English: Identifier: aquaticbirdsofgr00patt (find matches)
Title: The aquatic birds of Great Britain and Ireland
Year: 1906 (1900s)
Authors: Patten, Charles Joseph, 1870-
Subjects: Water birds Water birds
Publisher: London, R. H. Porter
Contributing Library: Smithsonian Libraries
Digitizing Sponsor: Smithsonian Libraries
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pensities as the lastspecies. It is fond of hiding in subterranean passages, andin daylight will suffer an intruder to pull it out of a burrow(its usual nesting-site), rather than take flight. It some-times nests in rock-crevices, near the summit of precipitousislands. The nest is a hollow, scantily lined with withered grass,or, in some cases, a naked depression in the soil. Thesingle egg is white in colour, sometimes finely marked withreddish-brown specks forming a zone near the larger end. Incubation commences early in June ; an oily smell per-vades the breeding-haunts. This Petrel has been found nesting in several of theIsland Groups oft the western sea-board of Scotland, in-cluding St. Kilda^ (where it has extensive colonies), NorthBona and several Islands of the Outer Hebrides. Mr. Ussher, in his work on the Birds of Ireland, gives In lioreray it nests in the cleets or little turf houses of thenatives anion^^ the sods of dry turf (Harvie-Brown, Ann. Scot. Nat.Hist., 1903, p. 17).
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FORK^TAILED PETEEL 541 an interesting acconnt of eggs wliich were received from theTearaght rock off the Kerry coast on July 1st, 188(3, June21st and 28rd, 1887, and July 6th, 1888) (Vide also Bar-rington, Migration of Birds, Rep. 18s9, p. 115.) On May20th, 1889, another egg was taken on Inishnabro, a neigh-bouring island belonging to the Blasket group (vule Ibis,1880, pp. 11-12) ; wliile on August 18th, 1899, an egg nuicliincubated was received by Mi-. Barrington from an islandoff the Mayo coast. It is not unlikely that this bird breeds on other islands,but its secretive habits render it diflicult of observation. Geographical distribution.—Abroad, this Petrel is widelydistributed. To the coast of Norway it is a wanderer,but it has reached Iceland • storm-driven birds have beenrecorded from many countries of Central and SouthernEurope, while southward some of the islands off the north-west coast of Africa are visited. Westward this bird iscommon off the eastern sea-board of Canada
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