AMERICAN BI TTERN.
B o tau ru s lentiginosus, S tep h .
L e B u to r de l’Amérique.
A b ir d o f this species was shot in Devonshire in the autumn o f 1804 ; and after passing through the hands of
two or three persons, who were not aware o f the rarity and valué: o f the specimen, it came into the possession
o f Colonel Montagu, by whom it was first described and figured in the supplement to his Ornithological
Dictionary under the name o f Freckled Heron, Ardea lentiginosa, and after whose death it was transferred
with his whole collection to the British Museum. It is now ascertained that the true habitat o f this species is
America, and that it is only an occasional visitant to this country.
Wilson, who has described it under the specific title o f minor, says, “ This is another nocturnal species,
common to all our sea and river marshes, though nowhere numerous. It rests all day among the reeds
and rushes, and nnless disturbed flies and feeds only during the night. When disturbed these birds rise
with a hollow note, and are easily shot, as they fly heavily. Like other nocturnal birds, their sight is
most i|cute during the evening twilight ; but their hearing is at all times excellent.” Wilsoh has also himself
found and shot this species in the interior o f thè country near Seneca Lake, and had learned, probably from
the account .of Mr. Hutchins, that this bird makes its nest in swamps, laying four cinereous green eggs
among the long grass. The young are said to be at first black. The stomachs o f those examined by Wilson
were usually filled with fish or frogs.
Dr. Richardson, in his North American Fauna, says this Bittern “ is a common bird in the marshes and
willow thickets o f the interior o f the ihr countries up to the fifty-eighth parallel. Its loud booming, exactly
resembling that o f the Common Bittern o f Europe, may be heard every summer evening, and also frequently
in the day.”
Top o f the head dusky reddish brown ; back o f the neck pale yellowish brown, minutely dotted with blackish
brown ; a broad stripe o f black on the sides o f the neck, from behind the ears ; upper surface dark umber
brown, minutely freckled with chestnut and yellowish brown ; long feathers on the shoulders broadly edged
with bufly yellow ; wing-coverts brownish yellow, freckled with umber brown ; spurious wing, primaries, and
secondaries greyish black, the tips o f the latter, the lesser quills, and tail brownish orange dotted with black ;
chin and upper part o f the throat white ; front of the neck and under surface ochreous yellow with a broad
stripe o f mottled brown down the centre o f each feather, margined on each side with a fine line o f a darker
tint ; bill dark brown above, sides and tinder mandible yellow ; legs greenish yellow.
We have figured an adult about two thirds o f the natural size.