SCRATCHING BIEDS. 165 



This digestive apparatus, described in Chapter XII., is 

 seen very completely developed ia the birds of this order. 

 210. Most of the Scratchers do not associate in pairs. 

 The m'ale birds have nothing to do with taking care of 

 the young, which are hatched with their eyes open, and 

 are generally able to run about at once in search of food, 

 ^stead of being dependent for some time on the parent 

 .for their supply. They can, for the most part, be domes- 

 ticated, and they are the most useful to man of all the 

 birds, affording him quite a large portion of his food. 

 The plumage of the male birds is usually gay, and they 

 often have crests or some other ornaments on the head. 

 The females commonly differ from the males in a marked 

 manner in these respects. 



271. There is a striking analogy between these birds 

 and the Ruminant Quadrupeds in several points. In 

 both the food is vegetable, and in both there is a special 

 provision for breaking it up and moistening it, so that 

 the gastric juice may readily act upon it. The crop in 

 the fowl answers to the paunch in the Ruminant, and the 

 crushing by the gizzard to the grinding in rumination, 

 each following the maceration. Then, too, these birds 

 and the Ruminants are both, for the most part, easily do- 

 mesticated, and domestication produces in both great va- 

 riety in breeds. There are seven families : 1. The Pigeon 

 family. 2. The Curassows. 3. The Pheasants. 4. The 

 Grouse. 5. The Sheath-bills. 6. The Tinamous family. 

 1. The Greatfoots. 



272. The family of Pigeons includes both those birds 

 called by this name and those which are called Doves. 

 These birds differ from those of the other families of this 

 order in pairing ; in living on trees, and, much of the time, 

 on the wing, for which they are adapted by the large 

 size of the ■wing-muscles ; and in having the hinder toe on 

 a level with the others, as in the Perchers, instead of be- 

 ing above them, as we see it in the common fowl and in 

 all the other families. On these accounts some have been 



