J.GouliLlcJL C.Dichter cleL.
STREPS ILAS INTERPRES.
Turnstone.
Trmga interpret, -Lin». Faun. Suec., p. 68.
mormella, Lirm Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 249.
Strepsilas interpret, 111. Prod. Syst. Mamm. et Av., p. 263.
~ -----;— collarh, Tetntn. Man. d’Orn., 1st edit, p, 349.
Mormella collar**, Meyer, Vög. Liv- und Esthl., p. 210.
Charadrius cinclus. Pall. Zoo«;. Ross.-Asiat., tom. ii. p. 148.
Cinclus interpret, 6 . R. Gray, Gen. of Birds, vol. iii. p. 549, Cinclus, sp. 1.
— morinelba, G . R. Gray, List of Gen. of Birds, 1841, p. 87.
Strepsilas boreaik. Brehm, Vög. Deutschi., p. 559.
— ----— littoraü*, Brehm, ib., p. 660.
T he Turnstone is found not only in the British Islands hut in. almost every part of the globe,— in the
Old World from Norway to the ('ape o f Good Hope, from China to Capes Leuwin and Howe in Australia,
and even still further south (for I found it in all the parts of Tasmania I visited); in the New World
from Hudson’s Bay to Florida and Mexico. Mr. Darwin obtained specimens in the Galapagos archipelago,
on the coast o f Peru, and, according to Yarrell, in the Straits of Magellan ; it is also found in the Moluccas
and, doubtless, in all the other islands of the New Guinea group in the Pacific, as it certainly is in Madeira
and Teneriffe in the Atlantic. Although so great a wanderer, it is nowhere very abundant; and wherever
it is met with, it is singly, in pairs, or in small companies of not more than six, eight, or a dozen. Its chief
breeding-quarters are doubtless the high northern regions; but some deposit their eggs, as we knowj on the
western coast of Norway.
The situations to which the Turnstone is more especially partial are low islands, the strands of the seashore,
and the borders of inland waters contiguous to the ocean. In its disposition it is more tame than
wary; and its actions and economy arc us curio«*» »» its plumage is chaste and beautiful. Those who may
wish to see a living example have twdjf & v»-n the Menagerie of the Zoological Society in the Regent’s
Park, where they will find a dwBWrtK^ed individual living in perfect harmony with other birds, and in as
beautiful a condition as if in a s&Me of nature.
The usual food o f the Tarewtone consists of marine insects and their larvae, worms, and crustaceans, for
procuring which its peculiarly constructed bill is admirably adapted. On the beach the progress of a small
troop o f Turnstones may be readily traced by the stones, shells, and clods o f earth they have turned over
in their course. At the base o f the upper mandible is a small fieshy sheath or fold of. skin, the purpose
o f which is unknown. I t has often recalled to my recollection the C/iionis, to which bird the Turnstone
seems to me to offer a slight alliance. As this fold shrivels up, becomes hard, and is not apparent after
death, it must be looked for in the living bird ;- it is, I trust, rendered sufficiently clear in the accompanying
illustration. I am uncertain w hether the chestnut-red plumage in which I have figured this interesting bird,
is or is not a livery which once assumed is never again thrown off; in winter we mostly meet with the bird
in the dark costume represented in the reduced figure on the opposite P la te ; these, however, may be
young birds o f th e y e a r; it was in this state that the individuals T observed in Tasmania were mostly seen.
Mr. Stevenson, in his notes on the Birds of Norfolk, states that the Turnstone visits that county regularly,
though not in large numbers, arriving in August, remaining dirring tlie winter, and leaving again in spring
for the breeding-grounds. He has met with small flocks in the scamps at Hunstanton as late as the 13th
o r 14th of June, and has no doubt th at some few remain all the year round, but as yet has no evidence of
their breeding in that neighbourhood. Mr. Rodd says it is common on the flat beaches and the Marazion
sands in Cornwall during the spring and autumn migrations; and Mr. J . Edmund Hartiug tells me that,
after spending a week in looking for the Turnstone along the Northumberland coast and on the Fame
Islands, he, on the 15th o f May fell in with a small flock o f eight near Beadnel, and succeeded
in killing two. This gentleman is of opinion that the bird still breeds on the Farne Islands; bat this
requires confirmation, although he state* that, during a risit to North Sunderland in 1863, he purchased
from a fisherman some eggs taken on the islands the previous year, among which he discovered one he
believed to be a Turnstone’s.
Mr. Hewitson’s account o f the nesting o f this bird, as seen by him in Norway, is so interesting that I
cannot refrain from transcribing i t :—
“ I have never heard of an instance o f the Turnstone breeding upon the British islands, although led to
expect it from having a t various times, seen several o f the birds upon the Northumberland coast and also