66 
1. LAPWING. 
LAPWING SANDPIPER. Ctass Ii. 
GENUS VI. SANDPIPER# 
Brix straight, slender, not an inch and a half 
long. 
NostTRILs small. 
TonGuE slender. 
Tors divided; generally the two outmost con- 
nected at the bottom by a small mem- 
brane. 
Tringa. Vanellus. Tr. pedibus 
rubris, crista dependente, 
pectore nigro. Lath. Ind. 
orn. 726. id. Syn. v. 161. 
Le Vanneau, Dixhuit, Pape- 
chieu. Belon av. 209. 
Zweiel. Gesner av. 765. 
Pavonzino. Aldr. av. iii. 202. 
Pavoncella. Olina. 21. 
Lapwing, bastard Plover, or 
Pewit. Wil. orn. 307. 
Vanellus, le Vanneau. Bris- 
son av. v. 94. tab. 8. fig. 1. 
Hist. ois. viii. 48. 
Enl. 242. 
Ran Syn. av. 110. 
Kiwik. Kram. 358. Frisch, 
il. 213. 
Tringa vanellus. Gm. Lin. 
670. 
Wipa, Kowipa, Blecka. Faun. 
Suec. sp. 176. 
Danis Vibe, Kivit. Brunnich, 
170. ; 
Scopoli, No. 141. 
Br. Zool. 122. Arct. Zool. ii. 
186. 
Pl. 
Tuts elegant species inhabits most of the 
heaths and marshy grounds of this island. It 
* This genus, the Tringa of Linneus, wanting an English 
name, we have given it that of the Sandpiper; most of the spe- 
cies being conversant about shores, and their note whistling or 
piping. 
im 
