OTIS TARDA, Linn.
Great Bustard.
Otis tarda, Linn. Syst. Nat.,'tom. i. p. 264.
I co n s id e r it would not add to the interest o f my account of the Bustard, were I to give a detailed list
o f the places and times o f its capture in this country. In the convenient handbooks o f Selby and
Yarrell, this kind of information may be found. I shall therefore only mention some of the later
occurrences o f this noble bird, which I have selected as a vignette for the cover of the present work.
The extensive warrens and open parts o f Norfolk and Suffolk, the heaths about Newmarket in Cambridgeshire,
the plains around Salisbury and Stonehenge and other parts of Wiltshire, the downs of Berkshire,
Hampshire, and Sussex, and the Yorkshire wolds are among the localities where it formerly existed and
doubtless b red ; but, like the Great Auk, which has not been seen alive since 1844, it is now extirpated
from our island. Dr. Fleming observes that it seems to have been found in Scotland in the days of H ector
Boethius, but had become rare in the time of Sir Robert Sibbald. In Ireland it appears never to have been
more than an accidental visitor.
Gilbert White, in his Diary, mentions, under the date of Nov. 17, 1782, “ Being at a lone farm-house on
the downs between Whorwell and Winchester, the c arter told me that, about twelve years before, he had seen
a flock of eighteen Bustards at one time on th at farm.” In a note lately addressed to the Rev. John
Fountaine by Henry Dugmore, Esq., and kindly placed in my hands by that gentleman, he says :—“ I cannot
remember the year I was riding with Mr. Hamond when I saw a flock of twenty-seven Bustards rise from
Westacre field, and wheel round us within 80 or 100 y ard s; but I should say it was as far back as 1820.”
Frederick J . Nash, Esq., o f Bishop’s Stortford, several times told Mr. Yarrell “ that when he was a young
man, and then taking the field as a sportsman, he once saw nine flights o f Bustards in one day, not far from
Thetford, in Norfolk. Some of these werevprobably seen more than once; but a t th at time, about the
beginning of the present century, the country between Thetford and Brandon, and thence southward to Milden-
hall, was considered to be the head-quarters of the Great Bustard in the counties of Norfolk and Suffolk.”
It is evident, then, that until within the last fifty years,-¿the Bustard was very far from being killed off, and
with ordinary care and protection it 'might have been preserved until the present day. Whatever interest
the landed proprietors may have taken, the small fanner and the poacher made quick work of shooting down
the remnant o f this fine specie^; The males appear to have been the first to disappear in all parts of the
country, a few females lingering behind until they, too, encountered that fate which awaits so many of the
larger animals.
Henry Stevenson, Esq., of Norwich, informs me that “ in 1833 three nests were found on Massingham Heath,
near Swaffham. ^Together they contained five eggs, all of which were taken under the impression that no
cocks were then existing, and that therefore the eggs would not be fertile. From this time until 1838 hen
birds continued to drop eggs a t random, forming no nest. The last nest found in Suffolk, according to
Mr. Newton, was discovered on the borders of Thetford W arren.”
I shall now enumerate some instances of the occurrence o f the Bustard since our indigenous birds ceased
to exist—stragglers which have now and then flown across from the Continent, like other accidental visitors,
and which, like the Sandgrouse, received no other welcome than that o f being .shot that their skins might
adorn some public museum or private collection.
A female, killed near the Lizard, in March 1843, is now in the possession of E . H. Rodd, E s q .; another
specimen was shot near St. Austell in 1854.
In 1850 a specimen, said to be a female, was killed a t Lydd, in Romney Marsh ; in D ecember 1851, another
was shot in a marshy piece of ground in the parish of Bratton Clovelly, North Devon. Mr. Gatcombe informs
me that the stomach o f this bird, which he examined, “ contained a quantity of turnip-leaves and a number of
flat stones,” some of which were about the size of a sixpence. The bird is now in the possession o f J . G. Newton,
Esq., of Millaton Brides tow, North Devon.”
In March 1854 a female was killed at Leeshill, in Cumberland.
In January 1856 one was caught by a boy near Hungerford, and now graces the collection of M. H. Marsh,
Esq., M.P. for Salisbury.
In 1859 a young male was killed near Romney, in Kent, by Mr. Chittenden; it is now in the possession of
George Simmons, Esq., of East Peckham.
In February 1861 a specimen, the sex of which was not stated, was killed near York.
The middle countries of Europe appear to be the centre of the area over which the range of the Great.