PROCELLARIA GIGANTEA, Gmel.
Giant Petrel.
Procellaria gigantea, Gmel. Edit, of Linn. Syst. Nat., vol. i. p. 563.—Lath. Ind. Orn., vol. ii. p. 820.—List o f Birds
in B rit. Mus. C o l., p a r t iii. p. 162.—Less. T ra ité d’O rn., p. 611.
Mother Cary’s Goose, Cook’s Voy.. vol. ii. p. 205.
Giant Petrel, Lath. Gen. Syn., vol. vi. p. 396. pi. 100.—Penn. Arct. Zool., vol. ii. Supp., p. 71.—Cook’s L ast Voy.,
vol. ii. pp. 229 & 258.—Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. x. p. 170. pi. clxxvi.
As is the case with several other species of the Procellaridce, this, the largest member of the family, is
universally distributed over all the temperate and high southern latitudes: and that it frequently performs
the circuit of the globe may, I think,' be fairly inferred from the circumstance of an albino variety having
followed the vessel for three weeks while we were running down our longitude between the Cape o f Good
Hope and Van Diemen’s Land, the ship often making nearly two hundred miles during the twenty-four
h o u r s ; i t must not, however, be understood that the bird was merely following the vessel’s speed, nor
deemed incredible when I state that during the twenty-four hours it must have performed the enormous
distance o f nearly two thousand miles, since it was only at intervals of perhaps half an hour that it was seen,
hunting up the wake of the vessel for the distance of a mile to secure any offal, &c. that had been
thrown overboard, the interim being employed in scanning the ocean in immense circles of at least twenty
miles, at a speed of eighty or a hundred miles an hour.
Its flight is not so easy, graceful and buoyant as that of the Albatros, but is of a more laboured and
flapping character ; the bird is also o f a more shy disposition, and never approaches so near the vessel as
the other members of the family ; while flying, its white bill shows very conspicuously.
On visiting Recherche Bay in D’Entrecasteaux’ Channel, Van Diemen’s Land, I found thousands of this
species sitting together on the water and feeding on the blubber and other refuse o f the whaling station.
I did not observe the bird between Sydney and New Zealand, but on arriving in lat. 50° S., long. 90° W.,
nearly off Cape Horn, a solitary wanderer flew about the ship ; and in lat. 41° S., long 34° W., a few were
still seen in pairs. Captain Cook found it very abundant on Christmas Island, Kerguelen’s Land, in
December, when it was so tame that his sailors knocked it down with sticks.
The adults have the entire plumage of a dark chocolate-brown; bill light horn-colour, the tip tinged
with vinous; irides dark blackish brown; legs blackish brown.
The young of the year, besides being much lighter in colour, have the eye of a silvery white interspersed
with markings resembling network.
The Plate represents the bird about two-thirds of the natural size.