SQUATAROLA HELVETICA.
Grey Plover«
Tringa squatarola, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 66.
Helvetica, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 250.
varia, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 252.
Charadrius hypomelas, Pall. Reise, tom. iii. p. 699.
pardela, Pall. Zoog. Rosso-Asiat., tom. ii. p. 142.
-------------- squatarola, Naum. Vog. Deutschi., 1838, tom. ix. p. 249, tab. 178.
Vanellus melanogaster, Bechst. Naturg. Deutschi., tom. iv. p. 356.
— Helveticas, Bonn, et Vieill. Ency. Meth., Orn., part iii. p. 1077.
----------griseus, Jenyns, Man. Brit. Vert. Anim., p. 181.
squatarola, Sieb., Temm. et Schleg. Faun. Jap., Aves, p. 106.
Squatarola Helvetica, Brehm, Vög. Deutschi., p. 554.
grisea, Leach, Syst. Cat. of Indig. Mamm. and Birds in Brit. Mus., p. 29.
-----------cinerea, Flem. Hist, of Brit. Anim , p. 1 1 1 .
------------- varia, Boie, Isis, 1822, p. 558.
Pluvialis squatarola, Macgill. Man. of Nat. Hist., Orn., vol. ii. p. 48.
A g r ea t e r transformation in the garb of birds does not exist than occurs in the vernal and autumnal
plumage o f this bird. The accompanying illustrations will show this better than I can explain it in writing.
I t is true that a change of the same kind and almost to the same extent occurs in the Golden Plover; but
the transformations o f the Grey are still more remarkable, since it is dressed in a third state of plumage
during the first autumn of its existence, a t which time it is speckled with black and yellow on the head,
breast, back, and upper surface of the tail-feathers. In this yellow stage the young might be supposed by
the casual observer to be Golden Plovers; but such is not the c a se ; and were any positive evidence
required on the subject, the presence of a small hind toe on the foot would convince the most sceptical.
I t is in spring that the Grey Plover, with its fine black breast, passes over the eastern parts of England
en route for countries further north, on its return from which it again makes our island its resting-place,
some few remaining here for a winter residence. To say that its summer home and its eggs have never
been found by any British ornithologist, however far north he may have travelled, would be about the
t ru th ; and it is but lately that we have been informed o f the discovery o f the eggs by the Russian
naturalist, Von MiddendorfF. That the individuals which visit us proceed to very high latitudes for the
purpose of breeding, there can be no d oubt; and we are yearly in hopes o f receiving additional information
on the subject. Now, what I have said o f the bird’s two visits annually to England is to a great extent
equally descriptive o f its occurrence in central Europe and, I believe, in India, China, and the temperate
portion o f America. To show how widely the bird is dispersed over the face of the globe, I may mention
that it is found as far south as Australia, and in almost the extreme south o f Africa; for we learn from
Mr. J . H. Gurney that it occcurs a t Port N a ta l; and not only does it inhabit the northern portions of
America, but, Mr. Salvin informs me, it has been discovered near to, if it does not overstep, the Isthmus
of Panama. In all these southern countries it is seen in its winter dress only; it is in the north, and
the north alone, that we meet with the bird in its black-breasted costume.
As the Grey Plover, during its visits to our islands, is perhaps more numerous in Norfolk than elsewhere,
I think it only ju st to the historian of the birds o f th at county to insert here what he has written respecting it.
“ The Grey Plovers,” says Mr. Stevenson, “ though, as compared with the Golden Plover, at no time very
numerous, visit us regularly in autumn, and usually make their appearance on Breydon and other parts of
the coast about the first week in October. Mr. Dowell, however, states th at in August, 1852, he observed
several frequenting the ‘ freshes’ a t Blakeney which still retained their full summer plumage; and I have
occasionally seen young birds in September, as early as the 17th, which at that time exhibited, in their first
plumage, a great resemblance to the Golden Plover, for which, in this stage, I have no doubt they are
frequently mistaken. One of those in my own collection, killed on the 22nd o f September, 1853, has all
those parts o f the plumage which are usually white in the adult bird more or less tinged with straw-colour.
T he large size o f the bill, the presence o f the hind toe, and the long feathers under the wing being black
instead of white as in the Golden Plover, distinguish this species at any age.
“ A few are seen on Breydon Broad throughout the winter, but, as Mr. Frere informs me, not often as
many as twenty or thirty at a time. Mr. Dowell describes them as mostly seen in pairs, which, joined to