<h2><SPAN name="STRANGE_ILLUMINATIONS" id="STRANGE_ILLUMINATIONS"></SPAN> STRANGE ILLUMINATIONS.</h2>
<p class="ac">BIRDS THAT CARRY LIGHTS.</p>
<p class="ac">P. W. H.</p>
<p>"LIGHTNING BUGS" and other
insects that carry lights are
familiar in many parts of the
country, but who ever heard of
birds that carry lights? A strange
story is told of the heron's powder
patch which makes a two-candle light,
which discloses a new idea in bird lore.
A belated sportsman returning from a
day's sport found himself late in the
evening on the edge of a flat or marsh
which bordered the path. The moon
had not risen, and the darkness was so
intense that he was obliged to move
slowly and carefully. As he walked
along, gun on shoulder, he thought he
saw a number of lights, some moving,
others stationary. As they were in the
river bed, he knew that they could not
be lanterns, and for some time he was
puzzled; but, being of an inquisitive
mind, he walked down to the water to
investigate.</p>
<p>As the stream was a slow-running,
shallow one, he had no difficulty in
wading in, and soon convinced himself
that the lights were not carried by men,
and were either ignes fatui or from
some cause unknown. To settle the
apparent mystery he crept as close as
he could, took careful aim and fired.
At the discharge the lights disappeared,
but, keeping his eye on the spot where
they had been, he walked quickly to it
and found, to his amazement, a night
heron, upon whose breast gleamed the
mysterious light.</p>
<p>"The sportsman told me of this incident,"
says a friend who knew him well,
"and, while I had often heard of the
light on the heron's breast, I never before
could find anyone who had personally
witnessed the phenomenon, consequently
I propounded numerous questions.
The observer saw the light distinctly;
first at a distance of at least
fifty yards, or one hundred and fifty
feet. There were three lights upon
each bird—one upon each side between
the hips and tail, and one upon the
breast.</p>
<p>"He saw the lights of at least four individuals,
and was so interested that he
observed them all carefully and, as to
their intensity, stated to me that each
light was the equivalent of two candles,
so that when he aimed he could see
the gun-sight against it.</p>
<p>"As to whether the bird had control
of the light, he believed he did, as he saw
the lights open and shut several times
as he crawled toward the birds and he
stopped when the light disappeared and
crept on when it came again. The light
did not endure long after the bird was
shot, fading away almost immediately.
In color the light was white and reminded
the sportsman of phosphorescent
wood.</p>
<p>"Stories of luminous birds have been
related by sportsmen occasionally, but,
so far as I know, exact facts and data
have never before been obtained on this
most interesting and somewhat sensational
subject. A friend in Florida
told we that he had distinctly seen a
light moving about in a flock of cranes
at night and became satisfied that the
light was 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."</p>
<p>That herons have a peculiar possible
light-producing apparatus is well
known. These are called powder-down
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.</p>
<p>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 patch
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</SPAN></span>
on each side of the rump. The bitterns
have two pairs of patches; the true herons
three, while the curious boat-bills
have eight, which, if at times all luminous,
would give the bird a most conspicuous,
not to say spectral appearance
at night.</p>
<p>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 only
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-down patches of the
oil bird are upon each side of the rump.</p>
<p>As to the use of such lights to a bird
there has been much conjecture; but it
is thought that it may be a lure to attract
fishes. It is well known that
fishes and various marine animals are
attracted by light, and a heron standing
motionless in the water, the light
from its breast, if equal to two candles,
would be plainly seen for a considerable
distance by various kinds of fishes, which
would undoubtedly approach within
reach of the eagle eye and sharp bill of
the heron and so fall victims to their
curiosity. If this is a true solving of
the mystery it is one of the most remarkable
provisions of nature.</p>
<p>There is hardly a group of animals
that does not include some light-givers
of great beauty; but it is not generally
known that some of the higher animals
also produce light at times. Renninger,
the naturalist, whose studies and observations
of Paraguay are well known,
tells a most remarkable story of his experience
with the monkey known as
<i>Nyctipithithecus trivigatus</i>. He was in
complete darkness when he observed
the phenomenon, which was a phosphorescent
light gleaming from the
eyes of the animal; not the light which
appears in the eye of the cat, but shafts
of phosphorescent light which were not
only distinctly visible, but illumined
objects a distance of six inches from
the animal's eyes.</p>
<p>The subject is an interesting one and
research among the various phenomena
disclosed by naturalists may discover
many other animals capable of strange
illuminations.</p>
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