Waxen Chatterer.
Ampelis garrulus, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 297.
Bombycilla Bohemica, Briss. Ora., tom. v. p. 333.
Garrulus Bohemicus, Ray, Syn., p. 85, A.
Bombyciphora polioccelia, Meyer, Vog. Liev. und Esthl., p. 104.
Bombycivora garrula, Temm. Man. d’Orn., 2nd edit. p. 124.
Bombycilla garrula, Bonap. Am. Ora., vol. iii. pi. 16. fig. 2.
Parus bombycilla, Pall. Zoogr., tom. i. p. 548.
How lavishly has Nature bestowed beauty and ornament on the varied forms which people the world,
without restricting it to any particular class of animal life ! for whether we look to the mane o f the Lion, the
spotting of the Leopard, the gay colours of the fishes of the tropical seas, the brilliant hues of the generally
despised reptiles, or the showy markings o f the swallow-tailed Butterfly, we find it is everywhere
displayed. Such ornaments and beauty may possibly be given to please the opposite sex, for in most
instances it is bestowed upon the male aloné. That the lengthened plumes and the fine colours so often
occurring among birds can have no influence on their well-being is evident, since in some instances these
conspicuous features are merely seasonal, while in others they are borne throughout life. In their extn
youthful state, too, many birds are clothed in a dress of great beauty for the short period o f three o r four
days only; and even the eggs of many species are ornamented in an extraordinary degree. How charming
are all these beauties! How interesting are these variations! How constant are they in every species!
so constant, indeed, that the Kestrel which flies over the pyramids a t the present moment exhibits a
the spots and markings of the Kestrel embalmed three thousand years ago. The subject o f the present
memoir—the Waxen Chatterer—one o f the most singular and chastely plumaged birds of the British Islands
affords an illustration o f the foregoing remarks. Behold its elegant crest, its silken plumage, the ornamentation
o f its wings; the primaries fringed with yellow, and the secondaries tipped with wax-like appendages
o f the brightest scarlet. Few, I think, will assert that these are given for any specific purpose in the bird’s
economy. In the Ampelis garrulus, these particular features are given to both sexes; but in the allied
species they are bestowed upon the male alone. The form is strictly a northern o n e ; and the number of
species is limited to three, o f which one is peculiar to America, another to Japan, while the A . garrulus
appears to range over all the countries between the 40th and 70th degrees of latitude; for it is known to
inhabit Norway, Sweden, Germany, Bohemia, Russia, the Steppes o f Siberia, the Amoor, China, Japan,
America, from the Rocky Mountains to Canada, and, lastly, England, Scotland, and Ireland. Truly welcome
is it when it comes to our island, where its reception, I regret to say, is generally the reverse of friendly; for
as certain as a small flock appears, they are hunted down and shot to a bird. The very sight o f a Wax-wing
drives the collector m ad : he follows it from tree to tree, from hedgerow to hedgerow, from field to lawn
from the lawn to the garden, stumbling over everything in his path, until he has obtained the object of his
pursuit.
As I have before stated, the presence o f the Wax-wing in the British Islands is uncertain; and its coming
entirely depends on the nature of the season in the countries further north, where it doubtless remains as
long as a supply of its natural food is procurable and the degree of cold is not excessive; for on the approach
o f rigorous weather it flies before the cold blast, and seeks shelter and food in this and other countries lying
in similar latitudes. Notices out o f number o f its occurrence in our islands have from time to time appeared
in the various zoological and other periodicals, local lists, &c. In the works o f Selby and Yarrell we find it
stated that it has been seen in various places, from the Orkney and Shetland Islands to Sussex and Cornwall.
I believe, however, that it is more frequently met with in the midland counties than a t either o f those extremes.
In Ireland it occurs in about the same numbers as in England. If unmolested, it would doubtless
remain with us until the following spring, when it would be instinctively prompted to return to its northern
home. Until the year 1856, its breeding-place was unknown, its mode o f nidification merely guessed at, and
its eggs desiderata in every European cabinet. Thanks, however, to the Lapland researches of the late
Mr. John Wolley, we are now in possession of full particulars respecting these points in the bird’s history.
Its breeding-ground having been made known, others followed in Mr. Wolley’s footsteps, and even fresh
nesting-places have since been discovered. Mr. H. E. Dresser, to whom I am indebted for the loan of the
nest and young birds figured on the opposite Plate, also found it breeding on a small island near Uleá-
borg, in the Gulf of Bothnia. With the descriptions furnished by those gentlemen I shall close this portion
o f the history of this interesting bird.