Online Encyclopedia

BUZZARD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 895 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BUZZARD  , a word derived from the

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Lat . Buteo, through the Fr . Busard, and used in a general sense for a large
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group of diurnal birds-of-prey, which contains, among many others, the
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species usually known as the
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common buzzard (Buteo vulgaris, Leach), though the
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English epithet is nowadays hardly applicable . The name buzzard, however, belongs quite as rightfully to the birds called in books " harriers," which form a distinct subfamily of Falconidae under the title Circinae, and by it one species, the
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moor-buzzard (Circus aeruginosus), is still known in such places as it inhabits . "Puttock" is also another name used in some parts of England, but perhaps is rather a synonym of the
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kite (Milvus
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ictinus) . Though ornithological writers are almost unanimous in distinguishing the buzzards as a group from the eagles, the grounds usually assigned for their separation are but slight, and the diagnostic character that can be best trusted is probably that in the former the
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bill is decurved from the
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base, while in the latter it is for about a third of its length straight . The head, too, in buzzards is short and round, while in the eagles it is elongated . In a general way buzzards are smaller than eagles, though there are several exceptions to this statement, and have their plumage more mottled . Furthermore, most if not all of the buzzards, about which anything of the kind is with certainty known, assume their adult dress at the first
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moult, while the eagles take a longer time to reach maturity . The buzzards are
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fine-looking birds, but are slow and heavy of
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flight, so that in the old days of falconry they were regarded with infinite scorn, and hence in common English to call a man " a buzzard " is to denounce him as stupid . Their food consists of small mammals, young birds, reptiles, amphibians and
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insects —particularly beetles—and thus they never could have been very injurious to the
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game-preserver, if indeed they were not reallyhis friends, though they have fallen under his
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ban; but at the
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present day they are so scarce that in England their effect, whatever it may be, is inappreciable . Buzzards are found over the whole
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world with the exception of the Australian region, and have been split into many genera by systematists .

In the

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British Islands are two species, one
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resident (the B. vulgaris already mentioned), and now almost confined to a few wooded districts; the other the rough-legged buzzard (Archibuteo lagopus), an irregular winter-visitant, sometimes arriving in large bands from the north of
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Europe, and readily distinguishable from the former by being feathered down to the toes . The honey-buzzard (Pernis apivorus), a summer-visitor from the south, and breeding, or attempting to breed, yearly in the New
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Forest, does not come into the subfamily Buteoninae, but is probably the type of a distinct group, Perninae, of which there are other examples in Africa and
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Asia . In
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America the name " buzzard " is popularly given to the
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turkey-buzzard or turkey-
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vulture (Cathartes Aura) . (A .

End of Article: BUZZARD
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