existence 01* non-existence o f food o f a particular kind suited to a species is one o f the causes o f its
absence or presence : thus the fact o f the majority o f the trees o f Australia not having a bark adapted
for insect life would indicate the absence of the Woodpecker family; and accordingly no one o f its
members is found there. The large White Falcons figured in this work are restricted to the northern
hemisphere, to which the Ptarmigan, Grouse, and Ducks upon which they mainly subsist almost solely
resort, only a single representative species, the Falco hypoleucos o f Western Australia inhabiting the
southern hemisphere. On the other hand, Peregrines or Duck-Hawks not only frequent the northern
hemisphere, but are also found in all southern countries ; thus there is a Peregrine at Cape Horn, another
at the Cape o f Good Hope, and a third in Tasmania.
Not wishing to multiply generic terms in a work like the present, I have retained that of Falco for the
birds under consideration ; but I am not Içss o f opinion th at Cuvier and the older writers were right in
giving them a separate generic appellation—that o f Hierofalco ; for they certainly do differ in many respects
from the Peregrines, for which the term Falco is rightly employed.
“ O f all the birds used in falconry in this country,” says J . C. Belany, in his ‘ T reatise on Falconry,’
printed for the author a t Berwick-on-Tweed, in 1841, “ the Gerfalcon has ever been ranked the foremost.
Superior in strength and agility to every other bird o f its size, and endowed with powers o f flight equalled
by none that wing the air, with a corresponding courage, he dashes into the a ir fearless o f every other bird,
however large; nor will he, a t times, hesitate to dispute precedence with the ‘ monarch of the skies.’ Nor
need any one acquainted with the anatomical structure o f this bird wonder at his power. The breadth
o f the sternum, the depth o f the keel affording a vast extent of surface for the muscles that move the wings,
the furcula, circular, broad, and strong, giving a firm support to the shoulders, with his long acuminated
wings, and with the feathers firm, narrow, and so arranged as to pierce the air and resist pressure, give
him powers which few o f the feathered tribe possess. Mr. Mudie considers him the boldest, the most
perfectly winged, and, in proportion to his weight, the strongest, both for action and endurance, of all the
feathered tribe.” Notwithstanding this affirmation, I question whether the Hierofalcones are equal in either
flight or courage to the female o f the true Peregrines.
Latham, without distinguishing one from another, says :— “ This species, with its varieties, has ever been
in much estimation for its use in falconry ; and Iceland has the reputation o f furnishing the most generous
breed. The King o f Denmark is said to send there annually to buy up all that can be procured, the
established place being Bessested, to which the Icelanders bring them as soon as taken, the white ones
being in most esteem : and they must be very docile ; for people catch them, in nets, o f any size o r age. Bell,
in his Travels in Russia, says that about Zabach-Yeer and Casan are caught the best and largest Falcons in
the world, which are purchased by the Turks and Persians ; the Russians prefer the old ones, which are
taken in nets with a live bird as a decoy. These will fly a t Swans, Herons, o r Cranes, and will take a Duck
out of the water when only the bill appears. The Tartars also fly them a t antelopes and hares. Some of
the Falcons are as white as a Dove.”
I cannot conclude without calling attention to the admirable delineations o f all these large northern
Falcons, for which I am indebted to the pencil o f Mr. Wolf, whose abilities as an artist are so justly
celebrated, and who thoroughly understands the subject. I trust they will be duly appreciated by the
possessors of the present work, as I feel every one must have been delighted with the illustrations o f Messrs.
Schlegel and Verster van Wulverhorst’s ‘Traité de Fauconnerie,’ by the same master hand.