CIC0NIIDJ3 — THE STORKS — TANTALUS. 
83 
upon its shoulders, and its enormous bill resting, like a scythe, upon its breast. 
In this manner the bird is said to pass most of its time, until awakened by the 
calls of hunger ; and it is also mentioned that it is easily approached and shot, 
and is by many of the inhabitants accounted excellent food. These were Mr. Bar- 
tram’s observations ; and for several of his statements he is severely taken to task 
by Mr. Audubon. 
Dr. Henry Bryant, however, who has since gone over the same ground on the St. 
John’s as Bartram did, and in the same way, remarks, in commenting upon Audu- 
bon’s criticisms, that the latter should have remembered that the habits of birds 
vary at different times and in different places, and states that, strange as it may 
seem when the long period of time that has elapsed is taken into view, his Jour- 
nal is almost an exact repetition of Bartram’s. While in Florida he never saw a 
flock of Wood Ibises except at their breeding-places; and even there, except when 
they were disturbed, they flew off and returned either singly or in pairs. He did 
not see them feeding in more than a few instances, and then there was never more 
than a pair at a time. The stomachs of all those that were killed by Dr. Bryant 
contained only crayfish, which could not readily be procured in the manner Audubon 
declares to be its only method of feeding. 
The Wood Ibis is found distributed over a large portion of South America, 
Central America, Mexico, and the southern portions of North America. It is 
found in all the Gulf States, is most abundant in Florida, straggles into Georgia, 
South Carolina, Tennessee, and Kentucky, and is not uncommon in Southern Illinois 
and Missouri, but occurring more rarely in Colorado, Kansas, Nevada, and Utah. 
Burmeister speaks of it as common on the banks of the Parana Elver, in small 
flocks, going from one lagoon to another, rarely seen except when flying. When 
on the ground it always conceals itself in the reeds, and is hardly ever visible 
there. 
Mr. Salvin mentions it as not uncommon about the large rivers in the forests 
of the Pacific coast region of Guatemala. It is there known among the Spanish 
by the name of Alcatraz. Mr. Salvin afterward met with it on the Pacific sea- 
coast of Guatemala among the lagoons ; and Mr. G. C. Taylor mentions meeting 
with it in Honduras, near the village of Lamani. 
Deferring to this species, Mr. C. Barrington Brown, in his work on British 
Guiana, makes frequent mention of meeting with large birds, called by some, Sowe- 
wies, by others, Negroscopes. He found them numerous in that region, and to be 
seen in large numbers on the sand-beaches of the Biver Essequibo. He describes 
their heads and necks as bare of feathers and as covered with a hard black skin 
divided by furrows into plates. Their white bodies contrasted with their black 
wings. They were frequently to be seen soaring high up into the heavens, in 
circles, mounting up higher and higher, until they appeared like mere specks. 
In the Mississippi Valley this bird wanders occasionally as far north as Chicago 
and Racine ; in the Red River region of Texas it was observed by Lieutenant 
M’Cauley as far up as the Staked Plains. It was also seen by Mr. Henshaw at 
Rush Lake in Utah, where he procured two specimens in October. Mr. Bischoff 
met with it in Nevada in July. 
This bird is said to congregate at times in large numbers high up in the air, 
where, with hardly any apparent motion, it sweeps in extended circles, in a man- 
ner not unlike the graceful movements of the Turkey Vulture, with which bird it 
is also not unfrequently seen to associate. 
Dr. Gundlach includes it among the birds that breed in Cuba ; and it probably 
