TURTUR AURITUS, 
Turtledove. 
Turtur auritus, Ray. Syn. Meth. Av. et Pise., p. 184, tab. 26, 
Columba turtur, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 284. 
Feristera turtur, Boie, Isis, 1828, p. 327. 
Turtur vulgaris, Eyt. Hist. Rarer Brit. Birds, p. 32. 
The Turtledove, at once the smallest and most elegantly formed of the British Columbidce, is not a 
permanent resident with us, but strictly a migrant, and one which evinces a partiality for certain parts of 
our island to the exclusion of others ; thus it is more abundant in the southern and central portions of 
England than it is in those further north. Wherever it appears in spring it is hailed with pleasure as an 
indication that summer is coming ; for it is not until the strong gales of March have exhausted their fury, the 
showers of April passed away, and May somewhat advanced, that its pleasing “ turr ” is heard in our woods and 
shrubberies, or that its slight flat nest among the branches, and its two immaculate eggs, can be detected. 
From Africa direct, with but little delay on the road, has the Turtle followed in the rear of our other 
summer visitants. Of late years it appears to have Increased in number among us, and to have extended 
its range in a northerly direction ; for within my own recollection it was extremely scarce in the border counties 
of England and Scotland, but now, like the Missel-Thrush and the Starling, it is observed there much more 
frequently than heretofore. Its stay with us not extending to the seed- and root-time of autumn, little 
mischief can be attributed to this docile and pretty bird, and therefore a price need not be put ujion its 
head (as in the case of the Wood-Pigeon), its principal food consisting of the seeds of the vetch and wild 
plants, the tender shoots of herbs, and small-shelled snails. 
“ The Turtledove has the discredit,” says the Rev. C. A. Johns, “ of resorting to fields of green wheat, 
for the sake of feeding on the milky grain. I am doubtful if this charge can be sustained. Often enough, when 
walking through a cornfield, one may see two or three Turtledoves rise suddenly from the thick corn, with 
a rustle and low cry of alarm, rapidly dart away in the direction of the nearest grove, disappearing in the 
shade, all but the white segment of a circle formed by the tips of their tail-feathers ; but, on examining the 
spot from which they rose, I have been unable to detect any ears of corn rifled of their contents — though the 
ground was thickly matted with weeds, which might have furnished them with food. I have been informed 
by a young friend, who has often shot them while rising from such situations, that he has invariably found 
their crops distended with the green seed-vessels of a weed common in corn-fields — the corn-spurry 
{Spergula arrsensis). This being the case, the Turtledove is more a friend than an enemy to the farmer, 
even if it sometimes regales on ripe grain or interferes with the occupation of the gleaner.” 
How much would the delights of summer be detracted from were we not visited by nearly forty 
spring migrants ! Without the Swallow and its kindred, the sultry heat would be unbearable, from the 
inordinate Increase of tormenting insects. The croak of the frog and the crake of the Landrail assist at 
this time in breaking the monotonous stillness of night ; and the cooings of the Dove relieve the mind by 
calling up soothing and pleasing thoughts not easily described. 
When the Turtle comes to us, in spring, it generally arrives in pairs ; in the autumn, on the other hand, 
the various broods assemble in our corn-fields and arable lands in considerable flocks, and in the month of 
September migrate in a southerly direction, through Portugal and Spain, to Morocco, where, in all 
probability, these, as well as many other birds that visit us in summer, pass the winter; while those which 
have summered in the eastern parts of the European continent proceed to Algeria, md the Maltese group 
of islands, where, for a few days in spring and again in autumn, the Turtle is especially numerous, and 
large numbers are captured at the former season in nets, precisely after the manner employed by the bird- 
catchers in this country. “As an illustration of the great power of flight of these birds,” says Mr. Wright, 
“ it may be mentioned that thousands of them are annually to be seen passing over Malta without alighting. 
When they reappear in September they are on their way from Europe, and are not generally so plentiful as 
in spring. At this time they consist chiefly of birds of the year, which want the collar of the adult, and are 
altogether of a duller hue.” 
Mr. Yarrell mentions that he could find no notice of the Turtledove visiting any part of Scandinavia; 
but Magnus von Wright includes it in his ‘ Birds of Finland ;’ and the late Mr. Wheelwright remarks : — 
“ Strange to say, a pair of Turtledoves were shot at Quickiock a few years since, on the ground in front of the 
priest’s house.” Still its occurrence in that part of the European continent must be regarded as exceptional ; 
from its central regions, however, to the shores of the Mediterranean it is more or less abundant in summer, 
