■ æ m m m oe im m sw m m ,
L I T T L E B I TTERN .
B o tau ru s minutus, S elb y .
L e Hé ron blongios.
A l t h o u g h we have followed Mr. Selby in placing this bird in the genus Botaurus, o f which the Common
Bittern is the type, stil we conceive that the present species (with numerous others, possessing the same
form and habits, distributed over nearly every part o f the globe,) possesses characters which entitle it to form
the type o f a genus as distinct from Botaurus as that genus is from Ardea and Nycticoracc. It cannot be
denied, however, that it is intimately allied to the more typical Botauri in its solitary and • secluded habits,
everywhere frequenting low and swampy situations, abounding in thick coverts o f reeds, willows, &c., and
from which it is not driven without considerable difficulty. In England it is, and always has been, a bird of
considerable rarity ; nevertheless various examples have been taken at different times, so that there are few
collections o f any extent which do not contain one or more British specimens. On the Continent it is found
in considerable abundance, especially in the southern provinces ; nor is it rare in Holland and France, in both
o f which countries it is known to breed annually. From the .seclusion o f its haunts, and the difficulty of
access, its nest is seldom seen : it is said to be placed in low bushes and tufts of herbage, among the thickest
rushes. The eggs are five or six in number, o f a pale greenish white.
The compressed form o f body which so eminently characterizes the Little Bittern enables it to avoid
pursuit with the utmost facility, by threading its way through the most closely compacted and intricate
masses o f reeds, &c., which it does with the utmost silence and rapidity. Like most other Herons, it is
capable o f perching ; and this it often does on willows, the stems o f thick reeds, &c. I f forced to take
wing, its flight is slow and heavy, not protracted to any great distance.
Its food consists o f small fishes, frogs, snails, insects, &c.
In their adult state, the sexes offer little or no external difference in the colour o f their plumage. The
young are wholly destitute o f the fine green o f the back and top o f the head, which, together with the wing-
coverts, are then brown, each feather having longitudinal blotches o f a darker colour. From this stage
it passes through several changes o f colouring, until it assumes the full plumage o f maturity, which is not
accomplished before the second or third moult.
Adults have the top o f the head, back o f the neck, whole o f the upper surface, and tail glossy greenish
black ; middle o f the wings, neck, and whole o f the under surface delicate fawn yellow ; bill, circle round the
eye, and irides yellow ; tarsi greenish yellow.
The Plate represents an adult, and a young bird in the intermediate stage, o f the natural size.