Online Encyclopedia

HARRIER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 17 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

HARRIER  , or

See also:
HEN-HARRIER, name given to certain birds of prey which were formerly very abundant in parts of the
See also:
British Islands, from their habit of harrying poultry . The first of these names has now become used in a generic sense for all the
See also:
species ranked under the genus Circus of Lacepede, and the second
See also:
con-fined to the particular species which is the Falco cyaneus of
See also:
Linnaeus and the Circus cyaneus of
See also:
modern ornithologists . One
See also:
European species, C. aeruginosus, though called in books the marsh-harrier, is far more commonly known in England and Ireland as the
See also:
moor-
See also:
buzzard . But harriers are not, like buzzards, arboreal in their habits, and always affect open country, generally, though not invariably, preferring marshy or fenny districts, for
See also:
snakes and frogs form a
See also:
great
See also:
part of their ordinary food . On the ground their
See also:
carriage is utterly unlike that of a buzzard, and their long wings and legs render it easy to distinguish the two groups when taken in the hand . All the species also have a more or less well-
See also:
developed
See also:
ruff or frill of small thickset feathers surrounding the
See also:
lower part of the head, nearly like that seen in owls, and accordingly many systematists consider that the genus Circus, though undoubtedly belonging to the Falconidae, connects that
See also:
family with the Striges . No osteological affinity, however, can be established between the harriers and any section of the owls, and the superficial resemblance will have to be explained in some other way . Harriers are found almost all over the
See also:
world,l and ' The distribution of the different species is rather curious. while the range of some is exceedingly wide,—one, C. maillardi, seems to be limited to the island of
See also:
Reunion (Bourbon).fifteen species are recognized by
See also:
Bowdler Sharpe (Cat . Birds Brit . Museum, i. pp . 50-73) . In most if not all the harriers the sexes differ greatly in colour, so much so that for a long while the
See also:
males and
See also:
females of one of the commonest and best known, the C. cyaneus above mentioned, were thought to be distinct species, and were or still are called in various European
See also:
languages by different names .

The

error was maintained with the greater persistency since the young males, far more abundant than the adults,
See also:
wear much the same plumage as their
See also:
mother, and it was not until after Montagu's observations were published at the Hen-Harrier (Male and
See also:
Female), beginning of the 19th century that the " ringtail," as she was called (the Falco pygargus of Linnaeus), was generally admitted to be the female of the " hen-harrier." But this was not Montagu's only good service as regards this genus . He proved the hitherto unexpected existence of a second species,2 subject to the same diversity of plumage . This was called by him the ash-coloured falcon, but it now generally bears his name, and is known as I\/Iontagu's harrier, C. cineraceus . In habits it is very similar to the hen-harrier, but it has longer wings, and its range is not so northerly, for while the hen-harrier extends to Lapland, Montagu's is but very rare in Scotland, though in the south of England it is the most
See also:
common species . Harriers indeed in the British Islands are rapidly becoming things of the past . Their nests are easily found, and the birds when nesting are easily destroyed . In the south-east of
See also:
Europe, reaching also to the Cape of Good Hope and to India, there is a
See also:
fourth species, the C. swainsoni of some writers, the C. pallidus of others . In North
See also:
America C. cyaneus is represented by a kindred form, C. hudsonius, usually regarded as a good species, the adult male of which is always to be recognized by its rufous markings beneath, in which character it rather resembles C. cineraceus, but it has not the long wings of that species . South America has in C. cinereus another representative form, while
See also:
China, India and
See also:
Australia possess more of this type . Thus there is a section in which the males have a strongly contrasted black and grey plumage, and finally there is a
See also:
group of larger forms allied to the European C. aeruginosus, wherein a grey dress is less often attained, of which the South
See also:
African C. ranivorus and the New Zealand C. gouldi are examples . (A . N.) .

End of Article: HARRIER
[back]
HARRATIN
[next]
EDWARD HARRIGAN (1845– )

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.