|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: TOO-TUM |
|
|
TROGON , a word apparently first used as English 1 by G. Shaw (Alus. Leverianum, p. 177) in 1792, and now for many years accepted as the general name of certain birds forming the family Trogonidae .of modern ornithology. The trogons are birds of moderate size: the smallest is hardly bigger than a thrush and the largest less bulky than a crow . In most of them the bill is very wide at the gape, which is invariably beset by recurved bristles. They seize most of their food, whether caterpillars or fruits, on the wing, though their alai power is not exceptionally great, their flight being described as short, rapid and spasmodic. Their feet are weak and of a unique structure, the second toe, which in most birds is the inner anterior one, being reverted, and thus the trogons stand alone, since in all other birds that have two toes before and two behind it is the outer toe that is turned backward. The plumage is very remark-able and characteristic. There is not a species which has not beauty beyond most birds, and the glory
pink
touch , and there is no down. The tail is generally a very characteristic feature, the rectrices, though in some cases pointed, being often curiously squared at the tip, and when this is the case they are usually' Trogonem (the oblique case) occurs in Pliny (H. N. x. 16) as the name of a bird of which he knew nothing, save that it was mentioned by Hylas, an augur, whose work
Anatole I3ogdanoff determined the red pigment of the feathers of Pharomacrus auriceps to be a substance which he called " zooxanthine " (Comples rendus, Nov. 2, 1857, xlv. 690).barred ladder-like with white and black.' According to J. Gould, they are larger and more pointed in the young
The trogons form a very well-marked family, belonging to the coraciiform birds, and probably to be placed in that assemblage near the colies (see MousE Bum) and swifts (q.v.). The remains of one, T. gallicus, have been recognized by A. Milne-Edwards (Ois. foss. de la France, ii. 395, pl. 177, figs. 18-22) from the Micoene of the Allier. This fortunate discovery seems to account for the remarkable distribution of the trogons at the present day. While they chiefly abound, and have developed their climax of magnificence, in the tropical parts of the New World, they yet occur in the tropical parts of the Old. The species now inhabiting Africa, forming the group Hapaloderma, can hardly be separated generically from those of the Neotropical Trogon, and the difference between the Asiatic forms, if somewhat greater, is still comparatively slight. It is plain then that the Trogons are an exceptionally persistent type; indeed in the whole class few similar instances occur, and perhaps none that can be called parallel. The extreme development of the type in the New World just noticed also furnishes another hint. While in some of the American trogons (Pharomacrus, for instance) the plumage of the females is not very much less beautiful than that of the males, there are others in which the hen birds retain what may be fairly deemed a more ancient livery, while the cocks flaunt in brilliant attire. Now the plumage of both sexes in all but one4 of the Asiatic trogons, Harpactes, resembles rather that of the young
establishment
About sixty species of trogons are recognized, which J. Gould in the second edition of his Monograph of the family (1875) divides into seven genera. Pharomacrus, Euptilotis and Trogon inhabit the mainland of tropical America, no species passing to the north-ward of the Rio Grande nor southward of the forest district
End of Article: TROGON If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/TOO_TUM/TROGON.html"> TROGON </a> |
|
|
(Previous) TROGLODYTES (rpcay?oSurat, from rpwyXn, hole, S... |
(Next) TROGUS, GNAEUS POMPEIUS |
|
Sponsored Advertisements