CARRION CROW. 
Corvus Corone, Linn. 
La Corneille noir. 
We are induced to believe that the range of habitat of this well-known species is not so extensive as is 
generally supposed, but that most of the birds received from distant countries, although very similar, are 
specifically distinct not only from the Carrion Crow of Europe but also from each other, and that although 
these differences are not apparent to the casual observer, they will be found on a critical examination to be 
sufficiently important. 
The Carrion Crow is very generally distributed over the British Islands, where it is a permanent resident ; 
it also appears to be equally dispersed over the western portion of the European continent, but is rarely found 
so far east as Hungary and many parts of Austria. In its habits, manners, and general economy the Carrion 
Crow is nearly allied to the Raven; like that bird it wanders about in pairs, evincing the greatest wariness of 
disposition and shyness on the approach of man, which may, however, be partly attributed to the persecution 
it meets with from almost every one. ‘The Crow is a more powerful and robust bird than the Rook, from 
which it may readily be distinguished by the greenish metallic hue of its plumage, and by its thickened and 
more arched bill, which is never deprived of the bristly feathers that cover the face and nostrils. It is also 
clearly destined by nature to fulfill a very different office; for, while Rooks congregate in immense flocks 
and disperse themselves over cultivated districts in search of insects, grubs, and grain, the Crow, as before 
observed, wanders about in solitary pairs, or at most in parties of six or eight, in search of all kinds of 
carrion, upon which it feeds voraciously ; and hence it may be frequently observed on the banks of the larger 
rivers, which constantly afford it a supply of putrid animal matter ; to this kind of food are occasionally added 
eggs, the young of all kinds of game, and it is even so daring when pressed by hunger as to attack very young 
lambs, fawns, &c. When once mated, it would appear that Crows never again separate, and if unmolested in 
their chosen breeding-place, the same pair generally return every year not only to the same locality but to 
the same tree. The nest is usually placed in a fork near the bole, is of a smaller size than that of the Rook, 
and is constructed of sticks and mud, lined with wool and hair. The eggs are five or six in number, of a 
greenish ground, blotched all over with thickly set patches of ash-coloured brown. 
It is perhaps one of the most destructive birds the preserver of game has to contend with, and in conse- 
quence the poor Crow being sadly persecuted uses the utmost vigilance and cunning to evade the pursuit of 
his great enemy the gamekeeper. 
The sexes offer no difference in the colour of the plumage, and they assume the full colouring from the 
nest. 
The whole of the plumage is black, the upper surface being glossed with blue and greenish reflexions ; bill, 
legs, and feet black, the scales on the two latter being in laminz, or plates. 
The figure is of the natural size. 
