hardly differs from the com- mon one; — the P. d'eau tachetee, or the Grinette, F. ncevia, Alb. 1 1, 73, is only a young Ral. crex. Add, P. d'eau des Indes, Ral. phcenicurus, Enl. 896 (n). X The Ful. maculata, flavipes anAfistulans, or\g\na\\y rest only on some bad figures of Gesner, from drawings which had been sent to him. But the Ful. martinica and flavirostris are true Rhynchasas. The martinica is in Vieill. Gal. 267. Add the Ta- leve a manteau verd (Poiph. s7naragnoius,T.), Enl. 910; — the T. a manteau noir {Porph. (a) Add, Gal. martinica, Gm.; Wils. IX, pi. Ixxiii, f. 2.— Eno. Ed, CiRALLATORL'E. FuLicA, Driss, The true Coots, in addition to a short bill and a large frontal shield, have their toes much widened by a festooned border that renders them excellent swimmers, in consequence of wliicli their lives are passed in ponds and marshes. Their polished plumage is not less adapted to this kind of life than their conformation, and these birds establish an evident link between .the order of the Grallatoriee and that of the Palmipedes, There is but one in Europe. F. atra, F. aterrima, and F. cethiops, Gm, ; La Foulque, Enk 197, Frisch, 208; Naum. 30, f. 40. (The Coot). The shield of a deep slate colour; edge of the wings whitish; in the nuptial season the shield becomes red: found wherever there is a pond*. We shall terminate this' sketch of the Grallatoriaa with three genera, which it is difficult to associate with any other, and which may be consi- dered as forming separately so many small families. Chionis, Foster. — Vaginalis, Lath, Or the Sheath-Bills. Their legs are short, almost like those of the Gal- linaceffi ; their tarsi scutellated, their bill stout and conical, having a hard substance enveloping its base, which, it appears, the bird has the power of raising and depressing. Only one species is known, and that is from New Holland, Vag. Chionis, Lath. Ill, pi, 89, Chionis necrophaga, Vieill. Gal. 258. It is the size of a Partridge, with entirely white plumage. It haunts the sea-coast, where it feeds on the dead animals thrown up by the waves. Glareola. Tlie bill of the Pratincoles or Sea Partridges is short, conical, arcuated throughout, has a large ^opening, and resembles that of the Gallinaceae. Their excessively long and pointed wings remind us of the Swallows f, or of the Palmipedes of the high seas ; their legs are of a moderate length, their tarsi scutellated, and their external toes somewhat palmated; their thumb touches the ground. Aquatic worms and insects constitute their food. The European species, Glar. austriaca, Enl. 882 ; Glar. pmtincola, Leach, Lin. Trans. XIII, pi. xii; Naum. 29, f. 59, is brown above, white beneath and on the rump ; a black circle round the throat ; feet and base of the melanotos, T.); — the T. mennier {P. pulverulentus, T.), Col. 405; — the T. emeraudine {P. smaragdimis, T.), Col. 421; the T. blanche {P. albus, L.), Philip., Voy. to Bot. Bay, p. 273; J. White, p. 238. * Add the Coot of Madagascar {Ful. cristata, Gm.), Enl. 797; Vieill. Gal. 269 (a). f Linnseus (Edit. XII) even placed the common species in the genus Iliruudo, under the name of Hir. prathicola. (a) Add also F. amerkana, Gm.;^Wils. IX, pi. Ixxiii, f. 1. — Eng. Ed. 356 BIRDS. bill reddisli. It appears to be found ia all the north of the eastern continent*. Our last genus will be that of Phcenicopterus, Lin. The Flammant or Flamingos, one of the most extraordinary and the most isolated of all birds. Its legs are excessively long; the three an- terior toes are palmated to their ends, and that of the hind one is ex- tremely short; the neck, quite as long and slender as the legs, and its small head furnished with a bill whose lower mandible is an oval longitu- dinally bent into a semi-cylindrical canal, while the upper one, oblong and flat, is bent crosswise in its middle, so as to join the other exactly. The membranous fossse of the nostrils occupy nearly all the side of the part which is behind the transverse fold, and the nostrils themselves are lon- gitudinal slits in the base of the fossae. The edges of the two mandibles are furnished with small, and very delicate transverse lamina?, which, with the fleshy thickness of the tongue, creates some affinity between them and the ducks. Were it not for the length of their tarsi, and the nudity of their legs, we might even place them among the Palmipedes. They feed on shell-fish, insects and the spawn of fishes, which they capture by means of their long neck, turning the head on one side to give more effect to the hook of the upper mandible. They construct in marshes their nest of earth, heaped up, placing themselves astride of it to hatch their eggs, a position to which they are forced to resort, by the length of their legs. The common species, Ph. ruber, Enl. 68 (The Red Flamingo), is from three to four feet in height ; ash coloured, witli brown streaks, during the first year ; in the second there is a rosy hue on the wings, and in the third it acquires a permanent purple-red on the back, with rose-co- loured wings. The quills of the wing are black; the bill yellow, with a black tip, and the feet brown. This species is found in all parts of the eastern continent below forty degrees. Numerous flocks are seen on the southern coast of France, and they sometimes ascend as far as the Rhine. M. Temrainck thinks that the American Flamingo, which is altogether of a bright red, Wils. VIII, 6Q, and Catesb. 73, is a different species from that of Europe (a). * Glareola ncBvia, Gm., is the young of the common species. See Leach, Lin- Trans. Xin, pi. xii, f. 2. Add Glar. auslralis, Leach, loc. cit. pi. xiv, or Glar. isa- bella, Vieill.Gal. 263|— G/ar. orientalis, Leach, XIII;— G/ar. lactea, Tem. Col. 399. («) l^° Dr. M' Murtrie, an American Naturalist, observes, that Temminck has positively ascertained that the Flamingo of America is different from that of Europe. The latter he calls Phan. antiquorum, but the American species Ph. ruber. — Eng. Ed. PALMIPEDES. 357 ORDER VI. THE PALMIPEDES. The feet, endowed with an adaptation for swimming, that is to say, situated posteriorly in relation to the body, sustained on a series of tarsi which are short and compressed, and palmated between the toes — these peculiarities characterize the order. With a plumage dense and glossy, whilst it is ever moistened with an oily excretion, and furnished near the skin with a thickly-set down, they are protected against the water, the element on which they live. Further, they are the only birds in which the neck exceeds — and in some cases this excess is considerable — the length of the feet, because in swimming on the surface they have often to search deeply beneath it. Their sternum is unusually long, and it affords an ample se- curity to the greater portion of their viscera, as it has on either side merely one emargination or oval foramen furnished with membranes. Their gizzard is usually muscular, the caeca long, and the inferior larynx simple ; in one family, however, the latter is so inflated as to form carti- laginous capsules. This order admits of n tolerably precise division into four families, and we commence with FAMILY I. THE PLONGEURS, OR BRACHYPTERES. The Divers, of which a portion bears some external resemblance with those of the Gallinula : their legs being placed more posteriorly than they are in all other birds renders their walking a painful process, and re- quires of them, when on land, to stand in a vertical position. Besides, as most of them are very indifferent flyers, and as several are unable to fly at all, in consequence of the extreme shortness of their wings, we are forced to regard them as almost exclusively attached to the surface of the water : and hence is it that their plumage is so dense, and that it pre- sents a surface very smooth and with a silvery polish. They swim be- neath the waters, with the assistance of the wings, which serve as so many fins. Their gizzard is muscular, and the caecum is moderate : they have a distinct muscle on each side on the inferior larynx. Amongst these birds the genus 358 BIRDS. CoLYMBUs*, Lin. Or Divers, have for their peculiar character only a smooth, straight, cor/i- pressed and pointed bill, and linear nostrils ; but the differences in the feet have caused them to be subdivided. PoBicEFS, Lath. — CoLYMBUs, Briss. and IlUg. The toes of the Grebes, instead of being regularly palmated, are widened like those of the Coots, the anterior ones only being united at the base by membranes. The middle nail is flattened, and the tarsus strongly compressed. The semi-metallic lustre of their plumage has caused it to be frequently employed as fur. Their tibia, as well as that of the succeeding subgenera, is prolonged above into a point which gives more efficient insertions to the extensors of the leg. These birds live on lakes and ponds, and build among the rushes. In certain circumstances, it appears that they carry their young ones under their wings. Their size and plumage are so much changed by age, as tQ have caused an improper multiplication of species. M. Meyer reduces those of Europe to four. Col. cristatus, Gm., Enl. 400 and 944; Frisch, 183; Naum. 69, F. 106; Col. urinator, Gm., Enl. 941; Edw. 36, (The Crested Grebe), is the size of a duck ; blackish-brown above, silver-white beneath; a white band on the wing; it acquires with age a double black tuft, and the adults have in addition a broad red collarette on the upper part of the neck, edged with black. Col. cornutus, Enl. 404, 2 ; Col. obscurus, Enl. 942 ; and CoL caspicus, Gm. Vieill. Gal. 281: Edw. 145, (The Horned Grebe), resembles the preceding in form, but the collarette of the adult is black ; its tufts and the front of its neck red. It is much smaller. Col. suhcristatus ; and the young, parotis and rubricollis, Enl. 931; Lath. Supp. I, 118; Naum. 70, f. 107, (The Grey-cheeked Grebe), also has the front of its neck red, but the tufts of the adult are small and black, and its collarette very short and grey. Intermediate, as to size, between the two last. Col. minor, Gm., Enl. 905, (The Little Grebe), is as large as a Quail, and has neither crest nor collarette; its plumage is brown, more or less shaded with red, the breast and belly excepted, where it is a silver-grey. The throat of the young bird is white -j". Hemornis, Bonnaterre. — Podoa, Illig. — Grebifoulques, Buff. Have feet lobulate as in the Coots and Grebes, but the tail more de- veloped than in either of the two; the nails also are sharper J. * Colymbus, the Greek name of these birds. t Add the Gr. de la Caroline {Pod. carolhiensis, Lath.), Catesb. 41, 91; Enl. 93;— the Gr. aux belles joues {Pod. kalipnreus, Less, and Gam.), Voy. de la Coq., Zool. No. 45 ; — the Gr. Rolland {Pod. Rollandi), Quoy and Gaym., Voy. de Freycin., Zool. pi. xxxvi. X Plotus surinamensis, Gmel., EnL 893; — Heliornis senegalensis, Vieill. Gal. 280. PALMIPEDES. o59 Mergus*, Briss. — Colymbus, Lath. — Eudytes, Illig. The true Divers have the feet of ordinary Palmipedes, along with all the forms of the Grebes, that is, the anterior toes are united to their ends by membranes, and are terminated by pointed nails. They are northern birds, which rarely breed in France, where they arrive in winter; at that season they are occasionally seen on the coast. Col. glacialls, L.; Enl. 952; Col. immer, Gm., Wils. Am. IX, Ixxiv, 3; Naum. 06, f. 103. (The Great Northern Diver). The adult is two feet six inches in length, its head and neck black, chang- ing to a green with a whitish collar ; back, a blackish-brown dotted with whitish,; white beneath ; the lower mandible, which has a slight curve upwards, is marked by a groove beneath. The young birds, Col. immer, Gm., Briss. VI, x, 1, which more frequently visit the fresh waters, differ considerably as to the extent of the black on the neck, and of the grey or brown on the back, which, added to their diminished size, has occasioned a multiplication of the number of species. We distinguish Col, arcticus, L. ; Edw. 146; Naum. Supp. 30, f. 60; and the young, Enl. 914, Le Lumme (The Black-throated Diver), which is somewhat smaller; the back of the neck ash-coloured, and the lower mandible straight, and without a groove. The young resemble those of the preceding. Col. septentrionalis, Enl. 308 ; Edw. 97 ; Naum. 67, f. 94 ; Vieill. Gal. 282; Col. stellatus, Gm.; BufF. VIII, xxi; Enl. 992; Naum. Supp. 31, f. 62. (The Red-throated Diver). The adult male is brown above, white beneath ; face and sides of the neck ash-coloured ; front of the neck red. The female and the young are brown, dotted with white above, and all white beneath. URiAf , Briss. et Illig. The Guillemots have a bill which, though of the general form of the preceding, is covered with feathers, down to the nostrils ; there is also an emargination at the point which is somewhat arcuated. Their chief cha- racter, however, consists in the absence of the thumb. Their wings, much shorter than those of the Divers, scarcely enable them to flutter. They feed on fish, crabs, &c., and are found among rocky precipices where they breed. The large species, called the Great Guillemot, Colymbus troile, L., Enl. 903; Brit. Zool., pi. H; Edw. 359, 1; Frisch, 185, is the size of a Duck, the head and neck brown, back and wings blackish, and a white belly ; there is a white line upon the wing formed by M. Ch. Bonap., as well as Gmelin, thinks that this genus should be approximated to that of Anhinga. * Mergus (diver), the Latin name of some sea-bird difficult to determine. Lin- naeus, following Gesner, has applied it to the Merganser. Eudytes, a Greek word composed by Illiger, has the same meaning. f Uria, the Greek, or rather Latin'name of an aquatic bird which appears to have been either a Diver or a Grebe. Guillemot, the English name, would seem to indi- cate its stupidity. SflO BIRDa. the tips of the secondary quills. It inhabits the extreme north, al- though it breeds on the rocky coasts of England and Scotland. In very hard winters it is seen on those of France. There is a smaller species which is black, with the upper part of the wing white, Col. grylle, L. ; Vieill. Gal. 294; Choris., Voy. aut. du M., Isles Aleut, pi. xxii; sometimes mottled throughout with white, C. marmoratus, Frisch, Suppl. B., pi. 185, Edw. 50 and Penn., Arct. Zool. II, xxii, 2. Individuals are sometimes seen all white, C. lacteolus, Pall.* We may also separate from the Guillemots the Cephus-j-. Vulgarly called Greenland Divers, which have a shorter bill with a more arcuated back, but without any eraargination. The symphysis of the lower mandible is extremely short. Their wings are larger, and the mem- branes of their feet well indented. The species most known, called the Little Guillemot or Greenland Dove, Colymbus minor, Gm. ; Enl. 917; Mergulus Alle, Vieill. Gal. 295 ; Brit. Zool. pi. H, 4, f. 1 ; Edw. 91 ; Naum. Ed. I, 65, f. 102, is the size of a large pigeon, black above, white beneath, with a white line on the wing, as in the Guillemot. Its bill is black, and feet red. Inhabits all the northern coasts, and builds under ground. It is sometimes seen on the French coast in winter. Alca, Lin. Tlie Auks are known by the very much compressed, vertically raised bill, which has a trenchant back, and is usually grooved transversely ; and by the feet which are completely palmated, and have no thumb like those of the Guillemot. All these birds inhabit the northern seas. We may divide the genus into two subgenera. Fratercula, Briss. — Mormon, lUig. Or the Puffins, v/'hose bill, shorter than the head, is as high and higher at its base than it is long, which gives it a very extraordinary form ; a. folded skin usually covers its base. The nostrils placed near the edge are merely narrow slits. Tlieir small wings can* just sustain them for a moment; they live upon the ocean, like the Guillemots, and build their nests on the rocks. The most common species, Alca arctica, L., and lahradoria, Gm.; Mormon fratercula, Tem., Enl. 275 ; Brit. Zool., pi. H ; Edw. 358, 1 ; Frisch, 192; Naum. G5, f. 101, is the size of a pigeon, and has • Add the G. a gros hec (Uria Brunnichii , Sabine), Choris., Voy. aut. du M. pl.xxi; — Uria lacrymans, Lapil., lb. XXIII — consult the article inserted there on this genus by M. Valenciennes. f Cephus, the name of some sea birds often mentioned by the Greek writers, wliich appear to have been species of Petrel or Gull. Mcehring, and subsequently Pallas, applied the term to the Divers and Guillemots. Vieillot has changed it into Mergulus, Gal. 295. PALMIPEDES. oGl a black calotte and mantle ; white beneath. It sometimes builds its nests among tlie cliffs on the English coast, and is very common on those of France during the winter*. M. Temminck distinguishes, under the name of Staryques (Phaleris), those species which have a less elevated billf . The true Auks have a more elongated bill, resembling in form the blade of a knife ; it is covered with feathers as far as the nostrils. Their wings are decidedly too small to support them, and therefore they never attempt to fly. They are sometimes seen in France and on its coasts during winter. Alca torda and pica, Gm. ; Pingouin commun, Enl. 1004, the adult, 1003, in summer plumage, Edw. 358, 2, Briss. VI, VIII, 2, Brit. Zool. pi. H, 1. (The Common Auk). Black above, white beneath ; a white line on the wing and one or two on the bill. The throat of the male is black, and there is a white line reaching from the eye to the bill. Its size is about the same as a duck's. ^Ica impenniSf'L.; Le Grand Pingouin, Buff. IX, xxix; Enl. 367; Edw. 147. (The Great Auk). Nearly as large as a goose, the colours very similar to those of the preceding species ; but the bill is entirely black and marked with eight or ten grooves, and there is a white oval spot between the bill and the eye : its wings are shorter in proportion than those of any other species of this genus. It is said to lay but one large egg, spotted with purple. ^^ Aptenodytes, Forst. The Penguins "are even less capable of flying than the Auks. Their little wings are covered with mere vestiges [of feathers, which, at the first glance, resemble scales ; their feet, placed farther behind than those of any other bird, only support them by bearing on the tarsus, which is wi- dened like the sole of the foot of a quadruped, and in which are found three bones soldered together at their extremities. They have a small thumb directed inwards, and their three anterior toes are united by an entire mem- brane. They are only found in the Antarctic Seas, never going on shore except to build their nests. They can only reach their nests by drawing themselves painfully along on their bellies. The difference in their bill authorizes their division into three subgenera. Aptenodytes, Cuv. The Penguins, properly so called, have a long, slender, and pointed bill; the upper mandible a little arcuated near the end; covered with fea- • Add, /J. cirrhaia, Pall. Spic. V, pi. 1 ; Vieill. Gal. 299. t /Ilea cristatcUa, Vieill. Gal. 297', or Staryque crystatelle, T. Col. 200, and Pall., Spic. Zool. V, pi. 1, of which A. pi/gvuea is the young;— ^if. psiliactila, Pall., Spic. V, pi. 2, of which ^. tetracula, lb., pi. 4, is the young. X Alca, Aik, Auk, the name of these birds in tlie Fero Islands, and in the north of Scotland. That of Penguin, first given to the Aptenodytes of the south by the Dutch, indicates the oily nature of their fat. See Clusius, ICxot. 101. It was Buf- fon who transferred this name exclusively to the northern Auks. 362 BIRDS. thers to one third of its length where tlie nostril is placed, from which a groove extends to the point. Apt. patagoniea, Gm. ; Le Grand Manchot, Enl. 975. (The Great Penguin). Is the size of a goose, slate-coloured above, white beneath ; a black mask, surrounded with a lemon-coloured cravatte. Found in large troops near the straits of Magellan, and as far as New Guinea. The flesh, though black, is eatable. Catarrhactes, Briss. The Gorfus* have the bill stout, but little compressed, pointed, round- ed on the back, and its point somewhat arcuated; the groove which arises from the nostril terminates obliquely on the inferior third of its edge. Apt. chrysocoma, Gm. ; Le Gorfou sauteur,'En\.9M; Vieill. Gal. " 298. (The Jumping Gorfu). As large as a stout duck, black above, white beneath, and has a white or yellow tuft on each side of its occiput. Found in the vicinity of the Falkland Islands and of New Holland, It sometimes leaps out of the water while swimming, and lays its eggs in a hole on the shore f. A compressed and straight bill, irregularly furrowed at the base ; end of the upper mandible hooked, that of the lower one truncated ; the nostrils exposed and placed in the middle. Apt. demersa, Gm. ; Sphenisque du Cap, Enl. 382 and 1005. Black above, white beneath ; the bill brown with a white band on the middle ; the male has in addition a white eyebrow, black throat and a black line on the breast, which continues along each flank. Found near the Cape, where it breeds among the rocks § . FAMILY II. LONGIPENNES, or GREAT SAILS. Comprises those birds of the high seas, which, by means of their great power of flight, are spread in every part of the world, and are met in every *' Gorfu, a corruption of goir fugel, the name of the Great Auk in the Fero Islands. See Clusius, Exot. 367. Catarrhactes is the Greek name of a very different bird, which could fly well, and precipitated itself from a height on its prey. It was most prohably a species of Gull. \ Add, Apt. catarrhactes, Edw. 49; — A.papua, Sonncr. Voy. I, pi. 115, and Vieill, Gal. 299;— ^.»«wor, Lath. Syn. Ill, pi. 103. X Spheniscus, a. name given by Mcehring to the Oidemia, and by Brisson to the Penguins; from the Greek word Sphen (wedge). § Aptenod. torquata, Sonner. Voy. I, 114, appears to be the female of the Apt. de- mersa. PALMIPEDES. 363 region by sailors. They are recognized either by the complete absence of the tliumb, or|by having an exceedingly small one ; by their very long wings ; by their bill, which, instead of being notched, is hooked at its extremity in the first of the genera, and is but simply pointed in those comprising the remaining genera. Their inferior larynx has but one peculiar muscle on each side, their gizzard is muscular, and tlieir caeca short. Procellaria, Lin. The Petrels have a bill hooked at the end, the extremity of which seems to consist of a distinct piece articulated to the remainder. Their nostrils are united and form a tube which lies on the buck of the upper mandible : there is a nail planted in the heel, instead of a thumb. Of all the Palmipedes, these remain most constantly at a distance from land, and when a tempest supervenes, they are forced to seek shelter on reefs and ships, from which circumstance they derive their name of Storm Birds : that of Petrel — Little Peter — has been given to them on account of their habit of walking on the water, which they effect by the aid of their wings. They make their nests in holes of rocks, and eject on those who attack them an oily fluid, with which it would appear that their stomachs must be always filled. The greater number of species inhabit the Antarctic Seas. Those species are more particularly called Petrels — Procellakia — whose lower mandible is truncated. Proc. gigantea, Gm.; Petrel geant ; Quebranta huessos, or Bri- \^\ seur d'os; Lath. Syn. Ill, pi. 100 (the Giant Petrel), is only «.■•" found in the South _Seas. Tt surpasses the Goose in size. Its plumage is blackish, though there are some varieties in which it is more or less white. In the same seas are found, Proc. capensis; Petrel du Cap; Le Damier ; Pintado, &c. ; Enl. 964, (the Cape Petrel), is the size of a small Duck, white above, spotted black and white beneath. It is frequently spoken of by navigators *. We see, sometimes, on the coast of France, Proc. glacialis ; Petrel gris-hlanc, or Fulmar ; Petrel de Saint- Kilda, Enl. 59; Brit. Zool. pi. M, f. 1. (The Fulmar). White, with an ash-coloured mantle; bill and feet yellow; size of a stout duck. It breeds among the cliffs on the coasts of the British islands, and of the whole north -j-. Certain small species, with a somewhat shorter bill, and rather longer legs and black plumage, the Thalassidroma, Vigors, are particularly designated by sailors under the name of Storm Birds\, The most common, Proc. pelagica, Briss. VI, xiii, 1 ; Wils. VII, * Better known to mariners as the Cape Pigeon. — Eng. Ed. t Add the Petrel hartie, Temm., Col. 416;— the Petrel birard, Freycinet, 37; — Proc. cinerea, Lath.; — Proc. desolata, Id.; — Proc. turtur, Forst. X The " Mother Carey's Chickens" of the English and American seamen. — Eng. Ed, 364 BIRDS. lix, 6 ; Edw. 00, is scarcely larger than a Lark ; stands high ; all brown except the rump, which is white, and a white line on the end of the great wing-coverts. When it seeks shelter on a vessel, it may be considered as the forerunner of a hurricane *. We separate, wuth Brisson, under the name of PuFFINUS, Or Puffins, those in which the end of the lower mandible is curved down- wards along with that of the upper one, and in which the nostrils, al- though tubular, do not open by one common orifice, but by two distinct holes. Their bill also is proportionally longer. Proc. puffinus, Gm. ; Puffin cendre, Enl. 962. Cinereous above ; whitish beneath ; wings and tail blackish; the young is darker. Its size is that of a Crow\ Very common in almost every sea -j-. There is a species, long confounded with the preceding one, which is not larger than a Woodcock, and which breeds in immense numbers on the northern coasts of Scotland and the neighbouring islands, whose inhabitants salt them for their winter provision. It is black above and white underneath, the Proeellaria Anglorum, Tem. Edw. 359. Navigators occasionally speak of some birds of the Antarctic seas by the name of Petrels, which may constitute two separate genera. They are the Pelecanoides, Lacep. — Halodroma, Illig., Which have the bill and figure of the Petrels, with a dilatable throat like that of the Cormorant, and are without the vestige of a thumb like the Albatross. Such are the Proeellaria urinatrix, Gm., and Pachyptila, Illig. i Or the Prions, Lacep., which, similar in other respects to the Petrels, have ieparate nostrils like a Puffin, the bill widened at the base, and its edges furnished internally with very delicate, vertical and pointed laminae, analogous to those of ducks. Such are the Blue Petrels, Proc. vittata and ccerulea, Forst. Diomedea]:, Lhi. The Albatrosses are the most massive of all aquatic birds. Their large, • The fig. Enl. 933, is a closely allied species of the South Seas (Proc. oceanica, Forst.).— Add, Proc. Leachii, Tem. Act. de Phil. VI, pi. 9, f. I;— Proc. WUsonii, Ch. Bonap.; Wils. VII, Ixx, 6; Id. Act. de Phil. VI, pi. 9, f. 2;— Proc. /regatta, Lath., Rochef., Antill. p. 152;— Proc. marina, Vieill. Gal. 292. t Add, Proc. obscura, VieiW. Gal. 301; and Proc. pactfica, or fuUginosa, White, 252, which perhaps does not differ from the Proc. aquinoctialis, Edw. 89. J Diomedea, the ancient name of certain birds of the Island of Diomedes, near Tarentum, which were said to receive the Greeks favourably, and to attack the barba- rians. As to the word Albatross, I find that the early Portuguese navigators called the Boobies and other oceanic birds Alcatros, or Alcatrass. Dampier applied this name to the present genus, Grew changed it into Albitross, and Edwards into Alba- tross. PALMIPEDES. 3G5 stlrong, and trenchant bill is marked with sutures, and is terminated by a stout hook, which seems to be articulated to it. The nostrils resemble short rolls laid on the sides of the bill ; there is no thumb, not even the small nail that is observed in the Petrels. They inhabit all the South seas, and feed on the spawn of fish, moUusca, &c. D. exulans, L., Enl. 237; Vieill. Gal. 293, is the species best known to navigators, who, on account of its size, white plumage, and black wings, and because it is particularly common beyond the tropic of Capricorn, have called it The Cape Sheep. The English also style it the Man of War Bird, &c. It is the great enemy of the Flying-fish. It constructs a raised-up nest of earth, and lays a number of eggs, which are considered good food. The cry of this bird is said to be as powerful as that of the Ass*. Various Albatrosses, more or less brown or blackish, have been observed; but whether they form varieties of the exulans, or are distinct species, has not yet been ascertained -i". LarusJ, Lin. The Gulls have a compressed, elongated, pointed bill, the superior mandible arcuated near the end, and the inferior forming a salient angle beneath. The nostrils, placed near its middle, are long, narrow, and bored quite through; their tail is full, their legs tolerably long, and their thumb short. They are cowardly and voracious birds, which swarm along the sea coasts, feeding on fish, the flesh of dead bodies, &c. They build nests in the sand, or in clefts of rock, laying but few eggs. When they fly into the interior of a country bad weather may be expected. Several species are found on the coast of France, and, as their plumage is greatly changed by age, the number has been still more increased. When young, tliey are usually spotted with grey. BufFon calls GoELANDsll, The large species whose size exceeds that of a Duck. One of the largest is Lar. marinus and ncevius, Gm. ; Goeland a manteau noir, Enl. 990 and 266 (the Great Black-backed Gull), which, at first, spotted with white and grey, afterwards becomes all white, with a black mantle ; the bill is yellow, with a red spot underneath ; feet reddish. Lar. glaucusy Gra. ; Burgomestre ; Naum. Ed. I, 36, is nearly • Dr. M'Murtrie obsen'es, that the cry of the Albatross has been quite as much exaggerated as its size. He has repeatedly heard it when within a hundred yards of the bird, and from various individuals, some of large size, and consequently adults; and he describes it as a piping kind of clang, deeper than that of a Goose, but some- thing like it. — Eng. Ed. f Such is the Diom. spadicea. — Add, D. brachyura, Tem., Enl. 963; — D. melano- phris, T. Col. 456;— Z). chlororhynchos, Lath. V, pi, xciv, Col. 468;— i). fuliginosa, Col. 469. X Larus, the Greek name of these birds, Gavia in Latin, whence Gahian in Pro- vence; they are called Mattves, or Mouettes, in French, from their German name Maeve. II Goeland, a corruption of Gull, Gull-eut. d8S BIRDS. as large, and only differs from it in the mantle, which is a light ash- colour. Its young also are spotted*. The MaUVES or MOUETTES Are the smallest species. Lar. fuscus, Jj.; Lar. flavipes, Meyer, Frisch, 218; Naum. Ed. I, f. 51, B. (The Silver Gull). Is all white, the mantle ex- cepted, which is black; the feet are yellow. Lar. eburneus, Gm. ; Mouette blanche, Enl. 994. (The Ivory Gull). All white, with black feet. From Spitzbergen and Green- land: sometimes wanders into Europe. Lar. cyanorhynchus, Meyer ; Mouette a pieds bleus, Enl. 977, Briss. VI, xvi, 2. (The Common Gull). When old, of a beauti- ful white, with a light ash-coloured mantle ; the primary quills of the wing partly black, with white spots at the tips, the feet and bill lead coloured. Feeds chiefly on shell-fish. Lar. ridibundus, L. ; L. hybernus, and Z. erythropus, Gm.;' La Mouette a pieds rouges, Enl. 969 and 970; Briss. VI, xvii, 1. Is very similar to the preceding, except that when young the tip of the tail is black, and that there are some black and brown on the wing: in spring the head of the adult becomes brown, and remains so dur- ing the summer — Enl. 970; the feet and bill are more or less red. It has been called, from its note, the Laughing Gullf. Lar. tridactylus, and Lar. rissa, Gm. ; La M. a trois doigts, Briss. VI, xvi, 1, and xvii, 2, is also very similar to the preceding species, but may be distinguished by its very short and imperfect thumb. When young it is more or less spotted with black or brown, Enl. 387. The GoELANDS and Mouettes. — The Stercoraires, Briss. — Lestris J, Blig. — Labbes, Buff. They have the membranous nostrils larger than those of the latter, open nearer to the point and edge of the bill ; their tail is pointed. They pursue the small Gulls with singular ferocity to rob them of their food, and, as it is said, to devour their excrement. Hence their name. Lar. parasiticus, Gm. ; Labbe a longue queue, Enl. 762 ; Edw. 148. (The Arctic Gull). A deep brown above, white beneath: * M. Temminck distinguishes the Lar. argentatus, Lalh. Enl. 253.— Add, the Goeland leiicomele, Vieill. 61, and the Gael, a tete noire dii Bengale (a). t Add, Lar. atricilla, Pall. Nov. Com. Peti-. XV, xxii, 2; Catesb. I, 89; Wils. IX, Ixxiv, 4, by the name of ridibundus; — Lar. leucopterus ; — L. cirrhocephalus, Vieill. Gal. 289, or poliocephalus, Licht. ; — L. leucopthalmus, Licht. Col. 366; — L. Sabini, Leach.; — L. minutus, Falk. Voy. Ill, xxiv; — L. melanurus, T. Col. 459, and Tiles, Voy. de Krusenst pi. Ivii. X Lestris, thief, the name of these birds among the Swedish fishermen. Vieillot has changed these names to Stercoreus. 1^^ (a) Add, L. capistratus, Temm.; — L. canus, L., Enl. 977; — L. argentatus, Brunn., Enl. 253; — L. argentatoides, Brelim. — Eng. Ed. Py\LMlPEDES. 367 tlie two middle quills of the tail are double the length of the others. It is very rare in France. When young it is all brown, and is then the Lar. crepidatus, Gni. ; Enl. 991, or better, Edw. 149*. The arctic regions produce a species of the size of a Goeland, which is brown, with the base of the wing-quills white, Lar. cata- ractes, Gm., Brit. Zool. pi. L, 0; and another the size of a Mouette, brown above, white underneath, with a brown collar on the breast, the Lestris pomarinus, Tern, -j- Sterna:}:, Lin. The Terns, or Sea-Swallows, derive this latter appellation from their excessively long and pointed wings and from their forked tail, which ren- der their flight and carriage analogous to those of Swallows. Their bill is pointed, compressed, and straight, without curve or projection; the nostrils, towards the base, are oblong and pierced quite through; the membranes which unite their toes are deeply emarginate, consequently they swim but seldom. They fly over the waves in every direction and with great rapidity, uttering loud cries, and skilfully raising from the sur- face of the water the moUusca and small fish on which they feed. They also penetrate to the lakes and rivers of the interior. The most common species that is found on the fresh waters of France in the spring is, St. hirundo, L, ; Pierre-Garin, or Hirondelle de mer a bee rouge, &c., Enl. 987; Frisch, 219; Naum. 37, f. 52; Wils. VII, Ix, 1. (The Common Tern). In the adult state white, with a light ash- coloured mantle, black calotte, red feet, and red bill with a black point. It is about one foot long, and two feet from the tip of one wing to that of the other. St. minuta, L.; Petit Hir. de mer, Enl. 996; Wils. V, Ix, 2; Naum. 38, f. 55. (The Small Tern). Only differs from the pre- ceding by being a third smaller, and having a white forehead. St. cantiaca, Albin. II, Ixxxviii; Hir. de mer a bee noir, is larger ' than aS'. hirundo ; the bill is black, with a yellow point: the St.' striata, Gm., Lath. VI, pi. 98, is its young. St. caspia, Pall. Sparm., Mus. Carls., Ixii; Meyer, Ois. d'Al- lem., II, vi; Sav., Egypt., Ois. pi. ix, F. 1. (The Caspian Tern). The largest of the European species; white, with an ash-coloured mantle ; occiput, black and white mixed ; red bill and black feet. St. niyra, fissipes and ncevia; Hir. de mer noire, Enl. 338 and 924; Frisch, 220. (The Black Tern). The tail less forked; when 'yo"i^g> its mantle is spotted Avith black ; the adult is almost entirely of a blackish ash-colour. Among the species foreign to Europe, we should notice the Hir. * The L. crepidatus, Brehm. is identical with the L. Buffonli, Boie, Enl. 762, — Eng. Ed. f I cannot affirm the identity of the Lestris catarractes, Freycin. 38, and of the Slercoreus pomarinus, Vieill. Gal. 288, with the above species. X Stern, or Tern, is their English name, latinized as above by Turner, and ad- mitted by Gesner. 968 BIRDS. de mer h aigrettes, St. inca, Less, and Gam,, from the coast of Peru, Voy. de la Coq., Zool. pi. 47, which is black; red bill and feet ; a band on the cheek, and the feathers of the ear pendent and white *. We may also distinguish from the other Terns, The Noddies, Whose tail is not forked, and is nearly as long as the wings. There is a slight projection under their bill, the first indication of that in the Mauves. But one species is known, St. stolida,J^.; Noddi noir, Enl. 997, (The Noddy), which is a blackish brown, top of the head whitish. Celebrated amongst navigators for the blundering manner in which it throws itself on vessels f. Rhynchops, Lin. The Skimmers, or Scissor Bills, resemble the Terns in their small feet, long wings and forked tail, but are not distinguished from all birds by their extraordinary bill, the upper mandible of which is shorter than the other, both being flattened so as to form simple blades, which meet with- out clasping. Their only mode of feeding is by skimming their aliment from the surface of the water with the lower mandible, which they effect while on the wing. One species, Rhym. nigra, L., Enl. 357, (The Black Skimmer), is white^ with a black mantle and calotte ; a white band on the wing ; outside of the external quills of the tail white ; bill and feet red ; hardly as large as a pigeon. It inhabits the seas near the Antilles J. FAMILY III. THE TOPIPALMAT^. This family is characterized by a remarkable peculiarity, that of having their thumb united with the other toes by means of a single mem- brane, and yet, despite this organization, which renders their feet most perfect oars — the only birds amongst the Palmipedes possessing the pecu- • Add of Europ. Spec: St. Dougalii, Montag.; Vieill., Gal. 290;— 5^ angUca, Id., or aranea, Wils. VIII, Lxxii, 6; — St. arctica, Tem.; — St. leucopareia, Natter.; — St. leucoptera, Tem., Schinz. Ois. de Suisse, frontisp. Of spec, foreign to Europe: St. cay ana, Enl. 998; — St. vielanauchen, Tem. Col. 427; — St. melanogasler, Id. Col. 434; — St. fiiUginosa, Wils. f The St. phillippevsis, (Sonner. Voy. I, pi. Ixxxv), does not appear to differ from the stoHcla; — the St. fuscata, Lath., Briss., VF, pi. xxi, 1, also seems to belong to this subgenus, as well as the St. tenuirostris, T. Col. 202. -?5j Add Rht/7i. flavirosliis, Vieill. Gal. 291; — Rh. cinerascetis, Spix, CII; — R. breci- rostris, Id. CI 1 1. PALMIPEDES. 369 liarity — they are able to perch on trees. They all fly well and have short feet. Linnaeus separated them into three genera, the first of which it was necessary to subdivide. Pelecanus, L'm. The Pelicans comprise all those in which the base of the bill is found to have some part destitute of feathers. Their nostrils are fissures, the apertures of which are scarcely perceptible. The skin of their throat is more or less extensible, and their tongue very small. Their thin gizzard, with their other stomachs, forms a large sac. Their cseca are moderate or small. Pelecanus*, Illuj. — Onocrotalus, Briss. The bill of the true Pelicans is very remarkable for its extreme length, its straight, very broad and horizontally flattened form, for the hook which terminates it, and for the lower mandible whose flexible branches sustain a naked membrane, susceptible of being dilated into a large sac. Two grooves extend along its length, in which the nostrils are concealed. The circumference of the eye is naked, and the tail round. P. onocrotalus, L.; Enl, 87; Edw. 92; Frisch, 18G. (The Common Pelican). As large as a Swan, entirely white; slightly tinged with flesh colour; the hook of the bill of a cherry-red; is more or less disseminated throughout the eastern continent, builds in marshes, and feeds exclusively on living fish. It is said to transport both food and water in its sac. The diff'erent changes this bird undergoes from age are not sufficiently ascertained to render certain the species of its genus that are enumerated f. Phalacrocorax, Briss. — Carbo, Meyer. — Halieus, Illig. The Cormorants I have an elongated and compressed bill, the end of the upper mandible hooked, and that of the lower one truncated; the tongue is very small, and the skin of the throat less dilatable ; the nos- trils resemble a small unpierced line, and the nail of the middle toe is notched like a saw. The True Cormorants have a round tail composed of fourteen quills. * Pelecanus and Onocrotalus are two Greek names of this bird latinized. f I see no difference between the Common Pelican and the Pelec. roseus, Sonner. Prem. Voy. pi. liv. As to the Pelec. manilknsis, Id. LIII, Sonnerat himself says he thinks it is the young of the roseus. Neither can I find any difference between the fuscus, Edw. 93, and that of the PI. Enl. 965, called roseus, but which is much more like the manillensis. Temminck thinks this figure represents the young of the com- mon species. The philippensis, Briss., VI, pi. Ivi, is the same specimen from which the PI. Enl. 965 was taken, so that both are the young of the onocrotalus. That of pi. 957, also called fuscus, appears to be really a species identical with that of Vieill. Gall. 276.— Add the Pel. a lunettes, {P. perspicillatus, T.) Col. 276. X Cormorant, from Cormoran, a corruption of Corbeau marin, on account of its black colour. It is in fact the Aquatic Crow of Aristotle, Phalacrocorax {Bald Crow) is the Greek name of this bird, indicated by Pliny, but is not employed by Aristotle. That of Carbo is only used by Albert, who perhaps derived it from the Gemian name Scharb. To all tliese names Vieillot has added that of Hydrocora.r, Gal. 275. 370 BIRDS. Pel. carlo, L. ; Enl. 927; the young, Friscli, 187 and 188; and Brit. Zool., pi. L, 1. (The Cormorant). Black-brown, undu- lated with jet black on the back, and mixed with wdiite near the end of the bill and front of the neck; circumference of the throat and the cheeks white in the male, which also has a tuft on the occiput. Its size is that of the goose. It breeds in holes among the rocks or upon trees, and lays three or four eggs. Pel. graeulus, Gm.; Enl. 974, the young. (The Little Cormo- rant). Is somewhat smaller, of a deeper black and more bronzed ; no white on the front of the neck ; the feathers on the back more pointed; not so common as the preceding species*. Tachypetes, Vieill. Tlie Frigate Birds differ from the Cormorants in their forked tail and short feet, the membranes of which are deeply emarginated ; in an exces- sive length of wing, and in a bill both of whose mandibles are curved at the point. So powerful are their wings, that they fly to an immense dis- tance from all land, principally between the tropics, darting upon the Fly- ing Fish and striking the Boobies to make them disgorge their prey. One species only is well known, the Peleeanus aquilus, L. ; Enl. 961 ; Vieill. Gal., pi. 274, whose plumage is black, the under part of the throat and neck more or less varied with white, and the bill red. Its wings, when expanded, are said to measure from ten to twelve feetf . SuL.\, Briss. — Dysporus, Illig. The Boobies J have a straight, slightly compressed, pointed bill, the point slightly arcuated; its edges are serrated, the teeth inclining back- wards; the nostrils are prolonged by a line which extends to near the point. The throat is naked as well as the circumference of the eye, the former not being susceptible of much dilatation; the nail of the middle toe is serrated, the wings much smaller than those of the Frigates, and the tail somewhat wedge-shaped. They are called Boobies on account of the excessive stupidity wdth which they permit themselves to be attacked by men and birds, the Frigate Birds particularly, which, as already stated, force them to yield up the fish which they have captured. The most common is, Peleeanus bassanus, L. ; Enl.. 278; Vieill.; Brit. Zool. pi. L; Naum. Sup. 56, f, 106. Le Fou de Bassan. (The Common Booby). White ; the primary quills of the wings and the feet black ; the bill greenish; nearly as large as the goose. It is called the Bassan * Add the Cormoran longup., Tem. {Pel. cristatus, Olafs.), Voy. en Isl., tr. fr. pi. xliv, Col. 322, and Vieill. Gal. 276;— Pe/. qfricanus, Lath.;— Sparm. Mus. Carls. 1, 10; — Pelec. pygmcciis, Pall. Voy. App., pi. 1. \ Naturalists have, somewhat gratuitously, raised to the rank of species the Pelec. minor, Edw. 309, and 'Uucocephalus, Buff. Ois. VIII, pi. xxx, and perhaps even the P. Palmerstvni, Lath. X Sula is the name of the common species at the Fero Islands, Hoyer, Clusius, Exot. 36. Booby, their English name, from their stupidity, ut sup. FALMIl'KDES. ^fl Boohy, from a small island in the gulf of Edinburgh, where it is very abundant, although it lays but a single egg. It is frequently seen on the coast of France during the winter. The young is brown, spotted with white, Enl. 98(). The remaining species of the Boobies are not yet sufficiently ascertained*. Plotus, Lin. The Darters have a body and feet very similar to those of a Cormorant, carry a long neck and small head, with a straight, slender, pointed bill, whose edges are denticulated; the eyes and nudity of the face are also the same as in the Pelicans, with whose habits theirs are similar, perching like them on trees. Several species or varieties are known from the hot climates of both continents. They are not larger than the duck, but they have a longer neckj. Phaeton, Lin. The Straw-tailed or Tropical Birds are known by two very long and nar- row feathers that flow from their tail, which at a distance resemble so many straws. There is no naked part about the head. Their bill is straight, pointed, denticulated, and tolerably strong; their feet short and their wings long: their powers of flight on the high seas are consequently great, and, as they rarely quit the torrid zone, their presence announces to the mariner his vicinity to the tropics. On land, where they seldom resort except to build their nests, they perch on trees. A few species or varieties only are known, whose white plumage is more or less varied with blackish, and which are not larger than pigeons §. FAMILY IV. LAMELLIROSTRES. The birds of this family have a thick bill, invested with a soft skin rather than with true horn ; its edges are furnished with laminae or little teeth; the tongue is broad and fleshy, the edges notched. Their wings arc of a moderate length. They pass more of their time on fresh water than at sea. The trachea of the male, in the greater number, is inflated « Add the Fou brim {Pelec sula, L.), Enl. 973, Catesb. I, 87; Vieill. Gal. 277. f Plotus, or plaiitus, signifies, in Latin, flat-foot. Klein lias employed it for one of his families of the Palmipedes. Linnaeus applied it to the Darters. + Plot, mclanogaster, Enl. 95!) and 960; Vieill. Gal. 278; Wils. LX, Ixxiv, I, 2;— Enl. 107;— Latlu Syn. VI, pi. {)6;—Jnliinga Lcvaillant, T. Col. 380. § Pluset. teiherius, Enl. 369 and 998-— PA. phanicitrus, Enl. 979, Vieill. Gnl. pi. 279. 372 BIRDS. near its bifurcation into capsules of various forms. The gizzard is large, and very muscular, the ceeca long. The great genus, Anas, Li7i. Comprises those Palmipedes, the edges of whose large and broad bill are furnished with a range of thin salient laminae, placed transversely, which appear destined to allow the water to pass off when the bird has seized its prey. They are divided into three subgenera, whose limits, however, are not very precise. Cygnus, Meyer. The Swans have the bill of an equal breadth throughout, higher at its base than it is wide; the nostrils about the middle of its length; the neck is very long. They are the largest birds of the genus, and feed chiefly on the seeds and roots of aquatic plants. Their intestines and caeca in particular are consequently very long. There is no inflation of the trachea. Two species are found in Europe. Anas olor, Gm. ; Cigne a bee rouge, Enl. 913. (The Red-billed or Domestic Swan). Bill red, edged with black, surmounted at the base by a rounded protuberance ; the plumage snow-white. When young the bill is lead-coloured and the plumage grey. This is the species, when domesticated, that forms the ornament of our ponds and grounds. The gentleness of its motions, the elegance of its form, the brilliant whiteness of its plumage, contribute to make it the emblem of beauty and innocence. It lives indifferently on fish and vegetables, flies at a great elevation, and with considerable ra- pidity, and swims swiftly, availing itself of the wind by means of its wings, vdiich further serve it as a powerful weapon to strike the enemy by whom it is attacked. Jn. cygnus, Gm. ; Edw. 150; Brit. Zool. pi. 1; Naum., Ed, I, t. 13, f. 27. Cigne a bee noir. (The Black-billed Swan). Bill black, with a yellow base ; the body white tinged with a yellowish- grey — when young, all grey. This species, which is very similar externally to the preceding one, differs essentially from it internally, in the trachea, which is bent over and penetrates to a considerable extent in a cavity of the keel of the sternum, a peculiarity common to both sexes, which does not exist in the domestic Swan. The latter is also erroneously called the fVild Swan, and the Singing Swan. The story of its singing on the approach of death is a fable. An. plutonia, Sh.; A. atrata, Lath.; Cigne noir; Nat. Misc. pi. 108; Vieill. Gal. 286 (The Black Swan), has been lately discovered in New Holland; it is the size of the common species, but its car- riage is less graceful and elegant; it is all black, the primary quills excepted, which are white, and the bill with the naked skin on its base, which is red*. It is impossible to separate from the swans, certain species, much less * TheO/e a cravatle {An. canadensis, L.), Eul. 346, Wils. LXVII, 4, appears to me to be a true swan. PALMIPEDES. 373 elegant, it is true, but which have the same kind of bill. Several have a tubercle at its base. The most common, /In. cygnoides, L. ; Oi de Guinee, Enl. 357, is bred in poultry- yards, where it mixes with the geese. It is a whitish-grey with a brown-grey mantle ; the male is recognised by a feathered appendage which hangs under his bill, and by a large tubercle which surmounts its base. Another species, much rarer, called by its first describers j4n. (jamhensis, L. ; Oi de Gamble, Lath. Syn. Ill, p. 2, pi. 102, is remarkable for its size, long legs, tubercle on the forehead, and for two large spurs with which its wing is armed. Its plumage is a purple black, the throat, and under part of the body and wings, white*. Anser, Briss. Geese have a moderate or short bill, narrower before than behind, and higher than wide at the base ; their legs, being longer than those of the ducks, and placed nearer the centre of the body, increase their facility in walking. Several of them feed on seeds and plants. There is no in- flation at the root of the trachea, nor is there any curve in that organ in any of the species known. Geese, properly so called, Have a bill as long as their head ; the ends of the lamellae extend to its edges, appearing like pointed teeth. yin. anser, L. (the Common Goose), which has acquired all sorts of colours in our poultry-yards, originates from a wild species that is grey, with a brown mantle undulated with grey and an orange- coloured bill, the y4ns. cinereus, Meyer; Albin. 90; Naum. Ed. I, pi. 41, f. 60. There is another species, however, which arrives late in the fall, and which may be known by its wings being longer than the tail, and by some white spots on the forehead; its bill is orange, with black base and point. Ans. seqetum, Meyer, Enl. 985; Frisch, 155; Naum. I, c. 42, f. 61. We have often seen, in winter. Anus alhifrons, Gm. ; LOie rieuse ; Edw. 153; Naum. Ed. I, 43, f. 62. (The White-fronted Goose). It i^ grey, with a black belly and white forehead. The north of both continents produces a fourth species. An. hyperborea, Gm. ; Wils. VIII, xlviii, 5 ; and the young Ixix, 5, Naum. Ed. I, Sup. pi. 23, f. 46. (The Snow-Goose). White; feet and bill red; tips of the wing-quills black. It some- times wanders into the temperate parts of Europe during the preva- lence of heavy gales in winter. The young bird is more or less grey. It is the An. ccerulescens, Gm., Edw. 152. The * Buff, has confounded this goose with a variety of the Oie d'Egypte, Enl. 982. The figure of Latham is defective, inasmuch as it shews hut one spur; the helmet also is not salient. This is also the place for the (He bronze a irete sur le bee, Ipeeati apoa, of Marcgr. {Am. melanolos), Enl. 937, Vieill. 285. 374> Barnacles* Are distinguished from the Common Geese by a shorter and slenderer bill, the edges of which conceal the extremities of the laminae. France is sometimes visited during the winter by that species from the north of Europe, which is so celebrated by the fabulous story of its growing on trees like fruit — Anas erythropus, Gm., or better, An. leueopsis, Bechst., Enl. 885 ; Frisch, 189; Naum. 1, c. 39, f. 77. Its mantle is ash-coloured, its neck black ; cheeks, throat, belly, and forehead white ; the bill black, and the feet grey. An. hernicla, Gm. ; Le Cravant\, 342; and better, Frisch, 156; Naum. I, c. 39, f. 78 ; Wils. VIII, Ixxii, 1 (the Brant), is from the same country. The head, neck, and quills of the wings are black; the mantle a brown grey; a spot on each side of the upper part of the neck, and the under part of the tail, white ; the bill black, and feet brown. A71. cecjyptiaca, Gm. ; Le Bernache armee ; Oie d' Afrique, du Cap, d'Egi/pte, &c., &c., Enl. 379, 982, 983 (the Egyptian Goose), remarkable for the lustre of its colours and the small spur attached to its wing, also belongs to this subgenus; it is sometimes domesti- cated, but always retains a propensity to return to its wild state. It is the Chenalopex or Fox Goose, held in veneration among the an- cient Egyptians, on account of its attachment to its young :|:. The Cereopsis, Lath. Is a New Holland bird, very similar to the Barnacles, with a still smaller bill, the membrane of which is much broader, and extends a little upon the forehead. Cer. cinereus, Lath., Col. 206; Vieill. Gal. 284, is the only one known. It is the size of a Goose, and of a grey colour. Anas, Meyer. The Ducks, properly so called, have the bill broader at its base than it is high, and wider at the end than towards the head, and the nostrils nearer to its back and base. Their legs being shorter than those of Geese, and placed farther back, renders walking more difficult to them than to the latter. Their neck also is shorter ; the trachea is inflated at its bifurcation into cartilaginous capsules, the left of which is usually the largest. The species of the first division, or those whose thumb is bordered with a membrane, have a larger head, a shorter neck, the feet placed * Barnacle is the Scotch name of Anser leueopsis, or the true Barnacle; Klake in this language signifies a goose. f Cravant, a corruption of grau-ent, grey Duck. X Geoff. St. Hilaire, Menag. du Mus. d'Hist. Nat. art. Oied'Egypte. Add, the An. magellanica, Enl. 1006; — An. antarctica, which is closely allied to it, Mus. Carls. 37, and Voy. de la Coq. Zool. 50; — An. leucoptr.ra, Brown., 111. 40; — A. ruficolUs and torquata, Pall. Spicil. VI, pi. iv, which is said to penetrate as far as Germany; — An. coromandelica, Enl. 949, 950; — An. madagascariensis, Enl. 770. PALMIPEDES. 375 farther back, smaller wings, a stiffer tail, more compressed tarsi, longer toes, and the membrane of the feet more entire. They walk with more difficulty, feed more exclusively on fish and insects, and dive more fre- quently*. Among them we may distinguish the OiDEMiA, OR THE Macreuses OR Sea-Ducks («), Fleming, By the breadth and inflation of the bill. Anas nigra, L. ; La Macreuse communr, Enl. 972; Naum. Supp. 14, f. 28 and 29; Brit. Zool. pi. U; Wils. VIII, Ixxii, 2, (the Scoter), is all black, greyish when young; the bill very broad, with a protuberance on its base. It is found in large flocks on the coast of France, where it feeds chiefly on muscles. The An. cine- raceibs, Naum. I, c. 60, f. 91, 92, is the young female. An fusca, L. ; La double Macreuse, Enl. 956 ; Frisch, 1 65 .; Naum. 1, c. Supp. f. 15 and 16; Wils. LXXII, 3 (the Velvet Duck), diff'ers in its superior size, a white spot on the wing, and a white streak under the eye. There is a circular vertically flattened inflation in the middle of its trachea. An. perspicillata, L. ; Enl. 995; Edw. 155; Wils. VIII, Ixvii, 1. (The Black Duck). Some white on the occiput and behind the neck; the naked and yellow skin of the base of the bill also sur- rounds the eyes. New Holland produces a speckled species, remarkable for a large fleshy appendage that hangs under its bill, An. lobata, Nat. Misc., VIII, pi. 255, and Col. 406 f • We may also separate Clangula, Leach. In which the bill is short and narrower towards the end ; and place first on the list those species the middle quills of whose tail are the longest, which renders it pointed. Such are An. glacialis, L., Enl. 1008; Edw. 280; Naum. 52, f. 76; Wils. VIII, Ixx, 1, 2; the young male, Enl. 999; Naum. 52, f. 76, B; the adult in wedding livery, Edw. 156. (The Sarcelle Duck). White ; a fawn-coloured spot on the cheek and side of the neck ; breast, back, tail, and part of the wing, black. Of all the European Ducks, this has the shortest bill. Its trachea, ossified near the root, has on one side five square membranous spaces re- sembling so many panes of glass, above which it is inflated into an osseous capsule. An. histrionica, L,; Enl. 798; Wils. VIII, Ixxii, 4; Edw. 99; * This division constitutes the genus Platypus, Brehm.; or Hydrobates, Teni.; or FiLiGULA, Ch. Bonap. t Add, the Jnas mersa and leucocephala, Voy. de Pall. fr. tr.. pi. v and vi ; Naum. Sup. 40, f. 79, SO;— the Jti. brachyptcra, Lath., Voy. de Freycin. pi. xxxix. ^^ (a) This genus is denominated by Cuvier Les Macreuses, a title which arises, he states, from the notion of the birds belonging to it being small eaters.— Eng. Ed. 376 BIRDS. Naum. I, c. 52, f. 77; and the female, An. minuta, 799; Edw. 197. (The Harlequin Duck). Ash-coloured; the male fantasti- cally streaked with white; eyebrows and flanks red. Each of the preceding species is occasionally seen in France, but at very long intervals. Then come the Garrots, the common species with a round or square tail. An. clangula, L. ; Le Garrot proprement dit, Enl. 802 ; the young. An. glaueion, L.*, Frisch, 181, 182; Naum. I, c. 55, f, 81, 82; Wils. VIII, Ixvii, 6. (The Golden-Eye). White; head, back, and tail, black; a small spot before the eye, and two bands on the wdng, white ; the bill blackish. The female is ash-coloured, with a brown head. The middle of the trachea is considerably dilated, the two arches of the sac, however, preserving their flexibility. It be- comes singularly widened near the bifurcation -}■. SoiiATERiA, Leach. The Eider Ducks have a longer bill than that of the preceding sub- genus, and ascending more on the forehead, where it is emarginated by an angle of feathers, but still narrower before than at its base. An. mollissima; L' Eider, Enl. 208, 209, the adults of both sexes, Mus. Carls. 39; the three years' old young male. Add, Edw. 98 ; AYils. VIII, xci, 2, 3 ; Naum. 64, f. 79, 80. (The Eider Duck). Whitish ; calotte, belly, and tail, black ; the female grey, speckled with brown. Celebrated for furnishing us with that va- luable article called eider down]};. After all these distinctions, there remains the FuLiGuxA, Leach. The Millouins, whose bill is broad and flat, but presents no other pecu- liarity. Several species are found in France, in which all the trachea terminates in nearly similar inflations, forming on the left a partially mem- branous capsule, supported by a frame and ramifications of bone. An. ferina, L., and A. rufa, Gm. ; Millouln commun, Enl. 803; Naum. I, c. 58, f. 87, 88; Wils. VIII, xc. 6. (The Red-head). Ash- coloured, finely striated with black ; head and top of the neck red; lower part of the neck and the breast brown; the bill a light lead-colour. Sometimes breeds among the reeds in the ponds of France. Its trachea is of an equal diameter. An. rufina, L. ; Mill, huppe, Enl. 928; Naum. I, c. 32, f. 63, 64. (The Pochard Duck). Black ; the back brown ; some white on the wing and fiank ; the head red, the feathers on its summit turned up into a tuft ; red bill. From the borders of the Caspian Sea, and occa«ionally driven by the winds as far as France. There • Glaueion, the Greek name of a Duck, so called on account of the colour of its eyes. t Add, An. albeola, Enl. 948, the same as An. bucephala, Catesb. I, 95; — A?!, bra- ckyplera, Voy. de Freycin. pi. xxxix. l Add, A)';, sp.ctnbilis, Sparm. Mus. Carls, II, pi. xxx\-i; Edw. 154; Naum. 40, i; .'53. 59. PALMIPEDES. 377 are two successive inflations of its trachea, besides the capsule of the bifurcation. An. marila,!..; Le Millouinan, Eiil. 1002; Brit. Zool. Q; Wils. VIII, Ixix, 3; Naum. 59, f. 90; the female, Jn. frcenata, ]\Ius. Carls. 38 ; Naum. 59, f. 90, B. (The Scaup Duck). Ash-colourcd, striated with black; head and neck black, changing to green; black rump and tail; the belly and spots on the wing white; the bill lead- coloured; arrive in small flocks in France during the winter from the remote parts of Siberia. Its trachea is very wide at the com- mencement, and then narrow. An. nyroca, Gm. ; A. leucopthalmos, Bechst, ; the female, A. africana, Gm.; Le Petit MUlouin, Enl. 1000; Naum. I, c. 39, f. 89. Brown; head and neck red; a white spot on the wing; belly whitish ; a brown collar on the bottom of the male's neck. Breeds in the north of Germany, and is rarely seen in France. Its trachea is very much inflated about the middle. An.fuligula, L. ; Le Morillon, Enl. 1001 ; Frisch, 171 ; Naum. I, c. 50, f. 83,84; Wils. VIII, Ixvii, 5; the young, Enl. 1007; An. scandiaca, Frisch, Yl, xxxvi, 1. 2. (The Tufted Duck). Black; the feathers of the occiput lengthened out into a tuft; the belly and a spot on the wing white; bill lead-coloured. Arrives in France every winter pretty regularly, from the North*. The Ducks of the second division f, whose thumb is not bordered with a membrane, have a more slender head, narrower feet, longer neck, the bill more equal, and not so thick a body ; they walk better, and feed on aquatic plants and seeds as much as on fish, and other animals. The in- flations of their trachea consist of a bony and cartilaginous substance which is homogeneous. RiiYNCHAPsis, Leach. The Souchets are very remarkable for a long bill, the upper mandible of which, forming the exact half of a perfect cylinder, is widened at the end. Its lamellae are so long and delicate that ihey resemble hairs. These birds feed on small worms, which they obtain from the mud on t!ie edge of brooks. An. cli/peata, L. ; Souchet commun, Enl. 971, 972; Frisch, IGl, 1G2, 1G3; Wils, VIII, Ixvii, 7; Naum. 49, f. 70, 71. (The Shove- ler). A beautiful duck, with a green head and neck, white breast, red belly, and brown back ; the wings are variegated with white, ash colour, green, brown, &c. It visits France in the spring, and its flesh is excellent. The lower part of its trachea is but slightly in- flated. It is the Chenerotes of Pliny. An. fasciata, Sh., Nat. Misc. pi. 697, is another species found in * Add of species foreign to Europe: An. spinosa. Enl. 967, 968; — An. Slelleri, Pall. Spic, VI, pi. v;— ^«. lahradora, Wils. VII, Ixix, G;—An. valisneria,\h. LXX, 5; An. rubida, lb. LXXI, 5,6, of wliich, on account of its pointed tail, M. Cli. Bonap. makes his genus Oxyura. t It is to this second division that M. Ch. Bonap. particularly applies the name of Anas. VOL. 1. H H 378 DIRDS. New Hollaiul. The edges of its upper mandible are extended on eacii side into a membranous appendage. Tadorna*. The bill very much flattened towards the end, and bulging into a salient lump at its base. An. tadorna, L. ; Enl. 53; Frisch, 166; Naum. I, c. 55, f. 103 and 104. (The Shieldrake). The most highly coloured of all the European Ducks: white; the head green; a cinnamon-coloured cincture round the breast; the wing varied with black, white, red, and green. Common on the shores of the North Sea, and of the Baltic, where it builds its nest in the downs, and frequently in holes abandoned by rabbits. Its bifurcation is inflated into two nearly similar osseous capsules. Some Ducks of this second division have some naked parts about the head, and very often a lump on the base of the bill. An. moschata, L., Enl. 989, commonly but improperly called The Muscovy Duck {Le Canard de Barharie) ; originally from South America, where it is still found in its wild state, and where it perches on trees ; is now very common in our poultry yards, where it mixes with the Common Duck. Its capsule is very large, circular, verti- cally flattened, and all on the left side. Some of them have pointed tails. An. acuta, L.; Le Pilet, Enl. 954; Wils. VIII, Ixviii; Frisch, 160 and 168; Naum. 51, f. 74 and 75. (The Pintail). Ash-co- loured above and on the flanks, finely striped with black ; white be- neath ; the head tawny, &c. The capsule of the trachea is small. The males of others have some of the feathers of the tail recurved. An. boschas, L.f; Enl. 776, 777; Wils. VIII, Ixx, 7; Frisch, 158 and 159. (The Mallard). Is known by its pale yellow feet, yellow bill, the beautiful changeable green of the head, and rump of the male, Sec. In our poultry-yards it varies in colour, like all other domestic animals. The wild breed is common in the marshes; it builds among the reeds, in the hollow trunks of willows, and sometimes upon trees. Its trachea terminates below, in a large osseous capsule. A singular variety is found in the Hook-billed Dtick, the An. adunca, L. Some of them have a crested head, and a bill somewhat more narrow at the end, which, though foreign, are reared in all the aviaries of Europe. Such are, An. galericulata, L. ; Enl. 980 and 981 ; Vieill. Gal. 287. (The Chinese Duck). The female of which has the wing feathers widened, turned up vertically. * Tadnrne, the name of this bird in Belon. Buffon, following Turner, mistook it for the Chenalopex of the ancients. — See above, the Oie d'Egi/pte. f Bosras, Greek name of the Mallard. PALMIPEDES. o79 An, sponsa, L. ; Enl. 980 and 981 ; Wils. VIII, Ixxviii, 3. Their capsules are of a medium size, and arc rounded. There are other species, also foreign, wliich to the bill of a Duck add legs, even longer than those of a Goose; they build and perch on trees'^". Some of this number have but semi-palmated feet-j-. Finally among those which have no peculiar mark is the An. strepera, L. ; Le Chipeau, or Ridennc, Enl. 958; Naum. I, c. 45, f. G5; Wils. VIII, Ixxi, 1. (The Gadwal). Reticulated and finely striped with black ; wings, red with a green spot and a white one. The capsule of the trachea is small. An. Penelope, L. ; Le Siffleur, Enl. 835; Frisch, 104 and 1G9; Naum. f. 72 and 73;];. (The Whistler). Finely striped with black; vinous-coloured breast; red head; pale forehead; the wing white, green, and black. The capsule of the trachea is rounded, mode- rate, and very bony§. There are several small species designated by the general name of Teal. An. querquedula, L. ; La Sarcelle ordinaire, Enl. 940, and the old male. An. circia, Frisch, 176; Naum. 47, f. 66 and 67. (The Garganey Duck). A grey ground, reticulated with black ; a white line round, and at the end of the eye, &c. Common on ponds, marshes, &c. Its capsule is a pyriform bony enlargement. An. creeca, L. ; La petite Sarcelle, Enl. 947; Frisch, 174; Naum. 48, f. 68, 69; Wils. VIII, Ixx, 4; Brit. Zool. pi. Q. (The Common Teal). Finely striped with blackish; the head red; a green band at the corner of the eye edged with two white lines, &c. The capsule resembles a peajj. Mergus, Lin. The genus of the Harles or Mergansers comprehends those species in which the bill, thinner and more cylindrical than that of the Ducks, is armed along its edges with small pointed teeth resembling those of a saw and directed backwards ; the tip of the upper mandible is hooked. Their carriage and even plumage are those of Ducks, properly so called; but their gizzard is less muscular, and their intestines and ca?ca shorter. The inflation of the lower larynx in the males is enormous, and partly membranous. They live on lakes and ponds, where they are very de- structive to fish. * An. arborea, Enl. 804; — autumnalis, 826; — viduata, 808. t An. semipalmata, Lath.; Cuv. Mem. du Mus. + Penelope, the Greek name of a red-headed Duck, either the present species or tlic ferina, L. § Add, An.rutUa, Pall. Nov. Com. Petrop., XIV, xxii; — An. cana and casarca. Brown, 111. 41 and 42; — An. piecilorhyncha, Indian Zool. pi. xiv; — ihc Jensen {An. amerlcana), Enl. 955, Wils. VIII, Ixix, 4; — the Marec {An. balinmetifis), Catesb. 93; — An. obscura, Wils. VIII, Ixxii, 5; — An. arcuata, Gm., or paturi, Spix, C. II Add, An, disror.^, Enl. 9fifi and 403; — An. manillensis, Sonner. Voy. I, pi. Iv. Sarcelle comes from querqnedula, which itself is only an imitation of the ciy of the bird. 3S0 BIRDS. Three species appear in France during the winter; their varia- tions of plumage have induced some naturalists to increase the num- ber. It is said that they breed in the North among the rocks or reeds, and lay a great many eggs. Merg. merganser, L. ; Le Harle vulgaire, Enl. 951; Naum. I, c. 61, f.93, Brit. Zool. pi. N. ; Frisch, 190; Wils. VIII, Ixviii, 1. (The Goosander). Is the size of a Duck, and has red feet and a bill of the same hue. The head of the old male is of a deep green, the feathers on its summit forming a sort of toupee ; the mantle is black, •with a white spot over the wing; underneath and the neck, white, slightly tinged with rose-colour. The young and the females — Merg. castor, Enl. 953 ; Frisch, 191 ; Naum. 61, f. 93, B, are grey with a red head. Merg. serrator, L. ; Harle huppee, Enl. 207; Edw. 95; Naum. I, c. 61, f. 90; Wils. VIII, Ixix, 2. (The Red-breasted Mergan- ser). Bill and feet red; the body variegated with black, white, and brown ; head of a black -green ; a pendent tuft on the occiput. The young and the females — Harles noirs, H. a manteau noir, Naum. 62, f. 95, have a bro-mi head. M. alhellus, L. ; La Piette, nonnette, petit harle, Enl. 449; Frisch, 172; Naum. 63, f. 97; Brit. Zool. pi. N, 1; Wils. VIII, xci, 9. (The Smew). Bill and feet blue ; body white, varied with black ou the mantle ; a black spot near the eye, and one on the occiput. The young males and the females — Merg, minutus, ir.us- telinus, &c., Enl. 450; Brit. Zool. pi. N, 2; Naum. 63, f. 98, are grey with a red head*. * Among the Mergansers foreign to Eui-ope, the only ones well ascertained are the M. cucullatus of Carolina, Enl. 935 and 936, and the M. brasiliensis, Vieill. Gal. 283. END OF VOL. LOND^.V: W. W'LE^TIA--(continued). Gen. — Avvicola, 128 Groups of Arvicola. — Fiber, 128 Arvicola, 128 Geoiyclms, 129 Otorays, ISO Dipus, ISO Gen. — Helamys or Pedeies, 131 Spalax, 131 Lai-liyergus, 132 Geomys, or Pseuaosuoma, or Ascomys, 132 Diplosiom;', 132 Casior, 133 Myopotamus, 134 Hystiix, 134 Suhgen. of IIi/s/.rix.—Uyi.tn:i, 135 Atherubus, 135 Eretison, 135 Synellieres, 135 Gen. — Lepus, 136 Sribgen. — Lepus, 136 Lagomys, 137 Gen. — Ilydiocboevus, 138 Cavia or Anceraa, 138 Snbgcn. — Kerodon, 139 Gen. — Clilo^omys or D?syprocla, J 39 Coelogenys, 139 VI. EDENTATA, 140 Tribe 1, Tardign'da, 140 Gen. — Bi^dypus, 141 Aclieus, 141 Cholgepus, 142 Megallierium, 142 Meg;ilonyx, 143 Tribe 2, Edentala Ordinaria, 143 Gen. — Dasypus, 143 Subgen. — Cacliicharaus, 143 Apara, 144 Encoubertus, 144 Cabassous, 145 Priodonles, 145 Clamyphorus, 145 Gen. — Orycteropus, 146 Myrmecophaga, 146 Manis, 147 Tribe 3, Monotremata, 148 Gen. — Ecbidna or Tachyglossus, 148 Ornitliorhynchus or Platypus, 149 XXVIU INDEX. VII. PACHYDERMATA, 150 Fam. I. Proboscidiana, 150 Gen. — Elephas, 151 Mastodon, 153 Fam. 11. Pachydermata Ordinaria, 154 Gen. — Hippopotamus, 154 Sus, 154 Subgen. — Phacochasrus, 155 Dicotyles, 156 Gen. — Anaplotherium, 156 Rhinoceros, 157 Hyrax, 158 Palffiotherium, 158 Lophiodon, 159 Tapir, 159 Fain. III. SoLiPEDES, 160 Gen. — Equus, 160 VIII. RUMINANTIA, 162 Without Horns. Gen. — Camelus, 164 Subgen. — Camelus, 164 Auchenia, 165 With Horns. Gen. — Moschus, 165 Cervus, 167 Camelopardalis, 170 Antilope, 171 Subgen. of Antilope. — Colus, 172 Damalis, 172 Reduncae, 173 Gew.— Capra, 176 Oryx, 173 Ovis, 177 Bos, 179 IX. CETACEA, 181 Fam. I. Herbivorous Whales, 182 Gen. — Manatus, 182 Halicore or Dugong, 182 Stellerus, 183 Fam. II. Ordinary Whales, 183 Tribe 1, Delpliinus, 184 Gen. — Delpliinus, 184 Subgen. — Delphinus, 184 Delphinorliynchus, 185 Pliocaena, 186 Delphinapterus, 187 Hyperoodon, 187 Gen. — Monodon, 188 Physeter, 188 ^''^^7ete{-^^^'\ Phys^t^^' 190 Gew.— Balsena, 190 Stfbgen.—Baiaina., 190 Balaenoptera, 192 INDEX. XXxix SECOND CLASS.— BIRDS. OVIPAROUS VERTEBRATA IN GENERAL, 197 BIRDS, 202 ORDERS OF THE CLASS OF BIRDS. I. ACCIPITRES, 207 II. Passerine, 207 III. ScansorijE, 207 IV. GALLINACEffl, 207 V. GrallatorijE, 207 VI. Palmipedes, 207 GENERA, SUBGENERA, AND OTHER DIVISIONS. I. ACCIPITRES: Gen. I.— Vultur, 208 Subgen. — Vultur, 209 Catliartes, or Gallinazas, or Catharistes, 210 Percnopterus, Gypaetos, or Neophron, 210 Gypaetos or Phene, 211 Gen. II.— Falco, 212 Sect. 1 . — Noble Birds of Prey. Falco, 212 Hierofalco, 214 Sect. 2. — Of the Gen. Falco. — Aquila, 215 If/noble Birds of Prey. Subgen. — Aquila, 215 HalijEtus, 216 Pandion, 217 Circaetus, 217 Harpyia, 218 Morphnus, 219 Gen. — Astur, 220 Subgen. — Astur, 220 Nisus, 221 Gen. — Milvus, 221 Subgen.— MWvnH, 222] Perriis, 222* Gen.— Buteo, 223 Circus, 224 Serpentarius or Gypoeranus, 225 Nocturnal Birds of Prey. Gen. — Strix, 225 Subgen. — Otus, 226 Ulula, 226 Strix, 227 Syrnium, 227 Bubo, 227 Noctua, 228 Scops, 229 II. PASSERINE, 230 Division I, of Passerines, in which the external Toe is united to the inner one hy a single phalanx or two. Fam. I. — Dentirostres, 231 Gen. — Lanius, 231 Suhgen. — Lanius, 231 Vanga, 233 Ocypterus, 233 Baiita, 234 Clialybaeus, 234 Psaris, 234 Graucalus, 235 Bethylus, 235 Falcunculus, 235 Pardalotus, 235 Gen. — Muscicapa, 236 Suhgen. — Tyrannus, 236 Muscipeta, 236 Muscicapa, 237 Gymnocephalus, 239 Cephalopterus, 239 Crew.— Ampelis, 239 Subgen. — Arapelis, 239 Tersina, 240 Ceblepyris, 240 Bombycilla, 240 Gen. — Procnias, 241 Suhgen. — Procnias, 241 Casmarhynclios, 241 Gymnoderus, 241 Cen.— Edolius, 241 Subgen. — Phibalura, 242 Gen. — Tanagra, 242 Subgen. — Bullfinch Tanagers, 242 Gfossbeak Tanagers, 242 Tanagers proper, 242 Oriole Tanagers, 243 Cardinal Tanagers, 243 Ramphoceline Tanagers, 243 Ge«.— Tardus, 243 Suhgen. — Turdus, 243 Grives, 244 Lamprotornis, 246 Turdoides, 246 Enicures, 246 \ Grallines, 246* Criniger, 246 Gen. — Myothera, 246 Subgen. — Orthonyx, 247 INDEX. ^ II. l^ASSERl^ M— (continued). Gen. — Cinclus, 248 Pliiledon, 248 Eulabes, 249 Gracula, 249 Subgen. of Gracxda. — Mauorhiua, 250 Gen. — Pyrrhocorax, 251 Oriolus, 251 Gymnops, 251 Maenuia, 252 Motacilla, 252 Subgen. of Motacilla. — Saxicola, 252 Sylvia, 253 Curruca, 254 Accentor, 256 Regulus, 257 Troglodytes, 257 Motacilla, 258 Budytes, 258 Gen.— AnthvLs, 258 I'ipra, 259 Subgen. — Rupicola, 259 Calyplomeues, 259 Pipra, 2G0 Gen. — Eurylaimus, 260 Fam. II. — FissiROSTRES, 260 Diurnal Birds. Gen. — Hirundo, 261 Subgen. — Cypselus, 261 Hirundo, 261 Nocturnal Birds. Gen. — Caprymulgus, 262 Subgen. — Podargus, 263 Fam. III. — CoNiROSTRES, 264 Gen. — Alauda, 264 Parus, 265 Subgen. oft ^^^. ^^^ Far us. > Gen. — Eraberiza, 266 Fringilla, 268 Subgen. of } Ploceus, 268 Fringilla. i Pyrgita, 269 Fringilla, 270 Carduelis, 270 Linaria, 270 Vidua, 272 Coccothraustes, 272 Pitylus, 273 Pyrrhula, 273 xlii INDEX. II. VASSERI^JE— (continued). Gen. — Loxia, 273 Corythus, 274 Colius, 274 Buphaga, 274 Cassicus, 275 Subgen. of Cassicus. — Cassicus, 275 Icterus, 275 Xantliornus, 275 Oxyrhyncus, 276 Dacnis, 276 Gen. — Sturnus, 276 Corvus, 277 Subgen. of Corvus. — Pica, 278 Garrulus, 278 Caryocatactes, 279 Teraia, 279 Glaucopis, 279 Gen. — Coracias, 280 Stibgen. — Coracias, 280 Colaris, 280 Gen. — Paradisasa, 280 Fam, IV. Tenuirostres, 282 Gen. — Sitta, 282 Subgen. — Xenops, 283 Anabates, 283 Synallaxis, 283 Gen. — Certhia, 283 Stibgen. — Certhia, 283 Dendrocolaptes, 284 Tichodroma, 284 Nectarinia, 284 Dicaeum, 285 Melithreptus, 285 Cinnyris, 285 Araclinothera, 286 G^en.— Trochilus, 286 Subgen. — Trochilus, 286 Orthorhynchus, 287 6'ett.— Upupa, 288 Subgen. — Fregilus, 288 Upupa, 289 Promerops, 289 Epimachus, 289 INDEX. Xliv II. PASSERINE— (eon/in«e(i). Division II, of the Passerince, in which the external Toe, nearly as long as the middle one, is united to it as far as the penultimate articulations. Syndactylae, 290 Gen. — Merops, 290 Prionites, 291 Alcedo, 291 Ceyx, 292 Todus, 292 Buceros, 293 III. SCANSORIiE, (7ew.— Galbula, 294 Picus, 295 Yunx, 297 Cuculus, 297 Subgen. of Cuculus. — Cuculus, 298 Couas, 298 Centropus, 299 Courols, 299 Indicator, 299 Barbacous, 299 Ge«.— Malcolm, 300 Scythrops, 300 Bucco, 300 Subgen. of Bucco. — Pogonias, 300 Bucco, 300 Tamatia, 301 . Gen. — Trogon, 301 Crotopliaga, 302 Rampliastos, 302 Subgen. of Ramphastos. — Ramphastos, 302 Pteroglossus, 303 Gen. — Psittacus, 303 Subgen, — Ara, 303 Cornurus, 303 Ara Paroquets, 303 Arrow-tailed Paroquets, 304 Paroquets, with a tail widened near the end, 304 Cockatoos, 304 Loris, 305 Psittaculus, 305 Paroquets a trompe, 30G Pezoporus, 306 Gen. — Corythaix, 306 Musophaga, 307 Xliv INDEX. IV. GALLINACE^, 307 Gen.— Alector, 308 Subgen. — Alector, 308 Ourax, 308 Penelope, 309 Ortalida, 309 Opistliocomus, 310 Cett.— Pavo, 310 Subgen. — Lophopliorus,, 311 Gen. — Meleagris, 311 Subgen. — Numida, 312 Gen. — Phasianus, 312 Subgen. of Phasianus. — G alius, 312 Phasianus, 312 llouppiferes, 314 Tragopan, 314 Ciyptonyx, 314 Gen. — Tetrao, 315 Subgen. — Tetrao, 315 Lagopus, 316 Pterocles, 317 Perdix, 317 Divisions of 1 Francolinus, 317 Perdix j Perdix, 318 Coturnix, 318 Colins, 319 Gen. — Tridactyles or Ilemipodius, 319 Subgen. — Turnix, 319 Syirliaptes, 319 Gen. — Tinamus, Crypturus or Ynambus, 320 Subgen. — Pezus, 320 Tinamoos, 320 Pvyncliolus, 320 Gen. — Coluraba, 320 Subgen. — Columbi-gallines, 321 Columba', 321 Vinago, 323 V. GRALLATORIiE, 323 Fam. I. Brevipennes, 324 Gen. — Struthio, 324 Casuarius, 325 Fam. II. Pressirostres, 326 Gen.— Otis, 327 Cliaradrius, 327 Subgen. of Charadrius. — CEdicnemus, 327 Cliaradrius, 328 Ge«.— Vanellus, 329 Subgen.— YmeWus, 329 INDEX. x\y V. GRALLATORIM— (continued). Gen, — Hematopus, 330 Cursorius or Tachydromus, 330 Cariama, Microdactylus,orDic]iolophus,331 Fam, III. CuLTiROSTRES, 331 Tribe 1.— Grus, 332 Gen.—Gras, 332 Subgen. — Psophja, 332 Grus, 333 Eurypyga, 333 Tribe 2.— Gen. — Cancroraa, 334 Ardea, 334 Crab-eaters, 335 Onores, 335 Egrets, 335 Citierns, 335 Niglit-lierons, 33G Tribe 3.— Gen. — Ciconia, 33G Subgen. — Bare-necked Storks, 337 Pouched Storks, 337 G'cM.— Mycleria, 337 Scopus, 338 Ilians or Anastomus, 338 Subgen. — Diomas, 338 Gen. — Tantalus, 338 Platalea, 339 Fam. IV, LoNGiROSTRES, 340 Gen. — Scolopax, 340 Subgai. — fbis, 340 Numenius, 341 Scolopax, 342 Rhynchgea, 343 Limosa, 344 Calidris, 344 Arenaria, 345 Pelidna, 345 Cocorli, 345 Falcinellus, 346 Maciietes, 346 Eurinorhynchus, 346 Phalaropus, 347 Strepsilas, 347 Totanus, 347 Lobipes, 349 Himantopus, 349 Gen. — Recurvirostra, 350 Xlri INDEX. V. GRAhhATORlJE.— (continued). Fam. V. Macrodactyli: Gen. — Jacanas, 351 Palamedea, 352 Chauna, 352 Megapodius, 352 RaUus, 353 Fulica, 354 Subgen. of Fulica. — Gallinula, 354 Porphyrio, 354 Fulica, 355 Chionis or Vaginalis, 355 •i _ Tn_ • . QKP Glareola, 355 Gen. — Phsenicopterus, 35b VI. PALMIPEDES, 357 Fam. I. BRACHYPTERiE: Gen. — Colymbus : Subc/cn. — Podiceps, 358 Heliornis, 358 Mergus, 359 Uria, 359 Cephus, 360 Gett.— Alca, 300 Subgen. — Fiactercula, 300 Alca, 301 Gen. — Aptenodytes, 301 Subgen. — Aptenodytes, 301 Catarrliactes, 302 Spheniscus, 362 Fam. II. LoNGiPENNEs, 362 (rew.— Procellaria, 303 Subgen.— Fumims, 304 Pelecanoides or Halodroma, 304 Pachyptila, 364 Gen. — Diomedea, 364 Larus, 365 Subgen. of Larus. — Goelands, 865 Mouettes, 366 Lestris, 360 Gen.— Sterna, 307 Subgen. — Noddies, 368 Gen. — Rhynchops, 368 Fam. III. TopiPALMAT^: Gen. — Pelecanus, 309 Subgen. — Pelecanus, 309 Phalacrocorax, 369 Tachypetes, 370 Sula, 370 ^ Gen.— Plotus, 371 Phaeton, 371 INDEX. xlrii VI. PALMIPEDES— (con/m«e^). Fam. IV. Lamellirostres. Gen. — Anas, 372 Suhyen. — Cygnus, 372 Anser, 373 Barnacles, 374 Cereopsis, 374] Anas, 374 Oidemia, 375 Clangula, 375 Somateria, 370 Fuligula, 370 Rhyncliapsis, 377 Tadorna, 378 Cre«.— Mergus, 379 CORRIGENDA. In addition to the errors of haste of Cuvier, which we have noticed in the particular pages where they occur, there are others which we shall now point out. Page 234. By some unaccountable mistake, the Psaris Cuvieri of Swainson is confounded with tlie Pachy. semifasciatus of Spix. The first is as big as a sparrow, olive-green, with a yellow breast; the second is as big as a thrush, cream- coloured white, wilh black wings, tail, and crown. 235. for Sphecothere, read Sphecolherw*. 238. for Stonura, read Stenura. — for Turdus volitans, read aurocapillus. 240. for Merremie, read Merrem., Ic. ^249. for Cridotheres, read y^cridotheres. — note N.B. The genera. Jnthrochara and Mi/zomela, are not Swainson's, but those of Messrs. Horsfield and Vigors. 252. note N.B. The Oroolus regens is the Melliphaga chrysocrphala (not regia) of Lewin, and the ^e. — The genus Tropedorliynchus is not Swainson's, but that of Horsfield and Vigors. 275. The Or. agripennis has been already noticed at p. 268 (under its original name of Emb. oryzevora), as the type of the genus Dolichonyx, Swainson. 284. note N.B. The genus Dasyornis is of Horsfield and Vigors; the rest following are Swainson's. The genera Perisiera and Estopestes, among the Pigeons, are Swainson's. # 2SSS ^J =<^t/^ ^ J>4 996r9G9l ' dO Advaan