454 



The Living Animals of the World 



fish, with the result that it is killed instantly 

 by the shock of the contact. 



Grannets breed in colonies of thousands on 

 the islands off the east and west coasts of Scotland. 

 They lay but a sinjle egg, in a nest composed 

 of seaweed deposited in inaccessible crags of 

 precipitous cliffs. The young are at first naked ; 

 later they become clothed with long white down. 

 " At one time," says Mr. Howard Saunders, " young 

 gannets were much esteemed as food, from 1,500 

 to 2,000 being taken in a season during the month 

 of August. They are hooked up, killed, and flung 

 into the sea, where a boat is waiting to pick 

 up the bodies. These are plucked, cleaned, and 

 half roasted, after which they are sold at from 



Photo hy Xcliolaslir Pl,o(o. Co.] [Parxo.i's Green. 



YOUNG GANNETS, FIRST YEAR. 



The plumage <at this st^ge is very d.ark brown, each feather being 

 til»13ed with white. 



eightpence to a shilling each. . . . The fat is 

 boiled down into oil, and the feathers, after being 

 well baked, are used for stuffing beds, about a 

 hundred birds producing a stone of feathers." 



Gannets present one or two structural pecu- 

 liarities of sufficient interest to mention here. 

 In most birds, it will be remembered, the nostrils 

 open on each side of the beak ; but in the gannet 

 no trace of true nostrils remains ; and the same 

 may almost be said of the cormorant and darter. 



PJwloby hrholi^U llotjl J [/■<r,-,«„;\w.;,-,, „""""' 



GANNET, FULL FLUMAGE. 



The fully adult plun.age is not attained till the bird is tliree 

 Jcai-B old. 



PliOto hij Scholastic Plwto. Co.] [Parson's Green. 



GANNET, SECOND YEAR. 

 Tlie white plumage of the neck is just beginning to appear. 



In gannets, however, a slight indication of their 

 sometime existence remains, though the nostril 

 itself no longer serves as an air-passage ; and 

 these birds are compelled to breathe through the 

 mouth. Again, the tongue, like the nostrils, 

 has also been reduced to a mere vestige. 

 Stranger still is the fact that immediately under 

 the skin there lies an extensive system of air- 

 cells of large size, which can be inflated or 

 emptied at will. Many of these cells dip down 

 between the muscles of the body, so that the 

 whole organism is pervaded with air-cells, all of 

 which are in connection with the lungs. 



The Frigate- and Tropic-birds, which now 

 remain to be described, are probably much less 

 familiar to our readers than the foregoing species. 



