CEDICNEMUS CREPITANS.
Stone-Plover, or Thick-knee.
Charadrius cedicnemus, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom,, i. p. 255,
Otis cedicnemus, Lath. Ind. Orn., vol. ii. p. 661.
Fedoa cedicnemus, Leach, Syst. Cat. of Indig. Mamm. and Birds in Coll. Brit. Mus., p. 28.
CBdicnemus crepitans, Temm. Man. d’Om., 1815, p. 322.
(Edicnemus desertorum et CE. arenarius, Brehm, Vög. Deutschl., p. 539.
--------------griseus, Koch, Baier. Zool., vol. i. p. 266.
--------------indicus, Salvadori, Att. Soc. Ital. Sc. Nat., 1866, tom. viii
--------------Belloni, Flem. Hist, of Brit. Anim., p. 114.
T h e European Stone-Plover (o r Thick-kneed Bustard, as it is commonly called) is a bird o f considerable size,
and one which, in my opinion, is unusually interesting, its large lustrous eyes, long and well-proportioned legs,
and ample wings rendering it very graceful in appearance. It is a shy, wild creature, preferring the most
stony fields and chalky downs to alluvial flats and cultivated districts, is very locally distributed over
England, is not found in Scotland, and is extremely rare in Ireland. Here in England it is more often heard
than seen, and would rarely be detected did not its peculiar whistling note, which is most frequently
uttered in the night, betray its presence.
Its usual position in the daytime is in the centre of the largest fields o f the uplands (not unfrequently
among the thin crops o f turnips or the few cereals that struggle for existence in such localities), in warrens,
and in heaths. “According to the Hon. and Rev. W. Herbert, the Stone-Plover is found only on chalk or
on ploughed land where there is a chalk subsoil. Whether this be an invariable rule or not, I must leave
to others to determine; but it is a remarkable fact that in Middlesex, where there is but little chalk, the
Stone-Curlew is a very scarce bird.”
Some ornithologists have questioned whether this bird is a migrant, or if it be a stationary species in our
i s l a n d i t is certain, however, that, if a migratory movement to other countries takes place in autumn, a
certain number stay with us, and merely remove from one p art of the country to an o th er; a t least, such is the
inference I deduce from the notes I have received from various correspondents.
“ In Berkshire,” says Mr. Hewett, “ the Stone- o r Norfolk Plovers arrive in spring, and soon form nests
by scratching holes in the gro u n d ; they remain till September, when they leave.”
“ It is singular, but quite true,” says Mr. Rodd, “ that this species has never, to my knowledge, occurred
in Cornwall in the summer season ; a t that time the bird is entirely unknown to us, being neither heard nor
seen, although, year after year, specimens are procured in the depth o f winter. The migratory movement
of this bird is, no doubt, similar to that of others which come to us in the breeding-season, and retire again
in the autumn and towards winter to the southern countries of Europe and the north of Africa. The only
way to account for the regular hyemal visits of the Great Plover to this district is, th at the extreme southern
latitude of the British Isles, which may be included between the Lizard Point and the Land’s End, is the
exact northern boundary o f the space occupied by the species in its winter-quarters.”
“A pair of Stone-Plovers,” says Mr. Philip Crowley, o f Alton, “ were shot a t Holybourne on New-Year’s
day. Their plumage was much brighter than one I have, which was killed in the summer. They generally
leave here about the middle or end o f September; a t least I have never seen or heard of any after that
time.”
“ A friend of mine,” writes Mr. W. Brodrick, o f Ilfracombe, Devon, “ shot a Norfolk Plover (I'Edicnemus
crepitans) on Braunton burrows, about ten miles from this place, on Monday last (Jan . 18th, 1858). I t was
a male bird in perfect plumage and condition. The stomach contained the remains of small beetles.”
In our islands it is almost in England alone that this bird is to be found. On the continent of Europe
its distribution is more g eneral; and it is equally numerous in North Africa, Palestine, Asia Minor, Persia,
and In d ia ; for I do not regard the species inhabiting the latter country as different: if I did, I must then
separate the bird I killed in Malta, as it varied from both English and Indian specimens, though so slightly that
it could only be regarded as a local variety. I might quote from twenty writers the accounts they have given
as the result o f their acquaintance with this bird in various parts o f North Africa, Malta, Spain, Portugal,
Italy, and France ; but I will end this part o f its history by a few lines from Temminck, who, speaking of
its distribution, curtly say s:— “Abundant in the middle o f France, in Italy, Sardinia, the Archipelago, and
Turkey; occasionally in Germany, and very seldom met with in Holland.”
The late Mr. Salmon, in his notice o f the arrival o f m igratory birds in the neighbourhood of Thetford, in