m m & m m
RECURYIROSTRA AVOCETTA, Unn.
Avocet.
Recurvirostra avocetta, Linn. Faun. Suec., tom. i. p. 191.
— europcea, Duin.
— * fissipet, Brehrn.
—I—V 1 V- helehiy Brehm (Bonap.),
How much is it to be regretted that a bird so attractive in its general appearance, and so singular in its form
as the Avocet, should be nearly extirpated from our island!. yet such is unhappily the c a se ; for, although
it was formerly abundant, it is now very rarely to be met with. In all probability, it was never a stationary
species with us, but one which, following the almost universal law o f nature, was influenced by the seasons,
and migrated as regularly as the Summer Snipe and the Ruff.
^ p f c e p t m England, it now breeds in roost o f the temperate countries o f the northern parts o f the Old
World that are of a marshy ch aracter; and when the young have attained their full stature, which they do
early in the first autumn o f their existence,' they wing their way southwards to other countries, where
animal life, suitable to the well-being o f a bird furnished with such a delicately constructed bill, is still
rife. The upcurved form o f this organ, which gives so singular an appearance to the bird, is most
remarkable, being unsuited to probe the ground, like that o f the Snipe or Woodcock, o r to break the
shell o f ordinary-sized mollusks; the slightest frost, therefore, drives the Avocet before it to the oozy,
muddy flats of estuaries, bays, and similar situations, where it can patter about with its wide-webbed
feet, and gather small Crustaceans and sea-worms. Those who have seen a Stork, or a Crane take a
worm or frog by the tips o f its long mandibles, and, with an upward movement o f the head, drop it into its
throat, will have a good idea of the actions o f the Avocet when it has captured a small shrimp, a marine
insect, or any other object upon which it lives, and will at once perceive that, with such a peculiarly formed
beak,,it could not feed in any other manner. Those authors who Have had opportunities for observing the
bird in. a state o f nature assert that it constantly moves its head from side to side after the manner of the
Spoon-bill—a movement which is doubtless induced by the structure of the bill.
But, to return to the bird as jgp inhabitant of Britain, “ time was ” when the Avocet was a constant
summer visitant to Norfolk, Lincolnshire, some parts of Suffolk, the coasts o f Essex and Hampshire, and
many other low and marshy parts o f our island; in all these places it bred in small communities, and was as
abundant as the Redshank is on our marshes and sandy dunes at the present time ; but the gunner, in the
exercise o f his calling, has year by year gradually thinned their numbers by shooting them on their arrival,
or by visiting their breeding-grounds, when the p o o r birds, alarmed for the safety o f their yonng, fly round
and easily fall a. victim to his. destructive propensities. Most wantonly, indeed, has the Avocet been shot
down, with no Other object than the pretence that its feathers were suitable for making artificial flies, which
they are not, o r for the c h a n ^ o f sale in the London market as an article o f food—an excuse equally untenable.
Up to a late period, that is, to within ten years o f the time at which I am writing this brief history o f the
bird (March 1864), a few pairs still continued to visit some o f the localities above enumerated; but, alas !
even those few have now deserted us. In speaking thus precisely, I must not be understood to say th at the bird
is not to he met with at the present period in either o f the three k ingdoms; for occasional visitors still a rrive;
but their appearance is most irregular and uncertain, and the localities to which they resort are as varied
as those in which other rare birds are found; and thus an Avocet may this year be observed in Cornwall,
in Devonshire, Essex, o r Norfolk, and in the next it may stilt over the muddy margins o f the rivers
o f the midland and northern counties o f England, o r those of Scotland and Ireland. O f these accidental
visitations we find numerous notices in the ‘ Zoologist ’ and other works devoted to the “ occurrences of
rare b irds. One o f the last Avocet# observed was seen near Poole, in Dorsetshire, by James Salter, Esq.,
tawhour I am indebted for the following note respecting i t:—“ During the autumn o f 1850 ( I believe, in
the month of October) I was at a place called Tattenham, about a mile from the town of Poole. My route
W along a narrow causeway which separates an arm o f Poole Harbour on the one side, from a brackish
marsh on the other. When I noticed the bird, it was busying itself a t the edge o f a small stream which runs
through the marsh. I approached to w ith P le u yards o f i t ; it did not seem in the lea st degree alarmed at
my presence, but continued scooping a t the mud with its beak. In two or three minutes it rose and flew
off to the harbour, uttering a sharp cry. The bird was in fine plumage, and apparently in good health.”
On the continent o f Europe it is still abundant in the north of Holland, in Holstein,' and some o f the islands
in the Baltic. It also oceurs in Germany, France, Spain, Italy, and Turkey, and, a t the seasons'of migration,
crosses and recrosses the Mediterranean an#Black Sea to Africa and Asia Minor; it is even said to be found