334 BRITISH BIRDS. 



UPUPA EPOPS. 



HOOPOE. 



(PLATE 15.) 



Upupa upupa, Briss. Orn. ii. p. 455, pi. xliii. fig. 1 (1760). 



Upupa epops, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 183 (1766) ; et auctorum plurimorum 



Latham, Temminck, Naumann, Bonaparte, Newton, Dresser, &c. 

 Upupa vulgaris, Pall. Zoogr. Rosso-Asiat. i. p. 433 (1826). 

 Upupa bifasciata, Brehm, Vog. Deutschl. p. 215, t. 15. %. 2 (1831). 

 Upupa senegaleusis, Swains. B. W. Afr. ii. p. 114 (1837). 

 Upupa indicus, Hodgs. Gray, Zool. Miscett. p. 82 (1844). 

 Upupa maculigera, Reich. Handb. Scansorice, p. 319 (1853). 

 Upupa ceylonensis, Reich. Handb. Scansoria, p. 320 (1853). 

 Upupa nigripennis, Gould, fide Horsf. fy Moore, Cat. B, Mus. E.I. Co. ii. p. 725 



(1856). 



The Hoopoe may almost be regarded as a regular summer migrant to 

 the British Islands, but one which has been nearly exterminated on account 

 of its beauty. Nevertheless it continues to visit this country, scarcely a 

 year passing without its being obtained, and it has bred in most of the 

 southern counties of England. It has occurred in almost every county of 

 both England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland. It has been obtained more 

 than once both on the Orkney and Shetland Islands. Gray records it 

 from the Outer Hebrides ; and I shot an example on one of the Blasquet 

 Islands in the extreme south-west of Ireland. It also occurs on the 

 Channel Islands. 



The Hoopoe, although not a northern bird, has a very extensive range, 

 and breeds commonly in temperate and Southern Europe south of lat. 

 56, but appears to have been almost exterminated from England and 

 Denmark. North of this limit it has occurred accidentally in Christiania, 

 St. Petersburg, and even on Spitsbergen. To the extreme south of 

 Sweden it appears to be a regular summer visitor. East of the Ural 

 Mountains it occurs up to about the same latitude (56) and throughout 

 the valley of the Amoor. It is a partial resident in the Azores, the 

 Canaries, and Madeira, and is a permanent resident throughout North 

 Africa. To Palestine, Asia Minor, Persia, Turkestan, Mongolia, and North 

 China it is a summer visitor. It is a resident in India, Ceylon, the whole 

 of the Burmese peninsula except the Malay portion, and South China. 

 It winters in West Africa and Abyssinia, and Africa south of the Sahara 

 to within about 500 miles of the equator, and, strange to say, in Mada- 

 gascar. About 500 miles south of the equator it is replaced, in many 



