Online Encyclopedia

OSPREY, or OSPRAY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 353 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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OSPREY, or OSPRAY  , a word said to be corrupted from " Ossifrage,"
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Lat. ossifraga, bone-breaker . The Ossifraga of Pliny (H.N. x . 3) and some other classical writers seems to have XX . I2been the Lammergeyer (q.v.); but the name, not inapplicable in that case, has been transferred to another
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bird which is no breaker of bones, save incidentally those of the fishes it devours.1 The osprey is a rapacious bird; of middling
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size and of conspicuously-marked plumage, the white of its
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lower parts, and often of its head, contrasting sharply with the dark brown of the back and most of its upper parts when the bird is seen on the wing . It is the Falco haliaelus of
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Linnaeus, but was, in 181o, established by J . C . Savigny (Ois. de l'Egypte, p . 35) as the type of a new genus Pandion . It is closely related to the
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family Falconidae, but is the representative of a
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separate family, Pandionidae . Pandion differs from the Falconidae not only pterylologically, as observed by C . L . Nitzsch, but also osteologically, as pointed out by A .

Milne-

Edwards (Ois. foss . France, ii. pp . 413, 419) . In some of the characters in which it differs structurally from the Falconidae, it agrees with certain of the owls; but the most important parts of its
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internal structure, as well as of its pterylosis, forbid a belief that there is any near
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alliance of the two groups . The
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special characters of the family are the presence of a reversible
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outer toe, the absence of an aftershaft and the feathering of the tibiae . The osprey is one of the most cosmopolitan birds-of-prey . From
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Alaska to Brazil, from Lapland to
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Natal, from
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Japan to
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Tasmania, and in some of the islands of the Pacific, it occurs as a winter-visitant or as a
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resident . Though migratory in
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Europe at least, it is generally
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independent of
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climate . It breeds equally on the
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half-thawed shores of Hudson's
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Bay and on the cays of
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Honduras, in the dense forests of Finland and on the barren rocks of the Red Sea, in
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Kamchatka and in West
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Australia . Among the countries it does not frequent are Iceland and New Zealand . Where, through abundance of food, it is numerous—as in former days was the case in the eastern
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part of the
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United States—the nests of the fish-hawk (to use its
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American name) may be placed on trees to the number of three
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hundred close together . Where food is scarcer and the
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species accordingly less plentiful, a single pair will occupy an isolated rock, and jealously expel all intruders of their kind, as happens in Scotland .2 Few birds
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lay eggs so beautiful or so rich in colouring: their white or pale ground is spotted, blotched or marbled with almost every shade of
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purple, orange and red—passing from the most delicate
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lilac, buff and peach-blossom, through
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violet, chestnut and
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crimson, to a nearly absolute black .

The fierceness with which ospreys defend their eggs and

young, in addition to the dangerous situation not infrequently chosen for the eyry, make the task of robbing the nests difficult . The
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term " osprey," applied to the nuptial plumes of the egrets in the feather trade, is derived from the French esprit; it has nothing to do with the osprey bird, and its use has been supposed to be due to a confusion with " spray." (A .

End of Article: OSPREY, or OSPRAY
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