The New Student's Reference Work/Spoonbill

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Spoon′bill, the name of birds related to the Ibises, having long, broadly expanded bills, more like paddles than spoons. They belong chiefly to the eastern hemisphere, where there are six or seven species. The European spoonbill is a white bird about 32 inches long. It breeds in Holland and other parts of Europe. The roseate spoonbill is the only American species. It is abundant in the tropics and also breeds in the southern United States. These birds inhabit marshes, muddy borders of estuaries and
WHITE SPOONBILL
small sea-islands overgrown with bushes. They are from 28 to 35 inches in length, of a beautiful rose-color, deepest on the wings, fading to almost white on the neck, back and breast. Their tail-coverts are deep carmine. They feed at night by gathering insects and shellfishes from the mud in shallow water. In the breeding season they congregate in large numbers.