10 



t'he wings and the end of the fleshy part of the legs, can be blown 

 up from the trachea. 



" The extent to which the skeleton of the Pelican is permeated by 

 alr has been particularly noted by Mr. Hunter in his celebrated 

 Paper on the air-cells of Birds, in -vvhich he thro\vs out a suggestion 

 that it may assist the birds of this species in carrying heavy loads 

 in their \diTgefauces. This supposed relation of extended air-cells 

 to a largely developed beak is borne out in the case of the Hornbill, 

 in -vvhich every bone of the skeleton is permeated by air, but is ap- 

 parently contradicted by the Gannet : I say apparently, because, al- 

 though the rami of the lower jaw do not, in this species, afFord sus- 

 pension to a capacious reservoir as in the Pelican, yet the bird may 

 occasionally have to bear away a considerable load as, for instance, 

 in a large fish seized by its mandibles, and a previous accumulation 

 in its dilatable asophagus. 



" Mr. Hunter, it may be remembered, was doubtful on the first pub- 

 lication of his Paper as to the source from which the mandibles de- 

 rived their gaseous contents : not that he \vas ignorant of the air- 

 holes in the bones, as he is careful to tell us in the reprint of the 

 Memoir in the ' Animal CEcouomy', where he statės that the lo^ner 

 jaw of the " Pelican is furnished with air, which is supplied l)y means 

 of the Eustachian tube." 



" To ascertain the correctness of this description 1 sawed across 

 the left ramus of the lo\ver jaw ; but on blo\ving into the end of the 

 part attached to the head, I found that the air did not escape as I 

 had expected by the Eustachian tube, (the oiifice of -nhich is a slit, 

 situated on the roof of the mouth, one inch behind the posterior or in- 

 ternal nares,) but filled, first the air-cells under the tliroat, and tlien, 

 passing down the neck, raised the large air-cell above the furciilum. 

 On dissection I found that the air passed into the lower raandible 

 immediately from an air-cell surrounding the articulation between 

 the jaw and os quadratum ; which received its air from the lungs by 

 means of the cells passing along the neck and throat, &c. The au- 

 thority of Mr. Hunter ought not to be set aside by the result of a 

 single experiment ; and the possibility of accidental rupture may be 

 urged against the above observation ; but it is at all events \vorthy 

 of being recorded, and should be repeated when opportunity occurs, 

 ■\vith the addition of blowing into the Eustachian tube, vvhich I 

 omitted to do. 



" There is little to be added to the accounts already given in the 

 Avorks of Cuvier, and of Professor Tiedemann and Carus, of the di- 

 gestive organs of the Pelican. The weak or thin-coated stomach, 

 small c<£ca, and short intestines bespeak its animal diet, and the uni- 

 formly capacious asophagns, as \vell as the superadded faucial bag, 

 may be regarded as pointing to the piscivorous habits of this singu- 

 lar species. It is more difficult to assign the use of the globular 

 cavity interposed between the gizzard and the duodenum, which the 

 Pelican has in common with some of the piscivorous Grallee, viz. those 

 of the genus Ardca. In them the pyloric cavity is very small, but 



