THE ANATOMY OF BIRDS. —SPLANCHNOLOGY. 209 
How sadly sweet the solemn strain — 
The dirge of the dying swan! 
That wondrous music, child of pain, 
That requiem, sounding once again — 
And a bird’s soul passes on. 
f. SPLANCHNOLOGY: THE DIGESTIVE SYSTEM. 
The Alimentary Canal, or digestive tract, is a tube which passes through the body 
from mouth to anus, conveying food, the nutritious qualities of which are drawn off by the lae- 
teals im transitu and assimilated, the refuse being voided. This is digestion. The canal is 
really a tube within a tube, being contained in the cavity below the bodies of the vertebrae, 
formed by the series of hemal arches (p. 135). Birds are fast livers, their digestive operations, 
like the processes of respiration and circulation, being very active and effectual; they require 
proportionally great quantities of food. The voracity of the cormorant is proverbial, but it is 
probably not greater than that of the ethereal nightingale. Birds as a elass are omnivorous ; 
many species are as nearly omnivorous as any animals can well be; but the majority are either 
vegetarian or flesh-feedmg. Very many birds feed upon fruits, hard or soft ; but even these, 
when in the nest, are nourished for the most part upon the bodies of insects ; and it may be truly 
said, that the great majority of birds are insectivorous. Birds seem to be the great controlling 
agency in the economy of nature, of the increase of insect life ; agriculture would be diffieult if not 
impracticable without them, and their economic value is simply incalculable. Insectivorous 
birds cannot be much interfered with, without destroying one of the most important and conse- 
quential of nature’s many beautiful adjustments. The bird cries perpetual ‘‘ échec!” to the 
insect. Even those birds which are mainly flesh-eaters, as the hawks and owls, are similarly 
beneficial, for the creatures they chiefly prey upon are the small rodents so fateful to husbandry. 
The carrion-eaters contribute largely to make tropical regions habitable to man. Various 
tribes of birds feed almost exclusively upon fish ; and these sometimes reach the dignity of 
diplomatic and other political interests of mankind: nations have gone to war over the dung 
of such birds, guano-beds being to some of the South American powers a large item of their 
revenue. Chili and Peru have been fighting lately, and the United States have been wrang- 
ling, over the excrements of the alimentary canal of sea-birds. This tube, in general, is 
shortest, simplest, and most direct in the flesh- and fish-eaters, the nature of whose food assim- 
ilates already more nearly to the substance of their bodies than does that of the vegetarians. 
The tube is modified in different portions of its extent, for the prehension, retention, saturation, 
maceration, and comminution of food, and the mixture with it of other solvent fluids than those 
secreted by the mucous membrane of the alimentary canal itself. Hence arise the various 
modifications of its length, dilatation here, contraction there; the presence in its ling mem- 
brane of numerous follicles ; and the annexation of various glandular organs. Being always 
longer than the body, the tube is necessarily coiled away in certain places; this folding taking 
place chiefly in the intestinal part of the tract. Modifications of structure make recognizable 
parts, as the mouth, gullet, crop, stomach, gizzard, intestine, cloaca, anus. Annex organs 
are the salivary glands, the liver, and the pancreas, all of which pour their secretions into the’ 
canal. This tube also receives the terminations of other systems of organs: the auditory organ 
of special sense; the respiratory system, which is at first a mere bud or off-set from the 
digestive ; the urinary and the generative, which, though originally distinct, primitively and 
permanently open into the lower bowel. The intestine is also continuous with the cavity of the 
umbilical vesicle of the embryo, a primitive structure which disappears as the chick matures; 
and with that of the allantois, another embryotie organ which begins by budding from the intes- 
tinal cavity. Its connection with the system of blood-vessels is direct through the lacteals and 
thoracic ducts (p. 199). Its operations are automatic and spontaneous, of the ‘reflex ” order ; 
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