EUDROMIAS MORINELLUS .
Dotterel.
Charadrius morinellus Linnæi et auctorum.
------------ Sibiricus, Gmelin, Syst. Nat. tom. i. p. 690.
----------— Tafaricus et Asiaticus, Pallas, Reis. vol. ii. pp. 714 et 715.
Eudromias morinellus, Boie, Gray, Blyth, &c.
Morinellus Sibiricus, Bonaparte.
I n the British M mk*«, and doubtless in all parts of the European continent, the Dotterel is strictly a
migrant, arriving in the spring as regularly as the Swallow, and as regularly wending its way back southwards
in August and September to winter, without doubt, in Northern Africa. It is daring its spring
passage, between the 15th of April and the 15th o f May, that the Dotterel may be looked for in England,
where it always evinces a decided preference for high open downs, extensive fallow fields, and the summits
o f mountains. The Mendip Hills in Somersetshire, the Chilton ridges in Berkshire, the.chalk hills of
Bedford, Hertford, and Cambridgeshires, and the Yorkshire wolds are among the many places that are
annually visited by these birds. In such localities they may be seen in small parties of three or four in
number, or in “ trip s ” o f ten o r twenty: they are now gradually passing to their breeding-grounds on the
hill-sides of Cumberland, the Grampians, and other elevated situations still further north. On the continent
o f Europe, the low country of Holland does n o t’offer them a congenial home, and hence they are seldom
seen th ere ; they do, however, as in England, regularly pass over Italy, France, and all parts of Germany.
The law, I believe, is that they proceed from south to north, and vice versa ; and thus those th at pass over
Frauce are en route to their summer home in Norway and Lapland, while those further east, in Turkey and the
Crimea, are ou their flight for the steppes of Russia and Western Siberia. In the autumn they as regularly
return, some to winter in North-eastern Africa, others in Asia Minor, Arabia, &c. The furthest point east,
from which I have received v tik e i.rim e * . According to the late Mr.Thompson, the Dotterel is
rare in Ireland, and in Nortf* dbtiMW*©» « :i never w m , If I had devoted years to the study o f this bird,
I could not have acquired more information respecting it than was communicated to M Ymrdl by my old
friend the late J . C. Heysham, Esq., o f Carlisle ; and I feel I should be wantMur m respect to the memory o f
this lover of nature were I not to transcribe the entire passage from Mr. YarreH’s ' History o f British Birds ’ :__
“ In the neighbourhood o f Carlisle,” says Mr. Heysham, “ D otterels seldom make their appearance before
the middle o f May, about which time they are seen in flocks which vary in number from five to fifteen, and
almost invariably resort to heaths, barren pastures, fallow grounds, &;c., in open and exposed situations, where
they continue, if unmolested, from ten days to a fortnight, and then retire to the mountains in the vicinity of
the lakes to breed. Their most favourite breeding-haunts are always near to o r on the summits o f the
highest mountains, particularly those that are densely covered with the woolly Fringe-moss ( Trichostomum
laamgtmmm, Hedw.), which, indeed, grows more or less profusely on nearly all the most elevated parts
o f this Alptnc district. In these lonely places they constantly reside the whole o f the breeding-season, a
considerable part o f * • v time enveloped in clouds, and almost daily drenched with rain or the wetting mists
so extremely prevalent in these dreary regions ; and there can be little doubt that it is owing to this
peculiar feature in their eeotMMfty that they have remained so long in obscurity during the period o f incubation.
The Dotterel is by no means a cobtanr bird a t this time, as a few pairs usually associate together, and live,
to all appearance, in the greatest harmony. They do not make any nest, but deposit their eggs, which
seldom exceed three in number, in a smalt cavity on dry grouud, covered with vegetation, and generally near a
moderate-sized stone or fragment o f rock, in early seasons old females will occasionally begin to lay their eggs
about the 20th o f May; but the greater part seldom commence before the first or second week in June.
..................The males assist the females in incubation of their eggs. How long incubation continues I
have been unable to ascertain, but I am inclined in think that it rarely lasts longer than eighteen or twenty days.
A week o r two previous to their departure, they congregate in flocks, and continue together until they
finally leave this country, which takes place sometimes daring the latter part o f A ugust, at others not before
the beginning o f September. A few birds are m doubt seen after this period, but they are either late broods
o r birds th at are returning from more northern teiitodes....................Having spent a considerable portion of
several days on Robinson, in company with a very able assistant, searching for the eggs o f the Dotterel, I
had, o f course, ample opportunities o f observing their manners. On the 3 rd o f July we found three o r four
pairs near the most elevated p art o f this mountain ; and on all our visits thither, whether early in the morning
o r late in the afternoon, the greater part were always seen near the same place, sitting on the ground.