174 FULMARS, SHEARWATERS, PETRELS 
The young are hatched covered with down, usually sooty or gray in 
color, and are reared in the nest. When taken from the nest, both old 
and young usually disgorge a quantity of amber-colored oil, the strong 
odor of which always characterizes the burrows or cavities in which 
most of these birds nest. 
1902. Job, H. K., Among the Water-Fowl, 97-128 (Doubleday). — 
1905. Wild Wings, 185-200, (Houghton, Mifflin Co.). 
KEY TO THE SPECIES 
I. Wing over 10‘50. 
A. Underparts dusky 94. Sooty Shearwater. 
B. Underparts white. 
a. Bill under 1'50 98. Black-capped Petrel. 
b. Bill over 1*50. 
6 1 . Under tail-coverts white 88. Cory’s Shearwater. 
b 2 . Under tail-coverts grayish brown . . 89. Greater Shearwater. 
II. Wing under 10'50. 
A. Wing over 7*25. 
а. Depth of bill at base over ‘50 „ 86. Fulmar. 
б. Depth of bill at base under ‘50. 
b 1 : Upperparts bluish gray , 99. Scaled Petrel. 
b 2 . Upperparts sooty black 92. Audubon’s Shearwater. 
B. Wing under 7‘25. 
a. Upper tail-coverts more or less white. 
a 1 . Tail forked 106. Leach’s Petrel. 
6 1 . Tail square. 
b 2 . Webs of feet marked with yellow; upper tail-coverts not tipped 
with black 109. Wilson’s Petrel. 
6 3 . Webs of feet without yellow; tail-coverts tipped with black. 
104. Storm Petrel. 
b. Upper tail-coverts grayish or brownish. 
b 1 . Entire underparts brownish 101 Bulwer’s Petrel. 
b 2 . Breast grayish 110. White-bellied Petrel. 
b z . Entire underparts white 111. White-faced Petrel. 
86. Fulmarus glaciaiis glaeialis {Linn.). Fulmar. (Fig. 26, b.) Light 
phase. — Head, neck, and underparts white or whitish; back, wings, and tail 
slaty gray. Dark phase . — Entire plumage nearly uniform dark, slaty gray. 
L., 19‘00; W., 13‘04; B., 1*50 ; depth of B. at base, ‘75. 
Range. — 1ST. Atlantic. Breeds from n. Greenland to Cumberland Sound 
and e. at least to Franz Josef Land; ranges n. to lat. 85° and w. to Melville 
Island; winters s. of the Arctic Circle to the fishing-banks off N.'F. and to 
George Bank off Mass., and casually to N. J. 
Nest , on the ledges of rocky cliffs. Egg , 1, dull white, 2‘85 X 2’01. Date , 
Iceland, May 10. 
“The Fulmar is a constant attendant on whalers, sealers, etc. — who 
know it as the ‘Mollimoke’ — in order to obtain fatty substances and 
animal offal; but I never saw it take any while on the wing, and it 
always settles on the water to feed, like an Albatross. The pinions 
are often flapped slowly in an owl-like manner, but in scudding they 
are held very straight — a pecularity by which it may easily be distin- 
guished from a Gull at a distance” (Saunders). 
The Pintado Petrel {102. Daption capense) of the Southern Hemisphere 
has been once recorded from Maine (Purdie, “New England Bird-Life,” p. 
387; see also Knight’s “Birds of Maine,” p. 67). 
