RAVngg SSS SY Willits CELL Cl ita, UetldtLevd thle tlt Pa tity MM Ld a i s > ‘ S Ce Yi y thle Yi s | ' «\ A ~ \¥ ASO IS oc << “fs ty Yi aw a Mil tity Lege iy Oy eee SRS SS SS NS SS \ AMEN %3 dad 2 * RR os UN) VUULLLLEEELE Lille oo Ue Lie Vill ~ a AK AN \\ WN SSS \ _ \ NS \ \ tts wae LY \ ZO tp ~ We Mélidddldldi Lie \N\ \ RAS \ A ~ \ \\ \SARA\\~ \\ \ WANN << QQ \ é WY \ IY NN IY MAY \\ | icant Sear ih a re nce Rhee | iS ee a, : es See a gt BP at a HCH. tag : + a p 23 f Mache Temetics 2atty a : 26 SEP 1985 Pae&SENTED | TRING LIBRARY AES TORY OF fetish BIRDS. BY THE REV. F. O. MORRIS, B.A., MEMBER OF THE ASHMOLEAN SOCIETY. NO eae LON DON: GROOMBRIDGE AND SONS, 5, PATERNOSTER ROW. CONTENTS OF THE FOURTH VOLUME. PAGE Golden Oriole ; ‘ : j : : : 1 Alpine Accentor ; : igen 5 Dunnock : 5 eats 8 Redbreast .. . i : : 14 Bluebreast . : ; : : ‘ : ; pee aly Redstart . ; : ; ; : : 39 Blackstart : : ; : . 4D Stonechat . 5 ; 51 Whinchat ; : : : : ; ; 5 LES Wheatear . ‘ : : : 61 Grasshopper Warbler . : . 68 Savis Warbler . : : ‘ : : 72 Sedge Warbler ; : : . 4 Reed Warbler. : ; ; 78 - Nightingale. A : : : 5 Sy Thrush Nightingale . : ; : 89 Great Sedge Warbler . : ; : : aol Rufous Sedge Warbler. 92 Blackcap , ; : : ; . sas Orphean Warbler ; : : : : : 99 Garden Warbler . ; : ; : : LO Whitethroat ; ‘ ; : : 105 Lesser Whitethroat : = LO Wood Warbler . 5 : : : : : : 114 Willow Warbler . : : , : é ‘ 118 iV CONTENTS. Melodious Willow Warbler Chiff Chaff Dartford Warbler Wren Dalmatian Becaine Goldcrest Firecrest Wood Pigeon . Stock Dove Rock Dove ' Turtle Dove Passenger Pigeon . Pheasant Capercaillie Black Grouse Red Grouse Ptarmigan Partridge Red-legged Duende Barbary Partridge . Virginian Partridge Quail 4 Andulusian Quail PAGE 123 125 130. 133 142 143 150 153 164 167 172 175 178 185 190 196 203 . 210 220 223 225 229 234 HISTORY OF BRITISH BIRDS. GOLDEN ORIOLE. Oricius galbula, PENNANT. Monracu. Berwick. Oriolus—,......000>? Galbula—A diminutive of Ga/bus—Yellow. Tus splendid bird is a native of the continent of Kurope, and of portions of those of Africa and Asia, In the first named it is plentiful in Spain, Italy, and France, and is also found in Germany, Bavaria, Holland, and Malta, in the latter on its passage at the seasons of migration. It occurs im Persia, and Asia Minor, and in Egypt, and other parts of the northern shores of Africa. The Golden Oriole, though not one of our very rarest visitors, is yet sufficiently unfrequent to justify an enumeration of the different specimens recorded as having occurred. In Yorkshire one, a fine female, was killed in the spring of 1834, near the Lighthouse at the Spurn Point, at the mouth of the Humber. In April, 1824, one was shot at Aldershot, in Hampshire. Two are related by Dr. Moore to have been met with m Devonshire. In Cornwall several have been obtained; one near the Land’s End in 18338. In Lancashire one, near Manchester, in July, 1811, and one at Quernmore Park, near Lancaster. In Surrey one was seen by Mr. Meyer, on Burwood Common, near Walton-on-Thames, and one was shot near Godalming, in 1833. One seen near Cheshunt. In Suffolk two were taken near Saxmundham, and the nest is said to have been found in that county. In Norfolk a pair were shot at Diss, one at Hethersett, near Norwich, in April, 1824, and one, a male, at Heigham, in the environs of Norwich, on the 8th. of May, 1847; the female, it is believed, was seen at the same time: a pair also built in the garden of the Rev. Mr. Lucas, of Ormsby. In the county of Durham one VOL, iV. B 2 GOLDEN ORIOLE. was killed near Tynemouth. In Kent, two built near Elmstone, and were unfortunately shot in June, 1849. Two others had a nest and young near the village of Ord, in the corresponding menth, in the year 1836. Several young ones were shot in the neighbourhood in the summer of 18384, and occasional visitors had been seen in that locality for some years previous. Another pair built at Oxney, near Kingsdown, about the year 1841. One was shot near Sandwich, and another, a male, as 16 would appear near Walmer. In Ireland, one was seen for some months in a garden between Castle Martyr and Middleton, in the county of Cork, in the summer of 1817.? One was shot near Bantry, at the seat of Lord Bantry, and another seen at Cahirmore, near Roxborough. One was shot in the county of Wexford, in May, 1923; another near Gorey, in 1837.? One near Donagh- dee, in the ‘county of Down, on the 11th. of May, 1824; one at Ballymona, in the county of Waterford, in 1824 or 1825, and another, a male, near Woodstown, in June, 1888; one near eo in the county of Wicklow, in the summer of 1827.2 One on the eoast of Kerry, in the summer of 1838; | and one, a male, in a garden at Ballintore, near Ferns, in the summer of 1837. In Scotland, or the northern islands, none appear ‘to have as yet been seen. It is a migratory species, moving southwards in April, and northwards again in the month of September. These birds frequent woods and groves, and in the fruit season repair to orchards. They are described as being very shy in their habits. The female is so careful of her young, that she will sometimes suffer herself to be taken on the nest. ‘They are capable of being kept in confinement, though not, it is said, without difficulty, and have been taught to whistle tunes. They are generally seen singly or in pairs, excepting while the members of the family continue together in the autumn. These are the only salient points that I am aware of, in regard to the habits of this species. They feed on insects and their larve, and on the various fruits that come in their way—figs, cherries, olives, and grapes. Their song is described as loud and clear, and their call- note as somewhat resembling their own name, given to them similarly in different languages on that account. I¢ is loud, and somewhat resembling that of the Parrot. The nest is flat in shape, and placed in the angle formed GOLDEN ORIOLE. 3 by the branching boughs of a tall tree, to which it is firmly attached. It is made of stalks of grass, small roots, and wool, cleverly interwoven together, and is lined with the finer portions of the materials. The one taken in Kent, alluded to before, is described by J. B. Ellman, Hsq., of Rye, in the ‘Zoologist,’ page 2496, as having been suspended from the extreme end of the topmost bough of an oak, and composed entirely of wool, carefully bound together with dried grass. The eggs are commonly’ four or five in number, of a white colour, sometimes with a tinge of purple, and a few spots of black, brownish black, or grey, and claret colour. Male; length, nine inches and a half; bill, ight brownish red, flattened at the base, and laterally compressed at the tip: the upper bill is nearly straight at the base, and gently arched towards the tip; there is a prominent ridge along it; it as toothed near the extremity. Iris, red—the space between it and the eye is black; head, crown, neck on the back and in front, and on the sides, and the nape bright yellow. Chin, throat, and breast, bright yellow. The wings, when closed, reach to within an inch of the end of the tail; the greater wing coverts have their tips and margins yellow; lesser wing coverts, yellow; primaries, secondaries, and tertiaries, black, their tips yellow, excepting those of the two outer primaries, and the outer margins of all, excepting the first, are also yellow; underneath, the wing feathers are greyish black; the first quill feather is not halfso long as the second, the second not so long as the fourth, but longer than the fifth, the third the longest; greater and lesser under wing coverts, yellow. The tail, which is slightly rounded, is black, excepting the two middle feathers, which are greenish yellow at the base, and yellow on the terminal edge, and the outer feathers, which are yellow from the tips to the middle on the outer webs; underneath, the black feathers are greyish black; upper tail coverts, bright yellow; under tail coverts, also bright yellow. Legs and toes, bluish grey; claws, light brownish red. It is to be observed that the male bird does not attain the brilliant yellow plumage until the third year: its beautiful colours ‘grow with its growth.’ In the female the bill is also light brownish red: the black streak between it and the eye is wanting. Forehead, yellow, with a tinge of green; head, crown, and neck on the back, yellowish green—in front the latter is pale yellowish grey, A GOLDEN ORIOLE. and on the sides greenish yellow; nape, also yellowish green; chin and throat, dull greyish white, marked with longitudinal pale brown lines. Breast, dull greyish white, with larger longitudinal pale brown lines, and bright yellow on the sides, which are also streaked in the same way; back, greenish yellow. Greater and lesser wing coverts, brownish black, tipped with pale yellow, and dull yellowish at the base; primaries, secondaries, and tertiaries, brownish black, their edges greenish yellow, and their tips, excepting those of the two outer ones, pale yellowish white. ‘Tail, brownish black, yellowish at the base, and with less yellow at the end and sides than in the male; underneath, it is yellowish grey; upper tail coverts, greenish yellow; under tail coverts, bright yellow. Legs and toes, bluish grey; claws, light brownish red. Young; bill, more brown than in the male; head, crown, neck on the back, and nape, dusky yellowish grey; chin, throat, and breast, yellowish white, the latter with a central line of brown on each feather, and the last-named yellow on the sides; back, dusky yellowish grey. Primaries, secondaries, and tertiaries, brown; tail, brownish olive colour; upper tail eoverts, tipped with yellow; under tail coverts, yellow. The female is duller in colour than the male. 4 y MOLNEOOVY BNId TV Cx ALPINE ACCENTOR. ALPINE WARBLER. COLLARED STARE. Accentor alpinus, FLEMING. SELBY. Motacilla alpina, GMELIN. Sturnus collaris, GMELIN. LATHAM. 66 moritanicus, GMELIN. LATHAM, Accentor—A. chanter—canto, to sing—(a factitious word.) Alpinus— Alpine, For want of a vernacular name for this species, I am compelled for the present, much against my will, to adopt, as in some similar cases, one that I by no means approve of, but I have done so only as a temporary thing, and in hope of ‘a good time coming, when the Queen’s English shall ‘enjoy its own again’—a consummation much to be wished by every lover of his country’s tongue. This bird is not uncommon in Germany, France, Spain, Switzerland, and Italy; and Temminck includes it among the Asiatic species, as a native of Japan. It frequents the highest parts of any alpine districts, as its name suggests; this at least in summer, but in winter it seeks and finds a milder temperature in the warm and sheltered valleys, and thus, like the lowly and humble in life, escapes the severest of the storms and tempests which the lofty and the aspiring are, necessarily exposed to, in the higher atmosphere in which their lot is cast or their place chosen: in severe weather it approaches farm-yards, villages, and houses. One of these birds, a female, was observed in the garden of King’s College, Cambridge, on the 23rd. of November, 1822, and obtained by the Provost, the Rev. Dr. Thackeray; another, no doubt the male, was seen by him at the same time, both together frequenting the grass-plots of the College garden, and climbing about the buttresses of the venerable building. A second was shot in a garden on the borders of ALPINE ACCENTOR. Epping Forest, in the county of Essex; and a third at Wells, in Somersetshire, in 1833, in the garden of the Very Rey. Dr. Goodenough, Dean of Wells; a fourth was seen by the Rev. R. Lubbock, at Oulton, in Suffolk, in the year, 1824, about the month of March; and a fifth is said to have been obtained in Devonshire. This species is peculiarly tame and confident in its habits, moving away but a short distance if nearly approached. It is mostly to be seen on rocks or on the ground, and seldom perches on trees; it frequently shufiles its wings and tail after the manner of the Dunnock. Its food consists of flies and other insects, grasshoppers, earwigs, ants’ eggs, and small seeds. Its note is described as resembling the syllables ‘tree, tree:’ its song is said to be pleasing. The nest is placed among stones or in some cavity or crevice of the mountain rock, as also at times, it is said, on the roofs of houses in such situations, as also under the shelter of the alpine rose or other low bush. It is made of moss and fine grass, and is lined with wool and hair. The eggs, four or five ia number, are of a beautiful hight - greenish blue colour. There are said to be two broods in the year. Male; length, six inches and a half to seven inches; bill, strong, straight, and fine-pointed; the upper bill is dusky black, yellowish white at the base; the lower bill is orange yellowish white, except at the tip, which is brownish black; iris, dark brown. Head, crown, and neck on the sides and back, dull light brownish grey; the latter in front is dull yellowish white, with a small black spot on each feather; nape, brownish grey; chin and throat, dull white, with a small black spot on each feather of a crescent shape, which loses or gains its perfect form according to the season of the year; it is bordered below with a black band; breast above, dark grey, varied lower down and on the sides with orange chesnut brown marks, the edges of the feathers white, and then greyish or yellowish white, tinged with yellowish brown, and spotted with darker brown; back, brown, the feathers being greyish brown on the edges, with longitudinal patches on the centre of each of dark blackish brown, more or less visible in different seasons of the year; on the lower part it is greyish brown, in some specimens reddish grey, with dark shaft streaks. ALPINE ACCENTOR. ff The wings have the first feather very short, the second longer than the fourth, the third the longest, but all these three nearly equal; greater wing coverts, reddish brown, varied with dusky black, edged with yellowish ash-colour, and tipped with a white triangular-shaped spot; lesser wing coverts, yellowish grey, those next the greater wing coverts dusky towards the end with pure white tips: two white bands are thus formed across the wings, but they are more or less faded off in different seasons of the year. Primaries, blackish brown, edged with yellowish rust-colour; secondaries, blackish brown, the inner ones narrowly margined with reddish brown; tertiaries, darker blackish brown on the centre of each feather, the sides deeply edged with reddish brown, and tipped with dull faded white. The tail, which is slightly forked, is dark brown ash- colour, tipped with dull buff white, the outside feathers ter- minating in a large reddish white spot upon their inner webs, and the inner feathers less extensively so; the base is lighter than the rest, and all the feathers are wider there than at the tip, they are also edged with yellowish grey; the rufous tips fade and wear into dull white at the season of the year; underneath, it is grey, also tipped with dull yellowish white; the upper tail coverts are very long, reaching to within an inch of the end of the tail; under tail coverts, dark greyish brown, broadly edged with dull yellowish white. The legs, which are scaled in front, and the toes, are strong, and pale reddish orange brown, the toes brownish; claws, dusky black; the hind claw is very strong, much curved, and very sharp at the tip, where it is compressed. The female resembles the male, but her colours are more dull, less rufous, more spotted on the under parts, and more grey on the sides; the spots on the breast are smaller and paler, and the under bill less yellow. The young have the bill horn-colour, dingy yellow at the base, the back much tinged with brown, the white edges of the rust-coloured feathers on the sides much more extensive, nearly prevailing over the other colour. Before the first moult the whole of the upper parts are ash-colour, without spots: the feet and claws are paler than in the adult. DUNNOCK. SHUFFLE-WING. HEDGE-SPARROW. HEDGE-WARBIER. WINTER FAUVETTE. Accentor modularis, JENYNS. Motacilla modularis, LINN ZUS. Sylvia modularis, LATHAM. Curruca sepiaria, BRISSON. Accentor—A chanter, (a factitious word.) Modularis. Modulor—To sing—to warble—to trill. UNOBTRUSIVE, quiet, and retiring, without being shy, humble and homely in its deportment and habits, sober and unpretending in its dress, while still neat and graceful, the Dunnock exhibits a pattern which many of a higher grade might imitate, with advantage to themselves and benefit to others through an improved example. It inhabits all the more temperate parts of Hurope, going as far north as Norway and Sweden, which it leaves, according to M. Nillson, at the approach of winter. In Italy it is plentiful in the latter season; so it is also in France; arriving there in October, and leaving im the sprmg. In Asia, my friend Mr. Hugh Edwin Strickland has noticed it, in Asia Minor, in December. It is common likewise in Scotland and Ireland. I occa- sionally visits Orkney in October. It was observed near Kirkwall during the winter of 1842, and again in the same season in 1844. Hardy in its habits, it needs not to migrate, but remains in its local habitation throughout the year. In the depth of winter, indeed, it approaches more nearly to houses, which again it leaves with the change of season for the hedge-side, the garden, the orchard, the plantation, or the pleasure-ground; and there, or among bushes, it passes its summer, seldom foe: = be $ , ‘a > . a < a f & . ys ey - a? i , ’ 7 » an Sv ee hee cP ' , 7