Online Encyclopedia

JABIRU

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 103 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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JABIRU  , according to Marcgrave the Brazilian name of a

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bird, subsequently called by
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Linnaeus Mycteria americana, one of the largest of the storks, Ciconiidae, which occurs from Mexjco southwards to the territory of the
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Argentine Republic . It stands between 4 and 5 ft. in height, and is conspicuous for its massive
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bill, slightly upturned, and its entirely white plumage; but the head and neck are
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bare and black, except for about the
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lower third
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part of the latter, which is bright red in the living bird . Very nearly allied to Mycteria, and also commonly called jabirus, are the birds of the genera Xenorhynchus and Ephippiorhynchus—the former containing one or (in the opinion of some) two
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species, X. australis and X. indicus, and the latter one only, E. senegalensis . These belong to the countries indicated by their names, and differ chiefly by their feathered head and neck, while the last is sometimes termed the saddle-billed stork from the very singular shape of its beak . Somewhat more distantly related are the gigaptic birds known to Europeansin India and elsewhere as adjutant birds, belonging to the genus Leptoptilus, distinguished by their sad-coloured plumage, their black scabrous head, and their enormous tawny pouch, which depends occasionally some 16 in. or more in length from the lower part of the neck, and seems to be connected with the
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respiratory and not, as commonly believed, with the
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digestive
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system . In many parts of India L. dubius, the largest of these birds, the bargila as
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Hindus call it, is a most efficient
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scavenger, sailing aloft at a vast height and descending on the
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discovery of
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offal, though frogs and fishes also form part of its
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diet . It familiarly enters the large towns, in many of which an account of its services it is strictly protected from injury, and, having satisfied its appetite, seeks the repose it has earned, sitting with its feet Jabiru . extended in front in a most
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grotesque attitude . A second and smaller species, L. javanicus, has a more
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southern and eastern range; while a third, L. crumenifer, of
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African origin, and often known as the marabou-stork, gives its name to the beautifully soft feathers so called, which are the under-tail-coverts; the " marabout " feathers of the plume-trade are mostly supplied by other birds, the
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term being apparently applied to any downy feathers . (A .

End of Article: JABIRU
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PAUL JABLOCHKOV (1847-1-894)

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