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Common linnet

The common linnet (Linaria cannabina) is a small passerine bird of the finch family, Fringillidae. It derives its common name and the scientific name, Linaria, from its fondness for hemp seeds and flax seeds—flax being the English name of the plant from which linen is made.

Common linnet
Male in breeding plumage
Female
Song
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Fringillidae
Subfamily: Carduelinae
Genus: Linaria
Species:
L. cannabina
Binomial name
Linaria cannabina
Range of L. cannabina
  Breeding
  Resident
  Non-breeding
Synonyms
  • Fringilla cannabina Linnaeus, 1758
  • Carduelis cannabina (Linnaeus, 1758)

Taxonomy edit

In 1758, the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus included the common linnet in the 10th edition of his Systema Naturae under the binomial name, Acanthis cannabina.[2][3] The species was formerly placed in the genus Carduelis but based on the results of a phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences published in 2012, it was moved to the genus Linaria that had been introduced by the German naturalist Johann Matthäus Bechstein in 1802.[4][5][6]

The genus name linaria is the Latin for a linen-weaver, from linum, "flax". The species name cannabina comes from the Latin for hemp.[7] The English name has a similar root, being derived from Old French linette, from lin, "flax".[8]

There are seven recognised subspecies:[4]

  • L. c. autochthona (Clancey, 1946) – Scotland
  • L. c. cannabina (Linnaeus, 1758) – western, central and northern Europe, western and central Siberia. Non-breeding in north Africa and southwest Asia
  • L. c. bella (Brehm, CL, 1845) – Middle East to Mongolia and northwestern China
  • L. c. mediterranea (Tschusi, 1903) – Iberian Peninsula, Italy, Greece, northwest Africa and Mediterranean islands
  • L. c. guentheri (Wolters, 1953) – Madeira
  • L. c. meadewaldoi (Hartert, 1901) – western and central Canary Island (El Hierro and Gran Canaria)
  • L. c. harterti (Bannerman, 1913) – eastern Canary Islands (Alegranza, Lanzarote and Fuerteventura)

Description edit

The common linnet is a slim bird with a long tail. The upper parts are brown, the throat is sullied white and the bill is grey. The summer male has a grey nape, red head-patch and red breast. Females and young birds lack the red and have white underparts, the breast streaked buff.

Distribution edit

The common linnet breeds in Europe, the western Palearctic and North Africa. It is partially resident, but many eastern and northern birds migrate farther south in the breeding range or move to the coasts. They are sometimes found several hundred miles off-shore.[9] It has been introduced to the Dominican Republic.

Behaviour edit

 
Eggs

Open land with thick bushes is favoured for breeding, including heathland and garden. It builds its nest in a bush, laying four to seven eggs.

This species can form large flocks outside the breeding season, sometimes mixed with other finches, such as twite, on coasts and salt marshes.

The common linnet's pleasant song contains fast trills and twitters.

It feeds on the ground, and low down in bushes, its food mainly consisting of seeds, which it also feeds to its chicks. It likes small to medium-sized seeds from most arable weeds, knotgrass, dock), crucifers (including charlock, shepherd's purse), chickweeds, dandelions, thistle, sow-thistle, mayweed, common groundsel, common hawthorn and birch. They have a small component of Invertebrates in their diet.

Conservation edit

The common linnet is listed by the UK Biodiversity Action Plan as a priority species. It is protected in the UK by the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981.

In Britain, populations are declining, attributed to increasing use of herbicides, aggressive scrub removal and excessive hedge trimming; its population fell by 56% between 1968 and 1991, probably due to a decrease in seed supply and the increasing use of herbicide. From 1980 to 2009, according to the Pan-European Common Bird Monitoring Scheme, the European population decreased by 62%[10]

Favourable management practices on agricultural land include:

Cultural references edit

The bird was a popular pet in the late Victorian and Edwardian eras. Alfred, Lord Tennyson mentions "the linnet born within the cage" in Canto 27 of his 1849 poem "In Memoriam A.H.H.", the same section that contains the famous lines "'Tis better to have loved and lost / Than never to have loved at all." A linnet features in the classic British music hall song "Don't Dilly Dally on the Way" (1919) which is subtitled "The Cock Linnet Song". It is a character in Oscar Wilde's children's story "The Devoted Friend" (1888) and Wilde also mentions how the call of the linnet awakens "The Selfish Giant" to the one tree where it is springtime in his garden. William Butler Yeats evokes the image of the common linnet in "The Lake Isle of Innisfree" (1890) : "And evening full of the linnet's wings." and also mentions the bird in his poem "A Prayer for My Daughter" (1919): "May she become a flourishing hidden tree That all her thoughts may like the linnet be, And have no business but dispensing round Their magnanimities of sound." In the 1840 novel The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens, the heroine Nell keeps "only a poor linnet" in a cage, which she leaves for Kit as a sign of her gratefulness to him.

The English Baroque composer John Blow composed an ode on the occasion of the death of his colleague Henry Purcell, "An Ode on the Death of Mr. Purcell" set to the poem "Mark how the lark and linnet sing" by the poet John Dryden.

"The Linnets" has become the nickname of King's Lynn Football Club, Burscough Football Club and Runcorn Linnets Football Club (formerly known as 'Runcorn F.C.' and Runcorn F.C. Halton). Barry Town F.C., the South Wales-based football team, also used to be nicknamed 'The Linnets'.

Robert Burns's 1788 poem "A Mother's Lament for the Death of Her Son" also tells of a linnet bird bewailing her ravished young.[11]

William Blake invokes "the linnet's song" in one of the poems entitled "Song" in his Poetical Sketches.[12]

Walter de la Mare's poem "The Linnet", published in 1918 in the collection Motley and Other Poems, has been set to music by a number of composers including Cecil Armstrong Gibbs, Kenneth Leighton[13] and Jack Gibbons.[14]

The Eurovision Song Contest 2014 entry for the Netherlands "The Common Linnets" is a direct reference to the bird.

William Wordsworth argued that the song of the common linnet provides more wisdom than books in the third verse of "The Tables Turned":

Books! 'tis a dull and endless strife:
Come, hear the woodland linnet,
How sweet his music! on my life,
There's more of wisdom in it.

But the fellow English poet Robert Bridges used the common linnet instead to express the limitations of poetry—concentrating on the difficulty in poetry of conveying the beauty of a bird's song. He wrote in the first verse:

I heard a linnet courting
His lady in the spring:
His mates were idly sporting,
Nor stayed to hear him sing
His song of love.—
I fear my speech distorting
His tender love.

The musical Sweeney Todd features the song "Green Finch and Linnet Bird", in which a young lady confined to her room wonders why caged birds sing:

Green finch and linnet bird,
Nightingale, blackbird,
How is it you sing?
How can you jubilate,
Sitting in cages,
Never taking wing?

In Emily Dickinson's poem "Morns like these—we parted—" the last line is: "And this linnet flew!"[15]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2018). "Linaria cannabina". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2018: e.T22720441A132139778. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2018-2.RLTS.T22720441A132139778.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ Paynter, Raymond A. Jnr., ed. (1968). Check-list of birds of the world, Volume 14. Vol. 14. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Museum of Comparative Zoology. pp. 255–256.
  3. ^ Linnaeus, C. (1766). Systema Naturæ per regna tria naturae, secundum classes, ordines, genera, species, cum characteribus, differentiis, synonymis, locis, Volume 1 (in Latin). Vol. 1 (10th ed.). Holmiae:Laurentii Salvii. p. 182.
  4. ^ a b Gill, Frank; Donsker, David (eds.). "Finches, euphonias". World Bird List Version 5.2. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 5 June 2015.
  5. ^ Zuccon, Dario; Prŷs-Jones, Robert; Rasmussen, Pamela C.; Ericson, Per G.P. (2012). "The phylogenetic relationships and generic limits of finches (Fringillidae)" (PDF). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 62 (2): 581–596. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2011.10.002. PMID 22023825.
  6. ^ Bechstein, Johann Matthäus (1803). Ornithologisches Taschenbuch von und für Deutschland, oder, Kurze Beschreibung aller Vögel Deutschlands für Liebhaber dieses Theils der Naturgeschichte (in German). Leipzig: Carl Friedrich Enoch Richter. p. 121.
  7. ^ Jobling, James A (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London: Christopher Helm. pp. 89, 227. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  8. ^ "Linnet". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  9. ^ "The Mirror of Literature, Issue 274". www.gutenberg.org. Retrieved 2021-10-06.
  10. ^ "French President Macron wants to allow trapping of 110,000+ wild birds". 16 September 2021.
  11. ^ "Robert Burns Country: A Mother's Lament for the Death of Her Son".
  12. ^ "William Blake (1757-1827). Extracts from Poetical Sketches: Song: 'Memory, hither come'. T. H. Ward, ed. 1880-1918. The English Poets".
  13. ^ "The LiederNet Archive". 2008-01-11. Retrieved 2016-03-26.
  14. ^ "Gibbons: 'The Linnet', Op.25". YouTube. 2010-12-06. Retrieved 2016-03-26.[dead YouTube link]
  15. ^ "Morns like these—we parted by Emily Dickinson".

Further reading edit

External links edit

  • Common Linnet · Linaria cannabina · (Linnaeus, 1758)—Audio recordings from Xeno-canto
  • at Wildscreen's Arkive (videos, stills)
  • BBC Wildlifefinder—Videos, sound files and information programmes featuring linnets
  • (PDF; 4.8 MB) by Javier Blasco-Zumeta & Gerd-Michael Heinze

common, linnet, north, american, bird, house, finch, linnet, redirects, here, other, uses, linnet, disambiguation, common, linnet, linaria, cannabina, small, passerine, bird, finch, family, fringillidae, derives, common, name, scientific, name, linaria, from, . For the North American bird see House finch Linnet redirects here For other uses see Linnet disambiguation The common linnet Linaria cannabina is a small passerine bird of the finch family Fringillidae It derives its common name and the scientific name Linaria from its fondness for hemp seeds and flax seeds flax being the English name of the plant from which linen is made Common linnetMale in breeding plumageFemale source source source SongConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PasseriformesFamily FringillidaeSubfamily CarduelinaeGenus LinariaSpecies L cannabinaBinomial nameLinaria cannabina Linnaeus 1758 Range of L cannabina Breeding Resident Non breedingSynonymsFringilla cannabina Linnaeus 1758 Carduelis cannabina Linnaeus 1758 Contents 1 Taxonomy 2 Description 3 Distribution 4 Behaviour 5 Conservation 6 Cultural references 7 Gallery 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksTaxonomy editIn 1758 the Swedish naturalist Carl Linnaeus included the common linnet in the 10th edition of his Systema Naturae under the binomial name Acanthis cannabina 2 3 The species was formerly placed in the genus Carduelis but based on the results of a phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial and nuclear DNA sequences published in 2012 it was moved to the genus Linaria that had been introduced by the German naturalist Johann Matthaus Bechstein in 1802 4 5 6 The genus name linaria is the Latin for a linen weaver from linum flax The species name cannabina comes from the Latin for hemp 7 The English name has a similar root being derived from Old French linette from lin flax 8 There are seven recognised subspecies 4 L c autochthona Clancey 1946 Scotland L c cannabina Linnaeus 1758 western central and northern Europe western and central Siberia Non breeding in north Africa and southwest Asia L c bella Brehm CL 1845 Middle East to Mongolia and northwestern China L c mediterranea Tschusi 1903 Iberian Peninsula Italy Greece northwest Africa and Mediterranean islands L c guentheri Wolters 1953 Madeira L c meadewaldoi Hartert 1901 western and central Canary Island El Hierro and Gran Canaria L c harterti Bannerman 1913 eastern Canary Islands Alegranza Lanzarote and Fuerteventura nbsp L c mediterranea male nbsp L c mediterranea female nbsp L c mediterranea juvenileDescription editThe common linnet is a slim bird with a long tail The upper parts are brown the throat is sullied white and the bill is grey The summer male has a grey nape red head patch and red breast Females and young birds lack the red and have white underparts the breast streaked buff Distribution editThe common linnet breeds in Europe the western Palearctic and North Africa It is partially resident but many eastern and northern birds migrate farther south in the breeding range or move to the coasts They are sometimes found several hundred miles off shore 9 It has been introduced to the Dominican Republic Behaviour edit nbsp EggsOpen land with thick bushes is favoured for breeding including heathland and garden It builds its nest in a bush laying four to seven eggs This species can form large flocks outside the breeding season sometimes mixed with other finches such as twite on coasts and salt marshes The common linnet s pleasant song contains fast trills and twitters It feeds on the ground and low down in bushes its food mainly consisting of seeds which it also feeds to its chicks It likes small to medium sized seeds from most arable weeds knotgrass dock crucifers including charlock shepherd s purse chickweeds dandelions thistle sow thistle mayweed common groundsel common hawthorn and birch They have a small component of Invertebrates in their diet Conservation editThe common linnet is listed by the UK Biodiversity Action Plan as a priority species It is protected in the UK by the Wildlife and Countryside Act 1981 In Britain populations are declining attributed to increasing use of herbicides aggressive scrub removal and excessive hedge trimming its population fell by 56 between 1968 and 1991 probably due to a decrease in seed supply and the increasing use of herbicide From 1980 to 2009 according to the Pan European Common Bird Monitoring Scheme the European population decreased by 62 10 Favourable management practices on agricultural land include Set aside Overwinter stubbles Uncultivated margins ditches field corners Conservation headlands Wild bird cover using plants that produce small oil rich seeds such as kale quinoa mustard plant and oil seed rape Brassica napus Restoration of meadows restoration and creation of hay meadows Short thick thorny hedgerows and scrub for nesting habitatCultural references editThe bird was a popular pet in the late Victorian and Edwardian eras Alfred Lord Tennyson mentions the linnet born within the cage in Canto 27 of his 1849 poem In Memoriam A H H the same section that contains the famous lines Tis better to have loved and lost Than never to have loved at all A linnet features in the classic British music hall song Don t Dilly Dally on the Way 1919 which is subtitled The Cock Linnet Song It is a character in Oscar Wilde s children s story The Devoted Friend 1888 and Wilde also mentions how the call of the linnet awakens The Selfish Giant to the one tree where it is springtime in his garden William Butler Yeats evokes the image of the common linnet in The Lake Isle of Innisfree 1890 And evening full of the linnet s wings and also mentions the bird in his poem A Prayer for My Daughter 1919 May she become a flourishing hidden tree That all her thoughts may like the linnet be And have no business but dispensing round Their magnanimities of sound In the 1840 novel The Old Curiosity Shop by Charles Dickens the heroine Nell keeps only a poor linnet in a cage which she leaves for Kit as a sign of her gratefulness to him The English Baroque composer John Blow composed an ode on the occasion of the death of his colleague Henry Purcell An Ode on the Death of Mr Purcell set to the poem Mark how the lark and linnet sing by the poet John Dryden The Linnets has become the nickname of King s Lynn Football Club Burscough Football Club and Runcorn Linnets Football Club formerly known as Runcorn F C and Runcorn F C Halton Barry Town F C the South Wales based football team also used to be nicknamed The Linnets Robert Burns s 1788 poem A Mother s Lament for the Death of Her Son also tells of a linnet bird bewailing her ravished young 11 William Blake invokes the linnet s song in one of the poems entitled Song in his Poetical Sketches 12 Walter de la Mare s poem The Linnet published in 1918 in the collection Motley and Other Poems has been set to music by a number of composers including Cecil Armstrong Gibbs Kenneth Leighton 13 and Jack Gibbons 14 The Eurovision Song Contest 2014 entry for the Netherlands The Common Linnets is a direct reference to the bird William Wordsworth argued that the song of the common linnet provides more wisdom than books in the third verse of The Tables Turned Books tis a dull and endless strife Come hear the woodland linnet How sweet his music on my life There s more of wisdom in it But the fellow English poet Robert Bridges used the common linnet instead to express the limitations of poetry concentrating on the difficulty in poetry of conveying the beauty of a bird s song He wrote in the first verse I heard a linnet courting His lady in the spring His mates were idly sporting Nor stayed to hear him sing His song of love I fear my speech distorting His tender love The musical Sweeney Todd features the song Green Finch and Linnet Bird in which a young lady confined to her room wonders why caged birds sing Green finch and linnet bird Nightingale blackbird How is it you sing How can you jubilate Sitting in cages Never taking wing In Emily Dickinson s poem Morns like these we parted the last line is And this linnet flew 15 Gallery edit nbsp Young in nest nbsp nbsp ID compositeReferences edit BirdLife International 2018 Linaria cannabina IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2018 e T22720441A132139778 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2018 2 RLTS T22720441A132139778 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Paynter Raymond A Jnr ed 1968 Check list of birds of the world Volume 14 Vol 14 Cambridge Massachusetts Museum of Comparative Zoology pp 255 256 Linnaeus C 1766 Systema Naturae per regna tria naturae secundum classes ordines genera species cum characteribus differentiis synonymis locis Volume 1 in Latin Vol 1 10th ed Holmiae Laurentii Salvii p 182 a b Gill Frank Donsker David eds Finches euphonias World Bird List Version 5 2 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 5 June 2015 Zuccon Dario Prŷs Jones Robert Rasmussen Pamela C Ericson Per G P 2012 The phylogenetic relationships and generic limits of finches Fringillidae PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 62 2 581 596 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2011 10 002 PMID 22023825 Bechstein Johann Matthaus 1803 Ornithologisches Taschenbuch von und fur Deutschland oder Kurze Beschreibung aller Vogel Deutschlands fur Liebhaber dieses Theils der Naturgeschichte in German Leipzig Carl Friedrich Enoch Richter p 121 Jobling James A 2010 The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London Christopher Helm pp 89 227 ISBN 978 1 4081 2501 4 Linnet Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required The Mirror of Literature Issue 274 www gutenberg org Retrieved 2021 10 06 French President Macron wants to allow trapping of 110 000 wild birds 16 September 2021 Robert Burns Country A Mother s Lament for the Death of Her Son William Blake 1757 1827 Extracts from Poetical Sketches Song Memory hither come T H Ward ed 1880 1918 The English Poets The LiederNet Archive 2008 01 11 Retrieved 2016 03 26 Gibbons The Linnet Op 25 YouTube 2010 12 06 Retrieved 2016 03 26 dead YouTube link Morns like these we parted by Emily Dickinson Further reading editWinspear Richard Davies Gethin 2005 A Management Guide to Birds of Lowland Farmland RSPB Management Guides Sandy Bedfordshire UK Royal Society for the Protection of Birds ISBN 9781901930573 OCLC 954855935 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Carduelis cannabina nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1921 Collier s Encyclopedia article Common linnet Common Linnet Linaria cannabina Linnaeus 1758 Audio recordings from Xeno canto Linnet Carduelis cannabina at Wildscreen s Arkive videos stills BBC Wildlifefinder Videos sound files and information programmes featuring linnets Ageing and sexing PDF 4 8 MB by Javier Blasco Zumeta amp Gerd Michael Heinze Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Common linnet amp oldid 1179976592, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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