Page:DawsonOrnithologicalMiscVol1.djvu/93

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
birds of new zealand.
45

feathered three parts down. Frontal plate going to back of the eye, as usual in this genus ; hind toe relatively longer than in Notornis. Claws short and curved. Body lighter than in Notornis; figure quite different. Wings longer than in Notornis, sharp, and feathers pointed. Primaries nearly 2 inches longer than secondaries, hard. Apparently a bird of good flight. On bend of wing, concealed by feathers, a sharp spur. Differs from Gallinula, in which the wing-spur is sometimes found as a knob only.

Colour: indications of first dress being brown or black, perhaps second dress blue, third dress white ; but all these uncertain.

Now in Liverpool Museum, formerly in Lord Derby's Museum, first in Bullock's Museum.

The present example is probably a young bird.

Description of the Plate.

As it is commonly impossible to tell the colour of the soft parts, legs, beak, &c. from a faded skin (from which this Plate was taken), these are not to be regarded as of any authority in the present illustration*. The bill is so badly broken in both mandibles that it would have looked an absurdity to copy it ; therefore this has been drawn as it is supposed it should be. There are some brown feathers on the occiput ; and it appears quite a young bird. The legs were in a very soft condition and swollen when the bird was killed and skinned, there being several folds in, and air-spaces under, the skin of the tarsus. It seems to have lost its original colour by moulting. When placed in a good clear light, the entire plumage appears to be yellowish white ; but the parts most turned away from the light present a beautiful bluish gloss : a reflection is much enhanced by placing a sheet of white paper under it as a reflector ; then the so coloured parts assume a brilliancy almost equal to phosphoric light, like mother-of-pearl. On the right side of the head are


Dr. Buller says, in the Birds of New Zealand, of Porphyrio melanotus, p. 186:—"The colours of the bill and legs are regulated by conditions of age and sex ; but they likewise differ somewhat in richness in individual examples of the male."

h 2