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HOOPOE (Fr. Huppe, See also: bird long celebrated in literature, and conspicuous by its variegated plumage and its large erectile crest,' the Upupa epops of naturalists, which is the type of the very See also: peculiar See also: family Upupidae, placed by See also: Huxley in his See also: group Coccygomorphae, but considered by Dr Murie (See also: Ibis, 1873, p
.
208) to deserve See also: separate See also: rank as Epopomorphae
.
This See also: species has an exceedingly wide range in the Old See also: World, being a See also: regular summer-visitant to the whole of See also: Europe, in some parts of which it is abundant, as well as to See also: Siberia, mostly retiring
Hoopoe
.
southwards in autumn to winter in See also: equatorial See also: Africa and See also: India, though it would seem to be See also: resident throughout the See also: year in See also: north-eastern Africa and in See also: China
.
Its power of wing ordinarily seems to be feeble; but it is capable of very extended See also: flight, as is testified by its wandering habits (for it occasionally makes its appearance in places very far removed from its usual haunts), and also by the fact that when pursued by a falcon it will rapidly See also: mount to an extreme height and frequently effect its escape from the enemy
.
About the See also: size of a thrush, with a long, pointed and slightly arched See also: bill, its See also: head and neck are of a See also: golden-buffthe former adorned by the crest already mentioned, which begins to rise from the forehead and consists of broad feathers, gradually increasing in length, tipped with black and having a subterminal See also: bar of yellowish-See also: white
.
The upper
See also: part of the back is of a vinous-
" Hence the secondary meaning of the French word huppe—a crest or tuft (cf
.
Littre, Dict. See also: francais, i
.
2067
.
See also: HOORN
See also: grey, and the scapulars and flight-feathers are black, broadly barred with white tinged in the See also: farmer with See also: buff
.
The tail is black with a white See also: chevron, marking off about the distal third part of its length
.
The legs and feet are as well adapted for See also: running or walking as for perching, and the scutellations are continued round the whole of the tarsi
.
Chiefly on account of this character, which is also possessed by the larks, Sundevall (Tentamen, pp . 53-55)See also: united the Upupidae and Alaudidae in the same " cohors " Holaspideae
.
See also: Comparative anatomy, how-ever, forbids its being taken to signify any real See also: affinity between these See also: groups, and the resemblance on this point, which is by no means so striking as that displayed by the See also: form of the bill and the coloration in certain larks (of the genus Cerllzilauda, for instance), must be ascribed to See also: analogy merely
.
Pleasing as is the appearance of the hoopoe as it fearlessly parades its showy plumage, some of its habits are much the See also: reverse
.
All observers agree in stating that it delights to find its See also: food among filth of the most abominable description, and this especially in its winter-quarters
.
But where it breeds, its See also: nest, usually in the hole of a See also: tree or of a See also: wall, is not only partly composed of the foulest material, but its condition becomes worse as See also: incubation proceeds, for the See also: hen scarcely ever leaves her eggs, being assiduously fed by the See also: cock as she sits; and when the See also: young are hatched, their faeces are not removed by their parents,' as is the See also: case with most birds, but are discharged in the immediate neighbourhood of the nest, the unsanitary condition of which can readily be imagined
.
See also: Worms, grubs, and See also: insects generally form the hoopoes' food, and upon it they get so fat in autumn that they are esteemed a delicate morsel in some of the countries of See also: southern Europe, and especially by the Christian population of Constantinople.'
Not a year passes but the hoopoe makes its appearance in some part or other of the See also: British Islands, most often in spring, and if unmolested would doubtless stop to breed in them, and a few instances are known in which it has done so
.
But its remarkable plumage always attracts See also: attention, and it is generally shot down so soon as it is seen, and before it has See also: time to begin a nest
.
Eight or nine so-called species of the genus have been described, but of them the existence of five only has been recognized by See also: Sharpe and See also: Dresser (Birds of Europe, pt. vii.)
.
Besides the Upupa epops above treated, these are U. indica, resident in India and See also: Ceylon; U. longirostris, which seems to be the form of the Indo-See also: Chinese countries; U. marginata, peculiar to See also: Madagascar; and U. africana or U. minor of some writers, which inhabits See also: South Africa to the Zambesi on the See also: east and Benguela on the west See also: coast
.
In habits and appearance they all resemble the best-known and most widely-spread species.4 (A
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