POWERS OF THE PASSENGER PIGEON. 
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the pigeons began to move off in a direction quite different from that in which they had 
arrived the evening before, and at sunrise all that were able to fly had disappeared. The howl- 
ings of the wolves now reached our ears, and the foxes, lynxes, cougars, bears, racoons, and 
opossums were seen sneaking off, whilst eagles and hawks of different species, accompanied by 
a crowd of vultures, came to supplant them, and enjoy their share of the spoil.’ 5 
The chief food of the Passenger Pigeon is beech-mast, but the bird feeds on numerous 
other grains and fruits, such as acorns, buckwheat, hempseed, maize, holly-berries, huckle- 
berries, and chestnuts. Pice is also a favorite article of food, and pigeons have been killed 
with rice still undigested in their stomachs, though the nearest rice plantation was distant 
several hundred miles. The amount of food consumed by these birds is almost incredible. 
Wilson calculates that, taking the breadth of the great column of pigeons mentioned above to 
be only one mile, its length to be two hundred and forty miles, and to contain only three 
Pigeons in each square yard (taking no account of the several strata of birds, one above the 
other), and that each bird consumes half a pint of food daily— all which assumptions are below 
the actual amount — the quantity of food consumed in each day would be seventeen million 
bushels. Audubon makes a similar calculation, allowing only two birds to the square yard. 
Although these birds are found in such multitudes, there is only a single young one each 
time of hatching, though there are probably two or even three broods in a season. The young 
birds are extremely fat, and their flesh is very delicious, only, as during their stay every one 
eats pigeons all day and every day, they soon pall upon the taste. So plump are these birds, 
that it is often the custom to melt them down for the sake of their fat alone. 
When they begin to shift for themselves they pass through the forest in search of their 
food, hunting among the leaves for mast, and appear like a prodigious torrent rolling along 
through the woods, every one striving to be in the front. “Vast numbers of them are shot 
while in this situation. A person told me that he once rode furiously into one of these rolling 
multitudes and picked up thirteen pigeons, which had been trampled to death by his horse’s 
feet. In a few minutes they will beat the whole nuts from a tree with their wings, while all is 
a scramble, both above and below, for the same.” The young, the males and females, have 
a curious habit of dividing into separate flocks. 
One or two specimens of this bird have been taken in Europe, and one individual was shot 
in 1825. This species has bred in aviaries, and it is rather remarkable that the female made the 
nest while her mate performed the duties of hodman by bringing materials. The nest is very 
slight, being only composed of a few twigs rudely woven into a platform, and so loosely made 
that the eggs and young can be seen from below. In this instance the nest was begun and 
finished in the same day. The young bird was hatched after sixteen days. 
The color of the Passenger Pigeon is as follows : The head, part of the neck and the chin 
are slate-blue, and the lower part and sides of the neck are also deep slate, “shot ” with gold, 
green, and purplish-crimson, changing at every movement of the bird. The throat, breast, 
and ribs are reddish-hazel ; the back and upper tail-coverts dark slaty-blue, slightly spotted 
with black upon the shoulders. The primary and secondary quill-feathers of the wings are 
black, the primary being edged and tipped with dirty white. The lower part of the breast is 
a pale purplish-red, and the abdomen is white. The long and pointed tail has the two central 
feathers deep black, and the rest white, taking a bluish tint near their bases, and being marked 
with one black spot and another of rusty-red on the inner webs. The beak is black, the eye 
fiery orange, and a naked space around it is purplish-red. The female is known by her smaller 
size, her oaken-brown breast and ashen neck, and the slaty hue of the space round the eyes. 
The total length of the adult male is about sixteen inches. 
The extraordinary powers of flight possessed by the Passenger Pigeons enables them to 
pass over a wonderful extent of country in a very short time. Pigeons have been killed in the 
neighborhood of New York, with their crops full of rice, which they must have eaten in the 
rice-fields of Georgia or Carolina ; these districts being the nearest in which they could possibly 
have gathered such food. It is estimated that these birds might easily cross to Europe in 
three days. 
