THE ANATOMY OF BIRDS.— OSTEOLOGY. 



177 



Brnjc 



Jufxp 



bine birds {Peristeromorphce of Huxley's arrangement) : maxillo-palatines elongate and 

 spongy; basipterygoid processes narrow, but prominent. (6) The gallinaceous birds (^Zee- 

 toromorphce) : maxillo-palatines varying greatly in size, but always lamellar ; palatines long 

 and narrow, -with rounded off postero-external angles ; basipterygoid processes oval, flattened, 

 sessile upon the rostrum, articulating with the pterygoids, (c) The penguins (Sphenisco- 

 morphce) : maxillo-palatines concavo-convex and lamellar; no basipterygoid processes; ptery- 

 goids flattened, {d) In the gulls, petrels, loons, grebes, 

 and auks, constituting the Cecomorphce of Huxley, the 

 maxillo-palatines are usually lamellar and concavo- 

 convex, but may be spongy, tumid, and closely approx- 

 imated to the vomer ; and basipterygoid processes are 

 absent or present, (c) In the cranes, rails, and their 

 allies (Geranomoiphce), the maxiUo-palatines are con- 

 cavo-convex and lamellar, and basipterygoid processes 

 are usually absent. (/). In the plover-snipe group, 

 or limicoline Grallce {Charadriomorphce) , the maxiUo- 

 palatines are always concavo-convex and lamellar ; the 

 basipterygoid processes narrow and prominent. Except- 

 ing perhaps group d, which does not hang together so 

 well, the schizognathous groups here noted correspond 

 very closely with recognized orders or suborders of birds; 

 in all of them, the maxillo-palatines are perfectly dis- 

 tinct from one another and from the vomer, and the _ 



Pa- 

 latter is slender and usually pointed. There are plenty " ' ^ ^ 



of other birds in which the former factor in the case 

 obtains ; but in these the vomer is broad and usually 

 truncate in front (see JSgWwgnathism, beyond). 



Desmognathism (Gr. 8e(rfx6s, desmos, a bond) is 

 exhibited in one or another style by those swimming 

 and wading birds which are not schizognathous, by 

 the birds of prey, and various non-passerine perching 

 l)irds. It does not fadge so well as any other one of 

 the palatal types of structure with recognized groups of 

 birds based on other considerations. In the ''bound- 

 palate " type, the vomer is either abortive, or so small 

 that it disappears ; when existing it is usually slender 

 and tapers to a point in front; the maxillo-palatines 

 are united across the median line, either directly or by 

 means of ossifications in the nasal septum ; the posterior 

 ends of the palatines and the anterior ends of the ptery- 

 goids articulate directly with the rostrum (as in schizo- 

 gnathism). This type is simply and perfectly exhibited by a duck (fig. 78) in which the 

 maxillo-palatinc is a broad flat plate united with its fellow in mid-line ; the oval sessile basi- 

 pterygoid facets are far forward, opposite the very ends of the pterygoids. In the flamingo, 

 ibis, sp()on-l)ill, stork, heron, the united maxillo-palatines are tumid and spongy, filling the 

 base of the beak ; basipterygoids are wanting (rudimentary in the flamingo). In totipalmate 

 swimmers (pelican, cormorant), desmoguathism is carried to an extreme by union of the palate 

 bones also across the mid-line ; the general arrangement is as before. The birds of prey 

 exhibit several special conditions of desmognathism. The parrots are another case ; among 



12 



Fig. 78 — Desmofinathous skull of mal- 

 lard duck, Alias boscas, iiat. size, from 

 nature, by Dr. R. W. Sbufeldt, U. S. A. 

 Letters as before. 



