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Bustard

Bustards, including floricans and korhaans, are large, terrestrial birds living mainly in dry grassland areas and on the steppes of the Old World. They range in length from 40 to 150 cm (16 to 59 in). They make up the family Otididae (/ˈtɪdɪd/, formerly known as Otidae).[1]

Bustards
Temporal range:
MioceneHolocene, 13–0 Ma
Kori bustard
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Clade: Otidimorphae
Order: Otidiformes
Wagler, 1830
Family: Otididae
Rafinesque, 1815
Genera
Synonyms
  • Gryzajidae Brodkorb 1967

Bustards are omnivorous and opportunistic, eating leaves, buds, seeds, fruit, small vertebrates, and invertebrates.[2] There are 26 species currently recognised.

Etymology edit

The word bustard comes from the Old French bistarda and some other languages: abetarda (pt), abetarda (gl), avutarda (es) used for the great bustard. The naturalist William Turner listed the English spelling "bustard" and "bistard" in 1544.[3][4]

All of the common names above are derived from Latin avis tarda or aves tardas given by Pliny the Elder,[5][a] these names were mentioned by the Pierre Belon in 1555 and Ulisse Aldrovandi in 1600.[6][7] The word tarda comes from tardus in Latin meaning "slow" and "deliberate",[8] which is apt to describe the typical walking style of the species.[9]

Taxonomy edit

The family Otididae was introduced (as Otidia) by the French polymath Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1815.[10][11][12] Otididae and before that Otidae come from the genus Otis given to the great bustard by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae in 1758,[13] it comes from the Greek word ὠτίς ōtis.[14][15]

Phylogeny of Otididae[16]
Lissotis

L. hartlaubii (Hartlaub's bustard)

L. melanogaster (Black-bellied bustard)

Ardeotis

A. nuba (Nubian bustard)

A. ludwigii (Ludwig's bustard)

A. denhami (Denham's bustard)

A. heuglinii (Heuglin's bustard)

A. arabs (Arabian bustard)

A. kori (Kori bustard)

A. nigriceps (Great Indian bustard)

A. australis (Australian bustard)

Family Otididae[17][citation needed]

  • Genus †Gryzaja Zubareva 1939
    • Gryzaja odessana Zubareva 1939
  • Genus †Ioriotis Burchak-Abramovich & Vekua 1981
    • Ioriotis gabunii Burchak-Abramovich & Vekua 1981
  • Genus †Miootis Umanskaya 1979
    • Miootis compactus Umanskaya 1979
  • Genus †Pleotis Hou 1982
    • Pleotis liui Hou 1982
  • Genus Lissotis Reichenbach 1848
  • Genus Neotis Sharpe 1893
  • Genus Ardeotis Le Maout 1853
    • Arabian bustard, Ardeotis arabs (Linnaeus 1758)
      • A. a. lynesi (Bannerman 1930) (Moroccan bustard)
      • A. a. stieberi (Neumann 1907) (great Arabian bustard)
      • A. a. arabs (Linnaeus 1758)
      • A. a. butleri (Bannerman 1930) (Sudan bustard)
    • Australian bustard, Ardeotis australis (Gray 1829)
    • Great Indian bustard, Ardeotis nigriceps (Vigors 1831)
    • Kori bustard, Ardeotis kori (Burchell 1822)
      • A. k. struthiunculus (Neumann 1907) (Northern Kori bustard)
      • A. k. kori (Burchell 1822) (Southern Kori bustard)
  • Genus Tetrax Forster 1817
    • T. paratetrax (Bocheński & Kuročkin 1987)
    • Little bustard, Tetrax tetrax (Linnaeus 1758) Forster 1817
  • Genus Otis Linnaeus 1758
    • O. bessarabicus Kessler & Gal 1996
    • O. hellenica Boev, Lazaridis & Tsoukala 2014
    • Great bustard, Otis tarda Linnaeus 1758
      • O. t. tarda Linnaeus 1758 (Western great bustard)
      • O. t. dybowskii Taczanowski 1874 (Eastern great bustard)
  • Genus Chlamydotis Lesson 1839
    • C. affinis (Lydekker 1891a) Brodkorb 1967
    • C. mesetaria Sánchez Marco 1990
    • Macqueen's bustard, Chlamydotis macqueenii (Gray 1832)[18]
    • Houbara bustard, Chlamydotis undulata (Jacquin 1784)
      • C. u. fuertaventurae (Rothschild & Hartert 1894) (Canary Islands houbara bustard)
      • C. u. undulata (Jacquin 1784) (North African houbara bustard)
  • Genus Houbaropsis Sharpe 1893
    • Bengal florican, Houbaropsis bengalensis (Statius Müller 1776) Sharpe 1893
      • H. b. bengalensis (Statius Müller 1776) Sharpe 1893
      • H. b. blandini Delacour 1928
  • Genus Sypheotides Lesson 1839
  • Genus Lophotis Reichenbach 1848
  • Genus Heterotetrax Sharpe 1894
    • Little brown bustard, Heterotetrax humilis (Blyth 1855)
    • Karoo korhaan, Heterotetrax vigorsii (Smith 1831)
      • H. v. namaqua (Roberts 1932)
      • H. v. vigorsii (Smith 1831)
    • Rüppell's korhaan, Heterotetrax rueppelii (Wahlberg 1856)
      • H. r. fitzsimonsi (Roberts 1937)
      • H. r. rueppelii (Wahlberg 1856)
  • Genus Eupodotis Lesson 1839
    • Blue korhaan, Eupodotis caerulescens (Vieillot 1820)
    • White-bellied bustard, Eupodotis senegalensis (Vieillot 1821)
      • E. s. barrowii (Gray 1829) (Barrow's/southern white-bellied Bustard)
      • E. s. canicollis (Reichenow 1881) (Somali white-bellied knorhaan)
      • E. s. erlangeri (Reichenow 1905)
      • E. s. mackenziei White 1945
      • E. s. senegalensis (Vieillot 1821) (Senegal bustard)
  • Genus Afrotis Gray 1855

Description edit

Bustards are all fairly large with the two largest species, the kori bustard (Ardeotis kori) and the great bustard (Otis tarda), being frequently cited as the world's heaviest flying birds. In both the largest species, large males exceed a weight of 20 kg (44 lb), weigh around 13.5 kg (30 lb) on average and can attain a total length of 150 cm (59 in). The smallest species is the little brown bustard (Eupodotis humilis), which is around 40 cm (16 in) long and weighs around 600 g (1.3 lb) on average. In most bustards, males are substantially larger than females, often about 30% longer and sometimes more than twice the weight. They are among the most sexually dimorphic groups of birds. In only the floricans is the sexual dimorphism the reverse, with the adult female being slightly larger and heavier than the male.[citation needed]

The wings have 10 primaries and 16–24 secondary feathers. There are 18–20 feathers in the tail. The plumage is predominantly cryptic.[2]

Behaviour and ecology edit

Bustards are omnivorous, feeding principally on seeds and invertebrates. They make their nests on the ground, making their eggs and offspring often very vulnerable to predation. They walk steadily on strong legs and big toes, pecking for food as they go. Most prefer to run or walk over flying. They have long broad wings with "fingered" wingtips, and striking patterns in flight. Many have interesting mating displays, such as inflating throat sacs or elevating elaborate feathered crests. The female lays three to five dark, speckled eggs in a scrape in the ground, and incubates them alone.[19]

Evolution edit

Genetic dating indicates that bustards evolved c. 30 million years ago in either southern or eastern Africa from where they dispersed into Eurasia and Australia.[20]

Status and conservation edit

 
Flying bustards – Apajpuszta, Hungary

Bustards are gregarious outside the breeding season, but are very wary and difficult to approach in the open habitats they prefer.[21] Most species are declining or endangered through habitat loss and hunting, even where they are nominally protected.

United Kingdom edit

The birds were once common and abounded on the Salisbury Plain. They had become rare by 1819 when a large male, surprised by a dog on Newmarket Heath, sold in Leadenhall Market for five guineas.[22] The last bustard in Britain died in approximately 1832, but the bird is being reintroduced through batches of chicks imported from Russia.[21] In 2009, two great bustard chicks were hatched in Britain for the first time in more than 170 years.[23] Reintroduced bustards also hatched chicks in 2010.[24]

Floricans edit

Some Indian bustards are also called floricans. The origin of the name is unclear. Thomas C. Jerdon writes in The Birds of India (1862)

I have not been able to trace the origin of the Anglo-Indian word Florikin, but was once informed that the Little Bustard in Europe was sometimes called Flanderkin. Latham gives the word Flercher as an English name, and this, apparently, has the same origin as Florikin.

— Jerdon's Birds of India, 2nd ed. ii. 625.

The Hobson-Jobson dictionary, however, casts doubt on this theory stating that

We doubt if Jerdon has here understood Latham correctly. What Latham writes is, in describing the Passarage Bustard, which, he says, is the size of the Little Bustard: Inhabits India. Called Passarage Plover. ... I find that it is known in India by the name of Oorail; by some of the English called Flercher. (Suppt. to Gen. Synopsis of Birds, 1787, 229. Here we understand the English to be the English in India, and Flercher to be a clerical error for some form of floriken.

Notes edit

  1. ^ "proximae iis sunt quas Hispania aves tardas appellat, Graecia ωτιδος damnatas in cibis; emissa enim ossibus medulla odoris taedium extemplo sequitur." [Next to these are the birds that Spain calls tardae and Greece otides, which are condemned as an article of diet, because when the marrow is drained out of their bones a disgusting smell at once follows.][5]

References edit

  1. ^ Gill, Frank; Donsker, David; Rasmussen, Pamela, eds. (2019). "Turacos, bustards, cuckoos, mesites, sandgrouse". World Bird List Version 9.2. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 26 June 2019.
  2. ^ a b del Hoyo, J. Elliott, A. & Sargatal, J. (editors). (1996) Handbook of the Birds of the World. Volume 3: Hoatzin to Auks. Lynx Edicions. ISBN 84-87334-20-2
  3. ^ Turner, William (1903) [1544]. Turner on birds: a short and succinct history of the principal birds noticed by Pliny and Aristotle first published by Doctor William Turner, 1544 (in Latin and English). Translated by Evans, A.H. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. xvi, 130–131.
  4. ^ Turner, William (1544). Avium praecipuarum, quarum apud Plinium et Aristotelem mentio est, brevis et succincta historia (in Latin). Cambridge: Ioan. Gymnicus. pp. 72–73.
  5. ^ a b Pliny Natural History III Libri VIII-XI. The Loeb Classical Library. Translated by Rachham, H. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press. 1967. pp. 328–329.
  6. ^ Belon, Pierre (1555). L'histoire de la natvre des oyseavx : avec levrs descriptions, & naïfs portraicts retirez du natvrel, escrite en sept livres (in French). Paris: Gilles Corrozet. pp. 235–237.
  7. ^ Aldrovandi, Ulisse (1637) [1600]. Vlyssis Aldrovandi philosophi ac medici Bononiensis historiam naturalem in gymnasio Bononiensi profitentis, Ornithologiae (in Latin). Vol. 2. Bononiae (Bologna, Italy): Apud Nicolaum Tebaldinum. p. 85.
  8. ^ Lewis, Charlton T.; Short, Charles (1879). "tardus". A Latin Dictionary. Perseus Digital Library.
  9. ^ "Great Bustard (Otis tarda) – Information on Great Bustard". Encyclopedia of Life. Retrieved 21 August 2012.
  10. ^ Rafinesque, Constantine Samuel (1815). Analyse de la nature ou, Tableau de l'univers et des corps organisés (in French). Vol. 1815. Palermo: Self-published. p. 70.
  11. ^ Bock, Walter J. (1994). History and Nomenclature of Avian Family-Group Names. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History. Vol. Number 222. New York: American Museum of Natural History. pp. 137, 252. hdl:2246/830.
  12. ^ "Taxonomic lists- Aves". Retrieved 30 December 2015.
  13. ^ Linnaeus, Carl (1758). Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis (in Latin). Vol. 1 (10th ed.). Holmiae (Stockholm): Laurentii Salvii. p. 154.
  14. ^ Jobling, James A. (2010). Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London, UK: Christopher Helm. p. 286. ISBN 978-1-4081-3326-2. OCLC 659731768.
  15. ^ Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert (1940). "ὠτίς". A Greek-English Lexicon. Perseus Digital Library.
  16. ^ Boyd, John (2007). "Otididae" (PDF). John Boyd's website. Retrieved 30 December 2015.
  17. ^ "Turacos, bustards, cuckoos, mesites, sandgrouse". IOC World Bird List. v13.2. Retrieved 21 October 2023.
  18. ^ Macqueen's bustard has recently been split from the Houbara bustard as a full species.
  19. ^ Archibald, George W. (1991). Forshaw, Joseph (ed.). Encyclopaedia of Animals: Birds. London: Merehurst Press. pp. 98–99. ISBN 978-1-85391-186-6.
  20. ^ Pitra, C.; Lieckfeldt, D.; Frahnert, S.; Fickel, J. (2002). "Phylogenetic relationships and ancestral areas of the bustards (Gruiformes: Otididae), inferred from mitochondrial DNA and nuclear intron sequences". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 23 (1): 63–74. doi:10.1006/mpev.2001.1078. PMID 12182403.
  21. ^ a b Bota, G., J. Camprodon, S. Mañosa & M.B. Morales (Editores). (2005). Ecology and Conservation of steppe-land birds. Lynx Editions. Barcelona ISBN 84-87334-99-7; 978-84-87334-99-3.
  22. ^ The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge, Vol.III, London, (1847) Charles Knight, p.963
  23. ^ Bird Guides 2009. The first Great Bustard chicks in the UK Bird Guides, June 2009.
  24. ^ Biodiversity Lab 2010. Reintroduced Great Bustards Breed Again 2017-01-25 at the Wayback Machine The Biodiversity Lab, University of Bath.
  • Bota, Gerard, et al. Ecology and conservation of Steppe-Land birds. International Symposium on Ecology and Conservation of Steppe-land birds. . 343 pages. ISBN 84-87334-99-7.
  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bustard" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Knox, Alan G.; Martin Collinson; Andreas J. Helbig; David T. Parkin; George Sangster (October 2002). "Taxonomic recommendations for British birds". Ibis. 144 (4): 707–710. doi:10.1046/j.1474-919X.2002.00110.x.
  • Sibley, Charles G.; Jon E. Ahlquist (1990). Phylogeny and Classification of the Birds: A Study in Molecular Evolution. New Haven: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-04085-2.
  • Hackett, SJ; et al. (2008). "A phylogenomic study of birds reveals their evolutionary history". Science. 320 (5884): 1763–1768. Bibcode:2008Sci...320.1763H. doi:10.1126/science.1157704. PMID 18583609. S2CID 6472805.
  • Jarvis, Erich D; et al. (2014). "Whole-genome analyses resolve early branches in the tree of life of modern birds". Science. 346 (6215): 1320–1331. Bibcode:2014Sci...346.1320J. doi:10.1126/science.1253451. PMC 4405904. PMID 25504713.

External links edit

  • Bustard videos on the Internet Bird Collection

bustard, confused, with, bastard, including, floricans, korhaans, large, terrestrial, birds, living, mainly, grassland, areas, steppes, world, they, range, length, from, they, make, family, otididae, formerly, known, otidae, stemporal, range, miocene, holocene. Not to be confused with bastard Bustards including floricans and korhaans are large terrestrial birds living mainly in dry grassland areas and on the steppes of the Old World They range in length from 40 to 150 cm 16 to 59 in They make up the family Otididae oʊ ˈ t ɪ d ɪ d iː formerly known as Otidae 1 BustardsTemporal range Miocene Holocene 13 0 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NKori bustardScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesClade OtidimorphaeOrder OtidiformesWagler 1830Family OtididaeRafinesque 1815GeneraLissotis Ardeotis Neotis Tetrax Otis Chlamydotis Houbaropsis Sypheotides Lophotis Eupodotis AfrotisSynonymsGryzajidae Brodkorb 1967Bustards are omnivorous and opportunistic eating leaves buds seeds fruit small vertebrates and invertebrates 2 There are 26 species currently recognised Contents 1 Etymology 2 Taxonomy 3 Description 4 Behaviour and ecology 5 Evolution 6 Status and conservation 6 1 United Kingdom 7 Floricans 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksEtymology editThe word bustard comes from the Old French bistarda and some other languages abetarda pt abetarda gl avutarda es used for the great bustard The naturalist William Turner listed the English spelling bustard and bistard in 1544 3 4 All of the common names above are derived from Latin avis tarda or aves tardas given by Pliny the Elder 5 a these names were mentioned by the Pierre Belon in 1555 and Ulisse Aldrovandi in 1600 6 7 The word tarda comes from tardus in Latin meaning slow and deliberate 8 which is apt to describe the typical walking style of the species 9 Taxonomy editSee also List of bustards The family Otididae was introduced as Otidia by the French polymath Constantine Samuel Rafinesque in 1815 10 11 12 Otididae and before that Otidae come from the genus Otis given to the great bustard by the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus in the tenth edition of his Systema Naturae in 1758 13 it comes from the Greek word ὠtis ōtis 14 15 Phylogeny of Otididae 16 Lissotis L hartlaubii Hartlaub s bustard L melanogaster Black bellied bustard Ardeotis A nuba Nubian bustard A ludwigii Ludwig s bustard A denhami Denham s bustard A heuglinii Heuglin s bustard A arabs Arabian bustard A kori Kori bustard A nigriceps Great Indian bustard A australis Australian bustard Tetrax tetrax Little bustard Otis tarda Great bustard Chlamydotis C macqueenii MacQueen s bustard C undulata Houbara bustard Sypheotides indicus Lesser florican Houbaropsis bengalensis Bengal florican Lophotis L ruficrista Red crested bustard L savilei Savile s bustard L gindiana Buff crested Bustard Heterotetrax H humilis Little brown bustard H rueppelii Ruppell s korhaan H vigorsii Karoo korhaan Afrotis A afra Southern black korhaan A afraoides Northern black korhaan Eupodotis E senegalensis White bellied bustard E caerulescens Blue korhaan Family Otididae 17 citation needed Genus Gryzaja Zubareva 1939 Gryzaja odessana Zubareva 1939 Genus Ioriotis Burchak Abramovich amp Vekua 1981 Ioriotis gabunii Burchak Abramovich amp Vekua 1981 Genus Miootis Umanskaya 1979 Miootis compactus Umanskaya 1979 Genus Pleotis Hou 1982 Pleotis liui Hou 1982 Genus Lissotis Reichenbach 1848 Hartlaub s bustard Lissotis hartlaubii Heuglin 1863 Black bellied bustard Lissotis melanogaster Ruppell 1835 L m notophila Oberholser 1905 L m melanogaster Ruppell 1835 Genus Neotis Sharpe 1893 Nubian bustard Neotis nuba Ludwig s bustard Neotis ludwigii Denham s bustard Neotis denhami N d denhami Denham s bustard N d jacksoni Jackson s bustard N d stanleyi Stanley bustard Heuglin s bustard Neotis heuglinii Genus Ardeotis Le Maout 1853 Arabian bustard Ardeotis arabs Linnaeus 1758 A a lynesi Bannerman 1930 Moroccan bustard A a stieberi Neumann 1907 great Arabian bustard A a arabs Linnaeus 1758 A a butleri Bannerman 1930 Sudan bustard Australian bustard Ardeotis australis Gray 1829 Great Indian bustard Ardeotis nigriceps Vigors 1831 Kori bustard Ardeotis kori Burchell 1822 A k struthiunculus Neumann 1907 Northern Kori bustard A k kori Burchell 1822 Southern Kori bustard Genus Tetrax Forster 1817 T paratetrax Bochenski amp Kurockin 1987 Little bustard Tetrax tetrax Linnaeus 1758 Forster 1817 Genus Otis Linnaeus 1758 O bessarabicus Kessler amp Gal 1996 O hellenica Boev Lazaridis amp Tsoukala 2014 Great bustard Otis tarda Linnaeus 1758 O t tarda Linnaeus 1758 Western great bustard O t dybowskii Taczanowski 1874 Eastern great bustard Genus Chlamydotis Lesson 1839 C affinis Lydekker 1891a Brodkorb 1967 C mesetaria Sanchez Marco 1990 Macqueen s bustard Chlamydotis macqueenii Gray 1832 18 Houbara bustard Chlamydotis undulata Jacquin 1784 C u fuertaventurae Rothschild amp Hartert 1894 Canary Islands houbara bustard C u undulata Jacquin 1784 North African houbara bustard Genus Houbaropsis Sharpe 1893 Bengal florican Houbaropsis bengalensis Statius Muller 1776 Sharpe 1893 H b bengalensis Statius Muller 1776 Sharpe 1893 H b blandini Delacour 1928 Genus Sypheotides Lesson 1839 Lesser florican Sypheotides indicus Miller 1782 Lesson 1839 Genus Lophotis Reichenbach 1848 Red crested korhaan Lophotis ruficrista Smith 1836 Savile s bustard Lophotis savilei Lynes 1920 Buff crested bustard Lophotis gindiana Oustalet 1881 Genus Heterotetrax Sharpe 1894 Little brown bustard Heterotetrax humilis Blyth 1855 Karoo korhaan Heterotetrax vigorsii Smith 1831 H v namaqua Roberts 1932 H v vigorsii Smith 1831 Ruppell s korhaan Heterotetrax rueppelii Wahlberg 1856 H r fitzsimonsi Roberts 1937 H r rueppelii Wahlberg 1856 Genus Eupodotis Lesson 1839 Blue korhaan Eupodotis caerulescens Vieillot 1820 White bellied bustard Eupodotis senegalensis Vieillot 1821 E s barrowii Gray 1829 Barrow s southern white bellied Bustard E s canicollis Reichenow 1881 Somali white bellied knorhaan E s erlangeri Reichenow 1905 E s mackenziei White 1945 E s senegalensis Vieillot 1821 Senegal bustard Genus Afrotis Gray 1855 Southern black korhaan Afrotis afra Linnaeus 1758 Northern black korhaan Afrotis afraoides Smith 1831 A a etoschae Grote 1922 A a damarensis Roberts 1926 A a afraoides Smith 1831 Description editBustards are all fairly large with the two largest species the kori bustard Ardeotis kori and the great bustard Otis tarda being frequently cited as the world s heaviest flying birds In both the largest species large males exceed a weight of 20 kg 44 lb weigh around 13 5 kg 30 lb on average and can attain a total length of 150 cm 59 in The smallest species is the little brown bustard Eupodotis humilis which is around 40 cm 16 in long and weighs around 600 g 1 3 lb on average In most bustards males are substantially larger than females often about 30 longer and sometimes more than twice the weight They are among the most sexually dimorphic groups of birds In only the floricans is the sexual dimorphism the reverse with the adult female being slightly larger and heavier than the male citation needed The wings have 10 primaries and 16 24 secondary feathers There are 18 20 feathers in the tail The plumage is predominantly cryptic 2 Behaviour and ecology editBustards are omnivorous feeding principally on seeds and invertebrates They make their nests on the ground making their eggs and offspring often very vulnerable to predation They walk steadily on strong legs and big toes pecking for food as they go Most prefer to run or walk over flying They have long broad wings with fingered wingtips and striking patterns in flight Many have interesting mating displays such as inflating throat sacs or elevating elaborate feathered crests The female lays three to five dark speckled eggs in a scrape in the ground and incubates them alone 19 Evolution editGenetic dating indicates that bustards evolved c 30 million years ago in either southern or eastern Africa from where they dispersed into Eurasia and Australia 20 Status and conservation edit nbsp Flying bustards Apajpuszta HungaryBustards are gregarious outside the breeding season but are very wary and difficult to approach in the open habitats they prefer 21 Most species are declining or endangered through habitat loss and hunting even where they are nominally protected United Kingdom edit The birds were once common and abounded on the Salisbury Plain They had become rare by 1819 when a large male surprised by a dog on Newmarket Heath sold in Leadenhall Market for five guineas 22 The last bustard in Britain died in approximately 1832 but the bird is being reintroduced through batches of chicks imported from Russia 21 In 2009 two great bustard chicks were hatched in Britain for the first time in more than 170 years 23 Reintroduced bustards also hatched chicks in 2010 24 Floricans editSome Indian bustards are also called floricans The origin of the name is unclear Thomas C Jerdon writes in The Birds of India 1862 I have not been able to trace the origin of the Anglo Indian word Florikin but was once informed that the Little Bustard in Europe was sometimes called Flanderkin Latham gives the word Flercher as an English name and this apparently has the same origin as Florikin Jerdon s Birds of India 2nd ed ii 625 The Hobson Jobson dictionary however casts doubt on this theory stating that We doubt if Jerdon has here understood Latham correctly What Latham writes is in describing the Passarage Bustard which he says is the size of the Little Bustard Inhabits India Called Passarage Plover I find that it is known in India by the name of Oorail by some of the English called Flercher Suppt to Gen Synopsis of Birds 1787 229 Here we understand the English to be the English in India and Flercher to be a clerical error for some form of floriken Notes edit proximae iis sunt quas Hispania aves tardas appellat Graecia wtidos damnatas in cibis emissa enim ossibus medulla odoris taedium extemplo sequitur Next to these are the birds that Spain calls tardae and Greece otides which are condemned as an article of diet because when the marrow is drained out of their bones a disgusting smell at once follows 5 References edit Gill Frank Donsker David Rasmussen Pamela eds 2019 Turacos bustards cuckoos mesites sandgrouse World Bird List Version 9 2 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 26 June 2019 a b del Hoyo J Elliott A amp Sargatal J editors 1996 Handbook of the Birds of the World Volume 3 Hoatzin to Auks Lynx Edicions ISBN 84 87334 20 2 Turner William 1903 1544 Turner on birds a short and succinct history of the principal birds noticed by Pliny and Aristotle first published by Doctor William Turner 1544 in Latin and English Translated by Evans A H Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp xvi 130 131 Turner William 1544 Avium praecipuarum quarum apud Plinium et Aristotelem mentio est brevis et succincta historia in Latin Cambridge Ioan Gymnicus pp 72 73 a b Pliny Natural History III Libri VIII XI The Loeb Classical Library Translated by Rachham H Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1967 pp 328 329 Belon Pierre 1555 L histoire de la natvre des oyseavx avec levrs descriptions amp naifs portraicts retirez du natvrel escrite en sept livres in French Paris Gilles Corrozet pp 235 237 Aldrovandi Ulisse 1637 1600 Vlyssis Aldrovandi philosophi ac medici Bononiensis historiam naturalem in gymnasio Bononiensi profitentis Ornithologiae in Latin Vol 2 Bononiae Bologna Italy Apud Nicolaum Tebaldinum p 85 Lewis Charlton T Short Charles 1879 tardus A Latin Dictionary Perseus Digital Library Great Bustard Otis tarda Information on Great Bustard Encyclopedia of Life Retrieved 21 August 2012 Rafinesque Constantine Samuel 1815 Analyse de la nature ou Tableau de l univers et des corps organises in French Vol 1815 Palermo Self published p 70 Bock Walter J 1994 History and Nomenclature of Avian Family Group Names Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History Vol Number 222 New York American Museum of Natural History pp 137 252 hdl 2246 830 Taxonomic lists Aves Retrieved 30 December 2015 Linnaeus Carl 1758 Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis in Latin Vol 1 10th ed Holmiae Stockholm Laurentii Salvii p 154 Jobling James A 2010 Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London UK Christopher Helm p 286 ISBN 978 1 4081 3326 2 OCLC 659731768 Liddell Henry George Scott Robert 1940 ὠtis A Greek English Lexicon Perseus Digital Library Boyd John 2007 Otididae PDF John Boyd s website Retrieved 30 December 2015 Turacos bustards cuckoos mesites sandgrouse IOC World Bird List v13 2 Retrieved 21 October 2023 Macqueen s bustard has recently been split from the Houbara bustard as a full species Archibald George W 1991 Forshaw Joseph ed Encyclopaedia of Animals Birds London Merehurst Press pp 98 99 ISBN 978 1 85391 186 6 Pitra C Lieckfeldt D Frahnert S Fickel J 2002 Phylogenetic relationships and ancestral areas of the bustards Gruiformes Otididae inferred from mitochondrial DNA and nuclear intron sequences Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 23 1 63 74 doi 10 1006 mpev 2001 1078 PMID 12182403 a b Bota G J Camprodon S Manosa amp M B Morales Editores 2005 Ecology and Conservation of steppe land birds Lynx Editions Barcelona ISBN 84 87334 99 7 978 84 87334 99 3 The National Cyclopaedia of Useful Knowledge Vol III London 1847 Charles Knight p 963 Bird Guides 2009 The first Great Bustard chicks in the UK Bird Guides June 2009 Biodiversity Lab 2010 Reintroduced Great Bustards Breed Again Archived 2017 01 25 at the Wayback Machine The Biodiversity Lab University of Bath Bota Gerard et al Ecology and conservation of Steppe Land birds International Symposium on Ecology and Conservation of Steppe land birds Lynx Edicions 2005 343 pages ISBN 84 87334 99 7 Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Bustard Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Knox Alan G Martin Collinson Andreas J Helbig David T Parkin George Sangster October 2002 Taxonomic recommendations for British birds Ibis 144 4 707 710 doi 10 1046 j 1474 919X 2002 00110 x Sibley Charles G Jon E Ahlquist 1990 Phylogeny and Classification of the Birds A Study in Molecular Evolution New Haven Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 04085 2 Hackett SJ et al 2008 A phylogenomic study of birds reveals their evolutionary history Science 320 5884 1763 1768 Bibcode 2008Sci 320 1763H doi 10 1126 science 1157704 PMID 18583609 S2CID 6472805 Jarvis Erich D et al 2014 Whole genome analyses resolve early branches in the tree of life of modern birds Science 346 6215 1320 1331 Bibcode 2014Sci 346 1320J doi 10 1126 science 1253451 PMC 4405904 PMID 25504713 External links edit nbsp Look up bustard in Wiktionary the free dictionary nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Otididae nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Otididae Bustard videos on the Internet Bird Collection Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Bustard amp oldid 1189215486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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