Genus LINARIA, Auet.
Gen. C h a r . B i l l straight, conical, e n tire ; mandibles compressed in front, and forming a'very
sharp point. N o s tr ils basal, lateral, concealed by incumbent feathers. Wings long, acuminate;
first, second, and third quill-feathers o f nearly equal length. T a il more o r less
forked. T a rsi slender, sh o rt F eet having th e lateral toes of equal le n g th ; the hind toe
with its claw as long as the middle one. Claws slender, acute, curved, th a t upon the hind
toe larger, and in old birds much longer than th e rest.
COMMON, OR B R OWN LINNET .
Linaria cannabina, Swains.
L e Gros-bec Linotte.
Tbe seasonal changes o f plumage to which the FringiUida are generally subjected is in no one of the tribe
more strikingly exemplified than in the birds constituting the restricted genus IAnaria, of which the Common
Linnet is the largest, and offers the most contrasted changes, being in winter clothed in a sombre and nearly
uniform dress of brown, which in spring is exchanged for a rich rosy red on the crown of the head and breast,
and in autumn it resumes the sombre winter colour: this divetsity of plumage has caused some confusion!
and added numerous synonyms to the name o f the Common Linnet, and its nearly allied species the Eedpole. ’
The Linnet is strictly indigenous to the British Islands, over the whole of which, and Europe generally, it
is plentifully dispersed. It associates in flocks, and feeds upon small seeds, particularly those procured from
the wild cruciform plants, &c. Open districts, such as commons and furze fields, constitute its favourite
localities. ■ The thickest parts o f the fume bushes are generally selected for the sites of incubation, and the
building of the nest is commenced early in the spring: it is constructed of moss, small twigs, and the stalks
of grass, interwoven with wool and lined with hair and feathers ; the eggs are mostly four in number, o f a
bluish white speckled with purplish red colour. “ In winter,” says Mr. Selby, “ these birds assemble in very
large flocks, and descend to the sea-eoast, where they continue to reside till spring again urges them to pair
and seek their upland haunts.”
The Linnet is not more highly prized for the lovely hues of its summer dress than for the sweetness o f its
simple song, on which account great numbers are annually captured and reared for the purpose of being kept
in confinement. °
The female does not possess the rich colouring that characterizes the male in summer. Mr. Selby
having taken considerable pains to ascertain and point out the various changes which this bird undergoes, we
take the liberty o f availing ourselves o f his very accurate description.
“ Bill deep bluish grey; forehead and breast of a bright carmine red; throat and under part of the neck
yellowish white streaked with brown; crown o f the head, nape, and sides of the neck bluish grey, in many
instances varied with a few darker streaks; back, scapulars, and wing-coverts chestnut brown, with the
margins o f the feathers palest; flanks pale brownish red; middle o f the belly and the vent greyish white ;
quill-feathers black, with more or less white on the basal half of their webs, and forming a distinct bar across
the wings when closed; tail considerably forked, with the two middle feathers wholly black and pointed!®
the rest black, margined both on their inner and outer webs with white; legs and toes brown.
“ In younger individuals the red upon the breast and head is not so pure in tint, nor to the same extent
as in the older birds; the grey upon the crown of the head and the neck is also more varied with spots and
streaksv”
The female is inferior in size to the male, and has the “ head and upper parts of the body umber brown,
the margins o f the feathers passing into yellowish brown; wing-coverts chestnut brown ; throat and sides of
the neck yellowish white, streaked and varied with yellowish brown; breast and flanks pale reddish brown,
streaked with umber brown; middle o f the belly yellowish white.
“ The winter plumage of the male (after the first year) is nearly as follows: crown o f the head varied with
large black spots, which occupy the centre of the feathers; back and scapulars chestnut brown, but deeply
margined with pale yellowish brown ; breast reddish brown, with the tips of the feathers reddish white; flanks
with large oblong brown streaks.”
We have figured a male and female of the natural size.