Field Guide/Birds/Streptopelia turtur

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The Turtle Dove (Streptopelia turtur) is a member of the bird family Columbidae, which includes the doves and pigeons.

It is a migratory species with a western Palearctic range, including Turkey and north Africa, though it is rare in northern Scandinavia and Russia; it winters in southern Africa.

In the British Isles, France, and elsewhere in northwestern Europe it is in severe population decline. This is partly because changed farming practices mean that the weed seeds and shoots on which it feeds, especially Fumitory, are scarcer, and partly due to shooting of birds on migration in Mediterranean countries.

Smaller and slighter in build than other doves, the Turtle Dove may be recognised by its browner colour, and the black and white striped patch on the side of its neck, but it is its tail that catches the eye when it flies from the observer; it is wedge shaped, with a dark centre and white borders and tips. When viewed from below this pattern, owing to the white under tail coverts obscuring the dark bases, is a blackish chevron on a white ground. This is noticeable when the bird stoops to drink, raising its spread tail.

The mature bird has the head, neck, flanks, and rump blue grey, and the wings cinnamon, mottled with black. The breast is vinaceous, the abdomen and under tail coverts are white. The bill is black, the legs and eyerims are red. The black and white patch on the side of the neck is absent in the browner and duller juvenile bird, which also has the legs brown.

The Turtle Dove, one of the latest migrants, rarely appears in Northern Europe before the end of April, returning south again in September.

It is a bird of open rather than dense woodlands, and frequently feeds on the ground. It will occasionally nest in large gardens, but is usually extremely timid, probably due to the heavy hunting pressure it faces on migration. The flight is often described as arrowy, but is not remarkably swift.

The nuptial flight, high and circling, is rather like that of the Wood Pigeon, but the undulations are less decided; it is accompanied by the whipcrack of the downward flicked wings. The arrival in spring is heralded by its purring song, a rather deep, vibrating “turrr, turrr”, from which the bird's name is derived.

The nest is even more flimsy looking than that of the Wood Pigeon, being built of more slender twigs, usually at no great height, in a tree or old untrimmed hedge. The two white eggs are laid late in May or in June, often with a second clutch in July or August.

A few other doves in the same genus are also called turtle doves:

S. senegalensis and S. chinensis have been introduced into Australia.

A New World dove of similar appearance and behavior to that of the Turtle Dove is the Mourning Dove.

Biblical References

Turtle doves are mentioned in the Bible, and their migratory habits had clearly been noted:

"Even the stork in the heavens knows its times; and the turtledove, swallow, and crane observe the time of their coming" (Jeremiah 8:7).
"For now the winter is past, the rain is over and gone. The flowers appear on the earth; the time of singing has come, and the voice of the turtledove is heard in our land" (Song of Songs 2:11-12).

However, although the same Hebrew word is used to describe them, the doves allowed to be used in sacrifices (cf. Leviticus, e.g. 1:14; Luke 2:24) were presumably not Turtle Doves, but the domesticated Rock Doves.

Perhaps because of these biblical references (especially the well known verse from the Song of Songs, which is essentially a love poem), but also because of its mournful voice and the fact that it forms strong pair bonds, the Turtle Dove features in a number of folk songs about love and loss. One of these is well known in a setting by Ralph Vaughan Williams.

Pop Culture References

Turtle Doves feature in the song "Twelve Days of Christmas", as the gift one gives on the second day of Christmas.

In the 1998 movie "Simon Birch", Turtle Doves are portrayed in a church play by children dressed as turtles with bird wings.

In the 2003 release of "Gangs of New York", a 'Turtle Dove' was referenced as a woman that dresses as a maid and enters a home 'through the back door' to rob it blind.

References

  • Template:IUCN2006 Database entry includes justification for why this species is of least concern

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