ONYCHOPRION FULIGINOSUS? 
Sooty Tern. 
Noddy, Damp. Voy., vol. iii. part i. p. 142. pi. in p. 123. fig. 5. — Hawkesb. Voy., vol. iii. p. 652. 
Sterna serrata, Forst. Draw., t. 110. 
guttata, Forst. 
• Oahuensis, Bloxam. 
Onychoprion serratus, Wagl. — G. R. Gray, List of Gen. of Birds, 2nd edit,, p. 100. 
Although I retain the term fuliginosus for this bird, which exhibits some trivial differences from the species 
so called inhabiting- the northern hemisphere, I have reasons for considering- it to be distinct, and that, as 
in many other instances, the two birds are representatives of each other ; and I think we are the more bound 
to consider them to be so, when we find that the incubation of these birds in the two hemispheres takes 
place at opposite periods ; Mr. Gilbert found this bird breeding- on the Houtman’s Abrolhos, off the western 
coast of Australia, in the month of December, while M. Audubon found the fuliginosus breeding on the 
Tortugas, in North America, in May. 
Mr. Gilbert states, that it “ lays a single egg on the bare ground beneath the thick scrub ; and that the egg 
varies considerably in colour. The breeding-season is at its height in December, but a few may be found 
performing the task of incubation in January. So reluctant is it to leave its egg or young, that it will suffer 
itself to be taken by hand rather than desert them. For several weeks after the young are able to fly, this 
bird may be seen in vast flocks soaring at a great height. It is an extremely noisy species, and may be 
heard on the wing during all hours of the night.” 
The ground colour of the eggs is a creamy white, in some very pale, in others very rich, blotched all 
over with irregular-sized markings of chestnut and dark brown, the latter hue appearing as if beneath the 
surface ; the lighter-coloured eggs have these markings much smaller and more thinly dispersed, except at 
the larger end ; they are two inches and an eighth long by one inch and a half in breadth. 
Lores, crown of the head and back of the neck deep black ; all the upper surface, wings and tail deep 
sooty black ; the apical half, the shaft and the outer web of the lateral tail-feathers white ; a V-shaped mark 
on the forehead and all the under surface of the wings and body white, passing into grey on the lower part 
of the abdomen and under tail-coverts ; irides dark brown ; bill black ; feet brownish black. 
The young have the entire plumage of a sooty brown, with a bar of white at the tip of each of the feathers 
of the back, wings and upper tail-coverts. 
The figures represent a male and a female of the natural size. 
