2092 FLAMINGOES, DUCKS, AND SCREAMERS 



massive, the neck short and thick, the head small, the leg long, and the foot with 

 short toes, powerful nails, and deeply-incised webs. The wings are broad, with 

 strong quills; the tail is rounded, and trie body plumage soft. The color of the 

 plumage is a clear ashy gray, with brown reflections, passing into lighter gray on 

 the crown of the head, and marked on the back with blackish-brown spots near the 

 tips of the feathers; the under tail coverts and the tips of some of the wing feathers 

 being also blackish brown. The eye is scarlet, the beak black, with its waxy cover- 

 ing greenish yellow, and the leg and foot blackish. 



In habits the cereopsis goose commonly known in Australia as the Cape 

 Barron goose is much more of a land than a water bird, its gait being very unlike 

 that of an ordinary goose, and its rate of swimming slow. The flight is, moreover, 

 heavy. Essentially diurnal in their habits, these birds are nowhere common, and 

 are rapidly diminishing in number, having been even exterminated in some of the 

 smaller Australian islands. During a long sojourn in Victoria, the " Old Bushman " 

 states that he only saw these birds on two occasions " once in a small flock, and 

 once when two pitched with the tame geese at Mordialloc (as they are fond of 

 doing), and which were caught alive. They soon became tame, and used to stalk 

 about the paddock; but they were very pugnacious with the other geese. Their 

 call note was a deep, trumpet-like sound." The nest, although no great work of 

 art, is better built than that of most members of the family, being smoothly rounded 

 inside, and decorated with feathers and down. In size the eggs are relatively small, 

 while in form they are rounded, and in color yellowish white. The period of 

 incubation varies from thirty to thirty-eight days, according to the weather, and 

 the young are able to run immediately after breaking the egg. 



Till within a comparatively-recent date New Zealand was in- 

 ew eaan ^abited ^y a nearly-allied but larger goose (Cnemiomis caltitrans], 



GrOOSe 



which, like so many of the large birds of those islands, had totally 

 lost the power of flight, the whigs being very small, and the keel of the breast- 

 bone wanting. In all probability these birds were exterminated by the Maoris. As 

 in the cereopsis goose, the metacoracoid of this extinct species was much wider and 

 shorter than it is in the other members of the family. 



The true geese (Anser), together with several allied genera, con- 

 e _ n stitute a fourth subfamily distinguished by the following character- 



istics, and including some forty species, having an almost world-wide 

 distribution. In size the geese occupy a middle position in the family, none of 

 -them being large. The neck is of moderate length, being always shorter than the 

 body; the lores -are feathered; the beak is not longer than the head, and tapers to 

 the extremity, which is covered by a large nail-like knob; while the metatarsus is 

 rather long, exceeding the third toe in length, and is covered on all sides with 

 reticulate scales. The tail feathers may be either fourteen or sixteen; and although 

 the two sexes are usually very much alike, there is great specific variation in 

 color. But a single autumnal molt of the plumage takes place; and all these 

 birds are essentially vegetable feeders, many of them grazing in the well-known 

 manner of the domestic breeds. They are all birds of strong, though somewhat 

 heavy flight; and although some are confined to the Southern Hemisphere, the 



