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"Length about 12-3/4 inches; expanse of wings 34 inches; length from carpal joint to tip of first primary 10-3/4 inches; length of bill, measured from gape, 1-5/8 inches; length of nasal tubes 5/16 inch; length of interval between nostrils and commencement of apical curve of upper mandible 1/4 inch; length of tarsi 1-5/10 inches; length of toes, outer and middle, sub-equal 2 inches; length of inner toe 1-5/8 inches. First and second primaries sub-equal, and about 1/2 inch longer than the third. Tail about 4-1/2 inches long and round at extremity. The closed wings extend about 1-1/2 inches beyond the tail. Hallux small, and in shape triangular."

"With respect to the habits of the bird, Mr. March has most kindly furnished me with the following interesting details:--

"It is a night-bird, living in burrows in the marly clefts of the mountains at the east and north-east end of the island. The burrows form a gallery 6 to 10 feet long, terminating in a chamber sufficiently commodious to accommodate the pair; from this they sally forth at night, flying over the sea in search of food (fishes), returning before dawn. It is often seen on moonlight nights and at sunrise running about the neighbourhood of its domicile, and sometimes crossing the road, regardless of the labourers going to their work. I know nothing of its nidification." {158}

The type of "_Pterodroma caribbaea_" is preserved in the Dublin Museum, and three specimens are in the British Museum. This bird is one of the rarest in collections, and all modern collectors have failed to obtain specimens.

Quite recently (1906) Mr. B. Hyatt Verrill published a pamphlet ent.i.tled "Additions to the Avifauna of Dominica." In this unpaginated essay he said under the heading "_Aestrelata jamaicensis_": "Not uncommon (on Dominica), but seldom seen during the day. Breeds at La Bime, Pointe Guignarde, and Lance Bateaux, as well as at Morne Rouge and Scott's Head. In many of the above localities the musky odour of these birds is very p.r.o.nounced when pa.s.sing the cliffs, wherein they breed, on a calm evening. At dusk they may often be seen flying about the cliffs in company with myriads of bats that spend the day in the fissures and crevices. They are very difficult to procure, and although shot at repeatedly only two specimens have been obtained."

From all former evidence we might have well considered this species to be extinct, but if Mr. Verrill's statement is correct it would be far from exterminated. I do not, however, know if the Dominica specimens have been compared with Jamaica examples, and if Mr. Verrill's determination (apparently made on Dominica) is therefore correct.

Habitat: Jamaica. {159}

AESTRELATA HASITATA (KUHL).

_Procellaria hasitata_ (sic) Kuhl, Beitr. z. Zool. Temminck, Pl. Col.

416 (1826); Gould, B Australia VII, pl. 47 (1845).

_Procellaria diabolica_ Lafresnaye, Rev. Zool. 1844, p. 168.

_Procellaria meridionalis_ Lawrence, Ann. Lyceum N.Y. IV, p. 475 (1848-- ), V, pl. 15, p. 220 (1852).

_Procellaria rubritarsi_ Newton, Zoologist 1852, p. 3692 (ex Gould's MS., descr. nulla).

_Aestrelata haesitata_ Bonaparte, Compt. Rend. XLII, p. 768 (1856), Elliot, B. N. America II. pl. 60, fig. 1 (1868); Rothsch. & Hart, New Edition of "Naumann" XII, p. 20 (1903).

_Aestrelata diabolica_ Bonap., Consp. Av. II, p. 189 (1855).

_Oestrelata haesitata_ Newton, Ibis 1870, p. 277; Dresser, B. Europe VIII, p. 545, pl. 618 (1880); Stevens, B. of Norfolk, III, p. 361, pl.

4 (1890); Salvin, Cat. B. Brit. Mus. XXV, p. 403 (1896).

Mr. Saunders describes this bird as follows: "The adult has the crown and nape dark brown, hind-neck white, cheeks and ear-coverts greyish; mantle dark brown; upper tail-coverts white; central tail-feathers chiefly brownish-black, the rest more or less white on their basal portions but broadly edged with brown; forehead and under-parts white; bill black; legs and feet dusky-yellow. Length 16 inches, wing 11.3 inches. The immature bird is believed to be mottled with brown on the forehead and to be duller in tint on the upper parts."

Though evidently not quite extinct, it seems certain that the fate of this bird is sealed. In former times it used to breed in great numbers on several of the West Indian Islands: Hayti, Guadeloupe, and Dominica. Its last breeding place was the Morne au Diable or Morne Diablotin on Dominica.

There it was searched for in vain by Colonel Feilden, in 1889, who wrote a lengthy article about it in the "Trans. Norfolk and Norwich Nat. Society"

V. p. 24-39. Mr. Selwyn Branch again, ten years later, ascended La Morne au Diable, and found the old breeding places deserted. The "Manicou,"

evidently an introduced North-American Opossum, Mongoose and rats had entirely extirpated the "Diable."

Two-and-a-half centuries ago Pere du Tertre found this Petrel breeding on Guadeloupe, and Pere Labat, about forty years later, found it in great numbers, and gave a long, graphic description of it in his "Nouveau Voyage aux isles de l'Amerique" (Edit. I, Vol. II, pp. 349-353). These birds were then known as the "Diable" or "Diablotin," and their flesh was highly esteemed, and they were even salted and exported to Martinique and other French islands in great numbers. {160}

In 1876 Mr. F. A. Ober searched already unsuccessfully for our birds.

It seems that the disturbance and destruction on their breeding places has scattered these Petrels about, for specimens have at various times been taken on the coast of Florida and Virginia, and even as late as 1893 and 1895, inland of the State of New York on Oneida Lake, in Ulster County, Vermont and Ontario; moreover, a specimen has been killed in 1850 in Norfolk, England, and an example in the Museum of Boulogne is said to have been killed in the neighbourhood of that town.

In an undated and unpaginated pamphlet, received last year in Europe, Mr.

A. Hyatt Verrill informs us that this bird is "not uncommon on the fishing grounds and in Martinique and Guadeloupe channels," and that he took a specimen in September, 1904. This statement requires confirmation.

In collections this bird is very rare. I have the male (in moult) which was caught on August 28th, 1893 on Oneida Lake, in the State of New York.

Habitat: West Indian Islands.

{161}

HEMIPHAGA SPADICEA (LATH.)

(PLATE 21.)

_Chestnut-shouldered Pigeon_ Latham, Gen. Syn. Suppl. II, add. p. 375 (1802--Norfolk Island).

_Columba spadicea_ Latham, Ind. Orn., Suppl. p. LX, No. 7 (1802--Norfolk Island); Temminck and Knip, Pigeons, II, p. 1, pl. 1 (1808--"Friendly Islands."--Errore).

_Columba gigas_ Ranzani, Elementi di Zool. III, 1, p. 223 (1821--"Friendly Islands."--Errore).

_Columba princeps_ Vigors, P.Z.S. 1833, p. 78 (Australia--errore).

_Columba leucogaster_ Wagler, Syst. Av., Columba spec. 12 (1827--Norfolk Island).

_Hemiphaga spadicea_ Salvadori, Cat. B. Brit. Mus. XXI, p. 238 (1893).

The Norfolk Island Pigeon, _Hemiphaga spadicea spadicea_, is very similar to the New Zealand Pigeon, _Hemiphaga spadicea novaezealandiae_, but differs in having the hind-neck coppery or metallic green, sharply defined from the chestnut back, the wings and upper wing-coverts more greyish, less greenish, also the lower back and rump somewhat more greyish.

As far as we know this pigeon was only found on Norfolk Island, the locality "Australia" being doubtless erroneous. Like so many other birds it became extinct on Norfolk Island, probably more than half a century ago.

There are evidently quite a number of specimens in various museums, many of which have never been recorded. I am aware of the following examples:

1 in the British Museum (Cat. B. Brit. Mus. XXI, p. 238).

3 in the Liverpool Museum (Bull. Liverp. Mus. I, p. 35).

1 in my own collection (Proc. IV. Orn. Congress, p. 215).

1 in Philadelphia, U.S. America (Ca.s.sin, U.S. Expl. Exp. B, p. 225).

1 in Frankfurt a.M. (Hartert, Kat. Vogelsamml., p. 189).

1 in Wiesbaden (Lampe, Jahrb. Na.s.sau Ver. 58).

1 in Bremen (Hartlaub, Verz. Museum, p. 98).

1 in Lisbon (Forbes and Rob., Bull. Liverp. Mus. II, p. 130).

1 in Leyden (Schlegel, Mus. Pays-Bas).

1 in Vienna (Ibis 1860, p. 422).

1 in Naples, seen by myself.

1 in Milan, examined by myself.

The specimen at Tring was bought at the auction of the "c.u.mberland Museum"

at Distington.

{163}

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Extinct Birds Part 38 summary

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