THE EMPEROR PENGUIN. 19 
them were captured. Furthermore, not one of this age was seen or captured later or 
in any other region but the pack; though of the immature stage of seventeen months, 
with the brown and weathered coat, and whitish throat, we saw about five examples in 
all, and every one of these was taken a great distance farther south, at the edge of the 
fast ice, and at the end of summer (in February) when the pack-ice belt had 
disappeared, throwing Ross Sea open to the southern oceans. 
It appears, therefore, that the various ages have each their own particular range 
during certain seasons, and that whereas the pack ice is regarded as a safe nursery 
for the youngest birds in summer, the more advanced immature birds, which, at seventeen 
months, are then on the point of moulting, wander south to find fast ice on which to 
remain while the process lasts, knowing that in the disintegrating ice-pack they might 
be forced to take to water when it would be highly inconvenient for them to do so. 
Similarly, the adult birds, having finished all their duties to the young, now 
leave them to themselves, and also retire southward in January and February to take up 
their retreat and moult in safety on fast ice. This accounts for the groups we met in full 
moult on January 15th, 1902, in the secluded bight known as Lady Newnes Bay ; also 
for the multitude we saw on the fast ice of King Edward VII.’s Land on January 31st, 
1902, and for the various examples taken in January, 1903, and in February, 1904, 
all in full moult or with the moult but just completed, in McMurdo Sound. 
We have therefore substantiated the following facts : first, that the Emperor 
Penguin chick remains but four months in the down, a most astonishing fact, if, as 
seems to be case, the King Penguin chick remains in down for fully ten months 
(see pp. 34, 35); that it then moults to assume the blue-grey plumage with the 
whitish throat which characterises the birds of five months old to be found in the pack 
during January. This same plumage is to be seen a year later in a brown and faded 
state, with blackish feathers sprinkling the white throat, and the whole about to be 
shed, in February, when the bird dons the first adult plumage, and all the characters 
of the fully adult, though not as yet the richness of colouring that it will assume 
at the next annual moult. 
One immature bird was brought on board in Lady Newnes Bay, and kept in cap- 
tivity while it shed its immature and donned its adult plumage. The feathers clinging 
close to one another came off in spurious sheets or handfuls, first from the breast and 
thighs, and then from the face and tail and flippers, but most irregularly, until at length 
there was nothing but a ruffle or collar of old feathers round the neck (see fig. 15, p. 22 ; 
and figs. 6 and 7, p. 12). This moult took just twenty days from start to finish. 
It has before been stated, as a result of the late Nicolai Hanson’s observations 
in the ‘Southern Cross,’ that the birds fast while moulting and avoid at all costs 
entering the water. 
The young feathers embedded in a mass of fat beneath the skin grow rapidly, 
and push the old ones out, so that often a mere touch will detach a hundred 
feathers from the bird en musse, giving the false impression that they have come off 
