The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction - Volume 13, No. 377, June 27, 1829 by Various
page 26 of 51 (50%)
page 26 of 51 (50%)
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basin, he concluded that the eagle had devoured them. Fearing the
consequences, he lost no time in opening the crop, took out the rats, and sewed up the incision; the eagle did well and is now alive. A proof this of the acuteness of smell in the eagle, and also of the facility and safety with which, even in grown birds, the operation of opening the crop may be performed.--_Jennings's Ornithologia_. * * * * * HATCHING. The following singular fact was first brought into public notice by Mr. Yarrel; and will be found in his papers in the second volume of the _Zoological Journal_. The fact alluded to is, that there is attached to the upper mandible of all young birds about to be hatched a _horny appendage_, by which they are enabled more effectually to make perforations in the shell, and contribute to their own liberation. This sharp prominence, to use the words of Mr. Yarrel, becomes opposed to the shell at various points, in a line extending throughout its whole circumference, about one third below the larger end of the egg; and a series of perforations more or less numerous are thus effected by the increasing strength of the chick, weakening the shell in a direction opposed to the muscular power of the bird; it is thus ultimately enabled, by its own efforts, to break the walls of its prison. In the common fowl, this horny appendage falls off in a day or two after the chick is hatched; in the pigeon it sometimes remains on the beak ten or twelve days; this arises, doubtless, from the young pigeons being fed by the parent bird for some time after their being hatched; and thus there is no occasion |
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