Genus CALAMOPHILUS, Leach.
Gen. Char. Beale nearly as in the genus P a ru s, b u t the upper mandible at its tip is some-?
wh at curved. T a il elongated, wedge-shaped. L e g s Very slender.
B E A R D E D T I T o r R E E D B IR D .
Calamophilus biarmicus, Leach.
La Mesange moustache.
Dr. L e a c h was induced to separate this very interesting and elegant bird from the genus Parus, in consequence
of its differing in several minor characters from the other species o f that genus, particularly in the situation it
affects as a place o f abode and nidification; constructing a nest on or near the ground in wet and marshy
places: its food is also very different, consisting o f the seeds o f reeds, with aquatic insects and minute shelled-
snails, for the trituration o f which it is furnished with a strong muscular gizzard. It inhabits England as
well as most of the temperate countries of Europe, but is more particularly abundarit in the low and marshy
districts o f Holland, France and Germany. Its disposition is timid, and its manners shy and retired, dwelling
in situations both local and difficult of access; a circumstance which, until lately, has prevented naturalists
from giving any minute details respecting its peculiar habits. We are indebted to Mr. Hoy, an intelligent
observer o f nature, for the best account of this bird yet published, from which, as given in “ The Magazine of
Natural History,” vol. 3. p. 328, we take the liberty of making the following extract.
“ The borders,” says Mr. Hoy, “ of the large pieces of fresh water in Norfolk called Broads, particularly
Hickling and Horsey Broads, are the favourite places of resort of this bird; indeed it is to be met with in that
neighbourhood wherever there are reeds in any quantity, with fenny land adjoining. During the autumn and
winter they are found dispersed, generally in small parties, throughout the whole length o f the Suffolk coast,
wherever there are large tracts o f reeds. I have found them numerous, in the breeding season, on the skirts
of Whittlesea, near Huntingdonshire, and they are not uncommon in the fenny district of Lincolnshire;
whether they are to be met with further north I have had no means of ascertaining, but they do not appear
to have been noticed north o f the Humber. It begins building in the end of April. The nest is composed on
the outside o f the dead leaves of the reed and sedge intermixed with a few pieces of grass, and invariably
lined with the top o f the reed, somewhat in the manner o f the nest o f the Reed Wren (S. arundinacea, L.),
but not so compact in the interior. It is generally placed in a tuft of coarse grass or rushes near the ground,
on the margin of the dikes, in the fen ; sometimes fixed among the reeds that are broken down, but never
suspended between the stems. The eggs vary in number from four to six, rarely seven, pure white, sprinkled
all over with small purplish red spots, intermixed with a few small faint lines and markings of the same
colour; size about the same as that of the Greater Tit, but much more rounded and shorter. Their
food during the winter is principally the seed o f the reed; and so intent are they in searching for it, that I
have taken them with a birdlime twig attached to the end of a fishing-rod. When alarmed by any sudden
noise, or the passing o f a hawk, they utter their shrill musical notes and conceal themselves among the thick
bottom o f the reeds, but soon resume their station, climbing the upright stems with the greatest facility. Their
manners in feeding approach near to the Long-tailed Tit, often hanging with the head downwards, and
occasionally assuming the most beautiful attitudes. Their food is not entirely the reed-seed, but insects
and their lame, and the very young shelled-snails o f different kinds, which are numerous in the bottom of the
reedlings. I have been enabled to watch their motions, when in search of insects, having, when there has
been a little wind stirring, been often within a few feet of them, quite unnoticed, among the thick reeds. Was
it not for their note betraying them, they would be but seldom seen. The young, until the autumn moult,
vary in plumage from the old birds ; a stripe of blackish feathers extends from the hind part of the neck to
the rump. It has been said that the males and females keep separate during the winter; but I have always
observed them in company; they appear to keep in families until the pairing time, in the manner o f the
Long-tailed T it ; differing in this respect, that you will occasionally find them congregated in large flocks, more
particularly during the month of October, when they are migrating from their breeding-places.”
To this interesting account we may add, that they are to be met with occasionally on the banks of the
Thames, from the thick reed-beds of Erith in Kent throughout the course of the river to Oxford; but their
visits are by no means regular, or to be calculated on with certainty.
The total length of the male Bearded Tit is about six inches; the beak orange, the upper mandible
longer and overhanging the under; irides yellow; feet black; crown of the head, nape, and cheeks delicate
ash colour; between the base of the beak and the eyes is a black mark, which proceeds down the side of
each cheek, and terminates in a fine and lengthened moustache ; throat white ; breast vinous grey; the sides
o f the breast, the back, and the four middle tail-feathers fine reddish orange; primaries brown externally,
edged with white ; secondaries the same colour as the back, with a black longitudinal stripe; vent black ;
tail graduated, and about three inches in length.
The female is rather less than the male, of a more uniform ferruginous colour, with a few dashes o f black
on the upper part o f the neck and back, and has a faint yellowish white instead of a black moustache.
We have figured a male and female o f the natural size.