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 R E D - F O O T E D   FALCON. 
 Falco rufipes,  Bechstein. 
 Le Faucon à pieds rouges. 
 T his  small  but  true  Falcon is  one of the most  elegant of  the European  species, and  has  lately become  an  
 object of still  greater  interest  to  the  British  ornithologist, from  the  circumstance  of five  or  six  examples  
 having been recently taken in this country. 
 In the  fourth volume of Loudon's Magazine of  Natural History, page  116, Mr. Yarrell has recorded,  that  
 in  the month of May  1830,  three specimens of this Falcon were observed together at Horning in Norfolk|p|  
 Fortunately all three birds were obtained,  and proved  to be an adult female and two young males, in different  
 states of plumage.  A fourth specimen, a female, has been shot in Holkham Park. 
 A notice has since been read at the Linnean Society from Mr. Foljamhe, of the capture of a male  in Yorkshire  
 ; and a female lived nearly two years in the Gardens of the Zoological Society in the Regent’s Park.  From  
 some  of these  examples, and  from others  in  the  collections of private  friends,  to  which  we  have  constant  
 access, we have had  ample opportunities of  examining the  many very interesting changes of plumage which  
 occur in both  sexes during their progress from youth to maturity. 
 The upper figure in our Plate represents an adult female.  M. Temminck in his Manuel, page 33, describes  
 this bird  as having the upper part of the head marked with dark  longitudinal streaks.  Our specimen, from  
 which the  figure in the Plate was coloured, has the head of one uniform tint, without streak, but with a dark  
 circle round the eye ;  and the female killed in Norfolk,  of which we have seen  a drawing, resembles our own  
 bird exactly.  Both  these  examples are considered to be adult.  The immature female has the head streaked  
 with dusky lines, which it retains through the second year ;  but it appears certain, from specimens before us,  
 that these markings are lost at an advanced age.  The feathers of the back and wing-coverts are then blueish-  
 black, edged  with  lighter blue.  The plumage of the other parts of the adult female  is sufficiently portrayed  
 in our figure.  The young female has the top of the head brown, with dusky streaks ;  throat and ear-coverts  
 white ;  eyes encircled with  black :  it has also  a small black  moustache extending from  the eye  downwards ;  
 the sides of the  neck, breast, and all the under parts yellowish-white, with brown  longitudinal streaks on the  
 breast and abdomen ;  upper parts brown,  the feathers edged with reddish-brown ;  tail with numerous alternate  
 bars of brown and reddish-white, the tips white.  Young male birds appear first in plumage similar to that of  
 the female, changing at their moult to alight blueish-grey, and subsequently assuming the dark lead-colour so  
 conspicuous on the head, back, and wings of the adult male bird represented by our lower figure.  The  thighs,  
 vent and under tail-coverts are deep ferruginous ; cere,  orbits and feet orange-red ; claws yellow-brown, darker  
 at the tips.  The fine adult male specimen from which our figure was coloured is in Mr. YarrelPs collection.  
 The  general uniformity in the colour of the males,  contrasted with the pleasing variety of the females, is one  
 of the most  striking characteristics of  this species, which  is  common over the  greater part of the North  of  
 Europe ;  but of its habits or nidification little is recorded.  Meyer, who has examined the stomachs of these  
 birds, found in them only the remains of large coleoptera. 
 Our bird is the Orange-legged Hobby and Ingrian Falcon of Dr. Latham, so named from its inhabiting the  
 province of Ingria in Russia, where it is called Kobez;  it is also the Falco  vespertinus of Gmelin.  The adult  
 male appears to have been  unknown to Buffon as a distinct species,  and is figured in the Planches enluminées  
 of that Naturalist, No. 431,  under the name of “ a singular variety of the Hobby.”