732 SYSTEMATIC SYNOPSIS.— LONGIPENNES. 



306. PHAETHON. (Gr. <Paiecov, Phaethon, son of the sun.) Tropic BiEDS.y, Character as above. 



■762. P. aethe'reiis. (Lat. cethereus, pertaining to the upper air.) Red-billed Tropic Bird. 

 Bill red ; tarsi and part of toes light colored ; rest of toes black. Plumage pure white, on 

 nearly all the upper parts finely barred with black ; black markings on sides under wings ; a 

 transocular fascia, outer webs and part of inner webs of most of the primaries, most of several 

 inner secondaries, and most of tlie shafts of the tail-feathers, black, the shafts of the long middle 

 pair, however, white in most of their extent. Length about 36.00 inches, including the long- 

 tail-feathers ; without these, about 18.00; wing 12.00; long middle tail-feathers up to 18.00 ; 

 tarsus 1.00 ; middle toe and claw 1.75 ; bill 2.50 along culmen, nearly 1.00 deep at base. Trop- 

 ical and subtropical America, accidental in N. Am. ; said to have straggled to Newfoundland 

 in one instance {Freke, Pr. Eoy. Soo. Dublin, 1879). 



763. P. flaviros'trls. (Lat. flavirostris, yellow-billed.) Yellow-billed Tropic Bird. Bill 

 and tarsi yellow ; toes black. Plumage white, tinged \\dth salmon or rosy on the under parts 

 and long tail-feathers; lacking the barring with black of the last species, but ^^-ith definite 

 black areas — a transocular fascia, an oblique band on lesser wing-coverts and thence on scap- 

 ulai's and inner secondaries, shaft-strijies on outer five or six primaries, stripes on the flanks, 

 and most of the shafts of the tail-feathers, including the middle pair. Smaller than the last; 

 development of middle tail-feathers about the same; wing 11.00; bill notably smaller, only 

 about 2.00 along culmen and 0.75 deep at base. This is the species iigured by Audubon (8vo, 

 pi. 427) under the Avrong name of P. cethereus, which belongs to the foregoing. Tropical and 

 subtropical America, rare or casual hi the U. S., as on the Gulf coast. Has strayed to Western 

 New York in one instance {Cones, Bull. Nutt. Club, v, 1880, p. ()3). 



XII. Order LONGIPENNES : Long-winged Swimmers. 



Long-winged Naiatores icith open nostrils and small free or no hind toe. — Wings long, 

 pointed, reaching when closed beyond the base, in many cases beyond the end, of the tail, which 

 is usually lengthened and of less than 20 rectrices (oftenest 12). Legs more fir less [lerfectly 

 beneath centre of equilibrium when the body is in the horizontal position ; the crura more nearly 

 free from the body than in other Natatores, if not completely external. Anterior toes palmate ; 

 hallux never united with the inner toe, highly elevated, directly posterior, very small, rudi- 

 mentary, or absent; tibiaa naked below. Bill of variable form, but never extensively membra- 

 nous nor lamellate, the covering liorny througliout, sometimes discontinuous. Nostrils variable, 

 but never abortive. No gular pouch. Altricial. 



This order, which may be recognized among web-footed birds by the foregoing external 

 characters, is less substantially put together than either of the two preceding, — not that its 

 components are not sufficiently related to each other, but because the essential points of structure 

 are shared to a considerable extent by other groups. Thus the osteological resemblances of 

 longipennine birds with loons, aides, and plover, are quite close, while the digestive system 

 agrees in general characters with that of other fish-eating birds. In some of the lower mem- 

 bers of the order, the tibia develops an apophysis, as in the loons ; while even in external 

 characters, one genus at least (Halodroma) resembles the Alcida. It is not certain that the 

 order must not be broken up, or rather enlarged and differently defined, to include some of the 

 genera now ranged under Pijgo2)odes. 



The palate has the schizognathous structure ; " the maxillo-palatines are usually lamellar 

 and concavo-convex, but in the Procellariidce they become tumid and spongy" {Huxley); 

 basypterygoid processes may be wanting, but they are certainly present in many cases. The 

 nasal bones are schizorhinal in Laridcr, holorhinal in ProceHariidce. There is apparently one 

 pair of syrhigeal muscles throughout the order. The oesophagus is capacious and distensible ; 

 there is no special crop ; the proventiculus is a bulging of the gullet ; the gizzard is small and 



