登陆注册
15679700000238

第238章

NEW GUINEA, with the islands joined to it by a shallow sea, constitute the Papuan group, characterised by a very close resemblance in their peculiar forms of life. Having already, in my chapters on the Aru Islands and on the Birds of Paradise, given some details of the natural history of this district, Ishall here confine myself to a general sketch of its animal productions, and of their relations to those of the rest of the world.

New Guinea is perhaps the largest island on the globe, being a little larger than Borneo. It is nearly fourteen hundred miles long, and in the widest part four hundred broad, and seems to be everywhere covered with luxuriant forests. Almost everything that is yet known of its natural productions comes from the north-western peninsula, and a few islands grouped around it. These do not constitute a tenth part of the area of the whole island, and are so cut off from it, that their fauna may well he somewhat different; yet they have produced us (with a very partial exploration) no less than two hundred and fifty species of land birds, almost all unknown elsewhere, and comprising some of the most curious and most beautiful of the feathered tribes. It is needless to say how much interest attaches to the far larger unknown portion of this great island, the greatest terra incognita that still remains for the naturalist to explore, and the only region where altogether new and unimagined forms of life may perhaps be found. There is now, I am happy to say, some chance that this great country will no longer remain absolutely unknown to us. The Dutch Government have granted well-equipped steamer to carry a naturalist (Mr. Rosenberg, already mentioned in this work) and assistants to New Guinea, where they are to spend some years in circumnavigating the island, ascending its large rivers a< far as possible into the interior, and making extensive collections of its natural productions.

The Mammalia of New Guinea and the adjacent islands, yet discovered, are only seventeen in number. Two of these are bats, one is a pig of a peculiar species (Sus papuensis), and the rest are all marsupials. The bats are, no doubt, much more numerous, but there is every reason to believe that whatever new land Mammalia man be discovered will belong to the marsupial order.

One of these is a true kangaroo, very similar to some of middle-sized kangaroos of Australia, and it is remarkable as being the first animal of the kind ever seen by Europeans. It inhabits Mysol and the Aru Islands (an allied species being found in New Guinea), and was seen and described by Le Brun in 1714, from living specimens at Batavia. A much more extraordinary creature is the tree-kangaroo, two species of which are known from New Guinea. These animals do not differ very strikingly in form from the terrestrial kangaroos, and appear to be but imperfectly adapted to an arboreal life, as they move rather slowly, and do not seem to have a very secure footing on the limb of a tree. The leaping power of the muscular tail is lost, and powerful claws have been acquired to assist in climbing, but in other respects the animal seems better adapted to walls on terra firma. This imperfect adaptation may be due to the fact of there being no carnivore in New Guinea, and no enemies of any kind from which these animals have to escape by rapid climbing. Four species of Cuscus, and the small flying opossum, also inhabit New Guinea;and there are five other smaller marsupials, one of which is the size of a rat, and takes its place by entering houses and devouring provisions.

The birds of New Guinea offer the greatest possible contrast to the Mammalia, since they are more numerous, more beautiful, and afford more new, curious, and elegant forms than those of any other island on the globe. Besides the Birds of Paradise, which we have already sufficiently considered, it possesses a number of other curious birds, which in the eyes of the ornithologist almost serves to distinguish it as one of the primary divisions of the earth. Among its thirty species of parrots are the Great Pluck Cockatoo, and the little rigid-tailed Nasiterna, the giant and the dwarf of the whole tribe. The bare-headed Dasyptilus is one of the most singular parrots known; while the beautiful little long-tailed Charmosyna, and the great variety of gorgeously-coloured lories, have no parallels elsewhere. Of pigeons it possesses about forty distinct species, among which are the magnificent crowned pigeons, now so well known in our aviaries, and pre-eminent both for size and beauty; the curious Trugon terrestris, which approaches the still more strange Didunculus of Samoa; and a new genus (Henicophaps), discovered by myself, which possesses a very long and powerful bill, quite unlike that of any other pigeon. Among its sixteen kingfishers, it possesses the carious hook-billed Macrorhina, and a red and blue Tanysiptera, the most beautiful of that beautiful genus.

Among its perching birds are the fine genus of crow-like starlings, with brilliant plumage (Manucodia); the carious pale-coloured crow (Gymnocorvus senex); the abnormal red and black flycatcher (Peltops blainvillii); the curious little boat-billed flycatchers (Machaerirhynchus); and the elegant blue flycatcher-wrens (Todopsis).

The naturalist will obtain a clearer idea of the variety and interest of the productions of this country, by the statement, that its land birds belong to 108 genera, of which 20 are exclusively characteristic of it; while 35 belong to that limited area which includes the Moluccas and North Australia, and whose species of these genera have been entirely derived from New Guinea. About one-half of the New Guinea genera are found also in Australia, about one-third in India and the Indo-Malay islands.

同类推荐
  • 二程粹言

    二程粹言

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 历代兴衰演义

    历代兴衰演义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • DON JUAN

    DON JUAN

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • Hero Tales From American History

    Hero Tales From American History

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 送覃二判官

    送覃二判官

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 谋划世界的100次会议(下)

    谋划世界的100次会议(下)

    本书对世界历史的真实过程做了纵深的透视,对人类文明的伟大成就做了全面的阐述,它从浩瀚的历史文库中,撷取精华、汇聚经典、分门别类地对历史上曾经发生的重大事件进行分析介绍,向广大读者尤其是青年朋友们打开了一扇历史的窗口,让他们穿越时空隧道,在历史的天空中遨游、于探幽寻秘中启迪智慧,启发思考,启示未来。
  • 遗失了的时光

    遗失了的时光

    你还记得当初最好的时光中最好的自己吗?可惜到最后,我们才会后知后觉的发现。原来,最好的自己没有在最美的时光中珍惜最好的你。
  • 狂神大陆

    狂神大陆

    异界,战士,刺客,法师,坦克,射手。五种职业,暴击,冰冻,烧伤等多种效果,异界大陆将给你讲述一个不一样的世界。
  • 星际之大时代

    星际之大时代

    为了解救水深火热的被遗弃的地球遗民,迷失百年之后,他毅然踏上征程。武道之极是什么?先天功,八荒六合唯我独尊功,龙象般若功,神照经,易筋经,洗髓经……浩瀚的武学,纷繁的星际大时代,给你非凡的畅快享受。在茫茫星空之中,又有多少未知的精彩?一切尽在本书。
  • 火澜

    火澜

    当一个现代杀手之王穿越到这个世界。是隐匿,还是崛起。一场血雨腥风的传奇被她改写。一条无上的强者之路被她踏破。修斗气,炼元丹,收兽宠,化神器,大闹皇宫,炸毁学院,打死院长,秒杀狗男女,震惊大陆。无止尽的契约能力,上古神兽,千年魔兽,纷纷前来抱大腿,惊傻世人。她说:在我眼里没有好坏之分,只有强弱之分,只要你能打败我,这世间所有都是你的,打不败我,就从这世间永远消失。她狂,她傲,她的目标只有一个,就是凌驾这世间一切之上。三国皇帝,魔界妖王,冥界之主,仙界至尊。到底谁才是陪着她走到最后的那个?他说:上天入地,我会陪着你,你活着,有我,你死,也一定有我。本文一对一,男强女强,强强联手,不喜勿入。
  • 运城名人(大运之城精品丛书)

    运城名人(大运之城精品丛书)

    运城位于中华民族母亲河——黄河金三角古河东地域,这里钟灵毓秀,地灵人杰,养育了无数的华夏才俊豪杰。早在开辟鸿蒙、刀耕火种的远古时期,就演绎了女娲抟土造人的优美传说和黄帝与蚩尤征战盐池的喧嚣;尧王访贤,舜耕历山,后稷嫁穑,禹凿龙门,嫘祖养蚕,也都发生在这里,中华文化从这里一路摇曳走来。
  • 神界还俗者

    神界还俗者

    他是绝望中的自杀者,却遇到了意外……一个肩负神圣使命的人仅仅做了几件平凡的小事,这个世俗的城市却接纳了他……一个大半辈子都只能低调寂名的人,无意中走进了人们的视线……一个疾恶如仇洁身自好的人,却天天出入于贪财好色坑蒙拐骗的人群中……一个视钱财如粪土视权力如祸根的人,却偏偏腰缠万贯权贵争媚……在金钱与权利的旋涡中,他用自己的方式消除一件件阴谋避免了一桩桩血案,用人性的规矩取代了横行已久的潜规则,无形中建立了一个新的秩序……这一切都与一个神秘使者有关——神界还俗者。
  • 先秦管理思想中的人性假设

    先秦管理思想中的人性假设

    本书从中国传统思想中的先秦思想入手,着重探讨了中国管理思想中的人性假设问题,以求破解西方管理科学所面临的种种困惑,实现管理科学由理性主义、心理性主义向伦理主义的转向。即实现经济人、社会人、自我实现人等假设向道德人假设的根本变革。最后得出了未来管理科学的中国转向这个结论。
  • 至尊图腾

    至尊图腾

    真武大陆,自真武大帝统一大陆之后,大陆上诸族动乱数千年。这里有杀伐如云,璀璨的魔法光芒,奥妙的阵法结界,更有真武大陆流传的真武之技,远古强大的图腾技。末雨落转世在战乱纷争的时代,继承远古传下的幻界玄术。历经爱恨情仇,追求至死不渝的爱情!探索武道终极!败兽族!灭妖宗!战魔尊!在他身上的终极图腾会是什么?
  • 尘颜

    尘颜

    十本古书进入异大陆究竟在凌妍身上有着什么秘密?“你是谁?”凌烟看着黑暗中的男人,谁知那男子身形一晃,便没了踪迹......