GRUIDAE 251 



known, while the lobed toes are noticed above. The smaller F. 

 luguhris of Sumatra, Java, and Celebes is hardly distinct ; the North 

 American F. americana and the Australian F. australis are very 

 similar ; the Andean F. gigantea is extremely large ; while the 

 red frontal caruncles of the Bolivian F. cornuta and of the African 

 and South-European F. cristata have already been mentioned. 



Of fossil Eallidae an extraordinary number are found, ranging 

 from the possibly toothed Telmatornis of the American Cretaceous 

 rocks, Gypsornis, Ortlinocnemus, Flcqyhrocnemus, and Tapinopvs of 

 the i'rench Upper Eocene, and Ecdlus of both Eocene and Miocene 

 of the same country, to Fulica minor of the Pliocene of Oregon. 

 Of more recently exterminated forms we have Tribonyx (?) roherti 

 from Central Madagascar, the long-billed flightless Aphanapteryx 

 hroecJci and Fulica netotoni from the Mare aux Sono;es in Mauri- 

 tins, Forphyrio caerulcscens from Eeunion, and the " Poule Eouge " 

 {ErytJiromachus leguati) from Eodriguez. In New Zealand are 

 found the large Aptornis defossor and A. otidiformis, with two 

 species of Motor nis ; in the Chatham Islands Diaphorapteryx 

 hawkinsi and Ocydromns insignis all six flightless ; in the latter 

 islands, too, an extinct Fulica {Pcdaeolimnas) occurs, and in iSTorfolk 

 and Lord Howe Islands Notornis cdha, as above. Queensland fur- 

 nishes Forphyrio mackintoshi,F.reperta, Tribonyx effi,uxus,Gallinula 

 strenuipes, G. peralata, and Fulica prior. The Sandwich Islands 

 may possibly yet contain Rcdlus sandvicensis and Pennula ecau- 

 data, farther instances of flightless species, but this is improbable. 



Fam. II. Gruidae. The Cranes are very old forms, superficially 

 somewhat like Herons, and often confounded with them in local par- 

 lance as is the case in Scotland and Ireland. They are among the 

 largest of Waders, and are scattered over most of the globe, except 

 the Malay islands, Papuasia, and Polynesia ; but in the Neotropical 

 Eegion they are mere migrants from the north, never found 

 south of Mexico. Their headquarters are in North-East Asia, 

 while America possesses only three species, and Australia one. 



These long-necked and long-legged birds have a moderate bill, 

 straight and rather compressed, which varies from slender to stout, 

 with a lateral groove on each side of the mandible and nasal furrows 

 about halfway down the maxilla ; in Bcdcarica this feature is com- 

 paratively short. The metatarsus is scutellated in front, reticu- 

 lated behind ; the tibia is partly bare ; the toes are short and 

 stout, the anterior being more or less connected at the base by a 



