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Our Domestic Birds: Elementary Lessons in Aviculture cover

Our Domestic Birds: Elementary Lessons in Aviculture

Chapter 44: Transcriber's Notes.
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About This Book

A practical elementary course in aviculture presents basic avian anatomy, behavior, reproduction, and classification, then surveys domestic species — chickens, ducks, geese, turkeys, guineas, peafowl, pheasants, swans, and ostriches — with breed descriptions and origins. It explains egg development and incubation, feather structure and molting, feeding and housing, breeding and brood care, and varied management systems for small urban flocks, farm flocks, and intensive poultry operations, including broiler and egg production. Emphasis falls on plain-language instruction suitable for schools and beginners, combining biological principles with hands-on husbandry and practical routines for raising birds.


Transcriber's Notes.

Illustrations were always positioned between paragraphs. As a result, they occasionally moved to the preceding or following page.

Changed "silver penciled" to "silver-penciled" on page 28: "partridge, silver-penciled, and ermine."

Changed "out-crosses" to "outcrosses" on page 30: "outcrosses are regularly made."

Changed "Siver-Penciled" to "Silver-Penciled" in the caption to figure 51.

Changed "Amercia" to "America" on page 63: "fowls of America."

Changed "thay" to "they" on page 169: "which they may use."

Changed "distroyed" to "destroyed" on page 200: "are destroyed by cultivating."

Changed "servicable" to "serviceable" on page 226: "more serviceable in this way."