| PETRELS are dispersed throughout all
the seas and oceans of the world. Wilsons Stormy
Petrel is one of the best known and commonest. It is to
be met with nearly everywhere over the entire watery
surface of the globe -- far north in the icy regions of
the Arctic seas and south to the sunny isles of southern
oceans. It breeds in the months of March, April, May,
June, July and August, according to the locality, in the
northern latitudes of Europe, eastern and western North
America. Dr. J. H. Kidder found it on Kergulen Island,
southeast of Africa. He had previously seen the birds at
the sea coast off the Cape of Good Hope, and, on December
14, saw them out by day feeding on the oily matter
floating away from the carcass of a sea-elephant. The
birds, he says, frequent the rocky parts of hillsides,
and flitting about like swallows, catch very minute
insects. Mother Careys Chicken, as it
is called by sailors, is widely believed to be the
harbinger of bad weather, and many superstitions have
grown out of the habit which they possess of apparently
walking on the surface of the water as the Apostle St.
Peter is recorded to have done. It is the smallest of the
web-footed birds, yet few storms are violent enough to
keep it from wandering over the waves in search of the
food that the disturbed water casts to the surface. The Stormy Petrel is so exceedingly oily in texture, that the inhabitants of the Ferol islands draw a wick through its body and use it as a lamp. Wilson gives the following account of its habits while following a ship under sail: |
It
is indeed an interesting sight to observe these little
birds in a gale, coursing over the waves, down the
declivities, up the ascents of the foaming surf that
threatens to bend over their head; sweeping along through
the hollow troughs of the sea, as in a sheltered valley,
and again mounting with the rising billow, and just above
its surface, occasionally dropping their feet, which,
striking the water, throws the birds up again with
additional force; sometimes leaping, with both legs
parallel, on the surface of the roughest wave for several
yards at a time. Meanwhile they continue coursing from
side to side of the ships wake, making excursions
far and wide, to the right and to the left, now a great
way ahead, and now shooting astern for several hundred
yards, returning again to the ship, as if she were all
the time stationary, though perhaps running at the rate
of ten knots an hour! But the most singular peculiarity
of this bird is its faculty of standing and even running
on the surface of the water, which it performs with
apparent facility. When any greasy matter is thrown
overboard these birds instantly collect around it, and
face to windward, with their long wings expanded and
their webbed feet patting the water, which the lightness
of their bodies and the action of the wind on their wings
enable them to do with ease. In calm weather they perform
the same maneuver by keeping their wings just so much in
action as to prevent their feet from sinking below the
surface. Rev. Mr. Eaton says that this species nests under large rocks not far from the beach. Egg, one, white. |