FIELDFARE. 



quents evergreens and thick plantations ; but, unlike its 

 congeners, it has frequently been known to roost on the 

 ground among fern, heath, or furze, on bushy commons. 



This bird is well known in Sweden, Russia, and Siberia, 

 where it is found only in summer : in Poland, Prussia, and 

 Austria, it remains the whole year ; but in France, and the 

 southern countries of Europe, it is a winter visitor, extend- 

 ing its migration, in that season only, as before stated. 



The point of the beak is black ; the base of the upper 

 mandible dark brown, the base of the lower mandible pale 

 yellow brown; the space between the beak and the eye 

 black ; the irides hazel brown ; the upper part of the head 

 ash grey, spotted with dark brown ; the neck, ear-coverts, 

 upper part of the back, rump, and upper tail-coverts, ash 

 grey ; the back, wings, and wing-coverts, rich hazel brown ; 

 greater wing-coverts edged with grey ; wing-primaries dark 

 slate grey, the outer edges and tips lighter grey, the shafts 

 black : upper surface of tail-feathers nearly black ; the tail in 

 form slightly forked : chin and throat golden amber, streaked 

 longitudinally with black ; the breast reddish brown, spot- 

 ted with black : the belly, flanks, and under tail-coverts, 

 white ; the two latter spotted with greyish brown and dark 

 brown : under wing-coverts white ; under surface of wing- 

 primaries and of the tail-feathers dark slaty grey : legs and 

 toes dark brown ; claws black. 



The whole length of the Fieldfare is full ten inches : the 

 length of the wing from the carpal joint, five inches and 

 five-eighths ; the first wing-feather very short ; the second 

 a little longer than the fifth ; the third and fourth feathers 

 equal in length, and the longest in the wing. 



The female has the beak darker brown ; the head more 

 clouded with brown ; the colour of the back less pure, and 

 the legs of a paler brown. 



p 2 



