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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: RAY-RHU |
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REDSTART , a bird well known in Great
change of position its brightly-coloured tail, together with the pure white forehead, the black throat, and bright bay breast of the cock, renders him conspicuous, even if attention be not drawn
young
great
Scotland ; but in Ireland it is very rare. It appears throughout the whole of Europe in summer, and is known towinter in the interior of Africa. Several very nearly allied forms occur in Asia; and one, R. aurorea, in Japan. A congeneric species which has received the name of black redstart, Ruticilla titys,l is very common throughout the greater part of the continent of Europe, where, from its partiality for gardens in towns and villages, it is often better known than the preceding species. It yearly occurs in certain parts of England, chiefly along or near the south
almost all authorities agree that these birds are, in one sense, immature. More than a dozen species of the genus Ruticilla have been described, and the greater number of them seem to belong to the Himalayan sub-region or its confines. One very pretty and interesting form is the R. moussieri of Barbary, which allies the redstart to the stone-chats (see WHEATEAR), and of late
bright bay spot in the middle of its clear blue throat, breeding in Scandinavia, Northern Russia and Siberia, and wintering in Abyssinia and India, though rarely appearing in the intermediate countries, to the wonder of all who have studied the migrationi The orthography of the specific term would seem to be titis (Ann. Nat. History, ser. , X. p. 227), a word possibly cognate with the first syllable of titlark and titmouse. of birds; (2) C. leucocyanea, with a white instead of a red gular spot, a more Western form, ranging from Barbary to Germany and Holland; (3) C. wolfs, with its throat wholly bluea form of comparatively rare occurrence. The first of these is a not infrequent, though very irregular, visitant to England, while the second has appeared there but seldom, and the third never, so far as is known. The redstarts with their allies mentioned in this article belong to the subfamily Turdinae of the thrushes (q.v.). In America the name redstart has been bestowed upon a bird which has some curious outward resemblance, both in looks and manners, to that of the Old Country, though the two are in the opinion of some systematists nearly as widely separated from each other as truly Passerine birds well can be. The American redstart is Setophaga ruticilla, belonging to the purely New-World family Mniotiltidae, and to a genus which contains about a dozen species, .cnging from Canada (in summer) to Bolivia. (A. N.)End of Article: REDSTART If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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