878 
U. S. P. E. E. EXP. AND SUEVEYS-ZOOLOGY-GENEEAL EEPOET. 
Sp. Ch.—G reenish black; behind each eye a recurved crest of loose feathers; gular sac orange; second quill longest; tail of 
twelve feathers. 
Adult. The plumage of the head, neck, lower part of the hack and entire under surface is greenish black, the feathers of the 
upper part of the hack, the wing-coverts, the scapularies and tertiaries, greyish brown or dark ash, the margins of which are 
greenish black; primaries blackish-brown, lighter on the inner webs ; the secondaries dark greyish brown; tail black, as are also 
the shafts; running from the hill over the eye is a line of white filamentous feathers, there are also a few of the same character 
sparsely distributed over the neck ; behind each eye is a tuft of rather long slender feathers, erect and curving forwards; bare 
space in the region of the eye, and gular sac orange ; upper mandible blackish brown, with the edges yellowish; lower yellow, 
marked irregular with dusky; iris bright green ; legs, feet, and claws black, claw of the middle toe pectinated. 
Length, 33 inches; wing, 13; tail, 6.75 ; bill, 2.85; tarsus, 3.50; outer toe and claw, 4; inner, 2.50; hind, 1.75. 
Bab .—Atlantic coast from Labrador to Carolina; fur countries ; Pacific coast from Washington Territory to California. 
Numerous specimens are in the collection, mostly from the Pacific coast, from which point 
none are fully adult, most having the greyish under plumage of the young, the bills being 
yellow. 
Ph. lenconotus and Ph. lencumus Aud. Orn, Biog. Ill, 1835, 334, are thought by both Gray 
and Bonaparte to he the young of this species. 
The hill is strong, in the adult the culmen is smooth, the sides of both mandibles are crossed 
with slight prominences of a curved or scale-like form, pretty regularly distributed about a 
quarter of an inch apart from the base to the unguis. 
This species resorts in large numbers to the low islands off the coast of Labrador, which are 
their breeding stations ; they construct their nests on the surface of the rocks, not on the 
shelves of precipices. 
I once witnessed a large migrating flight of these birds to the south, along our seacoast; they 
passed in great flocks, which succeeded each other frequently during the entire day; each flock 
formed a widely extended front, the individuals being side by side ; their mode of flight was 
by alternate flapping of the wings, and their sailing for a short distance, the effect of which 
was peculiar and striking. 
List of specimens. 
Catal. 
No. 
Sex. 
Locality. 
When col¬ 
lected. 
Whence obtained. 
Orig. 
No. 
Collected by— 
Stretch 
of wings 
Wing. 
2745 
Atlantic coast_ 
S. F Baird. 
J. J. Audubon _ _1 
12. 00 
2744 
13. 00 
Coast of New York_ 
George N. Lawrence . 
1030 
12. 00 
Atlantic coast......_ 
1031 
J. J. Audubon .. 
12. 50 
4438 
Quasquiton, Iowa_ 
Dr. E. C. Bidwell_ 
12. 00 
9893 
San Francisco, Cal_ 
Lt. Trowbridge_ 
12.50 
4503 
_do. 
Dr. Newberry__ 
12. 00 
5571 
Q 
Petaluma, Cal... 
Feb. 1856 
E. Samuels___ 
12. 00 
9894 
Bodega, Cal_ 
Dec. 1854 
Lt. Trowbridge.,-..-. 
T. A. Szabo....... 
12. 00 
9896 
Shoal water bay, W. T.. 
Oct. 5. 1854 
Gov. Stevens_ 
Dr. Cooper__ 
13. 50 
4577 
.... 
Steilacoom, Puget Sound 
Feb. 6,1856 
Dr. Suckley_ 
216 
50. 50 
14. 00 
