PIGEONS continued.
The differences described in the last
chapter between the eleven chief domestic races and
between individual birds of the same race, would be
of little significance, if they had not all descended
from a single wild stock. The question of their
origin is therefore of fundamental importance, and
must be discussed at considerable length. No one
will think this superfluous who considers the great
amount of difference between the races, who knows
how ancient many of them are, and how truly they breed
at the present day. Fanciers almost unanimously
believe that the different races are descended from
several wild stocks, whereas most naturalists believe
that all are descended from the Columba livia
or rock-pigeon.
Temminck has well observed, and
Mr. Gould has made the same remark to me, that the
aboriginal parent must have been a species which roosted
and built its nest on rocks; and I may add that it
must have been a social bird. For all the domestic
races are highly social, and none are known to build
or habitually to roost on trees. The awkward manner
in which some pigeons, kept by me in a summer-house
near an old walnut-tree, occasionally alighted on
the barer branches, was evident. Nevertheless,
Mr. R. Scot Skirving informs me that he often saw
crowds of pigeons in Upper Egypt settling on the low
trees, but not on the palms, in preference to the
mud hovels of the natives. In India Mr. Blyth
has been assured that the wild C. livia, var.
intermedia, sometimes roosts in trees.
I may here give a curious instance of compulsion leading
to changed habits: the banks of the Nile above
la deg. 30’ are perpendicular for a
long distance, so that when the river is full the
pigeons cannot alight on the shore to drink, and Mr.
Skirving repeatedly saw whole flocks settle on the
water, and drink whilst they floated down the stream.
These flocks seen from a distance resembled flocks
of gulls on the surface of the sea.
If any domestic race had descended
from a species which was not social, or which built
its nest or roosted in trees, the sharp eyes of
fanciers would assuredly have detected some vestige
of so different an aboriginal habit. For we have
reason to believe that aboriginal habits are long
retained under domestication. Thus with the common
ass we see signs of its original desert life in its
strong dislike to cross the smallest stream of water,
and in its pleasure in rolling in the dust. The
same strong dislike to cross a stream is common to
the camel, which has been domesticated from a very
ancient period. Young pigs, though so tame, sometimes
squat when frightened, and thus try to conceal themselves
even on an open and bare place. Young turkeys,
and occasionally even young fowls, when the hen gives
the danger-cry, run away and try to hide themselves,
like young partridges or pheasants, in order that
their mother may take flight, of which she has lost
the power. The musk-duck (Dendrocygna viduata)
in its native country often perches and roosts
on trees, and our domesticated musk-ducks, though
such sluggish birds, “are fond of perching on
the tops of barns, walls, &c., and, if allowed to
spend the night in the hen-house, the female will
generally go to roost by the side of the hens, but
the drake is too heavy to mount thither with ease."
We know that the dog, however well and regularly fed,
often buries, like the fox, any superfluous food;
and we see him turning round and round on a carpet,
as if to trample down grass to form a bed; we see
him on bare pavements scratching backwards as if to
throw earth over his excrement, although, as I believe,
this is never effected even where there is earth.
In the delight with which lambs and kids crowd together
and frisk on the smallest hillock, we see a vestige
of their former alpine habits.
We have therefore good reason to believe
that all the domestic races of the pigeon are descended
either from some one or from several species which
both roosted and built their nests on rocks, and were
social in disposition. As only five or six wild
species with these habits and making any near approach
in structure to the domesticated pigeon are known to
exist, I will enumerate them.
Firstly, the Columba leuconota
resembles certain domestic varieties in its plumage,
with the one marked and never-failing difference of
a white band which crosses the tail at some distance
from the extremity. This species, moreover,
inhabits the Himalaya, close to the limit of perpetual
snow; and therefore, as Mr. Blyth has remarked, is
not likely to have been the parent of our domestic
breeds, which thrive in the hottest countries.
Secondly, the C. rupestris, of Central Asia,
which is intermediate between the C. leuconota
and livia; but has nearly the same coloured
tail with the former species. Thirdly, the Columba
littoralis builds and roosts, according to Temminck,
on rocks in the Malayan archipelago; it is white,
excepting parts of the wing and the tip of the
tail, which are black; its legs are livid-coloured,
and this is a character not observed in any adult
domestic pigeon; but I need not have mentioned
this species or the closely-allied C. luctuosa,
as they in fact belong to the genus Carpophaga.
Fourthly, Columba Guinea, which ranges
from Guinea to the Cape of Good Hope,
and roosts either on trees or rocks, according to the
nature of the country. This species belongs
to the genus Strictoenas of Reichenbach, but is
closely allied to true Columba; it is to some extent
coloured like certain domestic races, and has been
said to be domesticated in Abyssinia; but Mr.
Mansfield Parkyns, who collected the birds of
that country and knows the species, informs me that
this is a mistake. Moreover the C.
Guinea is characterized by the feathers of the
neck having peculiar notched tips, a character
not observed in any domestic race. Fifthly,
the Columba oenas of Europe, which roosts on
trees, and builds its nest in holes, either in
trees or the ground; this species, as far as external
characters go, might be the parent of several
domestic races; but, though it crosses readily with
the true rock-pigeon, the offspring, as we shall
presently see, are sterile hybrids, and of such
sterility there is not a trace when the domestic races
are intercrossed. It should also be observed that
if we were to admit, against all probability,
that any of the foregoing five or six species
were the parents of some of our domestic pigeons, not
the least light would be thrown on the chief differences
between the eleven most strongly-marked races.
We now come to the best known rock-pigeon,
the Columba livia, which is often designated
in Europe pre-eminently as the Rock-pigeon, and which
naturalists believe to be the parent of all the domesticated
breeds. This bird agrees in every essential
character with the breeds which have been only
slightly modified. It differs from all other
species in being of a slaty-blue colour, with two
black bars on the wings, and with the croup (or
loins) white. Occasionally birds are seen in
Faroe and the Hebrides with the black bars replaced
by two or three black spots; this form has been
named by Brehm C. amaliae, but this
species has not been admitted as distinct by other
ornithologists. Graba even found a difference
between the wing-bars of the same bird in Faroe.
Another and rather more distinct form is either truly
wild or has become feral on the cliffs of England,
and was doubtfully named by Mr. Blyth as
C. affinis, but is now no longer considered
by him as a distinct species. C. affinis is
rather smaller than the rock-pigeon of the Scottish
islands, and has a very different appearance owing
to the wing-coverts being chequered with black, with
similar marks often extending over the back.
The chequering consists of a large black spot
on the two sides, but chiefly on the outer side, of
each feather. The wing-bars in the true rock-pigeon
and in the chequered variety are, in fact, due
to similar though larger spots symmetrically crossing
the secondary wing-feather and the larger coverts.
Hence the chequering arises merely from an extension
of these marks to other parts of the plumage.
Chequered birds are not confined to the coasts
of England; for they were found by Graba at Faroe;
and W. Thompson says that at Islay fully half
the wild rock-pigeons were chequered. Colonel
King, of Hythe, stocked his dovecot with young
wild birds which he himself procured from nests at
the Orkney Islands; and several specimens, kindly
sent to me by him, were all plainly chequered.
As we thus see that chequered birds occur mingled
with the true rock-pigeon at three distinct sites,
namely, Faroe, the Orkney Islands, and Islay,
no importance can be attached to this natural
variation in the plumage.
Prince C. L. Bonaparte, a great
divider of species, enumerates, with a mark of
interrogation, as distinct from C. livia, the
C. turricola of Italy, the C. rupestris
of Daouria, and the C. Schimperi of
Abyssinia; but these birds differ from C. livia
in characters of the most trifling value.
In the British Museum there is a chequered pigeon,
probably the C. Schimperi of Bonaparte,
from Abyssinia. To these may be added the
C. gymnocyclus of G. R. Gray from W. Africa,
which is slightly more distinct, and has rather more
naked skin round the eyes than the rock-pigeon;
but from information given me by Dr. Daniell,
it is doubtful whether this is a wild bird, for
dovecot-pigeons (which I have examined) are kept on
the coast of Guinea.
The wild rock-pigeon of India (C.
intermedia of Strickland) has been more generally
accepted as a distinct species. It chiefly differs
in the croup being blue instead of snow-white;
but as Mr. Blyth informs me, the tint varies,
being sometimes albescent. When this form is
domesticated chequered birds appear, just as occurs
in Europe with the truly wild C. livia.
Moreover we shall immediately have proof that the
blue and white croup is a highly variable character;
and Bechstein asserts that with dovecot-pigeons
in Germany this is the most variable of all the
characters of the plumage. Hence it may be concluded
that C. intermedia cannot be ranked as specifically
distinct from C. livia.
In Madeira there is a rock-pigeon which
a few ornithologists have suspected to be distinct
from C. livia. I have examined numerous
specimens collected by Mr. E. V. Harcourt and Mr.
Mason. They are rather smaller than the rock-pigeon
from the Shetland Islands, and their beaks are
plainly thinner; but the thickness of the beak varied
in the several specimens. In plumage there
is remarkable diversity; some specimens are identical
in every feather (I speak after actual comparison)
with the rock-pigeon of the Shetland Islands; others
are chequered, like C. affinis from the
cliffs of England, but generally to a greater
degree, being almost black over the whole back; others
are identical with the so-called C. intermedia
of India in the degree of blueness of the croup;
whilst others have this part very pale or very dark
blue, and are likewise chequered. So much variability
raises a strong suspicion that these birds are
domestic pigeons which have become feral.
From these facts it can hardly be doubted
that C. livia, affinis, intermedia,
and the forms marked with an interrogation by Bonaparte,
ought all to be included under a single species.
But it is quite immaterial whether or not they
are thus ranked, and whether some one of these
forms or all are the progenitors of the various domestic
kinds, as far as any light is thus thrown on the
differences between the more strongly-marked races.
That common dovecot-pigeons, which are kept in various
parts of the world, are descended from one or from
several of the above-mentioned wild varieties
of C. livia, no one who compares them will
doubt. But before making a few remarks on dovecot-pigeons,
it should be stated that the wild rock-pigeon
has been found easy to tame in several countries.
We have seen that Colonel King at Hythe stocked his
dovecot more than twenty years ago with young wild
birds taken at the Orkney Islands, and since this
time they have greatly multiplied. The accurate
Macgillivray asserts that he completely tamed
a wild rock-pigeon in the Hebrides; and several
accounts are on record of these pigeons having
bred in dovecots in the Shetland Islands. In
India, as Captain Hutton informs me, the wild rock-pigeon
is easily tamed, and breeds readily with the domestic
kind; and Mr. Blyth asserts that wild birds
come frequently to the dovecots and mingle freely
with their inhabitants. In the ancient ‘Ayeen
Akbery’ it is written that, if a few wild
pigeons be taken, “they are speedily joined
by a thousand others of their kind.”
Dovecot-pigeons are those which are
kept in dovecots in a semi-domesticated state;
for no special care is taken of them, and they procure
their own food, except during the severest weather.
In England, and, judging from MM. Boitard
and Corbie’s work, in France, the common dovecot-pigeon
exactly resembles the chequered variety of C. livia;
but I have seen dovecots brought from Yorkshire,
without any trace of chequering, like the wild
rock-pigeon of the Shetland Islands. The chequered
dovecots from the Orkney Islands, after having been
domesticated by Colonel King for more than twenty
years, differed slightly from each other in the
darkness of their plumage, and in the thickness
of their beaks; the thinnest beak being rather thicker
than the thickest one in the Madeira birds.
In Germany, according to Bechstein, the common
dovecot-pigeon is not chequered. In India they
often become chequered, and sometimes pied with
white; the croup also, as I am informed by Mr.
Blyth, becomes nearly white. I have received
from Sir J. Brooke some dovecot-pigeons,
which originally came from the S. Natunas Islands
in the Malay archipelago, and which had been crossed
with the Singapore dovecots; they were small, and the
darkest variety was extremely like the dark chequered
variety with a blue croup from Madeira; but the
beak was not so thin, though decidedly thinner
than in the rock-pigeon from the Shetland Islands.
A dovecot-pigeon sent to me by Mr. Swinhoe from
Foochow, in China, was likewise rather small,
but differed in no other respect. I have also
received, through the kindness of Dr. Daniell,
four living dovecot-pigeons from Sierra Leone;
these were fully as large as the Shetland rock-pigeon,
with even bulkier bodies. In plumage some of
them were identical with the Shetland rock-pigeon,
but with the metallic tints apparently rather
more brilliant; others had a blue croup and resembled
the chequered variety of C. intermedia of India;
and some were so much chequered as to be nearly
black. In these four birds the beak differed
slightly in length, but in all it was decidedly shorter,
more massive, and stronger than in the wild rock-pigeon
from the Shetland Islands, or in the English dovecot.
When the beaks of these African pigeons were compared
with the thinnest beaks of the wild Madeira specimens,
the contrast was great; the former being fully one-third
thicker in a vertical direction than the latter; so
that any one at first would have felt inclined
to rank these birds as specifically distinct;
yet-so perfectly graduated a series could be formed
between the above-mentioned varieties, that it was
obviously impossible to separate them.
To sum up: the wild Columba
livia, including under this name C. affinis,
intermedia, and the other still more closely-affined
geographical races, has a vast range from the southern
coast of Norway and the Faroe Islands to the shores
of the Mediterranean, to Madeira and the Canary Islands,
to Abyssinia, India, and Japan. It varies greatly
in plumage, being in many places chequered with black,
and having either a white or blue croup or loins:
it varies also slightly in the size of the beak and
body. Dovecot-pigeons, which no one disputes
are descended from one or more of the above wild forms,
present a similar but greater range of variation in
plumage, in the size of body, and in the length and
thickness of the beak. There seems to be some
relation between the croup being blue or white, and
the temperature of the country inhabited by both wild
and dovecot pigeons; for nearly all the dovecot-pigeons
in the northern parts of Europe have a white croup,
like that of the wild European rock-pigeon; and
nearly all the dovecot-pigeons of India have a blue
croup like that of the wild C. intermedia of
India. As in various countries the wild rock-pigeon
has been found easy to tame, it seems extremely probable
that the dovecot-pigeons throughout the world are
the descendants of at least two and perhaps more wild
stocks, but these, as we have just seen, cannot be
ranked as specifically distinct.
With respect to the variation of C.
livia, we may without fear of contradiction go
one step further. Those pigeon-fanciers who believe
that all the chief races, such as Carriers, Pouters,
Fantails, &c., are descended from distinct aboriginal
stocks, yet admit that the so-called toy-pigeons,
which differ from the rock-pigeon in little except
in colour, are descended from this bird. By toy-pigeons
are meant such birds as Spots, Nuns, Helmets, Swallows,
Priests, Monks, Porcelains, Swabians, Archangels,
Breasts, Shields, and others in Europe, and many others
in India. It would indeed be as puerile to suppose
that all these birds are descended from so many distinct
wild stocks as to suppose this to be the case with
the many varieties of the gooseberry, heartsease,
or dahlia. Yet these pigeons all breed true,
and many of them present sub-varieties which likewise
truly transmit their character. They differ greatly
from each other and from the rock-pigeon in plumage,
slightly in size and proportions of body, in size
of feet, and in the length and thickness of their beaks.
They differ from each other in these respects more
than do dovecot-pigeons. Although we may safely
admit that the latter, which vary slightly, and that
the toy-pigeons, which vary in a greater degree in
accordance with their more highly-domesticated condition,
are descended from C. livia, including under
this name the above-enumerated wild geographical races;
yet the question becomes far more difficult when we
consider the eleven principal races, most of which
have been so profoundly modified. It can, however,
be shown, by indirect evidence of a perfectly conclusive
nature, that these principal races are not descended
from so many wild stocks; and if this be once admitted,
few will dispute that they are the descendants of C.
livia, which agrees with them so closely in habits
and in most characters, which varies in a state of
nature, and which has certainly undergone a
considerable amount of variation, as in the toy-pigeons.
We shall moreover presently see how eminently favourable
circumstances have been for a great amount of modification
in the more carefully tended breeds.
The reasons for concluding that the
several principal races have not descended from so
many aboriginal and unknown stocks may be grouped under
the following six heads: Firstly,
if the eleven chief races have not arisen from the
variation of some one species, together with its geographical
races, they must be descended from several extremely
distinct aboriginal species; for no amount of crossing
between only six or seven wild forms could produce
races so distinct as pouters, carriers, runts, fantails,
turbits, short-faced tumblers, jacobins, and trumpeters.
How could crossing produce, for instance, a pouter
or a fantail, unless the two supposed aboriginal parents
possessed the remarkable characters of these breeds?
I am aware that some naturalists, following Pallas,
believe that crossing gives a strong tendency to variation,
independently of the characters inherited from either
parent. They believe that it would be easier
to raise a pouter or fantail pigeon from crossing two
distinct species, neither of which possessed the characters
of these races, than from any single species.
I can find few facts in support of this doctrine,
and believe in it only to a limited degree; but in
a future chapter I shall have to recur to this subject.
For our present purpose the point is not material.
The question which concerns us is, whether or not many
new and important characters have arisen since man
first domesticated the pigeon. On the ordinary
view, variability is due to changed conditions of life;
on the Pallasian doctrine, variability, or the appearance
of new characters, is due to some mysterious effect
from the crossing of two species, neither of which
possess the characters in question. In some few
instances it is credible, though for several reasons
not probable, that well-marked races have been formed
by crossing; for instance, a barb might perhaps have
been formed by a cross between a long-beaked carrier,
having large eye-wattles, and some short-beaked pigeon.
That many races have been in some degree modified
by crossing, and that certain varieties which are distinguished
only by peculiar tints have arisen from crosses between
differently-coloured varieties, may be admitted
as almost certain. On the doctrine, therefore,
that the chief races owe their differences to their
descent from distinct species, we must admit that at
least eight or nine, or more probably a dozen species,
all having the same habit of breeding and roosting
on rocks and living in society, either now exist somewhere,
or formerly existed but have become extinct as wild
birds. Considering how carefully wild pigeons
have been collected throughout the world, and what
conspicuous birds they are, especially when frequenting
rocks, it is extremely improbable that eight or nine
species, which were long ago domesticated and therefore
must have inhabited some anciently known country,
should still exist in the wild state and be unknown
to ornithologists.
The hypothesis that such species formerly
existed, but have become extinct, is in some slight
degree more probable. But the extinction of so
many species within the historical period is a bold
hypothesis, seeing how little influence man has had
in exterminating the common rock-pigeon, which agrees
in all its habits of life with the domestic races.
The C. livia now exists and flourishes on the
small northern islands of Faroe, on many islands off
the coast of Scotland, on Sardinia and the shores of
the Mediterranean, and in the centre of India.
Fanciers have sometimes imagined that the several
supposed parent-species were originally confined to
small islands, and thus might readily have been exterminated;
but the facts just given do not favour the probability
of their extinction, even on small islands. Nor
is it probable, from what is known of the distribution
of birds, that the islands near Europe should have
been inhabited by peculiar species of pigeons; and
if we assume that distant oceanic islands were the
homes of the supposed parent-species, we must remember
that ancient voyages were tediously slow, and that
ships were then ill-provided with fresh food, so that
it would not have been easy to bring home living birds.
I have said ancient voyages, for nearly all the races
of the pigeon were known before the year 1600, so
that the supposed wild species must have been captured
and domesticated before that date.
Secondly. The doctrine
that the chief domestic races have descended from
several aboriginal species, implies that several
species were formerly so thoroughly domesticated as
to breed readily when confined. Although it is
easy to tame most wild birds, experience shows us that
it is difficult to get them to breed freely under
confinement; although it must be owned that this is
less difficult with pigeons than with most other birds.
During the last two or three hundred years, many birds
have been kept in aviaries, but hardly one has been
added to our list of thoroughly reclaimed species;
yet on the above doctrine we must admit that in ancient
times nearly a dozen kinds of pigeons, now unknown
in the wild state, were thoroughly domesticated.
Thirdly. Most of
our domesticated animals have run wild in various parts
of the world; but birds, owing apparently to their
partial loss of the power of flight, less often than
quadrupeds. Nevertheless I have met with accounts
showing that the common fowl has become feral in South
America and perhaps in West Africa, and on several
islands: the turkey was at one time almost feral
on the banks of the Parana; and the Guinea-fowl has
become perfectly wild at Ascension and in Jamaica.
In this latter island the peacock, also, “has
become a maroon bird.” The common duck wanders
from its home and becomes almost wild in Norfolk.
Hybrids between the common and musk-duck which have
become wild have been shot in North America, Belgium,
and near the Caspian Sea. The goose is said to
have run wild in La Plata. The common dovecot-pigeon
has become wild at Juan Fernandez, Norfolk Island,
Ascension, probably at Madeira, on the shores of Scotland,
and, as is asserted, on the banks of the Hudson in
North America. But how different is the case,
when we turn to the eleven chief domestic races
of the pigeon, which are supposed by some authors to
be descended from so many distinct species! no one
has ever pretended that any one of these races has
been found wild in any quarter of the world; yet they
have been transported to all countries, and some of
them must have been carried back to their native homes.
On the view that all the races are the product of
variation, we can understand why they have not become
feral, for the great amount of modification which
they have undergone shows how long and how thoroughly
they have been domesticated; and this would unfit them
for a wild life.
Fourthly. If it
be assumed that the characteristic differences between
the various domestic races are due to descent from
several aboriginal species, we must conclude that
man chose for domestication in ancient times, either
intentionally or by chance, a most abnormal set of
pigeons; for that species resembling such birds as
pouters, fantails, carriers, barbs, short-faced tumblers,
turbits, &c., would be in the highest degree abnormal,
as compared with all the existing members of the great
pigeon-family, cannot be doubted. Thus we should
have to believe that man not only formerly succeeded
in thoroughly domesticating several highly abnormal
species, but that these same species have since all
become extinct, or are at least now unknown.
This double accident is so extremely improbable that
the assumed existence of so many abnormal species would
require to be supported by the strongest evidence.
On the other hand, if all the races are descended
from C. livia, we can understand, as will hereafter
be more fully explained, how any slight deviation in
structure which first appeared would continually be
augmented by the preservation of the most strongly
marked individuals; and as the power of selection would
be applied according to man’s fancy, and not
for the bird’s own good, the accumulated amount
of deviation would certainly be of an abnormal nature
in comparison with the structure of pigeons living
in a state of nature.
I have already alluded to the remarkable
fact, that the characteristic differences between
the chief domestic races are eminently variable:
we see this plainly in the great difference in the
number of the tail-feathers in the fantail, in the
development of the crop in pouters, in the length
of the beak in tumblers, in the state of the wattle
in carriers, &c. If these characters are the
result of successive variations added together by
selection, we can understand why they should be so
variable: for these are the very parts which
have varied since the domestication of the pigeon,
and therefore would be likely still to vary; these
variations moreover have been recently, and are still
being accumulated by man’s selection; therefore
they have not as yet become firmly fixed.
Fifthly. All the
domestic races pair readily together, and, what is
equally important, their mongrel offspring are perfectly
fertile. To ascertain this fact I made many experiments,
which are given in the note below; and recently Mr.
Tegetmeier has made similar experiments with the same
result. The accurate Neumeister asserts that
when dovecots are crossed with pigeons of any
other breed, the mongrels are extremely fertile and
hardy. MM. Boitard and Corbie affirm,
after their great experience, that with crossed pigeons
the more distinct the breeds, the more productive
are their mongrel offspring. I admit that the
doctrine first broached by Pallas is highly probable,
if not actually proved, namely, that closely allied
species, which in a state of nature or when first
captured would have been in some degree sterile when
crossed, lose this sterility after a long course of
domestication; yet when we consider the great difference
between such races as pouters, carriers, runts, fantails,
turbits, tumblers, &c., the fact of their perfect,
or even increased, fertility when intercrossed in
the most complicated manner becomes a strong argument
in favour of their having all descended from a single
species. This argument is rendered much stronger
when we hear (I append in a note all the
cases which I have collected) that hardly a single
well-ascertained instance is known of hybrids between
two true species of pigeons being fertile, inter
se, or even when crossed with one of their pure
parents.
Sixthly. Excluding
certain important characteristic differences, the
chief races agree most closely both with each other
and with C. livia in all other respects.
As previously observed, all are eminently sociable;
all dislike to perch or roost, and refuse to build
in trees; all lay two eggs, and this is not a universal
rule with the Columbidae; all, as far as I can hear,
require the same time for hatching their eggs; all
can endure the same great range of climate; all prefer
the same food, and are passionately fond of salt;
all exhibit (with the asserted exception of the finnikin
and turner, which do not differ much in any other
character) the same peculiar gestures when courting
the females; and all (with the exception of trumpeters
and laughers, which likewise do not differ much in
any other character) coo in the same peculiar manner,
unlike the voice of any other wild pigeon. All
the coloured breeds display the same peculiar metallic
tints on the breast, a character far from general with
pigeons. Each race presents nearly the same range
of variation in colour; and in most of the races we
have the same singular correlation between the development
of down in the young and the future colour of plumage.
All have the proportional length of their toes, and
of their primary wing-feathers, nearly the same, characters
which are apt to differ in the several members of the
Columbidae. In those races which present some
remarkable deviation of structure, such as in the
tail of fantails, crop of pouters, beak of carriers
and tumblers, &c., the other parts remain nearly unaltered.
Now every naturalist will admit that it would be scarcely
possible to pick out a dozen natural species in any
Family, which should agree closely in habits and in
general structure, and yet should differ greatly in
a few characters alone. This fact is explicable
through the doctrine of natural selection; for each
successive modification of structure in each natural
species is preserved, solely because it is of service;
and such modifications when largely accumulated imply
a great change in the habits of life, and this will
almost certainly lead to other changes of structure
throughout the whole organisation. On the other
hand, if the several races of the pigeon have been
produced by man through selection and variation, we
can readily understand how it is that they should still
all resemble each other in habits and in those many
characters which man has not cared to modify, whilst
they differ to so prodigious a degree in those parts
which have struck his eye or pleased his fancy.
Besides the points above enumerated,
in which all the domestic races resemble C. livia
and each other, there is one which deserves special
notice. The wild rock-pigeon is of a slaty-blue
colour; the wings are crossed by two black bars; the
croup varies in colour, being generally white in the
pigeon of Europe, and blue in that of India; the tail
has a black bar close to the end, and the outer webs
of the outer tail-feathers are edged with white, except
near the tips. These combined characters are
not found in any wild pigeon besides C. livia.
I have looked carefully through the great collection
of pigeons in the British Museum, and I find that
a dark bar at the end of the tail is common; that the
white edging to the outer tail-feathers is not rare;
but that the white croup is extremely rare, and the
two black bars on the wings occur in no other pigeon,
excepting the alpine C. leuconota and C.
rupestris of Asia. Now if we turn to the
domestic races, it is highly remarkable, as an eminent
fancier, Mr. Wicking, observed to me, that, whenever
a blue bird appears in any race, the wings almost
invariably show the double black bars. The primary
wing-feathers may be white or black, and the whole
body may be of any colour, but if the wing-coverts
alone are blue, the two black bars surely appear.
I have myself seen, or acquired trustworthy evidence,
as given below, of blue birds with black bars
on the wing, with the croup either white or very pale
or dark blue, with the tail having a terminal black
bar, and with the outer feathers externally edged with
white or very pale coloured, in the following races,
which, as I carefully observed in each case, appeared
to be perfectly pure: namely, in Pouters, Fantails,
Tumblers, Jacobins, Turbits, Barbs, Carriers, Runts
of three distinct varieties, Trumpeters, Swallows,
and in many other toy-pigeons, which, as being closely
allied to C. livia, are not worth enumerating.
Thus we see that, in purely-bred races of every kind
known in Europe, blue birds occasionally appear having
all the marks which characterise C. livia,
and which concur in no other wild species. Mr.
Blyth, also, has made the same observation with respect
to the various domestic races known in India.
Certain variations in the plumage
are equally common in the wild C. livia, in
dovecot-pigeons, and in all the most highly modified
races. Thus, in all, the croup varies from white
to blue, being most frequently white in Europe,
and very generally blue in India. We have seen
that the wild C. livia in Europe, and dovecots
in all parts of the world, often have the upper wing-coverts
chequered with black; and all the most distinct races,
when blue, are occasionally chequered in precisely
the same manner. Thus I have seen Pouters, Fantails,
Carriers, Turbits, Tumblers (Indian and English),
Swallows, Bald-pâtes, and other toy-pigeons blue
and chequered; and Mr. Esquilant has seen a chequered
Runt. I bred from two pure blue Tumblers a chequered
bird.
The facts hitherto given refer to
the occasional appearance in pure races of blue birds
with black wing-bars, and likewise of blue and chequered
birds; but it will now be seen that when two birds
belonging to distinct races are crossed, neither of
which have, nor probably have had during many generations,
a trace of blue in their plumage, or a trace of wing-bars
and the other characteristic marks, they very frequently
produce mongrel offspring of a blue colour, sometimes
chequered, with black wing-bars, &c.; or if not of
a blue colour, yet with the several characteristic
marks more or less plainly developed. I was led
to investigate this subject from MM. Boitard
and Corbie having asserted that from crosses between
certain breeds it is rare to get anything but bisets
or dovecot-pigeons, which, as we know, are blue birds
with the usual characteristic marks. We shall
hereafter see that this subject possesses, independently
of our present object, considerable interest, so that
I will give the results of my own trials in full.
I selected for experiment races which, when pure, very
seldom produce birds of a blue colour, or have bars
on their wings and tail.
The nun is white, with the head, tail,
and primary wing-feathers black; it is a breed which
was established as long ago as the year 1600.
I crossed a male nun with a female red common tumbler,
which latter variety generally breeds true. Thus
neither parent had a trace of blue in the plumage,
or of bars on the wing and tail. I should premise
that common tumblers are rarely blue in England.
From the above cross I reared several young:
one was red over the whole back, but with the tail
as blue as that of the rock-pigeon; the terminal bar,
however, was absent, but the outer feathers were edged
with white: a second and third nearly resembled
the first, but the tail in both presented a trace
of the bar at the end: a fourth was brownish,
and the wings showed a trace of the double bar:
a fifth was pale blue over the whole breast, back,
croup, and tail, but the neck and primary wing-feathers
were reddish; the wings presented two distinct bars
of a red colour; the tail was not barred, but the outer
feathers were edged with white. I crossed this
last curiously coloured bird with a black mongrel
of complicated descent, namely, from a black barb,
a spot, and almond tumbler, so that the two young
birds produced from this cross included the blood
of five varieties, none of which had a trace of blue
or of wing and tail bars: one of the two young
birds was brownish-black, with black wing-bars; the
other was reddish-dun, with reddish wing-bars, paler
than the rest of the body, with the croup pale blue,
the tail bluish, with a trace of the terminal bar.
Mr. Eaton matched two short-faced
tumblers, namely, a splash cock and kite hen (neither
of which are blue or barred), and from the first nest
he got a perfect blue bird, and from the second a
silver or pale blue bird, both of which, in accordance
with all analogy, no doubt presented the usual characteristic
marks.
I crossed two male black barbs with
two female red spots. These latter have the whole
body and wings white, with a spot on the forehead,
the tail and tail-coverts red; the race existed at
least as long ago as 1676, and now breeds perfectly
true, as was known to be the case in the year 1735.
Barbs are uniformly-coloured birds, with rarely even
a trace of bars on the wing or tail; they are known
to breed very true. The mongrels thus raised
were black or nearly black, or dark or pale brown,
sometimes slightly piebald with white:
of these birds no less than six presented double wing-bars;
in two the bars were conspicuous and quite black; in
seven some white feathers appeared on the croup; and
in two or three there was a trace of the terminal
bar to the tail, but in none were the outer tail-feathers
edged with white.
I crossed black barbs (of two excellent
strains) with purely-bred, snow-white fantails.
The mongrels were generally quite black, with a few
of the primary wing and tail-feathers white:
others were dark reddish-brown, and others snow-white:
none had a trace of wing-bars or of the white croup.
I then paired together two of these mongrels, namely,
a brown and black bird, and their offspring displayed
wing-bars, faint, but of a darker brown than the rest
of body. In a second brood from the same parents
a brown bird was produced, with several white feathers
confined to the croup.
I crossed a male dun dragon belonging
to a family which had been dun-coloured without wing-bars
during several generations, with a uniform red barb
(bred from two black barbs); and the offspring presented
decided but faint traces of wing-bars. I crossed
a uniform red male runt with a white trumpeter; and
the offspring had a slaty-blue tail, with a bar at
the end, and with the outer feathers edged with white.
I also crossed a female black and white chequered
trumpeter (of a different strain from the last) with
a male almond-tumbler, neither of which exhibited a
trace of blue, or of the white croup, or of the bar
at end of tail: nor is it probable that the progenitors
of these two birds had for many generations exhibited
any of these characters, for I have never even heard
of a blue trumpeter in this country, and my almond-tumbler
was purely bred; yet the tail of this mongrel was
bluish, with a broad black bar at the end, and the
croup was perfectly white. It may be observed
in several of these cases, that the tail first shows
a tendency to become by reversion blue; and this fact
of the persistency of colour in the tail and tail-coverts
will surprise no one who has attended to the crossing
of pigeons.
The last case which I will give is
the most curious. I paired a mongrel female barb-fantail
with a mongrel male barb-spot; neither of which mongrels
had the least blue about them. Let it be remembered
that blue barbs are excessively rare; that spots,
as has been already stated, were perfectly characterized
in the year 1676, and breed perfectly true; this likewise
is the case with white fantails, so much so that I
have never heard of white fantails throwing any other
colour. Nevertheless the offspring from the above
two mongrels was of exactly the same blue tint as
that of the wild rock-pigeon from the Shetland Islands
over the whole back and wings; the double black wing-bars
were equally conspicuous; the tail was exactly alike
in all its characters, and the croup was pure white;
the head, however, was tinted with a shade of red,
evidently derived from the spot, and was of a paler
blue than in the rock-pigeon, as was the stomach.
So that two black barbs, a red spot, and a white fantail,
as the four purely-bred grandparents, produced a bird
of the same general blue colour, together with every
characteristic mark, as in the wild Columba livia.
With respect to crossed breeds frequently
producing blue birds chequered with black, and resembling
in all respects both the dovecot-pigeon and the chequered
wild variety of the rock-pigeon, the statement before
referred to by MM. Boitard and Corbie would almost
suffice; but I will give three instances of the appearance
of such birds from crosses in which one alone of the
parents or great-grandparents was blue, but not chequered.
I crossed a male blue turbit with a snow-white trumpeter,
and the following year with a dark, leaden-brown,
short-faced tumbler; the offspring from the first
cross were as perfectly chequered as any dovecot-pigeon;
and from the second, so much so as to be nearly as
black as the most darkly chequered rock-pigeon from
Madeira. Another bird, whose great-grandparents
were a white trumpeter, a white fantail, a white red-spot,
a red runt, and a blue pouter, was slaty-blue and
chequered exactly like a dovecot-pigeon. I may
here add a remark made to me by Mr. Wicking,
who has had more experience than any other person
in England in breeding pigeons of various colours:
namely, that when a blue, or a blue and chequered bird,
having black wing-bars, once appears in any race and
is allowed to breed, these characters are so strongly
transmitted that it is extremely difficult to eradicate
them.
What, then, are we to conclude from
this tendency in all the chief domestic races, both
when purely bred and more especially when intercrossed,
to produce offspring of a blue colour, with the same
characteristic marks, varying in the same manner,
as in Columba livia? If we admit that these
races have all descended from C. livia, no breeder
will doubt that the occasional appearance of blue
birds thus characterised is accounted for on the well-known
principle of “throwing back” or reversion.
Why crossing should give so strong a tendency to reversion,
we do not with certainty know; but abundant evidence
of this fact will be given in the following chapters.
It is probable that I might have bred even for a century
pure black barbs, spots, nuns, white fantails, trumpeters,
&c., without obtaining a single blue or barred bird;
yet by crossing these breeds I reared in the first
and second generation, during the course of only three
or four years, a considerable number of young birds,
more or less plainly coloured blue, and with most
of the characteristic marks. When black and white,
or black and red birds, are crossed, it would appear
that a slight tendency exists in both parents to produce
blue offspring, and that this, when combined, overpowers
the separate tendency in either parent to produce
black, or white, or red offspring.
If we reject the belief that all the
races of the pigeon are the modified descendants of
C. livia, and suppose that they are descended
from several aboriginal stocks, then we must choose
between the three following assumptions: firstly,
that at least eight or nine species formerly existed
which were aboriginally coloured in various ways, but
have since varied in so exactly the same manner as
to assume the colouring of C. livia; but this
assumption throws not the least light on the appearance
of such colours and marks when the races are crossed.
Or secondly, we may assume that the aboriginal species
were all coloured blue, and had the wing-bars
and other characteristic marks of C. livia, a
supposition which is highly improbable, as besides
this one species no existing member of the Columbidae
presents these combined characters; and it would not
be possible to find any other instance of several
species identical in plumage, yet as different in
important points of structure as are pouters, fantails,
carriers, tumblers, &c. Or lastly, we may assume
that all the races, whether descended from C. livia
or from several aboriginal species, although they
have been bred with so much care and are so highly
valued by fanciers, have all been crossed within a
dozen or score of generations with C. livia,
and have thus acquired their tendency to produce blue
birds with the several characteristic marks. I
have said that it must be assumed that each race has
been crossed with C. livia within a dozen,
or, at the utmost, within a score of generations; for
there is no reason to believe that crossed offspring
ever revert to one of their ancestors when removed
by a greater number of generations. In a breed
which has been crossed only once, the tendency to
reversion will naturally become less and less in the
succeeding generations, as in each there will be less
and less of the blood of the foreign breed; but when
there has been no cross with a distinct breed, and
there is a tendency in both parents to revert to some
long-lost character, this tendency, for all that we
can see to the contrary, may be transmitted undiminished
for an indefinite number of generations. These
two distinct cases of reversion are often confounded
together by those who have written on inheritance.
Considering, on the one hand, the
improbability of the three assumptions which have
just been discussed, and, on the other hand, how simply
the facts are explained on the principle of reversion,
we may conclude that the occasional appearance in
all the races, both when purely bred and more especially
when crossed, of blue birds, sometimes chequered, with
double wing-bars, with white or blue croups, with
a bar at the end of the tail, and with the outer tail-feathers
edged with white, affords an argument of the greatest
weight in favour of the view that all are descended
from Columba livia, including under this name
the three or four wild varieties or sub-species before
enumerated.
To sum up the six foregoing arguments,
which are opposed to the belief that the chief domestic
races are the descendants of at least eight or nine
or perhaps a dozen species; for the crossing of any
less number would not yield the characteristic differences
between the several races. Firstly, the improbability
that so many species should still exist somewhere,
but be unknown to ornithologists, or that they should
have become within the historical period extinct,
although man has had so little influence in exterminating
the wild C. livia. Secondly, the improbability
of man in former times having thoroughly domesticated
and rendered fertile under confinement so many species.
Thirdly, these supposed species having nowhere
become feral. Fourthly, the extraordinary fact
that man should, intentionally or by chance, have
chosen for domestication several species, extremely
abnormal in character; and furthermore, the points
of structure which render these supposed species so
abnormal being now highly variable. Fifthly,
the fact of all the races, though differing in many
important points of structure, producing perfectly
fertile mongrels; whilst all the hybrids which have
been produced between even closely allied species in
the pigeon-family are sterile. Sixthly, the
remarkable statements just given on the tendency in
all the races, both when purely bred and when crossed,
to revert in numerous minute details of colouring to
the character of the wild rock-pigeon, and to vary
in a similar manner. To these arguments may be
added the extreme improbability that a number of species
formerly existed, which differed greatly from each
other in some few points, but which resembled each
other as closely as do the domestic races in other
points of structure, in voice, and in all their habits
of life. When these several facts and arguments
are fairly taken into consideration, it would require
an overwhelming amount of evidence to make us admit
that the chief domestic races are descended from several
aboriginal stocks; and of such evidence there is absolutely
none.
The belief that the chief domestic
races are descended from several wild stocks no doubt
has arisen from the apparent improbability of such
great modifications of structure having been effected
since man first domesticated the rock-pigeon.
Nor am I surprised at any degree of hesitation in
admitting their common origin: formerly,
when I went into my aviaries and watched such birds
as pouters, carriers, barbs, fantails, and short-faced
tumblers, &c., I could not persuade myself that they
had all descended from the same wild stock, and that
man had consequently in one sense created these remarkable
modifications. Therefore I have argued the question
of their origin at great, and, as some will think,
superfluous length.
Finally, in favour of the belief that
all the races are descended from a single stock, we
have in Columba livia a still existing and widely
distributed species, which can be and has been domesticated
in various countries. This species agrees in
most points of structure and in all its habits of
life, as well as occasionally in every detail of plumage,
with the several domestic races. It breeds freely
with them, and produces fertile offspring. It
varies in a state of nature, and still more so
when semi-domesticated, as shown by comparing the Sierra
Leone pigeons with those of India, or with those which
apparently have run wild in Madeira. It has undergone
a still greater amount of variation in the case of
the numerous toy-pigeons, which no one supposes to
be descended from distinct species; yet some of these
toy-pigeons have transmitted their character truly
for centuries. Why, then, should we hesitate to
believe in that greater amount of variation which
is necessary for the production of the eleven chief
races? It should be borne in mind that in two
of the most strongly-marked races, namely, carriers
and short-faced tumblers, the extreme forms can be
connected with the parent-species by graduated differences
not greater than those which may be observed between
the dovecot-pigeons inhabiting different countries,
or between the various kinds of toy-pigeons, gradations
which must certainly be attributed to variation.
That circumstances have been eminently
favourable for the modification of the pigeon through
variation and selection will now be shown. The
earliest record, as has been pointed out to me by
Professor Lepsius, of pigeons in a domesticated condition,
occurs in the fifth Egyptian dynasty, about
3000 B.C.; but Mr. Birch, of the British Museum,
informs me that the pigeon appears in a bill of fare
in the previous dynasty. Domestic pigeons are
mentioned in Genesis, Leviticus, and Isaiah. In
the time of the Romans, as we hear from Pliny,
immense prices were given for pigeons; “nay,
they are come to this pass, that they can reckon up
their pedigree and race.” In India, about
the year 1600, pigeons were much valued by Akber Khan:
20,000 birds were carried about with the court, and
the merchants brought valuable collections. “The
monarchs of Iran and Turan sent him some very rare
breeds. His Majesty,” says the courtly historian,
“by crossing the breeds, which method was never
practised before, has improved them astonishingly."
Akber Khan possessed seventeen distinct kinds, eight
of which were valuable for beauty alone. At about
this same period of 1600 the Dutch, according to Aldrovandi,
were as eager about pigeons as the Romans had formerly
been. The breeds which were kept during the fifteenth
century in Europe and in India apparently differed
from each other. Tavernier, in his Travels in
1677, speaks, as does Chardin in 1735, of the vast
number of pigeon-houses in Persia; and the former remarks
that, as Christians were not permitted to keep pigeons,
some of the vulgar actually turned Mahometans for
this sole purpose. The Emperor of Morocco had
his favourite keeper of pigeons, as is mentioned in
Moore’s treatise, published 1737. In England,
from the time of Willughby in 1678 to the present day,
as well as in Germany and in France, numerous treatises
have been published on the pigeon. In India,
about a hundred years ago, a Persian treatise was
written; and the writer thought it no light affair,
for he begins with a solemn invocation, “in
the name of God, the gracious and merciful.”
Many large towns, in Europe and the United States,
now have their societies of devoted pigeon-fanciers:
at present there are three such societies in London.
In India, as I hear from Mr. Blyth, the inhabitants
of Delhi and of some other great cities are eager
fanciers. Mr. Layard informs me that most of
the known breeds are kept in Ceylon. In China,
according to Mr. Swinhoe of Amoy, and Dr. Lockhart
of Shangai, carriers, fantails, tumblers, and other
varieties are reared with care, especially by the
bonzes or priests. The Chinese fasten a kind of
whistle to the tail-feathers of their pigeons, and
as the flock wheels through the air they produce a
sweet sound. In Egypt the late Abbas Pacha was
a great fancier of fantails. Many pigeons are
kept at Cairo and Constantinople, and these have lately
been imported by native merchants, as I hear from Sir
W. Elliot, into Southern India, and sold at high prices.
The foregoing statements show in how
many countries, and during how long a period, many
men have been passionately devoted to the breeding
of pigeons. Hear how an enthusiastic fancier
at the present day writes: “If it were
possible for noblemen and gentlemen to know the amazing
amount of solace and pleasure derived from Almond
Tumblers, when they begin to understand their properties,
I should think that scarce any nobleman or gentleman
would be without their aviaries of Almond Tumblers."
The pleasure thus taken is of paramount importance,
as it leads amateurs carefully to note and preserve
each slight deviation of structure which strikes their
fancy. Pigeons are often closely confined during
their whole lives; they do not partake of their naturally
varied diet; they have often been transported from
one climate to another; and all these changes in their
conditions of life would be likely to cause variability.
Pigeons have been domesticated for nearly 5000 years,
and have been kept in many places, so that the numbers
reared under domestication must have been enormous;
and this is another circumstance of high importance,
for it obviously favours the chance of rare modifications
of structure occasionally appearing. Slight variations
of all kinds would almost certainly be observed, and,
if valued, would, owing to the following circumstances,
be preserved and propagated with unusual facility.
Pigeons, differently from any other domesticated animal,
can easily be mated for life, and, though kept with
other pigeons, they rarely prove unfaithful to each
other. Even when the male does break his
marriage-vow, he does not permanently desert his mate.
I have bred in the same aviaries many pigeons of different
kinds, and never reared a single bird of an impure
strain. Hence a fancier can with the greatest
ease select and match his birds. He will also
soon see the good results of his care; for pigeons
breed with extraordinary rapidity. He may freely
reject inferior birds, as they serve at an early age
as excellent food. To sum up, pigeons are easily
kept, paired, and selected; vast numbers have been
reared; great zeal in breeding them has been shown
by many men in various countries; and this would lead
to their close discrimination, and to a strong desire
to exhibit some novelty, or to surpass other fanciers
in the excellence of already established breeds.
History of the principal Races of the Pigeon.
Before discussing the means and steps
by which the chief races have been formed, it
will be advisable to give some historical details,
for more is known of the history of the pigeon,
little though this be, than of any other domesticated
animal. Some of the cases are interesting as
proving how long domestic varieties may be propagated
with exactly the same or nearly the same characters;
and other cases are still more interesting as
showing how slowly but steadily races have been greatly
modified during successive generations. In
the last chapter I stated that Trumpeters and
Laughers, both so remarkable for their voices, seem
to have been perfectly characterized in 1735; and
Laughers were apparently known in India before
the year 1600. Spots in 1676, and Nuns in
the time of Aldrovandi, before 1600, were coloured
exactly as they now are. Common Tumblers
and Ground Tumblers exhibited in India, before the
year 1600, the same extraordinary peculiarities of
flight as at the present day, for they are well
described in the ‘Ayeen Akbery.’ These
breeds may all have existed for a much longer period;
we know only that they were perfectly characterized
at the dates above given. The average
length of life of the domestic pigeon is probably about
five or six years; if so, some of these races
have retained their character perfectly for at
least forty or fifty generations.
Pouters. These birds,
as far as a very short description serves for comparison,
appear to have been well characterized in Aldrovandi’s
time, before the year 1600. Length of
body and length of leg are at the present time
the two chief points of excellence. In 1735 Moore
said (see Mr. J. M. Eaton’s edition) and
Moore was a first-rate fancier that
he once saw a bird with a body 20 inches in length,
“though 17 or 18 inches is reckoned a very
good length;” and he has seen the legs very
nearly 7 inches in length, yet a leg 61/2 or 63/4 long
“must be allowed to be a very good one.”
Mr. Bult, the most successful breeder of Pouters
in the world, informs me that at present (1858) the
standard length of the body is not less than 18
inches; but he has measured one bird 19 inches
in length, and has heard of 20 and 22 inches,
but doubts the truth of these latter statements.
The standard length of the leg is now 7 inches,
but Mr. Bult has recently measured two of his
own birds with legs 71/2 long. So that in the
123 years which have elapsed since 1735 there
has been hardly any increase in the standard length
of the body; 17 or 18 inches was formerly reckoned
a very good length, and now 18 inches is the minimum
standard; but the length of leg seems to have
increased, as Moore never saw one quite 7 inches
long; now the standard is 7, and two of Mr. Bult’s
birds measured 71/2 inches in length. The
extremely slight improvement in Pouters, except
in the length of the leg, during the last 123 years,
may be partly accounted for by the neglect which
they suffered, as I am informed by Mr. Bult, until
within the last 20 or 30 years. About 1765
there was a change of fashion, stouter and more feathered
legs being preferred to thin and nearly naked legs.
Fantails. The first
notice of the existence of this breed is in India,
before the year 1600, as given in the ’Ayeen
Akbery;’ at this date, judging from
Aldrovandi, the breed was unknown in Europe. In
1677 Willughby speaks of a Fantail with 26 tail-feathers;
in 1735 Moore saw one with 36 feathers; and in
1824 MM. Boitard and Corbie assert that in
France birds can easily be found with 42 tail-feathers.
In England, the number of the tail-feathers is
not at present so much regarded as their upward
direction and expansion. The general carriage
of the bird is likewise now much regarded.
The old descriptions do not suffice to show whether
in these latter respects there has been much improvement;
but if fantails had formerly existed with their heads
and tails touching each other, as at the present
time, the fact would almost certainly have been
noticed. The Fantails which are now found in
India probably show the state of the race, as far
as carriage is concerned, at the date of their
introduction into Europe; and some, said to have
been brought from Calcutta, which I kept alive, were
in a marked manner inferior to our exhibition
birds. The Java Fantail shows the same difference
in carriage; and although Mr. Swinhoe has counted
18 and 24 tail-feathers in his birds, a first-rate
specimen sent to me had only 14 tail-feathers.
Jacobins. This breed
existed before 1600, but the hood, judging from the
figure given by Aldrovandi, did not enclose the head
nearly so perfectly as at present: nor was
the head then white; nor were the wings and tail
so long, but this last character might have been overlooked
by the rude artist. In Moore’s time, in
1735, the Jacobin was considered the smallest
kind of pigeon, and the bill is said to be very
short. Hence either the Jacobin, or the other
kinds with which it was then compared, must have
been since considerably modified; for Moore’s
description (and it must be remembered that he was
a first-rate judge) is clearly not applicable,
as far as size of body and length of beak are
concerned, to our present Jacobins. In 1795, judging
from Bechstein, the breed had assumed its present
character.
Turbits. It has generally
been supposed by the older writers on pigeons,
that the Turbit is the Cortbeck of Aldrovandi; but
if this be the case, it is an extraordinary fact
that the characteristic frill should not have
been noticed. The beak, moreover, of the Cortbeck
is described as closely resembling that of the
Jacobin, which shows a change in the one or the
other race. The Turbit, with its characteristic
frill and bearing its present name, is described by
Willughby in 1677; and the bill is said to be like
that of the bullfinch, a good comparison,
but now more strictly applicable to the beak of
the Barb. The sub-breed called the Owl was well
known in Moore’s time, in 1735.
Tumblers. Common Tumblers,
as well as Ground Tumblers, perfect as far as
tumbling is concerned, existed in India before the
year 1600; and at this period diversified modes
of flight, such as flying at night, the ascent
to a great height, and manner of descent, seem to
have been much attended to, as at the present time,
in India. Belon in 1555 saw in Paphlagonia
what he describes as “a very new thing,
viz. pigeons which flew so high in the air that
they were lost to view, but returned to their
pigeon-house without separating.” This
manner of flight is characteristic of our present
Tumblers, but it is clear that Belon would have
mentioned the act of tumbling if the pigeons described
by him had tumbled. Tumblers were not known in
Europe in 1600, as they are not mentioned by Aldrovandi,
who discusses the flight of pigeons. They
are briefly alluded to by Willughby, in 1687, as
small pigeons “which show like footballs in the
air.” The short-faced race did not
exist at this period, as Willughby could not have
overlooked birds so remarkable for their small size
and short beaks. We can even trace some of
the steps by which this race has been produced.
Moore in 1735 enumerates correctly the chief points
of excellence, but does not give any description
of the several sub-breeds; and from this fact
Mr. Eaton infers that the short-faced Tumbler
had not then come to full perfection. Moore even
speaks of the Jacobin as being the smallest pigeon.
Thirty years afterwards, in 1765, in the Treatise
dedicated to Mayor, short-faced Almond Tumblers
are fully described, but the author, an excellent
fancier, expressly states in his Preface (p. xiv.)
that, “from great care and expense in breeding
them, they have arrived to so great perfection
and are so different from what they were 20 or 30 years
past, that an old fancier would have condemned
them for no other reason than because they are
not like what used to be thought good when he was
in the fancy before.” Hence it would
appear that there was a rather sudden change in
the character of the short-faced Tumbler at about
this period; and there is reason to suspect that a
dwarfed and half-monstrous bird, the parent-form
of the several short-faced sub-breeds, then appeared.
I suspect this because short-faced Tumblers are
born with their beaks (ascertained by careful measurement)
as short, proportionally with the size of their
bodies, as in the adult bird; and in this respect
they differ greatly from all other breeds, which
slowly acquire during growth their various characteristic
qualities.
Since the year 1765 there has been some
change in one of the chief characters of the short-faced
Tumbler, namely, in the length of the beak.
Fanciers measure the “head and beak” from
the tip of the beak to the front corner of the
eyeball. About the year 1765 a “head and
beak” was considered good, which, measured
in the usual manner, was 7/8 of an inch in length;
now it ought not to exceed 5/8 of an inch; “it
is however possible,” as Mr. Eaton candidly
confesses, “for a bird to be considered
as pleasant or neat even at 6/8 of an inch, but exceeding
that length it must be looked upon as unworthy
of attention.” Mr. Eaton states that
he has never seen in the course of his life more than
two or three birds with the “head and beak”
not exceeding half an inch in length; “still
I believe in the course of a few years that the head
and beak will be shortened, and that half-inch
birds will not be considered so great a curiosity
as at the present time.” That Mr. Eaton’s
opinion deserves attention cannot be doubted,
considering his success in winning prizes at our
exhibitions. Finally in regard to the Tumbler
it may be concluded from the facts above given
that it was originally introduced into Europe,
probably first into England, from the East; and that
it then resembled our common English Tumbler, or more
probably the Persian or Indian Tumbler, with a
beak only just perceptibly shorter than that of
the common dovecot-pigeon. With respect to the
short-faced Tumbler, which is not known to exist
in the East, there can hardly be a doubt that
the whole wonderful change in the size of the head,
beak, body, and feet, and in general carriage,
has been produced during the last two centuries
by continued selection, aided probably by the birth
of a semi-monstrous bird somewhere about the year
1750.
Runts. Of their history
little can be said. In the time of Pliny the
pigeons of Campania were the largest known; and
from this fact alone some authors assert that
they were Runts. In Aldrovandi’s time, in
1600, two sub-breeds existed; but one of them,
the short-beaked, is now extinct in Europe.
Barbs. Notwithstanding
statements to the contrary, it seems to me impossible
to recognise the barb in Aldrovandi’s descriptions
and figures; four breeds, however, existed in
the year 1600 which were evidently allied both
to Barbs and Carriers. To show how difficult it
is to recognise some of the breeds described by
Aldrovandi, I will give the different opinions
in regard to the above four kinds, named by him C.
Indica, Cretensis, Gutturosa, and
Persica. Willughby thought that the
Columba Indica was a Turbit, but the eminent
fancier Mr. Brent believes that it was an inferior
Barb: C. Cretensis, with a short
beak and a swelling on the upper mandible, cannot be
recognised: C. (falsely called) gutturosa,
which from its rostrum, breve, crassum,
et tuberosum seems to me to come nearest to
the Barb, Mr. Brent believes to be a Carrier;
and lastly, the C. Persica et Turcica,
Mr. Brent thinks, and I quite concur with him, was
a short-beaked Carrier with very little wattle.
In 1687 the Barb was known in England, and Willughby
describes the beak as like that of the Turbit;
but it is not credible that his Barb should have had
a beak like that of our present birds, for so
accurate an observer could not have overlooked
its great breadth.
English Carrier. We
may look in vain in Aldrovandi’s work for any
bird resembling our prize Carriers; the C.
Persica et Turcica of this author comes the
nearest, but is said to have had a short thick beak;
therefore it must have approached in character
a Barb, and have differed greatly from our Carriers.
In Willughby’s time, in 1677, we can clearly
recognise the Carrier, but he adds, “the bill
is not short, but of a moderate length,”
a description which no one would apply to our
present Carriers, so conspicuous for the extraordinary
length of their beaks. The old names given
in Europe to the Carrier, and the several names
now in use in India, indicate that Carriers originally
came from Persia; and Willughby’s description
would perfectly apply to the Bussorah Carrier
as it now exists in Madras. In later times we
can partially trace the progress of change in
our English Carriers: Moore in 1735 says
“an inch and a half is reckoned a long beak,
though there are very good Carriers that are found
not to exceed an inch and a quarter.”
These birds must have resembled, or perhaps been a
little superior to, the Carriers, previously described,
which are now found in Persia. In England
at the present day “there are,” as Mr.
Eaton states, “beaks that would measure
(from edge of eye to tip of beak) one inch and
three-quarters, and some few even two inches in length.”
From these historical details we see
that nearly all the chief domestic races existed before
the year 1600. Some remarkable only for colour
appear to have been identical with our present breeds,
some were nearly the same, some considerably different,
and some have since become extinct. Several breeds,
such as Finnikins and Turners, the swallow-tailed pigeon
of Bechstein and the Carmelite, seem both to have
originated and to have disappeared within this same
period. Any one now visiting a well-stocked English
aviary would certainly pick out as the most distinct
kinds, the massive Runt, the Carrier with its wonderfully
elongated beak and great wattles, the Barb with its
short broad beak and eye-wattles, the short-faced
Tumbler with its small conical beak, the Pouter
with its great crop, long legs and body, the Fantail
with its upraised, widely-expanded, well-feathered
tail, the Turbit with its frill and short blunt beak,
and the Jacobin with its hood. Now, if this same
person could have viewed the pigeons kept before 1600
by Akber Khan in India and by Aldrovandi in Europe,
he would have seen the Jacobin with a less perfect
hood; the Turbit apparently without its frill; the
Pouter with shorter legs, and in every way less remarkable that
is, if Aldrovandi’s Pouter resembled the old
German kind; the Fantail would have been far less
singular in appearance, and would have had much fewer
feathers in its tail; he would have seen excellent
flying Tumblers, but he would in vain have looked
for the marvellous short-faced breeds; he would have
seen birds allied to barbs, but it is extremely doubtful
whether he would have met with our actual Barbs; and
lastly, he would have found Carriers with beaks and
wattle incomparably less developed than in our English
Carriers. He might have classed most of the breeds
in the same groups as at present; but the differences
between the groups were then far less strongly pronounced
than at present. In short, the several breeds
had at this early period not diverged in so great
a degree from their aboriginal common parent, the wild
rock-pigeon.
Manner of Formation of the chief Races.
We will now consider more closely
the probable steps by which the chief races have been
formed. As long as pigeons are kept semi-domesticated
in dovecots in their native country, without any care
in selecting and matching them, they are liable to
little more variation than the wild C. livia,
namely, in the wings becoming chequered with black,
in the croup being blue or white, and in the size
of the body. When, however, dovecot-pigeons are
transported into diversified countries, such as Sierra
Leone, the Malay archipelago, and Madeira (where the
wild C. livia is not known to exist), they
are exposed to new conditions of life; and apparently
in consequence they vary in a somewhat greater degree.
When closely confined, either for the pleasure of
watching them, or to prevent their straying, they
must be exposed, even under their native climate, to
considerably different conditions; for they
cannot obtain their natural diversity of food; and,
what is probably more important, they are abundantly
fed, whilst debarred from taking much exercise.
Under these circumstances we might expect to find,
from the analogy of all other domesticated animals,
a greater amount of individual variability than with
the wild pigeon; and this is the case. The want
of exercise apparently tends to reduce the size of
the feet and organs of flight; and then, from the
law of correlation of growth, the beak apparently becomes
affected. From what we now see occasionally taking
place in our aviaries, we may conclude that sudden
variations or sports, such as the appearance of a
crest of feathers on the head, of feathered feet, of
a new shade of colour, of an additional feather in
the tail or wing, would occur at rare intervals during
the many centuries which have elapsed since the pigeon
was first domesticated. At the present day such
“sports” are generally rejected as blemishes;
and there is so much mystery in the breeding of pigeons
that, if a valuable sport did occur, its history would
often be concealed. Before the last hundred and
fifty years, there is hardly a chance of the history
of any such sport having been recorded. But it
by no means follows from this that such sports in
former times, when the pigeon had undergone much less
variation, would have been rejected. We are profoundly
ignorant of the cause of each sudden and apparently
spontaneous variation, as well as of the infinitely
numerous shades of difference between the birds of
the same family. But in a future chapter we shall
see that all such variations appear to be the indirect
result of changes of some kind in the conditions of
life.
Hence, after a long course of domestication,
we might expect to see in the pigeon much individual
variability, and occasional sudden variations, as
well as slight modifications from the lessened use
of certain parts, together with the effects of correlation
of growth. But without selection all this would
produce only a trifling or no result; for without such
aid differences of all kinds would, from the two following
causes, soon disappear. In a healthy and vigorous
lot of pigeons many more young birds are killed for
food or die than are reared to maturity; so that an
individual having any peculiar character, if not selected,
would run a good chance of being destroyed; and if
not destroyed, the peculiarity in question would
almost certainly be obliterated by free intercrossing.
It might, however, occasionally happen that the same
variation repeatedly occurred, owing to the action
of peculiar and uniform conditions of life, and in
this case it would prevail independently of selection.
But when selection is brought into play all is changed;
for this is the foundation-stone in the formation
of new races; and with the pigeon, circumstances,
as we have already seen, are eminently favourable for
selection. When a bird presenting some conspicuous
variation has been preserved, and its offspring have
been selected, carefully matched, and again propagated,
and so onwards during successive generations, the
principle is so obvious that nothing more need be said
about it. This may be called methodical selection,
for the breeder has a distinct object in view, namely,
to preserve some character which has actually appeared;
or to create some improvement already pictured in
his mind.
Another form of selection has hardly
been noticed by those authors who have discussed this
subject, but is even more important. This form
may be called unconscious selection, for the
breeder selects his birds unconsciously, unintentionally,
and without method, yet he surely though slowly produces
a great result. I refer to the effects which
follow from each fancier at first procuring and afterwards
rearing as good birds as he can, according to his
skill, and according to the standard of excellence
at each successive period. He does not wish permanently
to modify the breed; he does not look to the distant
future, or speculate on the final result of the slow
accumulation during many generations of successive
slight changes: he is content if he possesses
a good stock, and more than content if he can beat
his rivals. The fancier in the time of Aldrovandi,
when in the year 1600 he admired his own jacobins,
pouters, or carriers, never reflected what their descendants
in the year 1860 would become; he would have been
astonished could he have seen our jacobins, our improved
English carriers, and our pouters; he would probably
have denied that they were the descendants of his
own once admired stock, and he would perhaps not have
valued them, for no other reason, as was written in
1765, “than because they were not like what
used to be thought good when he was in the fancy.”
No one will attribute the lengthened beak of the
carrier, the shortened beak of the short-faced tumbler,
the lengthened leg of the pouter, the more perfectly-enclosed
hood of the jacobin, &c., changes effected
since the time of Aldrovandi, or even since a much
later period, to the direct and immediate
action of the conditions of life. For these several
races have been modified in various and even in directly
opposite ways, though kept under the same climate and
treated in all respects in as nearly uniform a manner
as possible. Each slight change in the length
or shortness of the beak, in the length of leg, &c.,
has no doubt been indirectly and remotely caused by
some change in the conditions to which the bird has
been subjected, but we must attribute the final result,
as is manifest in those cases of which we have any
historical record, to the continued selection and
accumulation of many slight successive variations.
The action of unconscious selection,
as far as pigeons are concerned, depends on a universal
principle in human nature, namely, on our rivalry,
and desire to outdo our neighbours. We see this
in every fleeting fashion, even in our dress, and
it leads the fancier to endeavour to exaggerate every
peculiarity in his breeds. A great authority on
pigeons says, “Fanciers do not and will
not admire a medium standard, that is, half and half,
which is neither here nor there, but admire extremes.”
After remarking that the fancier of short-faced beard
tumblers wishes for a very short beak, and that the
fancier of long-faced beard tumblers wishes for a
very long beak, he says, with respect to one of intermediate
length, “Don’t deceive yourself.
Do you suppose for a moment the short or the long-faced
fancier would accept such a bird as a gift? Certainly
not; the short-faced fancier could see no beauty in
it; the long-faced fancier would swear there was no
use in it, &c.” In these comical passages,
written seriously, we see the principle which has
ever guided fanciers, and has led to such great modifications
in all the domestic races which are valued solely for
their beauty or curiosity.
Fashions in pigeon-breeding endure
for long periods; we cannot change the structure of
a bird as quickly as we can the fashion of our dress.
In the time of Aldrovandi, no doubt the more the pouter
inflated his crop, the more he was valued. Nevertheless,
fashions do to a certain extent change; first one
point of structure and then another is attended
to; or different breeds are admired at different times
and in different countries. As the author just
quoted remarks, “the fancy ebbs and flows; a
thorough fancier now-a-days never stoops to breed
toy-birds;” yet these very “toys”
are now most carefully bred in Germany. Breeds
which at the present time are highly valued in India
are considered worthless in England. No doubt,
when breeds are neglected, they degenerate; still we
may believe that, as long as they are kept under the
same conditions of life, characters once gained will
be partially retained for a long time, and may form,
the starting-point for a future course of selection.
Let it not be objected to this view
of the action of unconscious selection that fanciers
would not observe or care for extremely slight differences.
Those alone who have associated with fanciers can be
thoroughly aware of their accurate powers of discrimination
acquired by long practice, and of the care and labour
which they bestow on their birds. I have known
a fancier deliberately study his birds day after day
to settle which to match together and which to reject.
Observe how difficult the subject appears to one of
the most eminent and experienced fanciers. Mr.
Eaton, the winner of many prizes, says, “I would
here particularly guard you against keeping too great
a variety of pigeons, otherwise you will know a little
about all the kinds, but nothing about one as it ought
to be known.” “It is possible there
may be a few fanciers that have a good general knowledge
of the several fancy pigeons, but there are many who
labour under the delusion of supposing they know what
they do not.” Speaking exclusively of one
sub-variety of one race, namely, the short-faced almond
tumbler, and after saying that some fanciers sacrifice
every property to obtain a good head and beak, and
that other fanciers sacrifice everything for plumage,
he remarks: “Some young fanciers who are
over covetous go in for all the five properties at
once, and they have their reward by getting nothing.”
In India, as I hear from Mr. Blyth, pigeons are likewise
selected and matched with the greatest care.
But we must not judge of the slight differences which
would have been valued in ancient days, by those which
are now valued after the formation of many races,
each with its own standard of perfection, kept uniform
by our numerous Exhibitions. The ambition
of the most energetic fancier may be fully satisfied
by the difficulty of excelling other fanciers in the
breeds already established, without trying to form
a new one.
A difficulty with respect to the power
of selection will perhaps already have occurred to
the reader, namely, what could have led fanciers first
to attempt to make such singular breeds as pouters,
fantails, carriers, &c.? But it is this very
difficulty which the principle of unconscious selection
removes. Undoubtedly no fancier ever did intentionally
make such an attempt. All that we need suppose
is that a variation occurred sufficiently marked to
catch the discriminating eye of some ancient fancier,
and then unconscious selection carried on for many
generations, that is, the wish of succeeding fanciers
to excel their rivals, would do the rest. In the
case of the fantail we may suppose that the first
progenitor of the breed had a tail only slightly erected,
as may now be seen in certain runts, with some
increase in the number of the tail-feathers, as now
occasionally occurs with nuns. In the case of
the pouter we may suppose that some bird inflated
its crop a little more than other pigeons, as is now
the case in a slight degree with the oesophagus of
the turbit. We do not in the least know the origin
of the common tumbler, but we may suppose that a bird
was born with some affection of the brain, leading
it to make somersaults in the air; and the difficulty
in this case is lessened, as we know that, before
the year 1600, in India, pigeons remarkable for their
diversified manner of flight were much valued, and
by the order of the Emperor Akber Khan were sedulously
trained and carefully matched.
In the foregoing cases we have supposed
that a sudden variation, conspicuous enough to catch
a fancier’s eye, first appeared; but even this
degree of abruptness in the process of variation is
not necessary for the formation of a new breed.
When the same kind of pigeon has been kept pure, and
has been bred during a long period by two or more fanciers,
slight differences in the strain can often be recognised.
Thus I have seen first-rate jacobins in one man’s
possession which certainly differed slightly
in several characters from those kept by another.
I possessed some excellent barbs descended from a
pair which had won a prize, and another lot descended
from a stock formerly kept by that famous fancier Sir
John Sebright, and these plainly differed in the form
of the beak; but the differences were so slight, that
they could hardly be described by words. Again,
the common English and Dutch tumbler differ in a somewhat
greater degree, both in length of beak and shape of
head. What first caused these slight differences
cannot be explained any more than why one man has a
long nose and another a short one. In the strains
long kept distinct by different fanciers, such differences
are so common that they cannot be accounted for by
the accident of the birds first chosen for breeding
having been originally as different as they now are.
The explanation no doubt lies in selection of a slightly
different nature having been applied in each case;
for no two fanciers have exactly the same taste, and
consequently no two, in choosing and carefully matching
their birds, prefer or select exactly the same.
As each man naturally admires his own birds, he goes
on continually exaggerating by selection whatever
slight peculiarities they may possess. This will
more especially happen with fanciers living in different
countries, who do not compare their stocks and aim
at a common standard of perfection. Thus, when
a mere strain has once been formed, unconscious selection
steadily tends to augment the amount of difference,
and thus converts the strain into a sub-breed, and
this ultimately into a well-marked breed or race.
The principle of correlation of growth
should never be lost sight of. Most pigeons have
small feet, apparently caused by their lessened use,
and from correlation, as it would appear, their beaks
have likewise become reduced in length. The beak
is a conspicuous organ, and, as soon as it had thus
become perceptibly shortened, fanciers would almost
certainly strive to reduce it still more by the continued
selection of birds with the shortest beaks; whilst
at the same time other fanciers, as we know has actually
been the case, would, in other sub-breeds, strive
to increase its length. With the increased length
of the beak, the tongue would become greatly lengthened,
as would the eyelids with the increased development
of the eye-wattles; with the reduced or increased
size of the feet the number of the scutellae
would vary; with the length of the wing the number
of the primary wing-feathers would differ; and with
the increased length of the body in the pouter the
number of the sacral vertebrae would be augmented.
These important and correlated differences of structure
do not invariably characterise any breed; but if they
had been attended to and selected with as much care
as the more conspicuous external differences, there
can hardly be a doubt that they would have been rendered
constant. Fanciers could assuredly have made
a race of tumblers with nine instead of ten primary
wing-feathers, seeing how often the number nine appears
without any wish on their part, and indeed in the
case of the white-winged varieties in opposition to
their wish. In a similar manner, if the vertebrae
had been visible and had been attended to by fanciers,
assuredly an additional number might easily have been
fixed in the pouter. If these latter characters
had once been rendered constant we should never have
suspected that they had at first been highly variable,
or that they had arisen from correlation, in the one
case with the shortness of the wings, and in the other
case with the length of the body.
In order to understand how the chief
domestic races have become distinctly separated from
each other, it is important to bear in mind, that fanciers
constantly try to breed from the best birds, and consequently
that those which are inferior in the requisite qualities
are in each generation neglected; so that after a
time the less improved parent-stocks and many subsequently
formed intermediate grades become extinct. This
has occurred in the case of the pouter, turbit, and
trumpeter, for these highly improved breeds are now
left without any links closely connecting them either
with each other or with the aboriginal rock-pigeon.
In other countries, indeed, where the same care has
not been applied, or where the same fashion has not
prevailed, the earlier forms may long remain unaltered
or altered only in a slight degree, and we are thus
sometimes enabled to recover the connecting links.
This is the case in Persia and India with the tumbler
and carrier, which there differ but slightly from
the rock-pigeon in the proportions of their
beaks. So again in Java, the fantail sometimes
has only fourteen caudal feathers, and the tail is
much less elevated and expanded than in our improved
birds; so that the Java bird forms a link between
a first-rate fantail and the rock-pigeon.
Occasionally a breed may be retained
for some particular quality in a nearly unaltered
condition in the same country, together with highly
modified offshoots or sub-breeds, which are valued
for some distinct property. We see this exemplified
in England, where the common tumbler, which is valued
only for its flight, does not differ much from its
parent-form, the Eastern tumbler; whereas the short-faced
tumbler has been prodigiously modified, from being
valued, not for its flight, but for other qualities.
But the common-flying tumbler of Europe has already
begun to branch out into slightly different sub-breeds,
such as the common English tumbler, the Dutch roller,
the Glasgow house-tumbler, and the long-faced beard
tumbler, &c.; and in the course of centuries, unless
fashions greatly change, these sub-breeds will diverge
through the slow and insensible process of unconscious
selection, and become modified, in a greater and greater
degree. After a time the perfectly graduated links,
which now connect all these sub-breeds together, will
be lost, for there would be no object and much difficulty
in retaining such a host of intermediate sub-varieties.
The principle of divergence, together
with the extinction of the many previously existing
intermediate forms, is so important for understanding
the origin of domestic races, as well as of species
in a state of nature, that I will enlarge a little
more on this subject. Our third main group includes
carriers, barbs, and runts, which are plainly related
to each other, yet wonderfully distinct in several
important characters. According to the view given
in the last chapter, these three races have probably
descended from an unknown race having an intermediate
character, and this from the rock-pigeon. Their
characteristic differences are believed to be due
to different breeders having at an early period admired
different points of structure; and then, on the acknowledged
principle of admiring extremes, having gone on breeding,
without any thought of the future, as good birds as
they could, carrier-fanciers preferring
long beaks with much wattle, barb-fanciers
preferring short thick beaks with much eye-wattle, and
runt-fanciers not caring about the beak or wattle,
but only for the size and weight of the body.
This process will have led to the neglect and final
extinction of the earlier, inferior, and intermediate
birds; and thus it has come to pass, that in Europe
these three races are now so extraordinarily distinct
from each other. But in the East, whence they
were originally brought, the fashion has been different,
and we there see breeds which connect the highly modified
English carrier with the rock-pigeon, and others which
to a certain extent connect carriers and runts.
Looking back to the time of Aldrovandi, we find that
there existed in Europe, before the year 1600, four
breeds which were closely allied to carriers and barbs,
but which competent authorities cannot now identify
with our present barbs and carriers; nor can Aldrovandi’s
runts be identified with our present runts. These
four breeds certainly did not differ from each other
nearly so much as do our existing English carriers,
barbs, and runts. All this is exactly what might
have been anticipated. If we could collect all
the pigeons which have ever lived, from before the
time of the Romans to the present day, we should be
able to group them in several lines, diverging from
the parent rock-pigeon. Each line would consist
of almost insensible steps, occasionally broken by
some slightly greater variation or sport, and each
would culminate in one of our present highly modified
forms. Of the many former connecting links, some
would be found to have become absolutely extinct without
having left any issue, whilst others though extinct
would be seen to be the progenitors of the existing
races.
I have heard it remarked as a strange
circumstance that we occasionally hear of the local
or complete extinction of domestic races, whilst we
hear nothing of their origin. How, it has been
asked, can these losses be compensated, and more than
compensated, for we know that with almost all domesticated
animals the races have largely increased in number
since the time of the Romans? But on the view
here given, we can understand this apparent contradiction.
The extinction of a race within historical times is
an event likely to be noticed; but its gradual and
scarcely sensible modification through unconscious
selection, and its subsequent divergence, either
in the same or more commonly in distant countries,
into two or more strains, and their gradual conversion
into sub-breeds, and these into well-marked breeds,
are events which would rarely be noticed. The
death of a tree, that has attained gigantic dimensions,
is recorded; the slow growth of smaller trees and
their increase in number excite no attention.
In accordance with the belief of the
great power of selection, and of the little direct
power of changed conditions of life, except in causing
general variability or plasticity of organisation,
it is not surprising that dovecot-pigeons have remained
unaltered from time immemorial; and that some toy-pigeons,
which differ in little else besides colour from the
dovecot-pigeon, have retained the same character for
several centuries. For when one of these toy-pigeons
had once become beautifully and symmetrically coloured, when,
for instance, a Spot had been produced with the crown
of its head, its tail, and tail-coverts of a uniform
colour, the rest of the body being snow-white, no
alteration or improvement would be desired. On
the other hand, it is not surprising that during this
same interval of time our highly-bred pigeons have
undergone an astonishing amount of change; for in
regard to them there is no defined limit to the wish
of the fancier, and there is no known limit to the
variability of their characters. What is there
to stop the fancier desiring to give to his carrier
a longer and longer beak, or to his tumbler a shorter
and shorter beak? nor has the extreme limit of variability
in the beak, if there be any such limit, as yet been
reached. Notwithstanding the great improvement
effected within recent times in the short-faced almond
tumbler, Mr. Eaton remarks, “the field is still
as open for fresh competitors as it was one hundred
years ago;” but this is perhaps an exaggerated
assertion, for the young of all highly improved fancy
birds are extremely liable to disease and death.
I have heard it objected that the
formation of the several domestic races of the pigeon
throws no light on the origin of the wild species of
the Columbidae, because their differences are not
of the same nature. The domestic races for instance
do not differ, or differ hardly at all, in the relative
lengths and shapes of the primary wing-feathers, in
the relative length of the hind toe, or in habits
of life, as in roosting and building in trees.
But the above objection shows how completely the principle
of selection has been misunderstood. It is not
likely that characters selected by the caprice of
man should resemble differences preserved under natural
conditions, either from being of direct service to
each species, or from standing in correlation with
other modified and serviceable structures. Until
man selects birds differing in the relative length
of the wing-feathers or toes, &c., no sensible change
in these parts should be expected. Nor could
man do anything unless these parts happened to vary
under domestication: I do not positively assert
that this is the case, although I have seen traces
of such variability in the wing-feathers, and certainly
in the tail-feathers. It would be a strange fact
if the relative length of the hind toe should never
vary, seeing how variable the foot is both in size
and in the number of the scutellae. With
respect to the domestic races not roosting or building
in trees, it is obvious that fanciers would never
attend to or select such changes in habits; but we
have seen that the pigeons in Egypt, which do not for
some reason like settling on the low mud hovels of
the natives, are led, apparently by compulsion, to
perch in crowds on the trees. We may even affirm
that, if our domestic races had become greatly modified
in any of the above specified respects, and it could
be shown that fanciers had never attended to such
points, or that they did not stand in correlation with
other selected characters, the fact, on the principles
advocated in this chapter, would have offered a serious
difficulty.
Let us briefly sum up the last two
chapters on the pigeon. We may conclude with
confidence that all the domestic races, notwithstanding
their great amount of difference, are descended from
the Columba livia, including under this name
certain wild races. But the differences between
these latter forms throw no light whatever on the
characters which distinguish the domestic races.
In each breed or sub-breed the individual birds are
more variable than birds in a state of nature; and
occasionally they vary in a sudden and strongly-marked
manner. This plasticity of organisation apparently
results from changed conditions of life. Disuse
has reduced certain parts of the body. Correlation
of growth so ties the organisation together, that
when one part varies other parts vary at the
same time. When several breeds have once been
formed, their intercrossing aids the progress of modification,
and has even produced new sub-breeds. But as,
in the construction of a building, mere stones or bricks
are of little avail without the builder’s art,
so, in the production of new races, selection has
been the presiding power. Fanciers can act by
selection on excessively slight individual differences,
as well as on those greater differences which are
called sports. Selection is followed methodically
when the fancier tries to improve and modify a breed
according to a prefixed standard of excellence; or
he acts unmethodically and unconsciously, by merely
trying to rear as good birds as he can, without any
wish or intention to alter the breed. The progress
of selection almost inevitably leads to the neglect
and ultimate extinction of the earlier and less improved
forms, as well as of many intermediate links in each
long line of descent. Thus it has come to pass
that most of our present races are so marvellously
distinct from each other, and from the aboriginal
rock-pigeon.