BIRDS. 



INTRODUCTOEY CHAPTER. 



Birds are the spoilt children of nature — the favourites of creation. 

 Their brilliant plumage often assumes the most resplendent 

 colours. They have the happj^ privilege of moving in space — now 

 fluttering through the air, hunting the insect which flits from 

 flower to flower ; now soaring high aloft, and swooping upon the 

 victim it has marked for its prey ; now cleaving the atmosphere 

 on rapid wing, and performing journeys of vast extent with great 

 rapidit}'. Mankind have a profound sympathy with these little 

 winged beings, which charm at once by the elegance of their form, 

 the melody of their song, and the graceful impetuosity of their 

 movements. 



Anatomicallj' speaking, birds are connected M^ith the Matmni- 

 fera by their internal structure. Their skeleton essentiallj^ 

 resembles that of the Mammals, the bones being nearlj^ the same, 

 only modified slightly for the purposes of flight. 



In birds there is a double circulation. The heart consists of 

 two moieties, or lobes, known as the auricle and ventricle. It 

 is conical in form, and occupies the anterior part of the thorax, 

 its apex passing between the lobes of the liver ; but there is little 

 perceptible distinction between auricles and ventricles. Their 

 blood is richer in globules than that of the Mammalia, being more 

 thoroughly permeated by air ; the respiratory function is also more 

 energetic, from the same cause — in fact, they consume a laro-er 

 quantity of oxygen, and produce a proportionately greater deo-ree 

 of heat ; for while their lungs are small, and placed in the upper 



