BUBULCUS RUSSATUS.
Buff-backed Heron.
Ardea russata, Wagl. Syst. Av., Arden, sp. 12.
eequinoctialis, Mont. Trans. Linn. Soc., vol. ix. p. 197.
bubulcus, Savig. Descr. de l’Egypte, Zool., tom. i. p. 298, tab. 8. fig. 1.
Veranyi, Roux, Orn. Prov., tom. ii. p. 316.
Buphus russatus, Boie, Isis, 1826, p. 356.
Erodius russatus, Macgill. Man. of Orn., vol. ii. p. 135.
Egretta russata, Macgill. Hist, of Brit. Birds, vol. iv. p. 474.
Bubulcus ibis, Bonap. Tab. Syn. des Her., Compt. Rend, de l’Acad. Sci,, tom. xl. p. 722.
Herodias bubulcus, Allen, in Ibis, 1863, p. 32.
D ev o n sh ir e is the only English county that can claim this bird as forming-part of its avifauna ; and that
claim rests upon the occurrence o f the single specimen shot by Mr. F. Cornish, a t South Allington, in the
parish of Chivelstone, and presented by Mr. Nicholas Luscombe, o f Kingsbridge, to the celebrated Colonel
Montagu, by whom the circumstance was communicated to the Linnean Society on the 5th o f May, 1807,
and recorded in the ninth volume o f their ‘ Transactions,’ as above quoted.
“ This elegant little species o f H eron,” says Col. Montagu, “ which was shot in the southern promontory o f
Devon, very near the coast between the Start and the Prawl, in the latter end o f October 1805, had been for
several days in the same field, attending some cows and picking up the insects which were found in its
stomach. I t was by no means shy, and was fired a t a second time before it was secured.” This specimen
is still preserved in the British Museum.
Beyond the above meagre notice, nothing had been placed on record respecting this beautiful species in
any ornithological work; but, thanks to the labours of the modern observers who have communicated their
researches to ‘ The Ibis,’ I am able to furnish a number o f interesting details as to its habits, manners, See.
The native country of the Buff-backed Heron is Africa, where it is more or less abundant from north to
south, but is especially numerous in the basin o f the Nile ; it is also met with in certain parts o f Persia and
Asia Minor, and less frequently in Greece, Turkey, Dalmatia, Italy, Spain, and Portugal. In India and other
oriental countries, its place is occupied by an allied species, the Bubulcus coromandus^wxih which it has been
confounded, but which, says Dr. Jerdon, differs from the present bird by its longer tarsi, the more vivid hue
and greater extent of the golden yellow feathering, and the less denuded orbits ; and Mr. Swinhoe, who also
regards them as distinct, remarks :— “ The eastern bird can, even in its white plumage, be distinguished by
the greater length o f its bill, which is generally half an inch longer, and by its more naked tibiae. In the
summer plumage the distinctness is more marked. The African has the crown o f its head and its under
neck only buff-colour, tinged with a vinaceous h u e ; in the other the entire head, neck, and breast are
clothed with orange-coloured feathers, those o f the breast only having a slight vinaceous tinge ; the centre
o f the back is also orange, but the long loose dorsal plumes are light vinaceous pink. The specific term
russata has been applied by Temminck to the African b ird ; coromanda is an old name for the eastern one.”
In Egypt, the Buff-backed Heron frequents the banks o f the Nile, which, however, it often leaves to follow
the cattle and the ploughman, ju st as the Rooks and Gulls are wont to do in England. The Arabs, who
appear to know less of the Ibis than we do in Europe, affect to consider the present bird to be that species,
and frequently direct the attention o f travellers to it as the sacred bird.
I now proceed to give the observations of some o f the writers in ‘ The Ibis ’ alluded to above, and, in
justice to them, in their own words.
The Buff-backed Heron, says Mr. Taylor, is “ excessively numerous all through Egypt, and very tame
and familiar. I t especially affects the society of cattle. I have often seen it standing on the backs o f buffaloes
and cows.. From this propensity to fraternize with cattle, it is called ‘ Cow-Bird ’ by the English. I
never saw an example with the elongated buffy plumes on the back, which are considered to be characteristic
of the species. All that I met with had the entire plumage pure white, except the crown o f the head, which
was buff. I conclude from this that the elongated dorsal plumes are peculiar to the breeding-season, as I
cannot believe that the very numerous specimens which came under my observation were all in immature
plumage. This bird does duty on the Nile as the Ibis, being generally pointed out to travellers by dragomans,
See., as the real Ibis religiosa 'y— lbis, 1859, p. 50.
“ P erhaps the most conspicuous bird th at catches the eye o f the traveller in Egypt,” says Mr. Stafford