Fig. 309.—Tailor Bird’s Nest (India).
Instinct for nest building highly perfected.
General Field Study.—(For written report.) Name the best and poorest flyers you know; birds that fly most of the time; birds that seldom fly. Observe birds that pair; live in flocks. Does their sociability vary with the season? Do you ever see birds quarrelling? Fighting? What birds do you observe whipping or driving birds larger than themselves? Which parent do young birds most resemble? Name the purposes for which birds sing. Which senses are very acute? Why? Dull? Why? Can you test your statements by experiment? A partridge usually sits with 18 to 24 eggs in nest. About how long after laying first egg before sitting begins? Do several partridge hens lay in the same nest?
Fig. 310.—House Wren.
Haunts.—Name some birds that are found most often in the following localities: about our homes, in gardens and orchards, fields and meadows, in bushes, in the woods, in secluded woods, around streams of water, in thickets, in pine woods.
Size.—Name birds as large as a robin or larger, nearly as large, half as large, much smaller.
Colours.—Which sex is more brilliant? Of what advantage are bright colours to one sex? Of what advantage are dull colours to the other sex? Which have yellow breasts, red patch on heads, red or chestnut breasts, blue backs, black all over?
Habits.—Name the birds that walk, jump, swim, live in flocks, sing while flying, fly in undulations, in circles, have laboured flight.
Economic Importance of Birds.—Farmers find their most valuable allies in the class aves, as birds are the deadliest enemies of insects and gnawing animals. To the innumerable robbers which devastate our fields and gardens, nature opposes the army of birds. They are less numerous than insects and other robbers, it is true, but they are skilful and zealous in pursuit, keen of eye, quick, active, and remarkably voracious. The purely insectivorous birds are the most useful, but the omnivorous and graminivorous birds do not disdain insects. The perchers and the woodpeckers should be protected most carefully. The night birds of prey (and those of the day to a less degree) are very destructive to field mice, rabbits, and other gnawing animals. Some ignorant farmers complain continually about the harm done by birds. To destroy them is as unwise as it would be to destroy the skin which protects the human body because it has a spot upon it! It cannot be repeated too plainly that to hunt useful birds is a wrong and mischievous act, and it is stupid and barbarous to destroy their nests.