HERODIAS ALBA.
Great White Egret or White Heron.
Ardea alba, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 59.
egretta, Temm. Man. d’Orn. (1815), p. 367.
egrettoides, S. G. Gmel. Reise, tom. ii. p. 193, tab. 24.
modesta, J . E. Gray, Zool. Misc., p. 19.
—— Jlavirostris, Wagl. (Jerdon).
Erodius Victoria, Macgill. Man. Nat. Hist., Orn. vol. ii. p. 131.
albus, Macgill. ib. vol. ii. p. 134.
Herodias Candida, Brehm, Vog. Deutschl., p. 584.
----------- egretta, Boie, Isis, 1822, p. 559.
——------syrmatophorus, Gould, Birds of Australia, vol. vi. pi. 56.
Egretta alba, Swains. Class, of Birds, vol. ii. p. 354.
T h e r e can be no doubt th at tbe Herodias alba has ju st claims to a place in the avifauna of the British
Islands. Willughby and Latham both regarded it in this lig h t; and more recent writers, from Yarrell to
Mr. Stevenson, have recorded instances o f its occurrence in various parts of our country. Sir William Jardine
states that during the winter of 1840-41 several White Herons were killed both in England and Scotland,
and mentions that one was seen several times upon the shores o f the Solway on the English side, above Port
Carlisle; and Mr. Harting, in his ‘ Handbook of British Birds,’ enumerates nearly twenty instances o f its
capture in other localities.
As regards the habits and economy of the bird, there has o f course been but little opportunity for becoming
acquainted with them in this country, the individuals that stray here from the neighbouring continent being
usually permitted but a brief sojourn, its attractive appearance soon causing it to become a victim to the
gunner, and to be added to the rarities o f some local museum or private collection.
Ornithologists are still divided in opinion as to the range of the Herodias alba, whether it be universally
dispersed, or if it be confined to the older portion o f the globe. Some would restrict its limits to Europe,
Asia, and Africa, and separate tbe Australian and New-Zealand birds as distinct—a view which I formerly
entertained when I gave a figure o f the species in the sixth volume of my folio work on the birds o f Australia,
though I rescinded it in my Hand-book. As regards the individuals which have visited Britain, there
is no doubt that they were examples o f one and the same species, a species which frequents the whole of the
southern portions of Europe, Africa, from north to south, Asia Minor, India, and China. All Indian sportsmen
and collectors speak o f it as a bird o f great beauty and o f striking appearance, particularly just prior to
the breeding-season, when its plumes are in their highest state o f development.
The following brief notes have been kindly forwarded to me by my correspondents, to which I have
appended some passages which have from time to time been published respecting the Great Egret.
Mr. Rodd, of Penzance, informed me on the 21st o f November, 1870, that on one o f the Scilly Islands,
called Hedge-rock, there were frequently Common Herons, and that among them was seen a large
white bird of a similar size, that it had. been seen there more than once, and, after straying away for some time,
returned again to the same islet with the Common Herons ; as this individual was, so far as Mr. Rodd knew,
never shot, it must not be included among the birds of S cilly; for it may have been a Spoonbill, or a White
Stork.
. Charles Isham Strong, Esq., of Thorpe Hall, Peterborough,, wrote on the 14th of November, 1872, to
inform me that the Great White Heron in his collection was killed on ThorneyFen in Cambridgeshire (some
ten miles distant), by a small farmer, who wished to have it preserved for himself, but, not liking the expense,
sold it to a bird-stuffer a t Peterborough, who resold it to M r. Strong’s father. This specimen, which has the
ornamental plumes on the back, would appear to have been killed between the 1st o f May and the 14th of
July.
In Yarrell’s ‘ History o f British Birds ’ (vol. ii. p. 4 56) it is stated that Messrs. Sheppard and Whitear, in
their “ Catalogue o f the Norfolk and Suffolk Birds,” published in the fifteenth volume of the ‘ Transactions
o f the Linnean Society,’ say |S - “ On the 3rd o f October, 1834, in a walk on the banks of the river Stour,
we observed a large White Heron cross over from the Suffolk to the Essex side o f the river. It appeared
to be pure white, and to stand up rather taller than some Common Herons which were feeding not far off.
A similar bird was observed in the spring on the Oakley shores ; and subsequently to our observation, one
was seen on the banks of the river Orwell.” But the most valuable addition to our knowledge o f the