TOTANUS OCHROPUS.
Green Sandpiper.
Tringa ochropus, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 250.
Aldrovandi, Ray, Syn., p. 108, A 7, 8.
glareola, Markw. in Trans. Linn. Soc., vol. i. p. 128, and vol. ii. p. 325.
Totanus ochropus, Temm. Man. d’Om., p. 420.
, rivalis, et leucourus, Brehm, Handb. Naturg. aller Vog. Deutschl., pp. 641, 642, 643.
Helodromos ochropus, Bonap. Compt. Rend, de l’Acad. des Sci, tom. 43, seances des 15 et 22 Sept. 1856.
Helodromas ochropus, A. Newton, in Proc. Zool. Soc. 1863, p. 529.
T hose persons who are in the habit of wandering over meads and grassy lands, with their little round
ponds for the watering o f cattle, or by the sides of brooks, rivulets, and reservoirs, must have frequently
risen a bird about the size of a Snipe, conspicuous for its strong and rapid flight, and for the loud
whistling cry it emits as it mounts in the air. This is the Green Sandpiper—a bird which frequents the
smallest water-holes as well as the margins of streams. In such situations this elegantly formed bird trips
lightly over the oozy mud or along the edge of the water in search of insects and their larvae. Although
it is sometimes seen both in winter and summer, it is most frequently met with during its spring and
autumnal migrations; a t other periods it is either breeding in countries further north, or wintering
in more southern latitudes. That it never stays and breeds with us is almost certain, notwithstanding the
assertion of some ornithologists to the contrary. Wide-spread, indeed, is it in the countries o f the Old
World, since it is very generally distributed over the whole o f Europe, Africa, India, China, and Japan.
I have received specimens from Borneo; and it doubtless visits the neighbouring islands of Sumatra
and Java, as it certainly does St. Helena in the South Atlantic.
That exceptions to general rules exist in the habits of birds as well as in all other animals, is shown
in many instances; but, I presume, it never entered the brain o f the most imaginative ornithologist that
a Sandpiper laid its eggs high up in a tree, until the fact was made known by the foresters and savans
o f Scandinavia and Pomerania; and if positive and authentic evidence of the truth o f their statements had
not been produced, such an assertion would not have been believed. I t is only as yesterday that its
anomalous habit o f depositing its eggs on the branches o f trees has become known. The Peewit resorts
for the purpose o f nidification to open commons and waste lands, the Ruff, the Redshank and the Wood-
Sandpiper to the marsh, the Summer Snipe to the sedgy banks of streams, and the Dunlin to the upland
moors; the Green Sandpiper, on the other hand, searches for the deserted nest of a Pigeon, a Jay, a
Thrush, or the drey of a Squirrel, in which to deposit its very beautiful eggs. This fact may take some of.
my readers by surprise; but all I have said is confirmed in a paper on the subject, read by Mr. Alfred Newton
at the meeting o f the Zoological Society o f London held on the 8th of December 1863, of which the following
are the more important p a s s a g e s • -
“ In the ‘ Journal fur Ornithologie ’ for 1855, Herr Wiese, writing on the Ornithology o f Pomerania,
especially in the district o f Coslin, says that he had first heard from an old sportsman, who knew the
peculiarities o f all the forest-animals, th at the Totanus ochropus nested in old Thrushes’ nests, which
information, he remarks, ‘ I naturally did not believe;’ but he states th at some years after, in 1845, he
obtained from the same man four fine eggs o f a bird o f this species, which for many years had been wont to
nestle in an old beech tree. Still doubtful on the subject, the following spring he himself found a nest of
the bird on a pine which had a fork about five-and-twenty or thirty feet high. ‘ Joyfully,’ he says, ‘ I climbed
the tree, and found in th at fork four eggs on a simple bed of old moss.’ In the spring of 1853 he again
obtained four eggs of the same species; and on the 25th of May 1854 he found four others placed in the
old nest o f a Song-Thrush, out o f which the shed buds o f the beech had not so much as been removed.
“ In the ‘ Naumannia ’ for 1856, in an account o f an excursion in Western Pomerania, D r. Altum states that
Totanus ochropus returns annually to its old nesting-places, these being Misseltoe-Thrushes’ nests, whose
remains were still to be seen, often some hundred yards distant from the nearest pool, and their height
fifteen feet o r more from the ground. The same journal for 1857 contains a valuable series o f observations
on the birds of the same district by Herr W. Hintz, in which the author says that on the 6th o f May, 1855,
he found three eggs of this bird on an ‘ Else ’ [quaere, Pyrus domestica ?] in an old Dove’s nest, as he thinks,
though he states it might have been that o f a Jay. Formerly, he proceeds to remark, he had only observed
this Sandpiper to use old nests of Turdus musicus, excepting once, when he found some young -ones, only a
few days old, hard by a river-bank on a layer o f pine-needles on an ‘ Else ’-stub. * * *