Stilt- or Long,-leg,g,ed Plover.
Charadrius himantopus, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p.. 255.
r— autumnalis, Hasselq. Iter Palaest., p. 253..
Himantopus melanopterus, Temm. Man. d’Orn., 2nd edit., tom. ii. p. 528, and tom. iv. p. 350.
— rufipes, Bechst. Naturg. Deutschl., tom. iv. p. 446, tab. 25. fig. ].
-------------- Plinii, Flem. Hist, of Brit. Anim., p. 112.
-------------- atropterus, Meyer, Taschenb. Deutscb! Yog., p. 315.
-------------- candidus, Bonn. Ency. Meth., Orn., part i. p^ 24, p ! 5. fig. 4.
— albicollis, Vieill. Faun. Frang., p. 269, tab. 117. fig. 2.
Hypsibates himantopus, Nitsch, in Ersch und Gruber, Encycl., tom. xvi. p. 150.
How can I better commence the history of this singular bird than with the following quotation from the
‘ Natural History of Selborne,’ by the Rev. Gilbert White, a man whom we may regard as the father of
British ornithologists, and whose writings have inspired more young minds with a love of nature and o f our
native birds than any other observer ?
“ In the last week of last month ” (April, 1779), “ five of those most rare birds, too uncommon to have
obtained an English name, but known to naturalists by the terms of Himantopus, or Loripes, and Charadrius
himantopus, were shot upon the verge of Frinsham Pond, a large lake belonging to the Bishop of W inchester,
and lying between Wolmer Forest and the town of Farnham, in Surrey. . . . One o f these specimens I
procured, and found the length o f the legs so extraordinary that, a t first sight, one might have supposed the
shanks had been fastened on to impose on the credulity of the 'beholder: they are legs in caricatura. My
specimen, when drawn and stuffed with pepper, weighed only four ounces and a q u a rte r; yet the naked part
o f the thigh measured three inches and a half, and the legs four inches and a half. I t must be a matter of
great curiosity to see the Stilt-Plover move, to observe how it can wield such a length o f lever with such
feeble muscles as the thighs seem to be furnished with. At best, one should suspect it to be but a bad
walker; but what adds to the wonder is that it has no back toe,: Now without that steady propfto support
its steps, it must be liable, in speculation, to perpetual vacillations, and seldom able to preserve the true
centre of gravity. . . . The old name of Himantopus is taken from Pliny, and, by an awkward metaphor,
implies th at the legs are as slender and pliant as if cut out o f a thong of leather.” I can ^easily conceive
the delight and amazement of the good man a t a sight so novel and curious, having myself participated in
similar feelings on first meeting with a nearly allied species o f this remarkable form, while wandering, in
the wilds o f Au stralia; and well do I remember with what delight I watched the movements of a flock
which, after running gracefully along the margin o f the river Mokai, suddenly rose, turned, and flew back
by me with their long red legs streaming out behind.
Since Gilbert White wrote, solitary individuals and small companies of this species have now and
then visited the British Islands; such occurrences however, must, be regarded as purely accideutal. But
at only a short distance over the Channel (say, about 300 miles as the Crow flies), Long-legged Stilts may
be seen in the spring and summer o f every year, and no further off than Spain be found breeding in many places;
for there, as in Italy, Savoy, Greece, and Turkey, it is common. In France, Holland, and Germany it is
much less abundant, and, as with us, must be regarded as a mere wanderer; on the other hand, the avifaunas
o f India and Java comprise a bird of this form, so closely allied to the H. candidus as to be scarcely
separable from it, but which may prove to be the H. leucocephalus of Australia.
From the brief but interesting notes respecting this species contributed to ‘ The Ibis ’ by Lord Lilford,
the Rev. H. B. T ristram, Mr. Howard Saunders, and others, we learn :— that it is very abundant and breeds in
the marshes south of Seville; th at it is common in Malta in spring and autumn, numerous on the shores
o f Corfu and Epirus in March, April, and May, breeds in great numbers in the marshes near Spalatro, in
Dalmatia, and undoubtedly in T u rk ey ; th at i t resorts to the ditches of the oases in Northern Africa,
and breeds abundantly in the northern Sahara; that stragglers are occasionally seen in Upper Egypt,
small flocks found in the Delta and Faioum ; and that it is not unfrequent and breeds on a small marshy lake
near Jenin, in the centre o f Palestine, where it remains throughout the year.
O f the occurrence of this species in Scotland very few instances are on record, the first being mentioned
in Sir Robert Sibbald’s ‘ Scotia Ulustrata;’ in Ireland, according to Thompson, it is extremely r a r e ; in
England, Mr. Yarrell notes examples killed in Anglesea, Devonshire, Dorset, Hampshire, Lincolnshire, and
Norfolk: o f those killed in the last-mentioned county, a full account will be found in the second volume
of my friend Mr. Stevenson’s ‘ Birds o f Norfolk.’