We May Also, I Think, See In The Peculiar Organization Of The
Entire Family Of The Megapodidae Or Brush Turkeys, A Reason Why
They Depart So Widely From The Usual Habits Of The Class Of
Birds.
Each egg being so large as entirely to fill up the
abdominal cavity and with difficulty pass the walls of the
pelvis, a considerable interval is required before the successive
eggs can be matured (the natives say about thirteen days).
Each
bird lays six or eight eggs or even more each season, so that
between the first and last there may be an interval of two or
three months. Now, if these eggs were hatched in the ordinary
way, either the parents must keep sitting continually for this
long period, or if they only began to sit after the last egg
was deposited, the first would be exposed to injury by the
climate, or to destruction by the large lizards, snakes, or other
animals which abound in the district; because such large birds
must roam about a good deal in search of food. Here then we seem
to have a case in which the habits of a bird may be directly
traced to its exceptional organization; for it will hardly be
maintained that this abnormal structure and peculiar food were
given to the Megapodidae in order that they might not exhibit
that parental affection, or possess those domestic instincts so
general in the Class of birds, and which so much excite our admiration.
It has generally been the custom of writers on Natural History
to take the habits and instincts of animals as fixed points, and
to consider their structure and organization, as specially adapted,
to be in accordance with these.
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