Genus MORMON, Temmo. EN. € AR. Beak shor ls a { ad of rreater ej th t ) l | e | eSSE acut anc ele at aa S 121 0 s atere > c "| ge Tene ce i e are, < ~ retry . iy closed by a naked membrane. ars? short, retiring. Feet palmated. Toes three before only, the two inner nails much hooked. Wings short; first and second quill-feathers equal, er nearly so. PUFFIN. Mormon Fratercula, Ten. Le Macareux moine. Wuenever Nature appears to indulge in excentricity in the modification of those organs which are essential to existence, we are not to suppose,—because we cannot follow her through all her mysteries, or discover the motive,—that she ever acts a blind or random part, and the more inclined shall we be to come to this decision, the more closely we examine her operations. We make these remarks, because in the singular construction of the bill of this bird we are at a loss to account for this deviation from the forms which we see possessed by birds whose food and manners are altogether the same. ; On a first glance at the Puffin, we cannot fail to be struck by the short and inelegant contour of its figure, and by the strange shape but brilliant colour of its beak, which imparts a singular aspect to the physiognomy of this inhabitant of the ocean; where, as if to belie its round and awkward figure, it displays great agility and an arrow-like quickness cf motion ;—its beak, deep, compressed, and pointed with a sharp ridge and keel, affords the beau ideal of an instrument for cutting through the water,—a circumstance the more necessary when considered in connexion with a form of body by no means so well adapted for diving with ease and vigour as is possessed by many others. The feathers however are thick, close and smooth, so completely throwing off every particle of water as to render it impossible that the plumage can be wetted. Independent of the use of the beak as a water-cutting instrument, it is a weapon of destruction to innumerable hordes of fry and smaller fishes which swim near the surface of the water. These, at least during the breeding season, are retained by dexterous management between the mandibles, till a row of little pendent victims is arranged along each side, their heads firmly wedged in the beak, and their tails and bodies hanging outside. Thus loaded, as we have frequently ourselves witnessed, the Puffin flies home to its mate or newly hatched offspring. The young, however, are themselves very soon ready for the water, where, long before they are capable of flight, they may be seen in company with their parents diving and sporting on their congenial element. The old birds evince great regard for their young, attending them with assiduity and manifesting the utmost anxiety on the approach of danger. The Puffin has an extensive range, abounding at the season of incubation on the rocky parts of our coasts, especially the high cliffs and pointed rocks of the Isle of Wight, the rugged and precipitous coast of Recs Scotland, the Orkneys and Hebrides, as well as on the northern shores of the European and American Conti- nents. It does not however invariably resort to crevices and ledges of rocks, but is known occasionally, during the breeding season, to inhabit deserted rabbit-burrows, or other holes in the ore adjacent to ine sea, within which, without constructing any nest, it deposits one or two eggs of a uniform dull white. The young when hatched are covered with long and fine down of a sooty black: their bill, = might be expected, is not so fully developed either as to size or colour, nevertheless it bears the characteristic peculiarity so striking in the adult bird ; the sides also of the mandibles do not possess the deep furrows which appear at more advanced age assimilates to that of the adult, but is more obscure in its mark- differences, the colour of the whole of the upper surface reflections ; a collar of the same colour passing round r parts with delicate gray ; the whole of the under a bright reddish orange, with three oblique furrows red by a naked puckered membrane ; irides blueish on ‘te edges of the eyelids, are small bodies of a ow and two lines in length; their Their food consists of fishes and age. As they grow up, the general plum ings. The adult birds present no external sexual being of a dark brown, inclining to black with coppery the neck ; the cheeks white, shaded towards the lowe surface white ; the bill blueish ash at its base passing off to on the upper and two on the lower mandible ; the gape cove gray; rim round the eye orange ; above and below the eye, horny consistence and a deep slate-colour, that below the eye being narr use is not known; legs orange. Total length eleven to twelve inches. marine insects. - Our Plate represents a male and female in different position physiognom y. s, to exhibit the peculiar character of their Oe eee a ( a 2b) ~ ) > aot -_ ee | NOE 3 FRX (A Xd aN ¢ )y Pi}. —. .: wv ~~ oy