Black Redstart.
Sylvia Tithys, Scop. Ann. Hist. Nat, tom. i. p. 157.
Motacilla tithys, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 335.
— Phoenicurus, var. 8, Gibraltariensis, et atrata, Gmel. edit. Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. pp. 987, 988.
Ruticilla Tithys, Brehm,Vög. Deutschl., p. 365.
Cairii, Gerbe.
Phcenicura Tethys, Jard. and Selby, 111. Orn., vol. i. pi. 86. figs. 1 & 2.
T hat there are exceptions to all rules, applies to natural history as well as to other things, and we have an
instance in point in the present species; for, whereas its ally, the Common Redstart, comes to us in spring
for the purpose of spending the summer, the Black Redstart arrives in autumn, and takes its departure when
the winter is over. Had it been a species which breeds in high northern latitudes, like the Bramble Finch
and the Greater Redpole, its appearance in autumn would not elicit a remark, neither would its occurrence
have caused so much thought to British ornithologists. The Bramble Finch and the Redpole are hard-billed
birds, and mainly live on seeds; the Black Redstart, on the other hand, feeds exclusively on insects; and
hence we might naturally suppose that, in common with all insectivorous migrants, it would cross the
Mediterranean in autumn, and the greater number do really proceed in that direction; but a partial
migration westward also takes place, and seldom do the months o f October and November recur
without this bird appearing in one or other of the southern and western counties, particularly those of
Sussex, Devonshire, and Cornwall. That it proceeds still further west, and crosses the Irish Channel, is
certain; for it is occasionally found in many parts of Ireland at the same season. It there also arrives with
the fall o f the leaf, and departs when the trees are putting forth their spring foliage. In the counties above
mentioned, we may one day walk along the rocky coasts or among the cavernous sand-hills of their bays
without seeing a single example, while if we pursue the same track twenty-four hours after, one, two, or
three may be observed sitting solitarily on a stone, or flitting before us to a hiding-place in the cleft of the
rock, where it will remain for a short time, or, if there be an opening, pass out on the opposite side.
Sometimes an old cock may be seen in the black dress, but females and young males are ten times more
frequently met with. That the specific name of Cairii is merely a synonym there can be no doubt; for it
is certain that the numerous skins which we receive from the Continent, with that name attached, are young
males of this species. I do not for a moment doubt that these young males pair with the opposite sex, and
perform every function necessary for reproduction; but, in all probability, the black livery is not assumed
until the bird is two or three years old.
As the bird breeds in Belgium, the north o f France, and the whole of southern Germany, we might readily
believe that it would perform the same duty in the British Islands; but I have never heard of an authentic
instance of its so doing.
Although the habits and economy of the Ruticilla Tithys are very similar to those o f the Redstart, still
they differ in certain points. They are less arboreal than those of that bird, and present a striking resemblance
to the habits o f the more typical Saxicolinee—Wheatears, &c. The Black Redstart evinces a greater
partiality for stony and rocky places; and although I have seen it nesting in the outhouse of a German
garden, the nest is more frequently placed in a crevice o f a stone wall or in the cleft of a rock. Its eggs
are white. In this respect it also differs from its ally, as well as from the Wheatear; for the eggs of the
latter bird are not so blue as those of the Redstart and many others of the Saxicolince: the sexes, when
fully adult, present the same difference that is seen in the Redstart; but the females of the two species are
very similar.
I believe I was the first to notice this species as a British bird, since I find no record of it as such prior
to the instance of its occurrence communicated by me in 1829 to the ‘ Zoological Journal,’ and published in
the fifth volume of that work. The example there noticed had been killed by F. Bond, Esq., a gentleman
who has spent a long life in closely studying the works of nature, particularly the birds of this country, and
than whom no one can be more courteous, more willing to impart the knowledge he has acquired for the
advancement of science, or whose remarks may be more implicitly relied on. Another friend—Mr. John
Gatcombe, of Plymouth—has also paid great attention to our native b irds; I shall therefore append some
remarks on this species with which he has favoured me.
“ The Black Redstart is a regular winter visitor to the coasts o f Devon and Cornwall, arriving generally
the first week in November, and leaving at the end of March or the beginning of April. On two occasions
only have I observed them so early as the 29th of October. They frequent the cliffs and rocks along the