100 
ZOOLOGY OF THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE. 
for here they find, by scratching in the cindery soil with their powerful beaks and 
claws, the seeds of grasses and other plants, which rapidly spring up during the 
short rainy season, and as rapidly disappear. They often eat small portions of 
the succulent leaves of the Opuntia Galapageia, probably for the sake of the 
moisture contained in them : in this dry climate the birds suffer much from the 
want of water, and these finches, as well as others, daily crowd round the small 
and scanty wells, which are found on some of the islands. I seldom, however, 
saw these birds in the upper and damp region, which supports a thriving vege- 
tation ; excepting on the cleared and cultivated fields near the houses in Charles 
Island, where, as I was informed by the colonists, they do much injury by digging 
up roots and seeds from a depth of even six inches. 
1 . Geospiza magnirostris. Gould . 
Plate XXXVI. 
G . fuliginosa, crisso cinerascenti-albo ; vostro nigro-brunnescente lavato ; pedibus 
nig vis. 
Long. tot. 6 nnc. ; alee, 31 : caudce, 2 ; tarsi, 1 ; rostri, -£ ; alt. rost. 1 . 
Fcem. vel Mas jun.; cor pore intensb fusco singulis plumis olivaceo cinctis ; abdomine 
pallidiore; crisso cinerascenti-albo ; pedibus et rostro, ut in mare adulto. 
Sooty black ; with the vent cinereous white, the bill black, washed with brownish, 
and the feet black. 
Female, or young male : Deep fuscous, with each feather margined with olive, the 
abdomen much paler, with the under tail-coverts cinereous white, the feet 
and bill like those of the male. 
Habitat, Galapagos Archipelago. (Charles and Chatham Islands.) 
I have strong reasons for believing this species is not found in James’s 
Island. Mr. Gould considers the G. magnirostris as the type of the genus. 
2. Geospiza strenua. Gould. 
Plate XXXVII. 
G. fuliginosa, crisso albo, rostro fusco et nigro tincto ; pedibus nigris. 
Long. tot. 5 J unc. ; aloe, 3 ; caudce. If ; tarsi, f- ; rostri, § ; alt. rost. f. 
Fcem. Summo corpore fusco singulis plumis alarum caudceque plumis exceptis, pallidb 
cinerascenti-olivaceo cinctis ; gula et pectore fuscis ; abdomine lateribus et crisso 
pallide cinerascenti fuscis ; rostro brunnescente. 
Sooty black, with the under tail coverts white ; the bill brown, tinged with black, 
and the feet black. 
Female : Upper part of the body fuscous, with the margins of each feather, 
except those of the wings and tail, pale cinereous-olive ; the throat and breast 
