660 AVES—WILD GOOSE. 
a swan, and its wings, when extended, ten feet from tip to tip. The bill, 
which is six inches long, is yellowish, and terminates in a crooked point. 
The top of the head is of a bright brown; the back is of a dirty, deep spotted 
brown ; and the belly, and under the wings, is white. The toes, which are 
webbed, are of a fles’ color. 
This bird is an inhabitant of the tropical climates, and also beyond them, 
as far as the Straits of Magellan, in the South seas. It not only eats fish, 
but also such small water-fowl as it can take by surprise. It preys, as the 
gull kind do, upon the wing, and chiefly pursues the flying fish that are 
forced from the sea by the dolphins. 
The albatross seems to have a peculiar affection for the penguin, and a 
pleasure in its society. They are always seen to choose the same places of 
breeding ; some distant, uninhabited island, where the ground slants to the 
sea, as the penguin is not formed either for flying or climbing. In such 
places their nests are seen together, as if they stood in need of mutual assist- 
ance and protection. In the middle, on high, the albatross raises its nest on 
heath, sticks, and long grass, about two feet above the surface; and round 
this the penguins make their lower settlements, rather in holes in the 
ground; and most usually eight penguins to one albatross. 
There are about three other species of albatross, all of them smaller than 
the preceding. ‘The upper parts of the plumage are a dusky blue black, 
and the rump and under parts white ; but what peculiarly distinguishes it 
is, that the bill, which is four inches long, is black, all but the upper ridge, 
which is yellow quite to the tip. It inhabits the South seas within the 
tropics. 
THE, AMERICAN: WiLD?.G00SE.! 
Tuts is a bird universally known over the whole country, and whose regu 
lar periodical migrations are the sure signals of returning spring, or 
approaching winter. I have never yet visited, says Wilson, any quarter of 
the country, where the inhabitants are not familiarly acquainted with the 
passing and repassing of the wild geese. The general opinion here is, that 
they are on their way to the lakes to breed; but the inhabitants on the con- 

1 Anas canadensis, Lrx. The genus Anas has the bill middle-sized, robust, straight, 
more or less depressed, covered by a thin skin, often deeper than broad at the base, whic 
is furnished with a fleshy tubercle, or smooth; always depressed towards the tip, which 
is obtuse and furnished with a nail; edges of both mandibles divided into conical or flat 
lamellated teeth; nostrils almost at the surface of the bill, at some distance from the base, 
ovoid half closed by the flat membrane that covers the nasal furrow; legs short, feathered 
to the knee, and placed near the abdomen; the three fore toes webbed ; the hinder detach- 
ed, and either destitute of a web, or having only a rudimentary one. 
