Feet and Legs 



369 



fonvard, forming a four-tined grapple by which they 

 hang themselves up in their hollow nesting-trees. Whip- 

 poorwills and some other birds have a curious comb, 

 or pecten, along the edge of the middle claw, which is 

 perhaps of use in cleaning the long bristles about their 

 mouths, or in arranging their very delicate, soft plumage. 

 Kingfishers and several related groups of birds make so 

 little use of their feet, except in motionless perching, that 



Fig. 290. — C'oinl) on toe of Chufk-will's-widow. 



not only are the toes sm.all and weak, but two of the 

 front ones have grown together for over half their length. 

 Perhaps the most interesting condition of toe struc- 

 ture is found among the woodpeckers, parrots, cuckoos, 

 and owls. In these groups we find a similar plan of gen- 

 eral arrangement: two toes in front and two behind. 

 With few exceptions it is the great, or first, toe and the 

 fourth, or outer, toe which are reversed. This arrange- 

 ment of toes is known as yoke-toed, or zygodactyl. 



