OCR Text |
Show 178 DOMESTIC PIGEONS. CHAP. V. length together, but sometimes independently o~ ?ach other a~d of the size of the body. Th9 number and pos1t10n ?f tho tmlfeathers vary to an unpara-lleled degree.' Tho pnmary and secondary wing-feathers occa ionally vary m number, apparently in correlation wjt]t the length of the wing. ~he ~ ngth of the leg and the size of the feet, and, in connectiOn w1th the l~tter, the number of the scutcllro, all vary. A web of skin sometimes connects the bases of the two inner toes, and almost invariably the two outer toes when the feet are feathered. The size of the body differs greatly: a runt has been known to weigh more than five times as much as a ~hort-faced tumbler. The eggs differ in size and shape. Accordmg to Parmentier, 40 some races usc much straw in building their nests, and others use little ; but I cannot hear of any recent corroboration of this statement. rrhe length of time required for hatching the eggs is uniform in all the breeds. The period at which tho characteristic plumage of some breeds is acquired, and at which certain changes of colour supervene, differs. The degree to which the young birds are clothed with down when first hatched is different, and is correlated in a singular manner with the future colour of the plumage. The manner of flight, and certain inherited movements, such as clapping the wings, tumbling either in the air or Ql1 the ground, and the manner of courting the female, present the most singular differences. In disposition the several races differ. Some races are very silent ; others coo in a highly peculiar manner. Although many different races have kept true in character during several centuries, as we shall hereafter more fully see, yet there is far more individual variability in the truest breeds than in birds in a state of nature. There is hardly any exception to the rule that those characters vary most which are now most valued and attended to by fanciers, and which consequently are now being improved by continued selection. This is indirectly admitted by fanciers when they complain that it is much more difficult to breed high fancy pigeons up to the proper standard of excellence than the so-called toy pigeons, which differ from 40 Tcmmiuck, 'Hist. Nat. Gen. des Pigeons et des Gallinaccs,' tom. i., 1813, p. 170. CHAP. V. SUMMARY OF DIFFERENCES. 179 each other merely in colour; for particular colours when once acquired are not liable . to continued improvement or augmentation. Some characters become attached, from quite unknown causes, more strongly to tho male than to the female sex; so that we have, in certain races, a tendency towards the appearance of secondary sexual characters,41 of which the abm·iginal rockpigeon displays not a trace. 41 Tl1is term was used by John Hunter for such differences in structure between tho males and females, as aro not directly connected with tlJe act of reproduction, as the tail of the peacock, the horns of deer, &c. N 2 |