

table Mihstaiice aii'l iii - ! 111 about e,|iial prop. >rt i< .11 . a n<i that I IP- Span 

 having attached itself to tin- haunts of man. usually .l,taiii 

 From the plants ami ---., Is cultivated by men I'm- tln-ir own n - I h>i 

 many reports o|' so called observers, who ha 



D6Ver eafe insects >t' any kind, thai it lri\ es away our nat i v .- bird .and that it 

 IN alt outlier an umnit igat.ed n uisa net-. Sweeping ;, S s..rl ion^ of this kind are only 

 conclusive evidence that tin- so called observer cannot observe :i.-with 



ordinary percept i\ v Faculties can walk through our puhlic pa i 



our streets where thci-c an- trees and grass in the smiimer time, withovt seeing 



some Sparrows industriously hunting For insects with wliich to Feed th-i: 

 and should anyone have a sparrow's nest under his verandah or about, hi 

 in such a position that some of the food brought hy the parent birds to their 

 young will Fall where it can be seen, the proof that they do eat in^-ct-,and in 

 Large quantities too, will be very clear. The old birds also eat inlets at t\i\^ 

 m. varying their diet with sucli undigested grain as they may find in horse 

 droppings, and with bread crumbs and such like refuse From hou 



Spat rows, like the majority of birds, will not eat hairy caterpil la rs. but 1 

 have seen them eat the spiny larva? of Vanessa antiopa, which is one of our 

 shade tree pests that few birds will touch. Besides this I have seen them take 

 moths of almost any kind, including the large Cecropia and Luna moths and the 

 Tussock moth (both the winged male and the wingless female), beetles of many 

 kinds, even such large species as the aquatic Dytiscus, which they find on the 

 sidewalks beneath the electric lights to which the beetles are attracted at night, 

 the green cabbage worm (the larvae of the cabbage butterfly) of these they eat 

 great numbers. They also hunt about fences, and take the pupa of this same 

 butterfly. The currant worms and the mature insects are also taken in large 

 numbers, as are also grasshoppers, and both the black and green aphides that 

 occur on apple trees and rose bushes are eaten greedily. On one occasion a flock 

 of Sparrows completely cleaned off the green aphis from some rose bushes near 

 my windows. It took them several days to finish their work, but they did it 

 effectually in the end. 



About harvest time the Sparrows show their grain-eaten proclivities, They 

 then gather into large flocks, and, leaving the town where they were bred, visit 

 the surrounding country and make serious raids upon the wheat and oats, and 

 do more damage while the grain is standing by beating it out than by eating it. 

 It is in early spring, however, that the worst trait in the sparrow's character 

 becomes apparent. Vegetation awakens after the long winter's sleep : the 1 1 

 put forth their buds, and seedlings break through the soil. The Sparrow, pro- 

 bably needing an alterative after the hard fare of the winter, attacks all these ; 

 nothing green comes amiss to him, and then the gardener, wrathful at the loss of 

 prospective fruit, vegetables and flowers, forgets the good qualities the bird hav 

 and would have the whole tribe exterminated. Whether or not he would be the 

 gainer by this is somewhat difficult to decide. My own opinion at present iv 

 that the number we now have do as much good as they do harm, but that they 

 should not be allowed to increase to any great extent. 



The Sparrow is also charged with driving away our native birds. This 

 charge is well founded only in the case of such birds as were formerly in the 

 habit of building in holes and crevices about our houses, such as the Swallows 

 ind the Wrens. In the case of the Wrens the difficulty can easily be got over by 

 placing their nest boxes low down, say about eight feet from the ground : tin- 

 Sparrows will not then occupy them. But the Swallow problem is not so easy 

 to solve. The trouble arises from the fact that the Sparrows remain here all 



