ANATOMY OF BIRDS
GEOGRAPHICAL DISTRIBUTION
MIGRATIONS OF BIRDS
CLASSIFICATION OF BIRDS
LIZARD-TAILED BIRD
AMERICAN TOOTHED-BIRDS
THE OSTRICHES
THE RHEAS
EMEUS AND CASSOWARIES
THE TINAMOUS
THE KIWIS
THE PENGUINS
LOONS AND GREBES
ALBATROSSES & PETRELS
STORK-LIKE BIRDS
GOOSE-LIKE BIRDS
FALCON-LIKE BIRDS
FOWL-LIKE BIRDS
CRANE-LIKE BIRDS
PLOVER-LIKE BIRDS
CUCKOO-LIKE BIRDS
THE ROLLER-LIKE BIRDS
SPARROW-LIKE BIRDS

     

   

Birds and Birding's Guide to:

Watching THE PLOVER-LIKE BIRDS

THE PLOVERS, SNIPES, AND IMMEDIATE ALLIES

The Dotterels

are another group of small Plovers but with no very strongly marked characters. The word itself is a diminutive of Dott, a bird that was so called from its alleged stupidity, and there is a very ancient tradition or fable that the common European Dotterel (Eudromias morinellus) when approached by the fowler stretched out a wing or leg as the former reached out an arm or leg, the bird becoming so interested in the imitation that it neglected its own safety and was taken in the net.

This no doubt arose from the fact that the bird, which is of a very tame and confiding disposition, has the habit of stretching out a wing and leg before it moves off.

It is a handsome, richly colored little bird about nine inches long, the upper parts being ash-brown, many of the feathers margined with rufous, the crown black, with a white band extending from the eye round the nape, while the throat is white, the upper breast ashy, succeeded by a white band on the lower throat, and the breast and flanks bright chestnut, and the abdomen black. Curiously enough the female is larger and more brightly colored than the male.

This species is a native of northern Europe and northern Asia, breeding mainly on the cold tundras above the limit of trees, and spending the winter in the Mediterranean countries and northern Africa. It was formerly abundant in the British Islands and a few may still nest in the Lake District, but it is now mainly a migrant there. It frequents especially the bare mountain sides and is one of the tamest of the Plovers.

 

 

 

previous bird species next bird species

 

Footer

Footer