Illustrations of British Ornithology, Volumen1proprietor, and published, 1833 - 538 páginas |
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Página xxv
... sharp edges . Pl . 1. Fig . 8 . subulated . When the bill is long and slender , and shaped like an awl . Pl . 3. Fig . 9 . ............ .. conical . - Pl . 4. Fig . 1 . ...... subconic . - Approaching to the conical form . Pl . 3. Fig ...
... sharp edges . Pl . 1. Fig . 8 . subulated . When the bill is long and slender , and shaped like an awl . Pl . 3. Fig . 9 . ............ .. conical . - Pl . 4. Fig . 1 . ...... subconic . - Approaching to the conical form . Pl . 3. Fig ...
Página 7
... sharp - pointed feathers . Greater coverts umber - brown , varied with cream - white . Secondaries pale umber - brown , with their tips and mar- • To some interesting experiments relating to this subject , I refer my readers to ...
... sharp - pointed feathers . Greater coverts umber - brown , varied with cream - white . Secondaries pale umber - brown , with their tips and mar- • To some interesting experiments relating to this subject , I refer my readers to ...
Página 8
... and middle ones ; and their claws , which are much incurved , are very sharp , and in ge- neral partially retractile . To symmetry of form they unite great strength and activity , and the typical groups possess 8 FALCONIDE . RAPTORES .
... and middle ones ; and their claws , which are much incurved , are very sharp , and in ge- neral partially retractile . To symmetry of form they unite great strength and activity , and the typical groups possess 8 FALCONIDE . RAPTORES .
Página 10
... sharp - pointed , and in some subjects the head and throat are found partially naked . Their limbs are generally short and muscular , and their talons very strong and much hooked . In this subdivision we find the most powerful and ...
... sharp - pointed , and in some subjects the head and throat are found partially naked . Their limbs are generally short and muscular , and their talons very strong and much hooked . In this subdivision we find the most powerful and ...
Página 11
... sharp , grooved beneath ; those up- on the outer and hind toes the largest . The members of this genus are not less distinguished for their size and strength than for those bold and destructive habits , in which they emulate the typical ...
... sharp , grooved beneath ; those up- on the outer and hind toes the largest . The members of this genus are not less distinguished for their size and strength than for those bold and destructive habits , in which they emulate the typical ...
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Términos y frases comunes
appearance ash-grey bars base Bechst Bee-Eater belly Bill black blackish-brown breast breeds Briss brown brownish-black Buff cere CHARACTERS Chouette Claws colour Corvida Cypselus d'Ornith descrip Deut Dict Dorset eggs Facial disk Falco Falconida feathers female Flem flight genera genus Gmel grey habits Hawk head Hen Harrier hind toe inner webs insects Irides larvæ Lath Legs and toes Linn liver-brown male bird mandible margin Meyer middle MONTAGU natural nearly neck nest Nostrils notched operculum orange-brown Orcad Ornith ornithologists Otus outer webs pale PLATE plumage prey quills Raii Syn reddish-brown rounded Shaw's Zool short Short-eared Owl sinuated species specimens spots streaks Strix subfamily Suec Supp Swallow Syst Tail tail-coverts tarsi Tasschenb Tawny Owl Temm TEMMINCK thers throat tinged tion Titmouse tribe typical umber-brown upper mandible visitant Vög wing-coverts Wings long yellow yellowish-brown yellowish-white young bird Zool
Pasajes populares
Página 280 - Bewick's observations on the plumage of the linnet were made upon caged birds, I am not surprised at his assertion of its always retaining the same appearance; for I have repeatedly verified the fact of its never acquiring, under confinement, those brilliant tints which distinguish it at a particular period of the year when in a state of liberty. I will adduce one instance strikingly to the point in question. For some particular purpose of observation, a linnet was shot more than two years ago, towards...
Página 294 - ... the end of that year). Many of the females killed by Mr. Selby showed plainly, from the denuded state of their breasts, that they had been engaged in incubation some time previous to their arrival ; which circumstance, he observes, agrees with the account given of the early period at which they breed in higher latitudes.
Página 194 - ... or destroyed. This flight must have been immense in quantity, as its extent was traced through the whole length of the coasts of Northumberland and Durham. There appears little doubt of this having been a migration from the more northern provinces of Europe, (probably furnished by the pine-forests of Norway, Sweden, &c.), from the circumstance of its arrival being simultaneous with that of large flights of the Woodcock, Fieldfare, and Redwing.
Página 195 - This happened towards the conclusion of the month of January 1823, and a few days previous to the long-continued snow-storm so severely felt through the northern counties of England, and along the eastern parts of Scotland. The range and point of this migration are unascertained, but it must probably have been a distant one, from the fact of not a single pair having returned to breed, or pass the succeeding summer, in the situations they had been known always to frequent. Nor was one of the species...
Página 42 - I endeavoured, by keeping the barrel of my gun close to my cheek, and suddenly elevating its muzzle when they were in the act of striking, to ascertain whether they had the power of instantaneously changing the direction of their rapid course, and found that they invariably rose above the obstacle with the quickness of thought, showing equal acuteness of vision and power of motion.
Página 268 - In Northumberland and Scotland, this separation takes place about the month of November, and from that period till the return of spring, few females are to be seen, and those few always in distinct societies. — The males remain, and are met with, during the winter, in immense flocks, feeding with other...
Página 232 - Durham as early as the month of November. Selby says that in the winter of 1810 large flocks were dispersed through various parts of the kingdom, and that from that period it does not seem to have visited our island till the month of February, 1822, when a few came under his inspection, and several were again observed during the severe storm in the winter of 1823. Montagu...
Página 285 - The nest is built in a bush or low tree, (such as willow, alder, or hazel,) of moss and the stalks of dry grass, intermixed with down from the catkin of the willow, which also forms the lining, and renders it a particularly soft and warm receptacle for the eggs and young. From this substance being a constant material of the nest, it follows, that the young are produced late in the season, and are seldom able to fly before the end of June, or the beginning of July. The eggs are four or five in number...
Página 382 - During summer, however, and when moulting, they do not tree, but squat among the long grass and cover, offering themselves in this way an easy prey to another class of enemies, polecats, foxes, &c. When pheasants are numerous, Mr Selby observes, " the males are in general found associated during the winter, and separate from the females ; and it is not until the end of March that they allow the approach of the latter without exhibiting signs of displeasure, or at least of indifference. At the...
Página 52 - That it will do so, under some circumstances, is evident, since birdcatchers have discovered the Kestrel in the very act of pouncing their bird-calls ; and I have myself caught it in a trap baited with a bird. In summer, the cockchafer supplies to this species an object of pursuit and food, and the following curious account given from an eye-witness of the fact.