LAPWING. 



LIMWOLJE. 



283 



CHARADRIIDjE. 



Vanellus vulgaris, Bechsteiu*. 



THE LAPWING, OR PEEWIT. 



Vanellus cristatus. 



Vanellus, Brmonf. — Bill shorter than the head, straight, slightly com- 

 pressed ; the points of both mandibles horny and hard. Nasal groove wide, 

 and reaching as far as the horny tip. Nostrils basal, linear, pierced in the 

 membrane of the nasal groove. Legs slender, with the lower part of the tibiic 

 naked. Tarsi reticulated behind, scntellated in front. Feet four-toed ; three 

 before, one behind, the anterior ones united at the base by a membrane ; hind 

 toe very short, articulated upon the tarsus. Wings large, tuberculated or 

 spurred in front of the carpal joint ; the first and second quill-feathers shorter 

 than the third and fourth, which are about equal, and the longest in the wing. 



The Lapwing, ov Peewit, is one of the best known among 

 our native birds; the first name being suggested by its peculiar 



* Ornithologisches Tasohenbuch, ii. p. 313 (1803). 



t Oniitliologie, v. p. 94 (1760). The name was formerly spelt Vcoinclfu!^, as 

 the diminutive of lanniis, a fan. See Cliarlctnn, ' Kxercitationes,' p. 11-3 (1077). 



