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black guillemot
 
pigeon guillemot
 
common guillemot
 
cormorant


Noun

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sea pigeon (plural sea pigeons)

  1. The black guillemot (Cepphus grylle).
    • 1880, John Colquhoun, The Moor and the Loch:
      At length my son asked for the telescope, and on returning it carelessly remarked, "There are a couple of black guillemots." Macleod was alive in a moment—"That's the sea-pigeon."
    • 1904, W. H. Brownson, “A Visit to Grand Manan Island”, in The Journal of the Maine Ornithological Society, page 75:
      One of the most numerous sea birds, of this whole region, is the Black Guillemot, or Sea Pigeon. This bird in the breeding season is jet black , except a white patch on each wing . In the winter the plumage changes to a gray with black streaks , and in this dress the Sea Pigeon comes to the waters of Casco Bay quite plentifully.
    • 1905, Charles Wendell Townsend, The Birds of Essex County, Massachusetts, page 83:
      While swimming, the Sea Pigeon nervously ducks its head at frequent intervals, appearing to be dabbing at the water.
    • 1907, Abel Chapman, Bird-life of the Borders on Moorland and Sea, page 379:
      During mid-winter we have little auks from Spitsbergan, and the pretty coral-footed sea-pigeon, or tystie from Shetland .
  2. The pigeon guillemot (Cepphus columba).
    • 1892 September, Charles S. Greene, “Los Farallones De Los Frayles”, in Overland Monthly and Out West Magazine, volume 20, number 21, page 235:
      The pigeon guillemot, or sea pigeon, comes next. Its home is to be found close to the water's edge, in the little coves and clefts of the rocks, and it delights to sit on a rock where it is almost reached by every return of the swell.
    • 1915, George Willett, “Summer Birds of Forrester Island, Alaska”, in The Auk, volume 32, page 299:
      The nests of the sea pigeon were for the most part inaccessible, being far in the recesses of crevices in the roofs of caves.
    • 1958, Asa Clifford Thoresen, Breeding Activities of the Pigeon Guillemot, page 1:
      The pigeon guillemot, often called sea pigeon or bank duck , is a diving bird belonging to the family Alcidae , which includes the auks , murres and puffins .
    • 1976, Oceans - Volume 9, Issue 5, page 53:
      In the early spring, the sea pigeon, more widely known as the guillemot ( Cepphus columba ) , moves silently out of its winter haunts to join in large, noisy rafts.
  3. A common guillemot (Uria aalge).
    • 1880, Edward S. Morse, “On the Identity of the Ascending Process of the Astragalus in Birds with the Intermedium”, in Anniversary Memoirs of the Boston Society of Natural History, page 5:
      Believing that low aquatic birds would more readily yield these evidences, a visit was made to Grand Menan, at the mouth of the Bay of Fundy, and at that place were obtained the embryos of the razorbill auk, eider duck, sea pigeon, herring gull and petrel.
  4. The Mandt's guillemot (Cepphus mandtii).
    • 1896, Thomas Nuttall, ‎Montague Chamberlain, A Popular Handbook of the Ornithology of Eastern North America:
      MANDT's GUILLEMOT (C. mandtii) is a northern variety of the Sea Pigeon, differing from grylle in lacking the black bar on the wing-patch, and having a somewhat stouter bill.
  5. The cormorant.
    • 1917, Stephen Haweis, The Book about the Sea Gardens of Nassau, Bahamas, page 28:
      One of the oddest creatures in the sea is the sea pigeon, a long black shape as thick as a small cable, the head of which is like a crown of very soft feathers, and is very often seen in shallow muddy stretches near the shore.
  6. Bonaparte's gull (Chroicocephalus philadelphia).
    • 1956, The Kingbird - Volumes 6-10, page 9:
      Bonaparte's Gull. Little bass gull; sea pigeon (from its general figure and small size among gulls).
  7. A reddish brown marine invertebrate that propels itself by flaps that resemble wings.
    • 1936, Science News-letter - Volume 30, page 120:
      The sea pigeon was no bird but a slug-like marine invertebrate.
    • 1936, C. W. Coates, “A Sea Pigeon at the Aquarium”, in Bulletin - New York Zoological Society, volumes 39-40, page 159:
      This all but formless creature is a sea pigeon
    • 1942 June, Ellen Reed, “Natural Ink”, in Fantastic Adventures:
      The sea pigeon lives upon sea lettuce, consuming about a teacup-ful every day.

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