The wheatear breeds regularly in moorlands and may be declining.
THE WHEATEAR. WHITE-RUMP. . . . the nest is constructed with great care, of dry grass or moss, mixed with wool, lined with feathers, and defended by a sort of covert fixed to the stone or clod under which it is formed . . . In some parts of England great numbers are taken in snares made of horse hair, placed beneath a turf; near two thousand dozen are said to have been taken annually in that way, in one district only, and are generally sold at sixpence per dozen.
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- Bewick's British Birds, Vol. I, 1797 |
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