Genus PROC ELLARIA. is Pen Gen. Cuar. Beak thick, dilated at the tip, sulcated: the upper mandible hooked « the ] Ui ooked : 1e Nostrils united in a single straight and slightly truncated, tul l ia | 7 ube. 22S moderate : ; only in place of the hind toe. iain FULMAR PETREL. Procellaria elacialis, Lenn. Le Petrel Fulmar. ar Pr eT (ane nas . Tue genus Procellaria, in which Linneus placed all the oceanic birds possessing tubular nostrils, and which now form an extensive and well-defined family, has been subsequently divided by naturalists into several minor groups; and we find that in Europe alone there exist examples which illustrate three genera, viz. Procellaria (as now restricted), Puffinus, and Thalassidroma. The Fulmar Petrel constitutes the type of the genus to which it is assigned, and appears to form the passage to the true Gulls by the interposition of the birds composing the genus Lestris. How plainly does the present bird exemplify the wisdom which Nature has exhibited in the creation of all her subjects! It is in the almost impenetrable polar regions, among floating fields and bergs of ice, often at a great distance from the land, that the Fulmar finds its true and natural habitat ; and in order to enable it to endure the severities of the hardest seasons in these northern latitudes, Nature has afforded it every necessary protection by clothing it in a thick and warm mass of down and feathers of an oily nature, thus precluding cold and moisture. Although the polar regions constitute its native locality, it is nevertheless found, but in much less abundance, in more temperate climates, such as the northern seas of Europe and America, extending itself throughout the lengthened coast of Norway, and not unfrequently Holland and France. It frequents also the northern isles of Great Britain, resorting to the Orkney and Hebrides for the purpose of breeding, but particularly to the Island of St. Kilda. The food of the Fulmar consists of fish, mollusca, vermes, and the fat of dead cetacea ; it will also devour any oily substance or refuse thrown from vessels, which it fearlessly follows, particularly those engaged in the whale fisheries; and hence during the season it obtains an easy and bountiful subsistence. They are very active and buoyant on the water, and their powers of flight are considerable. g Their mode of living renders the flesh very disagreeable and unfit for use. Their stomach and body appear to be continually saturated with oil; and the circumstance of their being able to eject or discharge a quantity of this fluid from their nostrils, when irritated or attacked, is both singular and curious. 1 his power appears to have been given them as a mode of defence, and is characteristic of the whole of the family, from the largest species to the elegant Stormy Petrel ; and even this little creature has the power of squirtir from its nostrils with considerable force. The Fulmar lays one white egg on the grassy led oe make no nest ; the egg is very large compared with the size of the - it retains for some time. Our figure represents the plumage of an adult bird ; the back and wings varied with light grey and brown. 12 out an oily fluid ees of the rocks and cliffs of our northern islands. They = . bird, and has a strong musky smell, which ? . young birds of the year have el Tie - - Daw, iB «oN WZ ~~ ae a) 7 eS » ” ? pom = A ” ~ a4 om ‘~ ESO P/M] + ve Pa at oo ~ - = oJ y ~ 2 Pa ~) ¥ yf es I . 2) a)” 4 a " - a = " Ly. Nall ms" >