184 PELICANS 
majestically in broad circles, evidently for mere pleasure in the evolu- 
tion. They feed on fish, for which some species plunge from the air, 
while others capture small fry with their scooplike pouches while 
swimming. The young are born naked, but are shortly covered 
with white down which is followed by the plumage of flight. They 
procure their food of fish by plunging their heads far down the 
parental pouch. 
125. Pelecanus erythrorhynchos Gmel. Wuitrse Pruican. Ads. in 
nuptial plumage.— White, more or less straw-color on breast and wing-coverts; 
wing-quills chiefly black; occipital crest white or straw-color; a horny 
prominence on the culmen. Post-nuptial plumage.—Similar, but occiput 
of short gray feathers, no horny ridge on bill. Ads. in winter. — Similar, but 
occiput white. Im.—Similar, but lesser wing-coverts and top of the head 
brownish gray. L., 60°00; W., 22°00; Tar., 4°50; B., 14°00. 
Range.—Temperate N. Am. Breeds ‘from Ss. B. C., Great Slave Lake, 
and sw. Keewatin to Man. (formerly s. Minn. and 8. D.), Utah and 
s. Calif.; winters from s. Calif., the Gulf States, Fla., and Cuba s. to w. 
Mex., and Costa Rica; casual e. in migration to the Atlantic coast, n. to 
New Brunswick. 
Washington, casual, four records. Long Island, two records. N. Ohio. 
casual T.V. 
Nest, in colonies, on the ground, a depression i in a mound of pebbles, or 
of grasses, sticks or reeds. Eggs, 2-4, creamy or bluish white with a chalky 
deposit, more or less stained, 3°45 x 2°30. Date, Big Stick Lake, Sask., 
June 10, eggs hatching. 
During the summer the White Pelican frequents only fresh water; 
in winter it lives chiefly on salt water. At this season it is not uncom- 
mon locally on the Gulf coast of Florida, and a few are usually seen 
each winter on the Mosquito Lagoon of the east coast. With a wing 
expanse of between eight and nine feet, and a weight of sixteen pounds, 
the White Pelican is one of the largest of American birds. Its snowy 
plumage renders it conspicuous at a great distance and a far-away 
Pelican may be mistaken for a sail. This species migrates by day. 
In mid-March I have seen flocks containing thousands of birds passing 
northward along the eastern face of the Sierras of Vera Cruz. Although 
they progressed in wheeling circles, they moved on their course very 
rapidly. The habit of soaring, or sailing, is also common in the 
nesting season when the birds practically go up beyond the reach 
of vision. 
The White Pelican does not dive but catches its food while swim- 
ming. 
1908. CHapman, F. M., Camps and Cruises, 366-388 (biographical). 
126. Pelecanus occidentalis Linn. Brown Pr.ican. Ads. in breed- 
ing plumage.—Top of head white, sometimes straw-yellow like a spot on 
upper breast; line down either side of breast white; hindhead, neck and a 
spot on foreneck seal-brown; sides and back silvery gray bordered by 
brownish black; scapulars, wing-coverts, secondaries, and tail silvery gray; 
primaries black; underparts dark blackish brown narrowly streaked with 
white. Ads. after the breeding season.—Similar, but with hindhead and 
whole neck white, more or less tinged with straw-yellow. Im.—Above grayish 
