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pelican

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pelican

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A brown pelican in flight. Now an endangered species, the brown pelican lives in the coastal areas of North America. It feeds on fish, diving from the air and catching them in the pouch underneath its bill, which acts like a fishing net.

Large water bird of family Pelecanidae, order Pelecaniformes, remarkable for the pouch beneath the bill, which is used as a fishing net and temporary store for catches of fish. Some species grow up to 1.8 m/6 ft and have wingspans of 3 m/10 ft.

The legs are short and the feet large, with four webbed toes; the tail is short and rounded, and the neck long. The wings are long and expansive, and the birds are capable of rapid flight. The species are widely distributed, frequenting the seashore and margins of lakes, and feeding almost exclusively on fish, which are deposited in the pouch for subsequent digestion.

A nasal salt-secreting gland is present, which enables the animal to make use of sea water and the fluids of its food as a source of water, by excreting the excess salt content.

Species

They include the American brown pelican Pelicanus occidentalis, which is marine, and the only diving pelican; the North American rough-billed pelican P. erythrorhynchus; the common pelican P. onocrotalus of Europe, Asia, and Africa; and the Australian black-backed pelican P. conspicillatus.

The common pelican has white plumage, tinged with red. It usually nests on the ground and lays two or three white eggs. The young are at first brown, and the mother feeds them by pushing their beaks into her pouch. The appearance of a red tip of the bill pressed against her breast probably gave origin to the fable that she feeds her young on her own blood.



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? Mentioned in ? References in classic literature
 
Then night fell in the midst of a heavy silence, sometimes broken by the cries of the pelican and other night-birds, and the noise of the waves breaking upon the shore, chafing against the rocks, or the panting of some far-off steamer beating the waters of the Gulf with its noisy paddles.
Behind them a group of swaggering, half-drunken Yorkshire dalesmen, speaking a dialect which their own southland countrymen could scarce comprehend, their jerkins marked with the pelican, which showed that they had come over in the train of the north-country Stapletons.
Put out of countenance by the manner in which he thus "set foot" upon the New World, he uttered a loud cry, which so frightened the innumerable cormorants and pelicans that are always perched upon these movable quays, that they flew noisily away.
 
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