wings 72; bill 5, gape 7 T %; tarsus 6j, middle toe and claw 5, hind toe and
claw 2k, naked part of tibia 4; wings from flexure 20; tail 7.
The Female, when in full plumage, is precisely similar to the male.
On Prince Edward's Island, in the Gulf of St. Lawrence, there is a fine
breeding-place of the Great Blue Heron, which is probably the most northern
on the Atlantic coast of North America. The birds there are more shy
than they usually are at the period of breeding, and in the most cowardly
manner abandon their young to the mercy of every intruder. A friend of
mine who visited this place for the purpose of procuring adult birds in their
best plumage, to add to his already extensive collection, found it extremely
difficult to obtain his object, until he at length thought of covering himself
with the hide of an ox, under the disguise of which he readily got within
shot of the birds, which were completely deceived by the stratagem.
Adult Male. The interior of the mouth is similar to that of the last
species, there being three longitudinal ridges on the upper mandible; its
width is !■% inches, but the lower mandible can be dilated to 2 inches. The
tongue is 3| inches long, trigonal, and in all respects similar to that of JLrdea
occidentalis. The oesophagus is 24 inches in length, opposite the larynx its
width is 2 inches, it then gradually contracts to the distance of 7 inches,
becomes 1 inch 10 twelfths in width, and so continues until it enters the
thorax, when it enlarges to 2 inches and so continues, but at the proventri-
culus is 2^ inches in breadth. The stomach is roundish, a little compressed,
2 inches in diameter; its muscular coat thin, and composed of a single series
of fasciculi, its inner coat soft and smooth, but with numerous irregular
ridges. There is a roundish pyloric lobe, 9 twelfths in diameter. The pro-
ventricular glands form a belt 1 inch 4 twelfths in width; at its upper part
are 10 longitudinal irregular series of very large mucous crypts; the right
lobe of the liver is 3 inches in length, the left 2 inches; there is a gall-
bladder of a curved form, inches in length, and 6 twelfths in its greatest
breadth. The intestine is 7 feet 1 inches in length; its greatest width, in
the duodenum, is 3j twelfths, at the distance of 3 feet, it is 2 twelfths; a
foot and a half farther on it is scarcely 2 twelfths; and half a foot from
the rectum it is 2 twelfths; it then slightly enlarges. The rectum, including
the cloaca, is 5 inches 9 twelfths in length; there is a single ccecum, 5 twelfths
long, and 2 twelfths in width, the average width of the rectum is inch,
and it expands into a globular cloaca 2 inches 2 twelfths in diameter. The
duodenum curves at the distance of 5 inches, then passes to the right lobe of
the liver, bends backward, and is convoluted, forming 22 turns, terminating
in the rectum above the stomach.
The trachea is 21 inches in length, from A twelfths to 3 twelfths in
Page:The birds of America, Volume 6.djvu/177
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THE GREAT BLUE HERON.
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