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BY WILLIAM BORRER, M.A., F.L.S., MEMBER OF THE BRITISH ORNITHOLOGISTS’ UNION. RK. H. PORTER, 18 PRINCES STREET, CAVENDISH SQUARE. 1891. PRINTED BY TAYLOR AND FRANCIS, RED LION COURT, FLEET STREET, TO THE REVERED MEMORY OF My Father, IN WHOSE BOTANICAL RAMBLES I WAS SO OFTEN ASSOCIATED, AND FROM WHOM I INHERITED THAT LOVE OF NATURE WHICH HAS BEEN AN EVER-SPRINGING SOURCE OF ENJOYMENT THROUGHOUT A LONG LIFE, | DEDICATE THIS VOLUME. PREFACE. Iv is now nearly a hundred years since Markwick, the friend and correspondent of Gilbert White, read before the Linnean Society, on May 5th, 1795, his ‘ Catalogue of Birds found in the county of Sussex,’ numbering 168 species, including those which are domesticated. About the year 1800, Mr. Woolgar, of Lewes, made a list of birds observed by him in that neighbourhood, which may be found in Horsfield’s ‘ History of Lewes.’ In 1849, Mr. Knox published the first edition, and in 1855 the third, of his ‘Ornithological Rambles in Sussex,’ quoted in this work as “O.R.” Since that time, as faras I am aware, no attempt has been made to give a comprehensive account of its avifauna; there are, however, several local Societies,—as those of Brighton, Chichester, Eastbourne, Hastings, and Lewes,—which, from time to time, publish their ‘ Trans- actions,’ and doubtless do good work in their respective districts. There is also a Museum at Chichester, and one at Brighton, as well as the splendidly mounted collection of the late Mr. Booth, recently made over to that town. There have been, and there still are, many accurate observers who contribute accounts of interesting occurrences in the county to the pages of ‘The Zoologist,’ especially Mr. Dutton, Mr. Jeffery, Mr. Monk, and Mr. Wilson, who for many years have been its correspondents. vi PREFACE. Having been, through a long life, resident in the county, and from my earliest years taken the greatest interest in Ornithology, and being assured by friends, for whose judgment I have the highest respect, that a further con- tribution, enumerating the birds of Sussex up to the present time, would be desirable, I have employed some leisure hours in recording, partly from my own notes, and partly from those kindly placed at my disposal by friends and correspondents of many years, such facts as I deemed might be of interest in illustrating the nature and habits of our native birds. These I have supplemented by information from various ancient and modern sources, to which I have, in every case, given references, and have brought up the number of the birds of the county to 297, following the arrangement and nomenclature of the 4th edition of ‘ Yarrell’s British Birds.’ In conclusion, I beg to offer my most cordial acknowledg- ments to those who have so kindly assisted me, and chiefly to Professor Newton, to whom I am greatly indebted not only for looking over my manuscript, but also for many invaluable suggestions, and without whose kindly encourage- ment I should not, at my advanced age, have undertaken the work. To J. E. Harting, Esq., F.L.S., who has favoured me with several original and useful notes; to the Rev. R. N. Dennis, formerly Rector of East Blatchington, a friend and correspondent of many years; to Mr. Ellman, formerly of Glynde, Mr. Jeffery, of Ratham, Chichester, and T. Parkin, Esq., of Hastings, who most kindly placed at my disposal their private notes, extending over a long period, and quoted as p.n.; and to many other ladies. and gentle- men, some personally unknown to me, who have most PREFACE. vii courteously replied to my enquiries, or volunteered informa- tion, in many cases taking considerable trouble on my behalf, I tender my most sincere thanks. I would also desire to record my obligations to the several Taxidermists of our towns, who have most obligingly furnished me with notices and particulars of rare species, which have, from time to time, come into their hands, especially Messrs. Pratt, of Queen’s Road, Brighton, whom I have known for many years, and have always found most intelligent and reliable; Mr. Bristow, the well-known naturalist of St. Leonard’s-on-Sea; Mr. Bates, of East- bourne; Mr. Brazenor, of Western Road, Brighton; Mr. Ellis, of Arundel; Mr. May, of East Grinstead; and Mr. Potter, now of Carlisle. The few plates with which this work is embellished are by the pencil of Mr. J. G. Keulemans, the Gyr Falcon and the Honey Buzzard being portraits of specimens in my own collection. W. BORRER, COWFOLD, SUSSEX. November, 1890. . oi) =e "a d}eay . 4 7 . . \ . 4 ae o iD = ih Sh ae - a eer a © S . wane > 77 INTRODU CLTON, On putting forth this little account of the ‘ Birds of Sussex,’ it may perhaps be well to give a gencral idea of the natural features of the county, which measures about seventy-six miles in length by some twenty-seven in breadth. It is bounded on the north by Surrey and Kent; on the south by the English Channel, the coast line being about eighty-six miles in extent ; on the east by Kent, and on the west by Hants. The geological formation of Sussex may, speaking generally, be divided into three principal portions through- out its whole length: namely that of the Chalk, comprising the South and Western Downs ; the Weald, consisting chiefly of what is known as Wealden Clay; and the Sand, which forms a narrow band between the two. Besides these there are comparatively small deposits of Bracklesham and London clays, of which the most considerable extends about ten miles south from Chichester to Selsey Bill, and about twenty east and west from the boundaries of Hants to within a few miles of Worthing, being, however, now and then broken into by the Chalk. Again, about the courses of the rivers, there are narrow alluvial deposits, becoming wider towards their mouths, and at the eastern end of the county are two large beds of alluvium, blown sand, and shingle, forming the Levels of Pevensey, Rye, and Winchel- sea. The ancient forest of Anderida is described by the x INTRODUCTION. Venerable Bede, about the year 731, as “thick and macces- sible,” and as a place of shelter for large herds of deer and swine, as well as wolves; and we learn from the Saxon Chronicle that in a.p. 893 it extended from east to west one hundred and twenty miles, and from north to south from eighty to ninety miles, making it nearly co-extensive with the Weald in Sussex, Kent, and Surrey. It is now so greatly curtailed by clearing and by cultivation that little remains but the forests of St. Leonard, Tilgate, and Ash- down. From the time of the Romans to that of Charles II., large portions of these forests were greatly reduced by the practice of felling trees for charcoal, to be used in the extensive manufacture of iron; but in his reign, on account of the great destruction of the oak-timber consumed in smelting it, the portion now known as St. Leonard’s was disforested, and made a deer-park, thus, of course, doing more harm than good, as every young oak was browsed down by the deer. There is a small portion of the ancient woodland called Charlton Forest, situated on the north slope of the Western Downs, the only part of them which still has native timber. The whole of the county, however, with the exception of the Downs and the levels of the rivers, is still very well wooded, as may be seen by any one looking down upon it from their summits. ‘This is, in a great measure, caused by the practice of the original reclaimers, of leaving a strip of wood, in this county called a Shaw, of several yards in width, around each enclosure for the preservation of timber, the oak of Sussex being considered the best in existence for the use of the Navy; and it is still the pre- vailing tree throughout the county, though more especially on the clay. There are two distinct species, the Quercus pedunculata, or robur, and the Q. sessiliflora, of which the former is by far the commoner, and, from its greater dura- bility, very superior as timber to the latter for naval purposes. INTRODUCTION. xi The Q. sessiliflora is found in various parts of the county, for example near Cowfold and Cuckfield, and in several parts of St. Leonard’s Forest, as at Coolhurst and Slaugham, and to the westward at Goodwood. This oak, though undoubtedly indigenous, but not so common in Sussex as in some other counties, is said to have been largely increased by the introduction into some parts of England, several ages ago, of large importations from the Continent, especially from the forests of Germany. It has been said that the numerous complaints of our ships being infected with what is generally called dry-rot were owing to the introduction of this species into our naval dockyards, where the distinction was not even suspected until a very few years since. However this may be when it is used in so confined a situation as the hold of a ship, it has been indisputably proved that the timber of Quercus sessiliflora is exceedingly durable in places exposed to a free current of air; for the roofs of many of our oldest buildings, for example, those of Westminster Hall and St. Alban’s Abbey, are certainly built of it, though the timbers had been long mistaken for Spanish chestnut, and are still found to be in good condition *. With respect to the belt of sand, which extends from near Petersfield, on the borders of Hants, to Pevensey Level in the east of Sussex, a considerable extent of the western portion of it is occupied by heath. Other parts, however, are capable of the highest cultivation. Having now given a slight sketch of the interior of the county, I pass to the coast, which, from Brighton to East- bourne, consists of cliffs rising to various heights from the former town till they attain their greatest elevation, some * See a paper read by Mr. Wyatt Papworth, at a meeting of the Royal Institute of British Architects, held on June 14, 1858, and observations by the same gentleman at another meeting of that body on May 20th, 1878. xii INTRODUCTION. six hundred feet, at Beachy Head, or, as it was formerly spelt, Beauchef Head, and indeed it well deserves this appellation. Here the cliffs terminate abruptly, and Peven- sey Level continues till beyond Hastings, the sandy cliffs there being low and gradually falling to the Levels of Rye and Winchelsea. Westward of Brighton the coast is level and somewhat flat, and so continues to the border of Hants. Of the Rivers of Sussex, none of which are of any size, beginning from the east, we have the Rother, which rises in the parish of Rotherfield, and, passing Mayfield, receives a small tributary from Wadhurst, and flowing by Etching- ham and Salehurst, enters Kent, and returning to Sussex, south of the Isle of Oxney, expands into an estuary, and falls into the sea about two miles south-east of the town of Rye. The Cuckmere, rising not far from Heathfield, forms near its mouth a narrow tract of level country, which seems particularly attractive to Wildfowl in the winter, the sea there being somewhat sheltered by cliffs, enabling them to spend their days upon the water in comparative quietude, the grassy marshes affording convenient feeding-places by night. The Ouse rises partly near Slaugham, on the borders of St. Leonard’s Forest, and partly near Worth, and uniting its streams, meanders eastward through a well- wooded and cultivated tract of country, and receiving several inconsiderable affluents, passes through the exten- sive Levels of Lewes to the sea at Newhaven. The springs of the Adur (profanely called the Weald Ditch) rise under the Downs, near Clayton, and joining two small streams from Bolney and Cuckfield, near the bridge at Wyndham, it proceeds to Mock Bridge, there receiving another tributary from the Leach Pond in St. Leonard’s Forest, and all flow together to Eaton’s Farm, in the parish of Henfield, where a branch falls in, which, rising near INTRODUCTION. xii Itchingfield, passes through West Grinstead and Shipley to the Henfield Level. There another branch is received, rising from between the Chalk and Greensand under the Devil’s Dyke; the united streams then, passing Bramber, fall into the sea at Shoreham. The Arun, the largest of our rivers, rises near the great pond at Ifield, whence it flows through the mill-pond at Warnham into the parish of Slinfold, and nearly to Lox- wood, near which it joins a stream originating under Leith Hill, in Surrey, and passing a little east of Wisborough Green, receives a tributary from Shilliglee Park and another from the Hawkins, Hammer, and Birchin ponds, near Horsham. It then receives the Western Rother (which rises in Black Down) about halfway between Stop- ‘ham and Pulborough, and flowing through the wide meadows, formerly marshes, known as Amberley Wildbrook, and past the town of Arundel, reaches the sea at Littlehampton. The Lavant, which, often dry for months, is remarkable for being fullest of water in the hottest weather, rises from under the Chalk in Charlton Forest, and flows by Chichester into the estuary known as Chichester Harbour, near the village of Wittering. These rivers are all of them subject to heavy floods, from the narrowness of their mouths, and the enormous drainage of the country, proving, of course, very attractive to many species of birds. Pagham Harbour, which was formerly a perfect paradise for the ornithologist, has now, unfortunately for him, entirely disappeared, the sea having been a few years since banked out, and the mud-lands reclaimed and brought under cultivation. ‘The estuary forming Chichester Harbour extends from Fishbourne to the sea, and is some seven miles in length; soon after being jomed by Bosham Creek, it expands into a large sheet of water nearly three miles in width, to the border of the county at Emsworth xiv INTRODUCTION, Channel, and contains the Isle known as Thorney Island. It measures, from Prinsted to the sea, about five miles, the whole of this being, at low water, on both sides of its central channel, a vast extent of muddy banks and flats, very attractive to Waders and Seafowl in the summer, and in the winter the resort of various Ducks and other birds. The many changes of the last half-century have greatly interfered with ornithology in this county, as in others. The whole of Sussex is now intersected with railways, not only inland but along the coast, nearly the whole of what may be called the maritime district being traversed by a line of rails extending from Brighton to the extreme western limit of the county, the whistle of the steam-engine taking the place of that of the Wildfowl and the Wader. The estuaries, formerly abounding in these species, are now far more disturbed by traffic than they used to be; and much of the marsh-land has been brought under cultivation. The last of the grand morasses of the western division, the - Amberley Wildbrook, is converted into so-called smiling meadows, re-echoing with the lowing of cattle instead of the hollow boom of the Bittern and the croak of the Heron. The Downs too, once the peaceful haunt of the Bustard and the Lapwing, or disturbed only by the shepherd and his flock, are now to a great extent broken up by cultivation, and harassed by the rattle of the steam-plough. The cliffs have in many places been scarped down, or shattered by the engineer, thus destroying the favourite resorts of many wild birds. The inland aspect of the county, too, is much changed from what it was in former times. Where are the splendid stretches of heather? the sedgy bottoms? and where are the Black Game ? The whole tribe, too, of Hawks and Owls, though to a certain extent destructive, were useful to the Game pre- server and the farmer,—to the one by destroying the weakly INTRODUCTION, a individuals, and thus leaving only the most healthy birds for the stock of game; to the other by keeping down the multitude of rats, mice, and other vermin which do the farm more injury than all the birds of prey have ever done, and which have most destructively increased throughout the county in general, a state of things which can never be remedied till every country gentleman gives strict orders to his keepers to carefully preserve all birds of prey, and sees that his instructions are carried out. At the present time these birds have either entirely ceased to breed in the county, or have become so diminished in numbers, that with the exception of the really mischievous Sparrow-hawk and the harmless Kestrel, a bird of prey is rarely to be met with. To these causes may be added the wholesale destruc- tion of small birds by the bird-catchers, the increased population, and the constant improvement in firearms of all kinds. On the other hand, however, we have derived a certain degree of benefit by the late Acts of Parliament for the preservation of many species during the breeding-season, and from the increasing attention given to Natural History in general. Notwithstanding all the drawbacks I have mentioned, the county still presents an interesting field for future investigation, and in the woodland districts there are still abundance of songsters and other of the migratory birds, though on the clay-land I have observed that there are fewer individuals, though perhaps not fewer species, than on the sandy districts, but a very few miles off ; a circumstance which I think may perhaps be attributed to the comparative lightness of the soil there affording greater facilines for dusting, which all birds at times require, and which the weaker species find some difficulty in obtaining on the clay, as when the weather has been wet it is a long time before Xvi INTRODUCTION. ; the soil will pulverize, and when very dry it is too hard for them to be able to scratch it up. Although I am quite sensible of many defects in my work, and have made no attempt at science, I still hope that it may be found of some interest to the general reader as well as to lovers of Ornithology, and may tend to make known the present state of the Bird-life of the county; and as will, I think, be seen, no pains have been spared in verifying the occurrence of the rarer examples. It only remains to me to mention my reasons for omitting a few which have been accepted as Sussex birds; and first, respecting the Golden Eagle. Though Markwick mentions it as having occurred at Bexhill, he does so on very insufficient evidence, and there can be little doubt that he was mistaken, for the following reasons: he makes no allusion whatever to the White-tailed, Sea, or Cinereous Eagle, which has occurred several times in that very district, and in his time the different species of Eagles were not properly distinguished. The Golden Eagle, too, has never since been seen in the county; thus it may be fairly concluded that the bird he records was nothing more than the White-tailed Eagle. The Canada Goose, as its name implies, is a Nearctic species; I have not included it because, though specimens have been frequently met with in Sussex, there is little doubt that all have been escaped birds bred on, or in the neighbourhood of, the numerous pieces of water on which they have been for many years kept in a semi-domesticated state, and whence young birds, which could not be captured and pinioned, naturally, especially in severe weather, dis- perse over the country in search of food. To the Egyptian Goose, an African species, the foregoing remarks will equally apply. The Hooded Merganser, as I have explained in my account of the Goosander, has been erroneously mentioned as a Sussex bird. INTRODUCTION. Xvil Concerning the Owls formerly in the Keep of Arundel Castle, which I believe were generally supposed to be Eagle Owls, and were mentioned as such by Mr. Knox in O. R. p- 91, as they were for many years a great attraction to visitors, a few words may be expected, though they have no claim to be called Sussex birds. I may say that when I saw them many years ago I had no doubt that they were the Virginian species, in which opinion I am confirmed by the following notice in ‘The Beauties of England and Wales,’ vol xiv. p. 82, by F. Shoberl, where, speaking of the Keep of Arundel Castle, he says: ‘‘The Owls which are kept here were a present to the Duke from North America.” This was published in 1813. Mr. J. H. Gurney kindly made enquiries for me of the present Duke, who most courteously gave all the information in his power, stating that he believed it to be the fact that the Owls were introduced into the Keep by Charles, the 11th Duke, who died in 1815, and that some were still remaining when he himself came to the title in 1860, but that during his minority they gradually disappeared from the Castle, though two were remaining in a garden in the town up to the end of 1869. Mr. Mostyn, the Duke’s agent, kindly forwarded me a letter from an old man, for many years the custodian of the Owls, who states that they occasionally bred in the Keep, producing but one egg in the season, and hatching it; but in 1859 one bird laid three eggs, which produced three fine young, which grew to maturity. One of the Owls, which had long been known as “ Lord Thurlow,” at last laid an egg, which was the subject of considerable amusement. Mr. Gurney had a cutting from the ‘ West Sussex Gazette’ of 1859, stating that one of the Arundel Owls, believed to be the original “ Lord Thurlow,” had just died, supposed to be about a hundred years old. Three were at one time several Decoys in the county ; b XVill INTRODUCTION. at Firle, the only one now worked, the captures at which are very small; at Tangmere, Angmering, Tortington, Glynde, and Peasmarsh, all of which have ceased to be worked, on account of the increased drainage and the disturbance caused by the railways; but all my attempts to obtain any of the Decoy books, or indeed any information as to the number or species formerly captured, or anything whatever beyond what has been stated by Sir Ralph Payne Gallwey, in his lately published interesting and exhaustive work, ‘The Book of Duck Decoys,’ have failed, except in the case of that at Ratton, the proprietor of which, Freeman Thomas, Esq., most courteously forwarded me a book of entries dating from 1793 to 1827, and from 1852 to 1861. The only species mentioned are the Wild Duck, Teal and Wigeon, Winders, which name is applied to the Wigeon, though I never before heard of the term in Sussex, and Divers, which may allude to the Scaup Duck, which is generally known by this name. Of these, the numbers caught from 1793 to 1827 were, of Ducks 2903, of Teal 446, of Wigeon only 2. There is no further entry till 1852, from which date to 1861 there appear to have been taken, of Ducks 8226, of Teal 5075, of Wigeon 175. Besides these there are recorded 827 head of Ducks and Teal mingled together, as well as 25 Winders and 7 Divers. My thanks are also due to E. J. Mostyn, Esq., the agent to the Duke of Norfolk, who most kindly forwarded to me a copy of the information supplied to Sir Ralph Payne Gallwey. In conclusion I will only add, that as I have found it a life-long pleasure to investigate the works of the Creator, so wonderfully and beautifully displayed in the Natural History of the “ Fowls of the air,’ so I hope that the results of my studies, thus presented in this volume, may help those who come after me to enjoy the same pleasure. ati er — ys nai. = Ls AS, i + \ | . e I i ne I 3 Y : ‘ ma tts + a i a i prnis ri a 2 al ly on Me wrth 2 Bint ee yj as i 7 y ’ ; a : a dl ‘ a = ae A fae J at ¢ a oe ala aaili THE bala 1) >. GE 5S USS 2 e FALCONIDZ. WHITE-TAILED EAGLE. Haliwetus albicilla. Aw Eagle of this species was shot at Shoreham by the land- lord of the Dolphin Hotel in that place, where I saw it in 1841. It was in immature plumage, and had been killed some years before. In one of my own notes, made at the time, I find that a specimen of this Eagle was killed in 1839 near Newhaven. ‘The white was just beginning to show on the outer feathers at the base of the tail. This bird passed into the hands of Mr. H. Morgan, then of Lugwardine, Herefordshire. Having seen in the ‘Sussex Express’ news- paper of December 80, 1844, a notice of an Eagle taken near Northheath, I wrote to the late Mr. Knox, who replied :— “The Eagle to which you refer is an immature Sea- Eagle trapped in one of the large woods on the Cowdray estate.” In the early spring I have twice seen an Eagle pass over—one at Portslade, the other at Henfield,—both going 7 B 2 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. eastward, but have not the dates. In a letter from Mr. R. N. Dennis, dated February 22nd, 1855, he informs me that an Eagle was seen by one of the men of the Coastguard, near Seaford. The bird had established himself on a high spit of beach, which became an island at high tide, to which he carried his prey in order to dine in security, and from whence he kept a vigilant look-out on all around. He was quite unapproachable, but the Preventive men could watch all his proceedings with the glass with the greatest ease, as he was in full view of them from their station-house. On the 26th of December, 1864, as I was in a vehicle about a mile and a half eastward of Henfield, my attention was attracted to a large brown mass, near the top of an oak tree. As I could not satisfy myself that it was a bird at all, I asked the driver what he thought of it. He, not hearing what I said, immediately stopped the carriage, by which means the brown mass, being only about a hundred yards off, was startled, and, on its rising up, we could distinctly see that it was an Eagle, and that the tail was entirely white. It then glided away towards a large wood, and we last saw it flying eastward; but I was informed that it was seen again the next day, not far from the spot where we first observed it. This bird was, of course, adult; and as I learn, on the best authority, that in no other instance, of late years, has an adult Sea-Eagle been reported in England in a wild state, this circumstance rather leads to the suggestion that the one we saw might have escaped from confinement. In Mr. Knox’s O. R. (pp. 40, 43) several occurrences of the Sea-Kagle are mentioned, viz.:—the one before referred to at the Dolph Hotel at Shoreham; another shot in 1841 at Rottingdean, where it had been observed for about a month ; a third, killed at Windmill Hill, in the parish of Wartling, in January 1844; as well as a fourth on Pevensey Level about 1845. Beside these, one is mentioned as having been WHITE-TAILED EAGLE.—OSPREY. 3 trapped in one of the large woods on the Cowdray estate, which must be distinct from that recorded as taken on the same estate just when the first edition of that work was passing through the press, namely in 1849. The ‘ Zoologist’ records :—“ A magnificent specimen of this Eagle was shot in December 1859, feeding on a dead turtle, at Birling gap. It had been seen in the neighbourhood for several days” (p. 6889). and, from tree, durmg a heavy storm of wind and rain, it is also fre- quently called the Storm Cock, also the Holm Thrush, from its partiality to the holly or holm-bush, for the sake of its berries. Although it may be considered a very wild bird at all other seasons, yet in the spring time it becomes exceed- ingly bold, and enters our gardens and orchards, where it builds its nest in the most conspicuous places, and in its defence will fearlessly attack, and generally drive off, every bird, of whatever size, which may presume to approach it. Then, after it and its family have enjoyed the fruit, particu- larly cherries, and the protection of our gardens, the little party betake themselves to the open country, and even to the bare downs, till, on the approach of winter and hard weather, they assemble in flocks, and resort to the berry- bearing trees, more particularly to the holly, the mountain ash, and the haw, on which fare they become exceedingly plump, and, being by no means bad for the table, are much persecuted by juvenile gunners. This species receives large accessions from the continent in the autumn. I may add that Gilbert White says, ‘The Magpies, when they have young, destroy the broods of MISTLETOE THRUSH.—SONG THRUSH. 45 Missel Thrushes, though the dams are fierce birds, and fight boldly in defence of their nests. It is probably to avoid such insults that this species of Thrush, though wild at other times, delights to build near houses, and in frequented walks and gardens” (see ‘Natural History of Selborne,’ edit. of 1802, vol. ii. p. 165). On the 14th of February, 1859, my gardener, hearing a great clamour of birds on the other side of a wall from where he was working, went to see what was the matter, when he saw a Missel Thrush take its departure from a Hawfinch, which he picked up in an insensible state. As it got better, I put it in a cage, where it soon got appa- rently all right, and cracked some hawthorn-stones; but a few hours after was dead. SONG THRUSH. Turdus musicus. ExrkEMELY common everywhere, frequenting our gardens and shrubberies, and when the time comes taking heavy toll from fruits of all kinds. In return, however, for these de- predations it repays us with its charming melody throughout the year, though more especially in the spring. It destroys, too, an enormous quantity of earthworms and snails, bringing the latter to some favourite stone to break, where numbers of the shells may frequently be found, and returning again and again to this selected spot. This species is resident, receiving large additions from the North, of natives, and from the East, of arrivals from the continent in summer and autumn. It seems to be one of the earliest resident birds to be affected by the cold, and is frequently found dead on a sudden accession of frost, though, as a rule, it retires to the coast, where it finds an abundant 46 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. supply of food, and roosts among the tangled herbage of the mud-banks, which are covered by the highest tides only. The Sussex name for the Song-Thrush is Greybird. REDWING. Turdus iliacus. A REGULAR winter visitant, although occasionally a few remain as late as April, which has led some to suppose that it has bred in this county. It generally arrives in October, when it resorts to the grass land and enclosures, feeding on worms, &c., and not taking so much to berries as the other species of the genus. This bird does not seem to be forewarned by its instinct of the approach of severe frost, so that I have often seen numbers so overcome by the cold as scarcely to be able to escape the prong, or shovel of the labourer, spreading the dressing in the meadow. It is said to roost on the ground, in pastures overgrown with grass or rushes. I have often seen little parties of this species in the enclosures in Brighton, and particularly in the Pavilion Gardens, where, in March 1889, several were walking about within a few yards of my feet. FIELDFARE. Turdus pilaris. Tis species, like the last, is a regular winter visitor, but occasionally appears as early as the second week in FIELDFARE-—BLACK-THROATED THRUSH. 47 September. It arrives in some years in very large flocks, and betakes itself to the open country, and particularly to meadows. Its habits in general do not differ much from those of the Redwing, but it is rather a wilder and hardier bird, and does not scatter in so small parties over the country, and, when disturbed by gunners, soon becomes very wary and difficult of approach. The Fieldfare does not breed in this country. It has generally left us by the end of April, though I have once or twice seen one or two as late as May. The call-note is very harsh, but it is said to have an agree- able song. ‘This bird breeds in large societies. The Sussex name for it is “ Felt,” or “ Pigeon Felt,’ I imagine from the blueness of its plumage, not from its size, for it is certainly not larger than the Mistletoe Thrush. ‘The berries of the holly, the juniper, the mountain-ash, and the hawthorn, as well as worms, &c., collected in the meadows, form its principal food. BLACK-THROATED THRUSH. Turdus atrogularis. As the only British specimen I have ever seen is that men- tioned in Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds,’ 4th edit. vol. i. p. 276, I will merely quote therefrom :— Of this species a young male example, shot near Lewes, December 23rd, 1868, was, on the same day, taken to Mr. T. J. Monk, of that town, and now forms part of his choice collection. Mr. Gould recorded the capture in ‘The Ibis’ for January 1869 (p. 128), and a note to the same purpose, from the owner of the specimen, is printed in the ‘ Zoologist’ for February (1888, p. 1560), while the latter permitted Mr. Rowley, who himself saw the 48 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. bird before it was skinned, to exhibit it at a meeting of the Zoological Society, on the 14th of January (Proc. Zool. Soc. 1869, p. 4).” BLACKBIRD. Turdus merula. Tue Blackbird is the most common of the Thrush family, abounding on our lawns and in our shrubberies, among which it is one of the earliest to build its nest, and where it frequently brmgs up several broods in a season. It feeds greatly on various fruits, and devours large quantities of worms and snails. After the breeding-season, it resorts a good deal to the copses, and narrow strips of underwood and timber, which so commonly divide the fields in the Weald of Sussex, and are known as “ Shaws.” But, although it is the hardiest of all our Thrushes, it betakes itself to the sea-shore on the approach of very severe frost, returning again to its inland haunts as soon as the weather moderates. It does not associate in large flocks, but is said to receive, in the autumn, considerable additions from other parts. RING OUSEL. Turdus torquatus. Tne first notices I have of the Ring Ousel in Sussex are, that a male was shot at Chestham, Henfield, in September 1839, and a female caught at Portslade, in Mr. J. Borrer’s greenhouse ; it seems to be very fond of grapes. On the RING OUSEL. 49 31st of October, 1840, I saw one which had been shot at Brighton a few days previously, and on the 21st of September of the following year, one shot at Westmeston. I also know of one, obtained near Lewes, as early as the 6th of April, and another occurred near Brighton in October 1842, and several more in the same month of the next year. On the 18th of September, 1853, I was walking up to the Rectory at Petworth, and my attention being attracted by their harsh note, I saw several Ring Ousels flying from a moun- tain-ash in the garden, and afterwards had a good view of them from a window, feeding on the berries. On the South Downs these birds still continue their migrations, as they did in the time of Gilbert White. Mr. Knox merely observes that it is a passing visitor in spring and autumn, resting for a few days among the junipers and holly-bushes on our elevated commons and highest downs. Mr. Booth, in his ‘Rough Notes,’ writes as follows :—“ I possess the best evidence that a pair reared their young in the spring of 1865, im the lower branches of a stunted thorn- bush in a sloping hollow of the South Downs near Thunder’s Barrow, between Portslade and the Dyke Hill, the juveniles being seen near the same spot, attended by the old birds, a week or so after they were observed in the nest. My in- formant also stated that the previous year a shepherd had told him that a bird, resembling a Blackbird with a white ring round the throat, had taken up its quarters in a ruined hovel in one of the valleys among the hills near Hangleton, the nest having been placed on the wall-plate in the space left where one of the rafters had fallen away. Though this Ousel is generally well known in this part of Sussex, a few being seen annually in spring while on the passage towards the north, and numbers frequenting the hills about Falmer, Patcham, and Portslade, during the latter end of autumn, E 50 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. I fail to learn of other instances of this species remaining during summer in the county.” I cannot say that this story of Mr. Booth’s is perfectly satisfactory, but I leave it to my readers to take it for what it is worth. The Ring Ousel feeds on various berries, especially on those of mountain-ash, the yew, and the haw- thorn, as well as on worms and snails. Mr. Ellman records, in the ‘ Zoologist ’ for 1850 (p. 2698) : “The number of Ring Ousels passing southward during this autumn has been astonishing. Large flocks were seen con- tinually on the Downs from September till nearly the end of October. No one can ever recollect their being so plentiful before.’ And Mr. W. Jeffery, writing from Ratham, near Chichester, under date 12th to 20th of April, 1866, states, with reference to the same bird, “a few... have been obtained during the migration; as a rule, they are not nearly so numerous nor so frequently met with here at this time of the year as in the autumn” (‘ Zoologist,’ p. 266, s.s.). Mr. Jeffery also states, in his private notes, that he has met with considerable numbers in Kingly Vale, near Chichester. SYLVIID. ALPINE ACCENTOR. Aecentor collaris. As this species is strictly an inhabitant of rocky and moun- tainous districts, it has rarely been observed in the county, and only once by myself. This specimen I distinctly saw, and watched through a binocular for some minutes, on my own lawn at Cowfold, when it suddenly rose up and dis- © ALPINE ACCENTOR.—HEDGE SPARROW. 51 appeared round the corner of the house, and I could not find it again. I have lost the date. My attention was called to it by its shambling gait, and by the bright chestnut colour of its sides. In Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds, vol. i. p. 297, it is thus written :—* Mr. Porter states (‘ Zoologist,’ p. 5958) that on December 26th, 1857, two were shot on the Downs near Lewes, and Mr. Dennis, writing to me respecting the same specimens, informs me that they were shot near Hailsham.” HEDGE SPARROW. Accentor modularis. Tuts generally diffused and unobtrusive little bird is one of the tamest and most familiar of all the inhabitants of our gardens, and is fond of frequenting the immediate precincts of our dwellings, where it diligently searches the drains and sewers, &c. Notwithstanding its peaceful disposition, it generally manages to hold its own very well in the numerous contests with its fellow pensioners for the food thrown out of window for the birds in general, in the winter. It is extremely hardy, never seeming to shift its locality in the severest weather, and even when the ground is covered with snow, it may be heard uttering its simple but cheering little song. Whether its note is of a sufficiently distinguished order to entitle it to its specific name “‘ Modularis ”’ I cannot say, but that it is a welcome addition to the monotony of a wintry morning I think will be readily admitted by all. Its food consists principally of insects and vegetable matter. It has a peculiar habit of continually flirtmg up its wings as it moves about, which has given rise to the pro- vincial name of ‘“Shufflewing,” but in this county it is generally known as the “ Hedgepick.” E2 52 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. REDBREAST. Erithacus rubecula. Tuis appears to be a universal favourite, and from its con- fiding nature and familiarity has earned for itself in most of the countries it inhabits some name or other of endearment and affection. Wherever the labourer may go, not only in the garden, but even in the distant woodlands, no sooner does he begin to break up the ground than the Robin is with him to pick up any worm or grub that he may happen to disturb, and may often be seen sitting on the handle of some tool which he may have cast aside. Notwithstanding this tameness with regard to man, he is most pugnacious, and shows the greatest audacity should any other of his own species presume to come too near to his nest, or even to the part of the garden he may have arrogated to himself. He sings in the spring, but princi- pally in the autumn and winter. The Robin feeds on berries and most garden fruits, and is especially addicted to red currants. Worms also, and chrysalids, form a considerable portion of his diet, and he is very fond of corn in general, more particularly of wheat. He feeds also on the berries of the mountain-ash. Although he is resident he is partially migratory, and receives periodical additions from the continent. This bird is an early riser, and one of the last to retire at night. The materials of the nest appear to vary greatly, being sometimes moss, feathers, and hair, at another principally dead leaves. It is frequently found on the ground or on a bank, or perhaps on the wall-plate of an outbuilding, or a hole in a wall, I was once shown a nest in a lectern in the church of Ashington, and heard of another built under the seat of eee REDBREAST.—NIGHTINGALE. 53 a gentleman’s carriage, where it hatched its young, but the carriage being one day wanted, food was put in, and the old bird was enclosed, but on returning home the young were found dead. NIGHTINGALE. Daulias luscinia. Arter all that has been written of this delightful songster there is no necessity for me to describe its habits, its habitat, or its history. But, sad to say, there is in my immediate neighbourhood a district wherein tradition saith that the Nightingale shall not be heard. A holy recluse, who had fixed his cell in St. Leonard’s forest, is said to have been so disturbed in his devotions by its continual singing that he banished it from its precincts. Indeed some say that the recluse was no other than St. Leonard himself, but it is hard to put the saddle on the right horse at this distance of time, for the legend is at least as old as the days of Henry VIII., since, in the ‘ Boke of Knowledge,’ by Andrew Borde, physician to that king, occurs the following passage :— “In the forest of Saint Leonarde’s in Southsexe, there dothe never singe Nightingale, although the foreste rounde aboute in tyme of the yeare is replenyshed (sic) with Nightyngales ; they wyl syng round aboute the forest and never within the precincts of the forest, as divers keepers of the foreste and other credible parsons dwellyng there dyd shewe me.” * But whatever “credible parsons” say or said, I myself have frequently heard the aforesaid songster pouring forth his melody, regardless of consequences, in many parts of the forest. \ *See ‘Sussex Archeological Collections, vol. vi. p. 212. 54 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. BLUETHROAT. Ruticilla suecica. A remate was killed near Worthing May 2, 1853, and is mentioned in Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. 1. p. 322). October 1, 1862, a beautiful adult bird was seen by a boy on the South Downs, between Brighton and Stanmore Park, flying among the furzes from bush to bush. It was in the fullest plumage. It uttered no note, and on perching spread out its tail. The boy knocked it down with a stick, and took it alive to Mr. Pratt’s shop at Brighton, where I saw it. It had been put in a cage and kept very much to the bottom of it, and even then spread out its tail to its fullest extent when disturbed. It looked all right, but Mr. Pratt, fearing it would spoil its plumage in the cage, soon after- wards killed it, and set it up for me, and I now have it in my own collection. In this specimen the spot in the centre of the breast is bright chestnut-red. It feeds on insects, but of its general habits I have no personal knowledge, and I can only add that to this county it is a visitant of the greatest rarity. Both these examples are recorded in the ‘ Zoologist,’ the first at p. 3907, the second at p. 8281. REDSTART. Ruticilla phoenicurus. Tue Redstart appears about the middle of April, resting for a few days near the coast, especially in some grassy spot, even in towns, such as the lawns of the Pavilion at Brighton, and in Wellington Square at Hastings, in both of which places I have seen it picking up insects, worms, &e. It has REDSTART. 55 a very soft and pleasing note, but I have never heard it in Sussex, though frequently in other counties. It is most common on the alluvial tracts between the Downs and the sea in west Sussex, and to the eastward about Hastings and Redhill. It is also occasionally met with on the sandy parts about Storrington and Henfield, and much more rarely in the clayey portions of the Weald. I have only seen three examples at Cowfold in forty years, one on my lawn in April 1849, and a male accompanied by a young bird in my orchard in 1852. It breeds very sparingly in Sussex, in old fruit trees, in holes in the trunk, or in the interior of the thatch of some outbuilding, or in a wall. It builds a rather loose nest with a good deal of green moss externally, and lines it principally with horsehair and a few feathers, but is not very particular respecting the material, as I once found that it had made use of about a quarter of a yard of valuable lace, which it had stolen from a summerhouse where a lady had been sitting at work. It is remarkable that it should so seldom breed in Sussex, as I have frequently, in my younger days, found the nest in the very southernmost parts of Surrey, especially about Leith Hill. BLACK REDSTART. Ruticilla titys. Is a regular autumn visitant to the coast, but appears to have been long overlooked, though one of the first examples noticed in England was obtained near Brighton (at Hove) in 1880 (Yarrell, B. B. vol. i. p. 333). It generally arrives about October, but although it has occasionally remained as late as April, I am not aware that 56 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. the nest has ever been found in Sussex. With us it is very much confined to the seaside, and is fond of flitting about the rocks, or clinging to the face of the cliffs, and even to the parapets of the houses in Brighton, and it also has been observed to do the same at Worthing and Hastings. Its principal food is insects, but I once saw a quantity of hop- seeds taken from the crop of one which had been shot on a heap of manure, on which had been thrown some refuse from a brewery. I have notes, made at the time, of an immature male shot in the neighbourhood of Brighton, October 20th, 1848, and of a female shot there November 20th, 1849, also of a finely marked adult male shot in Brighton Park, November 23rd, 1857, as well as of another male, obtained on March 7th, 1859, at Hill’s Farm, near Horsham, an unusual distance from the sea. Mr. Knox characterizes this bird as a winter visitant, and mentions several specimens of it as obtained from Brighton, and others from Chichester and Hastings. References to the ‘ Zoologist’ are :—(P. 188) “ A Black Redstart was shot on a wall at Brighton, on October 16th, and another, also on a wall, in December 1839, and between the latter date and April 1843 three males and one female were seen and shot, all by Mr. Swaysland.” (P. 2799) An adult bird killed at Piddinghoe, March 31st, and an imma- ture male near Lewes, April Ist, 1852. (P. 3033) A female shot in a chalk-pit near Lewes. (P. 3329) One killed at Brighton, November 26th. (P. 9040) Another caught by a birdeatcher near Eastbourne, in November 1864, and again another, near Birling Gap. (P. 597,s.s.) A pair seen and female shot, at Ashling, in October 1862. (P. 3476) Another shot at Railton, near Eastbourne. (P.3907) One taken near Worthing, 1853. From the number appearing every year along the coast STONECHAT.—WHINCHAT. 57 since it was first distinguished, the Black Redstart can scarcely now be called a very rare bird; in fact it may be classed as a regular winter visitant, though in small numbers, STONECHAT. Saxzicola rubicola. RestpEnT, but less numerous, in winter, principally fre- quenting the masses of furze on the Downs, or the open heaths and commons more inland, where it may be seen perched on the highest points of the furze, constantly uttering its note, which has been compared to the sound made by knocking two stones together, hence the name. It also gives forth a rather pleasing little song while flitting about from bush to bush. It feeds on insects, and particularly on beetles. In April it builds a rather large and clumsy nest of coarse grass and green moss, generally on the ground on the inside of a furze, or other bush (close to the bottom), and well concealed by thick herbage. WHINCHAT. Saaricola rubetra. Tuts little bird arrives about the middle of April. It is to be found in similar districts to the preceding, and particu- larly in large tracts of furze, but is more generally diffused, being partial to enclosed parts of the Weald, where it may often be found about the hedges of our meadows and culti- 58 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. vated fields, flitting about from bush to bush, feeding on insects and berries, particularly on blackberries. IT am not aware of its having any actual song, its usual note being a hurried repetition of the syllables “ tic-tic.” It is fond of perching about on the haycocks in haymaking time, and builds its nest on the ground, formed of grass, and lined with the finer portions of the same. In the northern counties “ Whin” is the name of what we call “ Furze,’ whence they call this bird ‘‘ Whinchat”’ and we Furzechat, both, of course, from its fondness for that shrub. In some parts of Sussex it is also known as the Barleyear, though from what cause I have never been able to discover. This and the Stonechat are also known as the « Stonechucker.”’ WHEATEAR. Saxicola enanthe. Tue Wheatear is, I think, the earliest of our immigrants, as I was in the habit, some years since, of riding to a certain spot on the Downs every spring, on purpose to see if it had yet come, and there are few seasons in which I have not found it there on the lst of March. It arrives sometimes in large numbers together. I remember on the morning of the 22nd of March, 1881, at Eastbourne, the beach about 7 A.M. was completely covered with them, and they were sitting in numbers on the small trees, and on the backs of the seats on the esplanade, and I saw also several parties of ten or a dozen arriving from the sea. They did not appear at all fatigued, and on my going again to the esplanade at 10.30 there was not one to be seen. A celebrated old shepherd of the South Downs, in a com- WHEATEAR. 59 munication of great interest mede to the late Mr. Blencowe, of the Hook, near Chailey, speaking of a time when, in 1882, he was head skepherd on Westside Farm, near Brighton, states thus :—“ The farm extending along the seacoast, I caught great numbers of Wheatears during the season for taking them, which lasts from the middle of July to the end of August. The most I ever caught in one day was thirteen dczen, but we thought it a gocd day if we caught three or four dozen. We sold them to a poulterer at Brighton, who took all we could catch in @ season at 18d.adozen. From what I have heard from old shepherds, it cannot be doubted that they were caught in much greater numbers a century ago than of late. I have heard them speak of an immense number being taken in one day by a shepherd at East Dean, near Beachy Head. I think they said he took nearly a hundred dozen, so many that they could not thread them on crow-quills, in the usual manner, but he took off his round frock and made a sack of it to put them into, and his wife did the same with her petticoat. This must have happened when there was a great flight. Their numbers now are so decreased that some shepherds do not set up any coops, as it does not pay for the trouble.” Mr. Mark Antony Lower, in his ‘ Glimpses of our Sussex Ancestors,’ p. 96, gives the following amusing colloquy between two old shepherds :—‘ One was telling the other how he had known the time when in a single year from forty to fifty thousand sheep had been washed near the spot where they were sitting. ‘And now,’ he exclaimed, ‘there be none! .. . As to birding, he continued, in a still more doleful tone, ‘ birding is now all auver ; why I used to make quite a harvest of my birds; twelve pound a year I have made of my birds, and one year I made fourteen pound eight shillings. We sent them, you see, to Burthemson (Bright- helmstone—Brighton), and otherwhile we catched so many 60 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. that the Burthemsoners couldn’t take ’em all, and I myself have sent some to Tunbridge Wells. That was the time of dee, Old Boy, for shepherds.’ ” The song is rarely uttered except when the female is sitting close at hand, and the performer is generally perched on a stone, or some ant-hill overgrown with grass ; it is short and very pleasing, and is repeated every few minutes. On these occasions the bird is remarkably imperturbable, and I have heard it continue its song without showing the least concern while I have taken its loving partner from her nest in an old rabbit-hole. The nest is usually a mass of short pieces of the fern generally known in Sussex as Brake (Pferis aquilina, the Bracken of the North), and moss, wool, and rabbit’s fur. A rabbit’s hole being the only place in which I have found it, the nest has always been too much pulled to pieces for me to see what might have been its form before it was disturbed. To show how great a luxury these birds were formerly considered for the table we may look back to the time of Charles II., and I cannot refrain from giving the following extract from ‘Sussex Archeological Collections,’ vol. xi. (p. 82) 1859 :—“In the coat of arms of the Wilsons well do the Wheatears deserve a conspicuous quartering. The finest and fattest birds were found on the Downs about Beachy Head ; and, alas! in far greater numbers than is the case nowadays. They were a great card in Mr, Wilson’s hand, and he played it freely and ably. Who shall say whether his loyalty or his Wheatears had most to do with his elevation to the rank of baronet, which took place almost immediately after the Restoration ? Certain it is that Charles II. was exceedingly fond of them, and equally certain that Mr. Wilson supplied his Majesty very freely. “Dr. Burton, writing to his daughter, tells her he had WHEATEAR. 61 heard that at a dinner given by the Earl of Dorset to the King and the Duke of York, they had eaten twenty dozen of them.” Again (pp. 83, 84) “I heare,”’ writes the Earl of Dorset, “that my old friend Mr. Dr. Burton (the Rector of Broad- water) is nott at Bourne; but understanding you to dwell there, I am hopeful to procure the same friendly respects I was wont to receive from him. My request is, that when Wheatears are best, you would, for the short time they last, now and then oblige mee with some of them, I would not bee a beggar, as poore as I am, if they weare provisions to be bought for money in these parts ; but since you are there- abouts a great, if not sole master of them, I am very willing to be beholdinge to you, with assurance that, whensoever it is in my power, you shall finde me “ Your very affect® friend, “July 30, 1646.” “ Dorset.” Fuller, in his ‘ Worthies’ (vol. 1. p. 882), thus describes them :— Wheatears is a bird peculiar to this country, hardly found out of it. It is so called because fattest when wheat is ripe, whereon it feeds, being no bigger than a Lark, which it equals in the fineness of its flesh, but far exceedeth in the fatness thereof. . . . That palate man shall pass in silence, who, being seriously demanded his judgement con- cerning the abilities of a great lord, concluded him a man of very weak parts, because he once saw him, at a great feast, feed on chickens when there were Wheatears on the table’ Mr. Harting, in his ‘Summer Migrants,’ very aptly remarks “that Wheatear is a corruption from Whitear, the white around the ear being very conspicuous in spring plumage of this species, or else it must be derived from the season of its arrival,’ and this latter is suggested by Mr. A.C. Smith, in his ‘Birds of Wiltshire’ (p. 152), as the true origin, adding “ but then I submit that it cannot allude 62 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. to the wheat beg in ear, when it reaches us in the middle of March, but must refer to the old meaning of ear, ‘ to plough,’ and unquestionably the Wheatear does arrive wheu the ploughing and sowing of spring wheat is in operation.” The quantity of open grassland on the South Downs being so much diminished of late years by ploughing, the immense number of these birds which rest upon them on their pass- age from the inland counties must, from mere want of space, be compelled to resort in considerable numbers to the fallows, and they have thence obtained the name of Fallow- chat. I have never met with the Wheatear in the Weald in any number together, but only now and then two or three isolated birds, on some common or some open meadow on their first appearance, and again at the time of their de- parture. I have occasionally observed on the South Downs, though much more frequently in the birdstuffers’ shops, a considerably larger race of Wheatear than those ordinarily met with. Though it has never been admitted as a distinct species, it differs not only in size, but in its habit of perch- ing in trees when disturbed. The best published account of this race which I have met with is that of Mr. Booth, who, in his ‘ Rough Notes,’ vol. il. says thus :—“ In addition to the bird which arrives on our coast in March and early in April, a larger variety makes its appearance at a some- what laterdate. This form is seldom seen before the middle of April, and continues to land till the end of the first or second week in May. It is perfectly correct that the common Wheatear seldom, if ever, perches on trees or bushes, though the large form, if disturbed, usually makes its way to a commanding position either on a twig or a hedgerow, or even on the topmost branches of some lofty tree. . . . I never succeeded in discovering the nest of the larger Wheatear. I have, however, been assured, by persons . ~ AE re ; VW A Ae ; . We Wh Pe! re or ts eae 7 an 34 . — - = = aa set . ie BS i eo ae Mintern Bros. Chromo lith J.G.Keulemams de].et lith THE RUFOUS WARBLER. Aedon dé yiactodes. WHEATEAR.—RUFOUS WARBLER. 63 well acquainted with the variety, that these birds breed on the South Downs at times in rabbit-burrows, after the fashion of their smaller relatives. The eggs are described as being slightly marked with rusty blotches or spots. This information concerning their nesting I give for what it is worth, my own opinion being that this form only passes our islands on its way to the far North. . . . With regard to the habits of the two forms, they may be described as similar, with the exception of the far later date at which the larger form reaches our shores, and its predilection for perching on bushes or trees.”’ RUFOUS WARBLER. Aedon galactodes. Tue first example of this species obtained in England was shot by Mr. Swaysland, of Brighton, at Plumpton Bosthill, about six miles from that town, on the 16th of September, 1854. I quote from his letter to me, which I have before me: “ When I first saw it I took it for a cream-coloured Nightingale, but as I had no gun with me I had to go four miles for one; when I returned it was near 6 o’clock p.m. I found the bird about twenty yards from where I first saw it, in some furze. There were no trees within quarter of a mile of the place. The bird was very shy, and I was quite sure it was not a common Nightingale, as it had more of the appearance and flight of the young of the Red-backed Shrike, and when alighted in the furzebush it did not stop in till I came near to it, but took a circle round, about sixteen yards from the ground, back to the same place from whence I first drove it. It was difficult to get within thirty yards of it.” 64 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. I obtained the bird and sent it to Mr. Yarrell, from whom I received a letter stating it to be Sylvia galactodes; see ‘British Birds, vol. i. p. 356, where the words quoted are: “The bird, on dissection, proved to be a male, and would shortly have moulted, one or two of the young feathers of the primaries having made their appearance on each wing ; these are darker than the old ones. The feathers also on the back and tail, especially the central ones of the latter, are much worn.” Respecting this bird I have no further personal knowledge, neither have I ever heard of any other specimen being obtained in this country. I recorded it in the ‘ Zoologist,’ p- 4511. GREAT REED-WARBLER. Acrocephalus arundinaceus. AutHovucH the specimen was not obtained, I venture to insert the following taken from the private notes of Mr. Jeffery :—* 1885, July 26. Saw a bird in Ratham garden, which I feel satisfied was the Thrush-like Warbler of Yarrell, S. turdoides of Gould’s ‘ Birds of Europe.’ The note was harsh and guttural, and reminded me of the Ring Ousel. It had also another note, a high-toned shriek, I had a good view of it close, and noticed positively that the tail was wedge-shaped, size rather larger than the Nightingale, which bird it much resembled in colour.” REED-WARBLER, 65 REED-WARBLER. Acrocephalus streperus. Tuts little bird arrives late in April, and as a species is somewhat local. It is seldom found far from water, though the nest has occasionally occurred at some considerable dis- tance from it. Soon after its arrival it betakes itself to the reed-beds of our river- banks, or to those ditches in the marshy levels through which those rivers generally flow for a few miles before reaching the sea; there it forms its nest among the reeds in such a manner as to be supported by two or three, or three or four, reed-stems carefully woven into its structure, and as the reeds are constantly swayed to and fro by the winds, it is constructed of unusual depth, by which the eggs are not liable to be thrown out. The Cuckoo very frequently selects the Reed-Warbler as a foster-mother to its young. Its food consists of insects and small mollusca. It is rather silent during the day, only occasionally uttering a sort of chatter, but after sunset it suddenly breaks out into song and continues singing incessantly throughout the night. It may be met with in suitable spots about most of the large reed-frimged ponds in the county, particularly some of those in St. Leonard’s Forest, and had at one time a favourite haunt on the Salts Farm, not far west of the old bridge at Shoreham, over the Adur, but on the opening of the railway the birds forsook the place. It is still abundant on the banks of the Arun, from Burpham to Amberley, though about the latter place it is becoming less numerous owing to the draining of the marshes. 66 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. SEDGE-W ARBLER. Acrocephalus schenobenus. Arrivinc in April, and spreading immediately over the county, it betakes itself to some sedgy willow-plot, or to the borders of some ditch or brook overgrown by aquatic herb- age, or even to the banks of ponds and pits. Here, among stunted hawthorn or other bushes, browsed down by cattle or nibbled by rabbits, it frequently builds its nest. I have more than once found it in a bean-field by the water, where the crop was bound down by the white convolvulus, aptly called in Sussex, and probably in other counties, the “ bind- weed.” A field of beans, if near any pond or brook, has certainly a peculiar attraction for this bird, and it is fond of sitting and singing among them, probably because it is there well concealed and can find a plentiful supply of aphides and such like congenial food. It is not so much attached to reed-beds as the preceding species, and not being so much exposed to the winds, its nest 1s more open and not so deep. It keeps up a constant chattering by day and during the greater part of the night, and, should it be a short time sileut, its song will be at once resumed should a stone be thrown into its place of con- cealment. It not unfrequently sings on the wing while mounting up to a considerable height on to a willow or other tree near the waterside, rising to its perch with a quivering flight, and descending again to the thick herbage, very much in the manner of the Tree-Pipit, when, after rising in the air, it returns to the highest poimt of a tree or bush. Like most of its congeners it leaves the country in ‘September, in the early part of which month I have often flushed a considerable J.G.Keulemans, del.et lith Mintern Bros. Chromo lith THE AQUATIC WARBLER. Acrocephalus aquaticus SEDGE-WARBLER.—AQUATIC WARBLER. 67 number of them, while shooting in the turnips on the north side of, and in close proximity to, tne South Downs, Mr. Jeffery, in his private notes, states that it imitates the song of the Willow- Warbler. AQUATIC WARBLER. Acrocephalus aquaticus. Tue first example of this species which had then been re- cognized in England, and the only one which has yet been recorded as having occurred in this county, was shot by Mr. Pratt, of Brighton, on the 19th of October, 1853, from whom I obtained it. Though I took it at first to be a very bright example of the Sedge Warbler, I was never perfectly satisfied about it, and on showing it to Professor Newton he at once pronounced it to be the above species, and most kindly exhibited it at a meeting of the Zoological Society (vide Proc. Zool. Soc. 1865, p. 210). Till Professor Newton saw the example in my collection this species had never been included in any work on British Ornithology. I confess, therefore, that I did not know what it was. Its habits are, doubtless, very similar to those of the preceding species, but, as I have never even seen the bird alive ,I can say nothing of them from personal knowledge. In the ‘Transactions of the Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists’ Society’ for 1871 and 1872, Mr, J. H. Gurney remarks: ‘‘ I cannot help thinking that the Aquatic Warbler often occurs in this country. . . . There can be no doubt that the figure in Hunt’s ‘ British Birds’ was taken from one in all probability obtained in Norfolk, but there is no letterpress to accompany it.” F2 68 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. GRASSHOPPER-WARBLER. Acrocephalus nevius. Tus, like most of our immigrants, arrives in the county in April, departing in September. It is by no means uncom- mon, and, provided there is sufficient concealment, it does not seem at all particular in the choice of its locality; neither does the immediate vicinity of water appear to be requisite. For its nesting purposes, however, it chooses some tangled hedgerow, or some spot in a thick furze-field, where the ground is overgrown with long grass and close-growing herbage, and the nest is most carefully concealed. It 1s fond of placing it in a wheel-rut close to a hedge and over- grown with weeds, and when approaching or leaving it, is eareful not to show itself within forty or fifty yards of it, which makes it extremely difficult to discover the nest, the rut being often full of brambles and rough bushes. As a proof of the difficulty of finding the nest, I am quite sure that one pair at least have, for the last forty years, bred within a hundred yards of my house, but I have sought it in vain. Besides the places I have mentioned, this bird frequently builds in marshy spots covered with sedge or flags. I have never found the nest myself, but my son brought me the eggs from one he found some years ago in St. Leonard’s Forest. That the bird is so little known is hardly to be wondered at, as even its trilling note would not strike an ordinary observer as having anything to do with a bird, and might easily be supposed to proceed from a cricket or grasshopper, and should he catch sight of it in the cover, its movements are so much like those of a mouse, that he might easily mis- take itfor one. It is, moreover, frequently a difficult matter GRASSHOPPER-WARBLER.—DARTFORD WARBLER. 69 to ascertain from whence the sound proceeds, which may perhaps be accounted for by the habit which the bird has while uttering its note of turning its head in all directions. I once watched a Grasshopper-Warbler from a seat in a summerhouse, not more than eight or ten yards distant from it, and was surprised to see that, while pouring forth its note, its mouth appeared to be wide open, and I could not detect the slightest movement of either mandible, but it might have been too rapid for my eye to follow. During all this time it kept up a constant quivering with its wings. DARTFORD WARBLER. Melizophilus undatus. Tuts bird is found locally in many parts of the South Downs, where it is resident. I have also frequently seen it when shooting in turnips near the northern slope of those hills, and have traced it from Dover to the Land’s End. It is occasionally found on furzy commons further in- land. It is not so abundant in the locality named as it formerly was, partly owing to the nests having of late years been taken in considerable numbers, and to heavy snows having broken down the furze. Mr. Knox mentions a nest having been taken on the 3rd of May, 1844, on the “ Broyle,” near Chichester. In the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 3113) Mr. Ellman gives an in- teresting account of the manners of the Dartford Warbler, and mentions a female shot by him on the 12th of October, and a male, on the 7th of November, 1851. Mr. Wilson states, in the same journal (p. 6606), that in the neighbour- hood of Worthing, a male and female were taken in the summer of 1853, a male in 1857, and young in 1858. At 70 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX p- 59, s.s., Mr. Booth writes of the same bird, that it gene- rally feeds its young on the bodies of a large yellow moth, and that in winter, he has severa: umes met with it among stunted thorn-bushes and straggling furze, on the beach between Eastbourne and Pevensey. Mr. Harting mentions that he shot a male specimen on Bepton Hill, February 16th, 1863. Mr. Jeffery also ob- served a pair on Heyshot Common, near Midhurst (see ‘Zoologist’ for 1881, p. 49); and Mrs. Merrifield, in her ‘Sketch of the Natural History of Brighton,’ speaks of the Dartford Warbler as a very scarce bird (pp. 167, 168). In a letter from Mr. Ellman, dated April 29th, 1852, he informs me that young Dartford Warblers can fly well, and that instead of being a late breeder, it is the earliest he knows of. He says :—‘‘ Yesterday I saw thirty or forty full-grown young ones, but with the tail-feathers only an inch in Jength, and the bill only half grown.” He further says that he has found these birds in considerable numbers on parts of the South Downs about Lewes and Seaford. T am not aware that it has any provincial name in Sussex, but in Dorsetshire, on the heaths about Bournemouth, it is known by the cowboys by the remarkable title of “The French Blackbird,’ and indeed it is not inapplicable, for few, if any, birds that are not black, look darker when on the wing. WHITETHROAT. Sylvia rufa. Tus species makes its first appearance in April, but it is not till May is pretty well advanced that it arrives in any considerable numbers. It is then in very bright plumage, WHITETHROAT.—LESSER WHITETHROAT, 71 having the breast almost pink. After the breeding-season it becomes much duller, assuming a somewhat faded ap- pearance. It frequents hedgerows and plantations, where it may often be heard and seen, as it has a habit of rising suddenly a foot or two above the top of a hedge, singing loudly, jerking its tail, flitting about for a moment, and then disappearing again into its thickest parts. It feeds on insects, though, from its great partiality to the rows of pea-sticks in the kitchen garden, it is generally accused of doing great injury to the crop, and devouring great quantities of peas, whereas it is engaged in the search of aphides and caterpillars. It does, however, take a fair share of currants, and delights in raspberries. It generally nests in the roughest brambles near the ground, and from its being partial to thick beds of nettles, it has obtained the name of Nettlecreeper. The Whitethroat composes its nest of dead grass, and is specially fond of using the stalks of the common white Galium, generally known as lady’s bedstraw, lining it very slightly with horsehair. LESSER WHITETHROAT. Sylvia curruca. In the Weald this is less abundant than the former species, though all along the coast it even exceeds it in numbers. It arrives about the middle of April, and usually remains with us till the end of September, feeding on insects and various berries, particularly those of the ivy, the elder, and the privet. It is not so noisy as the preceding, its notes, though abundant, being pitched in a lower key. If any one approaches it when it has young both parents show the 72 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. greatest alarm, flitting from branch to branch, and uttering unceasingly a note resembling the syllable “ churr,” repeated over and over again with the greatest rapidity. The nest is formed of the very finest bents of dried stalks, generally of umbelliferous plants, with the hairs of horses and cattle, and is placed in the middle of the thickest bushes. GARDEN-WARBLER. Sylvia salicaria. Tux Garden-Warbler arrives late, and does not make itself heard in the Weald earlier than the end of April. Itisa very shy and retiring bird, being much more often heard than seen. In my own neighbourhood it generally, at first, conceals itself in low bushes in copses and hedgerows, or in shrubberies, and it is not till it has been some time in the country that its notes are heard from the tops of the oaks and other high trees. In fact I do not think it is heard much before the hen is sitting on its nest. From that time it continues to sing from the tops of the trees till the end of July or the beginning of August. It is very fond of fruit, for which it enters our gardens, and pays special attention to the cherries, whence it has obtained the name of “ Cherry- sucker ;” it feeds also on many other berries, especially those of the ivy, the privet, and theelder. It builds a rather slight-looking nest, though firmly put together, and consist- ing of the lightest dried grass and goose-grass, lined with cow’s hair and a little wool. To my mind, its song, though often much more continuous, is not so attractive as that of the Blackcap, nor does it con- clude with the clear flute-like notes of that species. The GARDEN-WARBLER.—BLACKCAP. 73 editor of Vol. I. of the 4th edition of Yarrell’s B. B. informs us that it was first made known as a native of this country by Willughby. BLACKCAP. Sylvia atricapilla. Tue Blackcap, the Wheatear, and the Chiffchaff are, I think, the earliest of our immigrants to herald the glad tidings of the approach of spring. I have several times heard the very pleasing note of the Blackcap as early as the Ist of March. Like the Garden-Warbler it is very fond of fruits and berries, and it appears to have the same predi- lection for cherries, privet, and elderberries. The nest also is very similar, but the bird is much more familiar, and often places it in shrubberies, where it seems rather to court its destruction by selecting some loose and open-growing bush such as the snowberry, in one of which, in my own garden, a nest was built for four consecutive seasons, presumably by the same pair of birds, or by the advice of a survivor of a former tenant of the nest. I have not noticed that it betakes itself to higher branches of the trees, but it appears rather to prefer the lower shrubs and bushes. It leaves the country early in September. Mr. Jeffery remarks, in his private notes, that the Blackcap feeds on ripe figs, the berries of the Daphne mezereum, and those of the mountain-ash, which it swallows whole. 74 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. ORPHEAN WARBLER. Sylvia orphea. Tue only reason to suppose that this species has ever occurred in Sussex, is the statement made by Mr. Gould, on Mr. Howard Saunders’s authority, and repeated in the fourth edition of Yarrell’s B. B. (vol. i. p. 424), to the effect that eggs believed to have belonged to it have been taken at East Grinstead. WOOD-W REN. Phylloscopus sibilatria. Griipert Waite seems to haye been the first to clearly dis- tinguish this species, though it is stated in Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. 1. pp. 386, 428, note) that Johnson, of Brignall, in Yorkshire, had described it to Ray. It is a summer im- migrant, somewhat local, arriving in the first or second week in May, when, after passing over the Downs and the clays of the Weald, and remaining a few days among the high trees on its route, it settles its abode in the large woods of beech and oak in the dry or sandy districts ; Stanmer Park, however, though on the chalk, is one of its favourite haunts. It is particularly abundant in St. Leonard’s Forest, where its loud sibilant note may be heard in all directions, keeping up the while a constant shivering of its wings. It has also, when the female is sitting, another note, resembling the syllable “chee” three or four times repeated. It lives entirely on insects, occasionally capturing them on the wing. It builds its nest on the ground, generally among drifts of WOOD-W REN—WILLOW-WREN. 75 dead leaves, and under the shelter of a tuft of herbage or a small bush. Its nest is constructed of dry grass and moss, with dead leaves, and lined with hair, feathers being never used, and is generally artfully concealed, but easily dis- covered when the female is sitting, by watching the male, who is serenading her from a neighbouring tree, and after a time descends in a somewhat parachute-like style, and either feeds his spouse or takes her place upon the nest. This being oval, domed, with an opening at the side, has in some districts given this species the title of “Oven Bird.” It has been shot as early as the lst of May, and departs in September. WILLOW-WREN. Phylloscopus trochilus. Tus is a regular spring visitant, arriving in little parties sometimes as early as the second week in April, and now and then continuing to do so till as late as the second week in May. Immediately on its reaching the coast it proceeds to the hedges and gardens, and is soon very abundant all through the county, and its short, low, and somewhat mo- notonous little song may be heard in every direction. It feeds entirely on insects, especially on aphides, and is very nseful and diligent in its search of them among our roses and other cultivated plants. It does not frequent the large timber woods, but prefers those in which the underwood is thick and close. It places its nest on the ground, or on the weedy and overgrown edge of a ditch, in some tuft of grass, sheltered, in most cases, by a thick bramble or the coarse herbage itself, constructing it of dry grass and moss, or 76 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. occasionally of dry fern. The main body leaves us in Sep- tember, though in a few instances the bird has been known to remain as late as December. CHIFFCHAFF. Phylloscopus collybita. In its habits, locality, and food this species is precisely similar to the last, but in its mode of nesting there is a slight difference, as this bird, though sometimes building on the ground, more frequently places its nest in a low bush, or on an ivy-covered stump or thick bush, or in a climbing rose from eighteen inches to four or five feet from the ground. It often collects a considerable mass of dead leaves and moss, or white lichen, looking as if accidentally lodged there, and, like the last-named species, always lines it well with feathers. I am not aware that it has any other note than that from which it derives its name. GOLDEN-CRESTED WEEN. Regulus cristatus. Turs little bird is resident, receiving considerable additions from abroad, arriving for the most part upon the east coast in the autumn. Some, however, it would appear, cross the channel for the coast of Sussex, a number having been occa- sionally taken in an exhausted state on board the Brighton fishing-boats, as much as forty miles out at sea. Two, both males, which were so taken came into my possession. I once saw a very large number of these little birds which, FIRE-CRESTED WREN. 77 after a heavy gale from the S.E., had been thrown ashore a little east of Yarmouth, in Norfolk. ! Were it not now well known that it crosses the sea it would appear almost incredible, as in its usual haunts it rarely flies more than a few yards. It is a confiding and gentle little bird, frequenting our plantations, especially where there are fir-trees, particularly the spruce, on the underside of a branch of which it often suspends its nest. It sometimes, however, makes use of a lichen-covered larch for that purpose, as well as the juniper, Virginian cedar, spruce, or yew. ‘The nest is formed very neatly and compactly of very fine moss, thoroughly worked together with spiders’ webs and wool, and lined with the finest hair and small feathers. I once found one on the flat surface of a bough of a cedar, sunk in between two of the lateral branches. Its habits partake a good deal of those of the Willow- Wren and the Tits, and it often accompanies these birds in the winter in little parties as they flit through the under- woods from bush to bush, or tree to tree. I suppose that many of these little birds congregate towards the coast with a view of again passing the sea, as they are certainly much more abundant in the winter than in the summer months. FIRE-CRESTED WREN. Regulus ignicapillus. THIs species appears in this country in small numbers and at very irregular periods. I have never heard of its breeding in the county, and I do not know of any instance of its having been obtained later than April. Its habits and manners are very similar to those of the Golden-crested Wren. 78 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. On November 5th, 1843, a specimen was brought to a Brighton birdstuffer by a little girl, who said she had found it dead in a garden close by ; this was a very handsome male. A female was caught alive in December 1846, in a shrubbery at Lancing, with the lantern and bell. Early in November 1852, a specimen was killed with a stone near Worthing, and on the 10th of the same month in 1854, a male was found dead at Shoreham. These three specimens are now in my possession. In March 1854, Mr. Dennis informed me that a Fire-crest had been brought to him which had flown into a window of a cottage at Seaford. It was put into a cage, but was very restless, and lived only a day. In the ‘ Zoologist’ Mr. Ellman writes that he shot a Fire- crest on the 30th of March, 1849, in the garden of Mr. Honysett at Rye (p. 2418), and Mr. Potter records (on p- 2766) that a friend of his, while walking under some fir- trees overhanging a pond in the neighbourhood of Lewes, caught one in his hand as it was running on a fence in the manner of the Common Wren, January 30th, 1850. In p. 8446 of the volume for 1863, a Fire-crested Wren is recorded, which was captured on board a collier lying off St. Leonards-on-Sea, on the 29th of December of that year. This was about a mile from the shore. In p. 9468 of that journal for 1865, one is stated to have been obtained near Plumpton by Mr. Swaysland on the 24th of December in the year before. In the volume of the ‘ Zoologist ’ for 1869 (p. 1518) one is recorded, without date, as having been obtained near Brighton, and in that for 1858 (p. 225) it is stated that one was caught on the 4th of April while flutter- ing against a window in North Street in that town; and on the same page two more specimens are recorded as having been killed near St. Leonards-on-Sea, and offered to Mr. J. H. Gurney, who added one of them to his collection. FIRE-CRESTED WREN.—WREN. 79 One is mentioned by Mr. Jeffery, in his private notes, as having been obtained at Fishbourne on the 21st of October, 1863. TROGLODYTIDZ. WREN. Troglodytes parvulus. Tuts little bird, so often celebrated in our nursery-rhymes, and in them so curiously associated with the Robin, may be found in every part of the county, in the shrubbery, in the fagot-stack, in the cow-house, and in all the outbuildings of the garden or the farmyard; and the fear of man seems never to have been impressed on it. It may also be seen among the furze of the South Downs, on the wildest heaths of the open country, or in the closest hedgerows of the more cultivated districts; in fact, wherever it is likely to find a chrysalis or a spider there is the Wren. Insects are un- doubtedly its principal food, but I have myself seen it pick- ing off and eating red currants, and, when a boy, have often caught it in brick traps baited with nothing but wheat, but whether that was the object of its visit I cannot say. Con- sidering the size of the performer, the loudness of its note is perfectly astonishing, and I well remember being abso- lutely startled by one of these birds suddenly bursting into soug as I was passing a fagot-stack at twelve o’clock on a pitch-dark night, while I was walking with the patrol during the agricultural riots of 1831, im the neighbourhood of Chichester. Few birds vary more in their choice of a place to build in; but perhaps the aforesaid outhouses may be mentioned as 80 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. most frequently selected, where, in a hole in the inside of a thatched roof, it forms a most conspicuous nest, externally of green moss, and internally of feathers and fine hair. I once found a nest near Henfield, against an ivy-covered oak, the outside of which was entirely composed of the skele- tonized leaves of Epimedium, but was lined as usual. As this plant does not grow wild at all in the south of England, and I have never seen it in a cottage-garden, the Wren could nowhere have obtained the leaves but from my father’s celebrated botanic garden, at least half a mile distant. I have a drawing of a Wren’s nest which was built in a bunch of old stirrups, which was hanging from a beam in a blacksmith’s shop at Preston, near Brighton, and the birds succeeded in bringing up their young, notwithstanding that the hammers of the workmen were frequently passing within a few inches of them. I think the persecution of the Wren, in Sussex, is a thing of the past; but in my younger days it was a regular institution to hunt it at Christmas time, when numbers of boys, on both sides of the hedges, amused themselves by beating the bushes and throwing at the Wren whenever it showed itself, with knobbed sticks about eighteen inches long, called ‘ libbets.”’ Many authors have mentioned the habit this bird has of beginning to build a number of nests which it never makes use of, and of roosting in little companies in holes in thatch, haystacks, and such situations. In severe weather I once took nine of them from an old nest in the inside of the thatch of a hovel. In some parts, especially in E. Sussex, it is thought unlucky to touch the nest. Strange as it may appear, the Wren has been occasionally found on the light- houses around the coast ; though I am told that, compared with other birds, the appearance of the Wren at “lights ” is very rare. TREE-CREEPER, 81 CERTHIIDA. TREE-CREEPER. Certhia familiaris. Tuts is by no means an uncommon bird, though nowhere numerous, and appears to be strongly attached to particular localities, and is generally solitary or in pairs ; it is never found far from old timber, as that of the old orchard or the woods. It is a lively little creature, in constant motion, and spends most of its time in diligently searching for in- sects in the cracks and crevices of the trees, among which the old oak and Scotch fir appear to be its favourites. On their trunks it climbs with a running jerking motion, chiefly in an upward direction, and proceeding spirally from the bottom of the tree to the top, in which it is greatly assisted by its stiff tail-feathers. It never appears to descend the tree, but on reaching the top flies rapidly to the bottom of another, and proceeds again as before. From its activity in climbing, it is generally known as the “ Tree-climmer.” As the time of pairing approaches, it utters a rather loud and very shrill little song, and chooses for its nest some place where the bark has been rent from the body of the tree, and is seleft as to afford room for it between it and the bark. It is generally composed of pieces of straw and grass or fine sticks, and is lined with any soft material. In my own garden it has for several years placed its nest on the side of an old chicken-house, between the boarding and spruce-fir bark which had been nailed on but loosened by the wind. Part of the wall of this building had been covered with asphalted felt which had partially decayed, and of this I saw the bird collecting the fibres and carrying them to its G 82 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. nest, notwithstanding that they smelt very strongly and were so black that I afterwards saw the seven eggs greatly discoloured by them. Ina similar situation at the back of an old bee- house was a nest, the outside of which was composed of the dried flower-stalks of the Portugal laurel, and lined entirely with the cotton-like substance of the catkin of the balsam poplar. At Henfield there was a nest in a very singular situation, having been placed in a hole caused by the partial decay of the post, and falling out of the mortar, by the side of the principal door of a cottage where people were constantly passing in and out. I was told that for several years this place had been made use of by Tits, but that this was the first instance of a Creeper taking possession, and that the birds had all been protected by the occupiers of the cottage. The Creeper is resident and very hardy, accompanying in winter the parties of Tits in their excursions through the woods. SITTIDZ. NUTHATCH. Sitta cwesia. A comMon inhabitant of woods and orchards wherever there is large timber, where it breeds in holes, reducing the open- ing when needful, to its own size, by plastering with clay. It will take freely to boxes put up for the purpose. In March 1871, I placed some rustic nest-boxes in trees near my house. The next week two were taken possession of by as many pairs cf Nuthatches, and in June, or the beginning NUTHATCH. 83 of July (I foolishly made no notes), on visiting one of the boxes, I found only two young birds nearly ready to fly. I took the box down, brought it into the house, and left it on the hall-table with the doors shut, for about an hour. I had not then seen or heard anything of the old birds. I then started in my dogcart, with the box between my feet to keep it steady, for Henfield, 44 miles distant. When halfway there I saw a Nuthatch fly over the box close to my knees, and it chirped to the young birds; but I did not hear them answer, nor had I heard the young utter any note at all. I delivered the box and birds to my sister, who put them, box and all, into a cage under a verandah outside her bedroom window. The next morning she saw an old Nut- hatch feeding the young ones, and the day after there were two old ones there, and these continued to visit the cage for a week or two, sometimes in the verandah, sometimes in the bedroom. The young birds became perfectly tame; but some months afterwards (my sister being from home) one was found dead, entangled between some wire and the bottom of the cage. The gardener, thmking to please her, caught a wild Nuthatch and put it into the cage, when it immediately killed the remaining young one. How the old birds found out that the young were in the dogeart, after having been an hour shut up in my hall, has always been a puzzle to me. I thought at first the rest of the young had probably escaped up the tree, which was covered with ivy; if so, it is still more strange that the old birds should have followed the others 44 miles, and I think it would be too much to suppose that the birds would main- tain both portions of their family at so great a distance apart. In the month of September I had the pleasure of driving my friend Mr. Harting to Henfield, and found that the old birds still continued to feed the young, which were in a G2 84 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. large cage hung in the verandah. We watched for some time behind some shrubs, and saw both old birds bring food to the young in the cage. This somewhat curious circum- stance is recorded in ‘The Field’ of October 4th, 1878. When in confinement the Nuthatch is rather given to killing small birds if put into the same cage. It is also most pertinacious in its attempts to escape. When a boy I have more than once caught it in a brick- trap and, when left too long, found that it had ground the bill off about half itslength. It is always in motion, running with equal facility in all directions, and is as much at home on the under as ou the upper surface of a bough, or climbing upwards or downwards on the main stem. Its note is a cheery, and remarkably clear whistle, extremely variable, and often so powerful that it may be heard from a long distance. It betakes itself in winter to the woods, and particularly to those of the oak, in the crevices of the bark of which it fixes the nut or seed which it wishes to crack, in the per- formance of which operation, it appears to throw its whole weight on its object, and on having extracted the kernel, it often leaves the shell so firmly fixed that it remains for months; and after having deliberately picked the kernel to pieces, it flies off in search of some other tempting morsel, such as the body of the common chafer, which is the favourite food of the young. The nest is almost always composed of dead leaves, particularly of the oak or beech, or, where obtainable, the laminze of the inner bark of the Scotch fir, among which the eggs may be often found scattered about, so that on visiting it one would suppose that no eggs had been laid; but a day or two before the bird begins to sit on them, they are carefully placed together. Six eggs, or seven, are the usual number for the first nest, though on a few occasions I have found eight. In two instances I have seen this bird entering and leaving a hole in a stone wall, in NUTHATCH.—GREAT TITMOUSE. 85 which it evidently was making its nest. The Nuthatch is the only bird I have ever seen attempt, and succeed in, carrying away two grains of maize at once; of which, how- ever, I do not see the advantage, as it invariably drops one while picking the other to pieces. It is also very fond of oats and fat, and I have watched it digging away at the horseflesh which has been hung up for the dogs. It will drive off any small bird which may attempt to share with it either that, or anything. which has been laid out to feed the birds in winter. It is very amusing to watch its manceuvres should one hang out a tallow candle near a window. It is particularly fond of peas and maize, but the kernels of nuts, and the stones of the yew-berry, and acorns, as well as insects, of which it is constantly in search, form its favourite food. PARIDA, GREAT TITMOUSE. Parus major. Tuts species is very common in all the wooded parts of the county. It is resident, and may be found in most of our gardens and shrubberies. It feeds largely on insects, and is also fond of flesh of any kind, as well as of various seeds, which, if of any size, it holds with its foot on a branch and picks to pieces, without fixing it in the manner of the Nut- hatch. It is a powerful bird for its size, and will occasionally kill other birds, and having done so, generally, in the first place, picks out the brains*. It is particularly fond of the * Perhaps only when in confinement. 86 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. seed of the sunflower, as well as of maize and oats, as are all the true Paride which are found in this country. Its note in spring is very variable, at one time resembling the sharpening of a saw, while at another it may be ex- pressed by the three words “Set your beans,” with a stress on the first word. It builds sometimes in a hole in the ground or close to it, in a stub* of underwood, or a hole in a tree or wall. I have frequently seen it in the cistern of an unused pump, or in a flower-pot, im one of which, in a very open place, seven young birds were found perfectly dead from the heat of the sun. When building in such situations, it covers the whole of the base with a mass of hair, wool, worsted, &c. felted together, and generally forms the nest in one corner away from the centre. BLUE TITMOUSE. Parus ceruleus. Tue Blue Titmouse is the commonest of the genus, fre- quenting all parts, except the open heights, or the marshy levels. It is very familiar and very bold, though not par- ticularly pugnacious. It will, however, hiss violently should a finger or stick be introduced into its nesting-place. If handled, it bites with such ferocity that, among the bird- nesting boys, it has obtained the elegant title of “ Billy Biter.” Its nest is placed in similar situations to that of the Great Titmouse. There has been more than one in- stance of its choosing a letter-box for this purpose. Mr. Booth mentions that a pair had for several years made use * Stub signifies in Sussex an old stump, which has been often cut down, from which many new shoots have arisen. BLUE TITMOUSE.—COAL-TITMOUSE. 87 of ahole in a lamp-post in Montpellier Road, Brighton, and, notwithstanding the constant traffic, brought off their young in safety. It is largely represented when a number of small birds are making their excursions together through the woods in winter. In the spring it picks to pieces the green fruit- buds, and is hated by the gardener, though probably it does less damage than would have been done by the caterpillar of which it is in search, COAL-TITMOUSE. Parus ater. THouGH this species is by no means rare in the Weald, it is far less abundant than either of the preceding, and in my own garden I have not very often seen it, yet in July 1889 a nearly fully fledged young one was found dead in a box I had placed in a tree ; and in the winter of the same year two of these birds were eating the seeds of an Arbor vite close to my dining-room window, and pecking at some bacon which I had hung up init. I have seen it busily feeding on the seeds of the cornflower (Centaurea cyanus). It is very partial to fir-trees, and is certainly more common on the sand than on the clay. I have never met with it in the thickest parts of the forest, though I have occasionally seen it on the outer trees. In the neighbourhood of Chichester it is rather common, as also on the sands, and old fir-trees of Parham. ‘The favourite place for its nest is in the de- serted hole of a mole, or a mouse, at the foot of a tree; but it sometimes places it in a hole in the trunk of a tree at some distance from the ground. At Henfield, a pair brought 88 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. up their young in a box over a verandah some fifteen feet in height. Though insects are probably its principal food, I have never seen or heard of its doimg any mischief by searching for them among fruit-buds. It feeds also on various berries. Its note is difficult to describe and varies considerably ; it is shriller than that of the other Titmice. Moss, with short hair and wool, are felted together in the structure of its nest. I have also found rabbit’s fur, and sometimes, but not always, quantities of feathers, whence, in common with the Long-tailed Tit, it is often called the Featherpoke. It is, however, more generally known as the Ground Tit. Mr. Jeffery mentions a nest at the bottom of a post nearly two feet below the surface. MARSH-TITMOUSE. Parus palustris. Why this species has been thus named I cannot tell, as it does not by any means, if at all, affect marshy places; and although it is somewhat partial to the willow when in cat- kin, and therefore attracting numerous insects, I find that it frequents those species of Salix which grow on land which is high and dry, quite as much as those by the river-side. On the high ground in my own neighbourhood it is far commoner than the Coal-Titmouse, and nearly as often met with as its blue relative. Its food is the same as that of the preceding species ; and it is very tame, as I can state from my own observation, having often watched it picking to pieces an oat, or a grain of maize, within a few feet of me. [t is not so usual a tenant of my boxes as the Great and the Blue Titmouse, nesting among the thick stems of the under- MARSH-TITMOUSE.—LONG-TAILED TITMOUSE, 89 wood close to the ground, or in holes in stumps but little above it, in which it places a neatly built nest on chips of wood, composed of hair and fur, and generally lined with down of the willow, or the catkin of the balsam poplar. It has a lively note in the spring, but its commonest call is well expressed in Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. i. p. 496) by the syllables “ peh! peh!” quickly repeated. LONG-TAILED TITMOUSE. Acredula caudata. FREQUENTING principally the woods, copses, and rough hedge- rows in the enclosed portions of the county, this species is not uncommonly met with, though it does not often visit our shrubberies and gardens, except in the breeding-season, During the rest of the year it roams about in little parties of ten or a dozen, flitting through the underwoods, and perching on them, in every possible position, as often as not head downwards, and uttermg a constant chirping note as if to keep the little band together, meantime progressing steadily through the woods and copses, searching for insects, which seem to be its only food. Its well known and very remarkable nest is generally placed in a thick bush, and is composed externally of lichens firmly woven into a compact mass with spiders’ webs, most artfully blended with the colour of its surroundings, and lined with a great profusion of feathers. It is, however, not unfrequently built at the divarication of two nearly parallel lichen-covered stems of a tree, and sometimes as high as twenty or thirty feet from the ground, and so con- cealed that it is hardly likely to be discovered unless the 90 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. bird betrays it on returning to or leaving the nest. It occasionally lays as many as fifteen or even twenty eggs. The male and female both roost in the nest. Its little parties generally keep to themselves through the summer, but in winter it often associates with the other insect-feeding birds. PANURID, BEARDED 'TITMOUSE. Panurus biarmicus. Tus species is entirely confined to reedy and marshy places. In his ‘ Ornithological Dictionary, published in 1802, Montagu writes that he had met with a party of five, doubtless a brood of the year, near Winchelsea, among the reeds close to the sea-shore. One of them, which he pro- cured, was in its nestling feathers, but though he took pains to find the nest he was unsuccessful. I have received it from Amberley ; and in September 1844 I saw two females which, as well as several others of both sexes, had been shot there, and it has since been found breeding there. It is, however, much less common than it formerly was, in con- sequence of the very large tract of marsh, known as the Wildbrook, having been drained. It also bred in some reedy ditches near Lancing until disturbed by the railway. Mr. Knox mentions a pair obtained near Amberley, and another pair at Fishbourne, near Chichester, but gives no date. Mr. Jeffery states that it is not now to be found there, the reeds being also gone. WAXWING. 91 AMPELIDZ. WAXWING. Ampelis garrulus. A RARE visitant, chiefly in severe winters. On January 12th, 1850, a beautiful male was shot in West Grinstead Park, and brought to Sir W. W. Burrell; another was shot in a brickfield near Horsham, apparently a female or immature bird. I have one in my own collection which was shot near Hastings. Mr. Dennis, writing to me on July 4th, 1850, mentions that one was seen at Denton during last January, feeding on the berries of a Pyracanthus roughly trained against a house, and that he was informed that one had been shot near New- haven, while *eeding on a similar shrub in a cottage garden ; that he saw one at Lewes, which was killed at Tarring Neville, and two more obtained near Hailsham. TI have also seen two which were shot in Ashburnham Park, and one at Albourne; all three in 1844. Mr. Knox mentions two which were shot in a garden at Newtimber, feeding on hawthorn berries, that one was killed at Beeding, and another near Shoreham. In the ‘ Zoologist ’ (p. 2768) a specimen, shot at Piddinghoe, is recorded by Mr. Ellman. There appears to have been a considerable incursion of these birds throughout England in that year, 1850 (op. cit. p. 6605). Both nest and eggs were wholly unknown, until, in June 1856, they were discovered by one Ludwig Matthias Knob- lock, Mr. Wolley’s most trusted follower, at Sadio, on the . Kittila River, im Kemi Lapmark (see Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds,’ vol. i. p. 529). 92 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. MOTACILLIDA. PIED WAGTAIL. Motacilla lugubris. Enormous numbers of this species make their appearance on the coast throughout the whole of March, and smaller parties continue to arrive till the middle of April. In March I have seen the beach, between Brighton and Shoreham, covered with them in the early mornings, though a few hours after, very few, or none, will be met with, as they pro- ceed at once to their inland quarters, where they become common throughout the county, and form one of the most sprightly and elegant ornaments of our lawns, gardens, and fields, where the new arrivals are readily distinguished from those which have remained with us during the winter, by the purity and brightness of their plumage. This Wagtail, soon after dispersing through the county, begins to build its nest, choosing some place in the neighbourhood of buildings, such as the thatch of a haystack, a hole in an ornamental stump in a garden, or in a wall or bank, or perhaps placing it on the larger ends of sticks in a fagot-stack, and constructs it of moss and fine roots, lining it with hair. After it has reared its young, it betakes itself with them to the meadows, especially delighting in those which have been recently flooded, where no doubt it finds abundance of its insect food and small freshwater mollusks. In such places, I think I may say that I have seen them in hundreds, and at this period the young have the part of the forehead and cheeks which, in mature specimens, is white, of a deli- cate lemon-yellow. All the Wagtails either walk or run, and do not hop. PIED WAGTAIL.—WHITE WAGTAIL, 93 In August and September its numbers on the coast greatly increase by the arrival of flocks, while by the end of October the greater part of them have crossed the sea. The birds which remain during the winter flock together, often follow- ing the plough, or seeking their food in the sheep-fold, especially where the turnips have been half eaten and left in the ground, probably finding in their substance the larvze of some insect or other. The flight of this bird is very un- dulating, and it keeps up a constant dissyllabic note, whether alone or in companies, while on the wing. It is commonly known in Sussex by the name of “ Dishwasher.” WHITE WAGTAIL. Motacilla alba. THis species occurs on the coast as regularly as the Pied Wagtail, but I can find no earlier mention of it in Sussex, than a note of my own (‘ Zoologist,’ p. 3908) for April 21st, 1853, on which day I carefully examined five specimens, four of which, one being a female, had been shot between Shoreham and Worthing, and the fifth at Hove, all in the possession of Mr. Swaysland, of Brighton. The female con- tained eggs not larger than a pin’s head. I exhibited these birds at the Anniversary Meeting of the Linnean Society, May 24th, 1853. April 6th, 1854, a male and female were shot at Hove, near Brighton, close to some ploughed land, though they are said not to follow the plough like M. lugu- bris, which led the editor of Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. i, p. 550) to suggest that the food of this species may be dif- ferent. Mr. Swaysland informed me that they were wilder, and hada hoarser note. The male had a singular malforma- tion, there being on one foot two perfectly formed hind toes. 94 ' THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. On the 8th of the same month Mr. Pratt brought me a female, and on examination we found that the eggs were only just formed, whereas in M. lugubris they were larger than peas, so that it is probably a late breeder. On further knowledge of this species, I conclude that it is seldom or never found on the north side of the Downs, though it frequents the coast from east to west. In its general habits, as far as known, it seems to resemble the common Pied species. I am not aware that it has ever nested in the county. Mr. Booth remarks, in his ‘ Rough Notes,’ vol. i. :—‘‘I have never met with the White Wag- tail during the winter, and, according to my own observa- tions, those that visit the British Islands in the spring are considerably later in making their appearance on our shores than the Pied Wagtails that pass the winter on the continent. I cannot record a single instance where this species has been observed before the second week in April. During fine weather at that period these birds may commonly be noticed in Sussex, within a short distance of the sea-coast. Asa rule they appear to be making their way from West to Kast, and seldom remain in the locality for any length of time. I have watched them seeking for food along the banks round brackish pools, as well as on the muds of Shoreham harbour. A few were also occasionally remarked frequenting the salt- marshes between Lancimg and Worthing. Further east I found a single specimen feeding along the muddy shores of a dyke in the level near St. Leonards-on-Sea, in the first week in May. When disturbed the bird took a short flight, but after alighting two or three times on the floating weed and searching closely over the surface, it rose in the air and made a straight course along the shore towards the east. The water in the dyke was partly salt, and the tangled weed that grew in profusion contained a number of minute shells.” GREY WAGTAIL. 95 GREY WAGTAIL. Motacilla sulphurea. THis is an autumn and winter visitant to this county, dis- appearing about the middle of March, very few remain- ing to breed, the greater number leaving in April, when it is assuming its breeding-plumage, and passing to the north or west, returning late in August or early in September, generally in little family parties, when the main body cross the sea, though a few remain during the winter. From its partiality to rapid, clear, and rocky streams, Sussex is little adapted to its habits. It delights in wild secluded spots, and never frequents ploughed or grass lands unless they are water-meadows. As it cannot be called a common bird, I[ think it worth while to mention the few specimens which have fallen under my own observation. The first notice I have is, that from the 11th of November, 1840, one frequented my father’s garden at Henfield for a few days, running about the lawn in pursuit of imsects, jumping up at them and taking them on the wing, in the manner of the Pied Wagtail. Ou the 8th of May, 1841, I saw two which had been shot near Firle in nearly full summer plumage, and two others obtained in the same neighbourhood about the same time. In March 1844 one appeared for a few days, at a spring in a tanyard at Henfield. On the 10th of March in the same year I saw, at a birdstuffer’s at Lewes, two more which had been shot on the level near that town, also in the same plumage. In May 1845, I observed a male in full breeding-dress, at a little runlet of water by the roadside at Ashington. On two or three occasions a single bird has appeared at my own house at Cowfold, running about on a flat-roofed verandah, and 96 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. jumping at the flies crawling on the inner side of the window panes. The note is rather loud and harsh, but cheerful. The Grey Wagtail generally places its nest in a hole in the bank of a rocky stream, or a wall, or perhaps in a heap of stones, and it is very similar to that of the Pied Wagtail. Mr. Booth, in his ‘ Rough Notes,’ remarks that in the autumn, winter, and early spring a few remain in the neigh- bourhood of Brighton, resorting to open drains or pools, and in some instances visiting the gardens adjoining the town. Mr. Jeffery, in his P. N., states that he found a nest on the Ist of June, 1867, with the young nearly ready to fly, at Burton, near Petworth. BLUE-HEADED WAGTAIL. Motacilla flava. TuIs species is a spring visitant, and by no means abundant. In my own collection I have a female shot by Mr. Ellman, May 5th, 1851, between Eastbourne and Pevensey, and a male, shot at Hove, April 18th, 1866, as well as a female obtained about the same time near Eastbourne. In 1859 I saw, at Mr. Pratt’s, two male specimens which had been shot on the 25th and 27th of April respectively at Hove. The Blue-headed Wagtail is said to nest on the ground in corn-fields and meadows. Mr. Booth says that the bird may be met with every spring, along the coast of Sussex ; that he is well acquainted with certain spots about a mile from the sea-coast, between Brighton and Shoreham, where a pair or two may be found at almost any time during May; and that he has littie doubt that it breeds not uncommonly within a few miles of Brighton. He observes that he has —S. BLUE-HEADED WAGTAIL.—_YELLOW WAGTAIL. 97 frequently noticed males in the vicinity of two or three of the sheep-ponds scattered over the Downs, at seasons when it was most probable that the female was sitting close at hand, and ke figures a male and female obtained near Brighton in April 1874. In the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 6606) Mr. Wilson mentions a beautiful male taken near Worthing in April 1855 ; and a fine adult male shot near Brighton, by Mr. Pratt, is recorded (p. 7709) under date April 1861, while another (p. 263, s.s.) is noted, caught in a net in April 1871,andtaken to him. Again, in April 1888 one was taken alive on the Downs (vol. for 1888, p. 226). YELLOW WAGTAIL. Motacilla raii. Tis Wagtail, like the last species, arrives on our coast in April, and though a few breed with us, the main body, after remaining a very short time, leave the county for that pur- pose, and reappear late in July or early in August. In a record of my own, from 1840 to 1876, and in another, kindly lent me by Mr. Jeffery, from 1860 to 1888, the earliest notice of its appearance is April 7th, and the first mention of its return is July 6th. It then remains with us till Sep- tember, during which month it leaves this country altogether for the winter. On its first arrival it spreads over the ploughed land and meadows, sometimes in considerable flocks, but it is rarely seen more than a few miles from the coast. It is partial to the sheep-folds on the Downs, and accom- panies cattle in the fields, for the sake of the insects they disturb while feeding on the grass. H 98 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. The nest may occasionally be found by the side of a ditch, or in a tuft of rushes on the levels, but more frequently in the corn-fields, where it places it in an open furrow, or any little depression in the ground, and the few I have seen have been constructed of dead grass and small roots. It is stated, however, in Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. i. p. 565) that Mr. Hewitson mentions a nest composed of green moss and grass, lined with rabbits’ fur. In the autumn, it greatly frequents the open grass-fields. I have, at this season, often seen, in the Henfield levels, very large flocks of mingled old and young, busily engaged in picking up their food in the large drifts of débris left on the subsidence of a flood. I have found in their interior considerable quantities of small freshwater and land shells, of which such a locality affords a large supply. I have no recollection of ever having heard this Wagtail sing, but, respecting its note, it is stated in Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. i. p. 566):—‘ The call of this bird is more shrill than that of the Pied Wagtail, but less so than that of the Grey species, and consists of two notes repeated in succession, the second of which, in its musical scale, is a whole note lower than the first. The song of the cock is lively, but short, and not often uttered.” The earliest plumage of this bird is totally different from that of the adult, and is admirably represented by Mr. Booth in his ‘ Rough Notes.’ In Sussex it is generally known as the “ Barley-Bird,” probably because it arrives about the time of the spring sowing of that grain. TREE-PIPIT, 99 TREE-PIPIT. Anthus trivialis. THis species visits us regularly early in April, many staying to breed with us, though still larger numbers pass on into other counties, reappearmeg in little parties in August, and departing for the continent in September. It spreads itself in pairs over the wooded and enclosed districts where there are trees. Its song is strong, lively, and well sustained, and is mostly uttered while rising from the highest point of a bush or tree some thirty or forty feet in the air; after hovering for a few moments it continues to sing as it descends with quivering wings and outspread tail to the spot from which it had origi- nally started. ‘Though most authors state that it breeds on the ground, by far the greater number of the many nests I have known have been placed in thick bushes, generally brambles, some three or four feet from it. The nest is com- posed of green moss and dead grass, and lined with hair. Its eggs vary in colour to a very remarkable extent, some being very similar to those of the Blackcap, others of a dark purple with still darker veins and streaks, and I have more than once found them of a plain blood-red unmixed with streaks, spots, or blotches. It is very seldom seen on the ground, and I am not aware of any country name for it, but the bird-fanciers call it the “ Singing Titlark.” BH 2 100 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. MEADOW-PIPIT. Anthus pratensis. Tue Meadow-Pipit remains with us all the year round, though great additions arrive in April, and it may then be met with in all unenclosed parts of the county, frequenting as well the Downs, the dry open heaths and commons, as the marshy meadows of the levels bordering our rivers. After spreading through the country in suitable spots, generally in pairs, it reappears in large flocks on the coast in August, and by the end of September most of them have departed for the winter. It builds on the ground, sometimes among the corn, a foot or two within the edge of a corn-field, in a furrow, or any little depression on the surface, often on the open down or common, placing it under the shelter of a tuft of grass or other herbage. The nest is composed of coarse and fine grass, lined with hair and fibrous roots. The Cuckoo is very partial to it for the nursery of its tyrannical bantling. It is generally known as the Titlark. A very long and interesting account of the migration of the Meadow-Pipit may be found in Mr. Booth’s ‘ Rough Notes.’ There is a very small variety of the Meadow-Pipit, if in- deed it be not another species, found in various places in the county. I have myself particularly observed it on the ex- tensive tract of old sea-beach between the harbour and the sea at Shoreham, and from that very place a clutch of four eges, on which the bird was sitting, though they were not incubated, was taken by Mr. Gorham, the Rector of Shipley, on May 17th, 1880. Three of these he kindly gave to me ; they were all four similar in colour and size; the measure- ments of my three were }° by 3%; of aninch. Now the average MEADOW-PIPIT._RED-THROATED PIPIT. 101 dimensions of a dozen of the ordinary Meadow-Pipits’ are 14 by tg. Inever remember finding a whole clutch of the eggs of any other bird in which ad/ were of an abnormal size. I went to the spot a few days after to see what were the materials of the nest, but it had been pulled out and blown away by the wind. If it be dwarf, it is the only wild bird I have ever met with in that state. In the ‘ Zoologist, p. 1561 (s.s.) is the following notice by Mr. Wonfor:—“ A very minute specimen, in perfect plumage, was obtained on November 9th near Cliftonville, Brighton, and was taken to Swaysland. From its size and general appearance, thinking it a new species, he sent it to Mr. Sclater, who pronounced it a dwarf. It measures five inches and one eighth from beak to tail.” The ordinary note of the Meadow-Pipit is “ Tit, tit, tit,” uttered while flitting from place to place. During the breed- ing season it has a pleasant song, low and soft, which it utters on the wing, rising some thirty feet in the air, and descending, with quivering wings and tail fully spread, to the ground. RED-THROATED PIPIT. Anthus cervinus. Tuts beautiful species, which had, fora long while, been con- founded with the preceding, was included as a “ British Bird” by Mr. Harting and Mr. Gould on evidence that to many ornithologists seemed inconclusive, though they fully ad- mitted that it was one which, sooner or later, was likely to appear in Britain. The first example about which no doubt could exist was brought to Mr. Swaysland, of Brighton, on March 13th, 1884, and on the next day was seen in the flesh 102 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. by Mr. J. H. Gurney, Jun., who recorded the fact in the ‘Zoologist’ of that year (p. 192). The specimen was after- wards submitted to Mr. R. B. Sharpe, who exhibited it at the meeting of the Zoological Society of London on April Ist (Proc. Zool. Soe. 1884, p. 206). It was caught near Brighton, and is now in the collection of Mr. Monk, of Lewes. A long account of the habits of this species, as ob- served on the shores of the Varanger Fjord in North- eastern Norway, by the late Mr. Wolley and Professor New- ton, in the summer of 1855, will be found in Bree’s ‘ Birds of Europe, whence it has been reproduced in Mr. Dresser’s well-known work. This species breeds in a some- what restricted area in the extreme North of Europe, and thence to the eastward across Asia. In winter it is found on the shores of the Mediterranean, and especially in Egypt. The nest, which is placed on the ground among coarse herb- age, is described as being simply built of dry bents without any lining of feathers or hair. WATER-PIPIT. Anthus spipoletta. Tue first notice of this species being taken in Sussex is that of Mr. John Pratt, of Brighton, who, in the ‘ Zoologist’ (pp. 9279-80), states that in 1864 an example had been killed near Worthing, and another on the beach at Brighton, and that these two specimens were determined by Mr. Gould to be Anthus spipoletta of continental authors, They are also recorded in the ‘ Ibis’ for 1865 (p. 114). -That obtained at Brighton passed into the collection of the late Bishop Wil- berforce, and Mr. Boynton, of Ulrome Grange, in Yorkshire, purchased the other, and submitted it to the inspection of WATER-PIPIT, —ROCK-PIPIT. 103 Professor Newton. I have a specimen in my own collection which was obtained in August 1868, and another in March 1869, both shot at Shoreham. The most prominent distinction between this and the Rock- Pipit is that the outer tail-feather has the outer web and the distal part of the inner web on each side white, as is also the chin. All those which have been met with have occurred in early spring, and been found around the little pools which have been left by the tide. Mr. Rowley states “ that all have taken their departure by the first week in April, and that they return again in August,” which rather tends to the con- clusion that they retire inland to breed. I have, however, never heard of the nest being met with in England. ROCK-PIPIT. Anthus obscurus. Tue Rock-Pipit is a permanent resident, though it receives a great addition to its numbers in the spring. It is for the greater part of the year entirely confined to the coast, and especially to the rocky parts of it, where it may constantly be seen flitting from rock to rock, or searching for small crus- taceans and insects among the seaweed on the beach, and occasionally wading in the shallow water. It may, however, be frequently met with on the muddy flats and shores. In the breeding season the call-note and song are very like those of the Meadow-Pipit, but somewhat harsher. At that time of the year it sings on the wing and with similar actions, and is confined to the cliffs, where it builds in the crevices or little hollows between the rocks or behind a tuft of the sea- pink or other herbage, constructing its nest of dry grass and seaweed, with which it is generally lined, with the addition 104 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. perhaps of a little hair. I once found a very singular nest of this bird near Eastbourne. It was entirely composed ex- ternally of fine seaweed mixed with the dried egg-capsules of the common whelk, and lined with hair. Mr. Jeffery states (Zoologist, p. 1034) that he shot two Rock-Pipits on a small island in Chichester Harbour, and was surprised to find in the stomach of both bones and other remnants of small fishes. It often happens that small gobies and other fish are left by the receding tide to die and dry up, and in this case they would become an easy prey to the Pipits, otherwise it is difficult to imagine in what way their capture could be effected by these small birds. In addition to these fishy remains were small seeds of several kinds. Mr. Booth states, in his ‘ Rough Notes,’ that he has occa- sionally observed a few of these Pipits along the flat portions of the Sussex coast from Pagham to Brighton. The muddy pools of brackish water inside of the shingle banks are their favourite haunts. The chalk cliffs between Brighton and Eastbourne, and the neighbourhood of Fairlight and Hastings, are resorted to during the breeding season. Pevensey and Winchelsea levels are visited about the same time, and those of the flat districts to the west of Brighton, where they feed only by those pools which are impregnated with salt. The ten specimens mentioned in the ‘ Zoologist,’ p. 792, s.s., as having been taken near Brighton between the 16th and 20th of March, 1869, and at first mistaken for Anthus spipoletta, proved, on further investigation, to be the Scandinavian form of the Rock-Pipit. TAWINY -PIPEE. 105 TAWNY PIPTE: Anthus campestris. Tus Pipit was first noticed as British by Mr. Rowley, and is arare straggler to this county, where, curiously enough, almost all the recorded specimens have been met with in the neighbourhood of Brighton. The first was taken at Shore- ham Harbour on the 15th of August, 1855, and was in the collection of the late Mr. Collins, of Aldmouth, until 1862, when another Pipit having been shot at Rottingdean on the 24th of September, Mr. Rowley, on careful examination of it in the flesh, discovered that both this and the former were Anthus campestris, and records them in the ‘ Ibis’ for 1863. I have in my own collection three specimens, all taken near Brighton. Mr. J. H. Gurney, Jun., tells me that his father had one which was shot at Rottingdean October 3rd, 1886, in very immature plumage. Referring to the ‘ Zoologist,’ we find (p. 9327) a male taken in a clap-net near Brighton, September 30th, 1864, which was seen alive by Mr. Rowley, and passed into the collection of Mr. Monk. At p. 1918, s.s., two more are mentioned by Mr. Wonfor as shot at Rottingdean, Septem- ber 6th, 1869. Another immature bird is mentioned by Mr. Rowley, obtained near Rottingdean September 29th, 1870 (p. 2383), also in the possession of Mr. Monk. And in October 1873 again another male example was killed near Brighton (p. 3832), which was purchased by Sir John Crewe. At p. 4456, s. s., Mr. Clark Kennedy mentions that one was caught inaclap-net at Eastbourne, November 8th, 1874; and at p. 4694, s.s., Mr. Swaysland records the purchase of a young male, taken in the same way, at the east end of Brighton, At p. 299, volume for 1877, Mr. Bond states 16 = THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. that he had a Tawny Pipit which had been taken in October 1875, a young bird, as shown by the lightness of its feathers. According to p. 342, s.s., 1877, another immature specimen was shot at Brighton on the 29th of September, and taken to Mr. Pratt. Three were caught on the Downs north-east of Brighton, in October 1886 (p. 490)*. On August 25th, 1887, a male was taken in a net close to the Ditchling Road, Brighton (p. 492). . As to its habits as a Sussex bird, nothing has been re- corded. According to authors they are, on the continent, much the same as those of the other Pipits, as is also the manner of its nesting, but it shows a preference for dry and especially sandy places. RICHARD'’S PIPLEE. Anthus richardi. An irregular spring and autumn visitant to the coast and neighbouring Downs, almost all those which have occurred having been taken near Brighton. I have in my own collection one in summer plumage, taken on March 17th, 1869, on Clayton Hill, and two others also obtained near Brighton, but I cannot now give the dates. The earliest mention of its appearance in the county is that of Mr. Rowley, who recorded it in the ‘ Zoologist,’ p- 9466, and says that he received a living specimen from Mr. Swaysland on January 20th, 1865. It had been taken in a clap-net at a place called Toad’s Hole, on the Downs, near Hangleton, Portslade, about 14 mile from the sea. The * One of these was probably Mr. Gurney’s specimen. RICHARD’S PIPIT.—SHORE-LARK. 107 man who caught it said that he was struck by its loud note, and drove it about nearly two days before he could get it into the net, in which there was nothing to attract it. In 1867 Mr. Monk obtained a specimen, taken near Brighton, October 9th (Zoologist, p. 1017); and in the volume for 1868 (p. 1478, s.s.) Mr. Rowley states that one was taken near Brighton October 5th, and that it was moult- ing all over, the tail being only half-grown, and remarks that it was very late, all the other Pipits moulting in August. Mr. Wonfor, in the ‘ Zoologist’ for 1869 (p. 1513, s.s.), states that four specimens had been shot within the last month (November), and in 1870, at p. 1984 of the same journal, Mr. Bond, giving a list of rare birds he had seen at Mr. Pratt’s, states thus :—“ I have seen in all eleven speci- mens of the Richard’s Pipit, the first taken in the first week in September, and the last on the 6th of December of the present year.”’ ALAUDIDA, SHORE-LARK. Otocorys alpestris. Since the first British specimen obtained at Sherringham, in Norfolk, in 1830, the Shore-Lark has been found, some- times in large flocks, on various parts of the coast, extending as far westward as Weymouth, where, about the 20th of November 1869, I saw eleven in the flesh, which had been shot on Lodswell Marsh, of which seven were females. The notices of the occurrences of this bird in Sussex are not, however, very numerous. I have a specimen in my owa collection, killed in March 18/0, at Rottingdean. In Yar- 108 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. rell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. i. p. 606) it is stated that three out of a flock of five were captured alive near Brighton in November 1861. Mr. Booth, in his ‘ Rough Notes,’ makes the following remarks :—‘‘ During severe weather in Sussex, I often remarked a fresh-captured bird or two of this species in the store cages of the professional bird-catchers, when meeting with them along the Downs near the coast. But one small flock of three or four individuals has (with the exception of the above-mentioned captives) come under my notice in this county; these birds were on the shingle- banks, between Shoreham and Lancing.” The following occurrences are taken from the ‘ Zoologist ?:—On March the Ist 1870, “ a fine specimen of the Shore-Lark was taken, at night, in a lark-net, on the Hodden Farm, near New- haven.—T. 8S. Monk” (p. 2140). Mr. Rowley remarks (p. 2407) that two specimens were obtained near Brighton on the 2ud of November, 1870. Mr. Aplin states (p. 350), 1885—“ In April last I received a male Shore-Lark, in the flesh, which was shot on the 22nd on the coast, near Hastings. Its stomach contained numerous small white worms, and a small coleopterous larva, also a quantity of grit.”?_ The Shore- Lark frequents the beach, and the neighbouring stubbles, or the open bushy lands near the sea, in little flocks. Its manners and flight much resemble those of the Sky-Lark. It has never been known to breed in this country, nor nearer than the high mountain-pastures of Scandinavia, whence no doubt come the birds which visit us in winter. Butit is also common in many parts of America, and I have eggs from Labrador. SK Y-LARK. 109 SKY-LARK. Alauda arvensis. Tuts, by pre-eminence the Lark, is generally diffused over the open country, but avoids the woods. It isa resident, but, except in the breeding season, very much on the move, and often gathers in enormous flocks, especially in hard winter, when it migrates from place to place, according to the weather. Its line of migration is most frequently from Hast to West. Immense multitudes cross the sea, and numbers are frequently found to strike the lanterns of the lighthouses. I have often seen them in the neighbourhood of the coast passing over, and flying very swiftly for hours together. The delightful song has been the theme of the poets of all ages, and is far more cheerful from the celestial height, than that of the equally celebrated Nightingale from its legendary thorn. It feeds on seeds of weeds and the corn which it finds scattered after harvest, as well as on insects, and in hard weather often frequents the sheep-folds, probably finding larvee among the decaying roots of the turnips. It is found still more abundantly on the open stubbles, where it roosts, when many hundreds, I may say thousands, are taken in nets, and sold to the poulterers. Enormous numbers are annually taken by the call-bird and clap-net, besides those that are shot as they hover—an easy mark for the gun—over an instrument of wood, ito which are fixed bits of looking- glass, and, by a string properly adjusted, made to spin round rapidly, this device proving a never-failing and fatal attrac- tion to the birds. The nest is generally placed on the ground in an open meadow, or corn-field, in any slight depression, and very commonly in a round hole in the turf, formed by the bird itself, and is composed of grass, and lined with fine roots 110 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. and hair. It is said to remove its young, or its eggs, if dis- turbed. Mr. Blyth (Nat. 1837, p. 102) describes a case of which he was told, wherein the upper part of a Sky-Lark’s nest had been shaved off by the scythe, and the surround- ing grass levelled by the mowers, without the female, which was sitting on her young, flying away. She was found about an hour afterwards to have constructed a dome of dry grass over the nest during the interval. The eggs are not subject to much variation, but a few years ago I found a nest in the vicarage meadow at Cowfold, in which all the five eggs were pure white, and perfectly fresh and good. Although I have not hitherto made any remarks on varieties, I may say that in February 1890, I was shown by Mr. Pratt, of Brighton, a Sky-Lark in such remarkable plumage that I think it is worthy of mention. The whole of the head and the upper part of the body are black, with the edges of the feathers almost imperceptibly tinged with brown. The under parts of the body, and the axillary plumes, the scapulars, and about half an inch of the second- aries, as also the tips of the primaries, and the final half of the tail, are black. The middle of the secondaries, forming a distinct bar across the wings, and about half the primaries, are white, the latter being slightly pencilled with black on the upper surface, while on the under side they are pure white. This specimen was originally, when first caged, an ordinary Sky-Lark, and assumed this plumage. WOOD-LARK. Alauda arborea. Tur Wood-Lark is a resident, but very local, and by no means common. When it occurs at all it is on the edges WOOD-LARK.—CRESTED LARK. 111 of those woods which are well furnished with timber, being seldom or never found far from the outside. It is a beauti- ful songster, and utters its delightfully liquid, flute-like notes in the evenings of spring, summer, and autumn, generally while suspended in the air at a very considerable height, and sometimes continuing it intermittently for an hour together. Some time ago, this bird might be heard from my lawn at Cowfold every fairly warm evening, trill- ing its lovely notes, often far into the night; but I bave not heard it for many years, nor met with it, in my own neigh- bourhood. In fact, the last time I saw it at all in Sussex was when shooting in the parish of Cowfold in January 1881. I was surprised to find it in little flocks of twenty or thirty, in the stubble-fields, just before a heavy snow, which covered the ground deeply for many days, They seem to have migrated in a body, and I have never seen or heard of one in the neighbourhood since. At this time they assembled together all along the coast, wherever the ground was free from snow, aud many dozens fell victims to the bird-catchers. Except on such occasions, they are found in pairs, and never in large numbers in any one district. It chooses a grassy spot, on the outside of a wood or copse, for its nest, con- structing it of dry grass, mixed with a little moss, and lining it also with fine grass, without hair or feathers. Although it takes a few small seeds, insects form its principal food, and it is very partial to grasshoppers. CRESTED LARK. Alauda cristata. AtuoucH this species is not uncommon in Normandy and in some parts of Holland, its occurrences in England have 112 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX, been few and far between. Its first appearance in Sussex is that of an example in the late Mr. Bond’s collection, which was procured at Littlehampton, and from which the figure in Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’? was taken; it is now in the possession of Mr. Whitaker, of Rainworth Lodge, Notts. Another was procured near Shoreham, by a bird-catcher, on the 20th of October, 1863, and seen alive the same day by Mr. Rowley, as is recorded in the ‘ Ibis,’ 1864, p. 224. This example is now in the collection of Mr. Monk. Besides these, I have in my own collection another specimen, which was captured by a bird-catcher at Portslade, near Brighton, October 10th, 1881, and taken to Mr. Pratt’s shop in that town; this proved on dissection to be an adult male. I recorded it in the ‘ Zoologist,’ p. 494, for 1881. Itisa more familiar bird than the Sky-Lark, frequenting in its own country the roads, and even making its appearance among the houses of the villages, often perching on the walls. The cock has a soft and pleasant song, generally given on the wing, and the hen is said to sing also. The nest is generally placed in a hoof-print, or other depression in the ground, though sometimes on a bank or mud wall, or even on the edge of a low thatched shed (see Yarrell’s B. B. vol. 1. p. 683-4). It is easily distinguished from the Sky-Lark by the reddish-buff colour of the under surface of the wings. SHORT-TOED LARK. Alauda brachydactyla. ‘THis species, like the last, is a very rare visitant to Britain. The first appearance in Sussex was that of one which had been taken in a lark-net near Brighton in September 1854. It SHORT-TOED LARK.—WHITE-WINGED LARK. 15 was for some time kept alive in Mr. Swaysland’s possession (Zoologist, p. 4568). In April 1858 another was shot while dusting itself in the road, and is noticed in the ‘ Ibis’ for 1859, p. 330. No other is recorded until November 1874, when a third was caught in a net, close to the same place, and brought alive to Mr. Swaysland, who sent it, still living, to Mr. Rowley. Of the habits of this bird I can say nothing from my own knowledge. WHITE-WINGED LARK. Melanocorypha sibirica. Tue only specimen which has been met with in England was exhibited by Mr. Rowley, at a meeting of the Zool. Soe. January 27th, 1870, and was taken in a net at Brighton. It was a hen bird*, and when captured was in the company of a flock of about two dozen Snow-Buntings. It is now in Mr. Monk’s collection. Its habits are little known. It is found in Northern Europe, and in South Russia generally, and adjoining States. Pallas says that it frequents the road- sides, singing as it flies; that it does not rise often to any great height, though it warbles for along time while hanging in the air, and that it builds its nest on the ground, forming it of grass. * It was originally recorded in the ‘ Zoologist’, p. 1984,s.s., as a young Snow-Finch (Montifringilla nivalis), a species not as yet known to have occurred in this country. 114 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. EMBERIZIDZ. SNOW-BUNTING. Plectrophanes nivalis. Tue Snow-Bunting visits the county almost every winter, but is more abundant in very severe seasons. It arrives at irregular periods depending on the weather, and sometimes in very large flocks consisting of birds of both sexes and all ages, though more generally, of birds of the year; and often flying so closely together that many may be killed at a shot. It is not often met with at any distance inland, and is gene- rally found on the beach, or on the flats which are uncovered except at the highest tides, and sometimes on the unploughed fields in the neighbourhood of the coast. On the 18th of June 1839, I saw, in the flesh, at Mr. Swaysland’s an adult male which had just been shot near Brighton. The nest has not yet been found in England, but has lately been obtained in Scotland; the first nest found with eggs was placed, according to Mr. John Young, in a “ scree,’ or stream of loose stones detached by weather from the mountain-side. " Hitherto there has been but a single record of this nest, which was exhibited to the Linnean Society, November Ist, 1888. The food of all the Buntings is principally seeds of some kind; this species is especially fond of those of Sueda maritima, but on occasion will eat oats. At v. 792, s.s., of the ‘ Zoologist, Mr. Dutton records a splendid pair shot at the ‘‘ Wish Tower,’ Eastbourne, on April 14th, 1867, one of them being in full summer plumage, SNOW-BUNTING.—LAPLAND BUNTING. 115 that is, pure white head and breast and black back; and at p. 3912, s. s., Mr. Clark Kennedy mentions a specimen shot on the beach, at the same place, in July 1872, and that it was in full breeding-plumage. LAPLAND BUNTING. Plectrophanes lapponica. Tuts Bunting is somewhat rare in England, and the follow- ing are, I think, all that have been recorded as having occurred in Sussex. In Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. ii. p. 16) it is stated that one was caught on the Downs, near Brighton, in, or previous to, 1827*. On September 30th, 1844, an adult male was netted with some Larks, on the Downs near Brighton, and is now in my collection; it is in the plumage of summer, but is undergoing a slight change from the advance of the season. In the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 2383, s. s.) mention is made, by Mr. Bond, of a young male, obtained near Brighton on October 6th, 1870; and another, also a young male, was caught in a net on the Downs, and purchased by Mr. Swaysland, in the first week of October 1875 (p. 4695, s.s.) Both these last were taken alive. In the volume for 1889, Mr. Brazenor, a bird- stuffer of Brighton, states that he received a male which was caught about a mile from the town, in February of that year, and on September 23rd a female, and on October 10th a male (see pp. 144 and 436) ; and in a letter received in June 1890 * This species was not recorded in England at all till 1826; in that year one was caught in Cambridgeshire and was kept for some months in acage. See Trans. Linn Soc. xy. p. 156, Te 116 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. he tells me that four more were brought to him in November, and another in January, all taken in the neighbourhood. According to Yarrell’s B. B. vol ii., this bird is found in colonies in Lapland, where the cloudberry and the dwarf birch are the chief vegetation, and utters a song, which, though not brilliant, possesses a tone of sweetness. The nest is formed chiefly of dry grass and a bedding of soft feathers, which distinguishes it from that of any other species fre- quenting the district. It is generally a local bird, and does not assemble in large flocks ; it feeds on berries and insects. In its fondness for swampy places it resembles the Reed- Bunting. REED-BUNTING. Emberiza scheniclus. Tue Reed-Bunting is found throughout the county wherever there are beds of reeds, either by the river-sides or in the marshes or ponds, and is resident throughout the year. It is particularly abundant in the patches of reeds between Shoreham and Beeding, where any evening many may be seen dropping in, one by one, from a considerable height in the air to their roosting-places. In the winter they roam about with flocks of Sparrows and other small birds, feeding along with them about the corn- stacks and farm-yards. In the breeding-season it utters a slight song, generally of a few notes, the last two or three being drawn out consider- ably, while the bird is sitting on a high reed, or little bush overhanging the water. It builds among the reeds, constructing its nest of coarse RUSTIC BUNTING.—LITTLE BUNTING. 117 grass and moss, and lining it with finer grass and feathery tops of the reed and a little hair. In land which is liable to be flooded, it is often built on the tangled herbage which has been left on the willows, or other bushes, on the subsidence of the water. It is generally known in Sussex as the Reed- Sparrow. RUSTIC BUNTING. Emberiza rustica. Norice of the only example which has occurred in England was communicated to the ‘Ibis’ for 1869 (p. 128), by Mr. Gould. It was caught near Brighton, October 23rd, 1867, and is now in the collection of Mr. Monk. It was shown to Mr. Rowley while still alive, and its portrait has been given by Mr. Gould in his ‘ Birds of Great Britain.’ Its proper home is in the north-east of Europe, and the most northern part of Siberia. In its habits it much re- sembles the Reed-Bunting. Of its nidification little appears to be known. (See Yarrell, B. B., vol. 1. p. 29.) According to Mr. Dresser (‘ Birds of Europe,’ vol. iv. p. 233), the nest is made entirely of fine wiry grass, and is not very carefully built. LITTLE BUNTING. Eimberiza pusilla. Turs species, like the last, has only once occurred in Britain, this example having been taken near Brighton im a clap-net. It was exhibited by Mr. Gould, at a meeting of the Zoological Society of London, November 8th, 1864, and recorded in 118 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. their ‘ Proceedings’ for that year, p. 377 (see also ‘Ibis, 1865, p. 113); this specimen passed into the collection of Mr. Monk. It inhabits, like the last, the northern parts of Europe and Siberia. It is found both in the older pine forests and underwood, building on the ground an artless nest of grass-stalks and larch leaves, and is said to feed on a species of beetle of the family Tenebrionide. (See Yarrell’s B. B. vol. il. pp. 34-386.) BUNTING. Emberiza militaria. Tue Bunting is remarkably heavy and clumsy in its appear- ance and movements, sufferimg itself to be approached within a few yards, and then merely moving away to a very short distance, with a laboured flight, and with its feet hanging down. It is a resident, frequenting principally the most open parts of the cultivated land near the coast, between the Downs and the sea. During the winter it assembles in large flocks, seeking its food, which mainly consists of grass and other seeds, in the stubbles, and occasionally about the corn-stacks, and it often assembles to roost among thick herbage above the ordinary high-water mark. In summer it spreads over the cultivated fields, particularly those of seed grasses. Among these it builds its nest, which is clumsily constructed of straw and dry grass, with fine blades of the latter, fibrous roots, and a little hair for the linmg. At this time of the year, it may be seen perched by the road-sides, and uttering its harsh, single note from some bush or rail, and often from a large clod, whence it has obtained the local name of ‘‘ Clod YELLOW BUNTING.—CIRL BUNTING. 119 Bird.’ A few pairs may occasionally be found on the north side of the Downs, but it does not penetrate very far into the Weald. It is a very late breeder, its nest being often found with eggs by the mowers. YELLOW BUNTING. Emberiza cttrinella. THis is the commonest, as well as the handsomest, of all the British Buntings, and may be found in almost every hedgerow in all parts of the county, uttering its well-known note of “a little bit of bread, and no cheese ” in the spring, from the top of a tree or bush. The nest is seldom far from the ground, built of moss, roots, and hair. Mr. Jeffery, in his private notes, men- tions finding one composed entirely of roots. Like its con- gener, the Bunting, it breeds rather late. In the winter it flocks together with Chaffinches and other small birds, roving about the fields and farmyards. It is always called the “ Yellow-hammer ” in Sussex. CIRL BUNTING. Emberiza cirlus. Tis is much more local than the last, but is found at intervals all along the coast, though only in rare instances in the Weald, and then not far north of the Downs. One was accidentally shot, in the parish of Cowfold, by a person, who fired at it as it was passing overhead, merely to 120 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. discharge his gun before coming indoors. This was a male bird. It is tolerably common in the neighbourhood of Brighton, and I have met with it occasionally, from Hastings in the east, to Bognor in the west. The note, which merely requires of the passer by “a little bit of bread and no —,” without any mention of the ‘ cheese,” is generally heard from a high leafy tree, which makes it diffi- cult to get sight of the bird. This species is particularly fond of the berries of the Solanum dulcamara. The nest is placed on, or near, the ground, sometimes in a quickset hedge or low bush, and has been found several times near Brighton, among ferns, on a rockery; and in such a situation I was shown one in the garden of Mr. Booth, on the Dyke road, on which the female was sitting at the time. The nest was very similar to that of the Yellow Bunting, and, like that species, this bird assembles in flocks in the winter, sometimes, according to Mr. Booth, as many as 50 or 60 being seen together. ORTOLAN. Emberiza hortulana. Or the occurrences of this bird in Sussex there are not many, and it is a decidedly rare bird in England. It visits us occasionally in summer only. It is common in Holland and Flanders, and breeds there, forming a nest somewhat like that of the Sky-Lark; the note is said to be chirping and monotonous. In the spring great numbers are, or used to be, imported into England from Rotterdam for the table, so that it is far ORTOLAN.—BLACK-HEADED BUNTING. 121 from improbable that some of those recorded as having been taken in this county are escaped birds. On April 29th, 1841, a fine specimen, now in my collection, was shot on the viaduct of the Brighton railway, close to the town, and was recorded by me, Ann. Nat. Hist. vii. p. 524; and a male was shot between Lancing and Worthing, April 27th, 1852 (Zoologist, p. 3476). Mr. G. W. Stephenson, by whom it is recorded, mentions that when first observed, it was seeking food on the beach by the road-side. It was found to contain the remains of small beetles, principally a species of Curculio. One of these birds was caught with bird- lime on the Dyke Road, Brighton, in 1870, and was in the dark brown plumage of the adult male in summer; this specimen passed into my own collection. About the 5th of May 1871, one was got at Brighton, according to Mr. J. H. Gurney, junr. (Zoologist, p. 2682, s.s.). A female was obtained near Brighton, in February 1877, which came into my possession. BLACK-HEADED BUNTING. Euspiza melanocephalta. Tuts species was first recorded as British, by Mr. Gould, ina letter dated December 1st, 1868 (see ‘ Ibis’ for 1869, p. 128), in these words :—‘ I have now to inform you of the occurrence of Emberiza (Euspiza) melanocephala, of which a very fine old female specimen in perfect plumage is now before me. It was brought me by Mr. Robert Brazenor, of 23 Lewes Road, Brighton, by whom it was shot about the 3rd of November last, near Mr. Ballard’s windmill on Brighton Race-course, while, as he stated, ‘it was following a flock of 122 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. Yellow-hammers.’ His two sons were with him at the time. On examination of the bird, a number of eggs were found in the ovarium. This is all the information I was able to obtain respecting it.” It has occurred once in Heligoland. Mr. Robson, of Ortakeuy, states that its habits are similar to those of the Common Bunting, sitting on the top of a bush, or low tree, and pouring forth its simple notes, or flying from one elevated part to another, with its legs hanging down. The nest is built not far from the ground in a rose bush, vine, or bramble. Dr. Lindermayer, in his work on the Birds of Greece, says :— This Bunting arrives always in the last five days of April in Greece, appearing everywhere at once, so that the flats near the sea, which are covered with vines and other creepers, and the places where the olive-trees are scattered about, are alive with this lovely and melodious bird. It is peculiarly partial to vineyards. Its nest is always formed of dried straw, is carefully made, and is lined with horsehair. The bird leaves Greece in August.” FRINGILLID. CHAFFINCH. Fringilla celebs. ais bird is of such a sprightly disposition, and of such elegant plumage, that “to be as gay as a Chaffinch” has become quite an ordinary proverb. It is one of our commonest Finches, and is found in all the wooded parts of the country, and in every garden, and its joyous note is one of the first indications of approaching spring. It has the CHAFFINCH.—BRAMBLING. 123 remarkable habit of walking along a horizontal bough, and may be often seen springing up from a high branch into the air and pursuing an insect, very much in the manner of a Flycatcher. It may be frequently seen on the road in search of food, and in the summer builds an extremely elegant nest, generally well matched in colour with surrounding objects, and composed of moss and wool, or any soft material, orna- menting the exterior with pieces of white lichen, or now and then a flake of birch bark, lining it neatly with hair and feathers. It is disliked by gardeners from its propensity to pick up the seeds from the radish-beds, and its eating the buds of the early vegetables when just springing from the ground. It is also very destructive to primroses and crocuses, com- pensating greatly, however, for these injuries, by destroying a vast number of leaf-rolling caterpillars, and insects which infest our apple and other fruit-trees, and by devouring great quantities of seeds of plants injurious to the farmer. It also feeds its young principally on insects and their larvee. In the winter it assembles in large flocks, often, but not always, of only one sex. BRAMBLING. Eringilla montifringilla. Tue Brambling is an autumn visitant, occasionally remaining late into the spring. It is most abundant in very severe winters, and is found, either singly, or in small parties, feed- ing round the corn-stacks, showing preference for oats. Another specially favourite food is beech-mast, for which it visits the plantations on the Downs and the Forest, occa- sionally in large flocks of both sexes together. 124 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. There was a very large arrival of this species all along the coast of Sussex, in January 1867, when the weather was very severe, and the fall of snow unusually deep. In the same month of 1871 there was an exceedingly violent storm, when the largest arrival of these birds occurred that I ever re- member, and great numbers sought their food round the houses wherever it was charitably provided for birds in general, and the stubbles along the coast were literally covered with them, together with Linnets and other small birds. On the 4th of February 1841, I shot three males and one female as they were feeding under an oat-stack, behind the Pad Inn, near old Shoreham Bridge, and three others were shot near the same place a few days before. I have hitherto referred only to the coast; inland, the Brambling has often occurred, but not so plentifully. In January 1838, a male was shot in the garden at Barrow Hill, Henfield, while feeding on crumbs at the window; and in February 1841 two more males were shot in the same parish. In April 1843 a flock of about forty frequented the beech- trees in the parish of Lower Beeding, in St. Leonards forest, for some weeks, and on the 14th two males and two females, in full nuptial plumage, were sent to me. In October 1853, about a dozen were caught in a sparrow-net while roosting among the straw on the sheltered side of an oat-stack at Cowfold, two of which I received; about the same time several were obtained in the neighbourhood of Horsham. OU TREE-SPARROW.—HOUSE-SPARROW. 12: TREE-SPARROW. Passer montanus. A SEVERE winter generally brings small parties to the coast and the Downs, accompanying the flocks of Bramblings, and searching, like them, for their food on the stubbles and about the stack-yards. They arrive in small flocks, some of them passing on from east to west, and returning again in the spring, when the greater number leave the county altogether, a very few pairs remaining to breed. A few years ago, I found a little colony nesting in holes in some pollard ash near the river Adur, in the parish of Henfield. It has occasionally been taken in the sparrow-nets, roosting in the corn-stacks ; I have also received it from Eastbourne. In plumage the male and female differ very slightly. It generally chooses a hole in a tree for its nest, but it has several times made choice of apertures among the sticks under the Rooks’ nests at Oakendean, near Cowfold. With regard to its song, though some consider it harsh, my own opinion is that it is very pleasant, but a trifle Spar- row-like, and it is continued for some little time. 'The nest is composed of dead grass and feathers. HOUSE-SPARROW. Passer domesticus. Or this bird I may say with Horace— “ Difficile est proprie communia dicere :” it is as universally distributed over this county as it is over nearly all the rest of Great Britain, and I have little to 126 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. say of it, save that it is about equally destructive and bene- ficial to the interests of the agriculturist, for, though it appropriates to itself large quantities of grain, it also rids them of immense multitudes of injurious insects. It is a most familiar as well as impudent bird, of which I may give one remarkable instance. A lady at my own house at Cowfold, watched one of them coolly plucking the feathers from the back of a so-called Sicilian Dove (Turtur risorius), which was sitting on its nest in a somewhat bare Arbor vite, immediately under her bedroom-window. So many singular situations which the Sparrow has chosen for its nest have been described by others, that, although it has nothing to do with the Birds of Sussex, I cannot refrain from meutioning one, and this was in the mouth of Thorwaldsen’s celebrated statue of the Lion, at Lucerne, greatly diminishing the dignity of the figure. The grimy appearance of the Sparrow of our towns, and the bright and sprightly aspect of those of the country, make them appear so distinct, that Mr. Booth has facetiously given in his ‘ Rough Notes’ an admirably characteristic plate of each. A Sparrow pudding is a favourite Sussex dish, and by no means to be despised. Many hundreds are annually taken in nets at night, and I have many times when a young man joined in the amusement of catching these birds. BAW FENCE. Coccothraustes vulgaris. Tue Hawfinch is resident, and is met with occasionally in all the wooded portions of the county, in early spring singly, and after the beginning of April, in pairs. By the middle of HAWFINCH. 127 that month, or in the first fortnight of May, they may be observed in little family parties, feeding on seeds in general. By the time the peas are well formed they enter our gardens, committing great havoc among them, and if undisturbed they would continue to do so till after they are ripe, and would finish them to the last pea. These birds are then very wild and difficult to get a shot at. They are especially fond of the seed of the maple. During the breeding season they are remarkably silent, and had I not from time to time picked up a stray feather or two of the bill-hook-shaped primaries, I should have had no idea that there were any in the neighbourhood. I have only myself met with two of the nests in Sussex, and both were in my own garden; they were roughly constructed of a rather large mass of dead twigs of the birch, lined with fine grass, wool, a little hair, and a few feathers. One was placed on a very leafy bough of an apple-tree, and the other in thick ivy, against the trunk of an oak, each about ten feet from the ground. In winter, a considerable flock may occasionally be met with. In December 1889, I observed a female breaking up the green seed-vessel of an Arbor vite, close to a window of my own house. They are remarkabiy fond of maize, which I have often seen them take from the side of a pond where it was thrown for some tame wildfowl, in my own grounds ; and I have several times caught them, attracted by the same seed, at a chicken-house, which has a large run enclosed by iron wire, where, on my sudden appearance, they were too frightened to find the apertures by which they had entered, and, on one occasion, I was so severely bitten on the hand as to draw blood. In January 1889, a female was seen close to the window at Barrow Hill, Heufield, for some days, and was afterwards joined by a male. They were observed feeding on the seeds of a rose-tree, close to the house. This bird does not eat the 128 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. flesh of fruit, but only the kernels of the stones, of which it swallows small pieces, for the purposes of trituration. Mr. Jeffery, in his p. n., remarks that “in February 1878, this species was plentiful in a cherry orchard near Chichester. Twelve were sent in one day to a bird-stuffer in that town.” One met its death by flying against the lantern of the Bell Tout lighthouse, near Beachy Head, in December 1863 (Zoologist, p. 9043). Several were killed at Eastbourne. GREENFINCH. Coccothraustes chloris. Tus species is very common, and resident throughout the county, frequenting our gardens and hedgerows, breeding in the shrubberies every spring, and, like the Chaffinch, doing considerable damage to the seeds sown, or coming up, in the kitchen garden. It nests in April, using green moss, wool, and fibrous roots, and, for the lining, finer roots, hair, and a few feathers. In winter it gathers on the stubbles and hedgerows in large flocks, more especially on those between the Downs and the sea, flying so close together that, in my boyhood, I several times killed as many as twenty at a shot. It resorts, at this time of year, to the farm-buildings and stack-yards, as well as to the sea-beach and dry mud-flats, where it feeds on the seeds of the rough herbage, among which it roosts. The Greenfinch is often caught with other birds in the sparrow-nets, and is much used in the cruel “sport” of trap-shooting. Its monotonous call is heard early in the spring, but it does not sing till the nest is com- menced, or finished, and then it continues to do so till after midsummer, often from the top of a high tree, occasionally GREENFINCH.—SERIN. 129 flying up, and describing a small semicircle, almost hovering in the air, and with wings stretched out and tail wide spread, descends to the place whence it came, or to the top of another tree close by. SERIN. Serinus hortulanus. Or this, one of the smallest of our British Fringillide, but few specimens have occurred. As almost all which have yet been taken in this county have been caught near Brighton, and as it is not a very uncommon cage bird, it is not im- possible that all may be escaped birds: it is, however, re- marked in Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds,’ vol. ii., that most of the specimens have been captured in the spring, the most likely season for this species to reach England. Those I have seen have certainly borne no marks of having been in confinement. In my own collection I have a female caught near Brighton on April Ist, 1873. It has never bred in this country. According to the editor of Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. ii. p- 114) its song is poor, and generally uttered from the top of some tree, and sometimes on the wing while flying up, in the manner of the Tree-Pipit. Its nest is very neat and compact, built of fine roots and grass bents, neatly lined with feathers and horsehair, the outer portion interwoven with spiders’ webs with a few bits of lichen and grey moss. On the Continent, it inhabits gardens and orchards, or the high poplars bordering many of the roads. Mr. Bond (Zoologist, p. 7105) mentions that he was shown a specimen of this bird, which was caught in a clap-net near K 130 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. Brighton, June 20th, 1859; it was then in the possession of Mr. Pratt, who had it shortly after its capture; it was de- scribed as being quite alone and very wild. Mr. Bond believed it to be afemale. Mr. Monk (Zoologist, p. 229, s.s.) states that a beautiful example was caught on April 9th, 1866, at Hove; it was also taken in a clap-net, and was in fine summer plumage; it passed into his own collection. Again in the ‘ Zoologist, p. 119, for 1884, Mr. Bond records a specimen of this bird taken near Brighton in April 1870. Another is mentioned by Mr. Chase, of Edgbaston, as having been obtained at Ovingdean, near Brighton, a male in perfect plumage showing no signs of captivity, January 27th, 1888 (Zoologist, p. 108, for 1888). GOLDFINCH. Carduelis elegans. AurnoucH the Goldfinch was formerly very common in all the open parts of the county, it has, of late years, become comparatively rare. Its favourite fare, ‘‘ the thistle’s downy seed”? or that of the common knapweed, of which it is ex- ceedingly fond, are however still sufficiently abundant. It formerly bred every year, in my own garden, frequently choosing a horse-chestnut on the lawn, as also a Phillyrea, placing its nest between the diverging stems close to the trunk, and in a particularly thick apple-tree, near the end of a leafy branch, and, now and then, a lichen-covered pear, building it of wool, felted together with the aforesaid lichen, and lining it with the down of the seed of the balsam poplar, a very favourite material, when it can be obtained. The nest is very similar to that of the Chaffinch, but much smaller GOLDFINCH. 151 and even neater. For its sprightly manners, its cheerful notes, and its extreme docility, it is greatly prized as a cage- bird, and is frequently supphed with a small bucket and chain, with which it is taught to draw up its water, or seed. In winter it receives considerable accessions, and though not in such large numbers as formerly, it is frequently captured in clap-nets, coming freely to the call-birds. Mr. Booth states that one Brighton bird-catcher informed him that about twenty-five years before the publication of his ‘ Rough Notes,’ he had, at one pull of his net, taken eleven dozen. Mr. Hussey, in 1860 (Zoologist, p. 7144), put the annual captures of this species near Worthing at about 1154 dozen, nearly all cocks; and Mr. Booth further states that even larger numbers used to be yearly taken within ten miles of Brighton, adding that in that neighbourhood it had now be- come comparatively scarce, owing in part to the fatal prac- tice of catching the birds prior to, or during the breeding season ; so that not a hundred may now be seen, even at the most favourable time of the year. Knowing this, no one can be surprised at the diminution of the species. The young are known to the bird-catchers as Greypates. There is also a variety called the Cheveril, or the Chevil, which is distinguished by being somewhat larger than the ordinary form, by having the chin entirely white, and the white on the sides of the bead extending upwards mm a well- defined line across the occiput; the sides of the breast, which are usually brown, being also white. This form is uncommon and valuable, because it is believed to have a sweeter song, and to pair more freely with the Canary-bird. 152 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. SISKIN. Carduelis spinus. Tuer Siskin is an irregular autumn and winter visitant, arriving akout October, when the seeds of the alder are its principal attraction, and occasionally congregating in large numbers. It may then be found among copses and marshy land, or on open commons and boggy places bordering the little streams in St. Leonards forest, in the gills—a Sussex term signifying the deep wooded ravines—wherever the alder abounds, the seeds of which form its favourite food, and, in search of that seed its attitudes are very like those of the Titmice, as often as not head downwards. At this time it is so tame that I have more than once heard of its being caught with a noose at the end of a fishing-rod. While it is feeding it keeps up a constant twitterimg. In the winter of 1871 or 1872 a flock frequented, for a few days, some old alders at the head of the upper pond at Woldringfold, near Cowfold, three or four of which were sent to me. I have also seen it busily engaged on the seeds of the birch. It is in high estimation as a cage-bird, and is often taken in the clap-net. It will breed freely with the Canary-bird. In my own notes I find, that in October 1839, several, males and females, were caught at Hove. It has frequently been observed among alders, near the Hassocks Station of the L. B. and 8. C. Railway, and, at the proper season, it may be met with wherever that tree is plentiful. In Mr. Jeffery’s p. nu. I find the following remark :—‘ July 3rd, 1867. I have just heard from Mr. G. Drewitt, of Oving, that a pair of Siskins have built, and hatched out their young, in the garden of Mr. Birrell, the rector of that parish.” Mr. Jeffery also records (Zoologist, p. 597), that on October SISKIN.—MEALY REDPOLL. 133 12th and 13th, 1866, it was seen feeding on alder seeds, in company with the Lesser Redpoll, and that the Siskin is the rarer bird of the two. The nest is said to be very like that of the Chaffinch, but smaller. MEALY REDPOLL. Linota linaria. Tur Mealy, known to bird-catchers as the Stone, Redpoll, has by some been regarded as only a large variety of the Lesser Redpoll. It appears very irregularly in the winter, sometimes in large flocks, but is never so abundant as the species next to be described, and its numbers appear to have decreased considerably of late years. It was unusually com- mon in the neighbourhood of Brighton about 1875, since which time it has been comparatively rare. I have never myself had many opportunities of observing it. On the north side of the Downs, a short distance from them, Poyn- ings Common, which is covered with rushes and coarse herbage, and bounded on one side with brushwood and high timber, used to be one of its favourite places of resort, where it fed on the seeds of the thistle and of the common knap- weed (Centaurea nigra), and thus engaged, I once saw about a dozen, some of them very brightly coloured, and admitting a very near approach. Further into the Weald I have neither met with nor heard of it. Most of those that have been found have been on the cultivated land between the Downs and the sea. It has never nested in the county, nor is there any record of the bird having been seen later than the middle of February. It has probably acquired the title of Mealy Redpoll from the elongated white fringes to the plumage, which it assumes in the winter, giving it the appearance of having been powdered over with fiour. 134 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. LESSER REDPOLL. Linota rufescens. Tuts, the smallest Finch which visits us, is seldom met with in the Weald, and I have but once seen it there. Its habits are similar to those of the Siskin, and, like that species, it delights in the seed of the alder, in search of which they are occasionally found in company. Although it has nested in each of the adjoining counties, and I have myself received an egg taken by the late Mr. Bury in the Isle of Wight, I have never heard of its having done so in this county in a truly wild state. Mr. Booth has, however, mentioned that a few nests werefound in elders and willows, in 1869, near Brighton; he supposes, from the worn and faded appearance of the birds, that they had escaped from confinement. In the winter it is often captured in very large numbers in clap-nets, no bird respouding more readily to.the note of the call-bird. At the time of immigration it has frequently been taken in small traps on the roofs of the houses in Brighton and Hastings. In confinement the red portion of the head changes to yellow after the first moult. LINNET. Linota cannabina. TuHroucHour the county, except in the large woods, this species is universally distributed. It is resident, and breeds especially in furée-bushes, and in all our gardens and shrub- beries, forming its nest of roots, and lining it with wool. It LINNET.—TWITE. 135 is a good songster, and in the winter assembles in very large flocks, and many hundreds annually fall victims to the bird- catchers. It feeds on small seeds of all kinds, and, like many of its congeners, is, in the spring, very destructive in the kitchen garden, but feeds its young principally on cater- pillars and insects, thus perhaps domg more good than harm. TWITE. Linota flavirostris. Tue Twite, known also as the Mountain Linnet, arrives in this county only in winter, confining itself entirely to the coast, especially to the salt-marshes, and those portions of the mud-flats which are dry and covered with coarse herbage. In such spots I have particularly observed it in small flocks just above the bridge at Old Shoreham, and in February 1841 I shot several there, and also fell in with a small party, in company with the Brambling and Tree-Sparrow, picking up the corn by the side of an oat stack in the parish of Lancing. It is also frequently found on the beach. Like the Common Linnet it is much prized by bird-fanciers, and, though it has but a poor song, in severe weather it is caught in great numbers. It breeds in the Northern Counties, where the nest resembles that of the Common Linnet, and is generally placed in a furze-bush. 136 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. BULLFINCH. Pyrrhula europea. In every part of the county, where there are high hedges or tangled copses, the whistling call-note of the Bullfinch may be often heard, though the bird itself is naturally wild and retiring, keeping to the interior of the thick bushes, but it will often show itself if one remains perfectly quiet. In spring they enter the gardens, and then have the credit of doing great damage, especially to the gooseberry bushes, by picking off the buds to such an extent that I have been asked to shoot them, though I think that the shot often does at least as much harm as would be done by the birds. If you squeeze one of them, and pass your thumb up from below the threat, it will discharge the buds, when you will find that they have been swallowed whole, and though there is the embryo of the blossom in each, I have nevertheless often thought that they do more good than harm, for the crop of gooseberries is generally as great as the bushes ought to bear, and the fruit is the finer for the thinning. The nest is constructed of small sticks at the base, most artfully laid together, then comes a first lining of long roots, and, after that, a second of very fine ones. It is often built in a thick bush, or a closely-clipped quickset hedge. At this period of the year it is very tame, and I have known the nest in an Arbor vitz close to my window, also in a Pyra- canthus trained close to the window of a cottage. To the berry of this tree the Bullfinch is especially partial, as it is to the seed of the wild rose, and those of several other berries, though it feeds its young with insects and half-digested greeu buds, BULLFINCH.—SCARLET GROSBEAK. 137 I have heard it remarked that this bird is extremely silent, and that its call-note is the only one it possesses. The fact is that its natural song is an inward warble, so low that unless one is close to it, it is not likely to be heard. During its delivery it puffs out its feathers and labours violently, as if it thought it was making a great noise. It is valued as a cage-bird for its beauty, and for the facility with which it acquires artificial notes from a flute, or bird-organ. Though this bird in confinement occasionally becomes black from overfeeding with hemp-seed, I have known one instance of a brood of four, taken near Hayward’s Heath, which were all black from the first, and one of them is in my collection. I mention this, because I think for a whole family to be of an abnormal colour, in an undomesticated state, is extremely uncommon. SCARLET GROSBEAK. Pyrrhula erythrina. Tus species has only once been taken in Sussex. In Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. u. pp. 172-3) we read as follows :—“ The first unquestionable appearance of the Scarlet Grosbeak in this country seems to have been recorded by Mr. Wonfor (Zoologist, s.s. p. 1918), and the statement was confirmed by Mr. Bond (op. cit. p. 1984), a hen bird having been caught on the Downs, near Brighton, in September 1869. This example was seen by the writer in Mr. Monk’s aviary at Lewes, and lived there until June 1876.” Its habits are described as much resembling those of the Linnet, though it affects marshy coppices rather than the open country. It is also called Scarlet Bullfinch. 138 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. PINE GROSBEAK. Pyrrhula enucleator. Tuis extremely uncommon visitor is reported to have appeared twice in Sussex. It is an inhabitant of all the coniferous zone of the northern parts of both the Old and the New World, and possesses much of the retiring habits of the Bullfinch. It is almost always a tame and unsuspicious bird, and has acquired a reputation, quite undeserved, for stupidity. The cock, in early spring, utters his melody from the summit of a fir tree, chiefly at sunrise and sunset (see Yarrell’s B. B. vol. uu. pp. 184-5). Mr. Knox, in his O. R. wakes this statement :—‘ I can record but two imstances of this rare bird in Sussex; an example was shot near Cotes House, about three miles from Petworth, while feeding on the seeds of a Pimaster, by a gentleman of the name of Mellish, who, being well acquaimted with British birds, at once recognized the species. In February 1848, two were killed at the same time in Ashdown Forest, one of them, which I saw, was an adult male.” But in the ‘ Zoologist ’ for 1877, p. 247, concerning these two specimens, Mr. J. H. Gurney, Junr., writes :—‘‘ Although it was believed at the time that they had been killed as stated, Mr. Knox informs me by letter, that he now almost begins to doubt them.” In the same paper Mr. Gurney also states that he saw in the possession of Mr. T. J. Monk, of Lewes, a handsome yellow male bird obtained at Shoreham, near the old bridge. CROSSBILL. 139 CROSSBILL. Loxia curvirostra. Roamine over the county in large or small companies, this species may be found occasionally, in any month of the year, wherever there is a plantation, or even a clump, of fir- trees. My earliest note refers to January 1836, when two in the red, and one in the green plumage, were shot, out of a flock of about a dozen, at Nuthurst. In July 1838, a party of about the same number visited a garden at Henfield, out of which 1 shot one red and one green specimen, as they were extracting the seeds from the cones of a Scotch fir. Their method of doing this is by inserting both mandibles between the laminze of the cone, and giving a twist, when, I suppose, the seed falls into the mouth, as I never could see anything of it on the withdrawal of the beak. They remained in that garden, or in the neighbourhood, for several days. On the 29th of the same month and year, my attention was attracted by the shrill note of a little flock of these birds as they flew over my head. Following them, I found about a dozen on some larch firs ; and on the next day I again saw several in the garden at Henfield. In August of the same year, I met with them again at Uckfield, and the points of the bill of five which I shot were much more elongated than in any I had before seen. The red birds had a great admixture of orange- yellow. In March 1840 one was brought me from St. Leonards forest. This was in the red plumage, and was moulting, the new feathers on the throat being of a light orange-colour, as were the few which were expanded on the breast. In February 1839, several were shot at Hurstpierpoint and at Ringmer. 140 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. In January 1861, a flock of some sixty or seventy flew over my head in a large plantation of larch, near Crawley, when my attention was drawn to them by their letting fall several cones of that tree. They settled at no great distance, when I had an excellent view of their parrot-like manners, as they frequently used their bills in climbing to different parts of the branch, or, standing on one foot, held the cone in the other while extracting the seed; and I observed that they fre- quently carried a cone with them when flying from tree to tree. I once received a nest, with eggs, from St. Leonards forest in March, but I have not recorded in what year. It was about twenty feet from the ground, on the branch of a Scotch fir, close to the stem. The nest, or perhaps only a portion of it, the only one I have myself seen, was constructed of dry grass, lined with finer grass, and a little rabbit’s fur, and finished with horsehair. Gilbert White mentions this bird as appearing annually at Ringmer. Mr. Knox (O. R. p. 212) states that “in the autumn of 1835, great numbers of these birds were observed in most of the pine and larch woods in Sussex. They were abundant at Salt Hill, near Chichester, and in that neighbourhood, and at Parham.” Mr. Jeffery observes that in July 1866, a male was obtained at Chidham, and another, the following September, at Sidlesham. PARROT CROSSBILL. Loxia pityopsittacus. Tue habits of this species, which was formerly considered only a large variety of the Common Crossbill, but is now held to be distinct, are similar to those of its congeners. I havea specimen in the red plumage, which was shot in St. Leonards PARROT CROSSBILL.—RED-WINGED STARLING. 141 forest in March 1870. One is recorded (Zoologist, p. 6329), by some one whose name is not given, thus:—“I saw the bird, ‘in the meat,” in Mr. Swaysland’s shop. It had been caught at Bognor, by a bird-catcher in clap-nets, November 2nd, 1858. ‘The bird bit his fingers so much that he dared not place it with the newly-caught Goldfinches, and was therefore obliged to killit. It had a very large beak, with the cross not nearly so much developed as in Lowia curvi- rostra. There was a little yellow onthe head. It was curious to find such a bird apparently a long way from any of its appropriate food.” It is a native of the pine-forests of Northern Europe, appearing in winter in Germany and Poland occasionally, sometimes in Holland, Belgium, and France. ICTERIDA. RED-WINGED STARLING. Ageleus phaniceus. Tuts is a very abundant species in North America, and a common cage-bird in this country. The particulars of the only two specimens which have been recorded as obtained in this county, are as follows :—One, stated by Mr. Jeffery (Zoologist, p. 8951) to have been killed on December 25th, 1862, at Sidlesham, and to have been found in a hedgerow. He believed it to be a male, but, it being shot in the back, he could not tell by dissection. The gizzard contained, besides small gravel, some round black seeds ; it was in good condition, and showed no signs of having been in confinement. The second example is a male, said 142 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. to have been caught near Brighton, March 21st, 1866; kept some time alive in a cage, and now in Mr. Monk’s collection. In its native country, North America, it is very destructive to corn, but also devours great numbers of insects. STURNIDZ. STARLING. Sturnus vulgaris. Tus sprightly and familiar bird is found throughout the county ; and in the spring affects houses and farm buildings, breeding in the chimney-stacks and water-pipes, from which it is very difficult to eject it, for, though several may be shot, others will take their places most pertinaciously. Neat as it may be im appearance, it is very untidy in its habits, scattermg the nesting materials about wherever it takes up its abode. It is fond of cherries, but its food consists very greatly of aphides and grubs, and of small land mollusks, of which I have found many in the interior of Starlings which I have examined, chiefly Zua lubrica and Zonites purus. It often accompanies the cattle in pastures, feeding on the crane-flies and other insects disturbed by their feet. At certain times of the year they assemble in large cloud- like flocks, and, at this time, they roost in great numbers in the reed-beds and in the underwoods, breaking down the reeds in the former, and in the latter destroying the vegetation on the ground by their droppings. On arriving at these spots they perform many evolutions, with great chattering, before they settle, when they swoop down suddenly and not a note is heard. They nest also in STARLING.—ROSE-COLOURED STARLING. 145 holes in trees and chalk-pits, often m sea-cliffs, building a rude nest of straws and hay, or any rough materials, with many feathers, bits of worsted, &c. The Starling has a very chattering note, as well as a pleasant warble, and readily imitates the songs of other birds, or the mewing of a cat, or sound of a saw, and it is easily taught to speak many words and sentences. - ROSE-COLOURED STARLING. Pastor roseus. Very rarely, and at long intervals, this species has appeared in the county. In its general habits and notes it much re- sembles the Common Starling. In its native country, South Russia, Turkey, Greece, &c., it assembles in large flocks, following, or sometimes preceding, as if they expected their arrival, the flights of locusts, and feeding on them, as well as on beetles and fruit. It nests in large companies in holes of buildings and in quarries. I have in my collection a beautiful adult male, which was shot from the back of a sheep, near Brighton on August 20th, 1870. Another was in its company, and was shot at the same time, but of which sex I have no information: they are recorded in the ‘ Field,’ and in the ‘ Zoologist,’ p. 2344, s.s. Another adult male was shot by Mr. Massie, of Warnham, near Horsham, where it was shown me soon after by a bird- stuffer. Mr. Dennis, then Rector of East Blatchington, informed me that two specimens were shot in that neighbourhood in August 1855, one, a male in full adult plumage, the other, in moult. They were shown him by Mr. Potter, formerly a 144 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. bird-stuffer in Lewes. The first was the property of Mr. Fuller, of Tarring Neville, by whom it was shot; the other, of the sex of which I was not told, was killed by a gardener at Piddinghoe, who, on Mr. Potter calling at his house, brought it from his garden, where he had just shot it. A fine specimen was shot at Bexhill, in August 1871, and sent for preservation to Mr. Kent, of St. Leonards-on-Sea (Zoologist, p. 2765, s.s.) It has never nested in Britain, though it has occurred as early as May and as late as February. CORVIDE, CHOUGH. Pyrrhocorax graculus. I rear that the Chough is now extinct in Sussex. I may mention that I had a good opportunity of watching the habits of this bird in co. Mayo, Ireland, where it is still numerous. Several authors have stated that Choughs never settle on the grass; there, however, I saw them every day on it, searching about like Starlings in front of the house, and picking up something from the turf. They might be heard chattermg Irish down the chimney of my bedroom early in the morning. I generally saw them flying about in little parties, over the patches of oats and potatoes. They breed on the cliffs, and on ruins of old castles, near the sea, bnilding their nests, in the most inaccessible crannies, of sticks and seaweed, feeding on beetles and grubs, as well as on crustaceans and shell-fish, and are said to dig up young potatoes. The note of the Chough when flying, somewhat resembles that of the Daw, but is pitched in a much higher key. CHOUGH. 145 It frequently rolls over in its flight, and falls to a consider- able distance, after the manner of the Raven. Merrett, writing in 1667, speaks of it as found along the whole coast, from Cornwall to Dover. Gilbert White, writing in 1773, states that it bred on Beachy Head, and on all the cliffs of Sussex. Markwick, that this bird fre- quents the South Downs about Beachy Head and Kast- bourne; and Mr. Woolgar, who died in 1821, says in his catalogue of the birds of the environs of Lewes, printed in Horsfield’s history of that town, that it “builds on the cliffs on the coast. Common at Beachy Head.” Mr. Knox (O. R. p. 213) says,—* This was certainly its last stronghold ; but it disappeared from the coast about twenty years ago.” It is in evidence that Choughs were given occasionally by Cornish gentlemen to their friends in other counties, and Sir Thomas Gage, in his ‘ History of Hengrave,’ records one thus sent by a Carew to Kytson, of Hengrave, in Suffolk. I hear from Mr. Dennis, some time rector of East Blatchington, that a Chough was brought to him on January 29th, 1868, by one, Joe Barker, who had just shot it between Seaford Head and the Puck Church. It was in good condition and plumage. There is a legend that the Choughs, which foremrly bred there, were derived from a pair which had escaped from con- finement ; but Mr. Dennis informs me that he never heard the story, and believes that it must have originated from the fact that a gentleman turned out a pair of Magpies, which bred for years on a solitary tree in front of the town of Sea- ford. The gentleman paid blackmail to the boys not to molest them. When he left, they were soon destroyed, and the tree has long since perished. Mr. Dutton, writing in the ‘ Zoologist’ for 1864 (p. 9099), remarks :—“ An old shepherd says, ‘Them there red-legged Crows was common at Beachy Head and Bell Tout about forty years ago.’ ” 146 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. RAVEN. Corvus corax. Tue Raven is now become a rare bird in Sussex, and its breeding-places are very few. It is extremely voracious, and, though feeding on any living animal it can master, hares, rabbits, rats, &c., as well as on young lambs, or even full- grown sheep, if found in a state of weakness, a dead car- cass of any kind is a particular attraction. It feeds also on freshwater mussels, as well as on marine shell-fish, or any animal matter it may find on the sea-shore, though near its nesting-places it is said to do little damage, driving off any Hawks, or other intruders, from its neighbourhood. In my own notes I find the following :—“'The Raven has for many years bred annually in Danny Park, Hurstpierpoint. A fine adult female was shot there in January 1840, which was afterwards presented to me. Having been much disturbed in the park, these birds forsook the spot, and betook them- selves to a plantation on the side of the neighbouring Wol- stonbury Hill, one of the South Downs. “On April 16th, 1855, I visited this new settlement, and found that the nest was built in an old Seotch Fir, about 50 feet from the ground. The birds were very anxious and clamorous, flying round and alighting on the trees, some- times within 200 yards or even nearer, or soaring over our heads uttering their bark-like ery. A few days before, a boy had been up to the nest, and found in it four young birds newly hatched. He said that the old birds, when he was at the nest, were very savage, and darted down several times to within a few feet of him.” Though it has nothing to do with the birds of Sussex, I RAVEN. 147 may mention that on December 2nd, 1837, I saw in Cam- bridge Market five young Ravens, quite in a callow state, which had been taken within a few miles of that town, the only instance in which I have known the young of any bird to have been met with in this country, at that time of year, in an undomesticated state. It still breeds every season on the cliffs, and formerly did so in Burton Park and at Parham. Mr. Knox, O. R. (p. 150), states that they also bred in Petworth Park, but had been missing for many years, till, to his surprise, when riding one day in 1843, in the park, he heard the unmistakable croak of a Raven, and perceived it dashing among a flock of Jackdaws, which it succeeded in driving from the precincts of its nest. This he found placed in a fork near the top of one of the highest trees in a clump of beech. The holes in the trunks were occupied by a colony of Jackdaws. In the following year this clump of beech was deserted for one of fir, and there Mr. Knox again found them breeding. After this, the nest was robbed by a boy, but the young birds were fortunately discovered and restored to the nest, when the parents again took to and reared them. The late Bishop Wilberforce, in his review of Mr. Knox’s O. R.,in the ‘ Quarterly Review’ for September 1849, vol. Ixxxy. pp. 489, 490, makes this observation :—“TIn the spring of the year the Ravens returned to their old nest, and re- paired and occupied it according to their wont; incubation had already begun, when a violent spring storm actually beat the mother from her nest, and scattered the eggs upon the ground. After a few days the Ravens began to repair the damage of the storm, and, abandoning the unfortunate tree, they constructed upon another their new nest, A second storm, almost as soon as the nest was completed, again marred their work, and actually tore the nest itself from the tree. For a few days the Ravens were missing ; L 2 148 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. after this they returned, but conjugal disagreement finished what the violence of the wind had begun. The work of nidification was recommenced, but one bird was set upon repairing the original, the other, upon building a new nest. For a day or two the divided work proceeded, when, as if by mutual compromise, both abandoned their separate under- takings and flew off together in search of a more favoured spot. The appearance at the same moment of a pair of Ravens, who proceeded forthwith to build and incubate at Parham Park, about eight miles distant, seems to mark out that place as the haven of their choice. ‘ Italiam leti Latiumque petamus.’’’ There was, however, a Raven’s nest at Parham Park long before the arrival of those birds, and I suspect there were Ravens nesting in that Park for many years before. About the year 1830 a pair nested near the summit of the ruined gateway-tower of Bramber Castle, and again in 1843; but these last were unfortunately shot. Mr. Booth says, that in passing over the South Downs in 1876, near Saddlescombe, during September and October, he noticed a pair of Ravens flying from the Dyke Hill. A year or two later, a dead body, or rather a skeleton, of a man was found in a patch of furze near the top of the hill, and that as the Ravens had been often noticed about the same spot, he had not the slightest doubt they had discovered it, and had returned to it regularly, as long as there was anything to attract them. GREY CROW. Corvus cornix. AxtHouGH this species and the Black Crow are now con- sidered to be identical, its habits in this county do not _ een GREY CROW. 149 appear to warrant that opmion. For, whereas our present subject does not appear there till October, departing in March, I have never known any accession to, or diminution of, the numbers of the Black Crow at either period. The latter birds, too, pair inter se, in March, yet I have never known them to do so in Sussex with the Grey Crow, a circumstance which, had it occurred, would surely have been noticed by some one. Why, if they are of the same species, does the Grey Crow always leave us to a bird, and the Black Crow breed here? It is equally persecuted wherever it goes, being welcomed with strychnine in a piece of carrion, or in an egg, placed for it in all directions, whether in England, Scotland, or Ireland, no bird being more destructive to the eggs or brood of any game, especially of Grouse. Surely the circumstance of their breeding together in the northern counties can be no proof of their being the same species. On the 4th of January, 1841, I witnessed an interesting - chase of, I believe,a Common Bunting, by one of these birds whose manceuvres in the pursuit were perfectly marvellous, as it followed every twist and turn of its intended victim, and this continued as long as they were in sight. As the Bunting was evidently growing fatigued, I have little doubt that the Crow succeeded in capturing it. Mr. Booth, in his ‘Rough Notes,’ states that he has seen this Crow pursuing birds, which appeared fatigued by a heavy gale, far out to sea, and over it they will often hover, and drop upon any floating garbage they can discover. All along the coast it may be found during its short visit, feeding about the roads and the manure heaps, and the more filthy its food the more it seems to enjoy it. Tnland, it is seldom met with, though I have now and then seen one some eight or ten miles from the coast. It retires at night to the plantations on the Downs, those about Brighton, for the most part, roosting in the beech woods in 150 THE BIRDS: OF SUSSEX. Stanmer Park. It is known as the Grey, Royston, or Saddle- backed Crow. BLACK CROW. Corvus corone. Tus Crow, formerly very abundant all over the county, is now, from its persecution by the gamekeeper, far less so, and bids fair to become altogether extinct. Its habits and food are similar to those of the Raven, and, like it, it is never found in flocks, not more than a pair, or at most the parents and their young, being seen together. The nest is generally on a tree of moderate height, and usually placed on the top of the trunk at the divarication of the principal boughs. Although not associating together, I once found no less than seven nests in one wood of about ten acres. This was in April, and they all contained eggs or young. The nest is neater than that of the Rook, and is formed externally of dead sticks, copiously lined, often with dry horse-droppings, overlaid with a thick layer of wool. Though said to migrate southward in autumn, I have always found the numbers about the same throughout the year, except from the addition of young birds in summer. In winter it frequents the sea-coast for what it can find on the beach. I have twice seen it strike down a bird on its flight—once a pigeon, which I picked up, and once a small bird, which it carried away im its beak. It is generally known as the Carrion Crow. It is particularly fond of the large freshwater mussel, which it opens by violent blows on the ligaments which attach the valves. ROOK, 151 ROOK. Corvus frugilegus. So much has been written respecting this species, that I have little, or nothing, new to say about it. As it has been dis- puted whether, or not, it feeds on carrion, I may state that I have often seen it tugging away at the pieces of horseflesh hung up by the keepers in the trees, as food for their dogs. Several winters ago, in a deep snow, a fox carried off three pinioned Sea-Gulls from my own premises. I observed, in three places in the meadow close to my house, several Rooks busily engaged, and, on driving them off, I found the bodies of the gulls, the head of each having been doubtless eaten by the fox, the remainder being quite freshly torn about by the Rooks. I left them, and the Rooks shortly returned, when, with a binocular, I saw them swallow down several pieces of the Gull’s flesh. The Rook is very destructive in gardens, digging up and devouring the crocuses and tulips; it is also particularly fond of green walnuts. Several years ago the late Sir Percy Burrell, wishing to establish a Rookery at West Grinstead Park, procured some boughs of trees with nests containing young from about half a mile off, and fixed them in a clump of old oak in the aforesaid park. The parents came there, and the young were brought up, and a considerable Rookery is now established. There was, until a few years ago, one of the largest Rookeries in the county, at Woodmancote. The timber, which was some of the finest oak in Sussex, was cut about 1876. All the birds of the smaller Rookeries, from long distances, used to resort to this place in the winter, visiting occasionally their own colonies to repair the nests. Since 152 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. the destruction of this grand establishment, several smaller Rookeries have sprung up in the county. Before a gale, I have often seen Rooks ascend to what Gilbert White would call a prodigious height in the air, circling about, and now and then descending rapidly, nearly to the ground, and continuing these manceuvres sometimes for an hour together. In Daniel’s ‘ Rural Sports,’ 1807, vol. ii., we find the following :—‘‘ Between the Rook and the Raven there appears a wonderful antipathy. Mr. Markwick says, that in 1778, so soon as a Raven had built her nest in a tree adjoining to a very numerous Rookery, all the Rooks immediately forsook the spot, and have not returned to build there since. At the Bishop of Chichester’s Rookery, at Broomham, near Hastings, upon a Raven building her nest in one of the trees, the Rooks left the place. They, however, returned to their haunts in the following autumn, and built their nests there the succeeding year. It is no very difficult task to account for this antipathy; the Raven will scarcely suffer any bird to come within a quarter of a mile of its nest, being exceedingly fierce in defending it; besides, the Ravens seize the young Rooks from their nests, to feed their own : this, at Mr. Seymer’s, at Harford, in Dorsetshire, Mr. Lam- bert was eye-witness to, and there was no rest in the Rookery, night or day, till one of the old Ravens and the young ones were destroyed.” The Rook occasionally builds on trees in our towns, as, for example, at Brighton, where it may often be seen settling on . the pinnacles of tne Pavilion. Or es) DAW.—PIE. 15: DAW. Corvus monedula. Tue Daw, generally called the Jackdaw, is resident and abundant, associating much with the Rooks, building in the hollows of the trees of the Rookery, and sometimes in the masses of old Rooks’ nests, the accumulation of years ; it frequents also the higher spires in our towns, and is fond of breeding in old chimneys, or on the flights of steps, and in apertures in ruims and ancient buildings, as well as in cliffs and chalk-pits. The Daw is a sad thief, and is greatly attracted by any bright object, such as a teaspoon, or piece of money, which it will hide in some corner or cranny ; it will often steal sticks used for marking the plants in gardens, and is a very familiar bird, and exceedingly amusing. It constantly accompanies the Rooks in their excursions, and, like them, indulges in extraordinary aerial evolutions, chasing one another and tumbling in the manner of certain varieties of the tame Pigeon. It feeds on garbage of all sorts, as well as on grubs, beetles, &c., and is very fond of walnuts. It uses large quantities of sticks, sometimes more than a bushel, in the construction of its nest, lining it with quantities of horse-droppings, shavings, and wool. PIE. Pica rustica. Tuts beautiful bird, which appears at a distance to be merely black and white, has, in fact, but little real black about it, and that only on the head, neck, and upper part of the back, 154 ' THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. the rest of the dark portions of its plumage being shot with green, bronze, and steel-blue. It is exceedingly cunning, and a great enemy to the game preserver, killing young hares and rabbits, and stealing the eggs and young of Part- ridges and Pheasants from the coops. It builds a rough and bulky nest in the branches of a high tree, doming it over, and composing the foundation of sticks, and the interior of fibrous roots, turf, and grass, forming a deep cup, which it then plasters with clay. The dome is more lightly built of the thorniest sticks, making a sort of chevauax de frise pro- jecting outside in all directions. The entrance is in the side, just proportioned to the size of the bird. When the female is sitting, a person waiting to shoot her often finds it difficult to make her leave the nest, even by striking the tree with a stick, and when she does so she suddenly descends perpen- dicularly, keeping the trunk of the tree between herself and her foe, and thus often escapes for a time. It, however, sometimes chooses for its site a thick hedge, or closely grown hawthorn, perhaps quite low down, and when this is the case it is called in Sussex the “‘ Bush Magpie.” It formerly bred freely in all parts of the Weald, but, from constant persecution, it has now betaken itself chiefly to the thorn-trees in the deep valleys of the Downs. Great numbers were formerly taken in steel traps baited with a hen’s egg, this beg an irresistible attraction. It is a favourite cage-bird, being amusing in its actions, and readily tamed, and taught to talk, imitating, of its own accord, the various noises around it. Besides the food already mentioned, it has a strong pen- chant for cherries and peas. JAY. 155 JAY. Garrulus glandarius. Tuis very gaily dressed bird is still fairly abundant in most of our woods and copses, and is rightly named garrulus, as its whereabouts is constantly proclaimed by its squalling and harsh cries, at all times of the year, except in the breed- ing season, when it is so silent that, unless from occasionally seeing the old bird, no one would suppose there was a Jay in the neighbourhood. Of this, I can give a notable instance : I was sitting on a seat in my own garden, under a very thick evergreen oak, a conspicuous object from my window, when, to my surprise, I heard the cry of a young Jay overhead, and, on looking up, there was the nest, though I had not seen or heard the parents about the premises. This is the only one of the Corvide which attempts a song, and a strange medley it is, of an inward chattering and gurgling warble, mingled with an occasional imitation of the notes of various other birds, and perhaps, now and then the mew of a cat, or bark of adog. During the utterance of these notes, it is usually concealed among the thick foliage. It builds an open nest, about 15 feet from the ground, on the top of the trunk of a tree, in the underwood of a coppice, or in a thick bush, on a considerable platform of sticks, and lines it very neatly with fine roots. I have several times shot this bird with a mouse in its bill, and two or three times with a young Partridge in the down, and once an old Tree-Pipit. As this last was in May, it had probably captured it while sitting on its nest. It is fond of maize and fruit, and, if it has a chance, does great damage amongst the peas in the gardens. It is also a great devourer of eggs, and is constantly caught by the keepers, by 156 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. placing a Thrush’s nest on a little platform of turf four or five feet from the ground, among the underwood, and surrounding the nest with steel traps. In captivity it will imitate the noises of the neighbourhood. The blue feathers of the wing are in great repute among anglers for the dressing of their salmon-flies. It is frequently much infested by a species of Hippobosca. NUTCRACKER. Nucifraga caryocatactes. Tue only occurrence of this bird in Sussex is the following :— On the 26th of October, 1844, 1 saw one at a bird-stuffer’s in Brighton, which I was told he had received, in the flesh, from a farmer of the name of Newman. On him I called, and was informed that it was shot by his nephew, Mr. Roods, at Littlington, on the 26th of the previous September. It was flying across a turnip-field, and appeared to have risen from a stubble near at hand. Unfortunately the interior had been removed before it was sent to Brighton. It isa mature bird. The sex was not ascertained, nor what it had been feeding on. I bought it, and have it still. It is said to be not uncommon in some parts of Europe. The following ac- count by a lady relative, Mrs. Blackburne, of Henfield, a great and accurate observer of birds, gives so graphic a description of its manners, that I think I may, as the lawyers say, “put it in;” March 1890 :— “You asked me to give you an account of the Nutcracker which I saw in Switzerland. “We were walking from the Kggischhorn to the Bel Alp, it was written out at my request in ait. J.G.Keulemans del THE NUTCRACKER. NUTCRACKER. 157 and, when we had passed the Reider Alp, began to descend the rugged side of the mountain, which is covered with fir- trees, through which the path is cut in steep zigzags to the edge of the Great Aletsch glacier in the valley beneath. We had scarcely entered the wood, when I heard the call of a bird whose note was quite new to me, strong and loud, yet full and rich, reminding me of the Australian Crow, whose note I had heard in confinement. My brother thought it was harsh, but I thought it only clear. We both watched, and saw the bird-busy at the top of a fir-tree, searching among the cones. It seemed very wary, but not shy, and as we could only see it against the sky, it looked black, and it flew away before we could make out what bird it was. “ A short time after, I heard another call, and proceeding very quietly, I saw the bird busily at work on the top of a fir-tree pounding into one of the cones, using its powerful beak like a hammer, as the Nuthatch and the Tits do. Before we got down to the edge of the glacier, we saw five or six of the birds. I think they were a family party, they answered each other’s call, and flew from tree to tree, always settling quite on the tops of the firs and holding the cones with their feet together, beating into them with their beaks. I could not get near enough to see the spots clearly, they looked a brownish black. I consider they were young birds of the year, and, like Starlings, not getting their full plumage till after the moult. I have no doubt as to their being Nut- crackers ; there seems no other bird they could possibly be. I was very glad to have the opportunity of watching them, They looked about the size of small Jackdaws, but it is always difficult to judge accurately the size of birds in very wild and bold scenery.” The editor of Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. ii. p. 335), describes a nest in his possession as five or six inches in thick- ness, with an outside diameter of about afoot, and six inches 158 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. across the interior. It is composed outwardly of sticks and twigs of larch, spruce, and birch; all, as the swollen state of their buds show, freshly plucked, as is also the grass with which it is thickly lined..... In some nests a considerable quantity of earth, or rotten wood, underlies the lining, which occasionally consists of hair-like lichen. Mr. Hancock, in his ‘ Catalogue of the Birds of Northumberland and Durham ’ (p. 40), after giving an interesting account of a Nutcracker which he kept six years in confinement, makes the following remarks :—“ Its voice was very peculiar; it had an extremely harsh loud ery, resembling the noise produced by a ripping saw while in full action. This cry was so loud that it could be heard all over the house. It had also a sweet, low, delicate, warbling song. This was uttered only when everything was perfectly quiet. The song was much varied, and was con- tinued for some time. So low and delicate was it, that it could only be heard when the bird was close at hand, and the note seemed as though it were produced low down in the throat. The song was occasionally interrupted by a few low creaking notes, like those produced when a corkscrew is being used.” HIRUNDINIDZ. SW ALLOW. firundo rustica. Tue average date of the arrival of the Swallow in this county is, according to notes kept by myself for more than thirty years, the 6th of April, but they are seldom numerous till about a week later. I once witnessed the, apparently, first arrival of a considerable company of these birds, which settled SWALLOW. 159 together on the branches of an ancient pollard ash, and were so fatigued that several dropped from the tree, and even allowed me to pick them up and put them on the somewhat flat surface of a large limb, where they remained quiet for more than half an hour, This was at least four miles inland, and I never could understand why they had not rested sooner ; but I suppose the distance to a Swallow in full flight is a matter of very few minutes, and hardly appreciable. The nest is built of mud, mixed with small pieces of hay or straw, and lined with feathers, which the Swallow, like the Martin, often, perhaps always, catches in the air. It is saucer-shaped, and though often placed in a chimney, about six feet down the shaft, is more commonly found on the sur- face of a beam in a barn, or under the roof of a porch, or out- house, perhaps under a bridge, or the arch of a gateway. I once found one in a small box left on the seat of a summer- house; and, when a boy at school, saw one in the same situa- tion as that mentioned by Gilbert White, namely, on the back of a dried Owl, which he says went to the Leverian Museum. My specimen was hanging up ina barn at Wester- gate, near Chichester; what became of it I do not know. When the young are hatched, the parent birds collect a large quantity of gnats and small Co/eoptera in their mouths, with which to feed them. At this time, on the approach of a person to the nest, it will swoop down at his head, making a shapping noise with its beak, as it will also at a dog or eat. I have seen them caught by boys, with a fishing-rod, with a small white feather, or piece of paper on the hook. Shoulda Hawk come in sight, they will collect, and mob him and drive him off. They assemble in large numbers on roofs and tele- graph wires, previous to their departure from the country, and the main body have all left by the end of October. The young may be known on the wing, by the absence of the elongation of the outer feathers of the tail. 160 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. MARTIN. Chelidon urbica. Tue Martin arrives a little later than the Swallow, about the middle of April, and the main body have left us by the middle of October. I have, however, occasionally met with a few as late as November, on the 5th of which month I once observed four, hawking for insects around the castle at Lewes. These were young birds, as has been the case with nearly all those Ihave seen so late in the year. These birds are much persecuted by the Sparrows, who frequently take possession of their nests, and not always with impunity; for in two instances I have seen the Martins stop up the entrance of one, in which the Sparrows had young; once at Shelford, near Cambridge, about the year 1839, and again at Martin Lodge, Henfield, in 1842 or 1843. In the former case seven Martins were busily thus engaged, and in spite of the resistance of one of the old Sparrows, if not of both, from the inside of the nest, they succeeded in imprisoning them. The Martin usually affixes its mud-built nest on the wall under the eaves of a house, or beneath the architrave of a window, sometimes on the underside of a mass of chalk projecting from a cliff. A colony of these birds will frequently breed in close proximity, and a row of perhaps a dozen nests may be seen together. . They seldom alight on the ground, except when collecting mud for their nests, the feathers with which they line them, being often captured in flight while floating in the air. SAND-MARTIN. 161 SAND-MARTIN. Cotile riparia. Tuts, the smallest of the British Hirundines, arrives, in most years, a few days earlier than the Swallow, making its appear- ance near some river or pond. It is seldom seen far from the water, except in the breeding-season, at which time it resorts in considerable numbers to sand-pits, railway- cuttings &c., in the perpendicular faces of which it digs out nearly circular holes, that, unless interrupted by a stone, or a stratum too hard to penetrate, it excavates to the depth of about two feet, straight or crooked, according to the nature of the soil, clinging, by the support of its tail, or sometimes head downwards, and scratching out the earth with its feet : at the further end of the hole it forms a neat nest, composed of fine grass, lined with feathers, preferring those of the Goose. It feeds its young on dragonflies and other insects. Though generally silent, the male has at this time a soft twittering song. Its flight is wavering and butterfly-like. It usually avoids the neighbourhood of houses, but occa- sionally makes use of the holes in masonry, called in Sussex “putlog” holes. It is rarely met with on the Chalk, or in the district between the Downs and the sea. It is much in- fested by fleas, which may often be seen in multitudes in and around its holes. The Sparrows greatly persecute it, and often possess themselves of its hard-earned abodes. It does not congregate, like the other Hirundines, previous to its departure, but all have left us by the end of September. M 162 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. PICARIZ. CYPSELIDZ. SWIFT. Cypselus apus. Tur Swift arrives about the 4th of May, when it congregates around the highest buildings of our towns, or the towers of our village churches. In fine weather it seems to pass the greater part of its existence in careering about high im the air, for it is never seen to alight on the ground or to settle on trees or buildings, and, except in the breeding-season, seems never to rest. At this time Swifts may be seen dashing about, pursuing one another with rapid flight, and screaming loudly. They are particularly active during thunder-storms ; in very rough winds or cloudy days, however, they may be observed to fly much lower, and when they have young will descend nearly to the ground, or fly over the water, capturing dragonflies and other insects, especially minute Coleoptera. In the breeding-season they betake themselves to the eaves of some lofty building, where they place, generally on the wall-plate, an artless nest of hay or straw, lined with feathers, and at the time of incubation the females are serenaded by the loud cries of their partners as they dash around the building. They will sometimes, however, take possession of similar situations under the roofs of low cottages, returning to them tor many years in succession. I once observed a pair of SWIFT.—ALPINE SWIFT. 163 these birds flying to and fro under a bridge, only a few mches above the level of the surrounding fields, and, as the water was low, I managed to get under it, and there found, on the piece of timber supporting one end of the planks of the bridge, anest containing twoeggs. On another occasion, I found several birds sitting on their nests on the wall-plate under the eaves of a church, and took them off to see how many eggs they had, placing the old birds by the side of the nest, when they made no effort to move, and I put them back and left them. As I have said before, the Swift is never voluntarily on the ground, and, when placed on a level sur- face, rises from it with great difficulty. It is infested by great numbers of a species of Hippobosca. It leaves us early in August, but I have once seen it as late as the 14th of September. ALPINE SWIFT. Cypselus melba. Tis rare straggler is larger than C. apus, measuring 18 inches in extent of wing. Its habits are very similar. In Switzerland, the only place where I ever saw it alive was about the Cathedral in Berne, whither I went for the pur- pose, and well was I rewarded! for it was a beautiful day, and I saw great numbers of this magnificent Swift careering around, and far above, the spire. I was not so successful, however, in procuring the egg, in hope of which I ascended the interior of the spire, for the only nest I found, but did not see, was in a hole which I thought I could reach from a small opening at the highest accessible point. By leaning out as far as possible, I could just touch an egg with the tips of my fingers, but durst not reach out an inch further, the M 2 164 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. mullion on which I was leaning showing signs of consider- able weakness. I wetted my fingers and made some mud from a dirty beam, hoping an egg might adhere to them, but with no avail, as it was not sticky enough, and I was obliged to give up the attempt, having no desire to make so rapid a descent as I might have done. What would I not have given for a bottle of gum, or a tea- spoon! but there was no time to go down and return, as I was compelled to leave by a particular tram. This was in August 1869. The nest is thus described in Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds,’ vol. ii. p. 8375 :— The nest is placed in holes of rocks or buildings, and is described as being small, for the size of the bird; semicircular when placed against a vertical surface, and formed of straws, grasses, and leaves, with moss, or almost any other material it can collect on the wing, the whole being glued together with its saliva.” The only specimen which, as far as I am aware, has occurred in Sussex, was seen sitting on a rail at St. Leonards-on-Sea early in October 1851, and was knocked down by a boy. It passed into the possession of Mr. Johnson, chemist, of that place (Zoologist, p. 3330). CAPRIMULGIDA. NIGHTJAR. Caprimulgus europaeus. Tue Nightjar, Fern Owl, or Goatsucker, is migratory, appear- ing about the middle of May, and leaving the country towards the middle of September. It is found in all the wooded districts, as well as on the open Downs and heaths, NIGHTJAR. 165 It feeds generally by night, on Coleoptera, especially the chafer, and on the night-flyng moths. Gilbert White says that, while watching one of these birds pursuing chafers, he saw that it conveyed something to its mouth with its foot, and that he supposes the serration of the middle claw to be useful to the bird in holding its prey; and in Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ is mentioned the suggestion of Mr. Sterland, that it may be an assistance to it in maintaining its hold on the branch of a tree in the horizontal position which, when it settles, it always assumes. It is, however, doubtful whether it is designed for this purpose, or what its true function is. Although, as I have said, it mostly feeds by night, I have several times seen it in the brightest sunshine, lying on the top of a bee-hive, swooping every minute or two at the bees, and have known it so engaged for many hours at a time, and it is often shot while thus destructively employed. So far from avoiding the sunshine, it seems to delight in it, and I have often seen it knocked on the head by the all- destroying keeper. My son, going about one night with a lantern, collecting moths on sugar, observed one thus stretched out on the top of a post, and, turning his lantern on it, the bird was so dazed by the light that it allowed itself to be stroked down the back. Its note exactly resembles the sound of a spinning wheel, and the “Spmning Wheel Copse” has from time immemorial been the name of a small wood in a neighbouring parish, which is more resorted to by Nightjars than any spot with which Iam acquainted. It has another note, resembling that caused by the passage of a whip through the air. It has extraordinary powers of flight, twisting and wheeling about in all directions. It lays its eggs, making no nest, on the ground, in an open space in a wood, and seems fond of placing them among the 166 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. chips left by the hoop-shavers, where I have often found them. When startled while sitting, it strikes its wings violently together in the manner of the Pouter and some other Pigeons, though its usual flight is inaudible. This has hitherto been considered the only representative in this country of the Caprimulgide, but a single specimen of the C. egyptius has been obtained in Nottinghamshire ; and an example of the large South-European species, C. ruficollis, is said to have been taken in Northumberland, in October 1856 (Ibis, 1862, p. 39). CUCULIDE. CUCKOO. Cuculus canorus. Havine kept notes of the arrival of the Cuckoo in this county for more than thirty years, I find the earliest to have occurred on the 6th of April 1844, but about the 14th is the more usual date. There is a saying in Sussex that it is turned out at Heathfield Fair, which is held on that day— the name of this village is rustically pronounced Hévél. Although the Cuckoo is not strictly polygamous, seven or eight may occasionally be seen chasing one another from tree to tree, and at this time another syllable is prefixed to the usual note, thus: “ Cu-cuckoo,” generally twice repeated at short intervals. _ It has, besides a clear, liquid note, which I cannot express in writing, and it also chatters, on leaving a tree, somewhat in the manner.of the Magpie. It is frequently heard at night even when it-is-wet and dark. On the 9th of May 1846, I heard two uttering the note with the prefix, CUCKOO. 167 for nearly a quarter of an hour. The Cuckoo feeds on moths, dragonflies, and hairy caterpillars. I believe few birds will eat the larva of the sawfly of the gooseberry, but I once saw five Cuckoos together im my garden busily thus engaged. These birds are perfectly harmless, yet the keepers constantly kill them, no doubt mistaking them for Hawks. There has been great discussion as to how the bird contrives to place its egg in the nest, which is often so built, or situated, that it would be impossible for it to adopt the usual method; it is, how- ever, now indisputably settled that it conveys it in its mouth. Formerly, when a Cuckoo was shot while on this errand, the broken egg in its mouth caused it to be suspected of robbing other birds’ nests. According to the nursery rhyme, “Tt sucks little birds’ eggs to make it sing clear.” I have occasionally found the Cuckoo’s egg in the nest of the Chaffinch and Greenfinch, and in that of the Pied Wagtail ; but those of the Hedge-Sparrow, the Robin, the various Pipits, and the Reed-Warbler, seem to be usually preferred. The Cuckoo has generally left us by the end of July, though an occasional bird, usually young, may be observed late in September. It is generally diffused all over the county, but prefers open heaths, especially those where there are scattered timber trees. It is also partial to marshy land. When uttering its note, it usually sits horizontally onabough. Its mode of flight, and its general appearance, are so much like those of a Hawk that it is mych persecuted by small birds, for which they, like the gamekeeper, no doubt mistake it, and, perhaps for that reason, it is very shy and retirmg. In the numerous eggs which I have seen, there has been verv little variation in colour, some being slightly redder than others. I took one, at Cowfold, from a Hedge-Sparrow’s nest, which was as large as that of the Alpine Accentor, and of the same colour as that of the Hedge-Sparrow, of which 168 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. I at first thought it a double-yolked specimen, which it was not, and several naturalists agree with me that it is that of a Cuckoo. UPUPID. HOOPOE. Upupa epops. ‘'HIs species makes its appearance almost every spring, prin- cipally in April, and again pays us an autumnal visit. Its occurrences are too numerous to need individual notice, and it has in very few instances bred in the county. The earliest on record, that Jam aware of, was at Southwick, near Shore- ham, where a pair hatched their young in a hole in an ash- tree on the village green. ‘They were for some time in the possession of Mr. Waring Kidd, of Brighton. I visited the spot, and examined the remains of the nest, which was on a bed of rotten wood, quite soaked with a most horribly odorous mass of putrid matter. In another instance, a pair hatched their young in a tree at Park End, Chichester, about the year 1835, as is recorded by Mr. Jesse in his ‘ Gleanings’ (vol. 11. p. 148). I saw an example of this bird on my lawn, on the 14th of April 1882, and watched it for some time searching for food among the grass, using its bill as a man would a pickaxe, which instrument, supposing the head and neck to form the handle, and the bill and folded crest the rest of the tool, was thereby not badly represented. I did not hear it utter any note, nor did I see it erect its crest. When disturbed, its fight greatly resembled that of the Jay, but was more buoyant. HOOPOE.—ROLLER. 169 I was told afterwards that either this or another Hoopoe was seen running about in an adjoining meadow, on the 29th of the same month. It is a very filthy feeder, delighting in searching in noisome manure heaps for grubs or beetles, for which it also frequents willows and other trees, probing the perforations made by these insects, it also feeds on earth- worms, often running round in circles, trampling down the grass to bring them to the surface. When I was quite a boy, I made my first acquaintance with the Hoopoe in this way: I was at a farmhouse when the tenant brought in a Hoopoe, which he had just shot in a wood close by. His wife said, “It is a pretty bird and ought to be kept ;”? to whom he replied, “ Hang it up in the chimney by the side of the bacon,” which was accordingly done. Many years after I saw it again, and was told that it had just been brushed over with a hat-brush. It was still in fair condition, though rather spoilt by the smoke. CORACIIDA. ROLLER. Coracias garrulus. Tuts very rare visitor has made its appearance in Sussex, but the notices are few and far between. From Yarrell’s ‘British Birds’ we learn that, in the countries of which it is a native, it frequents the woods and is very shy, and is generally seen passing from one dead tree to another in search of Coleoptera, uttering in its flight a loud cry resem- bling the words “ Rack-rack-rack.” It also feeds on frogs. The nest is commonly placed in a hollow tree, occasionally 170 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. in a hole ina bank, or wall, using a bedding of roots and grass, or feathers and hair, on which it places the eggs. It has obtained its name from a habit of rolling over in its flight. The earliest record of this species in Sussex is that of Hill (Hist. Anim. p. 369), who states that one was seen by him in Charlton Forest in 1752. Markwick, in his Catalogue of Sussex Birds, read before the Linnean Society (1795), merely says, “A bird of this species was killed in this neighbour- hood.” Mr. Knox records an example shot by Mr. Tomsett, near Alfriston, and another shot in July 1843, on Chinton arm, near Cuckmerehaven. In the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 2497) there is a notice of a specimen shot on the 29th of May, near Nutley, on the borders of Ashdown Forest, which proved on dissection to be a male, and a cockchafer, with the remains of other large Coleoptera, was found in its stomach. I am informed by Mr. Dunlop, Vicar of Henfield, that this specimen is now in the possession of Mrs. Day, of Uckfield House, and was shot by Mr. John Bennet, for whom Mr. May, naturalist, of Hast Grinstead, informs me that he mounted it. Mr. Monk has recorded a Roller which was killed at Isfield, on June 12th, 1870, and purchased by Mr. McQueen, of Chailey, who presented it to him. On dissec- tion, the only thing found in its stomach was a small cock- chafer (Zoologist, p. 2224). MEROPIDZ. BEE-EATER. Merops apiaster. I nave only heard of three instances of the occurrence of this species in Sussex. The first was shot by Sergeant BEE-EATER.—KINGFISHER. WI Carter, near Chichester, in May 1829, and is mentioned by My. Knox (O. R. p. 219). The second, which does not seem to have been recorded in any journal, is thus mentioned in a note to the ‘ Catalogue of British Birds,’ sold at Godalming in March 1890 :—“ This rare bird was obtained from a person who found it on the sea-shore between Arundel and Worthing in 1833.” The third was shot at Icklesham in August 1834, but not recorded in the ‘ Zoologist’ till 1850 (p. 2953). It was mounted by Mr. Martin, of Hastings, and purchased by Mr. Ellman, from whom it passed into my collection. The Bee-eater frequents the South of Europe, and breeds, often in large numbers together, in holes in banks, or sand- hills, excavating them to the depth of three or four feet, enlarging them into a chamber of about a foot in diameter, and lays on the bare soil. The legs and wing-cases of the insects on which it feeds, which are the castings of the bird, accumulate in such quantities that a handful may be taken up at once. It feeds on humble-bees, wasps, grass- hoppers, and many kinds of beetles. Its flight resembles that of the Swallow, and its note has been described as a rich warbling chirp. (See Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds,’ vol. ii. pp. 421-2.) ALCEDINIDA. KINGFISHER. Alcedo ispida. Tuoven rather local, the Kingfisher is found throughout the county, following the courses of the streams and haunting the large ponds of the forest and Weald, visiting as well the 172 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. small pits which are scattered about the county. Its flight is exceedingly rapid. It feeds principally on small fresh- water fish, for which it may often be seen watching, perched on an overhanging bough, and is then very confiding. I have known it to sit for some time on a fishing-rod stuck into a bank close to me; on perceiving a fish, it will dash down and seize it, generally by the middle, and either carry it off, or swallow it head first. It often hovers over the water for a few seconds before descending on the fish. It is partial to little drams im the salt-marshes near the sea, where it follows the ebbing tides, and pounces on the small Crustacea which it finds there. I have now and then seen it in Shoreham Harbour, or flying across the beach between that and the sea. It also feeds on water-beetles, dragonflies, and other insects. Occasionally, it appropriates the deserted hole of a water-rat, from one of which I dug a nest, close to the Hammer Pond, near Horsham, sometimes very little above the surface of the water, but more commonly it excavates one itself in a bank, sometimes in in a dry sand-pit, and only large enough to admit itself, and from two, to five or six, feet deep, sloping upwards, and ter- minating in a small chamber. There it forms a cup-shaped nest of its own castings of fish-bones, which smell abominably ; the passage to the nest being always, after the hatching of the young, flowing with putrid matter, and swarming with fleas. The note is shrill and piping, uttered as it follows the windings of the stream, or flies up and down a pond. The young assemble on a branch overhanging the water, while waiting for their food, and they then keep up a shrill twitter- ing. In confinement, the Kingfisher is very pugnacious. The feathers are in great request for making artificial flies, and, from the brilliancy of its plumage, it is a favourite orna- ment in the head-dresses of the ladies, whence its numbers are rapidly diminishing. In some of the Sussex farmhouses We KINGFISHER.—GREEN WOODPECKER. 17: © one of these birds may be seen suspended by a string from the ceiling, the idea being that the bill always points in the direction of the wind. PICIDA. GREEN WOODPECKER. Gecinus viridis. Tus, the largest and commonest of the British species, is found wherever there is old timber, frequenting the outer edges of the woods and the open glades, rather than the thicker portions, as well as the scattered trees of our parks, It climbs with great facility, and diligently searches the erevices In the bark of the trunk and the large limbs. It bores a truly circular hole, deep into the timber, in which it lays its eggs on the rotten wood and those chips which are not thrown out, forming no other nest. Notwithstanding its large size and its powerful bill, it is often dispossessed by the Starling. In the summer it may frequently be seen on the ground, probing with its long tongue the nests of the ants; its motions then resemble those of a Parrot. I have several times watched both the old birds and their young thus employed. Its flight is undulating, and in passing from tree to tree it utters a loud laughing ery, in some degree like the neighing of a horse, and on this account it has acquired the name of “ Yaffil.” It is also, from its uttering it most frequently in stormy weather, known as the “Rain Bird.” It is very harmless, seldom attacking the sounder parts of the wood. When perforating the tree, its tail may be observed to be constantly twisting round and round, as if polishing the surface of the wood, 174 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. GREATER SPOTTED WOODPECKER. Dendrocopus major. Tus species is not nearly so abundant as the last, but may he met with occasionally where there are pollard trees, par- ticularly the willow and alder, not affecting the large timber so much as G. viridis. It is fond of fruit as well as of nuts, beech-mast, and other seeds. Insects, however, are its prin- cipal food, and for them it may be heard constantly striking the higher branches, to which it chiefly confines itself. It bores holes about two inches in diameter, sometimes to a great depth, and, if the tree is suitable, it may be found regularly riddled with them, and the ground strewn with the chips. It has several distinct notes, and is very vociferous in the spring. It usually forms its nesting-place in a hole of its own making, but occasionally uses any suitable hollow, lay- ing its eggs on the decayed wood and chips. It receives an accession from abroad in December. Of this, a remarkable instance occurred in the neighbourhood of Brighton in that month of 1889, when the visitors even entered the gardens in the town, and were found in many parts of the Weald, not usually frequented by them. I am not aware that it has any local name. LESSER SPOTTED WOODPECKER. Dendrocopus minor. From its very small size, and from its predilection, except in the breeding-season, for lofty trees, especially the elm, this bird, though more generally diffused than D. major, is much LESSER SPOTTED WOODPECKER.—WRYNECK. 175 more rarely seen, and, were it not for the constant jarring of the bill against the branches, might altogether escape notice. In the breeding-season, although it probably nests in the higher parts of trees as well, it occasionally makes its hole quite low down in a fruit-tree, and sometimes close to a dwellmg, and this, as might be expected, is very small, little exceeding an inch and a quarter in diameter, Its food con- sists entirely of insects, and I have never seen it on the ground. It has a loud note, resembling kink, kink, often repeated, as it sits upright on the topmost shoot of a tree. It does not seem to have any local name in this county. WRYNECK. Lynx torquilla. Arrivine in April a little before the Cuckoo, the Wryneck has obtained the name of the “ Cuckoo’s Mate,” and its note, much resembling that of the Kestrel, is one of the earliest to be heard. It is also called in Sussex the ‘ Peel Bird ” or “ Rinding Bird,” from its giving notice that it is time to commence the flaying of the oak bark. It has acquired the name of Wryneck, from the peculiar habit of sunning itself on the point of a branch, and contorting its neck im an extra- ordinary manner, pointing its bill straight up, and ruffling up its feathers. It feeds entirely on insects, and, like the Green Woodpecker, is fond of collecting the ants and their eggs, by means of the adhesive secretion on its tongue. It never makes any nest, but lays its eggs on the rotten wood in a natural hole, frequently im some fruit-tree. In one instance a friend of mine amused himself by taking one egg every morning till he had obtained no less than twenty-two *. * It is curious that the same number was taken by Mr. Salmon (vide Mag. Nat. Hist. vii. pp. 465, 466), 176 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. Though a weak and defenceless bird, it is very tenacious of its abode, repelling any attack on it with a loud, snake-like hissing, and from this, and from the contortions of its neck, it has acquired the further title of the “ Snake-bird.” Its flight is not undulating, but straight, like that of the Finches. Although the feet are formed like those of the Woodpecker, it is seldom seen to climb, and the feathers of the tail are soft and flexible. COLUMBZ. COLUMBIDA. RING-DOVE. Columba palumbus. Tue Ring-Dove is generally known as the Wood-Pigeon, and is very common, and strictly monogamous. It inhabits the woods, but in the breeding-season often comes into gardens, and is then very tame, walking about on lawns close to houses. One has often come within a few feet of me when I have been sitting perfectly quiet, though at other times it is very wild, watchful, and difficult to get a shot at. It builds a mere platform of small sticks, so slightly put together that the eggs may sometimes be seen from below. It breeds very early, and very late. I have shot young birds in October that could merely fly from tree to tree. The usual site of the nest is in thick ivy on the trunk of a tree, but I have in two instances observed it in ivy against a house. It often nests in a thick fir, particularly spruce. The note is well described in Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ by RING-DOVE.—STOCK-DOVE. 177 the syllables ‘ coo-roo-cd6-c66,” laying great stress on the second, It is fond of gooseberries, but its usual food is beech-mast, acorns, and corn, as well as turnips, to which it does great harm by scooping out the pulp, leaving large holes, thus admitting the water, and causing the roots to decay. It eats the seeds of many noxious weeds, particularly those of the kelk, or charlock (Sinapis arvensis), and is very fond of those of the buttercup (Ranunculus acris), as well as of the berries » of the holly and the yew. In the breeding-season it has a peculiarly buoyant flight, rising and falling in the air in a series of arcs. STOCK-DOVE. Columba enas. Tur name Stock-Dove has been supposed to be derived from the mistaken idea that this species is the origin of the domestic pigeon, which however is not the case, but it has been given to this bird from its breeding, not in the ranches, but in the stock of a tree, placing its nest, composed of sticks, in holes of large timber, especially of the beech. It breeds in those of St. Leonards Forest, one of which I found tenanted by the Brown Owl in the middle, the Stock-Dove higher up, and the Jackdaw highest of all. \ I have also known it to build in Spanish chestnut, pollard oak, and fir trees, mm the Parks of Petworth, West Grinstead, Parham, and Stanmer, also among the ivy on a tree at Barrow Hill, Henfield. A pair bred for several years in a thick mass of it on my own house at Cowfold, and thence, on the ivy dying away, they removed to that on an oak tree about a hundred yards off. A pair also have long bred just below a window N 178 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. in front of the house at Oakendean, in the same parish, as well as in holes in the elms of the rookery there, and in some ash pollards near the house. Its food is similar to that of the Ring- Dove. Gilbert White says that it is particularly partial to bariey. Mr. Booth, in his ‘ Rough Notes,’ states that he found young Stock-Doves in a Squirrel’s drey, in Balcombe Forest, and that they resort to rabbit burrows in the slopes of the South Downs, and to holes in the face of the chalk pits of Beeding and Offham. Mr. Jeffery, in his P. N., says that it breeds in Stoke Park, and in the old yew trees at Kingly Vale. It is of late years much more diffused over the county than formerly, assembling in large flocks in the winter. It does not coo, but utters a prolonged rumbling sound. Mr. J. H. Gurney, in Transactions of the Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists’ Society, vol. iii. p. 172, says :—“The Stock-Dove breeds in the cliffs of Faiwlght. I was sure of this in 1879, havmg frequently seen Pigeons fly out of the cliffs, but could never be certain if they were Stock-Doves or Tame Pigeons; but this year I saw them near enough to be qnite certain about them, and should say that there were three or four pair nesting between the Glen of Ecclesbourne and the Glen of Fairhght. At Hurstmonceaux Castle, where they also breed, and where there is a large garden, I am told they do great harm to the young cabbages.” ROCK-DOVE. Columba livia. I povusr whether the Rock-Dove ever breeds in Sussex, the deep caves agreeable to its habits not existing in our cliffs. ROCK-DOVE.—TURTLE-DOVE. 179 It has been obtained very rarely. I can only give the follow- ing instances :—Mr. Ellman informed me that one was shot by Mr. Vidler, near Pevensey, in February 1852. Mr. Dutton records another shot near Bell Tout Lighthouse, im January 1865, and a third at Holywell, near Hastings (‘ Zoologist,’ p- 9578). I found them abundant on the coast of co. Mayo, and had an opportunity of observing the marvellous rapidity of their flight when dashing out of the caves in the rocks of that iron-bound coast. This species is considered to be the progenitor of the domestic Pigeon. TURTLE-DOVE. Turtur conmunis. Tuis beautiful Dove is migratory, appearmg in May and leaving us early in October. It breeds in the underwoods of our copses and shaws, and lays its eggs on a platform of small sticks so loosely constructed that they may often be seen through it, and seldom at any great height from the ground. It is very fond of salt, and may often be observed in little flocks on the salt-marshes. Feeding on corn, it after the harvest frequents the stubbles, and is especially fond of tares. Its note may be expressed by the syllables “ curr curr.” Its flight is very rapid. On its first arrival seven or eight may occasionally be seen together, and they assemble in the latter part of September in still larger numbers, a few days before they take their departure. N2 180 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. PEDIOPHILI. PTEROCLIDA. PALLAS’S SAND-GROUSE. Syrrhaptes paradoxus. Tuts straggler from the Steppes of Asia made its first appear- ance in Britain, on the coast of Norfolk, im July 1859; the great invasion, however, did not take place till 1863, and the Sand-Grouse did not arrive in Sussex till that year, though one was killed so near as New Romney in Kent in November 1859 (Ibis, 1864, p.186). The flight is extremely swift, and the note is described as resembling the words “ truck-truck, truck-truck ” ; the food consists of small seeds and berries. Mr. Parkin, of Halton, Hastings, in his P. N., says that a specimen was caught in the parish of Icklesham, at the Camber Sandbanks, in July 1863, by a son of Lieut. Webb, of the Coastguard, and was stuffed by Mr. Gasson, of Rye. I was informed by Mr. Pratt, of Brighton, that a flock of about thirty were seen for some days in June 1888, flying to and fro from the Downs to the beach; they were very wild, and no one could get within shot of them. He also said that on June 20th two were shot near Falmer, and a solitary bird on the beach at Shoreham on the 8th of November ; all these examples were seut to him for preservation. Mr. Jeffery tells me that a Sand-Grouse was obtained at Itchenor, near Chichester, in February 1889. In the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 8682) we read of a specimen having been shot by Mr. Pickard, of Woodward Farm, Balcombe, in June 1863, from the crop of which a spoonful of small seeds was taken; and of another, supposed to be a female, shot out of a flock of seven or eight _ PALLAS’S SAND-GROUSE.—BLACK GROUSE. 181 near Eastbourne. (Recorded in the ‘Field’? by Mr.C. S. White, but without date.) On p. 8683 it is mentioned that a specimen was killed by coming in contact with the telegraph- wire on August 29th, and was purchased by Mr. Vidler, of Pevensey. It was a female, and its crop contained a little of a peculiar grass which grows by the salt water “ells,” i.e. small pools, no doubt derived from the Latin palus. It afterwards came into my possession. Mr. Vidler had seen a party of eight, dusting in the road, a few days previously, but they disappeared before he could get his gun. The eggs of this bird were brought to Professor Newton by Mr. Bateson, who found them on the Kirgiz Steppes, where he saw many nests, which were chiefly placed in hoof-prints. GALLINE. TETRAONID. BLACK GROUSE. Tetrao tetrix. Tue Black Cock and Grey Hen, which were formerly found in scattered parties in the Forest Districts of Sussex, are, I fear, now nearly extinct. In the Forest of St. Leonards none have been heard of for the last forty years, though, from Mr. Padwick, of Horsham, I learn that his father once shot five or six brace in a morn- ing, in a part of the forest known as Coombe Bottom, between 1835 and 1840. I myself shot an old Black Cock in Lower Beeding parish about 1849; it was alone, and had been observed for some time, 182 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. It is very possible that birds might have strayed over the Sussex border from Wolmer Forest, where their numbers have been replenished since the time of Gilbert White by Sir Charles Taylor, when he was the Ranger of the forest *. More likely still, from Leith Hill in Surrey, where, about 1832, I saw as many as twenty old cocks in a pack, and have often put them up in smaller numbers. In Ashdown Forest, they seem to have lingered somewhat later, as, from imquiries made in that district, I learn that two or three pairs were seen up to about 1862 near Duddleswell and Pippinford, almost the highest part of that range. In that same year, 1862, Mr. Turner, then Rector of Maresfield, wrote as follows :—“ Ashdown Forest was well stocked with Black Game. So numerous were these birds at the commencement of the present century, that it was hardly possible to walk or ride in any direction without disturbing some of them. At that time the forest was thickly covered with heath, but this has been so generally cleared that the Black Game, being de- prived of the food and shelter they so much delight in, have gradually disappeared’? (vide ‘Sussex Archeological Col- lections, vol. xiv. p. 62). Markwick merely states that he has seen this species in St. Leonards Forest, near Horsham. Mr. Knox, in O. R. p. 164, mentions having seen a few near Crawley, but that they were fast decreasing in numbers. In the ‘ Zoologist, p. 3330, Mr. Ellman records that a Grey Hen was caught in a wire by one of the “ slippery gentle- men rovers of the night,” and the cock bird seen, about five miles from Lewes, October 30th, 1851. The Black Grouse feeds on corn, heath, whortleberries, and blackberries, and, in severe weather, on buds of the willow and birch, and the tips of the fir. It makes a slight nest * There is no reason to suppose that they were extinct in the time of Gilbert White. BLACK GROUSE.— PHEASANT, 183 generally on a bank, under shelter of a tuft of heath or small bush. Its favourite resorts were the most boggy parts of the forest, and it seemed to require a good supply of water. Mr. Stewart Hodgson, of Lythe House, Haslemere, writing in May 1890, informs me that he had not seen any Black Game on Black Down, which is in Sussex, except an old cock, which he killed in the winter of 1870, for several years. He kindly sent me a letter dated May 15th, 1890, from Mr. James Simmons, of Haslemere, in which he states that a brace were put up on Black Down this last season by the hounds, and that they were the last he had seen. Mr. Hodgson informs me also that many years since, Sir Charles Taylor, then of Hollycombe, had a number of Black Grouse from Scotland turned out, but they got away to the highest part of Hind Head, that they lived some years, seeming healthy, but never breeding, and that he also remembers that Mr. James Fielding turned a number out on Black Down in 1840 with the same result. They have been of late years much disturbed by the military. Mr. Allen Chandler, of Churt Wynd, Farnham, states that he last saw Black Game on Black Down about ten years ago. PHASIANIDS. PHEASANT. Phasianus colchicus. THERE is an ancient tradition that the Pheasant was originally introduced into Greece by the Argonauts, on their return from their expedition in search of the Golden Fleece, whence. it gradually spread over Europe, and there is reason to sup- pose that it was introduced into England by the Romans. 184 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. It is now so crossed with the Chinese Ring-necked species (P. torquatus) that it is extremely difficult to obtain a speci- men of the pure Colchican bird. That it was here before the Norman Conquest appears certain, and the earliest record may be found in the tract ‘De inventione Sancte Crucis Nostre in Monte Acuto et de ductione ejusdem apud Waltham,’ edited froma MS. in the British Museum by Bishop Stubbs, and published in 1861. The bill of fare drawn up by Harold for the Canons’ households of from six to seven persons, A.D. 1059, and preserved in a MS. of the date of circa 1177, was as follows :— Erant autem tales pitantize unicuigue canonico: a festo Sancti Michaelis, usque ad caput jejunii (Ash Wednesday), aut xii merule, aut 1 _aganseze [Agace, a magpie (?) Ducange], aut ii perdices, aut unus phasianus, reliquis temporibus aut ancee [Geese ; Du- cange|, aut galline.” Which may be thus translated :— Such were the allowances to each Canon from Michaelmas day to the beginning of the fast, Ash Wednesday: either twelve blackbirds, or two magpies, or two partridges, or one pheasant, at other times either geese or fowls. ‘ Now the point of this passage is that it shows that Phasianus colchicus had become naturalized in England before the Norman invasion; and as the English and Danes were not the intro- ducers of strange animals in any well authenticated case, it offers fair presumptive evidence that it was introduced by the Roman conquerors, who naturalized the Fallow Deer in Britain.” See Professor Boyd Dawkins, ‘ Ibis? 1869, p. 358. The first mention of the Pheasant, after the Conquest, may be found in Dugdale’s ‘ Monasticon Anglicanum.’ In the first year of Henry I., a.v. 1100, “'The Abbot of Amesbury obtained a licence to kill Pheasants.” In Mr. Dresser’s ‘ Birds of Europe’ (vol. vil. p. 87) it is stated that in the time of Edward I. Pheasants were sold at 8d. a brace. The earliest mention I have met with of Pheasants in PHEASANT. 185 Sussex is, that in 1245 the Custos of the Bishopric of Chichester was ordered to send to the King for his use at Easter among other game, twenty-four Pheasants (see Sussex Archeological Collections, vol. xvi. p. 118). There are now many large preserves in the county, and Pheasants are spread over it in all suitable places. As a rule they roost in high trees, but if disturbed they will not rise from the ground again the same night, concealing themselves under some thick bush till morning. A clap of thunder, or any violent explosion, will cause all cock Pheasants within hearing to crow. They are poly- gamous, and their usual nesting-place is on the ground, though, in a few instances, they have been known to take to the deserted nest of a crow, or the drey of a squirrel. They will, not unfrequently, breed with the Domestic Fowl, and when the Black Grouse was to be found in Sussex, there have been a few instances of their crossing with it. The hen Pheasant has been often found to lay its eggs in the nest of the Partridge. In the nuptial season the cocks fight desperately, so much so that I once witnessed a fierce and prolonged combat, which resulted in the death of one, and the retirement of the other im a very dilapidated state; the former I picked up and carried home. The Pheasant feeds on insects and their larve, particularly on the wire-worm, and on corn, peas, and acorns. It also digs up and eats the roots of many plants, and, in gardens, is very destructive to tulips and crocuses. Numerous berries also form a large portion of its diet. It is very fond of the fruit of the snowberry, Symphoria racemosa, and of that of the Berberis acuifolia, and much appreciates salt. It is subject to great variation of plumage, white and pied birds being often met with. The variety called Bohemian is found in a few preserves, 186 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. COMMON PARTRIDGE. Perdix cinerea. Tue Partridge is very common, and is too generally known to require much notice. It is mdigenous, and pairs for the season in February. The nest is formed of grass, placed in any depression of the ground, in rough hedgerows, or open fields of corn or long grass. It sits very close, and when the young are hatched the hen is very anxious for their safety, fluttering about as if wounded, but always in so artful a manner as to be able to escape as soon as the pursuer has been enticed away from her brood, and they have had time to disperse in all directions. There may occasionally be found a whole covey in which the horse-shoe mark on the breast is white, instead of chestnut; and I once met with a covey of eight, every bird of which was of a light fawn colour, with very slight rudiments of the horse-shoe mark, and shot a brace of them, which IJ still have. Should there be a strong breeze from the north, the sports- man on the coast refrains from shooting, the Partridges bemg liable to fly out to sea, where, in several instances, a whole covey has been picked up by the fishermen. I quote the followmg :—“ While walking on the Marine Parade at Brighton on Friday last, about two o’clock, I was surprised to see a small covey of Partridges dash across the esplanade, coming apparently from the direction of the sea, and seemingly quite bewildered, and take refuge in the areas of the houses on the Parade. Some workmen close by lost no time in securing them alive. It appears to me that the birds must have made an amazingly long flight to have come into such a central part of the town. I never saw such a thing before.” (‘ Field, Oct. 22, 1880.) COMMON PARTRIDGE.—RED-LEGGED PARTRIDGE. 187 During the Brighton Volunteer Review, Partridges, alarmed by the movements of the troops, have flown out to sea and alighted on the water, being picked up by fishermen in their boats. (‘ Field,” December 23, 1882.) RED-LEGGED PARTRIDGE. Caccabis rufa. Tus bird, generally known in Sussex as the French Partridge, is said to have been introduced into England about 1770, but was very rare in this county, a few being now and then met with on the Downs, which were considered by sportsmen to have immigrated from the Continent.* For a long time they did not spread to the Weald. Mr. Knox mentions that two coveys were hatched and reared under domestic Hens, aud turned down at Kirdford, near Petworth, in July 1841, which suddenly disappeared (O. R. p. 169). In September of the same year a covey of five were found at Bolney, a brace of which were shot and sent to me, by Mr. Marshall, of that place. Since that year they have rapidly spread over the whole of the Weald, and are considered a nuisance by sportsmen, as they spoil the dogs by running long distances, and then getting up out of shot. ‘The flesh is not much esteemed for the table. They, however, offer excellent sport when driven by a large party of beaters. They nest in similar situations to those chosen by the common species, using the same materials. Their * IT have heard that a number of these birds were turned out by one of the Curzons of Parham, on the South Downs, many years ago, but I can- not ascertain the date. It is very improbable that they migrated from the North of France, as the species is hardly to be found there. 188 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. call-note resembles the sharpening of a scythe—“ chuck, chuck, chucker-chucker.” The Grey Partridge says ‘‘ker- chup, kerchup, kerchup.” There is a remarkable difference in the habit of the two species. Ifa pair of Grey Partridges be made to run, they will always keep together, but a pair of Frenchmen, under similar circumstances, will always separate. OUATE: Coturnix communis. Tus little bird was formerly considered a spring-immigrant only, but as there have been many instances of its occurrence in the winter months, that idea must now be abandoned. Its principal haunts are the South Downs, where the nest is still occasionally found, but not so abundantly as formerly, when bevies of them were often met with in the corn-fields and turnips, both on the Downs and in those immediately adjoin- ing them. It occurs but rarely in the heart of the Weald, and then in September and October. When put up it flies close to the ground, and if missed by the sportsman it is exceedingly difficult to flush it a second time. Its flight is then exceedingly rapid, and in a straight line; but it seldom flies to any great distance. It is partial also to wet and rushy marsh-land, and runs very swiftly. The call-note (“wet- my-lips”’) is soft and dactylic, whence one of its specific names was dactylisonans. It may be heard to a considerable distance. Its nest is on the ground, and in the few instances in which it has been found on the Weald it has been in fields of wheat, clover, or grass put up for hay. Many years ago my father-in-law turned down several dozen on a farm QUAIL.—_LANDRAIL. 129 not far from the Downs, but never after fell in with one of them. The males are exceedingly pugnacious, and were by our ancestors much prized for exhibition in the Cock-pit. The Quail is largely imported from the Continent, for the table. It feeds on slugs and small seeds, and when. properly fed becomes exceedingly fat. Mr. Jeffery, in his P. N., men- tions a Quail killed at Selsey on the Ist of November, 1863, and another near Chichester on the Ist of February, 1866. FULICARIA. RALLIDA. LANDRAIL. Crex pratensis. Tue Landrail, or Corn Crake, arrives in April, or early in May, when its note, which may be imitated by drawing the fingers rapidly over the teeth of a comb, may be heard in the meadows and fields of corn and of clover, for which latter it has a pecuhar hking, probably because Helix caperata abounds there. I have frequently found broken shells of this species, and occasionally a whole one, in the gizzard. The nest is a mere depression in the ground, lied with dry herbage. In September this species is usually met with singly or in pairs, and when flushed it is very difficult to make it rise a second time. Should it get to a hedge it will often, when pressed by a dog, climb up into the bushes. I once happened to see a Landrail close to my foot, in some thick grass, and it allowed me to pick it up, and, to my surprise, appeared 190 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. perfectly dead, though I could not see the slightest appearance of its having been injured, and it was quite warm. I held it by the legs, and, on swinging it about, the neck was perfectly limp, and its eyes were closed. I then put it on its back on my hand, and it remained motionless. I laid it down on a foot-path and watched it for some five minutes, when I saw it open one of its eyes, and almost immediately it ran into the long grass, and, though the dog tried for it a long time, I never saw it again. Since that, I found a notice of a Land- rail behaving in exactly the same way, in the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 218 s.s.). Late in September they flock together for emigration. A brother sportsman, and I, once shot four brace and a half, in one clover field, and saw several more, but, the clover being very wet, the dogs could not hunt them, and they would not rise. I have known several instances in April, of their having been caught in the gardens of Brighton, and I remember one being picked up on the Chain Pier. Mr. Ellman records im ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 2419) that one was shot, and another seen, near the coast just before Christmas 1849, and a third was seen on the Downs near Eastbourne by Mr. Clark Kennedy in November. SPOTTED CRAKE: Porzana maruetta. Tue Spotted Crake arrives in March, and as a rule leaves us in October, but it has now and then been met with in the winter. I shot one myself on Henfield Common in December 1845. It is considered rather a rare bird ; though, from its skulking habits, requiring a good dog to flush it, I imagine SPOTTED CRAKE.—LITTLE CRAKE. 19] it to be more common than is supposed. I have often found it, when Snipe-shooting, on Henfield Common, especially in October, though I have never met with, or heard of, the nest in Sussex. I have often shot the adult bird in the county, and on two occasions, in September, obtained an immature example on the aforesaid Common. It principally resorts to wet and boggy places, where it conceals itself among the thickest herbage, and feeds on mollusks, water-insects, and small seeds, particularly those of the reed. It also frequents the weedy banks of streams and large ponds. The nest is built on wet ground, formed of aquatic plants and some finer materials. LITTLE CRAKE. Porzana parva. As the greater number of examples of this species which have been met with in England have occurred in April or May, it may be presumed to be migratory, and from its frequenting similar situations, its food and habits are probably the same as those of its congeners. The bird described by Markwick as the Spotted Gallinule, in Trans. Linn. Soc. (vol. iv. p. 9), which was shot by the side of a mill-pond at Catsfield, near Battle, in March 1791, turns out to have been the Little Crake, Porzana parva, of Yarrell. This interesting fact has lately been made known by Mr. Harting (Zoologist, 1890, pp. 348-344), in a notice of an unpublished manuscript by Markwick, now in the library of the Linnean Society, where there is also a coloured figure representing Porzana parva. Two specimens have come into my own possession. The first was taken alive near Beeding chalk-pit, on the banks of 192 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. the Adur, near Shoreham, in October 1855. The second was obtained in the following remarkable manner :—Two men, one only having a gun, were hunting for Moorhens, on the 14th of April 1869, in some reedy brick-pits near Eastbourne, with a spaniel. The man without a gun staying behind, the dog routed out a Little Crake, which flew towards him. He threw his “ wide-awake ” hat at it, whereon the bird followed it down and ran into it, and he took it alive. I soon after pur- chased it of Mr. Bates, the Naturalist, of Eastbourne. It is recorded in Yarrell’s B. B. (vol. i. p. 149). A fourth example is mentioned by Mr. Knox as in the possession of the landlord of the Dolphin Hotel, Shoreham, who shot it in that neigh- bourhood (O. R. 240). A fifth was picked up, in an exhausted state, near Seaford in March 1848, and brought to Mr. Ellman (Zoologist, p. 2148). A sixth was brought for pre- servation to Mr. Kent, a bird-stuffer at Hastings, in April 1859, p. 6537 ; and Mr. Dutton mentions a seventh, caught in Pevensey Marsh, in 1862, and seen by him in the flesh (Zoologist, p. 8330). BAILLON’S CRAKE. Porzana baillont. Tue only example of this rare Crake which has occurred in Sussex is thus recorded in the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 4159, s. s.) by Captain Clark Kennedy, while staying at Eastbourne :—“ An adult female was captured in this neighbourhood, on the sixth of August 1874, in a very exhausted and emaciated condition. It contained in its ovary eggs about the size of pins’ heads.” WATER-RAIL, 198 WATER-RAIL. Rallus aquaticus. Tue Water-Rail is generally distributed, and may be found in the coarse herbage bordering streams and ditches, It is resident, though it seems very susceptible of cold, as I have several times, in very severe weather, observed it standing on one leg, with its feathers puffed out, and its head sunk between its shoulders, apparently asleep, for it has suffered me to take it in my hand. It feeds on small fish, tadpoles, mollusks, insects, and seeds. When pressed by a dog it often scrambles up into a bush, and I once observed a wounded one walking on the horizontal limb of an oak about 20 feet from the ground. From the gizzard I took several perfect speci- mens of Clausilia nigricans and the broken shells of Aplexus hypnorum. Its flight is slow, the legs hanging down. I once found a nest, in a very wet spot on Henfield Common, composed of green flags, and lined with finer aquatic plants, containing nine eggs. It has many times, in April and October, been caught in the gardens and streets of Brighton. Its call-note is a loud, hoarse, half-choked whistle, uttered principally at night. It runs very swiftly, and swims well, if requisite. Mr. Jeffery (P. N.) states that he has found several small Millers’ Thumbs (Cottus gobio) in its interior, and also mentions that a nest was found near Up Park, on a heath at a distance from water, pretty well concealed, but having a run to and from it. Mr. Harting informs me that he has twice found the nest of the Water-Rail in the parish of Harting, where he has repeatedly seen the bird during the winter months, sometimes running, like a rat, along the side of a ditch; at others, flushed by the dogs in the swampy ground bordering ) 194 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. the Great Pond. Mr. Harper, of Norwich, says that he had found in one of these birds a full-grown Common Shrew (Zoologist, p. 2990), and in p. 215, 1882, is recorded an instance of its feigning death. MOORHEN. Gallinula chloropus. Tuts, also known as the Waterhen, is the commonest of all the Rallide, and there is scarcely a pond or stream in the county where it may not be found. Though somewhat wary, it is not nearly so much given to concealment as its con- geners, and swims and dives with the greatest facility. It often visits ponds in the neighbourhood of houses, and becomes occasionally very tame, even feeding with the domestic fowls. At Cowfold Vicarage several of these birds would come regularly, on hearing the bell at meal-times, to pick up whatever was thrown from the window, and were especially fond of boiled potatoes. I have seen one actually sitting on the back of a large dog lying on the doorstep there. It was very remarkable that this dog, though it would eagerly hunt the Moorhens in other places, was on the best of terms with those of the Vicarage, and never molested them. They will often wander about the meadows on the borders of streams and ponds, in search of worms, &c. They also feed on various insects and small fish. The nest is generally placed in the flags, or coarse herbage by the side of water, or on the branches of a tree overhanging it. I have found it, too, on the heads of pollards by the water-side, and once in the deserted nest of a Magpie, in a thick hawthorn, some ten feet from the ground. A Moorhen bred for several years MOORHEN. 195 on the head of an old weeping willow, which had fallen into the pond at the aforesaid Vicarage. The nest is generally formed of coarse aquatic plants, and lined with softer portions of the same, but I knew of one placed on a stack of pease haulm, of which material it was entirely composed. In walking, the bird constantly flirts up the tail, showing the white feathers, as it also does when swimming, nodding its head at every stroke of its feet. Its flight is heavy and slow, with the feet hanging down, and is seldom extended to any great distance, but at night it often flies round in large circles, uttering from time to time a loud note resembling the syllables, “ tak-a-ma-hak.”” In severe weather it takes to running water, and often seeks for worms, &c., among the dry leaves, proceeding up the ditches into the wider woods. It perches at times on trees, and climbs the bushes with the greatest ease. When suddenly disturbed, it will sink bodily in the water, and, after a little while, a patient watcher may see the head and neck raised above the surface, and, looking round, the bird will rise suddenly and take itself off. The curious so-called “ hairy” variety of the Moorhen has twice occurred in Sussex, and the specimens are recorded by Mr. J. H. Gurney in the Transactions of the Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists’ Society, vol. iii, pp. 581-587, in which he also gives a figure. One of these was obtained at Plump- ton, near Brighton, in November 1878, of which Mr. Gurney observes : “This is the lightest I have seen, the underparts being quite white, and the back a bright orange-red, and this is the most hair-like.” I saw this specimen myself at Mr. Swaysland’s. The other was obtained at Isfield, near Lewes, in March 1883, and was purchased by Colonel King. The peculiarity of the appearance of the birds is due to the loss of the cuticle of the plumage, carrying with it the bar- bicules which give the soft look to feathers, and so leaving a worn threadbare surface; but from what cause this decor- 02 196 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. tication arises is wholly unknown. ‘The colour of some speci- mens in this state is much tinged with yellow. COOT. Fulica atra: From the white plate on the forehead, I have heard the Coot called the Bald Coot. It is by no means uncommon in Sussex, but much more maritime than the others of its family, keepmmg to the open sea in large flocks, in quiet weather, but when it is rough, betaking itself to our harbours and estuaries for shelter. As the breeding-season approaches, it comes inland to many of the large ponds, preferring those abounding in reeds ; there it forms a large semi-floating nest of flags and broken reeds, on a platform of the latter, that have been broken down by the wind. Sometimes, when the water is shallow, it builds its nest up from the bottom, occa- sionally collecting a very large mass, raising it still higher on the approach of a flood. When wounded, the Coot requires careful handling, as it will scratch like a cat. On the wing the flight is powerful, the legs being stretched out behind it like those of a Heron. They feed on many fish and on vege- tables. I have often watched the old birds from the Covered Bridge at Lucerne, where they are very tame, diving and bringing up green weeds for the young from the bottom of the lake. The water being exceedingly clear, they may be seen to use their wings beneath the surface as if in flight. The Coot is not much esteemed in England for the table, but many are exposed for sale in Continental markets, though the flesh is very strong and oily; yet, if carefully prepared, and buried for a few hours in the ground, it is by no means unpalatable, beimg very white and juicy. COOT.—CRANE, 197 The Coot flies much at night, like the Wild Duck, but the two present a very different appearance on the wing, even when it is too dark to distinguish colour. Both fly with out-stretched necks, but the shorter-winged Coot, with longer legs, carried out behind like a tail, may always be distinguished from the sharper-winged and longer-necked Duek. ALECTORIDES. GRUIDZ. CRANE. Grus communis. Troucu formerly not uncommon, the Crane has now become arare straggler. In the good old days of Falconry, and before the draining of the Fens, it bred freely in this country, and was strictly preserved for that sport. The nest is formed of jong sedgy grass and very small twigs, placed on the ground. I have only heard of the occurrence of the Crane in Sussex on two occasions. One was shot by a butcher of the name of Geering, in Pevensey Level in May 1849, and was sent to Mr. Ellman, who recorded it in the ‘Zoologist’ (p. 3034). I afterwards purchased it from him, and it is still m my collec- tion. It was a female, though recorded by Mr. Ellman as a male, and was in good condition, the only shot-mark found on the skin being that of a single corn, which had passed through the head. The other example I saw in the flesh the day after it was shot, at Pagham, October 18th, 1854. This was also in good condition, and was an immature female, the elongated plumes on the hinder part being only two or three 198 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. on each side. The neck was much stained with rusty brown. It is preserved in the museum at Chichester, and recorded by myself in the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 4512). The taking of the eggs of the Crane was prohibited by an Act passed in 1534, under the maximum penalty of 20d. for every egg. The Crane appears to have been much prized for the table, as in the ‘ Household Book’ of the fifth Earl of Northum- berland (1512) occurs this entry: ‘It is thought the Cranys must be hadde at Chrystymas and other principal feestes for my Lord’s owne mees, so they be bought at 15d. a piece.” Nevertheless, the learned Dr. Mouffet, in his ‘ Health’s Im- provement,’ edited by Christopher Bennet, Ph.D., 1655, considers ‘‘ the flesh (of the Crane) distinctly unfit for sound men’s tables, and much more unmeat for them that be sick ; yet being young, and killed with a Goshawk, and hanged for two or three daies by the heels, eaten with hot gelentime, and drowned in sack, it is permitted unto indifferent stomachs.” The food of the Crane appears to be corn, acorns, fenny seeds and bents, as well as potatoes. Its flight is described as with the head and neck fully stretched out, with a re- markable casting up of the wings in a direction over the back after each downward stroke. The voice is loud and trumpet-like. (See an interesting account of the Crane in Lapland by Mr. John Wolley Junr., ‘Ibis, 1859, pp. 191- 198.) [ have two specimens in my own collection, which were caught in Spain by wire nooses placed in a hole in the ground, baited with olives. The fat is used by the Spaniards as a remedy for rheumatism and bruises. GREAT BUSTARD. 199 OTIDIDZ. GREAT BUSTARD. Otis tarda. Tue Great Bustard was formerly well represented in Sussex. Dr. John Hill, in his ‘ History of Animals, published in 1752, writes of this species (p. 483) :—“T have seen great numbers of them on the downs in Sussex; they run away at the approach of men, but rarely, and indeed difficultly, take wing. They are often taken by greyhounds in a fair course, in the manner of a hare. Their flesh is very well tasted.” Gilbert White, writing to Daines Barrington from Ringmer, near Lewes, in October 1770, says :—“ There are Bustards on the wide Downs near Brighthelmstone,”’ and remarks that they look at a distance like Fallow Deer; and Professor Newton tells me that he was much struck by the justice of the comparison on the only occasion on which he saw a wild Bustard, with neck extended at right angles to the body, general “ fallow ’ that there might just as well have been four as two. The Bustard was often hunted with greyhounds by my grandfather, who died at an advanced age in 1844. He told me that he had had many a good course with these birds. He used to go out early in the morning, after a foggy night, to look for them feeding in the wet turnips, when they were frequently so thoroughly soaked as to be unable to fly. He generally found them in little parties of from five to ten, and sometimes took five or six in a morning, commonly young birds, though occasionally he had known an old one to be caught, but they avoided them as much as possible, as, when overtaken by the dogs, they fought savagely, and had more than once damaged the greyhounds. They were most > colour, and legs invisible, so 200 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. numerous on a part of the Downs between the Dyke and a place known as Thunder’s Barrow, from certaim ancient tumuli supposed to be British. My father, also, while riding on the Downs, about a mile from Patcham, fell in with nine of these birds feeding in a turnip-field ; this was about the year 1810. I have heard them spoken of by some of the old South-down shepherds as having been often seen by them. Of course the birds then bred there. Markwick (Trans. Linn. Soc. vol. iv. p. 7) merely re- marks, “Common Bustard sometimes scen on our South Downs.” Mr. Knox, in his O. R. (p. 222), says :—“ The latest instance of the Great Bustard having been observed in Sussex appears to have been that of a single example which was occasionally seen about twenty-four years ago near Blatching- ton by Mr. Catt, who then occupied that farm. It used to frequent the flat table-land which runs for a considerable dis- tance in the direction of the Dyke. I have met with some very old people who in their younger days have seen flocks of these noble birds on the Downs.” In Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds” (vol. ii. p. 207) we find that on the 14th of January, 1876, a female was shot on the Downs near Eastbourne, and came into the possession of Mr. Monk, of Lewes; of course the bird was a straggler from the Continent. ‘The food of Bustards is grass, young corn, turnip leaves, trefoil, and other vege- tables, and they also kill and eat small mammals and reptiles, as well as, according to Pennant, those large earthworms which appear in great quantities on the Downs before sun- rising in the summer. In that season they conceal them- selves in the standing corn, or in high turnips. They deposit their eggs in a hole scratched in the ground. Mr. Rowley, in his Orn. Mise. (vol. 1. p. 103), quotes the following from “Museum Tradescantianum,’ published in 1656, p. 4: “The Bustard, as big as a Turkey, usually taken by greyhounds on Newmarket Heath.’’ LITTLE BUSTARD. 201 LITTLE BUSTARD. Otis tetrax. Tuer Little Bustard is a very rare straggler into Sussex, though in many parts of the Continent it is not uncommon, particularly in the South of France and in Spain, and at least seventy specimens have occurred in England. It feeds on vegetable matter, field-mice and frogs, as well as on worms and slugs. It runs with great rapidity. I saw one, near Nimes, whose pace was as fast as that of a rabbit when first started, and it kept it up across a large piece of ploughed land till out of sight. The note, in the breeding- “prut, prut.” This bird is not polygamous, and places its nest on the ground among high herbage. season, resembles the syllables ‘ The Little Bustard has been very rarely seen in Sussex, and does not appear in Markwick’s Catalogue. Mr. Dennis, in a letter to me, dated December 9th, 1854, says, speaking of a Little Bustard :—“ It was shot at Cuckmere in October 1846, by a Coastguardsman of the name of Bull, and sold by him to Mr. King, of East Blatchington, for half-a-crown. The purchaser, I fancy, was doubtful of it as an edible, and gave it to a painter of the name of Stent, by whom it was pre- served.” In March 1854 Mr. Dennis showed me the legs and feet of this bird, which were all that then remained, the rest of the specimen having been destroyed by moth. Mr. Knox (O. R. p. 222) says :—“ I have lately seen a specimen of the Little Bustard, a female, which was shot at Bosham, near Chichester, a few years ago, by Mr. Alfred Cheesman ;” and mentions that Mr. Jenyns, in his ‘Manual of Brit. Vert. An.,’ states that it has occurred in Sussex, but gives no date. 202 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. Two examples from this county are given in the ‘ Zoolo- gist ?:—On December 11th, 1879, one was shot by Mr. Martin Spiller, near Eastbourne. It was in good condition, and was preserved by Mr. Swaysland, of Brighton. And in the vol. for 1887, p. 111, Mr. Percy E. Coombe records that a fine speci- men was shot in a turnip-field by Mr. Coote, at Clymping, near Arundel, in October of that year. LIMICOLE. (DICNEMIDZ:. STONE-CURLEW. (Edicnemus scolopax. Tuts is a species still found in Sussex, principally on the South Downs and other wide, uncultivated expanses, as well as on the higher ridges of arable land, between the Downs and the sea, occasionally also on the wide plains of the interior. It was formerly much more common than it is at present, and is not unfrequently met with in the winter months, though generally considered a migratory bird, arriving in April and remaining with us till September. After the breeding-season it assembles in large flocks, and is very vociferous, especially at night, and before rain. Its note has been compared to the sound of a rusty winch, such as that of awell, when the bucketis letdown. It forms no nest, but lays its two eggs on the open field, and both the eggs and young so strongly resemble the stones, among which they are almost always placed, as to be very difficult to discover. STONE-CURLEW.—DOTTEREL. 203 Its food consists of beetles, field-mice, and frogs, as well as of worms and slugs. It runs with great swiftness, and is much more active by night than by day ; often visiting the beach at that time, for which its remarkably large eyes are particularly adapted. It has been killed in the neighbour- hood of Chichester, in January and December, and has been occasionally met with on all parts of our coast in each of the winter months, when it seeks its food among the turnips. Mr. Dennis mentions that a Stone-Curlew was picked up in a very emaciated state under the cliff at Seaford in winter, and that another was put up in a piece of rape near Hast Blatchington, on November 20th, 1856; and I have heard of several others having been killed in the winter. CHARADRIID. DOTTEREL. Eudromias morinellus. THIS species is migratory, appearing in the latter part of April and mostly departing in October, though a few are met with still later. They may be found on the Downs, in “ trips” of from seven or eight to a dozen, and sometimes in even larger numbers, and are very partial to fields of young rape, and turnips, where they feed largely on the small weevil-like beetles, which are so destructive to those crops. They used to breed in the North of England, particularly on Helvellyn and Saddleback, and still do so in Scotland— making no nest, but placing their eggs, three in number, on the bare ground, on the higher tops of the mountains— but never in this county. They are chiefly confined to the Downs, from about Brighton to a little beyond Seaford, and are not found in any number in West Sussex. 204 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. They run with great speed, and are very difficult to see on the ground. Mr. Dennis, in notes he has kindly sent me, mentions having seen and shot Dotterels from a trip of thirteen, on the hill above Blatchington, on March 22nd, 1853, and shortly afterwards twenty were reported to him as having been seen in a piece of rape, at Blackstone. On April 12th, 1858, eight birds were seen by him on the Blatchington hill; on the 24th he shot a couple, and on the 25th three young and two old birds. Mr. Jeffery informs me that three of these birds were shot at Runcton, near Chichester, on May 25th, 1859, and one at Sidlesham, on November 10th, 1875, and, in the same month, another at Earnley. They are much esteemed for the table. Of the name Dotterel, Camden somewhere remarks :—“ So called from their extreme doatishness, which occasions these imitative birds to be caught by the fowler’s gestures by candle-light.” And in Fuller’s ‘ Worthies of England,’ ed. folio, 1662, p. 149, may be found the following :—“ This is an avis yek@torrowos, a mirthmaking bird, so ridiculously mimical that he is easily caught (or rather catcheth himself) by his overactive imitation. There is a sort of apes in India caught by the natives thereof, after this manner. They dress a little boy in hissight, undress him again, leave all the child’s apparel in the place, and then depart a competent distance. The ape presently attireth himself in the same garments, till the child’s clothes become his chains, putting off his feet by putting on his shoes, not able to run to any purpose, and so is soon taken. The same humour otherwise pursued, betrayeth the Dotterels. As the fowler stretcheth forth his arms and legs going towards the bird, the bird extendeth his legs and wings approaching the fowler, till surprised in the net. But it is observed that the foolisher the fowl or fish (woodcocks, dotterels, cods’-heads, &c.) the finer the flesh thereof.” a RINGED PLOVER. 205 RINGED PLOVER. Agialitis hiaticula. THis is common all along the coast of the county, and may be considered resident, though partially migratory in spring and autumn. It is most numerous about the mouths of rivers and the muddy flats of the estuaries and harbours, though it may occasionally, though rarely, be met with on the sides of the larger mland ponds. I have seen it two or three times at the lake in Knepp Park, and in one instance an example was shot on the side of a small pond at King’s Farm, in the parish of Cowfold. It has been met with at the large mill-pond at Warnham, and is common by the tidal ditches in Pevensey Level. In the breeding-season it resorts to the large expanses of beach, especially those at Rye and Shoreham, and lays its eggs, without a nest, in small depressions among the shingle, where both they and their young are, from their similarity to the pebbles around, exceedingly difficult to discover without a dog. Mr. Booth, however, found a well-formed circular nest near Rye, most elaborately constructed, a hole having been scraped out in the fresh green turf, in which was arranged a copious lining of small white shells, which must have been transported from the shingle bank, between a quarter and half a mile distant. The Ringed Plover is strongly attached to its young, and when they are in danger will feign lameness, and flutter about to entice away the intruder. When wounded it will swim and dive well. The note is a loud trisyllabic whistle, generally uttered on the wing. In the winter it associates in considerable flocks. There is a small variety, or race, which arrives in May, and has the mantle much darker than that of the normal Ringed 206 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. Plover, and the legs of a deeper orange; the note also is quite different. These small birds were especially numerous about Shoreham in May 1880, and are not uncommon from Chichester in the west, to Rye in the east. There can be no doubt that this small race breeds on the Sussex coast, as it remains from May till October, when it totally disappears, yet I have never heard of any eggs having been found, which could be distinguished from those of the ordinary Ringed Plover. Both feed on shrimps and other small marine animals. LITTLE RINGED PLOVER. Aigialitis curonica. Tuts little Plover is exceedingly rare in Sussex, and I have seen no well-authenticated record of more than two examples having been obtained. One of them is in my own collection, and was shot, many years ago, at West Wittering, in May, but unfortunately I cannot give the year. Another was shot by Mr. Dennis, who sends me this note :—“I shot a Little Ringed Plover, together with a Redshank, at the Tide Mills Creek, Bishopstone, not knowing at the time what it was; as, though I had repeatedly shot small specimens of the Ring Dotterel, I had never met with this bird before.” This was on August 28th, 1865. In Yarrell’s ‘ British Birds’ (vol. iii. p- 268) it is stated that the note is a sharp whistle, not like that of the Common Ringed Plover, and shorter in duration ; and, on p. 264 op. cit., it is observed that it very rarely appears on the sea-coast, but frequents, and breeds on, the banks of rivers, laying its eggs on the sand, and making no nest. Its food is similar to that of the two preceding species. I am not aware that it has ever bred in Britain. It may be KENTISH PLOVER.—GOLDEN PLOVER. 207 at once distinguished from di. hiaticula by the colour of the shafts of the primaries, which are all dusky except the outer one, which is white throughout. In ‘ Zoologist,’ p. 3279, Mr. Ellman states that he obtained a specimen of this scarce bird, at Shoreham, at the latter part of September 1851. KENTISH PLOVER. Aigialitis cantiana. Tur wide expanses of beach, especially those about Rye Harbour and Winchelsea, and those of the eastern coast generally, are the favourite haunts of this Plover. It arrives in these parts in April, and breeds there in May, though it is not so abundant as formerly. After the breeding-season it may be met with in small parties all along the shore, and has been obtained in the neighbourhood of Hastings and Bexhill, becoming more scarce to the westward of the county, though it has occurred about Shorebam and Worthing. It does not associate with the Ringed Plover, but appears for the most part singly, or im pairs, running very swiftly on the sands, and when at rest, standing much higher on the legs than its congener. In its mode of nesting it resembles the other small Plovers, and leaves the country by the end of September. The note is a shrill whistle, quite different from that of the common Ringed Plover. GOLDEN PLOVER. Charadrius pluvialis. Tue Golden Plover seldom arrives before January, during which month and the foliowing large flocks visit the Downs 208 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. and the marshes, often accompanying those of the Lapwing. They are fond of fields of rape and turnip, and are very wary and difficult to approach. If, however, a shot can be obtained on the wing, the whole body of them will frequently dash down, and present an easy chance for the second barrel. As its name implies,it seems to delight in wet and stormy weather. In the breeding-season it retires to the mountains of the north of England and Wales, and makes a slight nest on the ground among the heather. In the year 1837, while travelling in Wales, I found several pairs on the summit of Cader Berwyn. The male birds were then exceedingly tame, running swiftly from one hillock to another in a state of great anxiety, and uttering aloud piping note. After watch- ing patiently for about an hour, I saw a bird alight not far from me, and after running a short distance it threw up its wings and settled down on the nest, which I found to contain four eggs. Soon afterwards I accidentally fell in with three more nests, all with the same number of eggs. As the breeding-season approaches, the bird undergoes an extraordinary change of plumage, the whole of the under- parts, as also the sides of the neck, becoming of a deep black. It is very highly esteemed for the table. GREY PLOVER. Squatarola helvetica. Tne Grey Plover is more maritime in its habits than the Lapwing or the Golden Plover, being very rarely seen at any distance from the coast, and is by no means so numerous. It is principally found on the mud flats, where it feeds on small crustacea and on various marine animals. Occasionally, however, large flocks come into our estuaries in October and GREY PLOVER. 209 November, especially when the weather is exceptionally severe. It is more usual, however, to find parties of five or six. It has appeared at Pagham Harbour early in October, and a few have been met with as late as May, when they have assumed the nuptial plumage ; non-breeding birds have even remained throughout the summer. Mr. Jeffery men- tions that several were found at Pagham Harbour as late as July 30, 1871, and some in summer plumage were seen in August 1873, but this is very unusual. It occurs all along the coast, from Rye to Chichester. Its nidification was unknown until Middendorff found it breeding in Siberia, and figured one of its eggs (Sibir. Reise, Hie LL. “Ps 209, pl. 19, fig. 1) ; and another taken by him on the Taimyr, July Ist, 1833, passed into the collection of Professor Newton, who described and figured it in the Proc. Zool. Soc. for 1861 (p. 398, pl. 39, fig. 2). In 1875 Messrs. Seebohm and Harvie- Brown found it breeding on the Tundras of the Petchora. There were many nests, formed of birch twigs and Iceland moss, containing four eggs each, inter- mediate in colour between those of the Lapwing and the Golden Plover. It feeds on small shrimps and crabs, and other crustacea, worms and green seaweed. Its note, in the breeding-season, has been described as resembling the word “kop,” and, on our coasts, on rising, it utters a call which may be expressed by “ Tle-ih” in a very high key. Respecting its qualities for the table, Yarrell (vol. iii. p. 282), quoting Muffett, gives the following :— “The gray Plover is so highly esteemed that this Proverb is raised of a curious and male-contented stomack, ‘a gray Plover cannot please him.’ Yet to some the green [Golden] Plover seemeth more nourishing, and to others the Lapwing, which is indeed savory and light of digestion, but nothing comparable to Plovers.”’ 210 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. LAPWING. Vanellus vulgaris. Turs is a resident, and by no means uncommon, frequenting the dry extensive heaths, the marshes, the roughest portions of uncultivated land, as well as the South Downs, in the summer. In each of these localities the nest may be found as early as the middle of April, always on the barest spots of the heaths, or those covered with short grass among the coarser herbage of the Downs. They occasionally breed on the more extensive old tracts of beach out of the reach of the sea, except in the heaviest gales, and almost destitute of vegetation except a few scattered plants, such as Sea Cam- pion and Thrift. They lay their eggs among the pebbles, and here the nest, in all situations very slight, has only the addition of a few stalks of those plants. I have found the nest, on one occasion, between Shoreham and Worthing; and Mr. Dennis states that they breed on the beach eastward of Rye Har- bour, in a similar locality. The Lapwing is particularly cunning in its attempts to lead away any intruder on its eggs or young: fluttermg on the ground, or flying round with heavily flapping wings, and occasionally tumbling as if shot. In the latter part of September, or beginning of October, they collect in flocks, often of several hundred, flying from place to place in loose order. At this time they especially affect the fields of rape or turnips, feeding on the black cater- pillars known to farmers as “ niggers,” thus ridding the crops of this most destructive pest. They feed also on earthworms, slugs, and insects. Both the eggs and the birds are in high demand for the table, though the flesh is not so LAPWING.—TURNSTONE, 211 much esteemed as that of the Golden Plover. In Sussex it is called the “ Peewit.” Mr. Booth states that he has “ several times, while on the North Sea in October, seen flocks of from three to five hundred, flying slowly and steadily, each keeping its own station, straight for the shores of Norfolk or Suffolk.” Yet he had never been able to ascertain from the fishermen, or light-keepers, that they had ever been observed on their return journey. We certainly receive large accessions to their numbers in the winter, and, in severe weather, large flocks may be seen flymg along the coast, generally from east to west, TURNSTONE, Strepsilas interpres. THis very beautiful little bird derives its name from its singular habit of turning over with its bill the pebbles on the beach, or other rejectamenta of the sea, at any distance from which I have never heard of its being seen (possibly from the small size of our rivers) in this county. In other counties it is said to have been found on the river-banks far inland. With us a few remain throughout the year, but as a rule the Turnstones arrive in small parties of young birds about the middle of July, though the main body does not make its appearance till about the second week in August. Along the whole coast, from beyond Rye to the borders of Hampshire, they may be found in small parties and, if not too much disturbed, are very tame. Some years ago, I was much interested in watching a pair acting in concert in their endeavours to turn over a flat-fish on the beach between Shoreham and Worthing, evidently P2 212 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. for the sake of the marine animals on its underside, which, I should have thought, would have been shaken off by their efforts; however, they succeeded at last in their endeavours, and appeared to derive a hearty meal, and, on their leaving the spot, I could find no appearance of their having eaten any part of the fish. On the beach it is very silent, but, on being put up, utters a loud twittering note. It goes far north to breed. OYSTER-CATCHER. Hematopus ostralequs. In this county the Oyster-catcher is usually known as the “ Olive,” of the origin of which name I have no information. I have now and then heard it called the “ Sea-pie,” from its black and white appearance. It remains with us throughout the year, preferring those parts of the coast where there is the largest expanse of beach. In former days I have seen considerable flocks between Shoreham Harbour and the sea, where it then bred, and where it is still occasionally met with. Another favourite resort is the widely-spread mass of shingle near Rye, where it still breeds in considerable numbers. An amusing story, how true I cannot say, is told of a man who used to distribute the eggs among his daughters to hatch, each of the four young ladies taking their turn with them in bed, and when hatched he had a ready sale for them at 10s. a piece. I well remember that about the year 1823 I often saw a small flock of Oyster-catchers driven from the Pavilion Gardens, at Brighton, across the Steme, by a man in the royal livery, armed with a long stick, having a piece of red OYSTER-CATCHER.—A VOCET. 213 cloth at the end, who took them for a few hours’ recreation on the shore. ‘This species forms no actual nest, but collects a few white shells, and pebbles, and now and then pieces of tobacco-pipe, around the eggs. What may be the object of this, when on the beach, does not easily appear, but when on the bare rock, where I have often found them, it is no doubt to prevent the eggs from rolling, or being blown away. Although in Scotland, where I have seen it on the Spey and other rivers, it goes far inland to breed among the flat stones of the shores, I have never heard of it inland in Sussex, the muddy banks of our small rivers being unsuitable to its habits. Its note is a loud whistle, which may be heard a long distance, and it swims with great ease when so dis- posed, and dives also. It feeds on limpets, mussels, and crustacea, prizing off the two former from the rocks with the greatest ease. Notwithstanding its name, I greatly doubt its ability to open the shell of an oyster, or its power to withdraw its bill, should it attempt to scoop out the animal while gaping for the tide. The flesh is by no means desirable, although it is stated in the ‘Northumberland Household Book, “ Item: Seepyes for my Lorde at the princypall Feestes, and non other tyme.” SCOLOPACIDZ. AVOCET. Recurvirostra avocetta. Owr1ne to extensive draining, this bird, which was formerly not uncommon in the marshy districts of the county in the 214 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. summer, and along the coast in the winter, has now become quite extinct as a native, and I have never seen it alive except in confinement. Many years ago, I was told that three had been observed on the mud flats near Old Shoreham bridge, and I went in hope of seeing them, though I did not succeed; but walking on the mud I came to a spot | where I observed many zigzag marks on it, which, I have no doubt, were made by these birds, as I have seen elsewhere that their method of obtaining food is by passing the some- what flattened portion of their whalebone-like bill over the surface of the mud, thus raising the little crustaceans known as sandhoppers, and catching them with the upturned point of it. The Avocet is a good swimmer, and dives well. When disturbed it flies round the intruder, uttering loud whistling cries. Markwick states that it was not uncommon on the sea- coast of Sussex, and that he had found a young one near Rye, which seemed to have been just hatched, and took it in his hand, the old birds flying overhead. My. Jeffery in his P. N. records that an Avocet was shot in June 1859, on a tide-mill pond at Sidlesham ; and in the ‘Zoologist, p. 9211, he mentions another, shot on the same pond, an‘ that this proved on dissection to be a male ; the gizzard contained nothing but a few stones. On July 14th, 1853, an adult Avocet and two others, young of the year, were shot by Mr. Dennis, at the upper tide-mill near Newhaven, and a few mornings after, three others were obtained on the tide-mill salts. He also informs me that they were very tame, and he particularly observed their mode of feeding, which seemed to be by thrusting their bills forward and a little upward into the softest mud, where there was an inch or two of water, the bird making sometimes a short and very rapid run, the webbed feet being apparently excellent mud-pattens. Mr. Dodd, of AVOCET.—BLACK-WINGED STILT. 215 Chichester, told Mr. Knox (‘ Zoologist,’ p. 229) that at a late period he saw a flock of five Avocets at Pagham Har- bour; he shot two and wounded another; the survivors, however, did not attempt to fly away until he had advanced to pick up the dead bird. He had previously observed their mode of feeding, and noticed the same ploughing of the sand as in the Spoonbill, but with this difference, that the Avocet ploughed with the convexity of the bill. Two of these are now in the Chichester Museum ; the wounded one was purchased by Mr. Tuffnell, of Mundham, and placed in his garden. Here the same action was observed of plough- ing, or mowing, from right to left in the grass, or rather brushing it from side to side. Mr, Allen Bell, writing from Hastings in January 1870 (‘ Zoologist,’ p. 2024, s.s.), states that he was shown an Avocet in immature dress, which was one out of a flock of three shot at Rye, during the snowy weather of the previous December. From the form of the bill it was formerly known in Sussex as the Cobbler’s Awl. BLACK-WINGED STILT. Himantopus candidus. _Tuts remarkable and extremely rare visitor has been ob- served in the county but a few times, and at very long intervals. It does not breed in Britain. In his account of ‘Five Months Birds’-nesting in the Eastern Atlas, Mr. O. Salvin gives the following account of the habits of this bird :—*“ Abundant at Zana, a few pairs occurring at Djendeli and Guerah el Tharf. Over the whole of the lower end of the Marsh of Zana and Chot Saboun the Stilt breeds in 216 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. great abundance among the wet grass, choosing for the position of its nest a small tuft, so as just to keep the eggs out of the water. Sometimes, however, this object is not obtained, as we occasionally found eggs half immersed. The bird uses its long legs with much greater ease than might be expected; and its long deliberate strides as it walks about in search of food are far from being ungraceful. The only time they seem to be in its way is at the moment of taking flight, when they hang awkwardly down till the bird, being fairly started, stretches them out, extending them far beyond the tail. We used to search for the nests of this bird on horseback, and on observing one sitting, to ride up without taking our eyes off the place. The bird would remain quiet till we were within thirty yards of the nest, when it would walk slowly away, till, aware of our purpose, it would rise and fly, wheeling and screaming overhead. The young Stilt is able to walk almost imme- diately on leaving the egg; one we found was capable of moving about, while the other three were struggling to free themselves from the shell. The nest is composed of a few bits of dead reed or grass.” (See ‘ Ibis,’ 1859, p. 360.) It breeds also in Spain, and in many parts of Asia and Africa. Its note may be expressed by the word “ pee” several times repeated. Mr. E. Newman records in * Zoolo- gist, (p. 3945) that an example was obtained at Bosham in December 1855 by Mr. A. Cheeseman; and another was shot on a small pond near the junction of the Midhurst and Bepton Commons, May 17th, 1859, of which Mr. Knox gives an interesting account in ‘ The Ibis,’ 1859, p. 395, from which the following is extracted:—The pond was very shallow, being only about a foot deep at fifteen paces from the shore, and was covered with the blossoms of the Water Crowfoot, Ranunculus aquaticus, which were inhabited by numerous minute Dipterous and Coleopterous insects. The BLACK-WINGED STILT.—GREY PHALAROPE, 217 Aird was first observed by a farmer’s boy, who was driving some cows home in the evening, standing up to its belly in the water, picking, as he thought, at the flowers. It allowed him to approach within twenty yards, then rising, alighted again on the opposite bank. The boy then went home and told his father, who, hurrying to the spot with a loaded gun, found the bird still employed in picking at the flowers. It was then extremely wary and shy of the gun, ‘The man, however, whose name was Pearson, at last succeeded in shooting it as it was standing up to its knees in the water, snapping at the insects. It was but little injured, and was brought the next morning to Mr. Knox, who found, on dissection, that it contained a number of eggs about the size of a pea, The stomach was crammed with insects, and the elytra of small beetles and gnats in a half digested state, On May 6th, 1880, Mr, Clark Kennedy, being in the marshes between HNastbourne and Polegate, had his attention attracted by his fox terrier chasing a bird along a deep ditch ; it ran with long strides for a few yards, and then flew close past him, when he saw that it was a Stilt. The bird appeared to be very tired, and only flew some two or three yards, alighting in a similar ditch, whence he did not again dislodge it (‘ Zoologist’ for 1880, p. 300), GREY PHALAROPE. Phalaropus , fulicarius. In some seasons this most elegant little bird visits us in very large numbers. Mr, J. WH. Gurney informs us that out of some five hundred which had appeared in the great immi- gration between August 20th and October 8th, 1866, about 218 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. two hundred and fifty were obtained in Sussex. At that period they were many times observed on small pools ten or twelve miles from the sea, and I was particularly interested in watching one of them swimming about in an extremely dirty and offensive pool, at the back of the Inn at Albourne. It swam remarkably high in the water, constantly nodding its head and dipping its bill, while snapping at the numerous flies with which the place was infested. It allowed me to approach it within a very few yards, occasionally flying close to me in perfect silence, both of wing and _ voice, with a most graceful and bat-like flight. There was another extraordinary immigration in the autumn of 1869, when many were obtained all along the coast of Sussex, and as far west as Dorsetshire. 'They were so tame that they might be knocked on the head with an oar. In the first immigration many were taken showing more or less trace of the red or nuptial plumage. As a rule, when found inland, they are met with singly, or at most in pairs. This Phalarope seems quite at home, even in a rough sea, where it feeds on minute animalcules, in search of which it is incessantly nodding its head, and thrusting its bill under water. It goes far north to breed, and the eggs have been found in Northern Siberia and Alaska; they are laid in a mere depression in the turf. The female has the brightest colour, and is somewhat larger than the male. RED-NECKED PHALAROPE. Phalaropus hyperboreus. Tn1s species is very similar in its habits to the last mentioned, and though much rarer, has appeared a few times in the county. It formerly bred in Orkney. About the second week in September 1845, a male Red- RED-NECKED PHALAROPE.—WOODCOCK. 219 necked Phalarope was shot on a small pond near Old Shore- ham, and is now in my collection. It was in pure winter plumage. On the 28th of May, 1846, another was obtained, also on a small pond, at Falmer; the ovary contaiming eggs in an advanced state; this was in full nuptial plumage, and had no doubt been driven out of its course by a severe gale. It was very tame, swimming and dipping its bill in the water like its congener. Mr. Ellman, in the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 3085), records a third, in winter plumage, shot on a pond near Lewes, in November 1851. On October 4th, 1853, a fourth was killed on a pond in the heart of the village of Rottingdean, while swimming among some tame ducks, in nearly complete winter plumage, a few red feathers only appearing on the neck. This is re- corded by Mr. Arthur Hussey (Zoologist, p. 4096-7). A fifth example was observed, while swimming on a flooded meadow near the sea, opposite the village of Bexhill. It was in company with a Schinz Sandpiper, when both were obtained at one shot, by Mr. Robert Kent, of St. Leonards- on-Sea. They both proved males (Zoologist, p. 6537). WOODCOCK. Scolopax rusticula. Tuts bird breeds every year in most counties of England, but is comparatively scarce till the arrival of large flights in October, of which the main body pass on to the westward, leaving small detachments, which gradually spread over the wooded parts of the county. On their first arrival many drop among the furze on the South Downs, and they have been several times picked up in the gardens of the towns on the coast. 220 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. When arriving ina heavy gale, they are generally in an exhausted state, and hide themselves in most unlikely holes and corners, to obtain shelter. For example, I well remem- ber being told by the late Mr. Tayler, the eminent surgeon at Brighton, that, on coming out of a house on the Marine Parade, he saw something dash under the apron of his ear- riage as it stood at the door, which proved to be a Wood- cock. They appear to breed in the county much more commonly than formerly, when to have found a nest at all was thought worthy of notice. They breed very early, nest- ing in March, and by the end of May the young are fully fledged. As the covers are rarely disturbed in the early spring, except for marking timber or cutting hop-poles, they may breed more numerously than is generally supposed. “Mr. T. Monk, of Lewes, some years since, was at consider- able pains to obtain statistics as to the number of Woodcocks remaining to breed in the eastern division of Sussex ; and, extraordinary-as it may appear, the conclusion he arrived at was to the effect that in seven districts of East Sussex, com- prising twenty-one parishes, there were annually on an aver- age from one hundred and fifty to two hundred nests of this bird.” (Zoologist, p. 434, 1879.) That the young are carried by the parents from place to place has keen now indisputably proved, and one manner in which they are conveyed is admirably depicted in the frontis- piece to the volume I have quoted. I have not myself seen many nests. ‘The first was in a wood in the parish of Wood- mancote, in March 1851, and another I saw in Eridge Park, in March 1852, and two more in St. Leonards Forest. I have received the eggs from Petworth, Arundel, and Tun- bridge Wells, and have*been informed that in the latter neigh- bourhood the eggs have often been found. Mr. Booth, in his ‘Rough Notes, states that in his bird-nesting days he had frequently met with them about Catsfield and Ashburnham. WOODCOCK. 221 The Woodcock conceals itself in the covers during the day, on the ground under the thick holly bushes being a favourite retreat. In the evening it flies out to feed in boggy places, when it may be easily shot. It always returns to cover before sunrise. This sport is called in Sussex “ wicketing,” I suppose from the wicket gates across many of the rides in the woods being convenient to lean on, while awaiting the arrival of the birds. It runs very fast when wounded, and feeds on earthworms, &e., for which it probes the ground in the softest spots, as well as on small land and freshwater shells. I have taken from its stomach those of Clausilia nigricans whole, and the remains of those of Aplexus hyp- norum comminuted. The nest is on the ground, and composed of dead leaves, in Sussex generally those of the oak. It is exceedingly difficult to see the bird when sittmg. A keeper once attempted to point one out to me, but not till he nearly touched it with the muzzle of his gun could I see it, and then only by acci- dentally catching sight of its eye, showing the aptitude of the lines in Butler’s ‘ Hudibras,’ ** Fools are known by looking wise, As men find Woodcocks by their eyes.” In the unpreserved parts of Sussex they are often caught in horse-hair nooses, called springes, set in their feeding places. When flying at night they utter a croaking note, but at other times are remarkably silent. When flushed the flight is often perfectly noiseless, the bird going off like an Owl; at other times it makes quite a loud clapping of the wings, like some of the Pigeons, and goes off twisting sharply like a Snipe. The male is smaller than the female, and both are much lighter in colour in summer than in winter. Those which migrate depart in March. bho bo bo THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX, GREAT SNIPE. Gallinago major. Tne Great Snipe is rare in Sussex, and does not visit England till the autumn. At that season of the year it does not fre- quent the bogs and marshes, but in the few instances in which it has occurred, was mostly found among turnips or on dry grass-land. When flushed, it rises in silence, as arule, though occasionally it utters a few harsh notes. The nest is found in Denmark, Sweden, Norway, and Russia, from the Baltic to Archangel, and in the breeding season, like the Common Snipe, it mounts high in the air, and makes a drumming noise on its descent. At that time, it frequents the higher regions as well as the marshes of the lowlands and coast. The food of the Great Snipe consists of worms and slugs, also of insects, especially those of the gnat tribe. (Vide Yarrell, vol. 11. pp. 338, 339.) Markwick, in his Catalogue of Sussex Birds, says, “ I have seen one of this species which was killed near Horsham.” Mr. Dennis (p. n.) states that one was obtained on Larnes ['arm, Upper Beeding, and another at Pond Lye, near Cuckfield, but gives no date. Mr. Knox mentions that the Great Snipe “has been killed on Pevensey Levels, and one was shot, in the month of October, a few years ago by Mr. Trist, a wine merchant at Brighton, on the Downs, near the Racecourse, a singular locality for this bird.” In the ‘ Zoologist ’ we find the two following notices from Mr. Ellman and Mr. Monk respectively:—“ A specimen of this rare bird was shot in the levels near this town, in October 1849, Lewes.”’ “A fine specimen of the Solitary (or Great) Snipe, which was shot near Lewes, was brought me on the 10th of October, 1867; it was a female, extremely — GREAT SNIPE. 223 fat, and weighed nearly 7% 0z.; it was preserved by Mr. Swaysland.” Again, at p. 1482 (s.s.), an instance is recorded of a Solitary Snipe caught in a gin which had been set by the side of a watercress bed, at Sompting, about two miles from Worthing, on the 24th of October, 1868, and came the same day into the possession of Mr. J. W. Stephenson, of Loudoun Place, Brixton Road. At p. 492, Mr. Parkin mentions that Mr. C. J. Ebden, of Coghurst Hall, near Hastings, informed him that he flushed a Great Snipe on that estate on October 6th, 1881. Mr. Bristowe writes to me of a specimen shot at Stream Farm, Dallington, near Battle, September 23rd, 1875, by Mr. Watts, of Caldbec Hill; and Mr. Child, of Slinfold, has kindly informed me that he saw a Great Snipe flushed in a barley field, and shot by Mr. William Lintott, of Horsham, about ten years ago ; and from Mr, Nicholls, of Eastbourne, I hear of another, shot in Pevensey Marsh, which he saw in the flesh in 1888. Mr. Aubrey Hillman, of Iford, near Lewes, has also kindly written to tell me of a Solitary Snipe which he shot, in the early autumn of 1860, at Lower Stone- ham, near Lewes, but although its great size and weight (over 8 oz.) were observed at the time, he, not knowing its rarity, did not have it preserved. Mr. P. Sorrell, Old Hum- phrey’s Avenue, Hastings, tells me that he has in his collec- tion two examples killed at Rye. Markwick, in his Catalogue, Linn. Trans. (vol. iv. p. 8), says, “I have seen one of this species, which was killed near Horsham ;” and in an unpublished MS., now in the Library of the Linnean Society (p. 23), this specimen is again re- ferred to, as seen by the author, and killed near Horsham, It was obtained on the Ist of October, 1793, and a full de- scription is given of it, together with a water-colour drawing, 224 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. COMMON SNIPE, Scolopax colestis. Tut Snipe is resident in the county, but the main body arrive, either from abroad, or from their inland breeding- places, about the first week in August. In my younger days I was a very ardent sportsman, and, living at Henfield close to the celebrated Common, the first piece of wheat which I saw reaped made me think it worth while to walk it for a Snipe, and seldom was the trouble in vain. There is something peculiarly attractive to this bird there, though it is not a large tract, in fact only about forty-five acres in extent. I was a very diligent observer of its bird-life, and generally got the best sport by working up wind when it was blowing half a gale. I was often there waiting for daylight, for, as the ground was unpreserved, it was a case of first come first served, and I have had many a good bag there, the best being twelve couple and a half, and a Teal. From constant obser- vation, I gradually discovered where those rising out of shot or missed went to, and after finishing the Common, started in pursuit. One of the most singular places was a thick plantation in a little wood called the Worm’s Copse, consisting in part of spruce fir, where it was almost impossible to get a shot. J have several times looked over this copse before going on the Common, but in no instance did I ever find a Snipe, and should never have gone there for them had I not one morning seen a wisp of seven or eight, when some other person was shooting on the Common, pass over, and marked them down there. The Snipe breeds sparingly in Sussex, but the nest has been found now and then on the aforesaid Common, as well as on the heaths near Balcombe, and on Ashdown Forest, Pevensey Level, and Horsham. COMMON SNIPE. 226 Its food is similar to that of the Woodcock. Its usual eall-note when flushed resembles the word “ scape,” two or three times repeated, and is never heard at any other time. Mr. Booth, however, states that it has a call-note in the breeding-season, consisting of two notes. When the young corn is come up in the spring, this bird is often caught in the wet furrows, in horsehair nooses, like those used for taking Woodcocks. The singular sound heard when the Snipe is descending is now satisfactorily ascertained to be caused by the vibration of its wings and tail. The Snipe, when first started, goes off nearly close to the ground, with many twistings, then flying round in large circles, suddenly drops like a stone into the marsh, if it does not leave it altogether. In very severe frosts the Snipe leaves the inland bogs and betakes itself to the salt-marshes, where, although it is at other times the best of birds for the table, the flesh becomes rank and unpalatable. In this country it is rarely seen but on the ground or on the wing, though I have more than once observed it on the top of a larch, and two or three times onarail. In the northern regions it has often been seen on trees. Of the variety known as Sabine’s Snipe, which is now admitted to be merely a melanism of the Common Snipe, only a single example seems to have been obtained in Sussex, viz. that which is mentioned by Mr. Knox in his O. R. p- 236. I heard of this bird and told Mr, Knox, who went to Chichester and bought it. It was shot by one Sergeant Carter, who informed me by letter that he found it on Appledram Common, where it rose out of shot, and marking it down, it again rose at a long distance, when he kilted it, and sold it for five shillmgs to a Mr. Andrews, who refused three pounds for it. He afterwards had it stuffed by Mr. Smith of Chichester, who sold it to Mr. Knox for five pounds. Q 226 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. Carter further adds, “ You will say ‘Old fool, for letting it go so cheap.’ I have no doubt there is another in the neigh- bourhood, as two countrymen told me they had put a Snipe up out of the springhole in Mr. Halsted’s marsh, as black as a Starling, the Saturday after I killed mine. If I should get the other the price would make me sing ‘ O be joyful.” I never heard that the second was obtained. JACK SNIPE. Scolopax gallinula. TuovucH not at all uncommon, the Jack Snipe is by no means so abundant as the last described, and, unlike it, is never found in wisps, seldom more than a pair being flushed together, and it is far more usual to find it solitary. When alarmed it lies very close, so much so that one day, having no more ammunition, I obtained three, immediately under the nose of my pointer, by dropping the muzzle of my gun upon the bird, which my readers will no doubt call a very unsportsmanlike proceeding. When flushed, the Jack Snipe seldom flies to any great distance, and does not twist about like the Common Snipe. Many stories have been told of the difficulty of shooting it, but I must say that I think it is even greater in the case of the Common Snipe, as the Jack hangs in the wind, and, though flying sharply for a moment, afterwards goes off very slowly, but if one waits till it is at a reasonable distance it is very apt to drop just as you are about to fire. It is found, not in the parts where the bog is deepest, but on the drier spots around the little springholes on its margin, or the runlets trickling down towards it. On the Common I have so often mentioned, I always knew where to find one, if any were there. JACK SNIPE.—BROAD-BILLED. SANDPIPER. 227 The first week in October is the earliest time of its arrival, as arule, but I have met with one on September Ist. It never breeds in this country, and we are indebted to the late Mr. Wolley, who found it breeding in Lapland, for a know- ledge of its nest and eggs. The former is stated by Yarrell, vol. 11. pp. 854-5, to be “ made loosely of little pieces of — grass and equisetum, not at all woven together, with a few old leaves of dwarf birch, placed in a dry, sedgy, or grassy spot, close to the more open swamp.” The food of this bird is similar to that of the Common Snipe, and during the breeding-season it makes a drumming noise, which Mr. Wolley likens to the cantering of a horse over a hollow road. BROAD-BILLED SANDPIPER. Limicola platyrhyncha. Or this species I am not aware of any example having been obtained in Sussex, except one in my own possession. I was walking near the west end of Brighton and met a boy carry- ing a bunch of birds ; I asked him where he got them and what he was going to do with them. He replied that his father shot them on the beach near Shoreham, and that he was going to see what he could get for them at the poul- terer’s. I asked what he expected that would be, and he said twopence a piece. I then said, “ If you like [ will give you sixpence for this one ;” the boy accepted it and was very much pleased, and so was I. He said that there was a large flock, and that his father killed the ten he was carrying at one shot ; with the exception of the one I selected, they were all Dunlins. This was in the latter part of October 1845. On examination the bird proved to be in winter plumage, Q2 228 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX, except one scapular feather and a small patch on the occiput. In many parts of the Continent it frequents the coast and inland waters. According to Yarrell (vol. ii. p. 3865), Mr. Dann was the first discoverer of its breeding-places in Nor- way and Lapland, where it forms its nest on dry hummocks in the most inaccessible bogs. On its first appearance it is wild and shy, and, on being disturbed, it soars to a great height, rising and falling suddenly like the Snipe, and utter- ing the notes “ two-woo,” rapidly repeated ; but, as the weather becomes warm, it changes its habits, and is then very difficult to flush, and when it rises only flies a short distance and drops again. In the stomach little has been found save small insects and larve. PECTORAL SANDPIPER. Tringa maculata. Tis Sandpiper has but rarely been met with in England, being an accidental visitant from N. America, where under the names of “‘ Meadow Snipe” and ‘ Grass Snipe” it is, according to Yarrell, generally distributed from Hudson’s Bay to Alaska, in winter, and is supposed to breed in the Arctic Regions, but the egg is yet unknown. It is abundant in summer, in Labrador, frequenting low muddy flats. Its habits resemble those of the Common Snipe. It feeds on insects, small seeds, and crustacea. In Sussex the only occurrence is that recorded by Mr. Harting in his ‘ Hand- book of British Birds,’ p. 141, as having been obtained at Eastbourne, in September 1870. ho bo © BONAPARTE’S SANDPIPER.—DUNLIN. BONAPARTE’S SANDPIPER. Tringa fuscicollis. Tuis Tringa is also an inhabitant of N. America, and is nearly as rare in Sussex as the last. According to Yarrell (vol. i. p. 8375), 1t is very abundant on the Atlantic coast from Labrador to Florida. Dr. E. Coues states that he has fre- quently observed it on the rocky shores covered with sea- weed, and that it is, of all Sandpipers, the most gentle and confiding. In this country an example was obtained by Mr. Kent, of St. Leonard’s-on-Sea, who states in the ‘ Zoologist,’ pp. 673-7, that the Schinz (or Bonaparte’s) Sandpiper was in company with a Red-necked Phalarope, the latter swimming and the Schinz wading in a flooded meadow, about two hun- dred yards from the sea, directly opposite the village of Bexhill; they were not at all shy, and he killed both at one shot. They proved to be males. This was the first recorded Sussex specimen, and the date was October 8th, 1857. Another was taken at Eastbourne, now in possession of Mr. Gurney, on November 12th, 1870. It was alone and standing on one leg, which attracted the attention of the person who shot it, though he at first mistook it for a Dunlin. It was a male bird and was recorded by Mr. J. H. Gurney, jun., in the ‘ Zoologist,’ p. 2442, s.s. DUNLIN. Tringa alpina. Tue Dunlin, also called the Purre, or the Ox-bird, is the most abundant of all the waders on the whole of our coast, 230 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. and is found in small parties, and occasionally in very large flocks, on the beach and sands as well as on the mud flats. When disturbed on the sea-side they fly in a compact body and make a semicircular excursion over the sea, returning to the beach at a few hundred yards distance. During these flights the whole body wheel and turn all together, showing at one moment the dark plumage of the back, and at the next the pure white of the underparts, and uttering a loud but somewhat soft ery, “Tui, Tui.” While feeding the bird runs very swiftly, and is very restless, constantly shifting from place to place, following each receding wave and picking up marine insects, worms, and small crustacea. It seldom proceeds up the rivers beyond the influence of the tide. It goes northward to breed on the moors of England and Scotland, sometimes on mountains at a considerable height above the sea, forming the nest in a dry tuft of sedge or rushes, liming it with small pieces of grass and heather. ETELLE STINT, Tringa minuta. In the latter part of May, or the beginning of June, small parties of this little wader may be found along the coast, many more arriving in August and September. Mr. Booth mentions that a heavy gale from the south-east not unfre- quently brings numbers to the coast of Sussex as late as October, thus checking their southerly migration. It is occasionally met with on the mud of the harbour at Shore- ham, and in the salt-marshes in the neighbourhood, in fact on suitable spots all along the coast. In the eastern division one of its favourite haunts was formerly a piece of marsh LITTLE STINT.—TEMMINCK’S STINT, 231 land near Rye, known as the “ Nook”; but owing to the drainage, it is, though still found there, by no means so abundant as formerly. 'To the westward of Pagham Harbour is another attractive spot, but unhappily, ornithologically speaking, the same remark equally applies there, the sea being now entirely shut out, and the mud preparing for the plough. It is a social little bird, often joining parties of the Dunlin and the Curlew Sandpiper. It retires far north to breed. The eggs were first found by Middendorff in Siberia, and in 1875 it was found breed- ing on the Petchora by Messrs. Seebohm and Harvie Brown, of which discovery there is a most interesting account in the ‘Ibis,’ 1876, pp. 294-308. The note is described as a “whispering warbling trill,’ and the nest as a mere depression in the turf with leaves of the cloudberry and other dry materials scraped together for the lining. TEMMINCK’S STINT. Tringa temmincki. Tus is a much rarer species than the Little Stint, and never found on the sand or open coast-line of the sea-shore, but frequents the mud flats of the tidal rivers. In August and September small parties arrive on the rivers, ponds, and mud of the Adur, and of Shoreham Harbour, also on the salt- marshes a mile or so up that river. On July 25th, 1878, one was shot by Mr. Booth, at Shoreham, in full summer plumage, and its manners resembled those of the Common Sandpiper. On this account Mr. Jeffery (p. n.) states that this and both the Stints are often called ‘‘ Wagtails,” and 232 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. he mentions that two were shot inside the mud walls of Prior’s Marsh, near Chichester, on Aug. 25th, 1873, and that their note resembles ‘“ Chicket, Chicket.” The eggs were discovered by Mr. Wolley in the interior of Lapland, who states that the note was like that of the Red-necked Phalarope and the Sanderlings, and gives a very interesting account of it, too long to quote. He also states that the nest is placed in hummocky ground covered with Carices and cloudberry. It is a mere depression in the ground, with such leaves of the cloudberry and other dry material as were in easy reach. The bird flew round, or perched on a stone, or the gable of a cottage, uttering a trilling note, which put him in mind of that of the Grasshopper Warbler (vide Yarrell, vol. ii. pp. 400, 401). In the ‘ Zoologist ’ (p. 3279), Mr. Ellman records that he obtained a specimen of this minute Sandpiper among the mud-pells at Newhaven, October 5th, 1851. CURLEW SANDPIPER. Tringa subarquata. THis is a migratory species, arriving in May, when these birds are in full breeding-plumage. In August and Sep- tember much greater numbers join them, consisting for the most part of birds of the year. They seldom remain long enough to have assumed the winter plumage, but before leaving they are in a state of transition, many of the red feathers of the underparts being mingled with the approaching winter dress. Their habits in Sussex are much the same as those of the CURLEW SANDPIPER.—KNOT. 233 Dunlin, with which they often associate, though still oftener with the Little Stint. They are by no means uncommon, and are found all along the coast. Our rivers being very small, I have never heard of their occurring inland in Sussex. The breeding-place is as yet unknown. PURPLE SANDPIPER. Tringa striata. | Tue Purple Sandpiper may be met with along the whole coast of Sussex, where it is generally alone, or at most with two or three in company. It prefers the more rocky parts, for example the large masses of chalk fallen from the cliffs between Brighton and Seaford Head, where it may be found all through September, October, and November running about among the sea-weed, or if on the beach, following the receding waves, and often getting buried in the surf, feeding on small crabs and other crustacea and on the contents of minute bivalves and other shells. It is very tame, and its note, when disturbed, is a soft “weet, wit” two or three times repeated. It breeds on the whole coast of Norway, the Faroes, Iceland, Greenland, Spitzbergen, and Nova Zembla. The nest is tolerably compact, deep in the ground, and lined with dead leaves. KNOT. Tringa canutus. Tue Knot has received its name from the old legend of King Canute, on account of its habit of feeding on the 254 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX, margin of the sea-shore, close to the advancing waves. It is migratory, making its first appearance in April, in small numbers, which continue to increase throughout that month and the next. Many, even then, show slight indication of the change from the winter to the summer plumage, and by the end of June the main body have entirely assumed it, when they depart for the breeding-season, with the exception of a few which remain throughout the year, frequenting the open coast. During the whole of May large flights pass eastward, following the line of coast, five or six miles out at sea. On the approach of a heavy gale they leave the shore and betake themselves to the mud of the harbours and rivers as high as the salt water flows, and are very seldom found further inland. When feeding on the mud they assemble in vast flocks, and are very easily approached, and with a punt-gun as many as sixty have been obtained at a single shot. As soon as the weather moderates they return to their feeding- places on the beach and sands. They are at times very numerous about Shoreham, and were so at Pagham before the mud flats were reclaimed; Rye Harbour was another favourite resort. They feed on small bivalves and other shellfish, and were formerly fattened for the table on bread and milk. In the breeding-season they retire to the Arctic Regions, where Parry’s Expedition found them breeding numerously on what were then called the North Georgian, but are now known as the Parry Islands, and again, on July 30th, 1876, an old bird, accompanied by three nestlings, was obtained on the border of a smali lake not far from H.M.S. “ Alert.” The old bird proved to be a male; its stomach and those of the young were filled with insects (vide ‘Ibis,’ 1877, p. 407), and, according to Yarrell (vol. iii, p. 416), Mr. TI. Chichester Hart, naturalist to H.M.S. “ Discovery,” obtained, in 81° 44’ N.L., a brood KNOT.—SANDERLING. 235 of four, disturbed from the nest on the 11th of July. This was placed under a large flat stone, resting on two others, forming a sort of gangway. It was merely com- posed of reeds and grass, loosely laid together on the earth by the edge of a stream, but no trace of the egg-shells were found. These were several miles inland. At this season of the year the Knot soars high in the air ike the Common Snipe, and when descending beats its wings behind the back with a rapid motion, producing a loud whirring noise. In the north these birds feed eagerly on the Saxifraga oppositifolia. SANDERLING. Calidris arenaria. Tus little wader first appears early in May, on the spring migration, and stays two or three weeks, occasionally as late as the first week of June. Flocks of old and young return about the end of July, or beginning of August, on their way southward. In October great bodies of them may be seen flying to the westward. As the name implies, the Sanderling feeds on the sea-sands, probing for its food, which consists of small worms and crustacea, after the manner of the Snipe. In the breeding-season it eats also the buds of Sawifraga oppositifolia. It is found along the whele coast, especially at Worthing, Pagham, Sidlesham, and Bosham. In the Arctic Regions, where it breeds, the eggs were first fully identified by Mr. McFarlane, when collecting for the Smithsonian Institution, near the Anderson River, and the German Arctic Expedition met with similar nests on the east coast of Greenland. Professor Newton obtained an egg in Iceland, and Colonel 236 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. Feilden, naturalist to H.M.S. “ Alert,” found ten on Sabine Island, in Smith’s Sound. | A nest found by the last-named naturalist was placed on a gravel ridge, a hundred feet above the sea, in a slight depression in the centre of a recumbent plant of willow ; the lining consisted of a few withered leaves and some of the last year’s catkins. Another, found on Anderson River, was composed of hay and decayed leaves (see Yarrell, vol, iii. p. 23). RUFF. Machetes pugnax. Tue Ruff cannot be called common in Sussex, and all which have been met with have been in winter plumage. It may now be considered as an accidental visitor, though it formerly bred in Pevensey Levels till 1t was banished by the extensive drainage. Numbers were formerly found in the fens of Cambridge and Lincolnshire, and on Romney Marsh, in Kent, whence the eggs were given me many years ago. In the breeding-season the males assemble at “ lekking” places, locally called “hills,” like the Black Grouse and Capercallie, and fight desperately for the females. The nest is generally placed on a tussock in the wettest part of a swamp. The food consists of insects, larve, worms, and, occasionally, of certain seeds, and its note is a low “ Kack-Kick-Kack.” The late Mr. Knox records (O. R., p. 234) a curious capture of a Ruff, in a clap-net, near Hove, being apparently attracted by a.Lark which was used as a call-bird. I see, RUFF.—BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPER. 237 by my own notes, that this was in September 1843, and that an adult male was shot near Eastbourne, on March 11th, 1840. Mr. Jeffery (p. n.) mentions one shot at Appledram, April 24th, 1861, another at Pagham Harbour, October 1863, and that three were seen at Sidlesham, August 24th, 1864, and one shot a day or two before at Pagham, two more in 1873 at the same harbour, and, lastly, two at Sidlesham, March 2nd, 1887. In the ‘ Zoologist, p. 4258, s. s., is re- corded a Reeve, obtained near Eastbourne, on September 21st, 1874. Mr. Harting informs me that twenty years ago, when Pagham Harbour was a paradise for shore birds in spring and autumn, and for wildfowl in winter, he used often to come across the Ruff and Reeve there in August and Sep- tember. ‘They were never in flocks, but in little parties of five or six birds, and the males had then entirely lost their frills. He never observed them there in spring, which indicates that they returned northward at that season by a different route. This he observed to be the case also with the Grey Phalarope. BUFF-BREASTED SANDPIPER. Tringites rufescens. A very rare visitant to Sussex, being in fact a straggler from N. America. According to Yarrell (B. B. vol. iv. pp. 437-8) its summer haunts are in the Arctic portions of tle American continent, and its food consists of land and marine insects, particularly grasshoppers. Mr. Dresser found it in Mexico, and the birds were there very fat, and 238 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. excellent eating. They preferred the sandy plains and the dry tracks of the cotton teams. The call-note was low and weak. The nest is placed in a slight depression in the ground, lined with a little grass or a few leaves. In the ‘ Zoologist’ for 1843 the late Mr. F. Bond, in a note dated March 28th, stated that a specimen of the Buft-breasted Sandpiper, obtained on the Sussex coast, had lately come into his possession. Not more than fifteen specimens have been recorded as having been met with in the British Islands. BARTRAM’S SANDPIPER. Bartrania longicauda. Tris is another American species, whose visits to this country are exceedingly rare. Of the habits of a specimen killed at Low Stead, in Northumberland, Mr. Bolam writes (see Yarrell’s B. B. vol. in. p. 44) :—“ It was in the habit of frequenting the long grass or ‘ bents’ with which the links at Low Stead are covered, and Mr. Henry Grey... informs me that it was not at all shy,and, when amongst the tall grass, lay like a Snipe or Woodcock, allowing him to approach within a few yards of it before rising.... and after flying for a short distance... it would again drop into the long grass, or, alighting on the bare sand, would run off to some con- venient place of shelter. When surprised in the open... it ran very swiftly, frequently stopping behind a stone, or, after it had got some distance from him, standing on a slight hillock or other eminence, and watching his movements, its tail, all the while, moving up and down with a peculiar sway- ing motion not observable in any other of the Sandpipers. BARTRAMS SANDPIPER.—COMMON SANDPIPER. 239 Its note, uttered for the most part when flying, was a shrill piping whistle.” On p. 444, op. cit., Dr. E. Coues states that the nest is a depression of the ground, with a leaf or two, or a few blades of grass. The food of this bird is principally grasshoppers and other insects, especially beetles, and berries. It is stated to be always fat, and delicious eating. Mr. Dutton, of Eastbourne, states in the ‘ Zoologist,’ p- 9118, that he purchased at a sale of birds belonging to the late Mr. Wille, of Lewes, a beautiful specimen of Bartram’s Sandpiper, shot at Newhaven sometime between 1836 and 1840. This is the first instance of the occurrence of this species in England on record. COMMON SANDPIPER. Totanus hypoleucus. Tuts species, known also as the Summer Snipe and the Wagtail, is migratory, making its first appearance in April, and remaining till the end of September. It is seldom met with on the sea-shore, but frequents the river banks, and those of most of the larger ponds throughout the county ; and is said occasionally to breed with us. I cannot, how- ever, confirm this, except that I once picked up a single egg, which I still have, on a little strip of pebbly sand, left by the tide of the Adur, but although I then watched a pair of these birds for a long time, and again on the next day, I failed to find the nest. When wounded I have seen the bird swim and dive well, and it is then very difficult to catch. It is very good eating, especially when potted. As it is generally seen in pairs, it seems very strange that the nest 240 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. has been so seldom met with in the county. Mr. R. Gray, in his ‘ Birds of the West of Scotland,’ p. 297, states that on the banks of the Clyde he has even seen the bird making its nest in flower-pots, under bushes, and among growing plants, frequently in turnip fields. It is very cheerful and lively, generally running from stone to stone very rapidly, perching on one of them, and wagging its tail up and down, uttering the while a few soft piping notes, which it also does while on the wing. I once found the nest by the edge of Bala Lake in N. Wales, constructed of little pieces of some dead water-plant, a quantity of which had drifted along the margin of the lake. The stomachs of several which I shot on the banks of the Adur were filled with minute freshwater shrimps, and small univalve mollusks, chiefly Turbo ulve. SPOTTED SANDPIPER. Totanus macularius. Or the occurrence of this American species in England there are but few instances recorded. Of these two were shot in Sussex, near Eastbourne. At the request of Mr. J. H. Gurney, I went there and ascertained from Mr. Bates, naturalist, that they had been shot-at the Crumbles pond, near that town, in October 1866. One of them was pur- chased by Mr. Gurney, and the other Mr. Bates retained, declining to let me have it. The habits of this species are said to be so similar to those of the Common Sandpiper that the description of that species will equally apply to this. GREEN SANDPIPER. 241 GREEN SANDPIPER. Totanus ochropus. Tux appearances of this bird are so erratic that it is im- possible to say when it arrives or departs. I have myself shot or seen generally single birds, and twice three together, in April, May, August, September, October, and November, and it can neither be called common nor rare. Nearly all I have met with have risen from some little insignificant pond or pool, dug in the meadows for the watering of the cattle. It also frequents streams in woods, and the banks of rivers and brooks at a distance from the sea. When disturbed it goes off with a flight like that of a Snipe, but generally silently, though I have occasionally heard it utter a triple piping note. I have never met with or heard of it on the coast, and there is no known instance of its breeding in Sussex. Where it does breed it is said to lay its eggs in the deserted nest of some other bird, some- times in a tree at a great height from the ground. Mr. Knox (O. R. p. 230) makes this statement :—“In June 1843 I observed four on the borders of a pond through which ran a clear trout stream at Cocking, near Midhurst. ... When disturbed at the pond the birds used to retire into the great woods in the immediate neighbourhood.” Mr. Harting, in his ‘ Birds of Middlesex,’ p. 175, observes that it is more sluggish in its movements than the Common Sandpiper, and that “it bores for its food, which consists chiefly of small beetles, as well as spiders, very small red worms, and woodlice.” The only specimen recorded as having occurred in Sussex in July is that noted by Mr. Jeffery, who met with one near Chichester, in that month in 1868. R 242 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. Markwick, in his Catalogue (Linn. Trans. vol. iv. p. 21), writing of the Green and the Wood Sandpipers, says, “These birds agree so nearly in size, mode of living, and other respects, that they are with the greatest probability supposed to be only varieties of the same species, perhaps male and female.” WOOD SANDPIPER. Totanus glareola. Tuts species is much rarer than the last. With the ex- ception of June and July, when it departs to its breeding- quarters on the Continent, it may be occasionally met with at any time, in various parts of the county, rarely on the sea-shore, occasionally in streams running through woods, but more frequently on open marshes or bogs. I find from my own notes that Mr. Ellman informed me by letter that he obtained a specimen in August 1851, at the Tide Mill, near Newhaven; in the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 3279), speaking of the same example, he says it was in company with some Dunlins, and when they rose it remained alone, thereby attracting his attention and leading him to shoot it. About the same time I saw at Mr. Swaysland’s two others shot near Shoreham. On August 16th, 1862, Mr. Smith shot a pair on Henfield Common, and gave me one of them. It was, however, too high to preserve. The other fell in an inaccessible part of the bog and was unfortunately lost. The two were together and uttered a sharp note on the wing. Another was obtained on the same common on August 17th, 1868; it was alone, and is now in my collection. I have seen one of these Sandpipers, which was shot near a pond WOOD SANDPIPER.-COMMON REDSHANK., 243 at King’s Farm, Cowfold, but cannot give the date. Mr. Knox (O. R. p. 231) states that Mr. Swaysland informed him that four were secured near Worthing, in September 1851. Mr. Jeffery, in his p. n., mentions one shot near Pagham, on October 10th, 1864, and another, at the same place, in August 1865, which was sent to Chichester Museum ; another, also at Pagham, in 1866, and a fourth at Itchenor, on May 10th, 1880. With respect to the flight of the Wood Sandpiper, Mr. Hancock, who found the only nest known to have been taken in England, states that it flies im circles, and at every change in the direction of its flight, a musical, sharp, and irilling sound may be heard, which endures for several seconds, at the same time the wings are observed to strike the air with a short, rapid, tremulous motion, which, there is little reason to doubt, causes this remarkable sound. See his ‘Birds of Northumberland and Durham,’ p. 121. Its food is insects and worms. The nest is placed in the thickest herbage of the marsh, and is very difficult to discover. It does not breed in Sussex. COMMON REDSHANK. Totanus calidris. Tue Redshank, generally known to the shore-shooter as the Redlegs, is resident throughout the year, and is one of the commonest species of its genus, frequenting the mud flats of our estuaries in considerable flocks as soon as they begin to be uncovered by the tide; retiring, as the water rises, R2 244 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. to short distances inland, and returning again to their feeding- places with singular punctuality. It is a very noisy bird. Its cry is extremely musical, and so loud that it may be heard in still weather for upwards of a mile. When feeding on the mud it frequently jumps up in order to thrust its bill with the greater force into it, constantly nodding and bobbing its head and running with great celerity from spot to spot. Its food consists of small worms and crustacea. The Redshank still breeds in a few places in Sussex, such as Pevensey Level, whence I have received its eggs within the last few years. In Yarrell’s B. B. (vol. i. p. 471) we find the following :-— “The nest is well described by Col. W. V. Legge, who says that it is well concealed in the centre of a green tuft of grass, the blades of which are carefully bent over the top, and the openings, by which the bird enters and leaves the nest, being closed up on her quitting it,—only a few tracks in the surrounding herbage betraying its existence.” It is not now much valued for the table, but we find in ‘The Earl of Northumberland’s Household Book’ (p. 105) :— Item, Redeshankes to be bought at Principall Feestes for my Lordes own Mees after j" ob. the pece.” In some Natural History Notes made by Mr. G. O. Rope during his stay at Iken, on the River Alde, in the spring of 1888 (‘ Zoologist,’ 3rd s. pp. 327, 328), he states :—‘ A pair otf Redshanks very clamorous to-day (May 16), at the top of the cliff, having evidently young ones close by; they kept alighting from time to time on the top of one of the oaks overhanging the saltings, uttering all the time their loud and impressive alarm notes. It is a common practice with these birds, when they have young about the saltings, to alight on these trees; and should anyone chance to pass nearer than they like to the chicks squatting among the rushes, severa! pairs of Redshanks may often be seen to- COMMON REDSHANK.—SPOTTED REDSHANK. 245 gether wheeling and screaming about the oaks, and perching from time to time on the upper twigs. Every now and then they dash suddenly to the ground, where, as well as when on the trees, they continually keep up the curious jerking bow, so characteristic of this bird.” SPOTTED REDSHANK., Totanus fuscus. TuoucH much rarer than the last described species, the Spotted Redshank has in many instances been met with in the county. Though occasionally feeding on the mud at the mouths of harbours and estuaries, it is more addicted to freshwater ponds inland than the Common Redshank, and is sometimes met with many miles from the sea. From my own notes I select the following instances of its occurrence :— Mr. Ellman informed me by letter that he shot an adult male in autumnal plumage near Eastbourne on Sept. 6th, 1851. Inthe same month I saw at Mr. Swaysland’s two specimens, one shot at Shoreham, the other at Amberley ; the latter contained in its stomach a perfect specimen of Lymneus pereger; both had nearly assumed the winter plumage. On August 23rd, 1889, a specimen just changing from the summer to the autumnal plumage was shot by the side of a small pond on King’s Farm, Cowfold. This is in my own collection, and is the darkest I have ever met with in Sussex. Mr. Jeffery (p. n.) records one shot on August 25th, 1860, and another on the 14th of the same month in 1863, a third on August 29th, 1864, and a fourth on September 26th, 1866, all at Sidlesham ; also one shot at 246 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. Pagham, in November of the same year, and an immature specimen on August 10th, 1869. The nest was first discovered by Mr. John Wolley, and is described by him as placed in the driest situation possible, even on hills of a considerable height covered with forest timber, two of which nests he saw; one was on ground which had evidently been burnt at some former period. They were both nearly at the top of long hills, many hundred yards from any marshy place, among diminutive heather and suchlike plants, growing thinly among rein- deer lichen in slight depressions on the ground, and the bedding was only a few dry leaves of Scotch fir. The bird sits very close, and when it rises, either gets up direct or runs a short distance first, and then flies round with an occa- sional “ ¢jeuty,’ or stands upon the top of a neighbour- ing tree, showing the full length of its slender legs, neck, and bill. GREENSHANK. Totanus canescens. In the first week in May the Greenshank makes its appear- ance on our coast, though it does not remain long before it retires to its breeding-stations, whence it reappears with its young in the beginning of August, and leaves for the winter by the end of October. It is seldom seen in larger parties than from four to six, and is very vigilant and diffi- cult of approach, which makes it by no means a favourite with the shore-shooting fraternity, as it rises with a great clamour and disturbs all the birds within hearing. This cry is uttered in a melodious tone, and is very loud, GREENSHANK.—BLACK-TAILED GODWIT. 247 resembling the syllables “ cherwut, cherwut.” It occasion- ally accompanies the flocks of Redshanks on the mud of the harbours &c., and has sometimes, though very rarely, been found inland by the side of a brook or in a meadow on its horders. Its food consists of insects, fish, worms, and small crustacea. If it comes to deep water while wading it will swim without hesitation, and dives well. From its wildness it is not often shot, but I have in my own notes mention of its occurrence at Old Shoreham, October 12th, 1838, and two out of four were shot after a very heavy gale from the south-west, on September 19th, 1840; also of one in May, and another on September 15th, 1843. I have also received specimens from Pagham and from Chichester Harbour. Mr. Dennis obtained one, shot in October 1854 near the Cuckmere River, and a few others at various times along the coast. During the breeding-season the Greenshank will some- times perch on trees. The nest is described in Yarrell’s B. B. (vol. iti. p. 485) as consisting of a few fragments of heath and some blades of grass placed in a cavity scraped in the turf im an exposed place. It breeds in many parts of Scotland. BLACK-TAILED GODWIT. Limosa egocephala. Tue Black-tailed Godwit appears occasionally on our coast on migration, but is much less numerous than the Bar- tailed species. It is in fact a rare bird, and frequents marshy spots inland more than the mud flats, feeding principally on freshwater univalves and mollusks. It bred 248 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. formerly on the fens of England, but there is no known instance of its nesting in Sussex. Mr. Knox states that it has been killed once or twice in an immature state at Amberley, also on Pevensey Levels and the Rye Marshes, and that a mae and female, killed at Sidlesham, are in Chichester Museum (O. R. p. 282). Mr. Gordon, in his ‘ History of Harting,’ mentions one shot at Black Rye Pond in the autumn of 1858. Mr. Jeffery (p. n.) records that one was shot on fresh water near Bird- ham, on August 6th, 1853; another on a freshwater pond near Ashling, August 24th, 1854, containing remains of insects and of marine and freshwater shells, and a portion of fine gravel. A young bird of this year was shot at Pagham, and five more were seen on August 29th, 1865; and one was shot at Bosham on the 4th September, 1867. The nest is concealed in the coarse herbage of the swamps and meadows, and is composed of dry grass and other weeds. When disturbed they are very vociferous, flying round and uttering a sound resembling “grutty, grutty.”” Mr. Seebohm, speaking of a nest which he found in Jutland, in his “ British Birds” (vol. ii. p. 165), remarks that it was a mere hollow in the short coarse herbage on the dry part of the ground, somewhat deep, and lined with a handful of dry grass. BAR-TAILED GODWIT. Limosa lapponica. Tue Bar-tailed Godwit arrives in May so regularly that the 12th is known as Godwit day; but far greater numbers BAR-TAILED GODWIT.—COMMON CURLEW. 249 appear in August, and until they are disturbed they are exceedingly tame; but being much prized for the table, they are persecuted by the gunner and soon become very shy and wary. Formerly they were fattened on bread and milk, and fetched a very high price. They frequent the mud flats throughout the winter, retiring to the beach at high tides, and feed on various worms, shellfish, and insects, probing for them with their long bills, and sweeping from side to side, and are common all along the coast, but are seldom met with inland. They breed in Lapland, and on the Petchora, and various places in the north of Europe. Mr. Wolley obtained the eggs in Finland. The nest is very slight,—a little dry grass or short herbage placed in a depression in the ground. Mr. J. H. Gurney, jun., in his paper on “The Spring Migration of Birds at St. Leonards ” in the ‘ Transactions of the Norfolk and Norwich Naturalists’ Society ’ (vol. 11. p. 174), observes that a single Bar-tailed Godwit had frequented a small marsh at Bexhill for several days, when on the 10th of May it was joined by twenty-five more, of which about one third were in full breeding-plumage. On another occasion he observed that the Godwits kept apart from the smaller Waders, and that they did not object to the waves splashing them, though they sometimes almost lifted them off their feet. COMMON CURLEW. Numenius arquata. Tuts species is found in great abundance on the mud flats in spring and autumn, and at high water the birds retire to the full of the beach, or to a short distance inland. They are 250 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. generally very wild, and have always a sentinel on the watch, whose voice is so loud that he gives notice to all the birds on the shore; and it is seldom that a shot can be obtained except by the most careful mancuvring. It is, however, worth some trouble, as the flesh is exceedingly good and fetches a high price in the market. Willughby mentions that in Suffolk there is a proverb :— «¢ A Curlew, be she white or be she black, She carries twelve pence on her back” ; and it is one of the luxuries mentioned in the ‘ Northum- berland Household Book ?:—“ Item, Kyrlewes to be hadde for my Lord’s owne Mees at Principall Feestes, and to be at kal 2) pece, They feed greatly on cockles and on mussels, crustacea, and small shelled snails, especially Helix ericetorum. As soon as the rocks begin to show above water a long line of these birds may be seen to arrive, uttering their loud cry of ‘‘corlieu.” In April they formerly retired to the South Downs, where I have often observed them, particularly on the wide expanse known as Plumpton Plain, between Ditch- ling Beacon and Lewes, which was, some fifty years ago, covered with coarse grass, especially Brachydactyla pinnata, among which I always thought it must be nesting, from its constantly flying round and uttering an oft-repeated cry of “Wha-up.” I never, however, succeeded in finding the eggs. In the breeding-season it betakes itself to moorlands and open wastes, in the Western, Midland, and Northern Counties, and to the mountains of Wales and Scotland, where it forms a slight nest on the ground, of dry leaves or grass placed in a tuft of rushes. WHIMBREL. bho i — WHIMBREL. Numenius pheopus. A rew Whimbrels arrive on our coast in April, and in May they become so numerous as to have obtained the name of May-birds, soon, however, departing to their breeding-places. This bird is known also as the “ Titterel,” and is found in little flocks on the beach at high water, scattering over the mud or sand when the tide is out. Although the main body has left by the end of May, a few may occasionally be met with late in the autumn; for example, Mr. Jeffery records (p. n.) that several were seen at Pagham, on October 3rd, 1864, and one or two are occasionally observed in the summer. Mr. Dennis states that he found one to contain the claws and other fragments of small crabs, and mentions flocks of Whimbrel on the coast near Cuckmere in May. The Whim- brel has a loud clear note, and is very difficult of approach. It much more often goes inland to feed than does the Curlew, and picks up insects and worms as well as small land shells. At the breeding-season it goes as far north as Iceland. Yarrell (B.B.vol.iii. p.508) states that Major Feilden found a dozen nests in the Faroes, and that the bird is very pugnacious, driving off even the Common Skua and the Lesser Black-backed Gull, uttering its sharp trillng cry of “Tetty, tetty ” while darting to and fro with arrow-like flight. 252 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. GAVIA. LARIDA. THE BLACK TERN. Hydrochelidon nigra. Tue Black Tern may be considered a rare visitor, occurring occasionally on inland ponds and large pieces of fresh water at a distance from the sea. On August 27th, 1853, I observed a small Tern, which I have no doubt was nigra, flying about over the water near the bay of Knepp Pond, or rather Lake, as it consists of about 80 acres, during a very heavy gale from the south-west ; notwithstanding which it seemed to be hawking for insects. Mr. Knox (O. R. p. 253) merely calls it a rare bird in Sussex, and states that it has occasionally been killed at the spring and autumn migrations, or returning from its summer quarters in more inland counties. Mr. Jeffery (p. n.) re- cords one, in winter plumage, shot at Ratham on the 22nd September, 1850; a female and a young bird at Sidlesham, May 5th, 1860, the former in full summer-plumage ; and on October 9th, 1865, another young bird at Pagham. In the ‘ Zoologist ’ (p. 2803) a specimen is recorded by Mr. Potter, which was shot at Balmer, about six miles from Lewes, where it had been seen hawking for insects, for about an hour, over the surface of a freshwater pond. Mr. Booth, in his ‘ Rough Notes,’ states that small flocks, flying eastward, usually put im an appearance in the Channel, off the coast of Sussex, during the last week in April, and WHITE-WINGED BLACK TERN. 253 that the flight continues throughout May; also that he has repeatedly seen them in the muddy harbours of Sussex. The Black Tern formerly bred on the marshes about Rye and in the Pevensey Levels, but has long ceased to do so. It also bred in Kent, and in the great fens of Norfolk, Lincoln- shire, and Cambridgeshire, from which last locality I still have eggs which were taken in a very wet part of Quy fen about fifty years ago. The nest is placed in a tuft of sedge or rushes in a shallow pool, and lined with pieces of half- decayed water-weeds. The bird feeds on dragon-flies and other insects, as well as on small fish. Its flight, which I watched with great interest in Holland, is exceedingly buoyant and bat-like. Several other specimens have been obtained inland, of which I have not the dates. WHITE-WINGED BLACK TERN. Hydrochelidon leucoptera. THis species is, in fact, much more an inhabitant of the southern than of the northern regions, and its occurrence in Britain is merely as an accidental wanderer, and there appear to be only two recorded instances of its having occurred in Sussex. In May 1873 an adult specimen was killed at South Weighton, near Newhaven, and was preserved for a gentleman residing in that neighbourhood, of which a notice was sent to ‘The Field’ of November 13th, 1875, by Mr. T. Colgate, jun. A second example is recorded in the same paper of June 19, 1875, by Mr. Clark Kennedy, as killed some few years previously at Eastbourne. The Black Tern and the present species have never been found breeding in company. 254 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. Its food, nidification, and general habits, resemble those of the preceding species. The note is said to be harsher and louder. THE GULL-BILLED TERN. Sterna anglica. Tne recognition of this very distinct species is due to Mon- tagu, whose type specimen, described and figured by him in the Supplement to his Ornithological Dictionary, was shot by himself in Sussex, and should be now preserved, with the rest of his collection in the British Museum ; though the late Mr. G. R. Gray, in his ‘Catalogue of British Birds in the Collection of the British Museum,’ p. 241, assigned Kent as the locality of the only example in that collection enrolled by him. Be that as it may, there can be no doubt that this county (Sussex) furnished the subject upon which this species is based, a fact the more remarkable wnen its extraordinarily wide range throughout the world is considered. It isnot only found breeding in some localities in Europe from Denmark southwards, but apparently across the whole of Asia and its islands to Australia, as well as on the Atlantic coast of America from Connecticut to probably Brazil. At first, Mon- tagu thought that the bird he obtained in Sussex—he unfor- tunately does not give the precise locality or date—was an example of the Sandwich Tern, which species had not long before been described by Latham ; but on becoming the pos- sessor of his type specimen of that species, which should now be in the British Museum, Montagu, of course, saw how very distinct they were, and accordingly did not hesitate ‘to describe the present one as new. From his statement that GULL-BILLED TERN. 955 not only had he shot his original specimen in Sussex, but that he had known others killed about Rye, we might be entitled to infer that the Gull-billed Tern may have in those days bred on our shores ; but perhaps it might be safer not so to do, even though we might be tempted to adopt the contrary belief, from an assertion of the late Mr. Rodd (‘ Birds of Cornwall, p. 166) that a private collection at Penzance contains a bird of this species, presented by Mr. Rice of South Hill, together with a portion of an egg which dropped when he shot the bird near Brighton. I find in my own notes that in the first week of May, 1855, a very perfect specimen, in full summer plumage, was shot halfway between Shoreham and Brighton. On examining this example I found that the head was not jet-black, as described by Yarrell, but glossed with the same green colour which pervades the plumage of the Crested Cormorant. This specimen was preserved by Mr. Pratt, of Brighton. Mr. Knox records (O. R. p. 253) that he has a specimen killed at Rye, and there is another in the Chichester Museum which was obtained at Selsey on March 3]st, 1852. Mr. Yarrell (B. B. vol. in. p. 534) says that the Gull-billed Tern breeds on islands or sand-banks in lagoons, the nests being merely slight hollows, with, at times, a few bits of sea-weed or dry grass for a lining, and that its food consists of frogs, crabs, and fish; that it feeds also on grasshoppers and beetles, which it captures on the wing, and that the flight is very graceful, though not very rapid. It is partial to lakes of fresh or brackish water, and forms a natural link between the Marsh Terns and those which frequent the coast. A Gull-billed Tern was shot out of a party of three, near Portslade, and was preserved by Mr. Pratt, of Brighton, June 27, 1855. 256 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. THE SANDWICH TERN. Sterna cantiaca. Turis Tern may be seen on our coast every spring, though it is never very numercus. Arriving in April, it remains the greater part of the summer, and may be met with occasionally all along the shore. It does not now breed in the county, though formerly the eggs were not unfrequently found on the extensive tract of beach in the neighbourhood of Win- chelsea and Rye. It now goes further north in the breeding- season. ‘The nest consists purely of a depression in the sand, or occasionally it is placed among the drifted sea-weed above high-water mark. The voice is powerful, and may be heard from a great dis- tance, resembling the words “ kirhitt, kirhitt.” The bird feeds on insects and small fish. In my own notes I have the fol- lowing :—* A Sandwich Tern was shot off Brighton in the first week of April 1844, in full summer plumage : another similar specimen near Shoreham in the beginning of May 1866.” Mr. Knox (O. R. p. 243) says that specimens have been obtained at Pevensey, Rye, and Selsey, in May and June, and in the autumnal months. Mr. Jeffery (p. n.) mentions an immature bird, a female, shot at Pagham Harbour, on October 12th, 1861, and an adult male at Sidlesham on May 11th, 1863. ROSEATE TERN.—COMMON TERN. 257 ROSEATE TERN. Sterna dougalli. Tus is the most elegant, as well as the rarest, of our native Terns. I can find but one record of its having visited the Sussex coast, viz. that of Mr. Southwell, of Norwich, in the ‘Zoologist’ for 1885 (p. 481), stating that a specimen in the collection of Mr. Rising, of Horsey, near Great Yarmouth, was shot on the Sussex coast, near Eastbourne, about the year 1848. At the sale of this collection in September, 1885, the bird was purchased by Mr. Ashmead, the taxidermist of Bishopsgate Street, London. This Tern formerly bred on one of the Scilly Isles, and more lately on the Farnes, as well as on a few islands off the coast of Scotland and Ireland. Though it has a very wide range, its diminution at all its breeding-quarters leads one to fear that it is doomed to become an extinct species. COMMON TERN. Sterna fluviatilis. Tuts is the most abundant of all the Terns on the coast of Sussex, known also as the Sea-Swallow, and is a constant summer visitant. Our rivers not being sufficiently large to induce it to go far inland, it is, with us, rarely met with far from the sea. It occasionally occurs, however, on some of the larger pieces of water, feeding principally on small fish. On the S 258 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. 18th of September, 1839, there being a very large flood on the Henfield Level, I observed several of this species flying over the water, and was much interested in watching the perseverance with which they beat against a strong gale till, arriving a a certain point, they would at once turn and dart before the wind with immense velocity to the furthest extremity of the water, and again beat up, although the wind was so strong that they sometimes appeared almost stationary; and this they did for an hour or more, when I left them. On the same day a solitary bird was shot on the River Ouse, at Lindfield, at least fifteen miles from the sea. Mr. Jeffery states (p. n.) that after a heavy gale eighteen of these birds were shot in Chichester Harbour on April 18th, 1866; one of them, which he examined, contained fourteen or fifteen common shrimps. Mr. Jeffery also mentions that one was shot over a small pond at Ashling, where it was so intent on catching small gold-fish that it would not be driven away, and was found on examination to contain five or six of them. The Common Tern formerly bred on the beach from Rye Harbour to beyond Winchelsea, and a few continue to do so. The nest is a mere shallow hole scratched in the sand or shingle or placed among the drifted sea-weed, and lined with little pieces of sea-thrift or dry grass. ARCTIC TERN 259 ARCTIC TERN. Sterna nacrura. Tue Arctic Tern is frequently scen in company with the Sea-Swallow. On the 18th, 19th, and 20th of May, 1842, a continuous stream of small flocks of the former species passed all along the coast of Sussex. There must have been several thousands of them, and many hundreds were wantonly shot from the beach, especially at Brighton. I well remember hearing of numbers having appeared on the Cam from Cam- bridge to Ely. In fact, this extraordinary visitation appears to have been general. In the Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. (pp. 352, 353) it is stated by Mr. H. KE. Strickland that these birds were abundant at Clevedon, Weston, and Bristol, at which last place more than two hundred were killed; also that on the 8th and 9th of May one bird-stuffer at Evesham received no less than forty specimens, and that considerable numbers were obtained at Tewkesbury, Worcester, Hereford, Devizes, and Trowbridge; and that he was informed that _ seven hundred were seen at Crofton Hall, near Bromsgrove. Numbers also appeared at Swansea, Monmouth, and Bridg- water, as well as in Dorsetshire and Cornwall. In October 1843 several adult birds and a young one were shot near Shoreham. Mr. Jeffery (p. n.) remarks that a large flight of Arctic, Common, and Lesser ‘Terns were seen swimming in Pagham Harbour on October 11, 1865. Mr. Knox states that the Arctic Tern is more numerous in May and June on the shingle at Pevensey than the Common Tern. Mr. J. H. Gurney states, on the authority of s2 260 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. Mr. Dutton, that he believes it still breeds near St. Leonards, that there is a considerable colony at Pevensey, and that with the help of a dog, without which it is almost impossible to dis- cover them, he found eight nests of three eggs each and three with only one. Its food and habits are similar to those of the Common Tern. LESSER TERN. Sterna minuta. Tuts, the smallest of our British Terns, is not very plentiful, though it occurs all along the coast and breeds with us in a few places, particularly in the eastward portion of the county, making its first appearance in May. It feeds on surface- swimming crustacea and small fish, on which it pounces while on the wing. It is occasionally met with off Shoreham and Worthing, and there is a colony at Rye. Mr. Jeffery notes that on May 9th, 1864, five were shot in Pagham Harbour, and that he had examined an immature specimen shot at the same place, and found it crammed with small fish. He also says that on May 20th, 1866, four were shot at Sidlesham, and on the same day thirteen were killed there at two shots. Its habits and the situation of its nest are similar to those of the Common Tern. In large floods and in heavy gales it is now and then found on fresh water at a considerable distance from the sea. SABINE’S GULL. 261 SABINE’S GULL. Aema sabinii. Tuts Gull is a rare straggler to the British coast, being an inhabitant of the polar regions. It was first noticed by Captain, afterwards General Sir Edward Sabine, when accompanying one of the expeditions in search of a North- West passage, on a group of low rocks on the west coast of Greenland. It gets its food on the sea beach, standing near the water’s edge, and picking up the marine insects which are cast ashore. See Mr. Dresser’s ‘ Birds of Europe,’ vol. vill. p. 338. In the severe weather of December 1853, a specimen of this Gull was obtained by the gardener of Mr. Catt, at the Tide Mill, near Newhaven ; it was an immature bird, and was recorded by me in the ‘ Zoologist? (p. 4408). Another immature specimen was picked up in a dying state at Hove in September 1871; on examination there were no shot- marks found on the skin, and as it was in good condition, it seems probable that it had flown against some object. It is now in my own collection. Mr. Dawson Rowley records another in the same plumage, shot at Hove during a severe equinoctial gale on October 7th, 1858; and lastly one is mentioned by Mr. Harting in his ‘ Handbook of B. B’ on the authority of Mr. J. H. Gurney, as killed near Kast- bourne, October 18th, 1870. In addition to the above I am informed by Mr. Pratt, of Queen’s Road, Brighton, that he had received one, killed at Black Rock, near that town, and two from Portslade. i) (op) bo THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. BONAPARTIAN GULL. Larus philadelphia. Tuts exceedingly rare straggler has only once occurred on the coast of Sussex, and was first noticed by Mr. Cecil Smith, of Bishop’s Lydeard, Taunton, while looking through the collection of Mr. F. Persehouse, of Torquay. It was in the same plumage as that of the centre figure in Yarrell. The following is Mr. Persehouse’s account of its capture :— “Tt is some years since I shot it, and I cannot supply the exact date, but it was early in November 1870, at St. Leonards-on-Sea, at the west end of the promenade. It was with a number of Black-headed and Kittiwake Gulls, and I mistook it at first for L. minutus. It is an immature specimen.” (* Zoologist,’ 1883, p. 120.) It was reported in the ‘ Field’ of April 14th, 1888. Mr. Persehouse showed me this example when I was at Torquay. I think it was in 1872. LITTLE GULL. Larus minutus. AN immature specimen was shot by Mr. Dennis on October 16th, 1846, as it passed over his head, while on the beach at Seaford, on the western side of the bay, after a heavy gale from the east. It was then thought a very rare bird. I purchased a Little Gull which had been shot near Lewes on the 29th of November, 1849, in winter plumage, and nearly mature; and in the same winter Mr. Dennis obtained LITTLE GULL. 263 an immature bird, which I saw at the Rectory at East Blatchington. It was brought to him alive, and covered with wet blood, by a coastguardsman who had shot it at Seaford. It had, however, quite recovered and was very tame, readily taking raw meat from the hand, and would scold at a great rate if not attended to. It had learned to beg for food, and was just getting into mature plumage, when it was accidentally killed by the slamming of a door on June 16th, 1850. A coloured drawing of this specimen was sent to Mr. Knox by Mrs. Rickman, of Lewes. See O. R. p. 254, where is mentioned another example which was shot by a fisherman near Brighton on November 10th, 1853, and preserved by Mr. Swaysland. Mr. Jeffery (p.n.) records one, now in Chichester Museum, shot December Ist, 1868 ; another at Chidham, January Ist, 1870; one at Selsey, February 1874; a fourth at Fishbourne, December 1876; a fifth at Pagham, January 1877; and a sixth at Itchenor on December Ist of the same year. Mr. Dresser (vol. viii. p. 378) states that it was very common at Novaya Ladoga in 1852, breeding on small floating islands in a morass. In the stomachs were found insects which they caught in the air, making graceful and quick evolutions, in which they almost surpassed the Goatsucker. Ina marsh in the same neighbourhood were found by Mr. Meves nests similarly situated among low plants, often quite close together, of which some were placed on the edge, and others in the centre of the islands, and composed of flags, scirpus, and grass-straws, some carefully, others carelessly constructed. On examining the birds it was found that they had been feeding principally on small fishes and on a few insects, THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. bo on) re BLACK-HEADED GULL. Larus ridibundus. Tuts Gull is exceedingly abundant on all parts of the coast throughout the winter, but does not now breed in the county. It feeds greatly on the cultivated land, where it follows the plough, as the Rooks do, in search of grubs and worms. The nearest breeding-places are on Romney Marsh, in Kent, and in the neighbourhood of Poole Harbour, Dorset, but the greater part 20 to the meres of Norfolk, Lincoln- shire, and Yorkshire, where they assemble in vast numbers, and whence their eggs are every year sent to the London market. In some seasons from ten to twenty thousand eggs have been taken. In 1825 they fetched, according to Yarrell (vol. iii. p. 597), 4d. a score; and in 1870 they were sold on the spot at from 9d. to 1s. the score. It breeds in many other counties of England and Scotland, and as far north as the Shetland and Faroe Isles. Its note is a hoarse cackle resembling a laugh. It feeds on crustacea and fish on the coast, and on any floating garbage, mollusks, and insects, frequently visiting pastures, where it finds the crane-fly, of which it is particularly fond. It also catches chafers on the wing, and will feed on mice and small birds as well as on corn. The flight is very beautiful and buoyant. Not long ago I was much interested in watching the evolutions of these Gulls on the Caledonian Canal, where they followed the steamer from Inverness to Fort Augustus. This is also called the Peewit Gull. BLACK-HEADED GULL. 265 On the 23rd of February, 1853, I received a so-called Masked Gull, Larus capistratus, which had been taken alive off Brighton, on a hook baited with liver. I turned it down on my pond, hoping to observe its changes of plumage. On the 24th of April in the same year I find this note :—“ The Gull caught off Brighton, February 22nd, has this day completed its change from the winter to the summer plumage, having assumed a black, or rather dark brown semi-hood on the upper part of the head, not extending backward beyond the eyes—the back of the head, as well as that of the neck, remaining pure white.” It fed well on barley and oats. By the 4th of August it had assumed a few speck-like white feathers round the eyes, and they remained unchanged till late in the month of September, when it resumed its winter plumage, the same as when I first received it. ‘The next spring the changes were similar, but on December 4th, 1854, I was sorry to find it dead and nearly eaten by a Great Black-backed Gull, by which it had never before been ill-treated, having lived with it in amity for many months. [Respecting the Laughing Gull, Z. atricilla, which was admitted as a British species in the three former editions of Yarrell, I find the following among some notes kindly lent me by Mr. Thomas Parkin, of Halton, Hastings :—“ At a meeting of the Zoological Society, held early in March 1884, Mr. Howard Saunders made some observations on the specimen of ZL. atricilla in the British Museum, said to be the one killed by Montagu at Winchelsea, and came to the conclusion that the bird in question was not that of Mon- tagu.”” Accordingly, in the last edition of Yarrell (vol. iii. p- 606), he states that it was admitted into the British list 266 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. owing to a misapprehension on the part of Montagu and his contemporaries. Rhodostethia rosea.—Respecting the so-called Ross’s Rosy Gull, recorded by Mr. Ellman (‘ Zoologist,’ p. 3388), the specimen was shown to me, and I told him that it was merely an unusually rosy example of L. ridibundus; but as he was not satisfied, I, to satisfy him, took it to the British Museum, thinking to compare it with others. There was, however, no specimen of Ross’s Gull there, but Dr. John Edward Gray quite agreed with me that it was L. ridi- bundus. | COMMON GULL. Larus canus. Tuoueu called the Common Gull, it is not nearly so abundant as the Black-headed Gull, but from autumn to spring it may be found along the coast, more particularly about the harbours, where it may be seen picking up the floating refuse among the shipping. It also follows the plough, like L. ridibundus, and feeds on similar substances. In confinement it may be kept in good condition on maize, barley, or wheat. In heavy gales it is sometimes driven far inland. Yarrell describes the nest as large, whether on marsh or rock, and constructed of sea-weeds, heather, grass, and sea-pink. On some of the Scotch lakes I have observed it perching on trees. HERRING-GULL. 267 HERRING-GULL. Larus argentatus. In the mature state this Gull is known on some parts of the coast as the “Cob,” and in the immature as the “ Grey Cob ” or “ Wagell,” and is perhaps the commonest of the genus all through the summer. It feeds greatly on grain, often doing considerable damage by digging up and devour- ing the corn just as it is beginning to sprout, and is said in very hard weather to bite out and devour pieces from the turnip roots. It also eats fish, mice, small mussels, &c., and is a great destroyer of eggs in its breeding-places, even pillaging the nests of its congeners. It often goes far inland for food, following the plough, or turning up the soil of the newly-ploughed fields. The Herring-Gull is a dangerous pet, as it will murder any of its companions it can master, and eat them too. The nests are generally formed of dry grass and sea-weed. These birds are frequently seen to trample the sand, probably to make the worms rise to the surface. Large flights often follow the herring-boats in the Channel to pick up the refuse fish and crustacea, which are thrown overboard after a haul, and on these occasions they are very noisy and quarrelsome. Unless this is the reason, it is difficult to say whence the name of Herring-Gull is derived, as that fish does not seem to be an especial favourite with this Gull. It is frequently seen to take up cockles, mussels, &c., to great heights in the air, dropping them on the rocks to break the shells. Having kept some of these birds for several years, I had 268 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. an excellent opportunity of observing their notes, of which they have a considerable variety, at times resembling the bark of a small dog, at others the mewing of a cat in distress ; this is uttered with the neck stretched out hori- zontally, close to the ground. It has also a note much resembling the sharp cry of an Eagle; the head and bill are then pointed straight upward toward the sky, the bird raising itself to its full height, and stretching up its neck to its greatest length. It is very dexterous in catching insects, both on and in the water as well as on the wing. It was very amusing to watch these Gulls sitting round a Duck whilst she was laying her egg, which was no sooner done than one of them would stick his bill into it and run off, till one of the others overtaking him, he would drop it, and it would be seized by another, till the egg was broken, when there was a general fight for the contents. This Gull breeds in small numbers in the cliff near Newhaven. I am informed by Mr. Bates, naturalist, Eastbourne, that it breeds also on the cliff just to the westward of Belle Tout Lighthouse. LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL. Larus fuscus. Mr. Knox calls this Gull far from common, and says that a few breed at Newhaven ; I do not think it now breeds in the county, and I doubt whether it does so anywhere on the south coast. It is certainly not so numerous as the Herring-Gull, and it spends the greater part of its time further out at sea, where considerable flocks attend the herring-boats, even pulling the fish out of the nets, and being so troublesome that Mr. Booth tells us he has been GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULL. 269 requested by fishermen to shoot them. A few may occa- sionally be seen about Brighton, especially attracted by the fish which are lost on the unlading of the boats; and at the great outfall of the Brighton sewage, a couple of miles or so east of the town, large numbers are often seen picking up the floating garbage. They are said to be much more partial to inland lakes than the Herring-Gull, and, as with the other larger species of Gull, birds in immature plumage are more common than adults. In confinement they will do well on greaves and maize, and are fond of mice and small birds, which they always swallow whoie, having first dipped them in water. Mr. Booth mentions that in Caithness large numbers nest on the dampest part of the flats in the central portions of the county, or on the rocky ledges of the north- west, and on the stretch of marsh land surrounding the inland lochs and pools in the outlying islands. He also states that he fully believes that this Gull does not attain its mature plumage until five years old. GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULL. Larus marinus. Tuis noble Gull may be found at all seasons round our coast, and frequently goes far inland, especially in rough weather. On November 20th, 1854, one of these birds was brought me which had been taken alive on Broadmere Common, near Henfield, with its feet and bill so clogged with the tenacious Wealden clay that it could not rise from the ground. It was an adult, in the finest winter plumage ; it seemed perfectly unconcerned, and would eat any flesh 270 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. which was thrown to it. I only kept it a few days and restored it to the man who caught it, fearing it might maltreat some of my other pets if turned down with them. This Gull kas been accused of attacking young lambs or weakly sheep, but of this I have no proof, and I have never heard of its interfering in any way with the vast flocks of sheep on the South Downs. It feeds on the foulest carrion, dead fish, or any wounded bird it can find, often attending the gunners when in search of wildfowl. It may be easily caught in traps baited with a piece of flesh. On the coast it forms a roughly constructed nest, on the upper ledge of a cliff, or in a cavity among the bare stones, composed of coarse herbage and sea-weed, or on the islands of a loch, or on the open moor. GLAUCOUS GULL. Larus glaucus. A soMEWHAT rare visitant to our coast, though from time to time a considerable number have been met with. 1 have a note that, in December 1852, Mr. Dennis had a specimen brought him which had been taken at Seaford, which so severely bit the man who caught it that he refused to touch it again, and Mr. Dennis had to get the bird into a basket ; it was in not quite mature plumage. Another of my notes records that at the beginning of January 1859 an immature specimen was shot off Shoreham. This bird was flying very high, in company with two others which appeared to be similar. Mr. Knox mentions (O. R. p. 255) an immature bird taken by a boy from the Chain Pier at Brighton, by means GLAUCOUS GULL. 271 of the click, which consists of a piece of cork rudely fashioned after the likeness of a fish, over which is spread the skin of a mackerel, from which the hooks project, baited with morsels of liver, a long line being attached to it and allowed to float with the tide—many Gulls of different species being taken in this way every year. Mr. Booth mentions that he saw a mature Glaucous Gull flying between St. Leonards and the sea, and that on the following day a specimen exactly resembling it was brought to a bird-stuffer in that town, which had been shot on the large expanse of shingle that stretches along the shore adjoining Pevensey Level. Mr. Jeffery notes one which was shot at Selsey, in January 1870, and passed into his collection ; another, now in Chichester Museum, shot at the same place January 15th, 1873; and in 1882, in the same month, an immature specimen obtained at Itchenor. In the ‘ Zoologist’” (p. 6606) Mr. Wilson has recorded one killed at Worthing in December 1857, with no remark. The Glaucous Gull being a comparatively rare winter visitor, I give from Mr. Dresser’s ‘ Birds of Europe’ (vol. viii. p. 437) the following description of its habits, which, he says, assimi- late closely to those of the Great Black-backed Gull. Like that species, it is extremely voracious, and commits great depredations amongst the eggs and young of other sea-birds and water-fowl, and, to a large extent, it feeds both its young and itself on the eggs and nestlings in down of its weaker neighbours, and renders itself a perfect pest to them. The young of the Eider, and of several other of the sea-ducks, are looked on by it as tender morsels ; and in places in the extreme north, where these birds breed in large numbers, the Glaucous Gull is almost sure to be present, devouring many of the young, pouncing down on and catching them just as it requires them. It doubtless also catches the smaller species of mammals, and waits to take possession of the remnants 272 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. left by the seal-hunters when they have cut up a seal; wherever the carcass of a whale or seal is cast ashore, these Gulls collect together, like vultures, to regale on it. The call-note, or cry, of this species closely resembles that of L. marinus, as does also its flight; but where the two species are found they keep apart in separate flocks. In its native Arctic regions, it pertinaciously follows the whaling-ships, feeding greedily on the blubber. ICELAND GULL. Larus leucopterus. Tuts is even rarer as a visitor than the last-described species. An immature specimen is said, by Mr. Knox, to have been shot near Pagham in January 1852, which was placed in Chichester Museum. In December 1889, or the following month, an Iceland Gull, also immature, was brought to Mr. Pratt, which had been shot at the outfall of the Brighton sewage at Bolsover. Of its habits little has been recorded. Mr. Saxby, in his ‘ Birds of Shetland,’ p. 337, observes that this bird “ seems to be partial to vegetable food, often resorting to the fields, where it may not seldom be seen near the pigs, which in Shetland are tethered by long ropes fastened to a stone or to a stake in the ground. Possibly the earth-worms rooted up may be an attraction. In the stomach I have found a considerable quantity of oats and vegetable fibre, with numerous small pieces of quartz.” It breeds plentifully im Greenland, and also in North America, laying its eggs in a mere depression scratched in the ground. In the ‘ Field,’ April 10th, 1890, Mr. G. H. Nelson records ICELAND GULL.—KITTIWAKE GULL. 273 that he shot an Iceland Gull, at Beachy Head, on January 21st, 1880. It requires very careful examination to distinguish the young of this species from that of the Glaucous Gull. I have no doubt respecting the example received by Mr. Pratt, as mentioned above. The specimens of the Glaucous Gull often vary greatly in size. KITTIWAKE GULL, Rissa tridactyla. Tue Kittiwake frequents our coast throughout the year, but is most abundant in spring and autumn, feeding on surface- swimming fish and crustacea. In heavy gales, and when the sea is too rough for it, it is often found inland in large flocks, but seldom goes far from the shore in calm weather. It may often be seen following the plough, and some years ago one was caught at Cowfold, with its feet and legs so weighted with clay that it could not rise ;—this is about twelve miles from the sea. It does not now breed in Sussex, but on many parts of the north and west coasts its nest is placed on narrow ledges of the cliffs, and is formed of sea-weed. Great numbers are usually placed in close proximity. The plumage is in great demand with the ‘ plumassier,” the barred wings of the young bird being most in fashion. Mr. Booth states that at Clovelly, opposite Lundy Island, vast numbers were annually slain, and there was a regular staff for preparing the plumage. In many cases the wings were torn off and the live birds thrown back into the water, and this abominable cruelty and destruction, commencing on £ 274 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. August Ist, continued for a fortnight. Hundreds of young birds were left dead and dying from starvation in their nests. On one day seven hundred were sent to Clovelly, on another five hundred, and so on, about nine thousand of these birds being destroyed in the course of this wanton onslaught upon them. The Kittiwake is said to be very good eating. In Yarrell (B. B. vol. ui. p. 654) is found the following :—‘‘ In olden times this Gull was considered good food, and Sir Robert Sibbald says that ‘The Kittiweak is as good meat as a partridge,” an opinion endorsed in later times by those inhabitants of Scotland who relish Gannets. There is an old story, told by Pennant, of a gentleman who, as a whet to his appetite before dinner, ate sia and did not find himself a bit less hungry than when he began. Sir James C. Ross says, ‘We killed enough to supply our party with several excellent meals, and found them delicious food, perfectly free from any unpleasant flavour,’ ” IVORY GULL. Pagophila eburnea. Tus inhabitant of the Arctic regions is an extremely rare visitor to our coast. In its native haunts it feeds on the blubber of whales and seals, and on any animal matter, putrid orfresh. The first egg of this bird, the only one in the nest, was found by Sir Leopold M*Clintock on the beach of one of the Polynia Islands, by him named Ireland’s Eye, in latitude 78°, during the Arctic Expedition of 1852-53. He brought this egg to Ireland, and it is now in the Museum of the Royal Dublin Society. He states that the nest was built of moss, with a little white down and a few feathers. See‘ Ibis,’ 1866, IVORY GULL.—GREAT SKUA. 275 p. 217. Yarrell (B. B. vol. i. p. 659) observes that Dr. Malmgren found a number of this species established in the lower niches of the rocks and precipices in Murchison Bay (lat. 80° N., long 30° E.), at a height of a hundred feet ; that two nests were reached, and proved to be shallow depres- sions lined with dry plants, grass, and moss, with a few feathers. Each contamed one much-incubated egg, which were placed in the Stockholm Museum, but one of them is now in the collection of Professor Newton. Mr. Knox (O. R. pp. 253, 254) states that it has been obtained twice near Brighton, and that he had seen a specimen at Mr. John- son’s, chemist, St. Leonards-on-Sea, which was found on the beach in a dying state; and mentions that during the winter of 1848 an example occurred near Rye. Mr. Wilson (‘ Zoologist,’ p. 6606), in a list of birds shot near Worthing, includes “ Ivory Gull, 1845,” without further notice; and Mr. Ellman, writing in the same journal September 23rd, 1848, says that he saw at a bird-stuffer’s at Hastings a few weeks before an Ivory Gull which he told him was shot in that neighbourhood a short time previously (p. 2304). GREAT SKUA. Stercorarius catarrhactes. Tue first mention of this species in my notes is that in January 1830 an adult specimen was picked up dead off the Chain Pier at Brighton. It was floating in the sea, and appeared to have been some days in the water, but was preserved for my collection. Another, in good condition, was caught on a hook by a fisherman off Brighton, Novem- ber 10th, 1846, in perfect plumage, and proved very tame, T2 276 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. almost suffering itself to be taken by the hand; this also is in my collection. A third was caught off Brighton in November 1851; on February 5th, 1880, I saw one flying off Brighton, so near the shore that I could see the white bar on the wing; and on the 7th, a bird, probably the same, was shown me at Mr. Pratt’s. It was in good condition, though most of those taken on our coast have been in a somewhat emaciated state. Mr. Knox (O. R. p. 259) states, without further date, that one was caught on the beach at Brighton in November while eating a dead cat, from which it was with difficulty separated; he also mentions another, killed at Worthing, and my bird of 1830. The Great Skua watches the Gulls feeding, and when one has taken a fish, immediately gives chase, till the persecuted bird is obliged to drop—or if swallowed to disgorge—its prey, and the Skua picks it up before it reaches the water. It feeds also on the blubber of whales and seals, and on flesh and carrion of every kind, which its powerful beak and sharp hooked claws are well adapted for tearing in pieces. The only British breeding-places are in the Shetland Isles. The nest is stated in Yarrell (B. B. vol. iii. p. 665) to be a neatly rounded cavity in the moss or heather of the highest moorlands. It is a very courageous bird, and in defence of its nest or young will attack man or beast. Mr. Jeffery (‘ Zoologist,’ p. 811, s.s.) records that on February 6th, 1867, one was caught alive, which had lost amu eye im conflict with another bird, and was purchased for the Chichester Museum. POMATORHINE SKUA. 277 POMATORHINE SKUA. Stercorarius pomatorhinus. I rrvp, in my own notes, the record of an immature example of this Skua, shot at Hangleton by Mr. Hardwick of that place, on October 27th, 1837. In 1841 two more were shot, the one, at Shoreham Harbour, on October 17th, the other, which was immature, at Brighton on November 2nd. The former was moulting, particularly about the head and neck, the long feathers of those parts having lost the greater portion of the straw-coloured tips. Mr. Dennis, writing in October 1857, tells me that a piece of flooded ground, near Seaford, was visited by a small flock of Skuas, and that he shot two of this species ; the mouth of one of them was crammed with earth-worms. He also informed me on another occasion that an adult speci- men was shot at Seaford on October 27th, 1858. Yarrell (B. B. vol. i. p. 668) observes that the first notice of this bird, as British, appears in the Catalogue of Mr. Bullock’s collection, sold in 1819, in which was a specimen said to have been killed at Brighton *. Mr. Knox merely remarks that the species had been shot at Brighton, Shoreham, Bognor, Newhaven, and Hastings. Mr. Booth states that numbers are occasionally seen in the Channel, and that during a terrible gale from the south on October 24th, 1852, a small party of Skuas of this species were blown inland at Shoreham, and settled for a time in a stubble field, and that the whole number were in * Prof. Newton’s annotated copy of this Catalogue shows that the specimen was bought by Dr. Leach for the British Museum, and it is entered in Mr. G. R. Gray’s ‘Catalogue of British Birds’ in that Collection with the locality “North Britain” ! 278 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. immature plumage. He says that he had seldom met with these birds at any distance from the shore. They seldom attack the larger Gulls, but follow the herring-boats, and rob the smaller ones and the Terns of the fish they steal from the nets. The nest has not been found in Britain. In the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 3331), Mr. Ellman notes a pair shot off Hastings in the early part of October 1851; and in the same work Mr. Jeffery gives the following quotation from the ‘West Sussex Gazette’ of Dec. 28th, 1865, (p. 142, s. s.):—“ A few days ago, as a young man named Collins was wheeling a barrow in a lane, loaded with flesh for dogs, he was suddenly startled by the appearance of a large bird alighting on the flesh, and beginning rapidly to make a meal from it. The young man stepped back to the roadside, and took a long piece of string from his pocket, with which to form a noose. The bird had flown a short distance during this operation. Two sticks were placed on the flesh and the noose laid on them. With the end of the string in his hand he stood back three or four yards; the bird soon came again, and stepping into the noose was easily captured. It was kept several days alive, but from being confined in too small a place its feathers became worn.” The bird was presented to Mr. A. E. Knox, who, in acknowledging it, wrote that it was the only adult specimen of the species he had ever met with in Sussex, “the breast being of a dirty white instead of the usual mottled brown, which is characteristic of the immature bird.” Mr. Dutton, ‘ Zoologist ? (p. 1099), writes that a few of these birds generally occur in the sprat season in November, and that four, all immature, were shot off Eastbourne in that month of 1867, ARCTIC OR RICHARDSON’S SKUA. 279 ARCTIC or RICHARDSON’S SKUA. Stercorarius crepidatus. Arter a tremendous gale on September 16th, 1840, one of this species was killed with a stone on the beach at Brighton, in the dark plumage*, and having the middle tail-feathers considerably elongated. A second but immature example was killed at Worthing on November 2nd, 1841, and on November 5th, 1843, another, in plumage more nearly matured than either of the above, the head and neck being much lighter in colour, and the two middle tail-feathers more elongated. Thus far my own notes. Mr. Dennis informed me that he had killed one on a flooded meadow near Seaford, on October 8th, 1857. It is the smallest Skua which breeds in the British Islands, the nest being constructed of moss, short grass, and heather, and, like the other Skuas, it defends its eggs with great boldness, and like them, wages a perpetual war with the smaller Gulls. Mr. Booth found it breeding on the moors of Caithness,-as it also does in the Outer Hebrides. Hewit- son says that the cry of this species at its nest more nearly resembles that of a cat than of a bird. I have a specimen which was caught on a hook off the Chain Pier at Brighton, in November 1844. Mr. Thorncroft, of that town, records, in the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 8054), that he killed a Richardson’s Skua about two miles from Brighton, on January 24th, 1850; and Mr. Jeffery saw a bird of this species in the flesh, at Chichester, on November 5th, 1873, * It was from a specimen in this plumage that the well-known Arctic Gull, or Skua, was redescribed as a distinct species under the name of Richardson’s Skua. 280 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. “ with the hair-like yellow streaks appearing on the sides of the neck, and one of the central tail-feathers extending about three inches beyond the rest; the other was missing.” (See ‘ Zoologist,’ p. 3823, s. s.) LONG-TAILED or BUFFON’S SKUA. Stercorarius parasiticus. Tus is the rarest of the Skuas found on our coast. I have one which was shot on a flooded meadow in the Adur Level, near Henfield, in October 1862. It was swimming about alone, and was very tame. This example is in full adult plumage. Mr. Jeffery mentions that in the beginning of October he saw a Buffon’s Skua which was killed at Don- nington while flying over some fields ; it was in the mottled plumage, the central tail-feathers projecting about an inch. This was in December 1873. He also says that one was obtained in the Manhood, a part of Chichester, in October 1879. This Skua feeds on fish, crustacea, insects, lemmings, and small birds, and on the berries of several plants found on the mountains. The nest is a mere depression in the ground, with a very shght lining of grass. Mr. Booth says that it probably passes to its breeding-places in April, and that in 1875 he was frequently out in the Channel from six to twelve miles off the Sussex coast, and on several occasions, between the 11th and 23rd of that month, fell in with single birds as well as small parties. A few obtained as specimens were in full breeding-plumage, and others in plumage otherwise the same, but without the long tail-feathers, all bemg mature, FULMAR PETREL,. 281 FULMAR PETREL. Fulmaris glacialis. THE appearances of the Fulmar are exceedingly rare on our coast. Ihave in my own collection a specimen which was found dead on the beach, near Brighton, on Oct. 7, 1852; and Mr. Dennis told me that he obtained another, which was washed up alive on the shore under Seaford Head, December 21, 1858, and was roughly stuffed by a bricklayer. This had been wounded by shot, one of its legs having been shattered, but it was healed when taken. It was restuffed by Mr. Pratt. The Fulmar keeps for the most part at a con- siderable distance from the land. In the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 598), another specimen is recorded by me, which was found dead on the beach at Brighton, near Black Rock, January 30, 1858. It was quite fresh, and had evidently been recently shot. In the ‘ Zoologist ’ for 1887 (p. 28), Mr. F. V. Theobald records a specimen picked up in an exhausted state near Rye a year before, and shown to him by a bird-stuffer at St. Leonards. Mr. Parkin (p. n.) has the following :—‘ Fulmar Petrel picked up dead on the beach between Winchelsea and Fairlight. Brought to Mr. Sorell, of Hastings, for preser- yation. The bird was in a very emaciated condition, and seemed as if it had been starved.””? All the specimens men- tioned were obtained after heavy gales. In St. Kilda the Fulmar breeds in countless numbers, selecting for the site of its nest places where the cliff, al- though very precipitous, is covered with grass, sorrel, and other plants, and in some parts of these cliffs the ground is almost white with sitting Fulmars. The bird often makes a hole sufficient to half conceal it. The nests are very slight, and 282 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. are often dispensed with altogether. More generally a little dry grass is the only material used. This bird when handled emits a quantity of oil, and the whole bird is impregnated with a scent which has been compared to exaggerated musk, so strong that it still retains it even though it may have been stuffed for years. It is a very voracious feeder, robbing the herring nets, and seizing on masses of blubber even when the men are engaged in flensing a whale. SOOTY SHEARWATER. Puffinus griseus. Tne first example obtained in Sussex was, I believe, one brought to Mr. Dennis, respecting which he tells me, in a letter dated July 4th, 1850, that it was picked up dead after a gale, under the cliff at Seaford, a few days previously. Of its habits little appears to be known. It is said to burrow in peaty ground for three or four feet horizontally, and then turning slightly to the right or left, to construct a rude nest of twigs and leaves, in which it deposits a single egg. In New Zealand, where it is said to breed, the Maories esteem the young birds as a delicacy, and hold them over their mouths to swallow the oily matter which they disgorge. The old birds roost on shore, and are very noisy during the night. The food of this Shearwater is of the same nature as that of its congeners. (See Yarrell, B. B. vol. iv. p. 19.) Mr. Parkin, of Hastings, sent me notice that a male of this species was shot off that town on the 3rd of September, 1890. This example was taken to Mr. Bristow, the well- known naturalist of St. Leonards-on-Sea, by whom it has been beautifully mounted, and it is now in my collection. I SOOTY SHEARWATER.—MANX SHEARWATER. 283 have lately met with a lady who had spent a summer in Madeira, and informed me that a bird, which she thought from my specimens was the Sooty Shearwater, was an occa- sional visitor to that island, flying about at night uttering most fearful screams, which were considered by the natives as an omen of evil, especially if heard by a sick person. The lady also said that she had been told that the bird used its hooked bill in the manner of a Parrot while climbing about the rocks, and that it bred in the Desertas. MANX SHEARWATER. Puffinus anglorum. THIs species occurs on our coast occasionally, but cannot be called common. In February 1854 I heard from Mr. Den- nis that four adult Manx Shearwaters were seen in Seaford Bay. Mr. Knox merely states that it is an unusual and acci- dental visitor to this part of the English Channel. It breeds in the Scilly Isles, on the Calf of Man, many of the Hebrides, and the Orkneys, and at St. Kilda it is one of the commonest birds. Its food is principally composed of small cuttlefish, mollusks, and scraps of offal found floating in the sea. It also eats great quantities of sorrel, and the remains of sea- weed have been found in its interior. It burrows in the ground like the Puffin, the holes being sometimes very long, and often under large masses of rock; the nests are merely little bunches of dried grass. Its note may be expressed as “ Kitty-coo-roo,” and at night it is very garrulous. Mr. Parkin, in his p. n., states that a fine specimen was obtained at Bexhill, August 18th, 1882. Mr. Booth writes that the flight of this bird when viewed for the first time is sure to attract attention, as it glides with an undulating 284 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. motion over the water, and may be readily recognized at almost any distance. In the ‘ Zoologist ’ (p. 6606) we find the following from Mr. John Wilson :—‘‘ Manx Shearwater, 1847,” in a list of rare birds near Worthing, with no remark. And on p. 9102, for 1864, Mr. Dutton writes of this bird that one was shot off Beachy Head about two years since, which came into his possession. In the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 391 of the volume for 1890), Mr. T. R. Harden, of Hastings, states “that on going into the garden of a house at Hurst Green, in August 1882, he saw a strange bird coming towards him in apparently a very exhausted state, which alighted in the garden, and was caught by his dog, when he found it to be a Manx Shearwater. A strong south-western gale was blowing at the time, and Hastings, the nearest sea-point, is fourteen miles distant. He has it still, preserved.” FORK-TAILED or LEACH’S PETREL. Cymochorea leucorrhoa. Turs species is much less common than the Storm Petrel, most of the specimens met with havimg been driven ashore, or even far inland, by heavy storms. I have noted that on November 15th, 1840, two were picked up dead on the beach at Brighton; one of them had lost a foot, but the stump was perfectly healed and covered by two scutes ; and on December 2nd in the same year, one was picked up dead and much de- composed, near Lancing, about a mile from the shore, having no doubt been driven in by the same gale. On November 23rd, 1841, a specimen was shot from the beach between Shoreham and Hove, and another from a boat off Brighton. This latter was attracted by liver which had been thrown out FORK-TAILED OR LEACH’S PETREL. 285 for the Guils. On November 3rd, 1859, an example in very perfect plumage, but minus a foot, lost apparently long ago, was picked up dead on Patches Farm, Cowfold; this also was after a furious gale, and at least ten miles from the sea. Mr. Knox mentions its occurrence in many places along the coast, and specially notices one picked up at Lodsworth, almost fifteen miles inland. Mr. Jeffery (p. n.) mentions one found dead at Sidlesham, November 25th, 1865, and two others, on the 28th of the same month, at the same place; also one shot at Bosham on December 5th, 1866, which was found to contain pieces of sea-weed, and parts of the stems and blossoms of sainfoin, and two more obtained in November and December 1881, one at Dell Quay, the other at Birdham. Mr. Dennis informed me that a Fork- tailed Petrel was found alive among the furze at Denton Top, near Lewes, December 15th, 1856. In the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 2892) one was recorded by me which was picked up alive, but in an exhausted state, at Rot- tingdean, on December 14th, 1849, and Mr. Ellman records another example which was found dead on the shore at Brighton, on November 8th, 1850 (p. 2970). This Petrel breeds on St. Kilda, and on North Rona, where Mr. Swinburne found it abundant, nesting among some old ruins, one large main burrow serving for several pairs of these birds, which made smaller burrows branching off from it at right angles. The note is said to resemble the syllables, “ pewrit-pewrit.” It feeds, like the other, on any greasy substances it can obtain. In Messrs. Harvie-Brown and Buckley’s ‘ Fauna of the Outer Hebrides, we find, at p. 154, that Sir W. E, Milner discovered a colony of these birds on the Dune of St. Kilda in 1848. He considered that they bred three weeks earlier than the Storm Petrel. And since his visit there this species has been found in great abundance on Borreay, one of 286 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. the St. Kilda group; alsoin Mingula and Barray a few pairs in holes and cracks in the peat, and on several other islands of the west of Scotland. STORM PETREL. Procellaria pelagica. Tis Petrel is found in large numbers in the Channel, gener- ally far out at sea. In my own notes I find that one was picked up in the churchyard of Hailsham, having been blown against the spire during the gale of February 26, 1848. Four specimens of this species were shot about half a mile off Brighton, on November 5th, 1845, which were preserved by Mr. Pratt. In the Isle of Burhou, off Alderney, about the year 1836, I found this bird in deserted rabbit-burrows, and took the eggs. I did not see the nests. In each case the bird allowed me to take it ont, and voided a quantity of oil and some green substance. I did not see any of the birds on the wing. It is said to breed on the Scilly Isles, and on many of those of Scotland, as far north as the Orkneys and Shetlands. Mr. Booth says that they are extremely numerous in the spring, and may be occasionally met with in the autumn ; adding that in the former season, when they are gathering in the Channel, and on the whole of our coast line, before they make a move to their northern breeding-stations, they are to be found almost every day that an attempt is made to ascertain their whereabouts. Mr. Booth suggests that the name ‘ Mother Carey’s Chicken” is a corruption of ‘‘ Madre cara,” addressed by pious seamen to the Virgin, when beseeching her to avert a storm. STORM PETREL.—WILSON’S PETREL. 287 Mr. Hewitson, in the Ist edit. of his ‘ Illustrations of the Eggs of British Birds’ (vol. i. p. 46), says that he found the Storm Petrels breedmg in Foula, in holes in the cliff, at a great height above the sea, but in Oxna they were breeding on the earth, under stones on the beach, at a depth of three or four feet or more. When walking, he could hear them chatterig under his feet, singing in a sort of warbling note a good deal like that of the Swallow when hovering over a chimney, but somewhat harsher.. The nests seem to have been made with little care, of small bits of stalks of plants. The birds remain in their holes during the day, but at night surround the fishermen in great numbers as soon as they throw out portions of fish. Mr. Graham, (‘The Birds of Iona and Mull,” pp. 47, 48), remarks that “ Both the young and the old ones, when confined ina basket or bag, escape at the smallest aperture, climbing up the sides like mice, in doing which they use their hooked bill to pull themselves up with : it seems to be of more service to them than their claws.” Again, at p. 96 he observes respecting some young birds of this species :—“ These little birds seemed to have an irresistible instinct which led them to attempt to surmount every ob- stacle which fell in their way. When walking on the table every book and desk must be climbed by means of the hooked bill, with the assistance of claws and pinions. When upon the floor, I have noticed them striving for a considerable time to ascend the wall of the room.” WILSON’S PETREL. Oceanites oceanica. Tue only occurrence of this Petrel on the coast of Sussex is that mentioned by Mr. Bond (‘ Zoologist,’ p. 148) as having 288 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. been obtained on the Sussex coast, and lately come into his possession. It belongs to the Atlantic Ocean. Of its breeding habits little is known. Mr. Godman, in his ‘ Natural History of the Azores,’ says (p. 40) :—“‘On returning from Flores to Fayal, we were becalmed for some hours ; and as there were a good many Petrels flying about, I took the boat be- longing to the schooner and shot some. They were all of this [Wilson’s ] species, nor did I see any other in the archi- pelago. In flying they carry their legs stretched straight out behind them, and their feet protruded about an inch beyond the tail, producing the effect of two long tail-feathers. I know nothing about this species breeding in the archipelago, though I suspect it does, as it remains throughout the year.” RAZOR-BILL. Alea torda. Tue Razor-bill, known also as the Parrot-billed Willock and the Tinkershere, is found around our coast in every season of the year, but very few appear to breed on the Sussex cliffs at the present time, though they are often met with in the Channel. It breeds in vast numbers on Flam- borough Head, preferring the highest ledges in the most lofty parts of the cliff; it makes no nest, but places its single egg on the bare rock. In June 1881, I was told by the boatmen there that they frequently laid their eggs in a deep cleft of the chalk, where they are very difficult to get at. On the cliffs and on the sea were many hundreds of these birds, and they were so tame that they suffered themselves to be nearly touched with an oar, when they merely dived, and generally came to the surface on the other side of the boat. It is a RAZOR-BILL.—GUILLEMOT. 289 very silent bird, the only note I heard being an occasional dull croak. In diving it uses its wings as if flying, pursuing the fish under water, as well as taking them on the surface. They are eaten by the fishermen, who bake them, after they have been skinned and laid in fresh water. Mr. Booth states that he has frequently remarked that during winter, “ previous to the setting in of stormy weather in the Channel, Razor-bills were exceedingly restless, immense flocks of these and other Divers being seen on wing making their way either east or west for several hours. No general movement to any distance appeared to be taken ; within a day or two the stream of birds would probably be seen taking an opposite course. At times, when the fry of fish are plentiful. . . . I have seen these birds perfectly crammed with food, snapping up the glittering morsels by merely dipping their heads below the surface without diving... . I am not acquainted with any breeding-stations of this species . . . within many miles of the Sussex coast... . That such still exist, however, is evident, as a fisherman who was working his shrimp-net over the sands near Shoreham, on 9th of August 1883, captured in the shallow water a young one that had strayed some distance from the old bird.” He further says that the fisherman took the young one home, but his wife killed it, as it constantly cried for food. Mr. Dutton says that the Razor-bill breeds on the cliffs about Eastbourne (‘ Zoologist,’ p. 9101). GUILLEMOT. Uria trotle. GuNERALLY known as the Willock, formerly bred abundantly on Beachy Head; but owing to incessant persecution, there U 290 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. are not now more than two or three pairs. Mr. Booth states that on April 28rd, 1874, “thousands of this species were observed in the Channel, some nine or ten miles out at sea, off Brighton. Several large flocks flew east during the day, but the majority were floating motionless on the glassy surface of the water, unruffled by a breath of air. These birds were, with few exceptions, in full summer plumage, only a single specimen in the perfect winter dress being noticed.” The Guillemot flies with great speed, but rises with difficulty at all times, flapping along the water for some time before getting well on the wing, and if fully fed, it will not rise, but merely dives, and when mounting to the top of the cliff, makes several circles before it can atta the necessary height. The egg is placed on the bare rock, generally on the middle ledges of the cliffs, without any nest. Long rows of Guillemots may be observed in such places as Flamborough Head sitting close together, most of them with their white breasts toward the sea. Their food and habits are similar to those of the Razor-bill. On November 28th, 1850, I saw, at Mr. Swaysland’s, an immature specimen of the variety known as the Ringed Guillemot, which was formerly considered a distinct species. It had been shot off the Chain Pier at Brighton on Oct. 22nd. Mr. Dennis informs me that on July 4th, 1850, as he was walking near Seaford, his attention was called by a child to a “duck” which was sittmg on some wreck driving about in Seaford Bay. He ran down to the edge of the water, and fired at the bird, which was hard hit and unable to fly, but every time he approached it contrived to eludé him. By hiding behind a groyne he got another shot with a cartridge and knocked the bird under water; on rising it was feet uppermost. His spaniel dashed in for it, but it did battle with its bill and fairly drove the dog off. He then fired again, and the dog fetched it out. It proved to be a Ringed GUILLEMOT.—-BLACK GUILLEMOT, 291 Guillemot, and was preserved by Mr. Swaysland. Mr. Dennis sent another specimen to the same bird-stuffer on Jan, 8th, 1853, which had been picked up dead under the cliff at Seaford. Mr. Booth remarks that in the Channel he has seen these birds very plentiful on several occasions, and that on April 23rd, 1884, several were observed eight or nine miles off Brighton, in perfect winter dress; the white ring and bridle were still conspicuous, a narrow line of dull white enclosing the bridle. A bird exhibiting this state of plumage was shot off Rottingdean, in December 1878. Mr. Wilson states (‘ Zoologist,’ p. 6606) that a specimen was taken in a field near Worthing, in August 1854. At p. 9122, Mr. Dutton records a very beautiful specimen shot off Kastbourne, April 19th, 1864. BLACK GUILLEMOT. Uria grylle. Tuis Guillemot is only an occasional straggler to the Sussex coast. It breeds in the rocky cliffs of the coast of Scotland, more especially on the eastern side, and lives almost entirely on the open sea, nothing but stress of weather ever bringing it inland except in the breeding-season. The general habits of this species are much the same as those of the last described ; two points of difference are, however, remarkable, that whereas the Common Guillemot never lays more than one egg, the present bird always lays two, and instead of placing them on the higher ledges of the cliffs, it always chooses a locality in crevices, at a low elevation, under stones near the water, or even on the sea-shore. I am informed by Mr. Bristow, the well-known naturalist u2 292 THE BIRDS OF SUSSEX. of St. Leonards-on-Sea, that on October 12th, 1882, a female immature Black Guillemot was shot off that town by Mr. Maggs. In ‘The Birds of Iona and Mull,’ p. 105, Mr. Graham states that during incubation these birds sit erect on their nests, gasping out a plaintive wheezing noise something like the complainings of a set of very young kittens. This seems to be their only ery, for, except at this time of year, they are entirely mute. LITTLE AUK. Mergulus alle. Tue Little Auk is entirely arctic in its breeding-quarters, and only an occasional visitor to our coasts. The only note T have of it is the following. On November 5th, 1841, I noticed a Little Auk sitting on a small rock in a little pool, close to Portobello, near Brighton. It took to the water and swam about for a short time, returning again to its station. Seeing a shrimper a short distance off, I beckoned to him, and when he disturbed it, it flew to a short distance; but after chasing it for nearly a mile, he at last caught it. It was rather curious that it never attempted to get out to sea. It is now in my collection. On November 28rd, 1850, I saw one at Mr. Swaysland’s which had just been caught by seme fisherwomen at Brighton, and another which had been taken about the same time. In the first week of February 1864, a Little Auk was caught alive in Lansdowne-place, Brighton, having been seen to fly against a house during a thick fog. It appeared uninjured and was in good condition ; the weather was quite calm at the time. I have another, found dead at Hurst-Pierpoint, but have lost the date. Mr. Jeffery (p. n.) LITTLE AUK.—PUFFIN. 293 mentions two taken near Chichester, in the winter of 1858- 59, and another in December 1866. In the ‘ Zoologist’ (p. 2070) Mr. Ellman mentions one obtained near Crawley, in November 1850. The Little Auk feeds entirely on small crustacea, and in the breeding-season the mouth is often crowded with them for feeding their young, the form of the bill not bemg adapted for carrying small fish, PUFFIN. Fratercula arctica. Tue Puffin, Coulterneb, or Sea Parrot, having no breeding- place on our coast, is not very frequently met with, and of those which have occurred the greater part have been washed up dead on the beach, after a heavy storm. APPENDIX. 373 bush overhanging a stream, at the end of Warnham Mill Pond. The bird (well known to him) was on the nest, and flew off when he approached it. The nest had five eggs in it. One of them was shewn to the Naturalist, Mr. Hall, who unhesitatingly pronounced it to be that of the Redwing.” As Mr. Hall is now in America, I have had no opportunity of obtaining further information on the subject. A Great Bustard was shot on Pett Level on the 6th of January, 1891, by Charles Cooke, and sold by him to Mr. E. Vidler, of Havelock Road, Hastings. It was a female, and in good condition, and weighed 7 lbs. 10 oz., the crop cons taining dry grass. It is somewhat remarkable that of seven Great Bustards obtained in various counties between the 9th of December, 1890, and the 5th of February, 1891, all should have been females. See ‘ Zoologist,’ 1891, pp. 104— 105. The extremely severe frost of the winter of 1890-91, which, with a very slight break or two, lasted from the beginning of December to the middle of January, though it brought an unusually large number of Ducks and Geese, as well as of the three species of Swan, all along the coast, was not productive of many really rare species. Those principally worthy of notice among this class were a specimen of the Pink-footed Goose, mentioned in the fore- going pages, a considerable number of Smews, a few Shell- Ducks, and a remarkable fine male Goosander, which was shot on the Western Rother in West Harting, and recorded by the Rev. H. D. Gordon in the ‘ Zoologist, p. 117, 1891. An unusually large number of the Common Bittern also occurred in various parts of the county, one of which was shot as it rose from a bed of cabbages in the western part of the town of Brighton. A fully mature specimen of the Little Gull was shot at Shoreham. Several Shore Larks were obtained on the coast near Brighton, of which five or six were taken to Messrs. Pratt, who also received five Lapland Buntings and a large number of Snow Buntings and Bramblings. INDEX OF ENGLISH NAMES. Accentor, Alpine, 50. Auk, Little, 292. Avocet, 2138. Bee-eater, 170. Bittern, American, 321. —, Little, 318. Blackbird, 48. Blackcap, 73. Bluethroat, 54, Brambling, 123, 373. Bullfinch, 136, , Scarlet, 137, Bunting, 118. —, Cirl, 119. —,, Lapland, 115, 373. —, Little, 117. —, Reed, 116, ——,, Rustic, 117. ——,, Snow, 114, 373. —, Yellow, 119. Bustard, Great, 199, 373. , Little, 201. Buzzard, Capped, 21. , Common, 16. ——, Honey, 19. — , Moor, 18. —, Rough-legged, 18, Chaffinch, 122. Chiffchaff, 76, , Common, 319, 373. » Black-headed, 121. | Chough, 144, Coot, 196. Cormorant, 304. ——,, Green, 306. Crake, Baillon’s, 192. ——,, Corn, 189. —,, Little, 191. , Spotted, 190. Crane, 197, Creeper, Tree, 81. Crossbill, 139. , Parrot, 140, Crow, Black, 150. , Carrion, 156. ——,, Grey, 148. —., Royston, 150. ——,, Saddleback, 150. Cuckoo, 151. Curlew, Common, 249, Curlew, Stone, 202. Daw, 153, Dipper, 43. Diver, Black-throated, 296, , Great Northern, 294. , Red-throated, 297. Dotterel, 203. Dove, Ring, 176. , Rock, 178. ——,, Stock, 177. , Lurtle, 179. Duck, Casarca, 545. , Castaneous, 352, 576 INDEX OF ENGLISH NAMES. Duck, Common Sheld, 340. , Hider, 359. ——, Ferruginous, 352. —, Long-tailed, 356. ——,, Pintail, 348. ——,, Ruddy Sheld, 3842. ——,, Scaup, 353. —, Tufted, 354. — ., White-eyed, 552. , Wild, 343. Dunlin, 229. Eagle, Cinereous, 1. , sea, 1. —,, White-tailed, 1. Elk, 334. Falcon, Greenland, 6. Ay Cada ——, Peregrine, 7. , Red-legged, 10. Fieldfare, 46. Finch, Mountain, 125. Flycatcher, Pied, 41. ——,, Spotted, 39, 369, Gadwall, 344. Gallinule, Olivaceous, 191. Gannet, 304. Garganey Teal, 348, Godwit, Bar-tailed, 248. , Black-tailed, 247. Golden-eye, 355. — Goldfinch, 130. Goosander, 362, 373. Goose, Bean, 530. , Bernicle, 332. ——.,, Brent, 355. , Grey-lag, 328. ——, Laughing, 529. ——.,, Pink-footed, 331, 373. ——., Solan, 307. — ., White-fronted, 329. Grebe, Eared, 301. ——, Great Crested, 297. —, Little, 302. ——.,, Red-necked, 298. —,, Sclavonian, 300. Greenfinch, 128. Greenshank, 246. Grosbeak, Pine, 188. , Scarlet, 137. Grouse, Black, 181. , sand, 180. Gull, Black-headed, 264. , Bonapartian, 262. ——, Common, 266. ——.,, Glaucous, 270. ——.,, Great Black-backed, 269. ——,, Herring, 267. ——,, Iceland, 272. , Ivory, 274. ——,, Kittiwake, 275. ——, Laughing, 265. —., Lesser Black-backed, 268. —,, Little, 262, 373. —-~, Masked, 265. , Ross’s Rosy, 266. , Sabine’s, 261. Guillemot, Black, 291. , Bridled, 289. ——., Common, 289. ——., Ringed, 289.. Harrier, Hen, 22. | -—, Marsh, 21. —, Montagu’s, 25. Hawfinch, 126. Hawk, Sparrow, 13. Hedge-Sparrow, 51. Heron, Common, 307. , Night, 317. ——, Purple, 314. ——,, Squacco, 315. Tobby, 9, 368. Hoopoe, 168. | House-Sparrow, 125, ——— Ss lL ee INDEX OF ENGLISH NAMES. This, Glossy, 324. Jay, 155. Kestrel, 12. Kingfisher, 171, Kite, 14, 367. Knot, 233. Landrail, 189, 368. Lapwing, 210. Lark, Crested, 111. —, Shore, 107, 373. ——,, Short-toed, 112. — , Sky, 109. ——, White-winged, 113. , Wood, 110, Linnet, 154, Magpie, 153. Mallard, 343. Martin, 160, 370. , Sand, 161, 370. Merganser, Hooded, 363. , Red-breasted, 363. Merlin, 11. Moorhen, 194. Morillon, 356. Nightingale, 53. Nightjar, 164, Nutcracker, 156. Nuthatch, 82. Oriole, Golden, 42, 370. Ortolan, 120. Osprey, 3. Ousel, Ring, 48. , Water, 43. Owl, Barn (Danish), 84. ——,, Brown, 27. ——, Hagle, 31. ——,, Little, 33. ——, Long-eared, 29. ——,, Scops, 32. Owl, Short-eared, 30. , Tawny, 27. —, Wood, 27. Oyster-catcher, 212. Partridge, Common, 186. ———,Ereneh, 137, —, Red-legged, 187. Peewit, 210. Petrel, Fork-tailed, 284. , Fulmar, 281. ————7 each s.. 254: ——,, Storm, 286. , Wilson’s, 287. Phalarope, Grey, 217. , Red-necked, 218. Pheasant, 182. Pie, 153. Pigeon, Wood, 176. Pipit, Meadow, 100. , Red-throated, 101. ——,, Richard’s, 106. ——,, Rock, 103. ——, Tawny, 105. ——,, Tree, 99. , Water, 102. Plover, Golden, 207. , Green, 210. , Grey, 208. , Kentish, 209. ——,, Little ringed, 206. , Ringed, 205. Pochard, 350. , Nyroea, 352. Puffin, 293. Quail, 188, Rail, Land, 189, 368. -—-, Water, 193. Raven, 146. Razor-bill, 288. Redbreast, 52. Redpoll, Lesser, 134, 369, 378 INDEX OF ENGLISH NAMES. Redpoll, Mealy, 133. Redshank, Common, 243. ——,, Spotted, 245. Redstart, 54, 369. —, Black, 55. Redwing, 46, 372. Ringtail, 23. Roller, 169, 368. Rook, 151. Ruff, 256. Sanderling, 255, Sandpiper, Bartram’s, 238. , Bonaparte’s, 229. ——, Broad-billed, 227. —., Buft-breasted, 235. ——, Common, 239. —,, Curlew, 252, — , Green, 241. —,, Pectoral, 228, ——, Purple, 253. —, Schinz, 229. ——,, Spotted, 240. —,, Wood, 242. Scoter, Common, 560. ——,, Velvet, 361. Serin, 129. Shag, 306. Shearwater, Manx, 283. —,, Sooty, 282. Shoveler, 344. Shrike, Great Grey, 56, —~, Red-backed, 38. , Woodchat, 39. Siskin, 132, 369. Skua, Arctic, 279. ——.,, Buffon’s, 280. ——,, Great, 275. ——,, Long-tailed, 280. ——., Pomatorhine, 277. ——, Richardso ’s, 279. Smew, 364, 372, Snipe, Common, 224, , Great, 222, 368. | Snipe, Jack, 226. ——,, Sabine’s, 225. ——,, Solitary, 223. Spoonbill, White, 326. Starling, 142, ——., Red-winged, 141. ——.,, Rose-coloured, 143, Stilt, Black-winged, 215, Stint, Little, 230. ——,, Temminck’s, 231. Stonechat, 57. Stork, White, 322. Swallow, 158, 370. Swan, Bewick’s, 537, ——, Mute, 388. ——, Whistling, 334. Swift, 162, 371. ——, Alpine, 163, Teal, 347, ——, Summer, 348. Tern, Arctic, 259, —, Black, 252. ——, Common, 257, —, Gull-billed, 254, ——,, Lesser, 260. ——.,, Roseate, 257. ——, Sandwich, 256. ——, White-winged Black, 253. Thrush, Black-throated, 47, ——, Mistletoe, 44. —, Song, 45. Titmouse, Bearded, 90, ——,, Blue, 86, ——,, Coal, 87. ——, Great, 85. ——,, Long-tailed, 89. ——, Marsh, 88, Tree-Sparrow, 125. Turnstone, 211. Twite, 135, Wagtail, Blue-headed, 96, —, Grey, 95. INDEX OF ENGLISH NAMES. Wagtail, Pied, 92. » Ray’s, 97. —., White, 93. —, Yellow, 97. Warbler, Aquatic, 67, ——.,, Dartford, 69. ——. Garden, 72. ——.,, Grasshopper, 68. , Great Reed, 64. ——,, Orphean, 74. — , Reed, 65. , Rufous, 65, —, Sedge, 66. Waxwing, 91, 869, Wheatear, 58. Whimbrel, 251. Whinchat, 57, Whitethroat, Common, 70, ——, Lesser, 71. Whooper, 334, Wigeon, 349. Willow Wren, 75. Woodchat, 39. Woodcock, 219, 372, 379 Woodpecker, Greater Spotted, 174. ——,, Green, 173. ——,, Lesser Spotted, 174. Wren, 79. ——,, Fire-crested, 77. ——,, Golden-crested, 76 —., Wood, 74. Wryneck, 175, Yellow-hammer, 119. SCIENTIFIC INDEX. Accentor collaris, 50. — modularis, 51. Accipiter nisus, 13. Acredula caudata, 89. Acrocephalus arundinaceus, 64, nevius, 68. schcenobeenus, 66. streperus, 65. Aedon galactodes, 63. Meialitis cantiana, 207. -— curonica, 206. hiaticula, 205. Agelzeus pheeniceus, 141. Alauda arborea, 110. arvensis, 109. brachydactyla, 112. cristata, 111. Alcea torda, 288. Alcedo ispida, 171. Aluco flammeus, 34. Ampelis garrulus, 91. Anas boscas, 543. strepera, 344. Anser albifrons, 329. brachyrhynchus, 331. cinereus, 528. segetum, 550. Anthus campestris, 105, cervinus, 101. obscurus, 105. pratensis, 100. richardi, 106, Anthus spipoletta, 102. trivialis, 98. Ardea cinerea, 309. purpurea, 514. — ralloides, 315. Ardetta minuta, 518. Asio accipitrinus, 30. otus, 29. Bartramia longicauda, 25%, Bernicla brenta, 333. leucopsis, 352. Botaurus lentiginosus, 321. stellaris, 319. Bubo ignayus, 31. Buteo lagopus, 18. —— vulgaris, 16. Caccabis rufa, 187. Calidris arenaria, 235. Caprimulgus europzeus, 164. eeyptius, 166. — ruficollis, 166. Carduelis elegans, 150. spinus, 152, Carine noctua, 33. Certhia familiaris, 81. Charadrius pluvialis, 207. Chelidon urbica, 160, Ciconia alba, 322. Cinclus aquaticus, 45. Circus eeruginosus, 21. —_—r” SCIENTIFIC INDEX. 38] Circus cinereus, 25. cyaneus, 22. Clangula glaucion, 355, Coccothraustes chloris, 123. vulgaris, 126. Columba cenas, 177. livia, 178. palumbus, 176. Colymbus arcticus, 206. elacialis, 294. —— septentrionalis, 297. Coracias garrulus, 169. Corvus corax, 146. —— cornix, 148. corone, 150. —— frugilegus, 151. — monedula, 153. Cotile riparia, 161. Coturnix communis, 188. Crex pratensis, 189. Cuculus canorus, 166, Cygnus bewicki, 537. musicus, 554. olor, 358. Cynochorea leucorrhoa, 284. Cypselus apus, 162. melba, 165. Dafila acuta, 546. Daulias luscinia, 55. Dendrocopus major, 174. minor, 174. Emberiza cirlus, 119. citrinella, 119. hortulana, 120. —— miliaria, 118. pusilla, 117. rustica, 117. scheeniclus, 116. Erithacus rubecula, 52. Eudromias morinellus, 205. Euspiza melanocephala, 121. Falco eesalon, 11. candicans, 6. —— gyrfaleo, 5. peregrinus, 7. subbuteo, 9. tinnunculus, 12. — vespertinus, 10. Fratercula arctica, 295. Fringilla evelebs, 122. montifringilla, 125, Fulica atra, 196. Fuligula cristata, 354. ferina, 350. marila, 355. nyroca, 552, Fulmarus glacialis, 231. Gallinago ccelestis, 224. gallinula, 226. major, 222. Gallinula chloropus, 194. Garrulus glandarius, 155, Gecinus viridis, 175, Grus communis, 197. Heematopus ostralegus, 212. Halizetus albicilla, 1. Harelda glacialis, 357. Himantopus candidus, 215. Hirundo rustica, 158. Hydrochelidon leucoptera, 255. nigra, 252. Tynx torquilla, 175. Lanius auriculatus, 59. collurio, 58. excubitor, 36. Larus argentatus, 267. -— atricilla, 265. — canus, 266. —— capistratus, 265, -—— fuscus, 268. —— glaucus, 270. 382 SCIENTIFIC INDEX. Larus leucopterus, 272. — marinus, 269. —— minutus, 262. —— philadelphia, 262. ridibundus, 264. -—— rhodostethia, 266. Limicola platyrhyncha, 227. Limosa eegocephala, 247. lapponica, 248. Lainota cannabina, 154. —— flavirostris, 135. -— linaria, 153. rufescens, 154. Loxia curvirostra, 159. pityopsittacus, 140. Machetes pugnax, 236. Mareca penelope, 349. Melanocorypha sibirica, 113. Melizophilus undatus, 69, Mergulus alle, 292. Meregus albellus, 564. merganser, 562. serrator, 363. Merops apiaster, 170. Milvus ictinus, 14. Motacilla alba, 95. flava, 96, lugubris, 92. rail, 97. sulphurea, 95. Muscicapa atricapilla, 41. erisola, 59. Nucifraga caryocatactes, 156. Numenius arquata, 249, phzeopus, 251. Nycticorax griseus, 517. Oceanites oceanica, 287. (idemia fusca, 361. nigra, 360, Cidicnemus scolopax, 202. Oriolus galbula, 42. Otis tarda, 199. tetrax, 201. Otocorys alpestris, 107. Pagophila eburnea, 274. Pandion halizetus, 3. Panurus biarmicus, 90. Parus ater, 87. —— ceruleus, 86. —— major, 85. palustris, 88. Passer domesticus, 125, montanus, 125. Pastor roseus, 143, Perdix cinerea, 186. Pernis apivorus, 19. Phalacrocorax carbo, 304. graculus, 506. Phalaropus fulicarius, 217. hyperboreus, 218. Phasianus colchicus, 183. Phylloscopus collybita, 76. —— sibilatrix, 74. trochilus, 75, Pica rustica, 153. Platalea leucorodia, 326. Plectrophanes lapponica, 115. nivalis, 114. Plegadis falcinellus, 324, Podiceps auritus, 300. — cristatus, 297. fluviatilis, 302. griseigena, 298, nigricollis, 591. Porzana bailloni, 192. — maruetta, 190. ——— parva, 191. Procellaria pelagica, 286. Puthnus anglorum, 283, griseus, 282, Pyrrhocorax graculus, 144, Pyrrhula enucleator, 138. —— erythrina, 137. —— europea, 156. SCIENTIFIC INDEX. Querquedula circia, 348. crecca, 347, Rallus aquaticus, 195, Recurvirostra avocetta, 215. Regulus cristatus, 76, ignicapillus, 77. Rissa tridactyla, 273. Ruticilla phoenicurus, 54. suecica, 54. —— titys, 55. Saxicola cenanthe, 58. rubicola, 57. Scolopax ccelestis, 224. | gallinula, 226. rusticula, 219. Scops giu, 52. Serinus hortulanus, 129, Sitta czesia, 82. Somateria mollissima, 358. Spatula clypeata, 344. Squatarola helvetica, 208. Stercorarius catarrhactes, 275, crepidatus, 279. —— parasiticus, 280. pomatorhinus, 277, Sterna anglica, 254, — cantiaca, 256, dougalli, 257. — fluviatilis, 257. —— macrura, 259, minuta, 260. Strepsilas interpres, 211. Strix aluco, 27. Sturnus vulgaris, 142. Sula bassana, 307. Sylvia aquatica, 67. atricapilla, 75. — curruca, 71. — orphea, 74. Sylvia rufa, 70. salicaria, 72. Syrrhaptes paradoxus, 180. Tadorna casarea, 342. cornuta, 340, Tetrao tetrax, 181. Totanus calidris, 243, canescens, 246, fuscus, 245, glareola, 242. —— hypoleucus, 239. —— macularius, 240. ochropus, 241. Tringa alpina, 229, canutus, 235, fuscicollis, 229. —— minuta, 230. —— maculata, 228. — striata, 233. —— subarquata, 232. temmincki, 251. Troglodytes parvulus, 79. > Tryngites rufescens, 237. Turdus atrogularis, 47, iliacus, 46. —— merula, 48. —— musicus, 45. —— pilaris, 46. torquatus, 43. viscivorus, 44. Turtur communis, 179, Upupa epops, 168. Uria grylle, 291. troile, 289. Vanellus vulgaris, 210. Xema sabini, 261. 385 POPULAR NAMES USED IN. SUSSEX. Barley Bird, 98. Barley-ear, 58. sar Gander, 540. Bier Gander, 540, Billy Biter, 86. Blackcock, 181. Black Duck, 560. Broadbill, 344. Burrow Duck, 340. Bush Magpie, 154. Butcher Bird, 36, Cheveril, 151. Chevyil, 151. Clod Bird, 119. Cob, 287. Corn Bunting (Bunting), 119. Coulterneb, 293. Cuckoo’s Mate, 175. Curlew, Pigmy (Curlew Sandpiper), 352. Dabchick, 302. Dish-washer, 95. Eyejar (Nightjar), 164. Fanner, 13. Feather-poke, 88. Felt, Pigeon Felt, 47. Fern Owl, 155. Fire-tail (Redstart), 54. Furzechat, 58. Glead, 15. Goatsucker, 155. Grey Bird, 46. Grey Hen, 181. Grey Partridge, 188. Greypate, 131. Ground Tit, 88. | Hedgepick, 51. _ Holm Thrush, 144. Isle of Wight Parson, 504. Jackdaw, 153. Jack hern (Common Heron), 500. Magpie Diver, 256. Mole-Diver, 302. Mother Carey’s Chicken, 286, Mountain Linnet, 135. Nettlecreeper, 71. Night-Hawk (Nightjar), 164. Olive, 212. Oven Bird, 74. POPULAR NAMES USED IN SUSSEX. Oxbird, 229. Oxeye (Great Tit), 86 Peel Bird, 175. Purre, 229. Puttock, 17. Rain Bird, 173. Redlegs, 243. Red-legged Crow, 145. Reed Sparrow, 117. Reeve, 237. Rinding Bird, 175. Robin, 52. Scarlet Bullfinch, 137. Scart, 306, Screech, 44. Sea-pie, 212. Sea Swallow, 257, 259. Shufflewing, 51. Singing Titlark, 99, Printed by TAYLOR and Francis, Red ion Court, Fleet Street. Snake Bird, 176. Spear Duck, 363. Spoonbill Duck, 344. Stonechucker, 58. Stone Redpoll, 133. Storm Cock, 44. Summer Snipe, 239. Tinkershere, 288. Titterel, 251. Titlark, 100. Vine Bird (Flycatcher), 39, Wagell, 257. Wagtail, 231-239. Willock, 288. Windfanner, 15. Windhover Hawk, 13, Yaffil, 173, 585 LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS. Artin, O. V., Esa. Barston, R. J., Esa. Barcuay, CoLoNneL Hansury. Barrineton, R. M., Esa. Bates, B., Esa. Batue, Gent. Sir Henry pe, Bart. Brat, Mr. G. (2 copies.) Bipptez, F. W., Esa. Bipputpeu, Cart. S. F. Brvwe 1, E., Esa. Birxey, F. H., Ese. Buiaavuw, T. 8. L., Esa. Borrer, D., Esq. (2 copies.) Borrer, L., Esq. Borrer, Magor. BovuttBes, Carr. Bow tss, A. H., Esa. Braysrooke, THe Lorn. BriGHTON AND Sussex Natu- RAL History AnD PHILo- SOPHICAL SOCIETY. BRIsTOWE AND Sons, Mussrs. Browse tt, W. F., Esa. Brown, J. A. Harvis, Esa., F.Z.8. Bucxton, G. B., Esq., F.R.S. Bunsury, H. J., Esa. Bureoyne, F., Esa. Burret, Sir C. R., Barr. Carneaciz, THE Honste. J. J. CuanpieEr, Rev. J. B., M.A. Cuapman, T. H., Esa. Crarke, 8. R., Esa. Currron, THE Lorp. Couns, C. E., Esa. Compton, T., Esa. CorpEaux, J., Esq. Courtuops, G. C., Esa. CrosFIELp, J. B., Esa. Crow ey, P., Esq., F.Z.S. Dawes, C. W., Esa. Dawes, W., Esa. Denman, THE Honstie. Mr. JUSTICE. Dicxins, C. R. Scrasz, Esa. Dovetas & Fouris, Messrs. Dowsett, A., Esa. Dresser, H. E., Esa. Dutav & Co., Messrs. (6 copies. ) Eaton, Rev. W. F., M.A. LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS. Eemont, Tue Ear or. Eiice, E. C., Esa. Exxiort, HE. A., Esa. Ewine, Rev. J. A., M.A. FriercHer, W. H. B., Esq. Fowier, W. Warps, Esa. FresHFieLtD, H. R., Esa. Gawen, C. R., Esa. Gopmav, C. B., Esa. Gopman, F. D., Esea., F.R.S. Gopman, P. S., Esq., B.A. Goocn, Rev. F. Harcourt, M.A. Gorine, Rev. J. (5 copies.) Grattan, Mr. H. H. G. GairritH, A. F., Esa. GrirritH, H., Esq. Gurney & Jackson, Messrs. (6 copies.) Hares, J. P. Witton, Esq. Hau, J. E., Esq. (5 copies.) Hart, E., Esa., F.Z.S. Hartine, J. E., Esa. HarcuHarps AND Co., Mrssrs. (13 copies.) Hawxsuaw, J. Crarke, Esa. Hessert, C.T., Ese. Heme, Rev. R., M.A. Honeson, J. S., Esa. Hoxuanp, Rev. C., M.A. (2 copies.) Houanp, Miss E. M. Hors, T., Esa. Hoprer, J. D., Esq. Hoper, R, Esa. Horrr, T. L., Esa. Hopkins, Rev. F., M.A. Howarp pe WatLpEN, THE Dowacer Lapy. Howagp, R. J., Esq. Howe tt, Mr. E. Hvsparp, W. E., Esq. Hurst, R. H., Esq. Hussey, E., Esa. Incram, Cot. R. B. Insy, Lievt.-Cor. L. H. Jennines, C. E., Esq. Jounstone, J. H., Esa. KNATCHBULL - HUGESSEN, Rev. R. B., M.A. Lang, H. C., Ese. Laneton, H., Ese. Lamp, Sir ARCHIBALD, Bart. Lawson, G., Esq., C.B. LeEconFIELD, THE Lorp. Less, E. B., Esq. Litrorp, THe Lorp. (2 copies.) Lister, J. J., Esq. Lovepay, Miss. (2 copies.) Lucas, C. J., Esa. Lyon, Lr.-Cou. F. H. Lyon, Mrs. WitiaM. McKenziz, H. W., Esa. (2 copies.) Mackenzigz, K. M., Esa. Macruerson, A. H., Esa. Macrpuerson, Rev. H. A., M.A. Marcersson, Miss E. Mareesson, Miss H. MarsHat., W., Esq. LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS. Massry, H., Esq. Marnew, Rev. Murray A., M.A. Meave-Watpo, E. G., Esa. Mercatre, J. 8., Esq. Miter, E., Esa. Mopserty, Mrs. Mo tinevx, G., Esq. Morris, H., Esa. Muttens, W. H., Esa. Morcuison, K. R., Esq., J.P. Newton, Atrrep, KEsq., F.R.S. Nicuotson, F., Ese. Noet, E., Esq. Norrotk, THe Dvke of, HM: KG. Norrusrook, THE Kart or, Oct, B. S., Esa. Orrter, Mrs. F. W. Parker, Capt. TOowNLEY. Parkin, J. S., Esa. Parkin, T., Esq. (6 copies.) Parrerson, R. Luoyn, Esa. Parteson, Mrs. Cartos. Prcuett, A., Esa. Penney, S. R., Ese. Pripstry, W. E. H., Esa. Pixe,T. M., Esq@.,M.A.,F.Z.S. Pitts, Ropert F., Esq. Pocuin, H. E., Esq. Roserr Porter, Mr. R. H.. (25 copies.) Powtrs, Rev. R. Cow tey, M.A. Pyrke, D., Esa., Jun. Ricr, Rev. J. M., M.A. RicHMonpD AnD Gorpon, THE Douxe or, K.G. (2 copies.) Riprout, Rev. G. A., M.A. Rice, A. H., Esq. (2 copies.) Rosrnson, W., Esa. Rover, F. E. S., Esa., F.Z.S. SaLvin, Ossert, Esga., F.R.S. SaunpeErs, Howarp, Esa. Sawyer, F. E., Esq. Seesoum, H., Esa. SHIFFNER, Sir GeorGe, Bart. Simmons, C, A., Esq. Simpxin, Marsnacy, Hamit- ToN, Kent & Co., Limirep. (25 copies.) Smitu & Son, Messrs. W. H. (13 copies.) SorRewu, Mr. T. SorHERAN, Messrs. H. & Co. (3 copies.) STonHAM, C., Ese. STREATFIELD, R. J., Esa. Swarnson, Rev. A. J., M.A. Tatsor, J.G., Ese., M:P. THompson, J., Esa. THorBurRN, A., Esa. TreacHER, Messrs. H. & G. (2 copies.) Tyacke, N., Esq., M.D. Upton, Mrs. Verner, Carr. W., R.B. Warren, R. A., Esa. Wenpp, G., Esa. Weexss, A., Esq. LIST OF SUBSCRIBERS. Westry & Son, Messrs. W. | Wuymrer, C., Esa. (2 copies.) Witty, J. E., Esa. West, H. T., Esa. Witson, Rev. H., M.A. Wuextpon, Mr. J. (2 WispEn, Lr.-Cot. copies.) Wirtcoms, H., Esa. Wuitaker, J., Esqa., F.Z.S. | Wynpuam, Tor Honste. P. Wuitre.p, G., Esa. Young, J., Esa. Wauirraker & WitiAMs, | ZootogicaL Society OF Messrs. Lonpvon. A. Selection FROM Peer PORTERS PUBLICATIONS. SECOND EDITION. COLOURED FIGURES OF THE BIRDS OF THE BRITISH ISLANDS, ISSUED BY LORD LILFORD, F.Z8., &c., President of the British Ornithologists Union. Tuer want of a series of accurately-coloured illustrations of British birds, in a handy form, has long been felt. Of the works specially devoted to this subject, that of Gould is too bulky and too costly to be available to a large number of the lovers of Ornithology ; and Dresser’s ‘ Birds of Kurope,’ on the other hand, covers a much larger field. The text- books of Macgillivray, Yarrell, and others are unaccompanied by illustra- tions such as I propose to issue ; I think, therefore, that such illustrations cannot fail to form a useful companion to the recognized text-books on British Birds. The Drawings will be made, in the first instance, by the best artists, and the Plates will be coloured lithographs reproduced from these by the best known methods. The size of the work will be Royal Octavo, and it will be issued in Parts of twelve Plates each; it is calculated that 32 such Parts will complete the work, the price of each Part being 12s. 6d. As no separate Parts will be sold, Subscribers are expected to continue their subscription till the work is completed. “Lord Lilford is engaged at the present time in a work which ought to supersede every stuffed collection except the National one. He is publishing in parts his ‘Coloured Figures of the Birds of the British Islands, a work of exquisite beauty and permanent worth. . . . No series illustrating British birds has ever been under- taken equal to this, which is in the convenient size of large octavo. Of infinitely more beauty than stuffed specimens, these figures would be more attractive and equally useful to the students in our towns. ‘l'urn, for example, to the three plates in Part IX., illustrating the three phases of the Ptarmigan’s plumage. Fidelity to nature could hardly he carried further. The figure of the Bittern in Part VII., taken from live specimens in his lordship’s aviary, show the very action and expres- sion of the bird. Some of the plates, besides their scientific accuracy, are perfect little pictures—such as that of the Bullfinch in Part VIII., worthy in itself of a costly frame—and all of them include pleasant scraps of landscape or studies of flowers and foliage characteristic of the life-history of the animal, These, then, are things of beauty and use, practically imperishable, and illustrating British Ornithology with far more accuracy than a crowd of dusty, distorted, stuffed skins. Lord Lilford’s work (now in progress) only requires to be known to have as many admirers as there are lovers of birds, and as many subscribers as can afford it.’— From the Nineteenth Century, by Sir Herbert Maxwell, Bart., M.P. «THE STANDARD OF EXCELLENCE IS FULLY MAINTAINED.” —Lbis. “ NorHINnG MORE LIFE-LIKE AND ARTISTIC CAN BE IMAGINED.” —Academy. R. H. PORTER, 18 Princes Street, Cavendish Square, London, W. A HISTORY SOF BRIMISH BIRDS WITH COLOURED ILLUSTRATIONS OF THEIR EGGS. By HENRY SEEBOHM, F.ZS. &c. This fine Work forms Four Volumes: Three of Text and one of Plates. Price, in Parts, as issued, £6 6s. In half-morocco, gilt tops, £7. “Mr. Serspoum’s work will be known to most of our readers already; but the commencement of such an undertaking should not pass unchronicled in the pages of ‘ The Ibis.’ Oology, it is true, as Mr. Seebohm tells us in his prospectus, has been much neglected of late years—at all events the scientific aspect of it; and Hewitson’s works being out of date, it was quite time that another British Oology should take its place....As his friends are well aware, no one is more competent, ... from his unrivalled personal experiences in almost every part of the Western Palarctic region.”— The Ibis. “The text contains not only a description of each egg and its varieties, but also a very full account of the life-history of each bird... .If we may conceive the works of Yarrell and Hewitson rolled into one, with corrections, emendations, and important additions, and with woodcuts as well as coloured plates, such a work will be Mr. Seebohm’s when completed.”—Zoologist. “To those who imagine that British Ornithology is worked out and there is nothing left to do in this well-worn field, we commend the study of the present book, as presenting us with a delightfully fresh view of an old and familiar subject. ... We must regret that we have not space to give extracts from the many charming accounts of the habits of our English birds of prey, which have certainly not been surpassed by any modern writer. . . . We unhesitatingly express our opinion that since the time of Macgillivray no such original book as My. Seebohm’s has been published on British Ornithology ; and, in spite of a few less satisfactory illustra- tions, we think that the figures of the eggs are by far the best that have yet been given.”— Nature. Royal 8vo, cloth, price 3s. 6d. CLASSIFICATION OF BIRDS: An attempt to Diagnose the Subclasses, Orders, Suborders, and some of the Families of Existing Birds, By HENRY SEEBOHM, F.Z.8. &c. Royal 8vo, cloth, price 25s. THE BLED Ss OF THE JAPAN SE) 2M etl By HENRY SEEBOHM, F.Z:S. &e. WITH NUMEROUS WOODCUTS. R. H. PORTER, 18 Princes Street, Cavendish Square, London, W. BIOLOGIA CENTRALI-AMERICANA; CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE KNOWLEDGE OF THE FAUNA AND FLORA OF MEXICO AND CENTRAL AMERICA. Edited by F. D. GODMAN and 0. SALVIN, FF.RS. Under this title is being published a series of quarto volumes upon the Fauna and Flora of the whole of Mexico, from the valleys of the Rio Grande and Gila on the north, Guatemala, Honduras, Salvador, Nicaragua, Costa Rica, British Honduras, and the Colombian state of Panama as far south as the Isthmus of Darien. The work is being issued in ZooLocicaL, Boranican, and ArcuxonocicaL parts. Those relating to Zoonoey contain portions of several subjects. When the work is closed each subject will be complete in itself, and the whole will form a series of volumes of various thicknesses, according to the extent of each subject. The Boranrcan portion is now complete. Each Zoonoaican part contains 96 pages of letterpress, and an average of 6 plates, most of which are lithographs coloured by hand. Each Boranicar part also contains 96 pages of letterpress, and an average of 6 plates, a few of which are coloured. As it is proposed to include all the materials that may come to hand during the progress of the work, it is not possible to give an exact estimate of its extent. The work is published by subscription, and subscribers will be at liberty to take the whole work, or the Zoouocy, Borany, or ARCHAHOLOGY separately. The different subjects of the Zootocy will not be sold separately ; and subscribers, on commencing their subscription, must give an undertaking to continue it until the work is finished. THE BOTANY, by W. B. Hens ey, is now complete in 5 volumes, half-bound. £17 17s. ARCHZE0LOGY. By A. P. Maupstay. Pp. 1-48, pls. i—xlviii. £4 4s. SCLATER (P. L.) and SALVIN (0.). NOMENCLATOR AVIUM NEOTROPICALIUM. Boards, price 14s. In two Volumes, roy. 8vo. Price of the Two Volumes, £3 3s. ARGENTINE ORNITHOLOGY: A Descriptive Catalogue of the Birds of the Argentine Republic. By P. L. SCLATER, M.A., Ph.D., F.R.S., &c. With NOTES ON THEIR HABITS, By W. H. HUDSON, C.M.Z.S. (late of Buenos Ayres). Two Royal 8vo Volumes, each containing 10 hand-coloured Plates drawn by Mr. J. G. Keulemans. Only 200 copies issued to Subscribers, and each copy is numbered and signed by the Authors. “Dr. Scuarpr and Mr. Hupson have combined their forces to produce one of the best. books ever written on South-American Ornithology. Each is a master of his own portion of the subject, for no one is better acquainted with Neotropical Ornithology than Dr. Scrarer, and Mr. Hupson has been known for many years as one of the best living observers of the habits of birds in the field. The scheme of the book, therefore, leaves nothing to be desired, and the whole of the “ get up,” as regards paper, print, and illustrations, renders it as good as it is possible to be, and reflects the greatest credit on the publisher.”—Nature, R. H. PORTER, 18 Princes Street, Cavendish Square, London, W. A HISTORY OF THE BIRDS OF EUROPE (including all the Species inhabiting the Western Palearctic Region). By H. E. Dressrr. Royal 4to. 8 vols. Half-morocco, gilt tops. 50 guineas. It contains nearly 5000 pages of letterpress, and more than 600 hand-coloured Plates by Josupn Worr, J.G. Knunemans, and EH, Nraus, and forms seven thick and one thin quarto volumes, for which titlepages, specially designed by Josepa Wo r, are issued. The work is out of print, the stones being erased and the type distributed. Prof. Newton, writing in the Encyclopedia Britannica (“ Ornithology”), refers to this fine work as follows :—* Is unquestionably the most complete work of its kind, both for fulness of informa- tion and beauty of illustration....As a whole, European ornithologists are all but unanimously grateful to Mr. Dresser for the way in which he performed the enormous labour he had under- taken.” Price £5 5s. With 34 beautiful coloured Plates. Imp. 4to. A MONOGRAPH OF THE MEROPIDZ, or Family of the Bee- eaters. By H. EH. Dresser. This work contains Illustrations, accompanied by as complete Letterpress as possible, of all known species of this beautiful Family of Birds. The Author possesses a nearly complete collection of the birds belonging to this group; and, having access to the best collections both in this country and on the continent, he believes that he has been able to make the work one which will be of use to the scientific worker and also, from the beauty of the lllustrations, find favour with the general public. All the species have been drawn, life-size, on stone, by Mr. J. G. Keunemans, with his characteristic beauty of rendering and accuracy of coloration. The Edition consists of Two Hundred and Fifty Copies, BRITISH PYRALIDES, including the PTEROPHORIDZE. By Joun Henry Lencn, B.A., F.LS., F.Z.8., &e. Crown 8yvo; 18 hand-coloured Plates, with over 200 figures and in many cases (where deemed necessary) of both sexes. Price, cloth, 16s. ; half-morocco, 19s. Medium 8vo, Three Vols., cloth, price £3 3s. NESTS AND EGGS OF INDIAN BIRDS. By Atztawn O. Home, C.B. Second Edition, Edited and Revised by E. W. Oatzs. Portraits of A. O. Hume, T. C. Jurpon, Colonel Tickent, Brian Honeson, W. T. Branrorp, R. G. Warpiaw Ramsay, Col. H. H. Gopwin-Austen, H. Buyrn, Artuur, Ninth Marquis or TwEeEppALe, W. EH. Brooks, R. Bowpier SHaree, and W. R. Davison. “We must all admire the genius and industry of Mr. Hume in getting together this enormous mass of valuable information from every part of the Indian Empire, and we must all thank Mr. Oates for the handy and well-printed volumes in which he has reproduced it.”—-The Lbis. R. H. PORTER, 18 Princes Street, Cavendish Square, London, W. MR. BOOTH’S ORIGINAL WORK ON BRITISH BIRDS. Forming Three noble Folio Volumes, containing 116 beautiful Coloured Plates ; Price of the Three Volumes, unbound, £21; in half-morocco, gilt tops, £25. ROUGH NOTES ON THE BIRDS OBSERVED During 25 years’ Shooting and Collecting Dy THE BRITISH. ISLANDS, By E. T. BOOTH. With Plates from Drawings by E. Nuaxn, taken from specimens in the Author’s possession. “ No naturalist who goes to Brighton should omit to visit Mr. E. T. Booth’s new museum in the Dyke Road. It contains a series of about 300 cases of British Birds. Each species is placed in a separate case, and the specimens (male, female, young, and often nest and eggs) are arranged in what the owner considers to be their natural attitudes, with imitations of appropriate scenery in the background, often copied from the actual spot in which the specimens themselves were procured. The most wonderful feature in the collection is that the specimens have in every case been procured by Mr. Booth himself during twenty-three years which he has devoted to forming it. “ Rew living ornithologists have a better personal acquaintance with British Birds than Mr. E. T. Booth, and we are all glad to have the results of his observa- tions, accompanied, as they are, by Mr. Neale’s life-like illustrations. These are taken entirely from subjects in Mr. Booth’s own well-known collection at Brighton, where every bird now figured may be examined. No visitor to Brighton who cares the least for ornithology should omit to visit Mr. Booth’s Bird-gallery. “Mr. Booth’s observations, based entirely upon his personal experience, cannot fail to be valuable ; and his remarks upon the geographical distribution of many of the species, as regards the British Islands, are of considerable interest. “« As before, Mr. Booth’s letterpress is excellent reading, and the articles on the species which are not figured, and which are too numerous for mention, are quite as interesting as the others.”— The Zbis. “We have been so long accustomed to refer to standard works of reference, which, though excellent in their kind, are after all but compilations, that it is refreshing to take up a book in which the writer tells us nothing but what he has himself observed, and, in most cases, noted down on the spot. Such information as he sometimes conveys in a few paragraphs is worth pages of the generalities which one too often meets with in books on British birds, wherein the writers only veil their ignorance of details, which, for want of personal observation, they are unable to give. “Tts utility, and, as we had said, its originality, sufficiently commend it to all lovers of bird-life.’—Zoologist. —————————— rl Demy 8vo, pp. 240. Price 12s, 6d. INDEX GENERUM AVIUM: A List of the Genera and Subgenera of Birds. By F. H. Warsruovuss, A.L.S., Librarian to the Zoological Society of London. Indispensable to Working Ornithologists. R. H. PORTER, 18 Princes Street, Cavendish Square, London, W. Demy 8vo. Price 2s., post free. dS ES ae iS ae, 2S ae Se KEY LIST. By Lizvt.-Cot. L. HOWARD IRBY, F.Z.S., &c. Author of ‘ Ornithology of the Straits of Gibraltar’ This attempt at a ‘Key List’ of British Birds is not intended to be of use to scientific ornithologists, but the compiler hopes it may be useful to those having a slight knowledge of birds, so as to enable them to determine a species without having to search through bulky volumes. Every endeavour has been made to avoid scientific terms and to be as concise as possible. Those American land-birds hitherto included in ‘ British’ lists have been omitted and others might with propriety be struck out—such as specimens escaped from captivity, or included without sufficient inquiry as to their authenticity. As far as possible, the nomenclature and arrange- ment of ‘The Ibis’ List have been adhered to. “This work, written by an excellent practical ornithologist, is likely to prove of great service, owing to the large amount of information compressed into a small compass.” — bis. “Has supplied a real want—a hand pocket-book giving just the diagnostic cha- racters of every species. It is a desirable supplement to the ‘List of British Birds,’ published by the British Ornithologists’ Union, which dealt with the nomen- clature of the various species, but which might also with advantage have contained diagnoses, such as Colonel Irby’s industry has now supplied.”—Nature. “This little work, compiled by one of our best practical ornithologists and sportsmen, is intended for the use of those who already have a slight knowledge of birds, but require a handy guide to the diagnostic characters of the species as a companion when travelling. It promises to be most useful, and certainly repre- sents a great deal of research in a small conpass—NEARLY PERFECT.”—Atheneum. OOTHECA WOLLEYANA. An Llustrated Catalogue of the Col- lection of Birds’ Eggs formed by the late Jonn Wottey, Jun., M.A. Edited, from the Original Notes, by Atrrep Newron, M.A., F.R.S.—Part I. Accrprrres. Plates by Wolf and others, those of the Eggs coloured. Price £1 11s. 6d. BIRDS OF CUMBERLAND, critically studied, including some Notes on the Birds of Westmorland. Map and Coloured Plate. By Rey. H. A. Macrnerson and W. Duckwortn. 8vo, 6s. BIRDS OF DORSET. A Contribution to the Natural History of the County. By J. C. Manser-Preyper, B.A., F.LS., F.G.S. In lvol. Svo. With frontispiece and other illustrations. 7s. 6d. BIRDS OF WILTSHIRE. Comprising all the Periodical and Occa- sional Visitants, as well as those which are indigenous to the County. By the Rev. A. C.Smurrg, M.A. 8vo. Cloth. 10s. 6d. THE BIRDS OF GUERNSEY AND THE NEIGHBOURING ISLANDS, Alderney, Sark, Jethou, Herm; being a small con- tribution to the Ornithology of the Channel Islands. By C. Smira. Post 8vo. Cloth. Gs. 6d. Demy 8vo, cloth, price 16s. SUNDEVALL’S TENTAMEN. [{Methodi Naturalis Avium Dispo- nendarum Tentamen.| ‘Translated into English, with Notes, by Francis Nicnorson, F.Z.8. With Portrait of Cart J. SunDEVALL, and Plate. R. H. PORTER, 18 Princes Street, Cavendish Square, London, W. DEDICATED BY PERMISSION TO HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN. The Genus Masdevallia. WITH COLOURED PLATES ISSUED BY THE MARQUESS OF LOTHIAN, K.T., CHIEFLY FROM PLANTS IN HIS COLLECTION OF ORCHIDS AT NEWBATTLE ABBEY. Tue Work will contain hand-coloured lithographs (natural size) and vignette engravings from photographs of every available species of the genus Masde- vallia, with text. Descriptions and Plates by Miss FLorrencr H. Wootwarp, with Addi- tional Notes by Consul F. C. Lrumann. To be issued in Parts, each Part containing 10 Plates, with text and vignettes, price £1 10s. Size, Imperial 4to. it is proposed to publish, in subsequent Parts, drawings of numerous species unknown in cultivation, discovered and drawn in South America by Consul F. C, Lenmann, who will add a chapter on the Geographical Distri- bution of the Genus Masdevallia, with a map. To be completed in about 12 Parts. Only 250 copies will be printed. PART I. ready, containing the following species :— MASDEVALLIA AMABILIS. MASDEVALLIA MACRURA. HY ——— PERISTERIA. —— CHESTERTONH. SIMULA. —— EPHIPPIUM. —— TORTA. LEONTOGLOSSA. VEITCHIANA, To be completed in Five Parts. 8vo. Part I. (7s. 6d.) and Parr II. (10s. 6d.) ready. ANATOMY, PHYSIOLOGY, MORPHOLOGY, AND DEVELOPMENT OF TE BEOW=FEY. By B. THOMPSON LOWNE, F.R.C.S., F.LS. R. H. PORTER, 18 Princes Street, Cavendish Square, London, W. Small 4to. Price £3 3s., cloth. DOGS, JACKALS, WOLVES, AND FOXES: A MONOGRAPH OF THE CANIDA. By ST. GEORGE MIVART, F.RBS. PROSPECTUS. Many years have now elapsed since any general work was published upon the subject to which this volume is dedicated ; but during this period much has been added to our knowledge with respect to individual species through separate papers in various scientific journals, and works describing the fauna of this or that geographical region. Many most valuable additions have also been made to our zoological collections, and means have thus been afforded for the correction of errors which previous defects of scientific data had rendered inevitable. The Author has been mainly induced to undertake the present work through the kindness of his friends, Professor Flower, C.B., F.R.S., and Dr. Giinther, F.R.S., who have afforded him every facility for a full examination of the treasures accumulated at the British Museum of Natural History. Although he cannot hope to have in all cases rightly determined the vexed questions as to the limits of species and varieties and those of synonymy, the Author has none the less had very exceptional oppor- tunities of so doing, and has been aided by the kind help of various scientific friends—Dr. P. L. Sclater, F.RS.; Mr. Blanford, F.R.S. ; Mr. Oldfield Thomas, F.Z.S.; and others. The present work contains a description, with a plate drawn and coloured from nature, and often from life, of every species which the Author thinks can fairly claim to be regarded as distinct, and also of various marked varieties of what he regards as probably one species. Since the work is devoted to that group of animals whereof the dog is a member, it can hardly fail to be of wide interest, although it is the wild species, not the domestic breeds, which are particularly treated of. Nevertheless, the interesting question of the origin of the domestic dog is not disregarded. In addition to an account of the habits, geographical distribution, and life-history of each species, there is given in a copious introduction, enriched with woodcuts, what the Author deems a sufficient description of the anatomy of the group, of the structural relations of the Canide to other animals, their position in zoological classification, and the general relations they bear to the past and present history of this planet. WITH WOODCUTS, AND 45 COLOURED PLATES Drawn from Nature by J. G. KEULEMANS, and Hand-coloured. R. H. PORTER, 18 Princes Street, Cavendish Square, London, W. 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