Online Encyclopedia

PRATINCOLE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 255 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PRATINCOLE  , a word apparently invented by J . Latham (Synopsis, v . 222), being the

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English rendering of Pratincola, applied in 1756 by P . Kramer (Elenchus, p . 381) to a
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bird which had hitherto received no definite name, though it had long before been described and even recognizably figured by Aldrovandus (Ornithologia, xvii . 9) under the vague designation of " hirundo marina." It is the Glareola pratincola of
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modern ornithologists, forming the type of a genus Glareola, founded by M . J . Brisson in 176o, belonging to the
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group Limicolae, and constituting together with the coursers (Cursorius) a
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separate
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family, Glareolidae . The pratincoles, of which some eight or nine
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species have been described, are all small birds, slendetly built and mostly delicately coloured, with a short stout
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bill, a wide gape, long pointed wings, and a tail more or less forked . In some of their habits they are thoroughly
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plover-like,
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running very swiftly and breeding on the ground, but on the wing they have much the appearance of swallows, and, like them, feed, at least partly, while flying.' The ordinary pratincole of
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Europe, G . 'pratincola, breeds abundantly in many parts of Spain,
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Barbary and Sicily, along the valley of the Danube, and in
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southern Russia, while owing to its
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great powers of
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flight it frequently wanders far from its home, and more than a score of examples have been recorded as occur-ring in the
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British Islands . In the south-east of Europe a second and closely-allied species, G. nordmanni or G. melanoptera, which has black instead of chestnut inner wing-coverts, accompanies or, farther to the eastward, replaces it; and in its turn it is replaced in India,
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China and
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Australia by G. orientalis .

Australia also possesses another species, G. grallaria, remarkable for the great length of its wings and much longer legs, while its tail is scarcely forked—peculiarities that have led to its being considered the type of a distinct genus or sub-genus Stiltia . Two species, G. lactea and G. cinerea, from India and

Africa respectively, seem by their pale coloration to be
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desert forms, and they are the smallest of this curious little group . The species whose mode of nidification is known
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lay either two or three eggs, stone-coloured, blotched, spotted, and streaked with black or brownish-grey . The young when hatched are clothed in down and are able to run at once—just as are young plovers . (A .

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