LANIUS MINOR, Gmei.
Rose-breasted Shrike.
Lanius minor, Gmel. edit. Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 308.
■ it aliens, Lath. Ind. Orn., vol. i. p. 71.
vigil, Pall. Zoogr. Ross.-Asiat., tom. i. p. 403.
longipennis, Blyth, Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng., vol. xv. p. 300.
Enneoctonus minor (Gould), Rodd, Journ. Roy. Inst. Cornw., no. viii. 1867.
roseus, Baill. Orn. de la Savoie, tom. ii. p. 26.
--------------minor, Blyth, Cat. of Birds in Mus. Asiat. Soc. Calcutta, p. 152.
S ome ornithologists believe that Britain has from time to time been visited by two, if not three, kinds of Grey
Shrikes. Beside the Lanius excubitor, the L . minor has certainly occurred h e re ; and I have therefore much
pleasure in giving a figure o f the latter in the present work. Mr. Rodd, of Penzance, has an undoubted
specimen o f this species, killed a t Scilly; and it may have occurred in other parts of our island, and probably
the American Lanins borealis also. I must remark that Mr. Rodd’s bird is out of colour, or destitute of the
delicate rosy hue on the breast represented in the accompanying Plate, and has the band on the forehead,
so conspicuous in the male, less distinctly defined. It is probably a young female which had not acquired
the characteristic colouring of the adult.
I t will be seen that I have adopted two of the proposed generic divisions of the Laniid<e, and applied
Lanius and Enneoctonus respectively to the Great Grey and the Red-backed Shrikes; and there are few
persons, I imagine, but will agree that these birds are very different both in form and coloration, the
little Red-backed Shrike, E . collurio, with its salmon-coloured breast and brown-plumaged female, being
essentially different from the white-breasted L . excubitor. Unfortunately for the systematist, the present
bird is directly intermediate between the two, both in structure and colouring, and really is almost as nearly
allied to the one as to the other, the grey tint of its upper surface being precisely similar to that of Lanius,
and its rose-tinted breast to the salmon-hued Enneoctonus, in which genus it has been placed by Mr. Blyth.
On comparing the wings of L . minor with the same organs in L . excubitor, we find them to be much longer,
although the body o f the bird is smaller; in this respect, as well as in the narrower form of the tail-feathers,
it assimilates to E . collurio; but differs from it in having a well-developed white speculum at the base of
the primaries.
The history of the Rose-breasted Shrike, as far as regards its capture in Britain, is contained in the
followingpassages from Mr. Rodd’s paper on the subject in the ‘ Journal o f the Royal Institution o f Cornwall.’
“ There is a probability of our being able to add another European species of ‘ Shrike,’ or ‘ Butcherbird,’
to our list o f British Birds, and the avifauna of Cornwall—although the occurrence of the individual, and
as far as I can learn, the only example yet found in Britain took place in the year 1851, at Scilly, and is
recorded in the ‘ Zoologist ’ for that year. I received the bird in the flesh, and had it preserved by Mr. Vingoe.
I t proved on dissection to be a female. On comparing it with a male specimen of the Lamia excubitor,
there were several points of difference—in size, length of tail, in the form and character of the black streak
through and behind the eye, together with a remarkable variation in the structure and form o f the bill. I
labelled it, however, as the • Female Great Grey Shrike but subsequent observations induced me to doubt
the identity of the two birds. Soon afterwards I met Mr. Gould at Tregothnan, and called his attention to
the subject; and as he was about to prepare his Plates o f the Shrikes for his work on the Birds of Great
Britain, he requested me to submit the bird to his inspection, which I accordingly did on his return to
London ; and 111 a few days I received the following remark from him : ‘ yonr Shrike is the Lanius minor,
the first instance of its occurrence in the British Isles, as far as I know.’ It may be as well to note here
that my specimen has not the black frontal band ; but Temminck says that the young birds are without i t;
and probably my bird may be young, with its plumage much worn.”
The natural home of this delicately coloured species is in the sunny regions of the Archipelago, Turkey,
Greece, Italy, Spain, and many parts of the south of France.
It is seldom found in Germany, and still more rarely in Holland. I have seen examples from the Crimea ;
and Mr. Tristram observed it in southern Palestine, which may be its most eastern ran g e ; for as yet it has
not been fouud in India. Dr. Bree says that, according to Degland, the Rose-breasted Shrike builds its
nest of odoriferous herbs; and M. Gerbe states that in Provence the outside is always constructed of the
stalks, in more or less abundance, of the wild Amarantkus. The eggs are five or six in number, which are
generally of a greenish hue, but sometimes grey or bluish, spotted with violet, grey, and olive.