Phalacrocorax. birds. PALMIPIDES. IIT 



bb. Wings long, and well adapted for flight. MacropteBjE. 

 c. Nostrils prominent, tubular. 

 Procellaria. 

 Puffinus. 

 cc. Nostrils plain. 



d. Bill hooked at the end. 

 Cataractes. 

 Larus. 

 dd. Bill pointed- 

 Sterna. 



Gen. LXXIX. PHALACROCORAX. Cormorant.— Bill 

 compressed, the margin entire, the extremity hooked. 

 Tail rounded. Middle claw serrated. 



169. F. Ca?-bo. Common Cormorant. — Tail of fourteen fea- 

 thers. Length of the bill, from the tip to the feathers on the 

 front, 2 inches and 3 lines. (Temminclc.) 



Corvus aquaticus. Will Orn. 248 — Sihb. Scot. 20 — PelecanusCarbo,Z,m?j. 



Syst. 1. 216. Perm. Brit. Zool. ii. 608 — Carbo cormoranus, Temm. 



Orn. ii. 894 — £, Cole-Goose ; S, Great Scarf or Scart ; W, Mulfran ; 



N, Brongie, Lorn. — Common. 

 Length 3, breadth 4 feet ; weight 6 or 7 pounds. BiU 5 inches long, 

 dusky; the bare space at the base yellow. Feet and legs black. Irides 

 green. Plumage black, with green and purple reflections ; gorget white ; and 

 numerous, slender, white feathers on the head, neck, and thighs. A crest of 

 long feathers on the hind head. Quills and tail black. In winter the ci-est 

 is wanting, the gorget is dirty white, the feathers on the back have a cine- 

 reous brownish tinge, and the peculiar slender white feathers drop off. Nest 

 on rocks, on the shore, or even on trees near large lakes. Eggs 3 or 4, green- 

 ish-white, with a rough crust. Young with more brown than even the win- 

 ter garb, the bill and irides are brown, and there is no crest — In an example 

 taken alive in April, and kept in confinement, by Montagu, the plumage 

 changed from the summer to the winter dress, and continued in that state. 

 The white gorget, the white on the neck and thighs, and the crest disap- 

 peared This species frequently visits fresh water lakes and rivers, and 



readily perches on trees. 



170. P. Graculus. Common Shag. — Tail long, conical, of 

 12 feathers, Length of the bill, from the tip to the feathers 

 on the front, 1 inch and 10 lines. (Temm.) 



Corvus aquaticus minor, Will. Orn. 249. Sibb. Scot. 20 — Pel. Grac. 



Linn. Svst. L 217. Penn. Brit. Zool. Ii. 610 — Carbo Grac. Temm. 



Orn. ii. 897 — E, Shag, Crane ; S, Scart ; W, Y Fulfran leiaf.— Com- 



mon. 

 Length 28, breadth 42 inches; weight 4 pounds. Bill dusky, towards the 

 base including the naked skin, yellowish. Ii-ides reddish brown. Legs 

 black. Plumage glossy greenish-black. Small white feathers scattered over 

 the neck and thighs. Nape with a crest of long green feathers. In winter, 

 the white feathers disappear, and the plumage, above, becomes more cinere- 

 ous. Nest on rocks, of a few sea-weeds. Eggs 2, with a rough crust. Young 

 cinereous on the throat, and the plumage on the back is more or less cine- 

 reous-brown. This species seldom leaves the sea-shore. 



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