PROCELLARIA LESSONII, Gam.
White-headed Petrel.
Procellaria Lessonii, Gam. Ann. des Sci. Na t., tom. vii. t. 4— Less. Traité d’Orn., p. 611.—L ist of B irds in Brit.
Mus. Coll., p a rt iii. p. 163.
------------ - leucocephala, Forst. Drawings, No. 98.—Gould in Ann. and Mag. o f Nat. Hist., vol. xiii. p. 363.
— vagabunda, Sol. MSS.
Many watchful hours have I spe^t on the decks of the vessels which conveyed me to and from Australia for
the purpose of obtaining specimens and a knowledge of the habits of the various oceanic birds which are
constantly to be seen, and my views and wishes were in most instances aided by the Captains with whom
I sailed, but by none more willingly than by Captain McKellar of the “ Parsee.” Often and often was
the ship surrounded by several species of the great family ProcellarideB, while engaged in watching the
movements of which a bright speck would appear on the distant horizon, and gradually approaching
nearer and nearer at length assumed the form of the White-headed Petrel, whose wing-powers are so
extraordinary as far to excel those of any of its congeners ; at one moment rising high in the air, at the
next sweeping comet-like through the flocks flying around; never however approaching the ship sufficiently
near for a successful shot, and it was equally wary in avoiding the boat with which I was frequently
favoured for the purpose o f securing examples o f other species; but to make use of a familiar
adage, “ the most knowing are taken in at last:” one'beautiful morning, the 20th of February 1839,
during my passage from Hobart Town to Sydney in the “ Potentate,” Captain Gilchrist, when the sea
was perfectly calm and of a glossy smoothness, this wanderer of the ocean came in sight and approached
within three hundred yards of the vessel; anxious to attract him still closer so as to bring him within
range, I thought of the following stratagem:—a corked bottle attached to a long line was thrown overboard
and allowed to drift to the distance of sixty yards, and kept there until the bird favoured us
with another visit, which, as he continued flying round in immense circles, he was likely to do every half-
hour ; at length his keen eye caught. sight of the neck of the bottle, to which a bobbing motion was
communicated by sudden jerks of the string, and down he came to examine more closely what it was that
had arrested his attention; during a momentary pause the trigger was pulled, the boat lowered, and the
bird was soon in my possession.
On referring to my notes, I find that I first met with this species in lat. 39° 33' S., long. 52° 2 E. I
also observed it off tbe coasts of Van Diemen’s Laud, and on my return to England I frequently saw it
between Sydney and New Zealand; it was again seen in lat. 40° S., long. 154° W., and a few were seen
in the South Atlantic, lat. 41° S., long. 34^° W.
The wings o f the White-headed Petrel are longer and more arched than those of any other species of its
size and weight, and it is consequently one o f the boldest and most powerful fliers of the ProcellarideB.
During flight the dark colouring of the wing shows very conspicuously, and presents the form of a W as
seen in some other species : as is the case with most birds of powerful flight, its legs are thin and delicate.
Forehead, face, all the under surface and tail white; hinder part of the head, back of the neck and
upper tail-coverts grey; back greyish brown; wings blackish brown ; round and before tbe eye a mark of
black; bill and irides black; tarsi and half the toes and webs flesh-white; the tips of the toes and webs
black.
The figure is of the natural size.