WILSON’S PETREL. 79 
seems to spend its lifetime on the wing. On more than one occasion it was seen by 
sledging parties on the ice plain of the Great Barrier, some sixty miles from open water 
(78° 30'S. lat.), but always on the wing, and apparently never tired. 
Its food, consisting of minute crustaceans, is picked up from the surface of the 
water on the wing. Fitting about from wave to wave, the little Petrel delicately 
treads the water to steady itself a moment, while it picks up a tiny morsel. 
As we left the southernmost area, we saw it each day from February 19th to 
March 38rd; but on that day, when amongst the Balleny Islands, we saw the last of 
the icebergs and with them the last of Oceanites. 
Five days later on, when in 8. lat. 61°, we fell in with Cymodroma grallaria, and 
from that time onwards they became more and more abundant, and apparently took 
the place of Oceanites. 
FREGETTA MELANOGASTER. 
Thalassidroma melanogaster, Gould, Ann. and Mag. Nat. Hist., xiii. (1844), p. 367. 
Fregetta melanogaster, Gig]., “Faun. Vert. Oceano,” 1870, p. 38; Sharpe, Rep. ‘Southern Cross’ Coll., 
(1902), p. 141, tbique citata ; Eagle Clarke, Birds of South Orkney Ids., Ibis, Jan., 1906, p. 168. 
Tus bird we met first on September Ist, 1901, in the Atlantic Ocean. There were 
a number of them, and they kept about our wake and stern quarters, rarely flapping 
their wings, but sailing up and down close over the waves. The distribution of black 
on the under parts, extending from the chin to the tail, can be easily made out when 
watching the birds upon the wing. The white of the axillary region joining with the 
white on the rump and under wing coverts does not meet beneath on the breast as 
it does in Cymodroma grallaria. We saw the,bird fairly constantly in the South 
Atlantic throughout September and on to the 16th of October in large numbers, 
twenty or thirty following in our wake with their very characteristic flight, halting 
and then darting forward as though they had dipped their toes in scalding water. 
Again on October 20th they were exceptionally plentiful, and a few appeared almost 
every day until November 16th (61° S. 140° E.) when they left us as we came within 
sight of ice, and were not seen again. 
Although they generally fly in the wake of the ship they also constantly 
travel round her, and may often be seen on the bows. We obtained no specimen. 
The bird is a great wanderer, and though it has been taken in Kerguelen Island, New 
Zealand, and has been reported from the Southern Oceans generally, it has also been 
taken as far north as the Bay of Bengal and the Tropic of Cancer in the North 
Atlantic, and quite recently has been found by the Scottish Antarctic Expedition, 
breeding on December 5th, so far south as the South Orkney Islands. (Eagle Clarke, 
op. cit., p. 168.) 
