Alania spinoletta, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 288.
Anthus spinoletta, Bonap. Syn. Birds of Am., p. 90.
— aquaticus, Bechst. Naturg. Deutschl., tom. iii. p.. 745.
montanus, Koch, Baier. Zool., tom. i. p. 172 ?
T he Pipits with vinous-coloured breasts which have for some years past been killed in England, have been
a sad puzzle to our ornithologists—some being of opinion that they are a variety of Antlius obscurus, and others
that they pertain to a distinct species; more than one regard them as identical with the Anthus ludovicianus
of America, while others believe them to be examples of the A. spinoletta of Linnaeus (A. aquaticus of Tem-
minck). In this latter opinion I coincide; hence it becomes necessary that I should give a figure of the bird,
and all the information I can respecting it. On the 25th of January 1860, Mr. Murray A. Matthews, of
Merton College, Oxford, wrote to me as follows :—“ Are there two species of Rock-Pipit in this country,
of which one has hitherto remained unnoticed ? or is the continental Rock-Pipit (A. aquaticus, Temm.)
merely a permanent variety of the ordinarily olive-coloured Pipit (A. obscurus) met with with us ? I
possess a Rock-Pipit shot at Torquay, which appears to me to he slightly larger than the bird commonly
seen, and of a rich vinous tint on the breast. I thought at first this might be a very old bird, in an advanced
state of plumage, and was careful therefore to shoot, last spring, duriug the breeding-season (when the birds
would certainly be in their finest state), a number of specimens for comparison ; but none of those I then
shot bore any resemblance in the tint of their plumage to my Torquay specimen. The ordinary Rock-
Pipit, so abundant on our coasts, is known at once by its sombre olive-green colouring, and by the well-
defined gorget of spots on its throat. In the Torquay specimen there is hardly any trace of this gorget-
marking.”
In December 1864, the Messrs. Pratt, of Brighton, sent for my inspection two vinous-hreasted
birds, one of which, killed near Worthing, is represented in the front figure of my Plate. Some time
after this, Mr. Edward T. Booth wrote to Mr. Bond Mr. Swaysland has seen ten of these birds
this season ; of that number he obtained eight one morning, and two more in three or four mornings
afterwards, between the Hth and 20th of March 1867, at a small salt-pool just inside the sea-beach at
Portslade, near Brighton. Some of them were seen crossing the sea, and pitching on the grass near the
pool. They were by no means shy, but would not permit a nearer approach than about thirty or forty yards.
A great number of other Pipits were crossing at the same time, all of which appeared to be the Meadow-
Pipit.” Two of these specimens having been sent to Mr. Bond, that gentleman allowed me to inspect
them, and I found they were precisely similar to the Anthus spinoletta of the Continent: one had
the breast strongly suffused with vinous; in the other this tint was not so extensive, the flanks being
spotted with brown, from which we may infer that it was a younger bird, or one beginning to assume its
summer plumage; for it is believed that the vinous tint is a characteristic of the A . spinoletta at that season ;
and it seems to me that these birds must be distinct from A . obscurus, because we do know that the examples
of the latter species so generally distributed over this country retain the spotted plumage throughout the
year. I suspect that most of the Pipits of the northern hemisphere differ in the same manner as the
Wagtails, and that, if we admit Motacilla Yarrelli to be distinct from M. alba, and Budytes Rayi from
B . Jlava, we must also regard the present bird, A. spinoletta, as distinct from A. obscurus.
According to Bailly, the A. spinoletta passes much of its time and breeds on the mountains—a habit so
different from that of A. obscurus that his account, extracted from .his ‘ Ornithologie de la Savoie,’ tends
greatly to prove that it is a distinct species.
“ This bird is common, at all seasons of the year, both in Switzerland and in Savoy. During winter it frequents
the wet meadows, the marshes, and the unfrozen springs of the lower portions of both those
countries, and about the end of March or beginning of April ascends the mountains and resorts to the most
sterile plateaux, fields, heaths, and stony places in the neighbourhood of water, often above the forest-region.
It generally proceeds in small companies, and ascends a short distance every day as the snows disappear
from its favourite breeding-places. It pairs at the beginning of May; and the united couples immediately
begin the construction of their nests. These are to be found on all parts of the mountains, even near to the
line of perpetual congelation—sometimes in declivities, at others on the plateaux, but nearly always in
the most arid and desert places. They are placed on the ground, under stones, sometimes in clefts in the
rock, but oftener in the grass, beneath the bilberry, Rhododendron ferrugineum, whortleberry, or some creep