Democratic Sentinel, Volume 20, Number 35, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 September 1896 — Illuminated Birds. [ARTICLE]

Illuminated Birds.

Stories of luminous birds have been related by sportsmen occasionally, but, as far as I know, exact facts and data have never l>efore been obtained on this most Interesting and somewhat sensational subject. A friend in Florida told me that he had distinctly seen a light moving about in a flock of cranes at night, and became satisfied that the light was upon the breast of the bird. Another friend informed me that on entering a heron rookery at night he had distinctly observed lights moving about among the birds. That herons have a peculiar possible light-producing apparatus is well known. These are called powderdown patches, and can be found by turning up the long feathers on the heron’s breast, where will be found a patch of yellow, greasy material that sometimes drops off or fills the feathers in the form of a yellow powder. This powder is produced by the evident decomposition of the .small feathers, producing just such a substance as one might expect would become phosphorescent, as there is little doubt that it does. The cranes and herons are not the only birds having these oily lamps, if so we may term them. A Madagascar bird, called kirumbo, has a large pifteh on each side of the rump. The bitterns have two pairs of patches; the true herons three, while the curious boatbills have eight, which, if at times all luminous, would give the bird a most conspicuous, not to say spectral appearance at night. Some years ago a party of explorers entered a large cave on the island of Trinidad that had hitherto been considered inaccessible. To their astonishment, they found it filled with birds which darted about in the dark in such numbers that they struck the explorers and rendered their passage not merely disagreeable but dangerous. The birds proved to be night hawks, known as oil birds, and in great demand for the oil they contain, and it is barely possible that these birds are also light-givers. The powder-do,wn patches of the oil birds are upon each side of the rump.—Philadelphia Times.