Chapter 16 - Page 2
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* In regard to thrushes, shrikes, and woodpeckers, see Mr. Blyth, in Charlesworth's Mag. of Nat. Hist., vol. i., 1837, p. 304; also footnote to his translation of Cuvier's Regne Animal, p. 159. I give the case of Loxia on Mr. Blyth's information. On thrushes, see also Audubon, Ornith. Biog., vol. ii., p. 195. On Chrysococcyx and Chalcophaps, Blyth, as quoted in Jerdon's Birds of India, vol. iii., p. 485. On Sarkidiornis, Blyth, in Ibis, 1867, p. 175.
Although many young birds, belonging to various families, thus give us a glimpse of the plumage of their remote progenitors, yet there are many other birds, both dull-coloured and bright-coloured, in which the young closely resemble their parents. In such cases the young of the different species cannot resemble each other more closely than do the parents; nor can they strikingly resemble allied forms when adult. They give us but little insight into the plumage of their progenitors, excepting in so far that, when the young and the old are coloured in the same general manner throughout a whole group of species, it is probable that their progenitors were similarly coloured. We may now consider the classes of cases, under which the differences and resemblances between the plumage of the young and the old, in both sexes or in one sex alone, may be grouped. Rules of this kind were first enounced by Cuvier; but with the progress of knowledge they require some modification and amplification. This I have attempted to do, as far as the extreme complexity of the subject permits, from information derived from
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