"This
species is far from being known throughout the United States,
for it has never been seen farther eastward than the confines
of New Jersey. None, I believe, have been observed in New York;
and on asking about it in Massachusetts and Maine, I found that,
excepting those persons acquainted with our birds generally, none
knew it. On my late northern journeys I nowhere saw it. A very
few remain and spend the winter in New Jersey and Pennsylvania,
where I have seen them only during summer, and where they breed.
As we proceed farther south, they become more and more abundant.
They are equally attached to maritime districts, and the vicinity
of the sea-shore, where they find abundance of food.
The
Turkey-Buzzard was found in abundance on the Rocky Mountains
and along the Columbia river by LEWIS and CLARK, as well as
subsequently by Mr. TOWNSEND, although it is said by Mr. DAVID
DOUGLAS to be extremely rare on the north-west coast of America.
On the Island of Galveston in Texas, where it is plentiful,
we several times found its nest, as usual, on the ground, but
on level parts of salt marshes, either under the widespread
branches of cactuses, or among tall grass growing beneath low
bushes, on which Herons of different species also bred, their
young supplying a plentiful store of food for those of the Vultures.
The eggs, which never exceed two in number, measure two inches
and seven-eighths in length, and one inch and seven and a half
eighths in their greatest breadth.
The
flight of the Turkey-Buzzard is graceful compared with that
of the Black Vulture. It sails admirably either high or low,
with its wings spread beyond the horizontal position, and their
tips bent upward by the weight of the body. After rising from
the ground, which it does at a single spring, it beats its wings
only a very few times, to enable it to proceed in its usual
way of sailing. Like the Black Vultures, they rise high in the
air, and perform large circles, in company with those birds,
the Fork-tailed Hawk, Mississippi Kite, and the two species
of Crow. The Hawks, however, generally teaze them, and force
them off toward the ground.
They
are gregarious, feed on all sorts of food, and suck the eggs
and devour the young of many species of Heron and other birds.
In the Floridas, I have, when shooting, been followed by some
of them, to watch the spot where I might deposit my game, which,
if not carefully covered, they would devour. They also eat birds
of their own species, when they find them dead. They are more
elegant in form than the Black Vultures, and walk well on the
ground or the roofs of houses. They are daily seen in the streets
of the southern cities, along with their relatives, and often
roost with them on the same trees. They breed on the ground,
or at the bottom of hollow trees and prostrate trunks, and lay
only two eggs. These are large, of a light cream-colour, splashed
toward the great end with large irregular markings of black
and brown. The young somewhat resemble those of the Black Vulture,
and take a long time before they can fly. Both species drink
water freely, and in doing this immerse their bill to the base,
and take a long draught at a time. They both breed at the same
period, or nearly so, and raise only one brood in the season.
I
have found birds of this species apparently very old, with the
upper parts of their mandibles, and the wrinkled skin around
their eyes, so diseased as to render them scarcely able to feed
amongst others, all of which seldom failed to take advantage
of their infirmities. I have represented the adult male in full
plumage, along with a young bird, procured in the autumn of
its first year. The average weight of a full grown bird is 6
1/2 lbs., about 1 lb. less than that of the Carrion Crow.
TURKEY-VULTURE
or TURKEY-BUZZARD, Vultur Aura, Wils., vol.ix. p. 96. CATHARTES
AURA, Bonap. Syn., p. 22. CATHARTES AURA, TURKEY-VULTURE, Rich.
& Swains., F. Bor. Amer., vol. ii. p. 4. TURKEY-VULTURE
or TURKEY-BUZZARD, Nuttall, Man., vol. ii. p. 43. TURKEY-BUZZARD,
Cathartes Aura, Aud., vol. ii. p. 296; vol. v. p. 339.
In
the adult, the head and upper part of the neck are destitute
of feathers, having a red wrinkled skin, sparsely covered with
short black hair, and downy behind. Feathers of the neck full
and rounded concealing the naked crop. Wings ample, long; the
first quill rather short, the third and fourth longest. Tail
longish, rounded, of twelve broad straight feathers.
Bill
at the tip yellowish-white; the cere and the naked part of the
head of a tint approaching to blood-red. Iris dark brown. Feet
flesh-coloured, tinged with yellow; claws black. The general
colour of the plumage is blackish-brown, deepest on the neck
and under parts, the wing-coverts broadly margined with brown;
the back glossed with brown and greenish tints; the tail purplish-black;
the under parts of a sooty brown, on the breast glossed with
green.
Length
32 inches; extent of wings 6 feet 4 inches; bill 2 1/2 along
the ridge, 2 2/12 along the gap; tarsus 2 1/2, middle toe 3
1/2.
Young
fully fledged. The bill is, of course, shorter and more slender,
its horny tip pale blue, black on the back; the skin of the
head is flesh-coloured, the iris yellowish, the feet flesh-coloured.
The plumage is nearly of the same colour as in the adult.
The
olfactory nerve has been ascertained in the mammalia to be the
instrument of smell; but in the class of birds, experiments
and observations are wanting to determine its precise function,
although analogy would lead us to suppose it to be the same
in them. So inaccurate have observers been in this matter, that
some of them have mistaken the large branch of the fifth pair,
which traverses the nasal cavity, for the olfactory nerve. The
experiments instituted upon Vultures shew that not only are
they not led to their prey by the sense of smell, but also that
they are not made sensible by it of the presence of food when
in their immediate proximity. Yet, if the olfactory nerve be
really the nerve of smell, and if a large expansion of the nasal
membrane be indicative of an extension of the faculty, one would
necessarily infer that Vultures must possess it in a high degree.
On the other hand, however, the organ and the nerves being found
to be equally developed in birds, such as Geese and Gallinaceous
species, which have never been suspected of being guided by
smell when searching for food, it would seem to follow that
the precise function of this nerve, and the nasal cavities,
has not yet been determined in birds. That the nasal passages
must be subservient to some other purpose than that of respiration
merely, is evident from their complexity, but what that purpose
is, remains to be determined by accurate observations and experiments.
"