LIFE ON PELICAN ISLAND, WITH SOME SPECULA- 

 TIONS ON THE ORIGIN OF BIRD MIGRATION 



E study of isolated colonies of 

 birds, particularly of those situ- 

 ated on islands, throws much light 

 on several as yet little-understood 

 problems of bird migration. 



With mainland birds of general 

 distribution the Robin, for exam- 

 ple the individual is, except when nesting, lost in 

 the species, and unless the bird be peculiarly 

 marked who can say whether the Robins which 

 nest with us one year are the same as those of 

 the preceding season where our summer Robins 

 winter, or our winter Robins summer ? and who can 

 tell whether the first Robins to come in the spring 

 are our summer resident birds, or early migrants 

 en route to more northern nesting grounds ? 



In the case of certain island-inhabiting birds, 

 however, some of these questions may be answered 

 with a fair degree of certainty. Thus Ipswich Spar- 

 rows are known to nest only on Sable Island, off the 

 Nova Scotia coast, and we are warranted in believ- 

 ing that the same birds, fate permitting, return to 

 their sandy home year after year. Gannets (Sula 

 bassand) nest in the western hemisphere only on 

 three islets in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, and it is 



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