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GREENSHANK , one of the largest of the birds commonly known as sandpipers, the Totanus glottis of most ornithological writers . Some exercise of the See also: imagination is however needed to see in the dingy See also: olive-coloured legs of this See also: species a See also: justification of the See also: English name by which it goes, and the application of that name, which seems to be due to See also: Pennant, was probably by way of distinguishing it from two allied but perfectly distinct species of Totanus (T. calidris and T. fuscus) having red legs and usually called redshanks
.
The greenshank is a native of the See also: northern parts of the Old See also: World, but in winter it wanders far to the See also: south, and occurs regularly at the Cape of See also: Good Hope, in See also: India and thence throughout the Indo-See also: Malay See also: Archipelago to See also: Australia
.
It has also been recorded from See also: North See also: America, but its appearance there must be considered accidental
.
Almost as bulky as a woodcock; it is of a much more slender build, and its long legs and neck give it a graceful appearance, which is enhanced by the activity of its actions
.
Disturbed from the See also: moor or See also: marsh, where it has its See also: nest, it rises swiftly into the air, conspicuous by its See also: white back and rump, and uttering shrill cries flies round the intruder
.
It will
See also: perch on the topmost bough of a See also: tree, if a tree be near, to See also: watch his proceedings, and the See also: cock exhibits all the astounding gesticulations in which the See also: males of so many other Limicolae indulge during the breeding-season—with certain variations, however, that are peculiarly its own
.
It breeds in no small numbers in the See also: Hebrides, and parts of the Scottish See also: Highlands from See also: Argyllshire to See also: Sutherland, as well as in the more elevated or more northern districts of See also: Norway, Sweden and Finland, and probably also thence to See also: Kamchatka
.
In North America it is represented by two species, Totanus semipalmatus and T. melanoleucus, there called willets, telltales or tattlers, which in general habits resemble the See also: green-shank of the Old World
.
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