Page:The Migration of Birds - Thomas A Coward - 1912.pdf/25

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been validated.
THE MIGRATION OF BIRDS
9

breed and thus the bird becomes an irregular summer resident or even, for the time, a permanent resident.

6. Stragglers or Wanderers: birds whose occurrence in our islands is more or less accidental, due apparently to their having lost their Way or to their ordinary wandering habits having taken them far from the normal range of their species. Some of the rarer petrels and other oceanic birds certainly pertain to this group, but our knowledge of the migration routes of others is still so slender that it is unwise to declare dogmatically that they are lost. Some too of the so-called stragglers may have been artificially or accidentally introduced; many "records" prove on investigation to be the aimless wandering of escaped captive birds, whilst others are known to have been aided in their journey and carried out of their usual course when resting on shipboard.

When Mr Eagle Clarke was on the Kentish Knock Lightship, off the mouth of the Thames, he found that in autumn there were continuing practically simultaneously the following streams of migration. Immigration from the Continent to England from east to west, and from south-east to north-west, and passage along both lines; emigration from north to south-south-west, and from north-west to south-east, with passage from north to south-south-