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at plunges down so as almost to touch the sportsman, and
then mounts to an immoderate height. It is a bold line to
take, but surely a safe one. It is not the act of a fool.
The purpose of it is to elude the sportsman’s shot by
taking him by surprise and by flying up in such a way
that it is very difficult for him to fire, however prepared by
previous experience.
The guanacoes have the habit of returning, like flies, to
the same spot to drop their excrement. This is pronounced
to be a senseless and a useless act. And yet it has a
certain resemblance to the act of civilised man, who, per
haps, if put upon his defence, would call the custom decent,
respectable, and not altogether unintelligent. The rationale
of such a proceeding may be seen from the fact that
large poultry farms are not a success ; because,
“ in all cases where a large number of fowls are congregated together,
the ground becomes contaminated by the excrement of the birds; the
food is eaten off the soiled surface; disease breaks out among the
adults, and rearing chickens successfully is out of the question.”—
(.Encyclopaedia Britannica. vol. xix., p. 646.)
If the biscache almost invariably collects all sorts of
rubbish about its burrow, we ought to be quite sure that it
has no purpose to gain by that custom before we condemn
the action as a “ foolish and useless habit.” Those who
will take the trouble to read Mr. Hudson’s chapter on
The Biography of the Vizcacha will not remain in doubt
on this subject. The biscaches or vizcachas on the pam
pas of Buenos Ayres live in societies, usually numbering
twenty or thirty members. The village, which is called
a vizcachera, is composed of a dozen or fifteen burrows
or mouths ; for one entrance often serves for two or more
distinct holes. A vast amount of loose earth is brought
up and forms a very irregular mound, fifteen or thirty
inches from the surrounding level. These entrances are