AC TJITIS BrrPOLElffCOS
ACTITIS HYPOLEUCOS.
Summer Snipe.
Tringa minor, Ray, Syn., p. 108, A. 6.
— hypoleucos, Liun. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 250.
—^-——leucoptera, PalL
Actitis hypoleucos, 111. Prodr. Syst. Mamm. et Av., p. 262.
Totanus hypoleucos, Teram. Man. d’Orn., 2nd edit. tom. i. p. 657, et tom. iv. p. 419.
Tringoides hypoleucos, Gray, Cat. of Gen. and Subgen. of Birds in Brit. Mus., p. 117.
Actites hjpolmcus, Bias. List of Birds of Europe, Engl, edit., p. 18.
Actitis empusa, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., p art xv. 1847, p. 222 ?
How mm h pleasure have they lost who have not seen this nimble and elegant species tripping over the
pebbly bottoms of our rivulets or the greensward fringing the river-banks, or witnessed how it imparts life
to the scene in the neighbourhood o f the glassy Highland lo ch ! For myself, I have always regarded it
with especial interest. Faithful as is the Swallow to the time o f its coming, and cheering as are the
associations connected with its visit, the arrival o f this bird, in the middle of April, gives an additional zest
to the anticipations o f a forthcoming summer. The trivial English name of Summer Snipe, by which this
species is so generally known, is singularly inappropriate; for it is in no way allied to the bird of sporting
celebrity, but belongs to the Sandpipers, a totally different family, o f which it is one o f the most pleasing
members. In its disposition it is meek, tame, and inoffensive. What the Pied Wagtail is to our lawns
and gardens, and the Lark to our fields, the Summer Snipe is to the neighbourhood of our rivers and
water-conrses; there it trips before us when we leisurely walk on their green turfy banks, or take a cast
for a trout among the gravel-beds of the stream ? and it is certain to be one of the party in a pic-nic on
the borders of some distant lake. In such situations it breeds; and here, if the proximity o f its nest
be invaded, it resorts to the usual artifice
rds and forwards across the stream for
the purpose of enticing us a wav (sVomi the r
•'»» the time to observe its slow, laboured,
and peculiar flight* performed .©&•, d o se to
th at i
: tips o f the wings appear to touch the
surface; now also is the time to observe its
ms on the ground, the upflirting of its toil, the elegance
with which it runs and leaps among and oi
h e large pebbles, and the general gracefulness o f its many
movements. The Summer Snipe is a river
lacustrine species, seldom visiting the sea-shore, and that
only prior to its departure to a warmer climate in September, when both the old birds and those which
have been bred in the British Islands quit our shores for Portugal and Spain, and gradually pass onward
to Africa. '
There is no p art o f the British Islands, not even the outer Hebrides, in which this bird is not a
denizen, or to which it is not a passing visitor, and so extensive is its range over the Old World that I
believe it to be universally distributed in every suitable locality; the only exception to this wide-spread
distribution being that it is not found in New Zealand and some of the Polynesian Islands—a t least, I
do not recollect to have seen examples from thence. It is certainly an inhabitant o f Lapland and all the
intervening countries to the Cape o f Good Hope, from Russia to Aden in Arabia, from Siberia to Cape Comorin
in India, and fro«» Kamtscbatka to China ; Japan, Malacca, Sumatra, Borneo, Java, New Guinea, Timor,
and Australia are also visited by this species. It is true that I have given the name o f Actitis empusa to
the Australian b ird ; but I now doubt its being distinct. How singular it is that a species so universally
distributed over the Old World should not be found in the New! yet such, I believe, is the case; for I
observe th at Dr. Baird does not include it in his recently published ‘ List of the Birds o f North America,’ its-
place in that country being supplied by a species of-the same form, so intimately allied to our bird in size
and structure that its habits and economy must be similar in every respect; but that it is specifically distinct
there is no d o u b t: the spotting of its breast has procured for it the appellation o f Actitis macularius.
“ T he Common Sandpiper,” says Mr. Selby, “ is a bird o f most lively habits, being continually in motion;
for, whether running along the shore or perched upon a stone, its tail is ever moving up and down, and it
has also a habit o f nodding the head by suddenly stretching out and contracting the neck. Its flight is
graceful, and is performed by a rapid motion o f the pinions, succeeded by an interval of rest, the wings at
the same time being considerably bent and forming an angle with the b o d y ; and in this manner it skims
with rapidity over the surface o f the water, not always flying in a straight line, but making occasional sweeps,
uttering at the same time its shrill and well-known whistle. It breeds upon the banks o f rivers ami lakes,
taking care to make its nest beyond the reach o f the usual floods. The nest is generally placed under a