EXTERN AL I'ARIS OF BIBD8. — TRE FEET. 



123 



the walking and esj)eciaUy the wading liirds that the crus is most extensively denuded ; 

 it may be naked half- way up to the knee. A few waders, — among ours, chiefly in the 

 snipe family, — have the cms apparently clothed to the heel-joint; but this is due, in most if 

 not all cases, to the length of the feathers, for probably in none of them does the ptoryla cruralJs 

 itself extend to the joint. Crural feathers are nearly always short and inconspicuous ; ))ut 

 sometimes long and flowing, as in the " flags " of most hawks, and in our tree-cuckoos. The 

 tarsus (I now and hereafter use the term in its ordinary accexJtation — C U> D in fig. '.ii; trs in 

 tig. 36) iu the vast majority of birds is entirely naked, being provided with a horny or leathery 

 sheath of integument like that covering the bill. Such is its condition iu the Fasseres and 

 Piairke (with few exceptions, as among swifts and goatsuckers) ; iu the waders without ex- 

 ception, and in nearly all swimmers (the frigate-bird, Tach)jpetes, has a slight feathering). 

 The liaptores and GalKiios furnish the most feathered tarsi. Thus, feathered tarsi is the rule 

 among owls {Striges) ; frequent, either partial or complete, in hawks and eagles, as in Aquila, 

 Archibuteo, Falco, Buteo, etc. All our grouse, and perhaps all true grouse, have the tarsus 

 more or less feathered (fig. 35). The toes themselves are feathered in a few birds, as several 

 of the owls, and aU the ptarmigans (Lagopus). Partial feathering of the tarsus is often con- 

 tinued downward, to the toes or upon them, by sparse modified feathers iu the form of bristles ; 

 as is well shown in the barn-owl (fig. 47). When incomplete, the feathering is generally want- 

 ing behind and 

 below, and it is 

 almost invariably 

 continuous above 

 with the crural 

 plumage. But in 

 that spirit of per- 

 versity iu which 

 birds delight to 

 nrove everv rule Fig. 35. — Feathered tarsus of a grouse, C'w^icZo?u« c-iy^i^/o. Nat. size. 



we establish by furnishing exceptions, the tai'sus is sometimes partly featliered discontinuously. 

 A curious example of this is afibrded by the bank-swallow, Cotile riparia, with its little tuft (jf 

 feathers at the base of the hind toe ; and some varieties of the barn-yard fowl sprout monstrous 

 legfrings of feathers fi'om the side of the tarsus. 



The Length of Leg, relatively to the size of the bird, is extremely variable ; a thrush or 

 sparrow probably represents about average proportions of the limb. The shortest-legged bii'd 

 known is probably the frigate-pelican, Tacliypietes ; which, though a yard long more or less, 

 has a tibia not half as long as the slnill, and a tai-sus under an inch. The leg is very shoii; in 

 many Picarian birds, as hummers, swifts, goatsuckers, kingfishers, trogons, etc., iu many of 

 which it scarcely serves at all for progression. Among Fasseres, the swallows resemble swifts 

 in shortness of their hind limbs. It is pretty short likewise in many zygodactyle, yoke-toed or 

 seansorial birds, as woodpeckers, cuckoos, and paiTots. In most swimming birds the limb 

 may also be called short, especially in its femoral and tarsal segments ; while the broad-webbed 

 toes are comparatively longer. The leg lengthens in the lower perching birds, as many 

 hawks and some of the terrestrial pigeons ; it is still longer among walkers proper, such as the 

 gallinaceous birds, and reaches its maximum among the waders, especially the larger ones, 

 such as cranes, herons, ibises, storks, and flamingoes ; among all of which it is correlated with 

 extension of the neck. Probably the longest-legged of all birds for its size is the stilt 

 (Jlimantopus) . Taking the tarsus alone as an index of length of the whole limb, this is in 

 the frigate under one-thirty-sixth of the bird's length ; a flamingo, four feet long, has a tarsus 

 a foot long : a stilt, four-teen inches long, one of four inches ; so that the maximum and 



