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Birdlime
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Birdlime : ウィキペディア英語版
Birdlime

Birdlime or bird lime is an adhesive substance used in trapping birds. It is spread on a branch or twig, upon which a bird may land and be caught. Its use is illegal in many jurisdictions.
==Manufacture==
Historically, the substance has been prepared in various ways, and from various materials.
In South Africa, birdlime (called ''voëlent'' in Afrikaans) is prepared from local mistletoe fruits. A handful of ripe fruits is chewed until sticky, and the mass is then rubbed between the palms of the hands to form long and extremely sticky strands which are then coiled around small thin tree branches where birds perch.〔Johnson, Thomas B. (1848) (''The sportsman's cyclopaedia'' ), p.56.〕
A popular form was made from holly bark, boiled for 10 to 12 hours. After the green coating is separated from the other, it is stored in a moist place for two weeks. It is then pounded into a thick paste, until no wood fibres remain, and washed in running water until no small specks appear. After fermenting for four or five days, during which it is frequently skimmed, the substance is mixed over a fire with a third part of nut oil. It is then ready for use.
Another popular form made in Asia is from the ''Ilex integra'' tree.
Birdlime from Damascus was supposed to be made of sebestens, their kernels being frequently found in it; this version was not able to endure frost or wet. That brought from Spain was said to have a bad odor. That of the Italians was made of mistletoe berries, heated, mixed with oil, as before; to make it water resistant, they added turpentine. It was said that the bark of the wayfaring tree (''Viburnum lantana'') made birdlime as good as the best.
Nathaniel Atcheson in his 1811 work ''On the Origin and Progress of the North-West Company of Canada with a history of the fur trade...'' mentions birdlime (p 14) as an important import commodity for use in the Canadian west in the late 18th century.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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