The genus Pelecanus as instituted by Linnæus included the Cormorant (vol. vi. p. 407) and Gannet (vol. x. p. 70) as well as the true Pelicans, and for a long while these and some other distinct groups, as the Snake-birds (q.v.), Frigate-birds (vol. ix. p. 786), and Tropic-birds (q.v.), which have all the four toes of the foot connected by a web, were regarded as forming a single Family, Pelecanidæ; but this name has now been restricted to the Pelicans only, though all are still usually associated under the name Steganopodes (Ornithology, p. 46). It may be necessary to state that there is no foundation for the venerable legend of the Pelican feeding her young with blood from her own breast, which has given it an important place in ecclesiastical heraldry, except that, as Mr Bartlett has suggested (Proc. Zool. Society, 1869, p. 146), the curious bloody secretion ejected from the mouth of the Flamingo may have given rise to the belief, through that bird having been mistaken for the "Pelican of the wilderness." (a. n.)
- ↑ This caution was not neglected by the prudent, even so long ago as Sir Thomas Browne's days; for he, recording the occurrence of a Pelican in Norfolk, was careful to notice that about the same time one of the Pelicans kept by the king (Charles II.) in St James's Park had been lost.
- ↑ It is also said to have twenty-two rectrices, while the ordinary species has only eighteen.