42 



KEY TO FAMILIES. 



A. Tip of the upper mandible more or less swollen, rounded, and 

 sharply pointed; upper parts, including wings, and sometimes the 

 entire plumage, dark sooty blackish, sometimes irregularly barred ; 

 tail always dark, the middle feathers longest. . . . family Sterco- 

 rariidce : Skuas and Jaegers (Fig. 6, a), p. 65. 



£. Upper mandible curved but not swollen at the end; tail generally 

 white, sometimes tipped with black ; the tail-feathers usually of about 

 equal length. . . . Subfamily Larina, : Gulls (Fig. 6, 1), p. 67. 



Fia. 7. 



Fio. 8. 



C. Bill straight, not hooked and sharply pointed ; out«r tail-feathers 

 generally longer than the middle ones. Subfamily Sternince : Teens 

 (Fig. 7), p. 76. 



D. Bill thin and bladelike, the lower mandible much longer than the 

 upper one. . . . Family Bynchopidce : Skimmers (Fig. 8), p. 85. 



Fig. 9. 



Order ill. Tubinares.— Albatrosses, Petrels, and Fulmakb. 



Bill hawklike, the tip of the upper mandible generally much enlarged ; 

 nostrils opening through tubes; hind toe reduced to a mere nail, and 

 sometimes entirely wanting. 



A. Size very large, nostrils separated and on either side of the bill. . . . 

 Family Diomedeidm : Albatrosses (Fig. 9, a), p. 86. 



B. Size smaller, nostrils joined and placed on top of the bill. . . . 

 Family ProceUariidm: Petrels, Fulmars, and Shearwaters (Fig. 



a' J), p. 86. 



