B L A C K STOR K .
C icon ia nig ra , B e llo n .
L a C ig o g n e noire.
A m o n g the wading birds o f Europe, there are few i f any which excel the Black Stork either in richness of
plumage or stateliness o f general aspect. Although resembling the White Stork in its habits, the present
bird offers many points o f difference from its well-known and familiar congener.
Instead o f associating in the immediate vicinity o f the habitations o f man, the Black Stork is much more
shy and distrustful, leading a life o f seclusion among the morasses and wooded districts o f the central and
northern portions o f Europe. The interchange o f forests and tracts o f marshy ground, where draining and
cultivation have made but little progress, afford this bird not only food, but an unmolested asylum in which
to rear its brood. Notwithstanding the length o f its limbs and its semipalmated toes, it perches on trees, and
builds its nest on the branches, choosing for that purpose some tall pine o f ancient growth, in the depths
o f the forest, where its colour assimilates with the gloomy hue o f the surrounding objects. It appears,
however, to be a bird o f migratory habits, travelling northwards and southwards with the spring and autumn.
Its winter residence is not precisely ascertained, but, like all birds whose sustenance is dependent on the
seasons, is doubtless in a country where the rigours o f winter do not lock up the marshes and lakes with ice.
Dr. Latham states it to have been met with along the Caspian Sea and at Aleppo. The preference which
the Black Stork manifests for a densely wooded district is doubtless one reason why it is a bird o f such rare
occurrence in Holland, which in other respects is well adapted for its residence, and abounds in its favourite
food, namely small fishes, frogs, worms and insects. Great Britain can scarcely lay nlaim to the Black
Stork as one in the list o f her Fauna, so few are the instances upon record o f its capture in our islands.-
Although shy and timid by nature, this bird soon acquires confidence and familiarity in captivity, and bears
the confinement o f the aviary equally well with its relative the White Stork, whose docility is proverbial.
The male and female are alike in plumage.
The head, neck, chest, and all the upper parts o f the body, are blackish with purple, green, and bronze
reflections; the under surface is pure white ; the naked space surrounding the eye, that on the throat, and
the beak, crimson r e d ; irides brown ; tarsi deep red.
The young have the beak, the naked skin round the eye and on the throat, as well as the tarsi, greenish
olive, and the plumage is more inclined to reddish brown.
Our Plate represents an adult bird, half its natural size.