On our Crossbills

Page 1

O N OUR CROSSBILLS.

ON OUR BY

CECIL

163

CROSSBILLS.

S . LAST, BIRDS

SUBRFCORDER.

T H A T most peculiar of British birds, the Crossbill (Loxia curvirostra, Linn.), with its tendency to be an irregulär or spasmodic colonist rather tban regulär winter visitor, usuallv arrives in November for the purpose of breeding and leaves again in April. From time to time flocks of them desert their home in the forests of Siberia to spread south and west, many reaching England. In Scotland the species has become a more permanent resident and, since the great influx of 1909, remains there. Its most striking characteristic is conveyed in the name, for the tips of its mandibles cross on one side or the other, a feature affording it remarkable power of extracting the seeds from fir-cones with comparative ease. I have watched these birds climbing along the branches of Scots pines, often Walking sideways, with head swung low to reach and wrench off a cone. When such a cone has been carefully selected it is twisted off with considerable force and carried in the bill to a firm perch, where it is held with one or sometimes both feet, the seeds are twisted out of it and then eaten, with head held w-ell erect. Although the Crossbill closely resembles a Finch in appearance, its attitudes during feeding recall, rather, those of a Parrot. T o discover its presence an examination of fallen cones is usuallv sufficient for, if the cones be dislocated and the scales forced back from their upright position revealing their seeds, it is evident this bird has been at work upon them. A close search of adjacent fir, larch or spruce trees, in that case generally discloses a nest, either high and well away from the trunk, or as low as six feet from the ground. I have seen nests sixty feet up, others ranging from fifteen to only six feet above the earth and one, observed by me on a branch overhanging a main road, was in such a precarious position that passing vehicles actually Struck the branch it was on, to the presumable detriment of the nest.

A very early but erratic nester is this bird. Its normal penod is from November to Februarv or March, and sometimes even April. This variability renders the Crossbill often unnoticed by passengers, since one hardly expects to see a nest in the very midst of winter, especially when the trees it builds m are snow-clad. A narrow belt of firs is a favourite nestingsite, invariably preferred to thick woodland, and in Suffolk our western moiety is that selected. Colonies have become well established throughout the breck district at Lakenheath iriswell, Mildenhall, Icklingham, Cavenham, Elveden^ Bamham, Euston and Fakenham ; whilst in eastern Suffolk the species is now almost if not quite extinct as a breeder, because


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