BIRDS OF PREY AND OWLS 



off my eyes; they mo\'ed in large curves, sweeping in circles, 

 descending and ascending, without giving a single flap." One 

 which he shot measured, from tip to tip of the fully expanded 

 wings, 83- feet. 



The condor, like its smaller relati\'es, hunts by sight, and 

 not, as was at one time believed, by smell, feeding on the dead 

 bodies of guanacos which have died a natural death or been 

 killed by pumas, and upon other dead animals. In the 

 neighbourhood where sheep and goats are kept, the)' arc 

 much dreaded, as they will attack the young kids and lambs. 

 The flock-owners on this account wage constant war against 

 them, capturing them by enclosing a carcase within a narrow 

 space, and when the condors are gorged galloping up on 

 horseback and killing them, for when this bird has not space 

 to run it cannot rise from the ground. Sometimes the trees 

 on which they roost are marked, and when night falls a man 

 climbs the tree and captures them with a noose, for they are 

 very heavy sleepers. 



The condor ranges from the Andes of Ecuador, Peru, 

 and Chili southwards to the Rio Negro on the east coast 

 of Fatagonia. It lays two large white eggs on a shelf of 

 bare rock projecting from precipitous cliffs, and the young 

 are said to be unable to fly till after they are a year old. 

 As will be seen in the photographs, the head of the male is 

 crowned by a bare, fleshy caruncle, which, like the surrounding 

 bare skin, is of a dull reddish colour: lower down the neck is 

 a frill of pure white down, which forms a conspicuous contrast 

 with the glossy black plumage of the rest of the body and wings. 



The King-vulture is a much smaller bird, but the bare par 



465 



FhaU by W. P. Danja, F.Z.S.] 



BLACK VULTURES 



lyken JisturbeJ, thae birds eject fout-smelling matter 



59 



[AVj.-n/'j Park 



Phtl, by IV. P. DanJt, F.Z.S., Riginl's Pari 



KING-VULTURE 



The Jieshy crest on the heak is developed In 

 the Jemales as luell as in the males 



ts of the head are much more 

 b r i 1 1 i a n 1 1 )', even gaudily 

 coloured, the combinations 

 being orange, purple, and 

 crimson. The plumage is 

 crcam\- white and black. It 

 is a comparatively rare bird, 

 and but little is known con- 

 cerning its breeding habits. 

 The female is much more 

 soberly clad than her mate. 

 The king-vulture has a more 

 northerl)' range than the 

 condor, extending from Brazil 

 to Mexico, Texas, and Florida. 

 The commonest of the 

 New World vultures is the 

 TUKKFA'-IiUZZARI), which is 

 found o\'er the whole of 

 temperate and tropical 

 America. Of the four species 

 commonly known as Turkey- 

 buzzards, three are exclusively 

 South American — the fourth 



