. Reptiles and birds. A popular account of the various orders; with a description of the habits and economy of the most interesting. . Fig. 234.—Quaketails, from the Pipits to the Wagtails, but incline more to the latter. Theyare the hergeronnettes of French authors. The claw on the hind toe,which is long, and greatly resembles that of the Larks, distinguishes 524 REPTILES AND BIRDS. them from Wagtails. They are said to follow flocks of sheep; hencethe name given them in France. The Titlarks, or Pipits {Ajithus\ the farlouses of French writers,approach the Larks by the same characteristics whi


. Reptiles and birds. A popular account of the various orders; with a description of the habits and economy of the most interesting. . Fig. 234.—Quaketails, from the Pipits to the Wagtails, but incline more to the latter. Theyare the hergeronnettes of French authors. The claw on the hind toe,which is long, and greatly resembles that of the Larks, distinguishes 524 REPTILES AND BIRDS. them from Wagtails. They are said to follow flocks of sheep; hencethe name given them in France. The Titlarks, or Pipits {Ajithus\ the farlouses of French writers,approach the Larks by the same characteristics which distinguish the. The Lvre Bird. Quaketails, and might be confounded with them were it not for theircompressed bill. They feed on autumnal fruits. Anihus arboreus(the Tree Pipit), A. pratensis (the Meadow Pipit), A. aquatictis (theRock Pipit), and A. Ricardi (Richards Pipit), are the British \:Q-\.dJ\\M(Enura siiperba^ Fig. 235) is a bird of New SouthWales, about, th^ size-of a-Common Fowlj-an d^ has been classed by ORIOLES. 525 some naturalists among Gallinaceous Birds ; but Temminck places itin his Insectivorous order, among the Thrushes, and between Ciicidusand Pitta. Cuvier places it among the Passerines. Vigors places itin the order Rasores, and in the family of the CracidcB. This curiousbird has a long compressed bill, triangular at the base. It owes itsname to the peculiar disposition of its tail, which in the male has theexact form of a lyre. The singular development of the feathers ofthe tail is its chief attraction, for the plumage is dull and sombre in


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectbirds, booksubjectrep