State Bird
of Minnesota
By John James Audubon,
F. R. SS. L. & E.
VOLUME IV.
GREAT NORTHERN DIVER OR LOON.
[Common Loon.]
COLYMBUS GLACIALIS, Linn.
[Gavia immer.]
PLATE CCCCLXXVI.--ADULT
MALE AND YOUNG MALE.
The Loon, as this interesting species of Diver is
generally called in the United States, is a strong,
active, and vigilant bird. When it has acquired its
perfect plumage, which is not altered in colour at
any successive moult, it is really a beautiful creature;
and the student of Nature who has opportunities of
observing its habits, cannot fail to derive much
pleasure from watching it as it pursues its avocations.
View it as it buoyantly swims over the heaving billows
of the Atlantic, or as it glides along deeply immersed,
when apprehensive of danger, on the placid lake,
on the grassy islet of which its nest is placed;
calculate, if you can, the speed of its flight, as
it shoots across the sky; mark the many plunges it
performs in quest of its finny food, or in eluding
its enemies; list to the loud and plaintive notes
which it issues, either to announce its safety to
its mate, or to invite some traveller of its race
to alight, and find repose and food; follow the anxious
and careful mother-bird, as she leads about her precious
charge; and you will not count your labour lost,
for you will have watched the ways of one of the
wondrous creations of unlimited Power and unerring
Wisdom. You will find pleasure too in admiring the
glossy tints of its head and neck, and the singular
regularity of the unnumbered spots by which its dusky
back and wings are checkered.
I have met with the Great Diver, in winter, on all
the water-courses of the United States, whence, however,
it departs when the cold becomes extreme, and the
surface is converted into an impenetrable sheet of
ice. I have seen it also along the whole of our Atlantic
coast, from Maine to the extremity of Florida, and
from thence to the mouths of the Mississippi, and
the shores of Texas, about Galveston Island, where
some individuals in the plumage characteristic of
the second moult, were observed in the month of April
1837. Indeed, as is the case with most other species
of migrating birds, the young remove farther south
than the old individuals, which are better able to
withstand the cold and tempests of the wintry season.
The migratory movements of this bird seem to be
differently managed in the spring and autumn. In
the latter case, a great number of young Loons are
seen to alight on the head waters of our great streams,
on which, without much exertion, being aided by the
current, they float along, diving at intervals in
pursuit of the numerous fishes, as they proceed toward
milder climes. The few old birds which, at a later
date, appear on the same water-courses, frequently
take to wing, and shorten their way by flying at
a considerable elevation directly across the great
bends or peninsulas. These modes of travelling are
also adopted by those which advance along the Atlantic
coasts, where, indeed, the birds have the double
advantage of meeting with food and obtaining repose,
on the rivers and on the sea. I think, however, that
this maritime course is followed only by such of
the Loons as have bred in the more immediate vicinity
of the coast. But whether you are in the interior,
or on the coast, it is seldom that you see at a time
more than one Loon travelling at this season; whereas,
in spring, they proceed in pairs, the male taking
the lead, as is easily ascertained by observing that
the bird in the rear is the smallest.
Although its wings are rather small, its flight
is strong and rapid, so that it is enabled to traverse
a large extent of country on wing. When travelling,
or even when only raised from its nest, it moves
through the air with all the swiftness of the other
species of its tribe, generally passing directly
from one point to another, however distant it may
be. Its long transits are at times performed at so
great an elevation, that its form can scarcely be
distinguished, and yet, even then, in calm weather,
the noise of its wings striking the air comes distinctly
on your ear. I have seen them thus, on their way
towards Labrador, passing over the head waters of
the Bay of Fundy, to cross the Gulf of St. Lawrence.
Whenever it chances to alight on the water, in the
course of its long journeys, it almost immediately
dives, as if to taste the water, and judge whether
it contains food suited to its appetite. On emerging,
and after having somewhat raised the fore part of
its body, shaken its wings, and by a strong shiver
re-arranged its plumage, it emits its loud echoing
call-note, to induce, perchance, some traveller of
its tribe to alight for awhile, that they may communicate
to each other their experience of the past, or their
hopes of the future. There is an absurd notion, entertained
by persons unacquainted with the nature of this bird,
that its plaintive cries are a sure indication of
violent storms. Sailors, in particular, are ever
apt to consider these call-notes as portentous. In
the course of a voyage from Charleston to the Florida
Keys, in May 1832, I several times saw and heard
Loons travelling eastward; but, notwithstanding all
the dire forebodings of the crew, who believed that
a hurricane was at hand, our passage was exceedingly
pleasant. Although I have heard the notes of the
Loon in rainy and blowy weather, yet I never heard
them so frequent or so loud, both by day and by night,
as on the Ohio, during that delightful and peculiarly
American autumnal season called the Indian summer;
when, although not so much as a cloud was seen for
weeks, I have frequently observed the passing birds
checking their flight, or heard the murmuring splash
which they produced on alighting upon the placid
water, to rest and refresh themselves.
Another strange notion, not deserving of credit,
although you will find it gravely announced in books,
is that, when the Loon is breeding, it will dart
down suddenly from the air, and alight securely in
its nest. I have never witnessed such a procedure,
although I have closely watched, from under cover,
at least twenty pairs. On such occasions I have seen
the incubating bird pass over the dear spot several
times in succession, gradually rounding and descending
so as at last to alight obliquely on the water, which
it always did at a considerable distance from the
nest, and did not approach it until after glancing
around and listening attentively, as if to assure
itself that it was not watched, when it would swim
to the shore, and resume its office.
The Loon breeds in various
parts of the United States, from Maryland to Maine.
I have ascertained that it nestles in the former
of these States, on the Susquehanna river, as well
as in the districts between Kentucky and Canada,
and on our great lakes. Dr. RICHARDSON states that
it is found breeding as far north as the 70th degree
of latitude. The situation and form of the nest
differ according to circumstances. Some of those
which breed in the State of Maine, place it on
the hillocks of weeds and mud prepared by the musk-rat,
on the edges of the lakes, or at some distance
from them among the rushes. Other nests, found
on the head-waters of the Wabash river, were situated
on the mud, amid the rank weeds, more than ten yards
from the water. Authors have said that only one pair
breed on a lake; but I have found three pairs, with
their nests, on a pond not exceeding a quarter of
a mile in length, in the State of Maine. One that
I saw after the young had left it, on Cayuga Lake,
in 1824, was almost afloat, and rudely attached to
the rushes, more than forty yards from the land,
though its base was laid on the bottom, the water
being eight or nine inches deep. Others examined
in Labrador were placed on dry land, several yards
from the water, and raised to the height of nearly
a foot above the decayed moss on which they were
laid. But, in cases when the nest was found at any
distance from the water, we discovered a well-beaten
path leading to it, and very much resembling those
made by the beaver, to which the hunters give the
name of "crawls." The nest, wherever placed, is bulky,
and formed of the vegetable substances found in the
immediate vicinity, such as fresh or withered grasses
and herbaceous plants. The internal part, or the
true nest, which is rarely less than a foot, and
is sometimes fifteen inches, in diameter, is raised
upon the external or inferior mass to the height
of seven or eight inches. Such was one found on the
5th July, 1835, in Labrador, and which was placed
within three yards of the edge of a considerable
pond of limpid water, supposed to have been produced
by the melting of the snow, and upwards of a mile
distant from the sea. Of the many nests which I have
examined, I have found more containing three than
two eggs, and I am confident that the former number
is that which more frequently occurs, although many
European, and some American writers, who probably
never saw a nest of this bird, allege the contrary.
The eggs average three inches and three quarters
in length, by two inches and a quarter in their greatest
breadth, and thus are considerably elongated, being
particularly narrowed from the bulge to the smaller
end, which is rather pointed. They are of a dull
greenish-ochry tint, rather indistinctly marked with
spots of dark umber, which are more numerous toward
the larger extremity. The weight of two of these
eggs, containing young nearly ready to emerge, was
ten ounces and a half. In Maine the Loon lays fully
a month earlier than in Labrador, and about the same
period as on the Wabash.
On approaching the female while sitting on her eggs,
I assured myself that she incubates with her body
laid flat upon them, in the same way as the domestic
Duck, and that, on perceiving the intruder, she squats
close, and so remains until he is almost over her,
when she springs up with great force, and makes at
once for the water, in a scrambling and sliding manner,
pushing herself along the ground. On gaining the
water, she dives at once, emerges at a great distance,
and very rarely suffers herself to be approached
within gunshot. Sometimes they swim so deeply immersed
as scarcely to be perceptible, and keep as much as
possible among the rushes and other water plants.
When the eggs are on the eve of being hatched, the
mother, when disturbed, often cries loudly and dismally
for some time, but seldom flies off. At other times,
when I found the eggs to have been recently laid,
the bird, on reaching the water, and diving, swam
lightly, flapping its wings, drank once or twice,
and moved about at a respectful distance. On such
occasions, should you persist in watching it, it
rises on wing and flies off. Should you not mark
the spot in which the nest is, but leave it to go
in pursuit of the bird, you may search for hours
before finding it, for the path leading from the
water to it is generally covered over by the herbage.
Once while approaching a spot in which I knew a Loon
to be engaged in forming her nest, I was disappointed
at not finding her at work: her keen sense of hearing
had apprised her of my purpose, and cunningly must
she have slipped away, for, on finding her absent,
although I had not heard any noise, I happened to
look toward the water, and there she was, gliding
off in the quiet manner usual on such occasions.
The young of the Loon are covered at birth with
a kind of black stiff down, and in a day or two after
are led to the water by their mother. They swim and
dive extremely well even at this early stage of their
existence, and after being fed by regurgitation for
about a fortnight, receive portions of fish, aquatic
insects, and small reptiles, until they are able
to maintain themselves. During this period, grey
feathers appear among the down of the back and belly,
and the black quill-feathers of the wings and tail
gradually elongate. They are generally very fat,
and so clumsy as to be easily caught on land, if
their retreat to the water be cut off. But should
you miss your opportunity, and the birds succeed
in gaining the liquid element, into which they drop
like so many terrapins, you will be astonished to
see them as it were run over the water with extreme
celerity, leaving behind them a distinct furrow.
This power of traversing the surface of the water
is possessed not only by the young and old of this
species, but by all other kinds of swimmers, including
even Gallinules and Coots. When the young are well
able to fly, the mother entices them to remove from
the pond or lake on which they have been bred, and
leads them on wing to the nearest part of the sea,
after which she leaves them to shift for themselves.
Now and then, after this period, the end of August
or beginning of September, I have still seen the
young of a brood, two or three in number, continuing
together until they were induced to travel southward,
when they generally set out singly.
Having given you a figure of a young bird, taken
in October 1819 from a specimen obtained on the Ohio,
I will not here trouble you with its description,
but merely state that the young undergo their first
moult in December, when they are seen singularly
patched with portions of new plumage beautifully
speckled with white, on a bed of almost uniform ash-brown.
I was told, while in the State of Maine, that if
the young were caught soon after being hatched, and
before they had been in the water, they would, if
thrown into it, immediately follow a paddled canoe
anywhere; but, as I have not myself made the experiment,
I cannot speak of this as a fact.
Although it has been generally asserted that Loons
cannot walk or run in an efficient manner, I feel
assured that on emergency the case is very different.
An instance which occurred to my youngest son, JOHN
WOODHOUSE, who accompanied me to Labrador, may here
be related. One day, when he was in pursuit of some
King Ducks, a Loon chanced to fly immediately over
him within shooting-distance of his enormous double-barrelled
gun. The moment was propitious, and on firing he
was glad to see the bird fall broken-winged on the
bare granitic rocks. As if perfectly aware of its
danger, it immediately rose erect on its feet, and
inclining its body slightly forward, ran on, stumbled,
rose again, and getting along in this manner actually
reached the water before my son, who is by no means
slow of foot. The space traversed was fully a hundred
yards, and the water to an equal distance was not
more than ankle-deep. The bird and its pursuer ran
swiftly through the water, and just as both reached
a sudden break about four feet in depth, the Loon,
which had been wounded elsewhere than in the wing,
expired and floated at the disposal of its enemy,
who brought it on board the Ripley; when I entered
this anecdote in my journal.
These birds are so very strong and hardy that some
of the old ones remain in Maine and Massachusetts
until all the fresh waters are frozen, first leaving
the quiet lakes and ponds, then the slow streams,
and lastly the turbulent pools below waterfalls,
which latter they do not quit until they are overhung
by icicles and deserted of fish. On the other hand,
this species returns northward at a later period
than most others that breed in high latitudes. I
have witnessed the arrival of some on the coast of
Labrador, after they had crossed the Gulf of St.
Lawrence, as late as the 20th of June, after which
they had scarcely four months to seek out a breeding
place, lay their eggs, hatch and rear their young,
and with them remove southward, before the rigour
of winter commenced.
The Great Northern Diver is a heavy-bodied bird,
and generally swims rather deep in the water, more
especially if apprehensive of immediate danger, when
scarcely more than two inches in height of its back
can be seen above the surface. As its body is more
flattened than that of the Cormorant, this circumstance
might seem to favour the action in question; but
other species less depressed exhibit the same peculiarity;
and I have thought that in all of these the internal
structure alone can account for this peculiar faculty.
With the exception of that most expert of all Divers,
the Anhinga, and the Great Auk, the Loon is perhaps
the most accomplished. Whether it be fishing in deep
water amid rolling billows, or engaged in eluding
its foes, it disappears beneath the surface so suddenly,
remains so long in the water, and rises at so extraordinary
a distance, often in a direction quite the reverse
of that supposed to be followed by it, that your
eyes become wearied in searching for it, and you
renounce the wish of procuring it out of sheer vexation.
At least, this has very frequently happened to me;
nay, I have at times abandoned the chase when the
bird was so severely wounded as to be obliged to
dive immediately beside my boat, and had it not died
of exhaustion and floated near enough to be seized
by me, I felt as if I could not have pulled my oars
any longer, and was willing to admit that I was outdone
by a Loon.
In Labrador, where these birds were abundant, my
son JOHN one day shot at one on wing, which fell
upon the water to appearance quite dead, and remained
on its back motionless until we had leisurely rowed
to it, when a sailor put out his hand to take it
up. The Loon, however, to our surprise, suddenly
sprung up, and dived, and while we stood amazed,
watching its appearance, we saw it come up at the
distance of about a hundred yards, shake its head,
and disgorge a quantity of fish mixed with blood;
on which it dived again, and seemed lost to us. We
rowed however to the spot in all haste, and the moment
it rose, sent another shot after it, which terminated
its career. On examining it afterwards, we found
it quite riddled by the heavy shot.
If ever so slightly wounded, the Loon prefers diving
to flying off, and all your endeavours to kill it
are almost sure to prove unavailing. You may shoot
at it under such circumstances, but you will lose
both your time and your ammunition. Its keenness
of sight defies the best percussion-locked gun, for
it is generally deep in the water before the shot
reaches the spot where it has been. When fatigued
with diving in the ordinary manner, it will sink
backwards, like a grebe or a frog, make for some
concealed spot among the rushes, and there lie until
your eyes ache with searching, and your stomach admonishes
you of the propriety of retiring.
Loons are now and then caught
in fishermen's nets, and are soon drowned. I have
also caught them with hooks fastened to lines laid
across the Ohio, but on no such occasion have I
taken the bird alive. A method of shooting these
birds, which I have often practised, and which
was several times successfully employed by our
Labrador party, may here be related. On seeing
a Loon on the water, at whatever distance, the
sportsman immediately places himself under the
nearest cover on the shore, and remains there as
carefully concealed as possible. A few minutes are
allowed to pass, to give the wary and sharp-sighted
bird all due confidence; during which time the gun,
charged with large shot, is laid in a convenient
position. The gunner then takes his cap or pocket-handkerchief,
which if brightly coloured is so much the better,
and raising it in one hand, waves it three or four
times, and then suddenly conceals it. The bird commonly
detects the signal at once, and, probably imagining
the object thus exhibited to be one of its own species,
gradually advances, emitting its love-notes, which
resemble a coarse laugh, as it proceeds. The sportsman
imitates these notes, making them loud and yet somewhat
mellow, waving his cap or kerchief at the same time,
and this he continues to do at intervals. The Loon,
in order to arrive more quickly, dives, perhaps rises
within fifty yards of him, and calling less loudly,
advances with considerable caution. He shews the
signal less frequently, imitates the notes of the
bird more faintly, and carefully keeps himself concealed,
until the Loon, having approached within twenty or
even ten paces, dives, and on emerging raises itself
up to shake its wings, when off goes the shot, and
the deluded bird floats dead on the water. Many species
of Ducks are procured in nearly the same manner.
The male Turkey, in the gobbling season, and the
stag in autumn, may also be drawn within shot by
the same means. I once "tolled" two Loons with my
hat from a distance of nearly half a mile, and although
they were at one time so near to me that I could
clearly perceive the colour of their eyes, I had
no sure opportunity of firing at them, as it was
in the pairing season, and they never once dived,
or raised their wings to flap them, so that, knowing
the extreme agility with which they disappear when
they have heard a gun snap, I judged it useless to
shoot. Until my visit to Labrador I had supposed,
agreeably to the common belief, that the Loons always
repose at night on the water, which, however, I have
since assured myself they rarely if ever do.
Colonel MONTAGU, than whom
none has written more correctly on the habits of
the birds of Great Britain, having procured a wounded
Loon, placed it in a pond, and observed the manner
in which it made its way under the surface of the
water. "In swimming and
diving," he remarks, "only the legs are used and
not the wings, as in the Guillemot and Auk tribes,
and by their position so far behind, and their little
deviation from the line of the body, the bird is
enabled to propel itself in the water with great
velocity, in a straight line, as well as turn with
astonishing quickness." This I have no doubt was
the case with the individual observed; but that this
is not the usual mode of proceeding of the species
is equally true. Having myself seen Loons pass and
repass under boats, at the distance of several feet
from the surface, and propel themselves both with
their feet, and their half-extended wings, I am inclined
to believe that when not wounded, and when pursuing
their prey, they usually employ all the limbs.
My friend THOMAS NUTTALL,
who kept one for some time, gives the following
account of its manners while in his possession. "A
young bird of this kind which I obtained in the
Salt Marsh at Chelsea Beach, and transferred to
a fish-pond, made a good deal of plaint, and would
sometimes wander out of his more natural element,
and hide and bask in the grass. On these occasions
he lay very still until nearly approached, and
then slid into the pond and uttered his usual plaint.
When out at a distance he made the same cautious
efforts to hide, and would commonly defend himself
in great anger, by darting at the intruder, and
striking powerfully with his dagger-like bill.
This bird, with a pink-coloured iris, like albinos,
appeared to suffer from the glare of broad day-light,
and was inclined to hide from its effects, but
became very active towards the dusk of the evening.
The pupil of the eye in this individual, like that
of nocturnal animals, appeared indeed dilatable;
and the one in question often put down his head and
eyes into the water to observe the situation of his
prey. This bird was a most expert and indefatigable
diver, and remained down sometimes for several minutes,
often swimming under water, and as it were flying
with the velocity of an arrow in the air. Though
at length inclining to become docile, and shewing
no alarm when visited, it constantly betrayed its
wandering habits, and every night was found to have
waddled to some hiding place, where it seemed to
prefer hunger to the loss of liberty, and never could
be restrained from exercising its instinct to move
onwards to some secure or more suitable asylum."
The same valued friend has
corroborated the result of my observations respecting
the number of eggs usually laid by this species,
by stating as follows: "About
the 11th of June, through the kindness of Dr. J.
W. HARRIS, I received three eggs, which had been
taken from the nest of a Loon, made in a hummock,
or elevated grassy hillock, at Sebago Pond, in New
Hampshire."
The range of this species is immense. It occurs
on the waters that fall into the Pacific Ocean, and
has been observed on the Columbia river. In the Fur
Countries it is plentiful; and, as I have already
stated, it breeds in many parts of the United States.
It is found equally in Europe, and the northern parts
of Asia. In all these countries it moves southward
on the approach of winter, and returns when the mild
weather commences in spring.
Unlike the Cormorant, the Loon usually swallows
its food under the water, unless when it happens
to bring up a shell-fish or a crustaceous animal,
which it munches for awhile before it swallows it.
Fishes of numerous kinds, aquatic insects, water-lizards,
frogs, and leeches, have been found by me in its
stomach, in which there is also generally much coarse
gravel, and sometimes the roots of fresh-water plants.
Although the flesh of the Loon is not very palatable,
being tough, rank, and dark coloured, I have seen
it much relished by many lovers of good-living, especially
at Boston, where it was not unfrequently served almost
raw at the table of the house where I boarded.
A female bird particularly examined by me presented
the following appearances. From the point of the
bill to the end of the tail it measured 34 inches;
to the claws 41; the extended wings were 71; the
bill measured 5 inches along the gap; the breadth
of the body was 8 inches, its depth only four; the
wings were 2 inches shorter than the tail; and the
weight was 10 lbs. 11 oz. avoirdupois. The first
primary was longest. The trachea, which was even
and flattened, being in diameter about 5/8 of an
inch by 1/2 inch, was 16 inches long. The eggs were
numerous. The gizzard was moderate, and contained
many large pebbles. The intestines were 7 feet long,
and about the same size as a Swan's quill. Every
bone and sinew was strong and tough. The tongue resembled
in shape and size that of the Ivory-billed Woodpecker.
The bones of the wing and leg were almost solid,
the cavity for the marrow being very small. All the
bones of this specimen were presented to Mr. THOMAS
ALLIS, of the Friends' Retreat, near York.
My friend Captain JAMES CLARK ROSS, of the Royal
Navy of England, once placed at my disposal a specimen
of the Loon procured in a very high latitude, and
which, having closely inspected it, I found to differ
from the one represented in the plate, only in having
the point of the bill slightly elevated or recurved,
and of a fine yellow tint. Dr. RICHARDSON informed
me that, on one of his arduous northern journeys,
he saw a very large and handsomely crested Diver,
which, although somewhat prematurely, I propose honouring
with the name of Colymbus Richardsoni.
GREAT NORTHERN DIVER or LOON, Wils. Amer. Orn.,
vol. ix.
COLYMBUS GLACIALIS, Bonap. Syn., p. 420.
COLYMBUS GLACIALIS, Great Northern Diver, Swains. and Rich. F. Bor. Amer.,vol.
ii. p. 474.
LOON or GREAT NORTHERN DIVER, Nutt. Man., vol. ii. p. 513.
GREAT NORTHERN DIVER or LOON, Colymbus glacialis,
Aud. Orn. Biog., vol. iv.p. 43.
Adult, 32 7/8, 57 1/2. Young Male, in winter, 31
1/4, 54 1/2.
During winter dispersed over the United States,
in Texas, as well as along the coasts of the Atlantic,
and the north-west. Breeds from Massachusetts northward
to very high latitudes. Common.
Adult Male.
Bill as long as the head, straight, stout, much
compressed, tapering to a point. Upper mandible with
the dorsal line descending and slightly convex towards
the end, the ridge convex, narrowed towards the point,
the sides convex beyond the nostrils, the edges sharp
and considerably inflected, the tip narrow and sharpish.
Nasal groove short, nostrils basal, linear, direct,
pervious. Lower mandible with the angle extremely
narrow, and extending beyond the middle, the dorsal
line straight and sloping upwards to the point, the
ridge convex and narrow, the edges sharp and involute;
the tip attenuated.
Head of moderate size, oblong, narrowed before.
Neck rather long and thick. Eyes of moderate size.
Body elongated, much depressed, of an elliptical
form viewed from above. Wings small. Feet short,
rather large, placed very far back; tibia almost
entirely concealed; tarsus short, exceedingly compressed,
sharp-edged before and behind, covered all over with
reticulated angular scales; hind toe extremely small,
connected with the second by a very small membrane;
the anterior toes united by articulated membranes,
the fourth or outer longest, the third a little shorter,
the second considerably shorter than the third, all
covered above with very numerous narrow scutella,
the second toe with a free two-lobed membrane; claws
very small, depressed, blunt.
Plumage short and dense; of the head and neck very
short, and blended; of the lower parts blended, short,
with slight gloss; of the upper compact, glossy;
the feathers in general oblong, those of the upper
parts with the extremity abrupt. Wings proportionally
very small and narrow, curved; primaries strong,
tapering, the first longest, the second almost as
long, the rest rapidly graduated; secondaries broad,
and rounded. Tail extremely short, rounded, of twenty
feathers.
Bill black. Iris deep bright red. Feet, tarsi, and
toes, of a livid greyish-blue, their inner sides
tinged with pale yellowish flesh-colour; claws black,
lighter at the base; webs brownish-black, lighter
in the middle. Head and neck dark greenish-blue,
with purple reflections. On the throat a small transverse
patch of white, longitudinally striated with dusky;
about the middle of the neck, two large patches of
the same, separated in front to the distance of an
inch, behind continuous, but when the feathers are
laid close, appearing as if separated by a longitudinal
dark band about half an inch in breadth. The under
parts glossy white, excepting the feathers on the
sides under the wing, which are black, each with
two, three, or four elliptical white spots, a faint
dusky band across the vent, the lower tail-coverts,
which are brownish-black tipped with white, and the
axillar feathers and larger wing-coverts, which have
a dusky streak along the middle. The sides of the
neck at its lower part are longitudinally streaked
with black and white, there being two oblong spots
of the latter on each feather towards the end. The
upper parts are glossy black, variegated with spots
of white in regular transverse slightly-curved lines
having the convexity backwards. These spots vary
in form and size, being small and roundish towards
the neck and sides, larger and somewhat four-sided
along the middle of the back: largest and rectangular
on the scapulars, very small and roundish on the
hind part of the back and tail-coverts. The upper
part of the wing is similar, with smallish spots;
the alula and quill brownish-black, a few of the
inner secondaries only having two white spots at
their extremity. Tail brownish-black, paler at the
tip. Adult Male. Adult Male. Young.
Length to the end of tail, . . . 32 7/8 36 31 1/4
Length to the end of claws, . . . 39 1/4 40 1/2
36
Length to the end of wings, . . . 31 1/4 -- 29 3/4
Length to the end of carpal joint,. 16 3/4 -- 16
1/4
Extent of wings, . . . . . . 57 1/2 52 54 1/2
Wing from flexure, . . . . . . 15 1/2 -- 14 1/4
Depth of body, . . . . . . . -- 6 --
Breadth, . . . . . . . . . -- 9 1/2 --
Bill along the ridge, . . . . . -- 3 4/12 --
Gap-line, . . . . . . . . . -- 4 1/2 --
Tarsus, . . . . . . . . . -- 3 3/12 --
Hind toe, . . . . . . . . . -- 9 1/2 --
Its claw, . . . . . . . . . -- 2/12 --
Outer toe and claw, . . . . . -- 4 1/2 --
Middle toe, . . . . . . . . -- 4 1/4 --
Inner toe, . . . . . . . . -- 3 9/12 --
Tail, . . . . . . . . . . -- 29 1/12 --
Wing from flexure, . . . . . . -- 14 1/2 -- Weight,
. . . . . . 8 3/4 8 1/2 9
The female is generally smaller, but in all other
respects resembles the male. Weight 10 lbs. 11 oz.
Young in winter.
Bill pale yellowish-green, the ridge and tip of
the upper mandible dusky. Iris brown. Feet dusky
externally, pale yellowish flesh-colour internally,
webs dusky, but yellow in the middle. Claws yellowish-brown.
All the upper parts are of a uniform dark greyish-brown,
each feather margined with lighter, the lower parts
white; the sides of the neck at the lower part whitish,
streaked with dusky; the sides dusky, without spots.
Towards spring the eye assumes a redder tint, and
the plumage of the upper parts gradually becomes
spotted with white; and when the moult is completed
about the end of summer, the plumage is as in the
adult, although the tints are improved at each successive
moult for several years.
A fine male killed at Boston, 34 inches in length,
with an alar extent of 56, presents the following
characters. There is a general layer of subcutaneous
adipose tissue, and the skin is very tenacious. The
external aperture of the ear roundish, very small,
having a diameter of only 2 lines. The tongue is
2 inches 1 line in length, fleshy, as high as broad,
slightly concave and longitudinally grooved above,
tapering to a horny point. On the palate are 6 rows
of papillae; the posterior aperture of the nares
is linear, 2 1/2 inches in length. The aperture of
the glottis is 1/2 an inch long, with numerous papillae
along its sides and behind. The pharynx is extremely
dilatable, as is the oesophagus, which is 17 inches
long, passes along the right side of the neck, together
with the trachea, and when distended has an average
diameter of 2 1/2 inches, but on entering the thorax
contracts to 1 1/2. The structure of the oesophagus
in birds may be very conveniently examined in this
species, the different layers being remarkably developed
in it. Properly speaking, it has only two coats,--the
outer muscular, its external layer composed of transverse
or circular fibres, the internal of equally distinct
longitudinal fibres, which are not straight, but
irregularly undulated. The inner, or mucous coat,
when contracted falls into longitudinal plaits. The
proventriculus is 2 3/4 inches long, the glandules
large, roundish, simple, and disposed in a continuous
belt. Over this part, the transverse muscular fibres
are remarkably developed. The right lobe of the liver
is 5 3/4 inches long, the left lobe 5 1/2. The heart
is very large, of a broadly conical form, 3 inches
long, 2 3/4 inches in breadth. The stomach is three
inches long, 2 1/2 in breadth, of an elliptical form,
a little compressed; its lateral muscles 9 lines
in thickness, and composed of strong large fasciculi;
the tendons 1 1/2 inches in diameter; the cuticular
lining thick, its upper and lower parts marked with
strong longitudinal ridges having numerous transverse
fissures; the grinding surfaces irregularly wrinkled,
with a deep fissure down the middle of each. The
pylorus is 8 lines in diameter when distended, and
is destitute of valve, but has a strong prominent
rim. In the stomach were remains of fishes, and some
pebbles, chiefly quartz, the largest 4 lines long.
The intestine measures 6 feet 6 inches in length,
and varies in diameter from 8 to 6 lines. The rectum
is 3 1/2 inches long, the cloaca extremely large,
forming a cavity about 3 inches in diameter. The
coeca are 1 3/4 inches long, cylindrical, rounded
at the extremity; one of them 7 lines, the other
9 lines, in diameter.
The trachea, when moderately extended, measures
13 1/2 inches in length, inconsiderably depressed,
its transverse diameter at the upper part 9 1/2 lines,
at the lower 6 1/2 lines; the rings cartilaginous,
of moderate breadth, uniform, with a contraction
in the middle before and behind, their number 134,
the four lowest united. The bronchi are composed
of about 20 narrow cartilaginous half rings. The
contractor muscles are very broad, but thin, their
fibres irregularly disposed in front; they become
thicker and narrower toward the lower part, and are
continued beyond the sterno-tracheal muscles, which
come off from the 20th ring from the inferior larynx,
to the membrane between the last tracheal and first
bronchial ring.
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