EXTEBNAL PARTS OF BIRDS. — THE TAIL. 115 



Tail-Coverts are the numerous comparatively small and weak feathers which overhe and 

 imderlio the rectrices, covering their bases ami extending a variable distance toward their 

 ends, contributing to the firmness and symmetry of the tail. They yiass smoothly out from 

 the body, by gradual lengthening, there being seldom, if ever, any obvious outward distinction 

 between them and feathers of th(^ rump and belly; but they belong to the ^terj/fa caudalis 

 (p. 87). Tlie natural division of the coverts is into an upper and under set (tectrices .mper- 

 iores, tectrices inferiores). The inferior covc^rts are the best distinguished from the general 

 plumage, the anus generally dividing off tliese " vent-feathers," as they are sometimes called. 

 It is to the bundle of under tail-coverts, behind the vent, that the term criftsum is most properly 

 applied. Neither set is ever entirely wanting ; but one or the other, particularly the upper one, 

 may be very short, as in a cormorant, (jr duck of the genus Erismatura, exposing the quills 

 almost to their bases. AVhile the upper coverts are usually shorter and fewer than the under 

 ones, reaching less than half-way U> the end of the tail, they scjmetimes take on extraordinary 

 (kjvelopment and form the bird's chiefest ornament. The gorgeous, iridescent, argus-eyed 

 train of the peacock consists of enormous tectrices, not rectrices; the elegant plumes of the 

 paradise trogon, Fharomacrus mocinno, several times longer than the bird itself, are like- 

 wise coverts. Occasionally, a pair of coverts lengthens and stiffens, and then resembles true 

 tail-feathers; as in the Ptarmigan (Lac/opus). The crissal feathers are more uniform in 

 development; they ordinarily form a compact, definite bundle, as well shown in a duck, 

 where they reach about to the end of the tail. In some of the storks, they become plumes of 

 considerable pretensions ; and in the wonderful humming-bird, Loddigesia mirahilis, the 

 middle pair stifiens to resemble rectrices and projects far beyond the true tail. The 



Rectrices, Rudders, or true tail-feathers, like the remiges or rowers, are usually stiff, 

 \\-en-pr(]nounced feathers, pennaceous to the very base of the vexilla, without after-shafts, as a 

 rule, and with the outer web narrower than the other in most cases. They are always in 

 pairs ; that is, there is an equal number of feathers on the right and left half of the tail ; and 

 their number, consequently, is an even one. The excepticjns to this rule are so few and 

 irregular, and then only among birds with the higher numbers of rectrices, that such are 

 l)robably to be regarded as more anomalies, from accidental aixest of a feather. They are im- 

 bricated over each other in this wise : the central pair are high- ^, 



est, lying with both their webs over the next feather on either 



side, the inner web of one of these middle feathers indifferently 



underlying or overlying that of the other ; all thus successively 



overlying the next outer one so that they would fijrm a pyra- 



mid were they thiclc instead of being so flat. The arrange- 



ment is perceived at once in the accompanying diagram ; ~^^ 



where it will be seen, also, that spjreading the tail is the diver- 

 gence of a from fo, while closing the tail is bringing a and h together under c. The motion 

 is effected by certain nmscles that draw on either side upon the bases of the quills collectively; 

 they are the same that pull the whoh; tail to one side or the other, acting like the tiUer-ropes 

 of a boat's rudder. The general 



Shape of a Rectrix is shown in fig. 23. Such a feather is ordinarily straight, some- 

 what clubbed or oblong, widening a little, regularly and gradually toward the tip, where it is 

 gently rounded off. But the departures from such shape, or any that could be assumed as a 

 standard, are numberless, and in some cases extreme. In fact, none of a bird's feathers are 

 more variable than those of the tail; it is impossible to specify all the shapes they assume. 

 While most are straight, some are curved — and the curvature may be to or fi'om the middle 

 line of the body, in the horizontal plane, or up and down, in the vertical plane. Some shapes 



