GALLINACEOUS BIRDS. 



54? 



rubbish, forming a hot-bed, in which its eggs art* left to 

 hatch. The raegapods, together with the American guans 

 and curassows (Cracidce), form a sort of passage from tho 

 gallinaceous to the columbine birds. One of the most puz- 

 zling forms for the systematic ornithologist to deal with is 

 the hoasin of Guiana (Opisthocomus cristatus Illiger). In 

 this bird the keel of the breast-bone is 

 cut away in front, the wish-bone unites 

 with the coracoid bones, and also with 

 the manubrinm of the breast-bone. It 

 was an archaic gallinaceous bird.* 



In the tinamous of Central and South 

 America the tail-feathers are. in some 

 cases, entirely wanting, and the breast- 

 bone and skull-bones have some anom- 

 alous features. Most all gallinaceous 

 birds have plump 

 bodies, with short 

 beaks and small 

 rounded wings, not 

 being good fliers. 

 In some of their 

 cranial characters 

 they are so peculiar | 

 that Huxley makes 

 them one of his 

 primary divisions 

 of CarinatcB. 



We now come to 

 birds of a higher F 2 _ WMte . tai]ed Ptarmigan (Lasmmt ieucurm\ 



type, in Which the in (upper figure) summer and (lower figure) winter 

 T A , , plumage. From Hayden's Survey. 



knee and part of 



the thigh are free from the body, the leg being usually 

 feathered down to the tibio-tarsal joint ; the toes are usually 

 on the same level, being fitted for grasping or perching. 



The doves are rapid fliers, but a notable exception is seen 

 in their extinct ally the Dodo (Didus ineptus Linn.) of 

 Mauritius, which became extinct on the island of Mauritius 

 in the seventeenth century, while the solitaire, Didus (Pe- 



* The young have wings with two claws, a third rudimentary claw, 

 and two rudiments of a fourth digit ; its scapula is batrachian, its 

 three clavicles lizard-like (Parker), see Fig 471&. 



