20i BIRD STUDIES WITH A CAMERA 



north and the south, prevents them from joining 

 many other bii-ds en route. However, apparently 

 most of tlie birds are warned at iiearls the same 

 time by a physiological change that the season has 

 come for them to return to their nesting grounds. 

 This is evidently in January, since in March a large 

 number of the young on the island were found 

 almost ready to fly, while some, as has been said, 

 were already on the wing. There was, it is true, a 

 great variation in the development of the young 

 found, and indeed the birds were still laying, but I 

 believe that the parents of these later broods had 

 been robbed of their eggs by tourists. 



A careful count yielded a total of 845 nests, 

 which had evidently been built during the season, 

 but only 251 of them were occupied. Most of the 

 \acMnt nests were on the ground, and had been 

 deserted by their tenants, who were now running 

 about the island. 



The 251 occupied nests contained eggs or j^oung, 

 as follows : 



55 nests with 1 egg each; 

 63 " " 2 eggs " 



23 '^ '' 3 ^' '' 



03 " " lyoiingeach; 



46 " " 2 " " 



1 nest " 3 " 



Incubation was found to be well advanced in 

 eggs which wei'e alone in their nest, showing either 

 that one egg sometimes composes the set, or that the 

 other eggs of the set had been destroyed. The fact 

 that one nest was foimd with three young while 

 twenty-three were found each containing three eggs. 



