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<ANTIMG id="coverpage" src="images/cover.jpg" alt="British Sea Birds" width-obs="500" height-obs="726" /></div>
<div class="box">
<h1><span class="sc">British Sea Birds</span></h1>
<p class="tbcenter"><span class="small"><i>By</i></span>
<br/><span class="large">CHARLES DIXON</span>
<br/><span class="smaller">AUTHOR OF
<br/>“THE GAME BIRDS AND WILD FOWL OF THE BRITISH ISLANDS”;
<br/>“THE NESTS AND EGGS OF BRITISH BIRDS”;
<br/>“ANNALS OF BIRD-LIFE”;
<br/>“THE MIGRATION OF BRITISH BIRDS”;
<br/>ETC. ETC.</span></p>
<p class="tbcenter"><span class="small"><i>WITH EIGHT ILLUSTRATIONS</i></span>
<br/><span class="smaller">BY</span>
<br/>CHARLES WHYMPER</p>
<div class="fig">> <ANTIMG src="images/i_000.jpg" alt="" width-obs="130" height-obs="164" /></div>
<p class="center"><span class="small"><i>LONDON</i></span>
<br/>BLISS, SANDS AND FOSTER
<br/><span class="small">1896</span></p>
</div>
<p class="tbcenter"><i>DEDICATION</i></p>
<p class="tbcenter"><span class="small">TO</span></p>
<p class="center"><span class="large"><i><b>John William Pease, D.C.L.</b></i></span></p>
<p class="center"><span class="small">[<span class="sc">Pendower, Newcastle-upon-Tyne</span>]</span></p>
<p class="center"><span class="small">AS A SMALL BUT CORDIAL TOKEN OF ESTEEM</span></p>
<p class="center"><i><b>This Volume is Inscribed</b></i></p>
<p class="center"><span class="small">BY</span></p>
<p class="center"><span class="small">THE AUTHOR.</span></p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_vii">vii</div>
<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
<dt class="center"><SPAN href="#c1">CHAPTER I.</SPAN>
<br/><i>GULLS AND TERNS.</i>
<dt class="just">The Gull Family—​Changes of Plumage—​Characteristics—​Great Black-backed
Gull—​Lesser Black-backed Gull—​Herring Gull—​Common Gull—​Kittiwake—​Black-headed
Gull—​Skuas—​Great Skua—​Richardson’s Skua—​Terns—​Sandwich
Tern—​Common Tern—​Arctic Tern—​Roseate Tern—​Lesser
Tern—​Black Tern <span class="jr"><i>Pages</i> 13-60</span>
<dt class="center"><SPAN href="#c2">CHAPTER II.</SPAN>
<br/><i>PLOVERS AND SANDPIPERS.</i>
<dt class="just">Characteristics and Affinities—​Changes of Plumage—​Structural Characters—​Oyster-catcher—​Ringed
Plover—​Kentish Plover—​Golden Plover—​Gray
Plover—​Lapwing—​Turnstone—​Phalaropes—​Gray
Phalarope—​Red-necked Phalarope—​Curlew—​Whimbrel—​Godwits—​Black-tailed Godwit—​Bar-tailed
Godwit—​Redshank—​Sanderling—​Knot—​Curlew Sandpiper—​Dunlin—​Purple
Sandpiper—​Other species <span class="jr">61-121</span>
<dt class="center"><SPAN href="#c3">CHAPTER III.</SPAN>
<br/><i>GUILLEMOTS, RAZORBILL, AND PUFFIN.</i>
<dt class="just">Affinities and Characteristics—​Changes of Plumage—​Guillemot—​Brunnich’s
Guillemot—​Black Guillemot—​Razorbill—​Little Auk—​Puffin <span class="jr">123-150</span>
<div class="pb" id="Page_viii">viii</div>
<dt class="center"><SPAN href="#c4">CHAPTER IV.</SPAN>
<br/><i>DIVERS, GREBES, AND CORMORANTS.</i>
<dt class="just">Divers—​Affinities and Characteristics—​Great Northern Diver—​Black-throated
Diver—​Red-throated Diver—​Grebes—​Characteristics—​Changes of
Plumage—​Great Crested Grebe—​Red-necked Grebe—​Black-necked
Grebe—​Sclavonian Grebe—​Little Grebe—​Cormorants—​Characteristics—​Changes
of Plumage—​Cormorant—​Shag—​Gannet <span class="jr">151-184</span>
<dt class="center"><SPAN href="#c5">CHAPTER V.</SPAN>
<br/><i>DUCKS, GEESE, AND SWANS.</i>
<dt class="just">Ducks—​Characteristics—​Non-diving Ducks—​Characteristics of—​Changes of
Plumage—​Sheldrake—​Wigeon—​Pintail Duck—​Various other Species—​Diving
Ducks—​Characteristics—​Changes of Plumage—​Eider Duck—​King
Eider—​Common Scoter—​Velvet Scoter—​Scaup Duck—​Tufted
Duck—​Pochard—​Golden-eye—​Long-tailed Duck—​Mergansers—​Characteristics
and changes of Plumage—​Red-breasted Merganser—​Goosander—​Smew—​Geese—​Characteristics—​Gray
Lag Goose—​White-fronted Goose—​Bean
Goose—​Brent Goose—​Bernacle Goose—​Swans—​Characteristics—​Changes
of Plumage—​Hooper Swan—​Bewick’s Swan <span class="jr">185-240</span>
<dt class="center"><SPAN href="#c6">CHAPTER VI.</SPAN>
<br/><i>PETRELS.</i>
<dt class="just">Petrels—​Characteristics—​Changes of Plumage—​Fulmar Petrel—​Fork-tailed
Petrel—​Stormy Petrel—​Manx Shearwater <span class="jr">241-258</span>
<dt class="center"><SPAN href="#c7">CHAPTER VII.</SPAN>
<br/><i>LITTORAL LAND BIRDS.</i>
<dt class="just">Littoral Land Birds—​White-tailed Eagle—​Peregrine Falcon—​Raven—​Jackdaw—​Hooded
Crow—​Chough—​Rock Pipit—​Martins—​Rock Dove—​Stock
Dove—​Heron—​Various other Species <span class="jr">259-278</span>
<div class="pb" id="Page_ix">ix</div>
<dt class="center"><SPAN href="#c8">CHAPTER VIII.</SPAN>
<br/><i>MIGRATION ON THE COAST.</i>
<dt class="just">The Best Coasts for Observing Migration—​Migration of Species in Present
Volume—​Order of Appearance of Migratory Birds—​In Spring—​In
Autumn—​Spring Migration of Birds on the Coast—​The Earliest Species
to Migrate—​Departure of Winter Visitors—​Coasting Migrants—​Arrival
of Summer Visitors—​Duration of Spring Migration—​Autumn Migration
of Birds on the Coast—​The Earliest Arrivals—​Departure of our Summer
Birds—​Arrival of Shore Birds—​Direction of Flight—​Change in this
Direction to East—​The Vast Rushes of Birds across the German Ocean—​The
Perils of Migration—​Birds at Lighthouses and Light Vessels—​Netting
Birds—​Rare Birds <span class="jr">279-295</span>
<div class="pb" id="Page_xi">xi</div>
<h2 class="eee">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
<br/><SPAN href="#fig1"><span class="sc">Black-backed Gull and Common Tern</span></SPAN> <i>Faces page</i> 15
<br/><SPAN href="#fig2"><span class="sc">Ruffs</span>—<i>Sparring</i></SPAN> ” ” 63
<br/><SPAN href="#fig3"><span class="sc">Guillemot and Razorbill</span></SPAN> ” ” 125
<br/><SPAN href="#fig4"><span class="sc">Great Northern Diver</span></SPAN> ” ” 153
<br/><SPAN href="#fig5"><span class="sc">Tufted Duck</span></SPAN> ” ” 187
<br/><SPAN href="#fig6"><span class="sc">The Stormy Petrel</span></SPAN> ” ” 243
<br/><SPAN href="#fig7"><span class="sc">The Chough</span></SPAN> ” ” 261
<br/><SPAN href="#fig8"><span class="sc">Migration Time</span> (<i>on the Friskney foreshore</i>)</SPAN> ” ” 281
<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
<h2 id="c1"><i>Gulls and Terns</i></h2>
<div class="fig"> id="fig1"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_003.jpg" alt="BLACK-BACKED GULL AND COMMON TERN. Chapter i." width-obs="500" height-obs="730" /> <p class="center"><span class="small">BLACK-BACKED GULL AND COMMON TERN. <i>Chapter</i> i.</span></p> </div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_15">15</div>
<h2 class="eee">CHAPTER I. <br/>GULLS AND TERNS.</h2>
<blockquote>
<p><i>The Gull Family—Changes
of Plumage—Characteristics—Great
Black-backed Gull—Lesser
Black-backed Gull—Herring
Gull—Common Gull—Kittiwake—Black-headed
Gull—Skuas—Great Skua—Richardson’s Skua—Terns—Sandwich
Tern—Common
Tern—Arctic Tern—Roseate
Tern—Lesser Tern—Black
Tern.</i></p>
</blockquote>
<p>Amongst the many natural objects that
confront the visitor to the sea, there are none
more readily detected than birds. The wide waters
of the ocean and its varied coast-line of cliff or sand,
shingle or mud-flat, are the haunts of many birds
of specialised type. Many of these birds are only
found on or near the sea; they are as inseparably
associated with it as the beautiful shells and seaweeds
and anemones themselves. Some of these
birds are common and widely distributed; others
are scarce or local in their habitat; some frequent
the shore, others the water; whilst many are
equally at home on both. Again, many of them
are migratory, or of wandering habits; some but
summer visitors, others winter refugees. It matters
<span class="pb" id="Page_16">16</span>
little, however, what the season may be, for many
interesting birds are sure to be met with by the
sea; the wide waters and wet tide-swept shores are
a perennial feeding place, and a safe and congenial
refuge.</p>
<p>Of all the birds that haunt the sea and the shore,
those of the Gull family are the best known.
From whichever direction the sea is reached,
almost invariably the first indication of its vicinity
is a Gull, sailing along, it may be, in easy, careless
flight, or wheeling and gliding high in air above
the waste of restless waters. The Gull and its
kindred then are inseparably associated in the
minds of most people with the sea, and with them,
therefore, it certainly seems most appropriate to
commence our study of marine bird-life.</p>
<p>The Gull family is divided by many systematists
into three fairly well-defined groups or sub-families,
viz., the typical Gulls or Larinæ, the Skuas or
Stercorariinæ, and the Terns or Sterninæ. The
Skuas, however, are included with the typical Gulls
by many naturalists, a proceeding for which much
may be said, thus reducing the three sub-families
to two. In their distribution the Gulls and Terns
may almost be regarded as cosmopolitan, but the
Skuas are chiefly boreal in their dispersal, four
of the half dozen known species breeding in the
Arctic Regions, and two others dwelling in the
higher latitudes of the Southern Hemisphere. Some
of the species are very widely distributed; the
<span class="pb" id="Page_17">17</span>
dispersal of others is just as remarkably restricted.
For instance, the Glaucous Gull has a circumpolar
habitat, and the Black-headed Gull ranges from
the Faröe Islands to Japan; but, on the other hand,
Larus fuliginosus is said to be peculiar to the
Galapagos Islands and Larus bulleri to New
Zealand. Three out of the four species of Arctic
Skuas are circumpolar in their distribution; the
fourth may possibly be so.</p>
<p>In adult plumage the Gulls are not remarkable
for any great diversity of colour. French gray
predominates upon the upper parts; the under parts
are white, often suffused with a delicate rosy tint;
the primaries are usually dark gray, brown, or
black, in many species spotted and tipped with
white. Some species assume (by a change of
colour and not by a moult) a sooty-brown or black
head or hood during the breeding season; Ross’s
Gull dons a black narrow collar at that period.
The wings are ample, long, and pointed; the tail is
even, except in Ross’s Gull in which it is wedge-shaped,
and in Sabine’s Gull in which it is forked.
The legs are comparatively short, and the feet are
webbed.</p>
<p>Gulls moult twice in the year. When first
hatched young Gulls are covered with down.
Young, in first plumage of the Black-headed
group of Gulls, have the feathers of the mantle,
the scapulars, and the innermost secondaries, brown
with pale margins; the crown, nape, and ear-coverts
<span class="pb" id="Page_18">18</span>
brown; and the tail with a broad sub-terminal band
of the same colour. The second plumage—assumed
as soon as the foregoing is completed—retains brown
marks of immaturity on the scapulars and innermost
secondaries; the wing-coverts are streaked
with brown, and the tail still retains its brown sub-terminal
band. This plumage is carried until the
following spring, when the brown hood—assumed
for the first time—is mottled with white; the tail-band
is more or less broken; whilst the scapulars
and innermost secondaries assume the colour
peculiar to the adult. For several years the white
markings on the primaries gradually increase in
extent until the bird arrives at perfect maturity.
The larger Gulls—of which the Herring Gull
may be taken as a typical species—mature much
more slowly, the perfectly adult plumage not
being assumed until the bird is four years old.
The plumage succeeding the downy stage is
brown on the upper parts, each feather with a pale
margin, and white on the under parts streaked with
brown. After each succeeding moult in spring
and autumn, the traces of immaturity grow less, the
wing-coverts and tail retaining them longest. The
white spots on the primaries are the latest signs of
complete maturity. The colour of the feet, bill,
iris, and irides, slowly changes until that characteristic
of the adult is assumed.</p>
<p>Gulls, popularly speaking, are inseparably associated
with the sea, yet the haunts of many species,
<span class="pb" id="Page_19">19</span>
especially during the breeding season, are by no
means exclusively marine ones. Almost every kind
of coast is frequented by these birds—rocky headlands,
precipitous downs, sandy dunes, mud-flats or
slob-lands, and marshes; whilst every harbour
round the shore of our islands is periodically visited.
Gulls are not very pronounced migrants. They
wander about a good deal during the non-breeding
season, and many Arctic species draw southwards
during winter, but all the indigenous British forms
are residents on and off the coasts throughout the
year. With these few words of introduction we
will now proceed to give a more detailed account of
the strictly British species.</p>
<h3>GREAT BLACK-BACKED GULL.</h3>
<p>This, the largest of the Gulls, and scientifically
known as <i>Larus marinus</i>, is one of the least
common British species, most locally distributed
during the breeding season. It is not known to
breed anywhere on the east coast of England, and
but very locally on the south coast, in Dorset. It
becomes more numerous in the wilder districts, in
Cornwall, the Scilly Islands, and Lundy, and thence
locally along the Welsh coast and in the Solway
district. In Scotland it becomes more common,
especially among the islands of the west coast,
including St. Kilda, and on the north coast to the
Orkneys and Shetlands. It is also widely distributed
in Ireland, but there, as everywhere else,
<span class="pb" id="Page_20">20</span>
extremely local, and nowhere, comparatively speaking,
numerous. During the non-breeding season
it wanders more, and is then seen at many places
along the coast. I have seen as many as fifty of
these fine birds in Tor Bay, after heavy gales from
the eastward. Montagu asserts that this Gull is
locally known as a “Cob,” but the term is of pretty
general application to the larger Gulls, and, so far
as I can learn, has no distinctive significance. In
St. Kilda, where I had many opportunities of
studying the habits of this Gull, it is regarded with
hatred by the natives, owing to its depredations
amongst the eggs of the other sea-fowl. In this
island it is universally known by the name of
“Farspach.” No Gull is more wary, and yet on
occasion none are bolder and more daring. I have
seen a bird of this species tear to pieces a Puffin I
had shot as it floated upon the sea, and that in spite
of several shots I had at it with a rifle. It is a sad
robber of the other and more weakly Gulls, not
only pillaging their nests at every opportunity, but
chasing them, and making them relinquish bits of
food they may chance to pick up within view.
Like the Raven and the Crow, it seems fully
conscious of its marauding misdeeds, and correspondingly
artful, as if always instinctively fearing
that treatment it metes out so lavishly to creatures
more helpless than itself.</p>
<p>The Great Black-backed Gull is one of the least
gregarious of the family, and the large gatherings
<span class="pb" id="Page_21">21</span>
of this species that are sometimes witnessed are
chiefly due to such accidental causes as an
unwonted supply of food, or a continued spell of
boisterous weather, which often drives Gulls in
thousands into sheltered bays and estuaries. This
Gull is generally met with beating about in a
solitary manner; less frequently three or four may
be seen together; whilst even in the breeding
season, when most Gulls congregate into colonies
whose size seems only to be regulated by the
accommodation presented, it is certainly the least
sociable of all the British species. It is a great
nomad during the non-breeding season, often
wandering far from land, resting and sleeping on
the sea. On the other hand, it is one of the least
frequent visitors of the Gull-tribe to inland districts,
and, as its specific name of <i>marinus</i> indicates, is
closely attached to the sea. The usual call-note of
this fine Gull is a loud, whining, oft-repeated <i>ag-ag-ag</i>.
Notwithstanding the purity of its plumage,
and the magnificence of its presence, the Great
Black-backed Gull is almost as unclean in its
habits as the Raven or the Vulture. No kind
of carrion is refused, either lying on the shore or
floating on the sea—weakly, death-stricken lambs
or wounded birds, eggs or chicks left unguarded
by their owners, fish basking or sleeping near the
surface, offal cast from the fishing boats or quays,
animal refuse of all kinds, form the prey of this Gull.</p>
<p>The usual breeding place of this Gull is the top
<span class="pb" id="Page_22">22</span>
of an isolated rock stack, a little distance from
the mainland; less frequently it selects a range of
high cliffs overhanging the sea. A small island
in a mountain loch is sometimes selected, and occasionally
this may be some considerable distance
inland. In a few chosen spots the birds nest in
such close, if somewhat scattered proximity, that
we might call it a colony, but the rule is for odd
and more or less isolated pairs to be met with, and
often at considerable distances apart. The fact
that this Gull may be found nesting in one chosen
spot year by year, warrants the supposition that it
may pair for life. The usually scanty nest is made
in a hollow amongst the short turf, or heath, or on
the flat ledge of a precipice. Sometimes the eggs
are laid in a bare hollow amongst the rocks. It is
formed of grass, dry sea-weed, twigs, and stalks of
marine plants, and occasionally a tuft of wool or a
few odd feathers are placed in the lining. The
eggs are usually three in number, but sometimes
only two, or even one. They are grayish-brown,
or brown sometimes tinged with olive in ground
colour, spotted with dark umber-brown and brownish-gray.
This Gull is a very light sitter, but is bold
and clamorous when disturbed from the nest.</p>
<h3>LESSER BLACK-BACKED GULL.</h3>
<p>Very similar in appearance, but much smaller in
size—it is only about half the weight—this pretty
Gull, the <i>Larus fuscus</i> of Linnæus, is one of the
<span class="pb" id="Page_23">23</span>
most familiar birds of the coast, especially in the
more northerly portions of the British Islands. It
is a more trustful species than its larger ally, admits
man to approach it with less show of fear or
wariness, and may often be seen on the meadows
and ploughed fields near the sea, seeking for
its food as familiarly as a Rook or a Daw.
Singularly enough, the east and south coasts of
England are not resorted to by this Gull for
breeding purposes. It is not known to breed south
of the coast of Northumberland, or east of that of
Devonshire; and this is all the more remarkable,
seeing that one of its most important colonies in
our area is situated upon the Farne Islands. It
breeds locally from Cornwall to the Solway, but
further northwards becomes more generally dispersed,
right up to the Orkneys and the Shetlands.
In Ireland, again, this Gull is a very local breeder,
and is only known to nest in one or two localities.
During the non-breeding season it wanders far
from home, and may then be met with on and
off most of the British coasts: young and immature
birds do not resort much to the nesting colonies,
but roam widely at all seasons. It is a very
remarkable fact that adult Gulls of this species are
so rarely seen near Heligoland, as the species
breeds commonly on the Baltic and Scandinavian
coasts, and yet its average appearance at the island
is about once in ten years! The Heligolandish
name for this Gull is very appropriate, signifying
<span class="pb" id="Page_24">24</span>
“little mantle wearer,” and refers to the dark slate-gray
mantle. Unlike its larger ally the present
species is very gregarious, and socially inclined at
all seasons, mixing freely not only with its
own kind, but with the Herring Gull and the
smaller forms, such as the Kittiwake, and the
Common Gull. These latter birds, however, must
too often prefer its room to its company, for it
repeatedly robs them of their prey, and is, Gull-like,
ever ready to profit by the labours of its
weaker congeners. Like the preceding species it
is almost omnivorous in its tastes, and will as
readily make a meal from stranded garbage on the
shore, as from the living fish it deftly swoops
upon as they swim near the surface. On the
Lincolnshire coasts it visits the flight nets, in
company with the Hooded Crows, and preys
upon any birds that may be entangled in them.
It is also a persistent follower of ships, attending
the trawlers, and feeding upon the refuse fish cast
overboard when the trawl net is emptied. It
swims lightly enough even on a rough sea, riding
like a cork on the wave-crests, and sleeps upon
the water, when roaming far from land. Flocks of
this Gull may often be seen standing upon the
mud-flats or level sandy reaches, preening their
plumage, and waiting, it may be, for a turn of the
tide that may bring some particular food of which
they are in quest. It will be remarked that these
larger Gulls, especially, often run for a short distance
<span class="pb" id="Page_25">25</span>
before taking flight, and that when alighting they
frequently keep their long wings unfolded and erect
for a moment or two before finally closing them.
Great numbers of Lesser Black-backed Gulls and
other species collect in Tor Bay during the herring
and sprat seasons, and at these times they will wait
and watch about the harbours and quays in fluttering
hosts for the odd fish and offal. The note of
this Gull very closely resembles that of the
Herring Gull, so closely, in fact, that no symbol
can denote the difference. It may be syllabled as
<i>klĭ-ou-klĭ-ou</i>, and during the breeding season is
very persistently uttered. Owing to its relatively
longer wings, this Gull looks more graceful in the
air than its larger and heavier congener: its flight
is remarkably easy and buoyant, and on occasion
rapid.</p>
<p>The usual breeding places of the Lesser Black-backed
Gull are low rocky islands—these larger
Gulls always prefer an island, covered with coarse
marine grass, sea campion, and the like—but in some
localities a rock stack, an island in an inland lake,
on grassy downs, in mosses, and flows. This Gull
usually breeds in colonies, and some of these are
very large. One of the most extensive, within the
present writer’s experience, is situated on the Farne
Islands. The entire group of islands may be regarded
as one vast colony of Lesser Black-backed
Gulls, if we except a few of the outlying rocks,
where the Cormorants breed. It is more than
<span class="pb" id="Page_26">26</span>
likely that this Gull pairs for life, seeing that it
resorts to the same nesting places, year by year, for
time out of mind. The nest, even in the same
colony, varies a good deal in size and general
completeness. Some birds are content merely to
line a hollow in the rocks with a little dry grass;
others are more bulky yet slovenly structures, rude
heaps of turf, heather stems, sea campions, or dry
grass and sea-weed, the lining being composed of
finer grasses, many of them often semi-green.
Occasionally a feather or two are seen, but these
may be due more to accident than to design. Few
sights in the bird-world are prettier than a colony
of disturbed Gulls during the breeding season. As
their haunts are invaded, the frightened birds rise in
fluttering thousands, drifting to and fro like a snowstorm,
in which each flake is a startled bird. The
noisy din, the rush of wings, the swooping, soaring,
fluttering Gulls, the ground strewn with nests—all
combine to form a picture in the mind that time
can never efface! The eggs of this Gull are
usually three in number, sometimes as many as
four. They vary to an almost incredible degree.
The ground colour varies from pale green to dark
olive-brown and gray, spotted, blotched, or streaked
with dark liver-brown, pale brown and gray. Vast
numbers of the eggs of this Gull are collected for
food, especially at the Farne Islands. The birds
do not appear to suffer in any way by this systematic
pillage, for they are always allowed to rear
<span class="pb" id="Page_27">27</span>
a brood from a second clutch at the Farnes, and
most rigorously protected whilst doing so.</p>
<h3>HERRING-GULL.</h3>
<p>Of all the gulls that frequent the British coasts,
this, the well-known <i>Larus argentatus</i> (<i>i.e.</i> “silver-winged”),
is certainly the most common and widely
dispersed. It is no exaggeration to say that the
Herring-Gull may be met with on every part of
the British coasts, from the Orkney and Shetland
Islands on the north, to Cornwall and the Scilly
Islands in the south; from the Blasquets in the
wild west of Ireland, to the mouth of the Thames
and the Bass Rock in the east. It is the Gull <i>par
excellence</i> associated in the popular mind with the
sea shore—the “Sea Gull” of the visitor to marine
resorts, ubiquitous, well-known from the Land’s
End to John-o’-Groat’s. For its size, it is certainly
the tamest and least suspecting Gull found on
British waters. It may be readily recognised,
when adult, by the pale grey colour of its mantle,
but the young and immature birds are less easily
identified. During the non-breeding season it
wanders far and wide like the rest of its kind, and
is a very frequent visitor to the fields, not only
adjoining the sea, but at some distance inland.
Whilst tilling operations are in progress, especially
in spring, it passes regularly from the coast to
the fields, following the plough, or collecting upon
the newly-manured pastures, in quest of food.
<span class="pb" id="Page_28">28</span>
Wild, stormy weather, I have repeatedly noticed,
will also drive this Gull landwards sooner, perhaps,
than any other species. Like its congeners, it is
practically omnivorous. Carrion is sought after as
readily as living fish and other marine creatures.
I have also known this species regularly to visit
a slaughter-house near the coast, to feed upon the
offal thrown upon the pastures for manure; and I
have repeatedly watched the pure-plumaged birds
fighting with the Rooks and Crows for a share of
the feast. This Gull will also feed on grain, grubs,
and worms, is a constant follower of vessels, and
congregates in unusual numbers at fishing harbours
during the sprat and herring seasons. In its flight
it is graceful in the extreme, and it may often be
seen soaring at a vast altitude like a Vulture.
Writing on the flight of this Gull, Gätke (in his
fascinating work, <i>Heligoland, as an Ornithological
Observatory</i>) says: “Not only are these Gulls able
to soar in a calm atmosphere in a direction straight
forwards, or sideways, on calmly outspread wings,
but, as has been more fully discussed in the case of
Buzzards, they can also, in a manner similar to
theirs, soar upwards to any desirable altitude. The
Gulls are able to perform their soaring movements
on the same plane in all phases of the weather,
during the most violent storm, as well as in a
perfect calm, progressing forwards or sideways
at the most variable rates of velocity; now darting
along with the swiftness of an arrow, now merely
<span class="pb" id="Page_29">29</span>
gliding, as it were, at the slowest pace imaginable.
In the latter case, indeed, we are frequently, even
against our will, forced to the conclusion that these
birds must have at their command some unknown
means or mechanism which prevents their sinking;
for neither is the surface-area of their wings large
enough, nor are these organs sufficiently concave in
form, to allow of their supporting the bird after the
manner of a parachute.” I can endorse these
remarks fully from my own observations (Conf.
<i>Idle Hours with Nature</i>, pp. 261, 262). That
these flights are accompanied with any vibratory
movements of the feathers is erroneous, as I have
had many opportunities of satisfying myself,
especially when observing the flight of the Fulmar
at St. Kilda, the birds then not being more than
six feet away from me, when I am positive every
individual feather was in perfect rest.</p>
<p>But to return from this digression to the general
habits of the Herring Gull. The breeding season
of this Gull is in May and June. Owing to its
remarkable aptitude for accommodating itself to the
various peculiarities of the coast, it is certainly the
most widely dispersed Gull of the British species
during the season of reproduction. Perhaps its
favourite breeding place is a low rocky island, but
failing this it is equally at home upon a range of
sea cliffs, a stack of rocks, or less frequently an
island in a loch, or, as at Foulshaw Moss in Westmoreland,
a marsh. The nest is made on a ledge
<span class="pb" id="Page_30">30</span>
or in a hollow or chink of the cliffs; in a sheltered
hollow of the grassy downs: or amongst the thick
growth of sea campion, thrift, and other marine
plants that often grow so luxuriantly in the bird’s
haunts. I have remarked that the nest is usually
larger when built on a cliff than when on the ground,
and in some cases is almost dispensed with. It is
composed of turf, dry sea-weed, coarse grass, and
stalks of various marine plants, lined with finer
grass often gathered green. The eggs are two or
three in number, varying in ground colour from
pale bluish-green through yellowish-brown to olive-brown,
and the spots are small and few and dark
brown, pale brown, and gray. This Gull will lay a
second lot of eggs if the first clutch be taken, as
they often are, for culinary purposes. When the
nesting places are intruded upon by human visitors,
the Gulls, as usual, become very noisy, the birds
whose eggs are most directly threatened being
filled with the greatest clamour. I have often
remarked that Gulls whose nests were safe in inaccessible
parts of the cliffs have remained quietly
sitting on them, while their less fortunate neighbours
have been filled with noisy alarm, as they
watched the fate of their eggs from the air above.
The note is very similar to that of the preceding
species.</p>
<h3>COMMON GULL.</h3>
<p>This pretty Gull, the <i>Larus canus</i> of Linnæus, is,
during the summer months especially, one of the
<span class="pb" id="Page_31">31</span>
most locally distributed of the British species. The
Common Gull formerly bred in Lancashire, but at
the present time is not known to do so anywhere in
England. From the Solway northwards, it becomes
tolerably common as a breeding species, right up to
the Shetlands, in many inland localities, as well as
on the coast. It is also a somewhat local bird in
Ireland. The Common Gull, or “Blue Maa,” as it
is locally known, is about half the size of the
Herring Gull, with a mantle, in the adult, almost
as dark as that of the Lesser Black-backed Gull.
During the non-breeding season this Gull is fairly
well distributed along the coast, and then visits
localities where it is never seen in summer. It is a
decided shore species, rarely wandering far out to
sea, and is one of the first Gulls driven inland by
stormy weather. Although popularly believed to
be so inseparably associated with the sea, the Gulls,
and especially the smaller kinds such as the one
now under notice, often resort to fields even at
some distance from the water. The Common Gull
seems as much at home inland as on the shore. I
have seen it on the high moorlands, and in Scotland
flying about many a loch pool, or land-locked sea
arm; it is equally at home on the ploughed lands
and the pastures, yet its plumage seems strangely
out of place in such localities, and the incongruity
is further intensified should the startled birds take
refuge in a neighbouring tree, as they sometimes do.
There is nothing specially remarkable about the
<span class="pb" id="Page_32">32</span>
flight of this Gull; it is performed in the slow
and deliberate manner of all these birds, and is
equally wonderful in many of its characteristics.
The food of this Gull is composed indiscriminately
of marine and terrestrial creatures. The bird will
follow the plough, or search the pastures for grubs,
insects, and worms; it searches the shore for any
stranded creature to its omnivorous taste; it hunts
the wide waste of waters in quest of fish, and
follows vessels to pick up any refuse that may be
thrown from them. This Gull is to a great extent
nocturnal in autumn and winter. Its note is a harsh
and persistently uttered <i>yak-yak-yak</i>, most frequently
heard when its breeding places are invaded
by man or predaceous animals. The Common Gull
is a thoroughly gregarious and social bird, often
congregating in large flocks, and mingling with
other species.</p>
<p>By the end of April most of the adult Common
Gulls have left all our southern coasts and retired
northwards to their breeding places. As these
are visited yearly in succession, it is not improbable
that this Gull pairs for life. Its nest colonies are
situated both inland and on the coast. An island
in a mountain lake, the marshy shore of a loch,
the flat table-like summit of a rock stack, or the
rolling grassy downs near the open sea, in little
populated districts, may be chosen; but so far
as my experience with this Gull extends, I have
found the favourite site to be rocky islands in quiet
<span class="pb" id="Page_33">33</span>
secluded sea-lochs. These colonies of Common
Gulls vary a good deal in size; and in some districts,
perhaps where suitable sites are scarce, the bird
breeds in scattered pairs only. The eggs are laid
during the last half of May and the first half of
June; only one brood is reared in the season, but
if the first eggs are taken they are generally replaced.
The nest of this Gull varies much in size; some
structures are mere hollows lined with a tuft or two
of grass; others are more elaborate, composed of
heather stems, pieces of turf, sea-weed, and stalks
of marine plants, lined with finer grass, often
gathered green. They are built indiscriminately
amongst the long herbage, in hollows and crevices
of rocks, or on ledges of the bare cliffs. In Norway
the eggs of this Gull have been taken from the
deserted nest of a Hooded Crow, in a pine tree,
but no instances of a similar character have occurred,
so far as is known, in our islands. The Common
Gull usually lays three eggs, but instances of four
are not rare. They run from olive-brown to buffish-brown
in ground colour, spotted and often streaked
with darker brown and brownish-gray. The eggs
of this Gull are extremely good eating. One
often wonders why they are not gathered for
the table, just as much as those of the Lapwing.</p>
<h3>KITTIWAKE.</h3>
<p>This charming Gull, the <i>Larus tridactylus</i> of
scientists, so named from its entirely absent or
<span class="pb" id="Page_34">34</span>
rudimentary hind toe, is one of the best known,
as it is one of the most widely distributed, British
species. These remarks are however most applicable
to the non-breeding season; for during the nesting
time it is rather more local, owing to the conditions
under which its young are reared. The Kittiwake
very closely resembles the Common Gull in general
appearance, but the mantle is paler, the legs and
feet are dark brown, and the primaries, or longest
feathers of the wings, have broad black tips: it is
also a perceptibly smaller bird, the smallest in fact
of the typically marine Gulls. Of all the British
Gulls the Kittiwake is certainly the most maritime
in its habits, and is never known to visit inland
districts, unless driven from the coast by storms of
exceptional violence. Save in the breeding season
it may be met with on all the low-lying coasts,
visiting harbours, bays, and fishing villages, and
imbuing many a littoral scene with life. The
Kittiwake is a much more oceanic bird than the
Common Gull, and often wanders immense distances
from land in quest of food. It is said that birds
of this species have been known to follow vessels
across the North Atlantic, but this seems almost
incredible—not because the bird is physically unable
to perform the feat, but because we can scarcely
believe any bird would wander of its own free-will
so far from the local centre of its habitat. One
of the most striking characteristics of the Kittiwake
is its peculiar cry, heard to the best advantage
<span class="pb" id="Page_35">35</span>
at the nesting places. This note, from which the
colloquial name of the species is derived, resembles
the syllables <i>kitty-a-ake</i>, requiring but little play
upon the imagination to render as <i>get-a-way-ah-get-away</i>.
It is only during the breeding season that
this cry is heard to perfection, and after that is over
the bird becomes a singularly silent one. The
flight of this Gull is light and buoyant, but powerful
and often long sustained. The bird may often
be observed fishing at no great distance from shore,
flying to and fro every now and then, poising and
hovering previous to pouncing down upon a fish or
other floating object. It is also an adept swimmer,
and very frequently sleeps whilst sitting on the waves.
The Kittiwake is perhaps more exclusively a fish-feeder
than any other British Gull. It seldom
searches for food on shore, and does not exhibit
those omnivorous tastes that characterise so many
of its congeners. It is a persistent follower of fish
shoals, especially herrings and sprats, and will
remain in the company of fishing fleets for weeks
together. A scrap of food thrown from a ship
will speedily be seized by one of these birds;
whilst a few crustaceans and other marine creatures
are taken from time to time.</p>
<p>The Kittiwake is a rather late breeder. It most
probably pairs for life, as the same nesting places
are resorted to each season. Of all the Gulls
none breed in more inaccessible situations. The
nests are almost always built upon a beetling ocean
<span class="pb" id="Page_36">36</span>
cliff, against which the waves are for ever beating
in ceaseless strife. Except during the three months
or so of the breeding season, this Gull is seldom
seen at its nesting sites. In April or May the birds
collect at their various stations, never quite to leave
them again until the young are able to fly. It is a
very gregarious bird, and some of these “gulleries”
are very extensive, containing many thousands of
pairs. In some localities, however, where the accommodation
is either limited or unsuitable, but a
few birds congregate to form a colony. The nests,
often made as close together as they can be wedged,
are built upon the ledges, shelves, and prominences
of the rocks. Favourite spots are where the cliffs
overhang, or at the entrance of a cave or hollow in
the precipice. They are made at varying heights
on the cliff, tier above tier, the lowest often within a
few feet of high-water mark, but the most crowded
places are usually about midway up from the sea.
The nests are large and well made, many of them
apparently the accumulation of years, composed
externally of turf and roots, with much of the soil
attached, and caked together. Upon this foundation
a further nest of sea-weed and the stalks of various
plants is formed, finally lined with finer and dry
grass, and sometimes a few feathers. The nests
and the cliffs in their vicinity are thickly whitewashed
with the droppings of the birds. The
eggs are two or three in number, rarely four,
and vary from greenish-blue, through pale buff
<span class="pb" id="Page_37">37</span>
and buffish-brown to brownish-olive, blotched
and spotted with reddish-brown, paler brown, and
gray. No words of mine can adequately describe
the beauty and animation of a colony of Kittiwakes.
Their cries are deafening, and when the frightened
birds flutter from the cliffs, and pass to and fro in
thousands like a living snowstorm, the effect,
whether seen from the water or from the cliffs
above is charming in the extreme. It is sad to
think that such a spot should too often become a
scene of slaughter. But such is the case; the poor
birds breeding too late fully to profit by the protection
afforded by law. Vast numbers of this
pretty gentle Gull are killed yearly, for the sake of
their plumage. Even when the breeding places
are left, the poor birds are shot in thousands out at
sea. The Kittiwake is the most trustful perhaps of
the Gulls, and a flock will remain hovering round a
boat until almost decimated by the gunners. The
young Kittiwake is widely known along the coast
under the name of “Tarrock.”</p>
<h3>BLACK-HEADED GULL.</h3>
<p>In most inland districts frequented by this Gull
(the <i>Larus ridibundus</i> of Linnæus) it is known as
the “Peewit,” the “Peewit Gull,” or the “Laughing
Gull.” It is not only one of the most widely
distributed but one of the best known of our
sea birds. And yet to describe the Black-headed
Gull as a “sea” bird in the sense we have hitherto
<span class="pb" id="Page_38">38</span>
used the term is, to say the least, somewhat misleading.
This species belongs to a small group
which might more appropriately be termed
“marsh” Gulls. It is almost as much seen in
certain inland localities as it is in marine ones;
whilst in many of its habits it bears a close
resemblance to the Rook—feeding on the pastures,
following the plough, and perching regularly in
trees. During spring and summer many of these
Gulls resort to inland haunts to breed—as for
instance at Scoulton Mere in Norfolk, Twigmoor in
Lincolnshire, and Aqualate Mere in Staffordshire—and
from these centres visit the surrounding country
for miles, in quest of food. Slob-lands and low
muddy coasts are favourite haunts of this Gull, but
during the non-breeding season it may be met with
on almost all parts of the coast. In winter it often
wanders up the larger tidal rivers for miles; and
the Gulls that visited the Thames in such abundance
during recent winters, were principally of
this species, doubtless from Norfolk and Essex.
Many of these Gulls appear to pass our southern
coasts, especially in spring, and I have remarked
them again in great plenty during the sprat season
in late autumn. I may in addition state that this
migration has been observed along the coast of
South Devon, the nearest breeding station being
near Poole in Dorset. The birds linger about Tor
Bay in spring until, in many cases, the full breeding
plumage—the sooty-brown head—is assumed.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_39">39</div>
<p>Owing to the great diversity of its haunts the
Black-headed Gull is almost omnivorous in its diet.
Inland it feeds on grubs—especially wire-worms—insects,
worms, fresh-water fish, and newly sown
grain, as I have often ascertained by dissection; on
the sea coast it subsists on fish, crustaceans, and
various odds and ends obtained about harbours or
vessels. It seeks its food both whilst swimming
about the water, fluttering above it, or when
walking on the shore. This Gull is much more
Tern-like in its habits than the larger species we
have already dealt with. Of its services to the
agriculturist there can be no question; it is just as
useful on the land as the Rook, without that bird’s
few little pilfering ways.</p>
<p>The Black-headed Gull is an inland breeding
species, and resorts to marshes, wet moors, and
meres, at varying distances from the sea. Sometimes
these breeding-places are in fairly well-timbered
districts, and often surrounded by trees
and bushes. This Gull, too, is remarkably
gregarious during the breeding season, and some
of its colonies are very extensive, consisting of
many thousands of pairs. The “gulleries” are
visited for nesting purposes in March or April, and
as the birds return to the same spots year after
year, they probably pair for life. Nesting begins
in April. Most of the nests are made upon the
ground in rush tufts, in hassocks of coarse grass
and sedge, amongst reeds in shallow water, on
<span class="pb" id="Page_40">40</span>
masses of the previous year’s decayed aquatic
vegetation, or on the flat, spongy, moss-covered
ground. Odd nests are occasionally made in the
trees and bushes, or even on boat-houses. Many
of the nests can only be described as mere rounded
hollows in the cushions of grass or sedge; the more
elaborate structures are usually in the wettest
situations, and these latter are often added to as
incubation advances, either to replace the wear and
tear from the incessant wash of the water, or to
provide a sufficiently large platform on which the
young may rest. The nests are made of bits of
reed and rush, coarse grass, flags, and scraps of
moss, lined with finer materials of similar description.
The eggs of this Gull are usually three in
number, sometimes four. They are subject to much
variation, ranging from rich brown to pale bluish-green
in ground colour, spotted, blotched, blurred,
and streaked with several shades of brown and
gray. Large numbers of these eggs are gathered
for culinary purposes, the crop being systematically
taken, and the birds always allowed eventually to
sit upon their final clutch. Many of these eggs are
passed off for those of the Peewit by unscrupulous
dealers, notably in Leadenhall market. Few scenes
in the bird world are prettier than a colony of
Black-headed Gulls. When disturbed at their nests
the birds rise in fluttering crowds, drifting noisily to
and fro, anxious for the safety of their eggs or
helpless young. As is the invariable rule with
<span class="pb" id="Page_41">41</span>
birds that continue to replace their taken eggs, but
one brood is reared in the season.</p>
<h3>THE SKUAS.</h3>
<p>These birds may be readily distinguished, even
when on the wing, by the cuneiform or wedge-shaped
tail, and by the dark upper plumage. The
bill is also much stouter and hooked at the point,
whilst the claws are sharp and curved. Skuas are
only exceptionally seen by the ordinary visitor to
the sea-side. In the first place, they only breed in
our islands in the extreme north or west of
Scotland, and in the second place they are decidedly
oceanic in their habits, after the nesting season is
passed. Occasionally Skuas may be seen on
migration, especially in autumn, and along our
eastern and southern seaboard; occasionally they
are driven shorewards by protracted stormy
weather, and under these circumstances have
frequently been known to visit inland localities.
Odd birds are generally seen, perhaps a party of
half a dozen, but on very exceptional occasions
large flocks make their appearance—witness the
thousands of Pomarine Skuas that visited the
coast of Yorkshire during the autumns of the
years 1879 and 1880.</p>
<p>The Skuas are birds of remarkably powerful
flight, displaying marvellous command over themselves
in the air, turning and twisting with great
speed. These birds are the Raptors of the sea;
<span class="pb" id="Page_42">42</span>
a terror to the Gulls and Terns; merciless robbers
of the hard-won spoil of more weakly species;
destroyers even of the eggs and helpless young of
other sea birds. All the four species of northern
Skuas are visitors to the British Seas, but only two
of them are indigenous to our islands. The first
of these to be noticed here is the Great Skua,
<i>Stercorarius catarrhactes</i>, one of the most local of
British birds during the breeding season, as its only
known nesting places in our area are on Unst
and Foula, two small islands of the Shetland
Group. Except during the breeding season, the
Great Skua is mostly oceanic in its habitat,
wandering long distances from land in quest of
prey, attending vessels and fishing fleets, only
drawing landwards by stress of weather or unusual
abundance of food. This Skua is practically
omnivorous. During its summer sojourn near and
on the land it repeatedly raids the colonies of other
sea fowl, to prey upon exposed eggs or unguarded
young; it captures the smaller Gulls, notably the
Kittiwake: it also picks up any stranded fish or
other carrion; and is constantly on the watch to
chase any Gull or Tern that catches a fish,
following the poor bird with fatal persistency
until, terror stricken, it disgorges its food, which is
promptly seized by the voracious Skua. The call
note of this Skua is very similar to that of the
Lesser Black-backed Gull, but when under the
excitement of chasing other birds, or of seeking
<span class="pb" id="Page_43">43</span>
to guard its own domain, the bird utters a loud cry
which is likened by many observers to the word
<i>skua</i> or <i>skui</i>.</p>
<p>The Great Skua resorts to its breeding grounds
in April, and the eggs are laid in May. As it
returns yearly to the same places, it very possibly
pairs for life. The nests are made upon the ground
of the high moorlands, amongst the heath and
grass, and are mere hollows in the moss, sometimes
lined with a little dry grass. The eggs of this
Skua are two in number, and vary from pale buff to
dark olive-brown in ground colour, sparingly spotted
and speckled with dark brown and grayish-brown.
These eggs are large in size, and very closely
resemble those of the Herring Gull. But one
brood is reared in the year, and by the end of
August the young birds and their parents desert
the nesting colony, and adopt their pelagic habits.
Few birds are so courageous in defence of their
nests as the Skua. Even such predaceous creatures
as Eagles, Ravens, and dogs are driven off; whilst
human intruders are screamed at and approached
within a few feet, the birds wrathfully extending
their legs as if they would strike, and skimming to
and fro in rage. Many tales of this bird’s daring
at its nesting places are current in Shetland, where
it is known almost universally as the “Bonxie.”</p>
<p>Our second species is Richardson’s Skua, the
<i>Stercorarius richardsoni</i> of some systematists, the
<i>S. crepidatus</i> of others. Although not quite so
<span class="pb" id="Page_44">44</span>
local as the preceding species, its breeding area is
remarkably restricted, so far as the British Islands
are concerned. It breeds on the Hebrides, in
Caithness and Sutherlandshire, and on the Orkneys
and Shetlands. Richardson’s Skua is a more
gregarious species than its larger relative, but its
habits generally are much the same. It is, for
its size, equally daring and rapacious; is also
remarkable for its powers of flight; but differs
from the Great Skua in being more gregarious.
Richardson’s Skua is for the most part a summer
migrant to the British Islands, and numbers of
birds pass along our coasts in spring to their
northern breeding-grounds. It is only during the
seasons of passage that the visitor to our southern
coasts may hope to fall in with this bird, and even
then it does not approach the land much. Like
the other Skuas, the present species is a relentless
robber of the Gulls and Terns, chasing them up and
down until they disgorge their fish, and repeating
the process at every opportunity. Eggs, young
birds, and carrion, are also eaten. It is said to
capture weakly birds, but I do not think it is so
much addicted to this Hawk-like habit as the
preceding species. During summer insects and
ground fruits are eaten, whilst it has been known
to take worms and molluscs. The note of this
Skua is described either as a plaintive <i>mee</i> or <i>kyow</i>,
and when in chase of a bird it has been likened to
the syllable <i>yah</i>, oft repeated.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_45">45</div>
<p>Richardson’s Skua reaches its breeding-grounds
in the British Islands early in May. Its haunts
at this season are open moors, at no great distance
from the sea. Although social at its breeding-places,
it can scarcely be described as gregarious,
and the nests are usually scattered up and down
the moorland area. This Skua appears to pair
annually, and the nest, always made upon the
ground, is merely a hollow, carelessly lined with
a little dry herbage, and sometimes nothing but
a shallow cavity in the moss. The eggs, normally,
are two, but sometimes three have been found, and
occasionally but one. They range from olive to
brown in ground colour, spotted and speckled with
darker brown and grayish brown. Incubation is
performed by the female, and lasts about a month.
At its breeding-places Richardson’s Skua is very
demonstrative, and often reveals the situation of
the nest by its anxious movements above the
intruder’s head. After the young are reared the
moors are deserted, and for the remainder of the
year this Skua is decidedly pelagic in its habits and
haunts.</p>
<p>We now pass to the Terns. These pretty
graceful birds—widely known as “Sea Swallows”—differ
in many respects from the Gulls and Skuas.
They most closely resemble the former in general
appearance, but may be easily distinguished by
their slender form, small size, and forked tail. Of
the dozen species that have been regarded as
<span class="pb" id="Page_46">46</span>
“British,” no less than five breed within the limits
of our islands. The Terns are far more locally
distributed than the Gulls. Many miles of coast
may be traversed without one ever seeing a Tern.
They are all migratory birds with us, visiting
Britain in summer to breed, and retiring south
again in autumn. It is only during the season of
passage, therefore, that they are at all widely
dispersed, for the remainder of their sojourn on our
coasts is spent at or in the near vicinity of their
breeding-stations. The five indigenous British
species follow.</p>
<h3>SANDWICH TERN.</h3>
<p>This fine species—the <i>Sterna cantiaca</i> of Gmelin,
and the <i>S. sandvicensis</i> of Latham—is not only the
largest of the indigenous British Terns, but one of
the rarest. It was formerly much more widely
dispersed along our coasts, but persecution has
thinned its numbers, and the seaside holiday-maker
has banished it from many of its old-time haunts.
Special interest attaches to this bird, because it is
one of the very few species that have been first
made known to science from examples obtained in
the British Islands. It was first discovered in 1784,
at Sandwich, on the coast of Kent, and described
by Latham three years later. Alas! no longer
does this beautiful Tern breed in its early haunts
on the Kentish coast; it has disappeared from
there, as it has from many another locality, without
<span class="pb" id="Page_47">47</span>
hope of return. The most important breeding-place
of this Tern, and certainly the most accessible
to the majority of observers, is situated on the
famous Farne Islands; even here the bird is much
less common than it used to be. There are small
colonies on Walney Island, in Cumberland, in
the Solway district, on Loch Lomond, in the
Firth of Tay, and on the coast of Elgin. Its
only known breeding-station in Ireland is in Co.
Mayo.</p>
<p>The Sandwich Tern reaches the British coasts
in April or early in May. But little is seen of this
species whilst on passage, for it evidently keeps
some distance from shore as a rule, or passes
quickly and unobserved. The smaller Terns, for
instance, are commonly seen on the coast of South
Devonshire in Spring and Autumn, but I cannot
recall a single strong migration of the present
species in that locality. This Tern is seldom or
never seen at any distance from the sea. Most of
its waking time is spent in the air, flying about
with easy, graceful motion, in quest of its finny
prey. The Sandwich Tern, however, is nothing
near so graceful looking on the wing as its smaller
relatives, the heavier body, broader wings, and
much less acutely forked tail giving it a heavier,
more cumbersome appearance. Most of its food is
obtained whilst it hovers above the sea. The way
in which all the Terns feed is very pretty. They
poise and hover above their finny victims, and
<span class="pb" id="Page_48">48</span>
every now and then dart downwards like a stone into
the water and capture a fish, fluttering up again, or
remaining for a moment to swallow their capture.
A flock of Terns (of any species) fishing is one of
the prettiest sights imaginable. In addition to
small fish the Sandwich Tern devours crustaceans
of various kinds, whilst its young are fed largely
upon sand-lice and beetles. The Terns are much
cleaner feeders than the Gulls, and I have never
known them touch carrion or refuse. I have,
however, seen them pounce down upon scraps of
food thrown from a vessel. The usual call-note
of the Sandwich Tern is a somewhat shrill
scream.</p>
<p>This Tern probably pairs for life, and returns
regularly every season to its old-accustomed haunts
to breed. These are by preference low, rocky, or
sandy islands, covered with marine herbage, varied
with barer patches, and with beaches of rough
shingle. Similar conditions are sought on the
mainland, in a secluded spot on the coast, but an
island is always preferred. The Sandwich Tern is
gregarious, but its colonies, with one exception, in
our islands are nowhere very extensive. This one
exception is at the Farne Islands, where it has been
computed the birds number upwards of a thousand
pairs. As the nesting-places are visited very
regularly year by year this Tern probably pairs for
life. I have noticed, however, that the birds shift
their actual breeding ground from time to time,
<span class="pb" id="Page_49">49</span>
using several spots in succession. One year they
will nest here, another year there, on the same
small island perhaps, but sometimes removing <i>en
masse</i> to another one of the group. The nests are
always placed upon the ground, either amongst the
sand shingle and drifted <i>debris</i>, a short distance
from high water mark, or amongst the sea campion,
thrift, and coarse grass further inland; sometimes
a bare mound on the highest part of the island is
selected. Many nests are made within a small
area, sometimes so close together as to render
walking amongst them without treading on their
contents a difficult matter. The nests are slight
enough, mere hollows lined with a few bits of
withered herbage, and in some cases even this
simple provision is neglected. The eggs, which are
laid from about the middle of May to the middle of
June, are generally two in number, but sometimes
three. These vary from creamy-white to rich buff
in ground colour, handsomely blotched and spotted
with various shades of brown and gray. During
the hot June days the eggs seem to require little
incubation, but there are always plenty of birds
about the spot, ready to rise fluttering and screaming
into the air when their breeding grounds are
invaded by man. But one brood is reared in the
season, yet if the first clutches of eggs be lost they
will be replaced.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_50">50</div>
<h3>COMMON TERN.</h3>
<p>This Tern, known as the <i>Sterna hirundo</i> of
Linnæus, by most British ornithologists, although
there can be little doubt that the great Swedish
naturalist applied the term indiscriminately to this
and the Arctic Tern, is one of the best known
British species, especially round the English and
Welsh coasts. It becomes rarer in Scotland, where
it is largely replaced by the Arctic Tern. The
Common Tern, distinguished by its white underparts
from the Arctic Tern, is migratory and
arrives on the British coasts towards the end of
April, retiring south in Autumn. Its favourite
haunts during the summer are the various groups
of low rocky islands, and the more secluded portions
of the coast where sandbanks and shingle occur.
Save on passage, this Tern is seldom seen far from
the vicinity of its nest colony. The flight of the
Common Tern is exceedingly buoyant and graceful,
the long slender wings and acutely forked tail
assisting greatly in the general effect. Like the
Swallows the tarsus of the Terns is remarkably
short, so that on the ground the birds seem awkward,
and rarely attempt to walk far; on the sea, however,
they are quite at home and swim well. There are
few prettier sights along the shore than a flock
of Terns busy in quest of food. Where the beach
is rocky, and the water somewhat deep inshore, the
<span class="pb" id="Page_51">51</span>
birds may be watched with ease. In a serried
throng they flutter to and fro; ever and anon a
bird falls down like a fragment of white glittering
marble into the sea with a loud splash, and in a
moment rises again with its finny prey. Bird after
bird keeps dropping so; now and then a bird
remains swimming on the water; now and then
two birds chase each other in rapid flight. And
so for miles the Terns will continue to follow the
shoal until hunger is satisfied, or the fish retire to
greater depths. The food of this species is chiefly
composed of small fish, but insects and crustaceans
are also devoured. The note of the Common Tern
is a shrill <i>krick</i> or <i>kree-ick</i>, most frequently uttered
when the bird is flying alarmed over its invaded
nesting place.</p>
<p>The Common Tern is rather a late breeder, its
eggs not being laid until the end of May or early
in June. It breeds in companies of varying size,
the suitability of the site being in some measure a
determining cause. This Tern is equally capricious
in the site selected for the nests; sometimes one
spot is chosen, sometimes another; but there can
be little doubt that the bird pairs for life, and
evinces considerable attachment for its accustomed
haunts. I have found almost invariably that the
Common Tern habitually lays its eggs farther from
the water than the Arctic Tern, and always prefers
to conceal them amongst vegetation of some kind.
Islands are always preferred to the mainland,
<span class="pb" id="Page_52">52</span>
doubtless because of their greater safety. We
cannot class this bird as an elaborate nest builder,
a mere hollow, scantily lined with a little withered
grass or weeds, being the only provision. The two
or three eggs vary from buff to grayish-brown in
ground colour, blotched and spotted with several
shades of rich brown and gray. But one brood
is reared, and as soon as the young are strong upon
the wing, the nesting places are deserted, and the
movement south begins.</p>
<p>Terns migrate leisurely in autumn, often remaining
a day or so here and there, on and off
the coast, and are then seen in localities which
they never frequent during summer.</p>
<h3>THE ARCTIC TERN.</h3>
<p>This Tern, widely known to systematists as the
<i>Sterna arctica</i> of Temminck, was unaccountably
confused with the preceding species, until the
German naturalist, Naumann, appears first to have
pointed out their specific distinctness. The Arctic
Tern is <i>par excellence</i> the Tern of our northern
coasts, say from the Farne Islands and Lancashire
onwards to the Orkneys and the Shetlands. I am
not aware that it breeds anywhere on the English
coast between Spurn and the Scilly Islands, but
there are a few scattered colonies on the west coast
of England and Wales. This pretty Tern may be
distinguished from its near ally, the Common Tern
<span class="pb" id="Page_53">53</span>
(which it closely resembles in size and general
appearance), by its grayer under parts and perceptibly
longer outermost tail feathers. Like all
its congeners, the Arctic Tern is a summer migrant
to the British seas and coasts, arriving from the
south late in April or early in May. It prefers
very similar haunts to those of the preceding
species—low rocky islands with sandy or shingly
beaches, and with a fair amount of grass and other
marine vegetation upon them. It is equally
gregarious in its habits, breeding in colonies, and
returning regularly to certain districts to rear its
young. Its slenderer form, and proportionately
longer wings and tail, make it even more elegant
looking in the air than its congener. It catches
its food in the same Hawk-like or Gannet-like
manner, pouncing down into the water and seizing
the tiny fish as they swim near the surface. No
Tern dives, and it is certainly exceptional for the
bird completely to immerse itself; usually it flutters
on the surface for a moment, then rises again.
Small fish and crustaceans form the principal food
of this species. Its note is very similar to that of
the preceding Tern—a shrill and monotonous
<i>krick</i>, often prolonged into two syllables.</p>
<p>The nesting season of this Tern begins in June,
and fresh eggs may be found throughout that
month. Rocky islands seem everywhere to be
preferred for nesting places, and the same habit of
changing the exact hatching ground prevails in this
<span class="pb" id="Page_54">54</span>
as in the preceding species. The Farne Islands
are, or used to be, a great breeding station of the
Arctic Tern, and there I have taken great numbers
of its eggs. The bird probably pairs for life. It
differs somewhat in its nesting arrangements from
the Common Tern, inasmuch that it never makes
any nest. No lining of any kind is placed in the
hollow which contains the eggs, and this hollow is
generally selected ready made. Another peculiarity
is that the eggs are far more generally laid nearer
to the water; and this applies not only to the Farne
Islands, but to every breeding place of this Tern
that I have visited. The two or three eggs are
laid in any little depression in the coarse sand or
shingle on the line of drift, or amongst small
pebbles, or even on the bare ground or rock.
These eggs vary from buff to olive, and even pale
bluish-green in ground colour, heavily blotched and
spotted, especially at the larger end, with dark
brown, paler brown, and gray. They are decidedly
smaller than those of the Common Tern, more
elongated in shape, and are much more olive in
general colour. When disturbed from their eggs
the Arctic Terns become very noisy, and rise in
fluttering crowds above the sacred spot, continuing
to fly to and fro, screaming anxiously until the
intruder retires.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_55">55</div>
<h3>ROSEATE TERN.</h3>
<p>It is with some hesitation that I include this
species, the <i>Sterna dougalli</i> of Montagu, in the
present work, because if it really does visit our
coasts now to breed, it is so exceedingly rare and
local, that any ordinary observer of bird life by
the sea could scarcely hope to meet with it. It
is interesting to remark that the Roseate Tern was
first made known to science from a skin that was
sent to Montagu, from the Cumbrae Islands, in the
Firth of Clyde. It was subsequently found breeding
on the Farne Islands by Selby; it formerly bred
on the Scilly Islands, as well as on Foulney and
Walney; but so far as I can ascertain there is no
direct evidence that it breeds at any of these places
now. It may be distinguished from the Common
Tern by its rosy under plumage; but as this is very
apt to fade, a still more infallible distinction, according
to Mr. Saunders, is the white inner margin to
the primaries.</p>
<p>The Roseate Tern is a very late migrant, not
reaching its breeding places until towards the
end of May. In its flight and habits generally,
it very closely resembles those of the preceding
species; but its note is hoarser than that of
the Common Tern. The favourite breeding
grounds of this Tern appear to be low rocky islets
and—so far as our islands are concerned—it is
partial to nesting among a larger colony of Arctic
<span class="pb" id="Page_56">56</span>
or Common Terns. It does not appear to make
any nest, but deposits its two or three eggs on the
bare ground, usually in a little hollow amongst the
shingle. These eggs very closely resemble those
of the Common Tern; so closely in fact that no
reliable means of distinguishing them can be
given.</p>
<h3>LESSER TERN.</h3>
<p>This species (<i>Sterna minuta</i>) is by far the
smallest of the Terns that visit the British coasts in
summer to breed. It cannot be said to be anywhere
common, and its breeding stations are few
and far between. Curiously enough, it is not known
to breed on that great resort of British sea fowl,
the Farne Islands. There can be no doubt that
this Tern is slowly becoming rarer, and in view of
this fact I do not feel justified in assisting its extermination,
by naming a single locality known to me
where it now breeds. The bird-loving reader will,
I am sure, appreciate this reticence. Small colonies
of this pretty Tern are situated here and there
round the British coasts, and in one or two more
inland localities. The partiality of the Lesser Tern
for the coast of the mainland, rather than for
islands, as a nesting ground, contributes largely to
the decrease in its numbers. It arrives on our
coasts in May, and is readily distinguished from all
its congeners by its small size. In its habits it is
certainly gregarious, but nowhere are its gatherings
<span class="pb" id="Page_57">57</span>
as extensive as in the other common British species.
Like its congeners it is eminently a bird of the air,
flying up and down in restless uncertain flight,
living almost entirely on the wing during the
daytime, only seeking the sands or the sea to sleep
or to rest. It may be watched flying along the
coast, a short distance from land, in a slow irregular
way, every now and then poising for a second, and
then dropping into the water with a tiny splash to
seize a fish or a crustacean. Its note is not quite
so harsh as that of the larger species, and may be
described as a shrill <i>pirr</i>, most frequently uttered
when its breeding places are invaded. Its food is
composed of small fish, insects, sand-lice, and
crustaceans, most of which is secured whilst the
bird is on the wing.</p>
<p>The Lesser Tern begins breeding in June. Like
all the other species it returns unfailingly to certain
spots along the coast each summer, and may, therefore,
be presumed to pair for life. Its favourite
breeding-grounds are extensive stretches of sand,
varied with slips and banks of coarser shingle.
It makes no nest, not even so much as scratching
a hollow for its eggs, but lays them on the bare
ground. It is most interesting to remark that
this Tern never lays its eggs on the fine sand,
but always on the bits of rough beach—where the
ground is strewn with little stones, broken shells,
and other <i>débris</i> of the shore—where their colour
harmonises so closely with surrounding objects
<span class="pb" id="Page_58">58</span>
that discovery is difficult. The eggs are from
two to four in number—I have on two separate
occasions taken clutches of the latter—but three
may be given as the average. They vary from
buff to grayish-brown in colour, blotched and
spotted with various shades of darker brown and
gray. During the hottest hours of the day the
female sits but little upon them, and it is remarkable
how quickly these shore birds will rise
from their nests at the first sign of impending
danger—the alarm doubtless being given by the
male bird from the air above. It is a most
exceptional thing to see a conspicuously coloured
bird rise from its nest in a bare situation; the eggs
are generally coloured protectively, and resemble
the objects around them; the presence of the
showily attired parent would inevitably lead to
their discovery. Early in autumn, when the young
are strong upon the wing, the return journey to
the winter home on the African coast begins, and
it is during these migration journeys that the bird
is, perhaps, most commonly observed along the
British seaboard.</p>
<h3>BLACK TERN.</h3>
<p>Allusion may here, perhaps, be permitted to the
<i>Sterna nigra</i> or <i>Hydrochelidon nigra</i> of ornithologists.
The Black Tern formerly bred commonly
in our marshes and fens, but has long ceased to do
so. The “Car Swallow,” as it used to be widely
<span class="pb" id="Page_59">59</span>
called in the fens, belongs to the group known as
Marsh Terns—birds that rarely frequent the sea
coast at all, so that its absence from our avi-fauna,
although greatly to be deplored, could scarcely
be remarked by the observer of marine species
alone. The White-winged Black Tern and the
Whiskered Tern complete this division, known as
“Marsh Terns.” Both these latter are occasional
wanderers to the British Islands.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_61">61</div>
<h2 id="c2"><i>Plovers and Sandpipers</i></h2>
<div class="fig"> id="fig2"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_064.jpg" alt="RUFFS—Sparring. Chapter ii." width-obs="500" height-obs="353" /> <p class="center"><span class="small">RUFFS—<i>Sparring</i>. <i>Chapter</i> ii.</span></p> </div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_63">63</div>
<h2 class="eee">CHAPTER II. <br/>PLOVERS AND SANDPIPERS.</h2>
<blockquote>
<p><i>Characteristics and Affinities—Changes
of Plumage—Structural
Characters—Oyster-catcher—Ringed
Plover—Kentish Plover—Golden
Plover—Gray
Plover—Lapwing—Turnstone—Phalaropes—Gray
Phalarope—Red-necked
Phalarope—Curlew—Whimbrel—Godwits—Black-tailed
Godwit—Bar-tailed Godwit—Redshank—Sanderling—Knot—Curlew
Sandpiper—Dunlin—Purple Sandpiper—Other
Species.</i></p>
</blockquote>
<p>In the present chapter we commence the study
of an entirely different class of birds. The
Gulls are for the most part seen flying in the air
or swimming upon the sea, but the Plovers and the
Sandpipers spend the greater part of their time
on the ground. Again, Gulls, when adult, are
remarkably showy birds, but the Plovers and allied
species are just as inconspicuous. Many of the
haunts frequented by Gulls are utterly unsuited
to the Plovers and Sandpipers. These principally
delight in low sandy coasts, mud-flats, slob-lands,
and salt marshes. Rocks and ranges of cliff have
no attraction for these little feathered runners of
the shore; they obtain their food on the shallow
margin of the sea, on the sand and shingle, the
<span class="pb" id="Page_64">64</span>
mud and the ooze, or at low water among the
weed-draped stones. They are emphatically beach
birds. Such parts of the coast that have little or
no beach uncovered at high water, on which they
may rest whilst the tide is turning, or at low water
on which they can seek for food, are but little
frequented by these Limicoline birds. Consequently
we find them much more abundant on the flat
eastern coasts of England, and some parts of the
southern coasts, with their miles of sand and mud
and wide estuaries, than on the much more rock-bound
north and west.</p>
<p>The Plovers, with their allied forms, the Sandpipers
and Snipes, and between which no very
pronounced distinction is known to exist, constitute
a well-defined group of birds, perhaps on the one
hand most closely allied to the Gulls, and on the
other hand to the Bustards. There are more than
two hundred species in this group, distributed over
most parts of the world. The Limicolæ (under
which term we include the Plovers, Sandpipers,
and their allies) present considerable diversity in
the colour of their plumage, and in a great many
species this colour varies to an astonishing degree
with the season. The most brilliant hues are
assumed just prior to the breeding season; the
winter plumage is much less conspicuous. To a
great extent this colour is protective, the brighter
plumage of summer in many species harmonising
with the inland haunts the birds then frequent: the
<span class="pb" id="Page_65">65</span>
duller hues characteristic of winter assimilating
with the barer ground—the sands and mud-flats.
It is worthy of remark that the species which do
not present this great diversity in their seasonable
change of plumage—such as the Snipes and Woodcocks—confine
themselves to haunts clothed with
vegetation all the year round; or—as in the case of
the Ringed Plovers—to bare sands and shingles.
In their moulting the Limicolæ are most interesting.
It is impossible to enter very fully into the details
of this function in the present volume, nor is it
necessary, for the purpose of this study of marine
bird-life, to do so. A few of the most salient facts,
however, may be mentioned. The young of all
Limicoline birds are hatched covered with down,
and are able to run soon after their breaking from
the shell. They consequently spend little time in
the nest, after they are hatched. This down varies
considerably not only in the pattern of the colour,
but in the colour itself. Some of these chicks, or
young in down, are beautifully striped or spotted;
others are sprinkled or dusted with darker or lighter
tints than the general colour. In all, however, the
colours are eminently protective ones, and harmonise
so closely with the hues of surrounding objects that
discovery is difficult; more especially so as the
chicks possess the habit of crouching motionless to
the ground when menaced by danger. The first
plumage of the young bird in the present order,
approaches more or less closely in colour that of
<span class="pb" id="Page_66">66</span>
the summer plumage of the adult. At the beginning
of autumn, however, these bright colours begin to
be changed for a dress which resembles the winter
plumage of their parents. This is not effected,
however, by a moult, but by a change in colour of
the feathers, only the very worn and abraded ones
being actually replaced. In the spring following,
these immature birds moult into summer plumage,
similar to that of the adults, although the wing
coverts retain their hue, characteristic of summer or
the breeding season, until the next autumn, when
for the first time these feathers are changed for
the gray or brown ones of winter. It should here
be remarked that the wing coverts of the adults
seem only to be moulted in the autumn, so that this
portion of their plumage is always the same colour
after the bird reaches the adult stage of its
existence. The phenomenon of the alteration of
colour in the plumage of birds, and especially
in Limicoline species, without moulting or an
absolute change of the feathers, is a profoundly
interesting one. One of the most remarkable
facts in connection with this phenomenon is the
restoration of the worn and ragged margins of
the feathers in some Limicoline species to a
perfect condition without a change or moult of
the notched and damaged feather. Schlegel was
the first naturalist, apparently, to discover that this
wonderful renovation took place, but his statements
seem to have been doubted by naturalists. Fortunately
<span class="pb" id="Page_67">67</span>
Schlegel’s opinions have been fully confirmed
by Herr Gätke; and the reader interested in the
subject is referred to that great naturalist’s remarks
thereon in his book on the birds of
Heligoland.<SPAN class="fn" id="fr_1" href="#fn_1">[1]</SPAN>
This seasonal change of colour may be produced
both by a moult and by actual transition, without
cast of feather, even in the same bird: the restoration
of ragged feathers and development of colour
upon them may also be progressing at the same
time. Thus the black markings on the head and
neck of the Golden Plover are the result of colour
alteration, but the black on the breast is attained by
moult. The colour changes in the Sanderling, the
Knot, the Dunlin, the Redshank, and numerous
other allied birds, are perfectly astonishing: in the
Redshank especially so, the profusely barred upper
plumage being developed without change of feather,
and the feathers reacquiring a pristine freshness
and perfectness which seem almost incredible without
a complete moult!</p>
<p>Comparatively speaking, the haunts frequented
by Limicoline birds during summer, or the season
of reproduction, are not, in the strict sense of the
term, littoral ones. But few species breed on the
actual coast—in our islands they are represented by
such birds as the Oyster-catcher and the Ringed
Plover; the vast majority rear their young in
inland localities, on moors and downs, by the side
of rivers, streams, and lakes, in swamps, and so on.
<span class="pb" id="Page_68">68</span>
As soon, however, as the duties of the year are
over great numbers of species resort to the sea
coasts, where, in all districts suited to their requirements,
they form one of the most characteristic
avine features. It is amongst birds of this order
that the habit of migration is exceptionally pronounced,
some species journeying every year many
thousands of miles between their summer haunts,
or breeding grounds, and their winter homes, or
centres of dispersal. In the present group of birds
the wings are generally long and pointed, a form
best adapted for prolonged and rapid flight, whilst
the legs are usually long—in some species, as, for
instance, the Black-winged Stilt, exceptionally so—enabling
the birds to wade through shallows and
over soft mud and ooze. In some species the feet
are semi-webbed, as in the Avocets, in others they
are lobed, as in the Phalaropes. The bill varies to
an astonishing degree amongst birds of this class,
and seems specially modified to meet the varying
methods by which food is obtained. Thus we have
presented to us the decurved bill of the Curlew
type, the recurved bill, characteristic amongst others
of the Avocet or the Godwits, the nearly straight
bill of such forms as the Oyster-catcher and the
Phalarope, hard and chisel-like in the former, and
finely pointed in the latter; then, again, the bill in
many species is hard and horny, in others it is
acutely sensitive, full of delicate nerves, as in the
Snipes and many others. The bill of the typical
<span class="pb" id="Page_69">69</span>
Plovers differs strikingly from that of the Sandpipers
and Snipes, inasmuch that it tapers from the
base to the end of the nasal groove, then swells
towards the tip. It is utterly impossible in a
work like the present, which only attempts a slight
sketch of marine bird-life on British coasts, to deal
adequately with the astonishing amount of variation,
even in this single organ of Limicoline birds.
We will, therefore, now proceed to notice the most
characteristic species found on the tideways of
our islands, either as resident species, as passing
migrants, or as winter visitors. It will, perhaps, be
most convenient, as well as most interesting, to deal
first with those species that are resident on our
coasts, as being the most characteristic forms of
this group of shore birds.</p>
<h3>OYSTER-CATCHER.</h3>
<p>During summer, this species (the <i>Hæmatopus
ostralegus</i> of Linnæus and other systematists) south
of the Yorkshire and Lancashire coasts, is decidedly
local and rare; but north of those localities it
becomes one of the most common and characteristic
birds of the shore, even extending to the Shetlands,
the wildest of the Hebrides and St. Kilda. It is of
interest to remark that in some parts of Scotland
the Oyster-catcher drops its marine habits, and
frequents the banks of rivers and lochs. There is,
perhaps, no more conspicuous, no more handsome,
no more noisy bird along the coast, than the Oyster-catcher.
<span class="pb" id="Page_70">70</span>
It is worthily named “Sea Pie,” its
strongly contrasted black and white plumage recalling
at once the Magpie of the inland fields and
woods. The favourite haunts of this species are
long stretches of low, rocky coast, relieved here
and there by patches of shingle and long reaches of
sand, broken with quiet bays, creeks, and lochs,
where a large amount of beach is exposed at low
water. One may generally find an Oyster-catcher
about rocky islands; it is also very partial to
resting on these, between the tides. Few birds
look daintier or prettier than the present species, as
it stands motionless on some weed-grown rock, its
pied plumage, rich orange-coloured bill, and flesh-pink
legs, coming out boldly against the olive-green
masses of algæ. It is not often, however, that we
can approach sufficiently close to see such details;
as a rule the bird rises piping shrilly into the air,
before it is actually seen, and long before unaided
vision can distinguish colours distinctly. During
summer the Oyster-catcher can scarcely be regarded
as gregarious, but in winter, when its numbers are
increased by migrants from the north, flocks of
varying size may be met with. When flushed, the
flight of this bird is very erratic and very rapid,
performed by quick and regular strokes of the long-pointed
wings; and perhaps it is now that the
colours of the bird are seen to best advantage.
The call note is heard most frequently and persistently
as the bird hurries away in alarm, or
<span class="pb" id="Page_71">71</span>
careers about the air overhead, anxious for the
safety of its eggs or young. This note cannot
readily be confused with that of any other bird
upon the coast. It may best be described as a loud
shrill <i>heep-heep-heep</i>. The food of the Oyster-catcher
is composed of mussels, whelks, limpets,
crustaceans, and small fish, together with various
tender buds and shoots of marine plants. Its
chisel-shaped bill enables it readily to detach limpets
from the rocks, or force open the closed valves of
the mussel or the cockle. Oyster-catchers often
frequent certain spots on the coast to feed, visiting
them as soon as the tide admits, with great regularity.
It may here be remarked that this bird
wades often through the shallows, but never swims,
as far as I know, unless wounded.</p>
<p>The eggs of the Oyster-catcher are laid in May
or June, in the north a little later than in the south.
The nesting-place is usually a stretch of rough
pebbles or a shingly beach in some quiet bay, a
low rocky island, or even a stack of rocks.
Although Oyster-catchers cannot be said to breed
in colonies, like some of the Gulls and Terns,
numbers of nests may be found at no great distance
apart. The nest is simple in the extreme—a mere
hollow, in and round which are neatly arranged flat
pebbles and bits of broken shells. As a rule,
several mock nests may be found near to the
one containing the eggs. These eggs are usually
three in number, but sometimes four, pale buff or
<span class="pb" id="Page_72">72</span>
brownish-buff in ground colour, blotched, spotted,
and streaked with blackish-brown and gray. Two
distinct types are noticeable: one in which the
markings are streaky, and often form a zone;
the other in which they are large, irregular, and
distributed over most of the surface. As soon
as the nest is approached the ever-watchful birds
rise screaming into the air, and should many pairs
be breeding in company, the din soon becomes
general and deafening. It is under these circumstances
alone that the Oyster-catcher permits man
to approach it closely; at all other times it is
certainly one of the shyest and wariest of birds
on the coast.</p>
<h3>RINGED PLOVER.</h3>
<p>With the present species—or resident large race,
the <i>Ægialitis hiaticula major</i> of Tristram, as we
should more correctly describe it—we reach the
true Plovers. The Ringed Plover is one of
the most widely distributed of our coast birds,
frequenting all the flat sandy shores of the British
Islands, from the Shetlands, in the north, to the
Channel Islands, in the south. And not only does
it haunt the coast, but it is found on the banks
of rivers and lochs in many inland districts. In
many places this species is known as the “Ring
Dotterel”; in others its local name is the “Sand
Lark.” The favourite haunts of the Ringed
Plover are the sandy portions of the beach; but
in autumn and winter this bird frequently visits
<span class="pb" id="Page_73">73</span>
mud-flats. The Ringed Plover is about the size
of a Thrush, and may be easily recognised by
its broad white collar, black breast and cheeks,
brown upper parts, and snow-white under parts.
Its actions on the shore are most engaging, tripping
here and there along the margin of the waves,
over the wet sand and shingle, darting this way
and that as some tempting morsel of food is
discovered. If in autumn or winter, this Plover
will generally be met with in flocks of varying
size; if in summer in scattered pairs or parties
composed of the birds breeding in the immediate
neighbourhood. Ringed Plovers are most attached
to certain haunts, and seem to frequent them year
by year, notwithstanding continued persecution and
disturbance. It is the same when they are feeding.
If alarmed they usually rise in a compact bunch,
fly out to sea a little way, then return inshore,
perhaps passing two or three times up and down
before finally alighting. Again and again may
this action be repeated, although the flock has a
tendency to break up if flushed many times in
quick succession, and odd birds will fall out, or
remain skulking amongst the shingle. A dense
flock or bunch of Ringed Plovers is a pretty sight.
The birds fly quickly, and wheel and turn with
astonishing precision, now close to the waves, then
up in the air above the horizon, often persistently
uttering their shrill call note, which resembles the
syllables <i>too-it</i> rapidly repeated. Occasionally a
<span class="pb" id="Page_74">74</span>
fair sprinkling of Sanderlings and Dunlins may be
observed in the flocks of this species. If seriously
alarmed the entire flock will mount up high, and go
off to a distant part of the coast, or even divide into
several smaller ones, each retiring to a different
spot; but almost invariably they return, and reform
into a single company on the old familiar sands,
within a hour or so of their scattered departure.
The food of this pretty little Plover consists of the
smaller creatures of the shore, such as minute sand-worms,
shrimps, sand-hoppers, tiny molluscs, and
insects. That this species occasionally eats vegetable
substances I have assured myself by repeated
dissection.</p>
<p>Although the Ringed Plover appears only to
rear one brood in the year, its laying season is
prolonged from the middle of April to the beginning
of June. Early in April the winter flocks begin
to disband, and the birds to disperse over their
breeding places. Many pairs may be found breeding
on one large stretch of sand in a suitable district.
Some individuals seek an inland site for their eggs,
on the bank of a stream or lake, but the majority
prefer the sands of the sea-shore. Occasionally
the nest has been discovered remote from
water. This Plover makes no nest. The eggs
sometimes are laid in a hollow of the sand, but
just as frequently on the level surface. The fine
sand is always preferred to the shingle, as the eggs
best harmonize in appearance with it, their fine
<span class="pb" id="Page_75">75</span>
markings becoming more conspicuous on the coarser
surface. The bird sits lightly: indeed it is most
exceptional to see one rise from its eggs, unless
the spot had been previously marked. When
disturbed, the birds exhibit but little outward
manifestation of alarm. They may be seen running
to and fro about the sand, but their behaviour is
very different from that of the Lesser Terns, which
often nest on the same sands. The eggs of the
Ringed Plover are always four in number, very
pyriform in shape, and invariably laid with the
pointed ends turned inwards. They are large in
proportion to the bird, and pale buff or stone colour
sparingly spotted and speckled with blackish-brown
and ink-gray. During May and June a smaller
and darker race of Ringed Plover passes along
our coasts, to breed further north; appearing on
the return journey during August, September, and
October. There is some evidence to suggest that
this race breeds sparingly on the coasts of Kent
and Sussex.</p>
<h3>KENTISH PLOVER.</h3>
<p>This species, the <i>Ægialitis cantiana</i> of ornithologists,
is one of the most local of British birds.
Stragglers have been obtained here and there along
the coast line between Yorkshire and Cornwall,
but its only known nesting places are on certain
parts of the coasts of Kent and Sussex. It is
now nearly a century ago since this Plover was
first made known to science by Lewin, who figured
<span class="pb" id="Page_76">76</span>
it in his <i>Birds of Great Britain</i>; and by Latham,
who described and named it in the supplement
to his great work, the <i>Index Ornithologicus</i>, from
examples which had been obtained on the Kentish
shingles by Mr. Boys of Sandwich. The Kentish
Plover bears a superficial resemblance to the Ringed
Plover, but may readily be distinguished by the
broken pectoral band, represented by a dark
patch on each side of the breast, and the reddish-brown
nape and crown. Unlike the preceding
species, this Plover is a summer migrant only to
the British coasts, arriving towards the end of
April or early in May, and departing again with
its young in August or September. Odd birds,
however, have been met with during winter. The
Kentish Plover does not differ in its habits in
any marked degree from the Ringed Plover, and
frequents very similar localities, stretches of sand
and shingle. Like that bird, it also gathers into
small parties during summer; but in our islands,
where its numbers are limited, we more usually
find it in isolated pairs on various suitable parts
of the shore. It possesses the same restless habits;
running about the wet shining sands and shingles
close to the breaking waves, in quest of the sand-hoppers,
crustaceans, worms, and other small marine
creatures on which it feeds. It cannot be regarded
as a shy bird, permitting a somewhat close approach,
and manifesting little fear or alarm even when
its breeding grounds are invaded by man. Its
<span class="pb" id="Page_77">77</span>
alarm note may be described as a shrill <i>ptirr</i>, but
the usual call is a clear loud <i>whit</i>, which, during
the love season, is frequently uttered so quickly
as to form a sort of trill, as the cock bird soars and
flies round and round above his mate. The Ringed
Plover utters a very similar trill during the pairing
season.</p>
<p>The Kentish Plover rears but one brood during
the summer, and preparations are made for this
towards the end of May. It is not improbable that
this Plover pairs for life, seeing that the same
localities are visited year by year for nesting
purposes. It makes no nest, the eggs being laid
in a little hollow amongst the coarser sand or the
shingle, or on a drift of dry seaweed and other
shore <i>débris</i>. The eggs are usually three, but
occasionally four in number, and are pale or dark
buff in ground colour, blotched, scratched, and
spotted with blackish-brown and slate-gray. As
is the almost invariable custom with birds breeding
on bare plains and beaches—and whose eggs
are protectively coloured—the Kentish Plover sits
lightly, rises from her eggs as soon as danger is
discovered, and evinces but little outward anxiety
for their safety; although, in some instances, the
feigning of lameness has been resorted to, especially
when the eggs have been on the point of hatching.
The young birds and their parents form a family
party during the autumn, and apparently migrate
southwards in close company.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_78">78</div>
<p>With the present species we exhaust the number of
Limicoline birds that nest upon the shore in the
British Islands. All the other species that make our
sands and mud-flats their winter home, or their place
of call during their spring and autumn migrations,
breed away from the actual beach on marshes and
moors and uplands, or do not rear their young at all
within our area. Closely associated with most of
these birds are the fascinating problems of Migration.
We miss the feathered hosts from sand and mud-flat
as the spring advances; we note the fleeting appearance
of others along the shore bound to far away
northern haunts: and then long before the first
faint signs of autumn are apparent these migrant
birds begin to return, and imbue the wild lone
slob-lands and shingles with life. To and fro with
each recurring spring and autumn, the stream of
avine life flows and ebbs; by day and by night
the feathery tides press on, calling forth wonder
from the least observant, filling more thoughtful
minds with the complexity and the mystery of it all.
We have not space to deal here with this grand
avine movement; but, content with this passing
allusion to it, pass on to a study of the other
feathered dwellers by the sea. (Conf. <SPAN href="#Page_281"><i>p.</i> 281</SPAN>).</p>
<p>It is rather remarkable how few species of
Limicoline birds breed on the British coast-line.
Not a single Sandpiper nor Snipe does so, and but
two or three Plovers, as we have already seen.
So far as summer is concerned, these wading birds
<span class="pb" id="Page_79">79</span>
cannot be regarded as a very remarkable feature of
avine life upon the coast; and it is, doubtless,
because they are so little known to the majority of
seaside visitors, that they appeal so much less to
the popular mind than the more ubiquitous Gulls.
But from September onwards to the following
spring, Plovers and Sandpipers are the most
prominent characteristics of all the more low-lying
coasts. We will briefly glance at those species that
not only frequent such situations regularly every
season, but occur in sufficient numbers to place
them beyond the category of abnormal visitors, or
storm-driven wanderers from their natural haunts.</p>
<h3>GOLDEN PLOVER.</h3>
<p>This species, the <i>Charadrius pluvialis</i> of ornithologists,
is, from the regularity of its appearance
and its great abundance, known almost everywhere
as <i>the</i> Plover of the coast. It derives its trivial
name from the profusion of golden yellow drop-like
spots which adorn its upper plumage, and may
always be distinguished from allied species by its
barred tail feathers and white axillaries. Large
flights of Golden Plover begin to appear on our
low-lying coasts in September, and through October
and November the number steadily increases.
Many of these birds simply pass along our shore-line
to haunts in the Mediterranean basin, but
many linger thereon through the winter. One of
the great haunts of this Plover is along the shores
<span class="pb" id="Page_80">80</span>
of the Wash—that vast area of mud, and sand,
and salt-marsh, which extends for miles in drear
monotony, only enlivened and made endurable by
the hordes of wild fowl that congregate upon its
treacherous surface. Here, at the end of October,
or during the first week in November, the migration
of the Golden Plover can be observed in all its
strength. Day after day, night after night, I
have remarked the passage of this bird, in almost
one unbroken stream, flock succeeding flock, so
quickly as to form a nearly continuous throng.
Upon the sands this Plover often associates with
Dunlins, Gray Plovers, Lapwings, and other waders.
Great numbers are, or used to be, shot or netted in
this district, and sent to inland markets, for their
flesh is justly esteemed for its delicacy, ranked by
some as second only to that of the Woodcock.
Golden Plovers feed and move about a good deal
at night, especially by moonlight. Their food,
during winter at least, consists of sand-worms and
hoppers, molluscs, small seeds, and so on. The
whistle of this Plover is one of the most attractive
sounds of the mud-flats and salt-marshes. It may,
under suitable atmospheric conditions, be heard for
a long distance across the wastes, and sounds
something like <i>klee-wee</i>, occasionally prolonged into
<i>klee-ee-wee</i>. This note is uttered both while the
bird is on the ground and in the air. In the
pairing season it is run out into a trill. The
movements of the Golden Plover during winter
<span class="pb" id="Page_81">81</span>
are largely regulated by the weather, and I have
known it desert a district entirely, or become very
restless and unsettled, just previous to a storm.</p>
<p>In spring the sea coasts are deserted, and the
Golden Plover retires to its breeding-grounds.
These, in our islands, are situated on the upland
moors and mountain plateaux. The nest, invariably
made upon the ground, is often placed on a hassock
of coarse herbage, or on a tuft of cotton grass, and
consists merely of a hollow, lined with a few bits
of withered grass or dead leaves. The eggs are
four in number, buff blotched and spotted with
various shades of brown, and more sparingly with
gray. They are much richer and yellower in
appearance than those of the Lapwing, otherwise
closely resemble them.</p>
<h3>GRAY PLOVER.</h3>
<p>This handsome bird, generically separated by
many ornithologists from the preceding, on account
of its possessing a minute and entirely functionless
hind toe, is the <i>Vanellus helveticus</i> of Brisson, and
the <i>Charadrius helveticus</i> of writers who ignore the
genus <i>Squatarola</i>, founded by Leach on the above-named
trivial and, all things considered, utterly
inadequate character. The Gray Plover is the first
species we have considered in the present work that
does not breed in the British Islands. Many birds
of this species only pass our coast on migration in
going to, and returning from, their Arctic breeding-grounds,
<span class="pb" id="Page_82">82</span>
but a fair number linger upon them
throughout the winter. The Gray Plover may be
readily distinguished from the preceding, as well as
from all other allied forms, by the presence of a
rudimentary hind toe, and by its <i>black</i> axillaries.
In its seasonal changes of plumage it closely
resembles its ally. In the adult plumage, however,
it never exhibits any of the yellow, drop-like, spots
on the upper parts, so characteristic of that bird in
every feather stage of its existence. Gray Plovers
begin to arrive on the British coasts as early as
August, and the migration continues with increasing
strength until October or November. Such
individuals as pass our islands for more southern
haunts return along the British coasts during May
and June. During its sojourn with us, the Gray
Plover confines itself almost entirely to the mud-flats
and salt marshes. It does not gather into
such large companies as the Golden Plover—but
this may be due, perhaps, to its smaller numbers—and
is often seen in pairs or small parties, whilst
odd birds will occasionally attach themselves to
flocks of Knots and Dunlins. In its habits
generally, in its flight, and in its food, it closely
resembles its commoner and better known ally.
The note uttered whilst the bird lives upon our
coasts resembles that of the Golden Plover.</p>
<p>The breeding-grounds of the Gray Plover are on
the tundras and barren grounds in the Arctic regions
of the Old and New Worlds, above the limits of
<span class="pb" id="Page_83">83</span>
forest growth. The nest is always made upon the
ground, and is merely a slight hollow, lined with a
few scraps of withered herbage. The four eggs
very closely resemble those of the Lapwing, but
are not quite so olive. When once flushed from
the nest the Gray Plover becomes very wary and
restless, and does not return for some time; should
the young be hatched various alluring antics are
indulged in to withdraw attention from them.</p>
<h3>LAPWING.</h3>
<p>This bird is the typical species of Brisson’s
genus <i>Vanellus</i>, and is known to most naturalists
as <i>Vanellus cristatus</i> or <i>vulgaris</i>. It cannot easily
be confused with any other British bird, and is
readily identified by its long conspicuous crest,
metallic green, suffused with purple upper parts, and
bright chestnut upper and under tail coverts.
Further, its appearance in the air, so far as British
Limicoline birds are concerned, is unique; the
curiously rounded wings, and deliberate Heron-like
flight, together with the peculiar note, make the
matter of its identification easy to the veriest tyro
in ornithology. The Lapwing is also not only the
commonest of its order found in Britain, but certainly
the most widely dispersed. Nevertheless, it
is only during the non-breeding season that the
Lapwing can fairly be described as a marine bird.
From March onwards to the early autumn it retires
to inland moors, pastures, and rough undrained
<span class="pb" id="Page_84">84</span>
lands to breed, returning coastwards again when the
young are reared, especially from the more exposed
and elevated localities. The favourite marine
haunts of the “Green Plover,” or Peewit, as this
bird is otherwise called, are rough saltings, mud-flats,
and slob-lands; sands and shingles it rarely visits
unless when driven to do so by heavy snowfalls;
and at all times it prefers ground overgrown with
herbage to the bare beaches. As this species
presents little difference between summer and winter
plumage, means for concealment may have some
influence in its choice of haunt. When standing
or running on the ground the Lapwing is a very
ordinary looking bird; graceful enough, it is true;
but the moment it rises into the air the observer is
struck with the singularity of its appearance; the
broad and rounded wings are unfolded and moved
in a slow flapping Owl-like manner; very often
grotesque evolutions are indulged in, the bird rising
and swooping down again, turning and twisting in a
most erratic way, and all the time persistently
uttering the wild, mewing, plaintive cry that is
absolutely characteristic of this Plover—an unmistakable
and unique note among birds. It may
be expressed on paper as a nasal <i>pee-weet</i>, frequently
modulated into <i>weet-a-weet</i>, <i>pee-weet-weet</i>.</p>
<p>As the autumn days draw on the Lapwing
becomes more gregarious, often forming into flocks
of enormous size, which wander about a good deal
as the varying weather affects their supply of food.
<span class="pb" id="Page_85">85</span>
This, in winter, consists chiefly of worms, grubs,
molluscs, crustaceans, and other small marine
creatures; in summer, seeds, shoots of herbage, and
various ground fruits and berries are added. The
Lapwing in its movements on the ground is light
and elegant, running and walking well, standing
high upon its legs, but it seldom seems to wade,
and never, so far as I know, attempts to swim under
any normal circumstances. Great numbers of
Lapwings are killed for the table, but the flesh
cannot be compared with that of the Golden Plover,
being not only dark in appearance, but unpleasant
in taste, especially after the birds have resided long
in littoral haunts.</p>
<p>The Lapwing at the approach of spring retires
inland to breed, visiting for the purpose moors,
rough lands, water meadows, pastures, and grain
fields. The nesting habits of this species are
certainly better known than those of any other
member of the Plover tribe, at least, as far as
British birds are concerned. Every person at all
familiar with the common objects of the country,
knows the nest of the Lapwing, and must time
and again have been amused with the bird’s erratic
behaviour, as its breeding grounds are invaded by
human intruders. The nest is always made upon
the ground, generally in a hollow of some kind,
often in the footprints of cattle and horses. Sometimes
it is cunningly hidden beneath a tuft of
rushes or hassock of sedge and grass; whilst the
<span class="pb" id="Page_86">86</span>
summit of a mole-hill is not rarely chosen. The
hollow is lined with a few bits of the dry and
withered surrounding herbage; and in many cases
even this slight provision is omitted. The four
eggs (five have been recorded!) very like pears
in shape, are buffish-brown or pale olive in ground
colour, handsomely blotched and spotted, especially
on the larger half, with blackish-brown, paler brown,
and gray. If the flesh of the Lapwing is not held
in very high repute its eggs make ample amends
for the deficiency. Vast numbers are systematically
gathered for the table; and as the birds will replace
their stolen eggs again and again, the harvest may
be prolonged over several weeks. The first eggs
are laid in April; in more northern localities not
before May. In the early days of the Plover egg
season, these commodities frequently realise as
much as twelve shillings per dozen, and are a source
of profit to many a dweller in country districts.
Dogs are sometimes trained to search for them.
When the young are hatched the Lapwing displays
many curious tricks to lure enemies from them,
feigning death or broken wings, or swooping with
loud cries to and fro.</p>
<h3>TURNSTONE.</h3>
<p>It is rather a remarkable fact that this species,
the <i>Strepsilas interpres</i> of naturalists, does not
breed in the British Islands. Some naturalists
have suspected that it does so on the Hebrides,
<span class="pb" id="Page_87">87</span>
and it has been said to nest on the Channel Islands,
but no direct proof has yet been obtained. Under
exceptional circumstances the Turnstone may be
met with inland, especially during the season of
its migrations, but otherwise it is strictly a coast-bird,
as much so as the Oyster-catcher, and rears
its young upon the shore. This somewhat singular
bird is met with on the British coasts, most commonly
during its passage north or south, comparatively few
individuals remaining upon them for the winter.
The Turnstone cannot readily be confused with
any other coast bird, its mottled black and chestnut
upper parts, black throat and breast, and white
belly, being very distinctive. The wings and tail
during flight exhibit a good deal of white upon
them. Turnstones, chiefly young birds, begin to
arrive on the British coasts at the end of July,
and the migration of the species continues through
August and September; the return passage in
spring may be remarked towards the end of April,
and lasts for about a month. Mud-flats, slob-lands,
and salt-marshes are not frequented much by the
Turnstone; it always prefers the low rocky coasts,
and seems specially fond of haunting rocks and
islands. Social to a great extent in summer, in
winter this bird is more or less gregarious; but
many odd individuals attach themselves to parties
of other shore-frequenting species. An example
now lying before me was shot from the company of
Common Sandpipers. The Turnstone is a restless
<span class="pb" id="Page_88">88</span>
little creature, ever on the run in quest of food.
It may be watched hunting about the beaches,
or running amongst pebbles, and over the piles
of drifted rubbish that the tide washes up in a long
irregular line along the shore. In watching the
actions of this bird, the observer cannot fail to
remark its singular habit of turning over shells
and other objects, in quest of the small marine
creatures that lurk under them, with its conical
shaped beak, and perhaps occasionally with its
breast as well. This peculiarity has gained for
the Turnstone its trivial name. Not only does it
run about the sand and rocks, but it frequently
wades, and has even been seen to swim just outside
the line of breakers, rising from time to time, flying
a little way and then settling upon the water again.
The flight of this bird is not very rapid, and
generally taken close to the ground; its note is
a shrill whistle, resembling the syllable <i>keet</i>. During
the love season this note is run into a rapid trill.
The food of the Turnstone is composed of sand-worms,
crustaceans, molluscs, and other small marine
animals.</p>
<p>The Turnstone changes its haunts but little
during the breeding season. It rears its young
on the beaches or on rocky islets, placing its nest
amongst the scanty marine herbage, beneath the
shelter of a tuft of grass or a little bush. This is
merely a hollow lined with a few bits of dry grass
or other vegetation. The four eggs are olive-green
<span class="pb" id="Page_89">89</span>
or pale buff in ground colour, blotched, spotted, and
clouded with olive-brown, dark reddish-brown, and
violet-gray. But one brood is reared in the year,
and the eggs are laid in June. As soon as the
young are able to fly the movement south begins.
The Turnstone breeds throughout the northern
parts of the Nearctic and Palæarctic regions, as
far as land is known to extend. Its nearest
breeding stations to the British Islands are in
Denmark, on some of the Baltic Islands, and in
Iceland. During winter it visits the coasts of
almost every part of the world, south of the Arctic
circle.</p>
<h3>PHALAROPES.</h3>
<p>But three species of the genus <i>Phalaropus</i> are
known, and two of these are British birds, one of
them the Red-necked Phalarope, <i>P. hyperboreus</i>,
breeding very sparingly and locally within our
limits, the other the Gray Phalarope, <i>P. fulicarius</i>,
a more or less regular visitor to our coasts in
autumn and winter. From many points of view
the Phalaropes are very interesting birds. They
are distinguished from all other Limicoline forms
by the structure of the feet, which are lobed like
those of the Coot—a peculiarity which induced
Edwards, in 1741, to describe a Phalarope as the
“Coot-footed Tringa.” They are by far the most
aquatic of the Charadriidæ, swimming as readily
as Gulls or Ducks, and often going for hundreds of
miles out on to the open sea; indeed they spend
<span class="pb" id="Page_90">90</span>
most of their time upon the water, only visiting
land for any lengthened period during the breeding
season.</p>
<p>There can be little doubt that the Gray
Phalarope is a more abundant visitor to British
waters, in autumn and winter, than is generally
supposed. It has little reason to visit land at all
at such a season, unless driven towards it by
exceptionally severe weather. Occasionally, however,
this Phalarope has occurred on our coasts in
great numbers, something similar to the visitations
of Sand Grouse, with which doubtless most readers
are familiar. The autumn of 1866 is specially
famous for a great “rush” of Gray Phalaropes
to the British seas and coasts, and it is estimated
that upwards of 500 were caught, of which large
number nearly half occurred in Sussex! The
most recent irruption of Gray Phalaropes was in
1886. The Gray Phalarope lives almost entirely
out at sea, after the breeding season is over,
wandering immense distances from land, and even
accompanying whales, for the sake of catching the
various small marine creatures disturbed by the
“blowing” of those mighty animals—hence to the
sailor it is often known as the “Whale Bird.” So
hardy is this little bird, that it has been watched
swimming about amongst icebergs far from land.
It swims lightly and buoyantly as a foam fleck, with
a peculiar bobbing motion of the head, but it is
not known to dive. It apparently flies with
<span class="pb" id="Page_91">91</span>
reluctance, always preferring to swim out of
danger. Its food principally consists of insects,
but crustaceans, worms, and scraps of vegetable
substances are eaten. The call note of this
Phalarope is described as a shrill <i>weet</i>, and the
alarm note, heard most frequently during flight, as
a rapidly repeated <i>bick-abick-a</i>.</p>
<p>The Gray Phalarope is not known to breed
anywhere on continental Europe, but does so in
Spitzbergen, in Iceland, Greenland, and probably
throughout all suitable parts of Arctic America
and Asia, as far north as land extends. In winter
it is very widely dispersed, even wandering as far
as New Zealand. The Gray Phalarope is one of
those species that change greatly in the colour
of their plumage according to season. In winter
dress—the plumage perhaps most familiar to British
observers—the back is gray, and the under parts
pure white; but in summer the whole of the latter
are rich bright bay, and the feathers of the upper
parts are dark brown with pale reddish-brown
margins. In this plumage it is known as the
Red Phalarope. Another interesting fact is that
the female is much more brightly and richly
coloured than the male, and the latter not only
performs the duty of incubating the eggs, but
takes the greater share in tending upon the young!
It may thus be inferred that the pairing habits
of this Phalarope are most singular, the female
conducting the courtship! The Gray Phalarope
<span class="pb" id="Page_92">92</span>
remains practically gregarious throughout the year,
breeding in colonies of varying size. Its favourite
nesting-places are beside the marshy pools and
lakes on the tundras, at no great distance from
the Arctic Ocean. The nest is made upon the
ground, and consists of a mere hollow in the moss
or lichen, lined with a few dry leaves and grasses.
The four pyriform eggs are pale buff, tinged with
olive, blotched and spotted with dark brown and
paler brown. At the nest the old Phalaropes are
remarkably tame and confiding, showing little fear
of man, but when the young are hatched often
trying to delude him away by various deceptive
antics. As soon as the young are sufficiently
matured, the nesting-places are deserted, and young
and old repair to the sea for the remainder of the
year.</p>
<p>The second British species, the Red-necked
Phalarope, is scarcely less known to the majority
of people than the Gray Phalarope. It seldom
visits the land except for breeding purposes, and as
its nesting-places in our area are not only few, but
in the remotest part of it, opportunities for observing
its habits are few and fitful. It is a summer
visitor to certain parts of the Outer Hebrides, to
the Orkneys, and the Shetlands. Outside our limits
its range is very extensive. It breeds in suitable
localities throughout the Arctic regions of the
New and Old Worlds, above the limits of forest
growth; in winter it wanders far southwards, and
<span class="pb" id="Page_93">93</span>
is then found on the coasts of Europe, Southern
Asia, Mexico, and Central America. Like the
preceding species it is thoroughly marine in its
choice of a haunt, but does not appear to wander for
such great distances from land. It is just as tame
and confiding, just as social in summer, and as
gregarious in winter. It swims equally as well
and buoyantly, with the same peculiar bobbing
motion; whilst on the land it is able to run and
walk with ease. It exhibits the same reluctance
to take wing, preferring to retreat from danger by
swimming, although it flies on occasion quickly
and well. Its food is very similar, and its note
is a shrill but rather low <i>weet</i>. As Professor
Newton has remarked, both this and the preceding
species of Phalarope are entrancingly interesting
in their habits. “Their graceful form, their lively
colouration, and the confidence with which both are
familiarly displayed in their breeding-quarters can
hardly be exaggerated, and it is equally a delightful
sight to watch these birds gathering their food in
the high-running surf, or, when that is done,
peacefully floating outside the breakers.”<SPAN class="fn" id="fr_2" href="#fn_2">[2]</SPAN></p>
<p>So far as concerns Scotland, the breeding season
of the Red-necked Phalarope commences in May,
but in more Arctic localities it is deferred until
several weeks later. It returns with unerring
regularity to the old accustomed spots to rear
<span class="pb" id="Page_94">94</span>
its young. These are on the marshy moors,
beside the pools, at no great distance from the
sea. The nest, usually made on the ground, (in
the valley of the Petchora it has been found in a
hassock of coarse grass a foot or more above it),
is a mere hollow lined with a few scraps of dead
grass and rush. The four eggs are buff of various
shades, or pale olive, spotted and blotched with
amber and blackish-brown, pale brown and gray.
As previously remarked the male bird incubates
them. When disturbed at its breeding grounds, the
Red-necked Phalarope slips off the nest and takes
refuge in the water, manifesting little concern for
its safety. As soon as the young are sufficiently
matured, they and their parents resort to the sea,
moving southwards as autumn advances, and for the
most part keeping to the water until another
nesting season comes round.</p>
<h3>CURLEW.</h3>
<p>This species, (<i>Numenius arquata</i>), is not only
the largest Limicoline bird that frequents the coast,
but also one of the best known. There are few
parts of the shore during autumn and winter where
an odd Curlew cannot be found, whilst in some
localities it may be classed as absolutely common.
The Curlew is another of those species that
present little difference between summer and
winter plumage, and yet the haunts it selects in
summer differ very considerably from those it
<span class="pb" id="Page_95">95</span>
seeks in winter. It is a resident in the British
Islands, but its numbers are very considerably
increased in autumn, by migrants from more
northern latitudes. It may be found, as previously
inferred, on almost all parts of the shore, but
such beaches where wide expanses of sand,
mud, and broken rocks occur, are specially
preferred—as are also salt-marshes and wet
meadows close to the sea. Of all wild fowl
the Curlew is one of the wariest, never allowing
a close approach unless stalked with the greatest
care, or surprised in some unusual way, which
does not often happen. In some districts where
little beach is exposed during high-water, the
Curlews will retire some distance inland, but
return with remarkable punctuality as soon as
the tide begins to ebb. Shingle banks and
islands are also often visited between tides.
Curlews when feeding are very restless birds,
running and walking about the beach, seemingly
in a very careless and unsuspecting manner,
but sentinels are ever on the watch to sound the
warning note, which sends the big long-billed
speckled birds hurrying away to safer haunts.
The Curlew feeds both by day and by night;
and its wild somewhat mournful note, shrill
and far-sounding, <i>curlee</i>, <i>cur-lee</i>, may repeatedly
be heard during darkness. The flight of this
bird is both rapid and well sustained. Gätke,
on evidence which seems absolutely conclusive,
<span class="pb" id="Page_96">96</span>
estimates its speed on certain occasions to be not
less than a mile a minute, and possibly very
much more! Although the Curlew repeatedly
wades, it is not known to swim under normal
circumstances, but has occasionally been seen
to perch in a tree. All through the autumn and
winter the Curlew continues gregarious. It
migrates in vast flocks, and frequently associates
with other wild fowl, although it may be that
these other and smaller species seek its company
to profit by its extraordinary vigilance. Sand-worms,
crustaceans, and molluscs form its
principal food whilst living on the coast, but
in summer, at its breeding-grounds, worms, grubs,
insects, ground fruits, and berries are eaten. The
European form of the Curlew is pretty generally
distributed over the western half of the Palæarctic
region, and in winter is found throughout Africa.</p>
<p>The Curlew begins to leave the coast for more
or less inland haunts in March, scattering over
most of our swampy moorlands and rough higher
grounds to breed. The eggs are laid during April
and May. The nest is invariably made upon the
ground, and consists merely of a shallow cavity,
lined with a few bits of withered herbage or dead
leaves. Numbers of pairs often nest within a
comparatively small area of suitable ground, and
should one pair be disturbed, the entire community
is soon thrown into a state of alarm. The four
eggs of the Curlew vary from olive-green to buff,
<span class="pb" id="Page_97">97</span>
blotched and spotted with olive-brown and pale
gray. The Curlew begins to wander coastwards
as soon as the young are reared. By far the
majority seen first are young birds, and these arrive
from the middle of July onwards.</p>
<h3>WHIMBREL.</h3>
<p>This species—which is the <i>Numenius phæopus</i>
of systematists—is best known on the British coasts
during its annual migrations, passing our islands so
regularly that it has received the name of “May
Bird.” On the Lincolnshire coast, as well as in
many other districts, the Whimbrel is almost universally
known as the “Jack-Curlew.” During its
seasonal movements it visits most parts of the
British coast-line, but mud-flats, salt-marshes,
estuaries, and extensive reaches of sand, are the
most favoured localities. Its habits are very similar
to those of the Curlew—a bird which it somewhat
closely resembles in general appearance, although
it is much smaller. It is also a less wary bird,
especially upon its arrival; much stalking, however,
soon teaches it shyness. Perhaps the Whimbrel
is not so often seen on the actual beach as the
Curlew; it seems to prefer to resort to slob-lands,
and swampy meadows adjoining the beach. It
not only wades, but is said even to swim
occasionally, and is fond of bathing, throwing
the water over itself as it stands breast-high in
the sea. In autumn and winter the Whimbrel is
<span class="pb" id="Page_98">98</span>
certainly gregarious, but its gatherings are never
so large on our coasts as those of the Curlew.
This, however, is entirely due to local causes, for
Gätke reports that on the bright warm days of
April and May they pass over Heligoland in
successive flocks, at a vast height, and flying at
a tremendous speed. On migration the note of
the Whimbrel may be described as a shrill
<i>hee-hee-hee</i>. Its food, during its sojourn in small
numbers on the British coasts, consists principally
of crustaceans, sand-worms, and molluscs.</p>
<p>The Whimbrel is a later breeder than the Curlew.
During the nesting season it is one of the most
local of our birds, and is only known to nest on
North Ronay—one of the Hebrides—the Orkneys,
and the Shetlands. Its favourite breeding-grounds
are the wild moors, at no great distance from the
sea. Although not gregarious during summer,
many pairs often nest on the same portion of
the moors. The nest is made upon the ground,
sometimes amongst heather, or beneath the shelter
of a tuft of grass, and consists of a few bits of
withered herbage, arranged carelessly in some slight
hollow. The four eggs are very like those of the
Curlew, but are much smaller. The bird’s actions
at the nest are very similar to those of the preceding
species. Outside the British limits, the breeding
range of the typical Whimbrel reaches from Iceland
and the Faröes, across Arctic Europe, whilst its
winter home is in Africa.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_99">99</div>
<h3>GODWITS.</h3>
<p>These birds rank amongst the rarest and most
local of the British species of Limicolæ, so that
little more than a passing allusion to them is
necessary in a work of the present character.
One of them, the Black-tailed Godwit, <i>Limosa
melanura</i>, formerly known as the “Yarwhelp” or
“Barker,” used to breed regularly in some of the
eastern counties of England, but for nearly fifty
years now it has not been known to do so. The
reclamation of its fenland haunts, and the practice
of netting it during the breeding season, have
probably been the chief causes of its extirpation.
A few birds still continue to appear on our coasts,
especially on the vast mud-flats and salt-marshes
of East Anglia, during their annual migrations,
and a few remain to winter. Outside our limits
it nests in Iceland and the Faröes, and in Scandinavia;
but its chief breeding-area extends across
Europe, from Holland to the south of Russia.
In winter it draws southwards, visiting the
Mediterranean basin and parts of Africa. The
Black-tailed Godwit appears on the British coasts
on passage, during April and May, the return
journey beginning in August, and lasting for about
a month. In its habits it is very like the Curlew,
picking up its food on the muds and marshes,
walking deliberately to and fro, wading through
the shallows, and sometimes standing in the water
<span class="pb" id="Page_100">100</span>
breast-high to sleep. Whilst on actual migration
it is a restless bird, continually shifting its ground,
but later in the year it becomes more settled, and
will visit certain spots to feed with great regularity.
Its food, whilst on our coasts, consists of insects
(especially beetles), worms, crustaceans, and molluscs.
Its call-note is a loud and shrill <i>tyii-it</i>. This
Godwit breeds in May, making a slight nest on
the ground, concealed amongst herbage, in which
it lays four pyriform eggs, olive-brown, spotted
with darker brown and gray.</p>
<p>The second and smaller species, the Bar-tailed
Godwit, <i>Limora rufa</i>, is certainly the best known,
and by far the most abundant. So far as my
observations extend, this Godwit occurs in greatest
numbers on the mud-flats and salt-marshes of the
Wash, where it is known in some places as the
“Scamell.” There it is often taken in the flight-nets,
and it is a well-known bird to the gunners of
the coast. This Godwit passes along the British
seaboard towards the end of April, and early in
May, returning from the end of August up to the
first week in November. According to Professor
Newton the 12th of May is known as “Godwit day”
on the south coast of England, because about that
date large flocks of this bird arrive thereon, on their
passage north. Whilst with us its habits are much
the same as those of the preceding species. It is
gregarious throughout the winter, and often
associates with other shore-haunting birds. Both
<span class="pb" id="Page_101">101</span>
these Godwits are readily distinguished from other
Limicoline species on the British coasts by their
long and recurved bills. They also present much
diversity between summer and winter plumage.
The most marked difference is seen in the colour of
the underparts, which the present species changes
from white in winter to rich chestnut in summer,
whilst in the Black-tailed Godwit the chestnut
characteristic of the breeding season is confined
to the neck and breast. It is only in summer
plumage that the tail of the Bar-tailed Godwit is
barred; in winter it is uniform ash-brown. Upon
its first arrival on our shores the Bar-tailed Godwit
is often remarkably tame, admitting a close
approach. It is very fond of frequenting the
creeks and dykes that intersect the salt-marshes
and muds, and during high water often goes inland
a little way to wait for the ebb. The food of this
Godwit consists of worms, crustaceans, molluscs,
and similar marine creatures. The note resembles
the syllables <i>kyă-kyă-kyă</i>, often very persistently
repeated as the birds fly up and down the coast.
In its quest for food it frequently wades, but never
swims nor dives, unless wounded.</p>
<p>But little is known respecting the nidification of
the Bar-tailed Godwit, and its eggs, very rare in
collections, have hitherto only been obtained in
Lapland. These so closely resemble those of the
preceding species, that no known point of distinction
can be given.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_102">102</div>
<h3>REDSHANK.</h3>
<p>During the greater part of the year this species—the
<i>Totanus calidris</i> of modern naturalists—resides
upon the coasts, retiring to more or less inland
districts to breed. There are few prettier and
more graceful birds along the shore than the
Redshank, distinguished by its long orange-red
legs, and white lower back, rump, and secondaries—the
latter marbled with brown at the base. In
the breeding season the grayish-brown upper
plumage, and the white breast characteristic of
winter, are mottled with rich dark brown. In
autumn our resident Redshanks are largely increased
in numbers by migratory individuals from
more northerly latitudes; many of these pass on
to winter quarters further south, but many others
remain with us for the winter. Sociable at all
times, and freely consorting with other Limicoline
species on the coast, in winter, especially, the
Redshank becomes very gregarious. Its favourite
haunts are mud-flats and salt-marshes, and it is
here that the largest flocks congregate, but many
odd birds frequent coasts of a more rocky
character. Redshanks are sprightly, restless birds,
almost constantly in motion when on the feed, and
scattering far and wide, running to and fro with
dainty action, wading through the little pools, and
even occasionally swimming the shallows between
one mud-bank and another. They are ever alert,
<span class="pb" id="Page_103">103</span>
and take wing as soon as danger threatens, the
scattered flock soon forming into a compact mass
again. Between the tides Redshanks often collect
on some mud-bank, where in a serried throng they
keep up a confused babel of subdued cries, as if all
were talking and none listening. Its flight is rapid
and most unsteady looking—the black and white
wings producing an idea of irregularity which is more
imaginary than real. Upon the coast the Redshank
feeds on sand-worms, crustaceans, molluscs,
and such like marine creatures, but during summer
at its breeding-grounds, worms, insects, ground-fruits
and berries are among the substances sought.
The call note of this wader is a loud shrill <i>tyü-tyü</i>
most persistently repeated when the bird is excited
or alarmed; whilst during the pairing season the love
song or trill is happily described by Professor
Newton—who has had exceptional opportunities
for observing this species—as a constantly repeated
<i>leero-leero-leero</i>, accompanied with many gesticulations,
as he hovers in attendance on the flight of
his mate; “or with a slight change to a different
key, engages with a rival; or again, half angrily
and half piteously, complains of a human intruder
on his chosen ground.”<SPAN class="fn" id="fr_3" href="#fn_3">[3]</SPAN></p>
<p>The Redshank breeds somewhat locally in the
marshy districts of our islands, perhaps most
commonly in the low-lying eastern counties of
<span class="pb" id="Page_104">104</span>
England, and in Scotland. It is one of the earliest
waders to quit the coast in spring, and to retire
to its nesting places, which are fen and marsh
lands, swampy moors, and the boggy shores of lochs
and tarns. Numbers of nests may be found within
a small area of suitable ground, and certain spots
appear to be visited annually for breeding purposes,
in some cases even after the district, by reclamation,
has lost its original marshy character. The nest is
slight, but usually well concealed, often beneath
the shade of a tuft of grass or other herbage, or in
a hassock of sedge or under a little bush or tall weed.
It consists of a mere hollow scantily lined with a few
bits of withered grass or leaves. The four eggs are
very pyriform in shape, and vary from pale buff to
dark buff, handsomely and boldly blotched and
spotted with rich dark brown, paler brown and gray.
When disturbed the old birds become very noisy
and excited, careering wildly to and fro, and
should the young be hatched they become even
more demonstrative, and by various antics seek
to decoy an intruder away. A return to the coast
is made as soon as the young are sufficiently
matured. Many eggs of this bird are gathered
and sold as “Plover’s eggs.”</p>
<h3>SANDERLING.</h3>
<p>During the period of its spring and autumn
migrations—especially the latter—this pretty little
bird, the <i>Tringa arenaria</i> of ornithologists who
<span class="pb" id="Page_105">105</span>
ignore the genus <i>Calidris</i>, named first by Cuvier in
1800, and formally founded eleven years later by
Illiger, established as it is on such a trivial character
(all things considered) as the absence of a minute
and functionless hind toe—is one of the commonest
and most widely distributed of Limicoline birds.
Comparatively few individuals remain on our coast
to winter, and these collect more especially on the
southern beaches. In winter plumage—the dress
in which it is most familiar to British observers—the
Sanderling is a delicate silvery-gray above and
pure white below; but in the breeding season,
although the underparts remain unchanged in colour,
the upper parts become mottled with chestnut and
black. Comparatively few Sanderlings reach the
British coasts before August, and the southward
migration continues during September. By the
middle of the latter month the bulk of the individuals
has passed beyond our limits; by the end of
October but few remain, although some of these
prolong their stay over the winter. The return
migration begins in April, and lasts over May into
June. There can be little doubt that the Sanderling
migrates by night. Few birds are more trustful
and engaging than this pretty little Arctic stranger.
It not only frequents the long reaches of sand,
but mud-flats, estuaries, and the creeks and
streams in salt-marshes; its favourite haunts,
however, are the sands. During its sojourn on
our coast it consorts in flocks of varying size;
<span class="pb" id="Page_106">106</span>
and very frequently a small party attach themselves
to a larger gathering of Dunlins, or
Ringed Plovers. Indeed for the society of the
latter birds the Sanderling shows a strongly
marked preference. We may safely say that,
during the migration period, most large bunches
of Ringed Plovers contain a varying number of
Sanderlings. Its actions on the sand are very
similar to those of the Ringed Plover, but it
does not appear ever to run in such fits and starts,
searching the ground more systematically, after the
manner of a Stint or a Dunlin. During high water
the Sanderling very often resorts to the higher
shingle, and skulks amongst the pebbles, sometimes
remaining unseen until nearly trodden upon, so
closely does its white and gray dress resemble the
stones among which it nestles. Upon the dark muds
and the wet shining brown sands it is much more
conspicuous; and there are few prettier sights
along the shore than a scattered flock of Sanderlings,
standing head towards the observer, looking
like so many white balls of animated snow. It
searches for its food by running to and fro about
the beach, often on the very margin of the spent
waves, sometimes wading through the shallows,
or quickly dodging the foam-flecked in-driving surf.
Its food consists of sand-worms, crustaceans, various
insects and great quantities of small molluscs. In
summer, however, it is almost exclusively insectivorous,
but also feeds on the buds of the Arctic
<span class="pb" id="Page_107">107</span>
saxifrages. The note of this bird during its sojourn
on our coasts is a shrill <i>whit</i>, but this is not very
frequently or persistently uttered.</p>
<p>During winter the Sanderling is a great wanderer,
visiting parts of Africa, Southern Asia, Australia,
and South America, but in the breeding season its
range seems confined to the Arctic regions. But
very little is known of the nesting habits of the
Sanderling, and few of its eggs are in collections.
It is said to arrive at its Arctic haunts in May or
early June, as soon as the water is free from ice,
and the ground bare of snow. Its nesting haunts
are the barren grounds and tundras near, and the
beaches of, the Arctic Ocean. The nest is a mere
hollow, scantily lined with dry grass and leaves,
and the four eggs are buffish-olive in ground colour,
mottled and spotted with pale olive-brown and gray.</p>
<h3>KNOT.</h3>
<p>This species, the <i>Tringa canutus</i> of Linnæus,
and most modern ornithologists, is another of the
Arctic migrants that pass the British coasts
regularly on their journeys, and linger here in much
smaller numbers over the winter. Camden, in 1607,
appears to have been the first author to connect
the name of the Knot with King Canute, but much
difference of opinion exists as to the reason thereof.
Some authorities assert that it was in connection
with the story of that king upon the seashore;
others, and perhaps with greater reason, because of
<span class="pb" id="Page_108">108</span>
the Royal Dane’s great liking for its flesh. The
bird continued to be so closely associated with the
king by successive writers, that Linnæus followed
them in applying the specific name of <i>canutus</i> to
the Knot, which is still retained by the majority
of naturalists.</p>
<p>The migrations of the Knot are very marked
and regular. The bird begins to arrive on the
British coasts early in August, and from then to the
end of October a nearly constant stream pours
upon them, reaching its greatest volume in September.
By far the greater number pass on to still
more southern haunts, but a sufficiently large
portion remain to winter as to render the species
one of the most familiar of Limicoline forms to
habitues of the coast. The return migration
begins on our coasts in April, and continues
throughout May. The principal haunts of the
Knot in the British Islands are situated on the
eastern and south-eastern coasts. Mud-flats, salt-marshes,
wide, expansive sands, and big estuaries,
are the spots where Knots most do congregate, for
these furnish it with a constant supply of food.
Ten years ago, I remember, great numbers of
Knots used to be caught in the flight-nets on the
Wash, during October and November, but the
numbers of late years have considerably decreased.
The Knot is not only very gregarious, but social,
and often mixes with companies of other waders.
When feeding Knots keep close together, generally
<span class="pb" id="Page_109">109</span>
all heading in the same direction, and moving
about quickly. If the flock is a very large one
some of the individuals are almost constantly in the
air, flying over the heads of their companions, and
alighting again, as if eager to get the first look
over the ground. They are very wary when
congregated in such large assemblies, easily flushed,
and often performing various evolutions, both over
the sands or the water, before alighting again.
The Knot more often runs with a series of short,
quick steps than walks, and it flies both rapidly and
well. After feeding, the entire flock will often
stand for a long time on a certain piece of the
shore, sleeping and preening plumage, but even on
these occasions they are somewhat restless, and it
is rare to see all still at once. They feed both by
night and by day. The call-note is seldom or
never uttered, although when on migration the
birds appear to be noisy enough, crying incessantly
to each other as they fly along in the gloom.</p>
<p>But little is known of the nesting economy of
the Knot. Its great breeding grounds—the nesting
places of the vast flocks that pass southwards in
autumn—still remain undiscovered. Where they are
situated it is useless to speculate. Naturalists are
ignorant of its eggs, which still remain unknown
in collections, although the young in down have
been obtained. The Knot breeds in the high
Arctic regions, in the North Polar Basin, mostly, if
not entirely above lat. 80°; and here it has been met
<span class="pb" id="Page_110">110</span>
with during summer by various travellers. The
Knot is another bird remarkable for the great
seasonal changes which its plumage undergoes. In
winter, the plumage is ash-gray above, white below;
in summer, the feathers of the upper parts become
black margined with reddish-brown and mixed with
white, those of the lower parts rich bay or chestnut.
It has been remarked that the birds that winter on
our coasts do not assume such rich tints in summer
as individuals that pass along our coasts from more
southern latitudes. This is probably because the
birds wintering with us are younger individuals,
only the oldest penetrating to the remoter winter
home. The Knot has a wide distribution during
winter, including the Southern States, and Mexico,
Africa, and it is said Australia, and New Zealand!
It is possible that in the latter countries the Eastern
Knot—the <i>Tringa crassirostris</i> of science—is confused
with the present species.</p>
<h3>CURLEW SANDPIPER.</h3>
<p>This pretty little species, known to many as the
“Pygmy Curlew,” and to modern naturalists by the
scientific name of <i>Tringa subarquata</i>, is one of the
rarest of the British Limicolæ. It very closely
resembles the Knot in the colour of its plumage,
and in the seasonal changes that plumage undergoes,
but it is not much more than three-fourths the size,
and has a curved Curlew-like bill. This little Sandpiper,
like most of its order, is a migrant, breeding
<span class="pb" id="Page_111">111</span>
in some yet undiscovered part of the Arctic regions,
retiring southwards to winter in Africa, various
parts of southern Asia and in Australia. It is
during these journeys between the Arctic regions
and the tropics that it occurs on the British coasts,
a few individuals even remaining upon them all the
winter through. As might naturally be expected it
is most frequently observed on the vast stretches of
low coast on the eastern side of England; it is also
a tolerably frequent visitor to the south coast, even
as far westwards as Devon and Cornwall. A few
Curlew Sandpipers arrive on our coasts in April,
but the greater number pass along them in May,
stragglers lingering until June. The return flight
is noticed in August, and consists mostly of young
birds, the older ones reaching us during September
and October. The habits of this Sandpiper very
closely resemble those of the Dunlin, in whose
company the bird is very frequently found, and from
which it may readily be distinguished, even at a
distance, by its pure white upper tail-coverts. It
prefers coasts of a muddy rather than a sandy
character, haunting saltings, estuaries, and muds.
Here, its actions are much the same as those of all
these little sand birds; it feeds both by day and
night; and often retires during high water to some
wet land near the sea, to wait the ebb. The food
of this species consists of crustaceans, worms,
molluscs, and insects. Its note is described as
being louder than that of the Dunlin.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_112">112</div>
<p>Absolutely nothing is known of the nidification
of the Curlew Sandpiper, and its egg has never yet
been described. It is, to say the least, remarkable
that some of the great breeding-places of these
Arctic birds have not yet been discovered—a fact
that seems to suggest a vast area of land somewhere
in the vicinity of the Pole.</p>
<h3>DUNLIN.</h3>
<p>Owing to the great seasonal changes of plumage
which this Sandpiper—the <i>Tringa alpina</i> of most
naturalists—undergoes, considerable confusion has
prevailed concerning it. Linnæus described birds
of this species in summer plumage as distinct
from individuals in winter plumage, naming them
<i>alpina</i> and <i>cinclus</i>; but Temminck (and before him
B. Meyer) with greater discernment united both
under the name of <i>T. variabilis</i>. Birds in the two
plumages have also received distinctive colloquial
names; in summer dress, the bird is known as
“Dunlin,” in winter dress as the “Purre.” Other
local names of wide application to this species are
“Ox-bird,” “Stint,” and “Plover’s Page,” the latter
being derived from the habit of the Dunlin to
accompany a Golden Plover, flying to and fro
over the moors, where the two species chance to
be nesting. Perhaps the Wryneck has in like
manner, gained the name of “Cuckoo’s Mate”
from its habit of flying in attendance with that
bird; although some writers attribute the term
<span class="pb" id="Page_113">113</span>
to the fact of the two species appearing in our
country about the same time.</p>
<p>The Dunlin is absolutely the commonest Limicoline
bird of the shore, and certainly the most
widely dispersed. It possesses the habit, in common
with so many other species of this order, of
retiring to moors to breed; but as soon as nesting
duties are done it returns to the coast, and for the
remainder of the year continues to reside upon it.
The Dunlins that breed in our islands represent
but a very small portion of the vast number that
winter on the British coasts. The majority of
these are from more northern haunts, winter
migrants, that haste away again with the return
of spring. During its residence on the coast the
Dunlin is remarkably gregarious, assembling often in
flocks of thousands, which, by preference seek such
portions of the shore as are low-lying and muddy.
Salt-marshes, slob-lands, estuaries and creeks, and
vast expanses of mud—as the Wash for instance, are
the favourite haunts of the Dunlin. These large
flocks of Dunlins are much more difficult to
approach than smaller gatherings or individual
birds. Dunlins are active little birds, almost
incessantly in motion, running daintily about the
muds, by the margin of the waves, or wading
through the shallow tide pools. During the course
of feeding a large flock will become widely
scattered, and it is remarkable how quickly the
broken ranks reform. There are few sights so
<span class="pb" id="Page_114">114</span>
pretty along the salt-marshes and mud-flats than
a large flock of Dunlins, in the act of performing
those graceful aerial movements so characteristic
of this little bird during its winter sojourn upon the
coast. The whole flock, as with a single impulse,
will spread out like a net, close up again,
apparently vanish, appear black, or like a flash of
silver, just as the birds turn and expose their dark
or white plumage to the light. Sometimes the
flock will head straight away down the coast,
passing the observer with a rush and whirr of
wings, and a chorus of <i>purring</i> cries; at other
times a large flock will rise <i>en masse</i> from the
muds, pass out to sea a little way, turn, and go
some distance along the shore, come back again,
repeating the movement time after time, ever and
anon appearing as though about to alight, dipping
and rising with marvellous regularity. No doubt
these movements will recall to the observer the
gyrations of the autumn flocks of Starlings, for
there is much in common between the two.
During its sojourn upon the coast the Dunlin
feeds upon crustaceans, sand-worms, molluscs, and
other small marine organisms; but in summer
insects, grubs, worms, and ground-fruits are eaten.
The usual note of the Dunlin is harsh, and
resembles the word <i>purr</i>—hence one of the bird’s
trivial names; during the breeding season it is a
long drawn <i>peezh</i>. In the pairing season, when the
male indulges in certain aerial gambols, he utters a
<span class="pb" id="Page_115">115</span>
trill, which has been likened by some observers to
the continuous ringing of a small bell.</p>
<p>It is a rather remarkable fact that the Dunlin
is the only species of <i>Tringa</i> that nests in the
British Islands. It breeds sparingly and locally
in Cornwall, Devon, and Somerset, perhaps in
Wales, and thence northwards, more generally, over
the remainder of England, and in Scotland up to
the Shetlands. Dunlins begin to move from the
coasts in March and April, and to resort to their
breeding places, which are situated on the marshy
moorlands and mountain swamps, often at no great
distance from the sea, or at least from tidal waters.
The nest is a mere depression, often in a tussock of
grass or rushes, or beneath a small bush, or even
in a patch of thrift on bare sandy soil, lined with
a few scraps of withered vegetation, or enclosed with
a few twigs or roots. The four pyriform eggs are
pale olive or pale brown, blotched and spotted with
reddish- and blackish-brown and gray. We remark
the same extraordinary difference between summer
and winter plumage, as we have already observed
in the Knot and some others. In summer or
breeding plumage, the Dunlin is rich reddish-brown
above, striped with dark brown; lower breast or
gorget, deep black; remainder of under parts white.
In winter the upper parts are chiefly ash-gray, and
the under parts white, except the gorget, which is
now grayish-brown. Outside the British Islands
the Dunlin has a very wide distribution, breeding
<span class="pb" id="Page_116">116</span>
not only in the Arctic regions of both hemispheres,
but in many temperate latitudes of the same; in
winter it is dispersed over North Africa, Southern
Asia, the Southern States of America, and the
West Indies. At Heligoland, flocks of Dunlins
invariably indicate bad weather.</p>
<h3>PURPLE SANDPIPER.</h3>
<p>This species, the <i>Tringa maritima</i> of Brunnich and
most modern naturalists, but erroneously identified
with the <i>T. striata</i> of Linnæus, by certain recent
writers on ornithology, is a fairly common and widely
distributed bird on the British coasts during autumn
and winter. The fact that a few odd birds are
sometimes met with on our shores during the
summer, has led to the supposition—totally unsubstantiated
as yet—that the Purple Sandpiper may
breed here. During some years this species is
much more abundant than others, a fact perhaps
due to exceptionally favourable breeding seasons.
The Purple Sandpiper, readily distinguished from
all other British Limicolæ by its nearly black rump
and upper tail coverts, the purple gloss of its
upper plumage, and its yellow legs—makes its
appearance with us early in September, and continues
to arrive in increasing numbers during that month
and October, and leaves us by the following May.
This Sandpiper is most partial to a rocky coast,
where the huge boulders shelve down into the water,
and large masses of rock and shingle are exposed
<span class="pb" id="Page_117">117</span>
at low tide. It may, however, be frequently
observed in the company of Knots, Dunlins, and
Ringed Plovers, on the mud-flats and sandy reaches.
It usually seeks for its food close to the water,
running over the rocks as each great wave breaks
and retires, even darting into the seething drifts
of surf, or coursing along the very edge of the
rollers, where each one threatens to annihilate it as
it breaks upon the shore. Occasionally it may be
seen to swim just outside the surf, and when flushed
it sometimes even alights upon the sea. Its food
consists of crustaceans, sand-worms, molluscs, and
insects; and, during summer, of seeds as well.
Although most of this food is obtained whilst the
tide is driving in, the bird may be seen in quest
of it at the ebb. It frequently retires inland a
little way, or rests upon a rocky islet or point,
between the ebb and the flow of the tide. Its
flight is rapid and straightforward, and often accompanied
by its shrill and quickly uttered <i>tee-wit</i>.
The Purple Sandpiper, though social, is never seen
on our coasts in very large flocks, and, perhaps,
most frequently in pairs or alone. In Norway,
however, Collett states that it assembles in countless
flocks during the winter. It is certainly one of
the least shy of the Limicolæ, and often permits
of a close approach, especially when alone.</p>
<p>The best known breeding-place of the Purple
Sandpiper, and one of its most southerly summer
stations, is on the Faröes. Other breeding places
<span class="pb" id="Page_118">118</span>
are in Iceland, in Norway, Spitzbergen, and Nova
Zembla, and on various parts of the north Siberian
coasts, and in Arctic America to Greenland.</p>
<p>It arrives at its nesting grounds in May or June.
These are rarely situated far from the sea, although
in the Faröes it retires to the fells, where it begins
to nest even before the snow has all melted. The
nest is but a shallow depression, scantily lined with
scraps of withered vegetation, and is made either
close to the beach on broken ground, covered with
a sparse vegetation, or in some marshy spot on a
hill in the vicinity of the ocean. The Purple Sandpiper
may pair for life, as there is some evidence to
show that it returns annually to certain spots, to
breed. The four eggs are pale olive- or buffish-brown,
beautifully blotched and spotted, mottled
and streaked with blackish- and reddish-brown and
gray. The sitting bird lingers long upon her nest,
sometimes remaining till almost trodden upon before
she starts up, and, by feigning lameness, seeks to
draw the intruder away. So closely is the Purple
Sandpiper attached to the coast, that even during
the nesting season, when its duties call it more or
less inland, it always visits the shore to feed. In
summer plumage, the upper parts are marked with
rich chestnut, and in winter dress, the underparts
are more spotted.</p>
<p>There are certain other Limicoline birds found
upon our coasts, more or less frequently, which at
least deserve some passing notice; but as they are
<span class="pb" id="Page_119">119</span>
species that are merely fleeting visitors during their
annual migrations, and never occur in sufficient
number to form a dominant feature in the bird-life
of the shore, they do not call for any lengthened
description, or minute study, in a work which seeks
only to sketch the more enduring avine characteristics
of the British seaboard. We will deal with
the commonest species first. During the period of
its migrations, the Common Sandpiper, or Summer
Snipe (<i>Totanus hypoleucus</i>) is a pretty frequent
visitor to the coast, especially in the south-western
parts of England; and there is strong reason
to believe that a limited number may pass the
winter thereon. Its habits on the shore are very
similar to those of the other Limicoline species.
It breeds commonly by the side of our inland
waters, and is certainly, as its name implies, the
most abundant and the most widely dispersed of
the British waders. Another fairly regular and
frequent visitor to the British littoral in spring
and autumn is the Greenshank (<i>Totanus glottis</i>).
It is most often met with on the low-lying eastern
coasts; but it is said a few birds winter in Ireland.
The Greenshank breeds very locally in Scotland,
and is best known to us at its more or less inland
nesting stations. It may be distinguished by its
white lower back and central upper tail coverts,
and nearly uniform gray secondaries. Of even rarer
and more local appearance is the Wood Sandpiper
(<i>Totanus glareola</i>), sometimes met with in small
<span class="pb" id="Page_120">120</span>
parties on our eastern and southern coasts; whilst
the Green Sandpiper (<i>Totanus ochropus</i>) is a less
frequent visitor still. This species is remarkable
for its peculiar mode of nesting, for instead of
laying its eggs upon the ground—as is the almost
universal custom of birds of this order—it places
them in the deserted nests of other birds in trees.
We must also not forget to give a passing reference
to the singular-looking Ruff (<i>Machetes pugnax</i>).
Drainage of the fens has long banished the Ruff
from its ancestral haunts, where it was once so
common that a regular trade was carried on in
netting and fattening it for the table. The Ruff
takes it name from the singular, yet remarkably
beautiful, frill of elongated feathers that, during
the love season, adorns the neck of the male bird.
The extraordinary variation in the colour of this
fleeting sexual ornament can only be described
as marvellous, it being almost impossible to find
two birds exactly alike. This sexual development
of feather ornament seems closely associated with
the polygamous habits of the Ruff; the cock bird
takes no share in family duties, and during the
pairing season wages endless battles with his rivals
for the possession of the hens. Odd birds frequent
our coasts during the migration periods, and less
frequently during the winter. Two species of
Stint—the most diminutive of the Sandpipers—also
deserve a brief allusion. The first and most
frequent visitor is the Little Stint (<i>Tringa minuta</i>),
<span class="pb" id="Page_121">121</span>
most numerous on its autumn passage south. It
is chiefly seen on the eastern coast-line, but is a
visitor to the Solway district. The Little Stint
breeds in the Arctic regions of Europe and West
Siberia, and is a late migrant in spring, seldom
seen in any numbers on our coasts before May.
It frequents, whilst with us, mud-flats, salt-marshes,
and long reaches of sand, and often joins the
Dunlins in quest of food. Its stay with us is brief,
especially in spring, and even in autumn most have
gone away before October. It may be distinguished
by its small size (wing under 4 inches in length),
tapering bill, and black legs and feet. The second
species, Temminck’s Stint (<i>Tringa temmincki</i>),
is a larger bird than the foregoing, and readily
distinguished from all other Tringæ by its white
outer tail feathers. It is much rarer in its appearance,
too, and, as usual, most frequent on the
low-lying eastern coast-line; even this district is
beyond the more general limits of its migrations.
It is also not so maritime in its haunts, and seems
to migrate along more inland routes.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_123">123</div>
<h2 id="c3"><i>Guillemots, Razorbill, and Puffin</i></h2>
<div class="fig"> id="fig3"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_127.jpg" alt="GUILLEMOT AND RAZORBILL. Chapter iii." width-obs="500" height-obs="731" /> <p class="center"><span class="small">GUILLEMOT AND RAZORBILL. <i>Chapter</i> iii.</span></p> </div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_125">125</div>
<h2 class="eee">CHAPTER III. <br/>GUILLEMOTS, RAZORBILL, AND PUFFIN.</h2>
<blockquote>
<p><i>Affinities and Characteristics—Changes
of Plumage—Guillemot—Brunnich’s
Guillemot—Black
Guillemot—Razorbill—Little
Auk—Puffin.</i></p>
</blockquote>
<p>Few birds are more thoroughly marine in
their haunts and their habits than those
which are included in the present chapter. They
are inseparably associated with the sea; they
form one of the most interesting features of
marine life, whether in summer, when they crowd
in countless hosts at their breeding stations
upon the cliffs and islands, or in winter, when
they spread themselves far and wide over the
waste of waters. From whatever point of view
we study them, they are intensely interesting
birds.</p>
<p>The Auks, as they are collectively termed,
form the small yet well-defined family <span class="sc">Alcidæ</span>.
Although the Auks are a specialised group,
systematists pretty generally agree in associating
them more or less closely with the Divers, the
Grebes, the Gulls, and the Limicolæ. Auks are
<span class="pb" id="Page_126">126</span>
web-footed birds, with no hind toe, with the
legs placed far back, and the bill subject to
great variation in size, and in some species
presenting considerable change in appearance
according to season. All the Auks have comparatively
short and narrow wings; in the recently
extinct Great Auk these were incapable of supporting
the bird in the air; and the tail is remarkably
short, in some species being scarcely perceptible
under ordinary circumstances. The Auks are
exclusively confined to the north temperate and
polar regions of the Northern Hemisphere: and
by far the greater number of species inhabit
the Northern Pacific. They number some thirty
species. The prevailing colours of the Auks
are black and white; none of them are showy
birds; but some species are remarkable for their
eccentric nuptial plumes, and for the brilliancy
of colour of the bill. The Auks are thoroughly
aquatic, and not adapted in any way for a
terrestrial existence. They swim well, dive with
marvellous skill, and save during the incubation
period, pass most of their time on the sea.
None of the species are remarkable for any
great migration flights; as a rule they wander
little from their high northern homes. They are
all gregarious birds, breeding in companies wherever
possible. Some species undergo but little change
in their appearance between summer or winter
plumage; others are more remarkable in this
<span class="pb" id="Page_127">127</span>
respect. During the breeding period some species
resort to lofty cliffs washed by the sea; others
burrow into the ground. Many species make no
nest whatever, but others form slight structures in
which to deposit their eggs. The young of the
Auks are hatched covered with down, assuming
their first plumage in a few weeks. Adult Auks
moult in September; the difference in the colour
of the plumage peculiar to the pairing season,
apparently being entirely due to a change in the
hue quite irrespective of a moult. The complete
change from white to brownish-black observed
prior to the breeding season on the necks and
heads of Guillemots and Razorbills is very curious
and interesting. According to the observations of
Herr Gätke, the shafts of the feathers are the first
portions in which the black appears; yet almost
at the same time this colour is seen in the form
of minute specks on the lower third of the feathers,
quickly spreading into crescentic markings, and
ultimately covering the entire surface. Half a
dozen species are British. Of these, four breed
more or less abundantly in our area, and the other
two are irregular winter visitors. The now extinct
Great Auk—the largest known representative of
the family—formerly bred in certain parts of the
British Islands, but, alas, is now only known as
a fast receding tradition. We will now proceed to
a short study of these British Auks.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_128">128</div>
<h3>GUILLEMOT.</h3>
<p>Of all the various sea birds that cluster on the
cliffs of Albion this species, the <i>Uria troile</i> of most
modern ornithologists, is by far the commonest,
and of the present family of birds the most widely
distributed. During summer it may be met with in
colonies of varying numbers, here and there on
most of our rocky coasts, from the Scilly Islands to
the Shetlands, from Flamborough Head in the east
to the Blaskets in the west. Not, perhaps, so
familiar to the sea-side wanderer as the Gull, whose
ærial habits bring it more frequently into notice, the
Guillemot, nevertheless, is a seldom absent feature
of marine bird life. It is gregarious and social at
all times, but joins into greatest companies during
the season of reproduction. When the nesting
season has passed the birds spread themselves more
generally along the coast and out at sea, and it is at
such times that they are most ubiquitous. Between
October and March the Guillemot may often be
met with swimming close in shore, in quiet bays,
and especially in the neighbourhood of fishing
villages. On these occasions it is not particularly
shy, and will allow a sufficiently close scrutiny, but
it is ever wary, diving at the least alarm, and
appearing again well out of danger. The Guillemot
swims well and buoyantly; it also dives with
remarkable agility, and obtains most of its food
whilst doing so. The Guillemots are rarely seen
<span class="pb" id="Page_129">129</span>
upon the land after the young have quitted their
birthplaces; they spend their entire time upon the
sea, seeking shelter during rough weather in bays
or under the lee of headlands, but not unfrequently
great numbers perish in a gale, their dead bodies
strewing the coast where the tide has cast them
ashore. Except during the breeding season the
Guillemot flies very little, but during that period it
often feeds far from its rocky haunts, and may then
be seen, especially at eventide, flying in little
bunches, or in compact flocks, swiftly and silently
just above the waves, returning to them. The
food of this bird is almost exclusively composed of
fish, especially such small species as pilchards and
sprats; it is also extremely partial to the fry of
the herring and the pollack. Few birds are more
expert at catching fish than the Guillemot; it dives
after them, and chases them beneath the surface
with marvellous speed and unerring certainty. In
this chase of fish it sometimes comes to grief by
getting entangled in the drift-nets. The Guillemot
is a remarkably silent bird. I have repeatedly
been amongst thousands of these birds, both at sea
and on the rock stacks where they breed, and the
only sound I have ever heard them utter is a low,
grunting noise. My experience has been chiefly
confined to the earlier part of the breeding season,
and the autumn and winter months. It would
appear, though, that when the young are partly
grown the birds become more noisy, for Gätke
<span class="pb" id="Page_130">130</span>
describes their cries at the breeding-stations as
a “confused noise of a thousand voices, the calls
of the parent birds—<i>arr-r-r-r</i>, <i>orr-r-r-r</i>, <i>err-r-r-r</i>,
and mingled with these the countless tiny voices
of their young offspring on the face of the cliff—<i>irr-r-r-idd</i>,
<i>irr-r-r-idd</i>—uttered in timid and anxious
accents.” I should here remark that the Guillemot
never flies over the land, never flies inland from the
rocks, but always when disturbed unerringly makes
for the sea, which is almost, if not quite, as much
its element as the air.</p>
<p>The actions of the Guillemot are interesting
enough upon the sea, few sights being prettier
than a number of these birds busily engaged in
capturing their finny food; but the most attractive
scenes in the life of this bird are to be witnessed at
its breeding places. Formerly these were much
more numerous than is now the case, especially in
England, but there, on the southern coast line
notably so, many a large colony has disappeared
for ever, and many another has been sadly reduced
in numbers. The distribution of the Guillemot
becomes much more local during summer, the
birds crowding in vast numbers to certain time-honoured
spots. Fortunately some of these still
remain fairly accessible to the lover of birds. One
of the most famous breeding stations is at the
Farne Islands; another on the cliffs at Bempton;
whilst less noted places are in the Isle of Wight,
the Scilly Islands, and the coasts of Devon and
<span class="pb" id="Page_131">131</span>
Cornwall. The great number of local names by
which the Guillemot is known round our coasts
speak to its former abundance; Lavy, Marrock,
Murre, Diver, and Willock—the latter applicable
to the young—may be mentioned as a few of the
best known. The birds congregate at their old
accustomed haunts in Spring, with remarkable
regularity, often punctually arriving on the same
day for years in succession. At Heligoland, and
certainly other places, Guillemots return to their
nesting places from time to time during the winter,
appearing in the morning for a little while, just as
Rooks are wont to do at the nest trees. The
Guillemot rears its young on the face of the lofty
ocean cliffs, or on the flat tops of rock stacks. Cliffs
with plenty of ledges and hollows are preferred,
and in such chosen spots the birds crowd so closely
that, at some stations, the wonder is how each
individual can possibly find room to incubate its
egg, or even secure a standing place in the general
throng. There can be little doubt that in such
crowded spots as the “Pinnacles,” many of the
eggs never reach maturity. The Guillemot makes
no nest of any kind, but lays its single large
pear-shaped egg on any suitable ledge, or in any
available hollow where it can be tolerably safe
from toppling over into the sea. There are few
more stirring sights in the bird-world than a large
colony of Guillemots. I still retain the vivid
impressions made upon my mind by the vast
<span class="pb" id="Page_132">132</span>
hordes of these birds at St. Kilda, at the Farne
Islands, and elsewhere. Even whilst I write, I
can once more see the struggling, quarrelling,
rowdy hosts of Guillemots that crowd the famous
“Pinnacles”; still see them pouring off in endless
streams, headlong into the water, as I prepared
to scale their haunt. Once more memory recalls
and paints in vivid scene the beetling St. Kildan
cliffs, with their rows and rows of white-breasted
Guillemots, sitting tier upon tier, upwards and upwards
towards the dark blue sky; my tiny boat
tossing like a cork on the wild Atlantic swell,
and the countless swarms of Guillemots swimming
in the sea around me, hastening to the cliffs or
returning from them, beaten off by more fortunate
possessors of a place.</p>
<p>The Guillemot lays a single egg, without making
a nest of any kind for its reception. If this egg
be taken, however, the bird will lay a second or a
third, and advantage is taken of this fact by those
persons that gather them for a livelihood. The
egg of no other known bird varies to such an
extraordinary extent as that of the Guillemot,
whilst few, if any, are more beautiful. Greens,
browns, yellows, pale blues, and white, form the
principal ground colour; the markings, which take
the form of spots, blotches, streaks, and zones,
are composed of browns, grays, and pinks, of
every possible tint. One variety is white, intricately
laced, netted, and streaked with pink; another is
<span class="pb" id="Page_133">133</span>
a beautiful green, streaked in the same manner
with yellow, light brown, or nearly black; others
of various ground colours are zoned with blotches,
or marked with fantastic-shaped spots and rings.
Some eggs of the Guillemot closely resemble those
of the Razorbill, but may be distinguished by the
yellowish-white interior of the shell when held
up to the light.</p>
<p>There has been much controversy as to the way
in which the Guillemot chicks reach the water from
their lofty birthplace. Some writers assert that the
parent bird carries them down to the sea on its
back; on the other hand, Gätke maintains that the
chicks tumble off the ledges into the water, being
enticed to do so by the old birds swimming on the
sea beneath the cliffs. He writes: “in its distress,
the little chick tries to get as near as possible to the
mother waiting for it below, and keeps tripping
about on the outermost ledge of rock, often of no
more than a finger’s breath, until it ends by slipping
off, and, turning two or three somersaults, lands
with a faint splash on the surface of the water;
both parents at once take charge of it between
them, and swim off with it towards the open sea.
This is the only way in which I have seen this
change of habitat of the young birds accomplished,
during some fifty summers.” As soon as the
young are sufficiently matured, the sea in the
vicinity of the breeding-stations is deserted, and
the colonies disperse far and wide. From this
<span class="pb" id="Page_134">134</span>
time forward, to the following breeding-season, the
Guillemot’s movements are to a certain extent
unknown. As Professor Newton justly asks,<SPAN class="fn" id="fr_4" href="#fn_4">[4]</SPAN>
What becomes of the millions of Guillemots and
other Auks that breed in northern latitudes?
The birds that are met with round the coasts of
temperate Europe, and elsewhere, bear no proportion
whatever to the mighty hosts whose
position and movements remain unrevealed. At
present the only feasible explanation seems to be
that the birds, during the non-breeding-season, are
scattered in quest of sustenance over many
thousands of square miles of water; in summer
only is their vast abundance palpable, when all
are gathered into a comparatively small area.</p>
<p>In connection with the Guillemot mention should
be made of the Ringed Guillemot, the <i>Uria ringvia</i>
of Latham. It only differs from the Common
Guillemot in having a narrow white band round
the eye, which is prolonged into a streak for some
distance behind and below it. It may be seen
breeding in company with the commoner form,
and is not known to differ in its habits. Whether
it be a distinct species—as Gätke states—or
merely a variety of the Common Guillemot,
as many naturalists believe, still remains to be
decided.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_135">135</div>
<h3>BRUNNICH’S GUILLEMOT.</h3>
<p>This Guillemot, the <i>Uria bruennichi</i> of Sabine
and most modern writers, is a very rare visitor to
the British Islands, its home being in the Arctic
regions, from Greenland possibly to the Liakoff
Islands, off the coasts of northern Siberia. It
deserves a passing notice, for it is possible that it
occurs in British waters more frequently than is
generally supposed. It is a perceptibly stouter
bird than the Common Guillemot, and has the
base of the upper mandible pale gray. In its
habits and economy it is not known to differ in
any special manner from the better known species,
of which it is the Arctic form.</p>
<h3>BLACK GUILLEMOT.</h3>
<p>This species, the Dovekey, or Greenland Dove,
of northern mariners, the Tysty of the Shetlanders,
and the <i>Uria grylle</i> of naturalists, is by far the
most local of the Auks that are indigenous to the
British Islands. During the breeding season it
is only known to frequent one English locality,
the Isle of Man; but in Scotland it is pretty
generally distributed along the western and northern
coasts, including St. Kilda, the Orkneys, and the
Shetlands. Its chief resorts in Ireland are on
the north and west coasts. The difference between
the summer and winter plumage of this little bird
is most extraordinary. In spring it assumes a
<span class="pb" id="Page_136">136</span>
rich black dress, glossed with green, except a
patch of white on the wings; in winter it is
uniformly mottled black and white; the legs and
feet are bright coral red. With us the Black
Guillemot is strictly marine in its haunts, but in
Spitzbergen it was found breeding more than a
mile inland—a habit very different from any it
displays with us. In its actions it very closely
resembles its larger allies. Like them it is an
expert diver—I have seen it dive repeatedly at
the flash of a gun, and thus escape the shot.
It is, on the whole, a more trustful bird, often
permitting a near approach, and frequently remaining
on the surface until the boat is about to
pass over it, when it will dive and reappear quite
unconcernedly a short distance away out of danger.
This Guillemot often feeds quite close in shore.
At St. Kilda I used to see parties of this species
every evening, fishing under the cliffs; but, on
the other hand, I have often met with them searching
for food many miles from land. The Black
Guillemot is nothing near so gregarious as the
Common Guillemot, nor does it appear to wander
so far from its breeding places to feed. It is
partially nocturnal in its habits in summer, feeding
well into the dusk, and during winter seldom comes
upon the land, sleeping out at sea. Although capable
of flying swiftly, it always prefers to escape danger
by diving; it swims lightly, usually sitting high in
the water, but it has the power of sinking itself
<span class="pb" id="Page_137">137</span>
more than half below the surface when apparently
alarmed. Black Guillemots may often be seen
in strings, flying to and from a distant feeding
place, hurrying along close to the water, their
short wings beating rapidly, and rendered very
conspicuous by the broad white bar. The food
of this Guillemot is largely composed of the
fry of the herring and the coal-fish, but other
small fishes are eaten, as are crustaceans, and
various marine insects. I have never heard the
Black Guillemot utter a sound beyond a low
grunting; but its note has been described as a
whining sound, that of the young birds being more
shrill. In chasing its finny prey under the water
the Black Guillemot displays astonishing powers,
darting to and fro, aided by its wings and feet.
During winter these birds wander southwards,
and then they may sometimes be seen off our
more frequented coasts.</p>
<p>The Black Guillemot retires to its breeding-stations
in May. These are situated, in our islands,
on rocky headlands and islands, and on ocean
cliffs. Here its colonies are never very large,
and often much scattered. It very probably pairs
for life, and resorts often to one particular spot
year after year. The bird deposits its eggs in
a hole or cranny of the cliffs, occasionally in the
clefts amongst fallen rocks at the foot of the
precipice, or on rock-strewn downs sloping to the
sea. It makes no nest, and the eggs rest upon
<span class="pb" id="Page_138">138</span>
the bare ground or rock. The Black Guillemot,
and its allies, are remarkable for the fact that their
eggs are two or three in number; in all other
members of the Alcidæ the eggs never exceed
one. This peculiarity has induced some systematists
to restrict the genus <i>Uria</i> to the Black Guillemots
alone. The Black Guillemot lays two eggs, much
smaller than, and not so pear-shaped as, those
of the Common Guillemot, cream, buff, or pale
green in ground colour, blotched and spotted with
rich dark brown, paler brown, and gray. The
young chicks are said not to repair to the sea
at so early an age as those of the preceding birds;
and to be soon deserted by their parents after
doing so, congregating in flocks by themselves.</p>
<h3>RAZORBILL.</h3>
<p>This bird, the <i>Alca torda</i> of Linnæus and
ornithologists generally, is widely confused with
the Common Guillemot, and many local names
refer indiscriminately to each—such as Murre,
Marrot, and Diver. It is readily distinguished
from the Guillemots by its much deeper bill, crossed
by a white line at its centre, and by a narrow yet
very conspicuous white stripe, extending from the
base of the bill to the eye. Otherwise, the
Razorbill closely resembles the Guillemot in appearance,
both in its summer and winter plumage. It
is widely distributed round the British coasts,
breeding in most situations where the cliffs are
<span class="pb" id="Page_139">139</span>
sufficiently suitable, but is much less abundant in
the south, and is nowhere, perhaps, so numerous as
the Guillemot. During the non-breeding season
it becomes more generally scattered, and may then
be met with, although ever sparingly, in the seas
round most parts of the British coastline. Its
actions in the water are almost precisely the same
as those of the Guillemot. Like that bird it may
be seen swimming to and fro, sitting highly and
lightly on the water, often permitting a very close
approach, especially in districts where it is not
much harassed by the shooter. It dives with the
same marvellous celerity as the Guillemot, pursuing
its prey through the water, often at a considerable
depth, as readily as the swallows chase an insect
through the air. It is a very pretty sight to watch
the Razorbill in quest of food. This may often be
done from the summits of the cliffs, but certainly
to better advantage from a boat, in which the birds
can be more closely approached, and consequently
better observed. A Razorbill in the water is a
remarkably striking, if not an actually pretty bird.
He sits so lightly, riding buoyantly as a cork on
the swell, turning his head from side to side as the
boat approaches, swimming rapidly before it, and
often nonchalantly dipping his head into the water
and throwing a shower over his upper plumage.
The boat comes too near at last, and the bird, with
a scarcely audible or perceptible splash, disappears
into the water. Several moments afterwards he
<span class="pb" id="Page_140">140</span>
rises again to the right or left, ahead or astern, and
the salt spray rolls off his plumage glinting like
diamonds in the sun. Should fish be plentiful the
birds are diving and rising again incessantly, the
time of absence depending upon the depth descended
or the length of the chase. The Razorbill ever
seems to use its wings with reluctance on these
occasions, always keeping out of harm’s way by
diving or swimming. It is capable of rapid flight
though, and may often be seen in strings or skeins,
hastening along just above the waves to or from a
favourite fishing place. The Razorbill is gregarious
enough during summer, but in winter it is most
frequently seen in small parties, or often alone. It
also goes some distance from land, where, should a
gale overtake it, great numbers often perish, as their
dead bodies washed up on the coast sadly testify.
The food of the Razorbill is largely composed of
fry, especially of the herring, but many other small
fishes are captured, together with crustaceans and
other small marine creatures. The bird, so far as
my experience extends, never seeks its food upon
the shore, and obtains most, if not all, of it by
diving. The Razorbill is a remarkably silent bird;
the only sound I have ever heard it utter has been
a low grunting. This note is uttered both in summer
and winter, on the rocks as well as on the sea.</p>
<p>In May the Razorbill gives up its roaming,
nomad life upon the sea, and collects in numbers at
the old-accustomed breeding-places. These are
<span class="pb" id="Page_141">141</span>
situated on the ocean cliffs, such as contain plenty
of nooks and crannies being preferred to those
of a more wall-like character. It is possibly due to
this that the Razorbill’s colonies are never so
crowded as those of the Guillemot, and that the
birds are more scattered along the coastline.
There can be little doubt that the Razorbill pairs
for life. As a proof of this I have known a Puffin
burrow resorted to yearly, whilst eggs possessing
certain peculiarities of form and colour have
repeatedly been taken from one nook in the cliffs,
years and years in succession. Like the Guillemot
the Razorbill makes no nest, but lays its single egg
in a crevice or hole in the cliffs, or far under stacks
of rock, poised one upon another, where to reach
it is an utter impossibility. Like most birds that
breed in such situations, the Razorbill is much more
loth to quit its egg than the Guillemot, often
remaining upon it until captured. When alarmed
by man the birds may be heard scrambling amongst
the crevices, and uttering their grunting cries of
remonstrance.</p>
<p>The single egg of the Razorbill, though not
displaying a tithe of the variety observed in that
of the Guillemot, is a remarkably handsome object.
The ground colour varies through every tint
between white and reddish-brown, and the handsome
large blotches and spots are dark liver-brown,
reddish-brown, gray, or grayish-brown. No shade
of green or blue is ever apparent upon them
<span class="pb" id="Page_142">142</span>
externally, but the shells, when held up to the light,
have the interior of a clear pea-green tint—a
character which readily serves to distinguish them
from such eggs of the Guillemot that resemble
them in external colour. If the first egg be taken
the bird will lay another, and this process may be
repeated several times, but on no occasion is more
than one chick reared in the season. It is said that
the young of this species remain upon the cliffs for
a much longer period than the chicks of the
Guillemot, and that they eventually fly or flutter
down to the sea, never revisiting the rocks. The
parent will sometimes dive with its offspring, just
as the Little Grebe will do.</p>
<h3>LITTLE AUK.</h3>
<p>This species, the Rotche of Arctic navigators,
and the <i>Mergulus alle</i> of ornithology, is but an
irregular visitor to British seas during autumn and
winter, and as it seldom comes near the land under
ordinary circumstances, is not a very familiar bird
to the seaside observer. Exceptionally severe
weather not unfrequently drives this little bird far
inland. In its general colouration the Little Auk
closely resembles the Razorbill, but it is less than
half the size, and has a considerable amount of
white on the wings. This curious little species
congregates in incredible numbers at certain spots
in the Arctic regions, to breed. Beechey, at the
beginning of the present century, records that he
<span class="pb" id="Page_143">143</span>
has seen nearly four millions of these birds on the
wing at one time. Colonies of the Little Auk are
known in Nova Zembla, Franz-Josef Land (?),
Spitzbergen, Grimsey Island (to the north of
Iceland), and the coasts of Greenland. Like all
its larger allies, the Little Auk is thoroughly
pelagic in its habits, apparently only visiting the
land to breed, living on the sea for the remainder
of the year. It is well adapted for its lengthened
sojourn upon the waters. It swims well and
buoyantly, sitting rather low, flies rapidly when
inclined, dives with as much ease as a fish, and
sleeps quite safely and comfortably upon the waves.
Voyagers in the Arctic regions have met with flocks
of Little Auks at most times of the year, often far
from land, and occasionally crowding upon the
masses of floating ice. All observers agree in
describing it as a somewhat noisy bird, and its
specific name of <i>alle</i> is said to resemble its ordinary
note. There is scarcely a winter that the Little
Auk is not obtained in varying numbers off the
British coasts, more frequently, of course, in the
northern districts, but under ordinary circumstances
it keeps too far off the land to be observed, and
occurs most plentifully during periods of continued
storm. Where the uncounted millions of Little
Auks winter, that are known to breed in the Arctic
regions, washed by the Atlantic, is still an unsolved
problem. The few that are observed are as
nothing in comparison with the numbers that crowd
<span class="pb" id="Page_144">144</span>
at certain spots during summer. Perhaps it is
because the area of distribution is so wide in
winter, and, comparatively speaking, so restricted
during summer. The food of the Little Auk
consists largely of minute crustaceans, and possibly
of small fish. The bird is said to resort to the
vicinity of fishing fleets, to pick up the refuse
thrown overboard.</p>
<p>In May, the Little Auk resorts to the land to
breed. It is eminently gregarious, and some of its
colonies consist of an almost incredible number of
birds. Curiously enough, its breeding places are
not always by the sea, some of them being situated
a considerable distance from the coast. Sloping
rock-covered banks at the foot of the cliffs, seem to
be preferred to the cliff themselves. A favourite
situation is on the sloping ground below a range of
cliffs, where the surface is covered with stones and
rock fragments that have, during succeeding ages,
crumbled from the precipices towering above. Here,
in cavities, worn by wind and storm, beneath large
stones and rock fragments, or in various hollows
and holes under the fallen <i>débris</i>, the Little Auk
deposits its single pale greenish-blue egg, out of
reach of the Arctic foxes that prowl about the
colony in quest of prey. The actions of the Little
Auk at its nesting colony, seem to be very similar to
those of the Puffin when breeding on slopes, as, for
instance, on the island of Doon, one of the St.
Kilda group.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_145">145</div>
<h3>PUFFIN.</h3>
<p>Of all the Auks the present species, the <i>Alca
arctica</i> of Linnæus, and the <i>Fratercula arctica</i> of
modern ornithologists, is not only the best known,
but the most readily distinguished. The Puffin
cannot readily be mistaken for any other bird along
the coast, his big brightly coloured beak and comical
facial expression, being never failing marks of his
identity. In the colour of its plumage the Puffin
somewhat closely resembles the Guillemot or the
Little Auk, only the throat and the sides of the head
are white. The most striking feature in the Puffin
is its beak—a deep, laterally flattened, coulter-shaped
organ, banded with blue, yellow, and red,
singularly grooved and embossed with horny excrescences,
although these latter are only assumed
for the pairing season, and are cast again when the
breeding period is over! Unlike most birds,
therefore, the Puffin displays his wedding ornaments
on his beak! And this singular peculiarity appears
to be common to various other species, more
distantly allied, yet undoubtedly of close affinity with
the English Puffin. Many local names have been
applied to the Puffin in consequence of its singular
bill. Bottlenose, Coulterneb, and Sea Parrot, may
be mentioned as the most commonly used. Like
most, if not all, members of the Auk family, the
Puffin is not seen much near the land after the
breeding season has passed. Indeed, it is very
<span class="pb" id="Page_146">146</span>
doubtful whether the bird ever voluntarily seeks the
coast after it leaves it in early autumn with its
young; continued gales and storms will occasionally
drive a bird even far inland, whilst rough weather
often causes it to perish at sea, its remains being
sometimes washed up in quantities. Its actions on
the water are almost precisely the same as those
of the Guillemot and Razorbill. It is an adept
swimmer, a marvellous diver; it flies well and
strongly, especially during the summer, where I
have seen it in swarms, drifting round and round
the highest peaks of its island haunt on apparently
never-tiring-wing. At the summit of the cliffs its
powers of flight may often be witnessed to perfection.
At St. Kilda, I have watched it gracefully
poising itself in the air, its narrow wings beating
rapidly, and its two orange-coloured legs spread out
behind acting as a rudder. Of all the Auk tribe,
so far as my experience goes, the Puffin flies the
most. The Puffin feeds principally upon small fish,
especially sprats and the fry of larger fishes; it also
eats crustaceans, and various marine insects. It
dives often to a great depth, and is remarkably
active beneath the surface; when on the water it
generally tries to escape from danger by diving.
Sometimes the Puffin may be seen close ashore
during winter, but never in any abundance.</p>
<p>The Puffin becomes by far the most interesting
at its breeding places. The regularity of its appearance
at these has often been remarked. In many
<span class="pb" id="Page_147">147</span>
localities it not only arrives punctually on a certain
day, but retires from them in autumn with its young
almost as regularly! In some places Puffins arrive
on the land to breed as early as March; in others,
not before April; in others, yet again, not before
the beginning of May. With the exception of
the south and east coasts of England—where it is
only sparingly and locally distributed—the Puffin,
from Flamborough northwards, is widely and
generally dispersed. In some places its numbers
are almost incredible, as for instance, at Lundy
Island, the Farne Islands, on some of the Hebrides,
and St. Kilda. There is a very interesting colony
of Puffins established amongst the walls of the
ancient fortress on the Bass Rock, but so far as
my experience goes the colony on St. Kilda stands
unrivalled, and, at a very moderate computation,
must consist of many millions of birds! The
Puffin most probably pairs for life, and returns time
out of mind to certain familiar spots to rear its
offspring. In most places the bird makes its scanty
nest in a burrow which it excavates itself, but in
some localities rabbit holes are frequently made
use of. In some localities, however, the bird
makes a nest in a crevice of the cliffs or beneath
heaps of rocks. By the end of April both birds
are engaged in scraping out this burrow, if circumstances
demand it, which often extends for
several yards in the loamy soil, sometimes sloping
downwards, sometimes tortuous, sometimes nearly
<span class="pb" id="Page_148">148</span>
straight. At the end, or elsewhere in some cases,
the slight nest of dry grass and a few feathers is
formed. Occasionally several pairs occupy one
burrow, each pair enlarging a portion of it for their
own requirements into a kind of chamber; whilst
many of the burrows have several openings, and
are evidently the work of successive years. In
this rude nest the hen Puffin lays a single egg,
dull white, sometimes tinged with blue or gray,
and obscurely spotted with pale brown and gray.
Contact with the earth in the burrow and with
the wet feet of the sitting bird, soon discolours this
egg, and renders it almost like a ball of peat in
appearance. When disturbed at their breeding
places, such Puffins as may chance to be outside
the holes soon fly off to the sea, and join the hosts
of birds that swarm in the water near every
breeding station. Those in the burrows, however,
remain, allowing themselves to be dragged out
without making any attempt to escape. Great
caution and gloves are recommended, for the Puffin
resents intrusion and bites fiercely, being able to
inflict a nasty cut with its powerful beak and sharp
claws.</p>
<p>I still retain the most vivid impressions on my
visit to the grand colony of Puffins on Doon, one
of the St. Kilda group. Every available place
is honeycombed with their holes; the ground
cannot afford accommodation for all, and numbers
of birds have to seek nesting places under the
<span class="pb" id="Page_149">149</span>
masses of rock lying on the grass-covered hillsides,
or in the crannies of the cliffs at the summit of
the island. As soon as we had fairly got ashore,
and begun to walk up the slopes, the Puffins, in a
dense whirling bewildering host, swept downwards
to the sea, or rose high in air to circle above our
heads, in the direst alarm. It seemed as if the
whole face of the island were slipping away from
under me, just like flakes of shale down a quarry
side! Not a single bird, so far as I could ascertain,
uttered a note, but the whirring noise of the
millions of rapidly beating wings sounded like the
distant rush of wind! But even Doon does not
harbour so many Puffins as find a home on the
face of the mighty cliff Connacher; and when we
fired a gun and disturbed them from this noble
precipice, it seemed as though the face of the entire
cliff was falling outwards into the Atlantic, the
enormous cloud of birds overpowering one with
its magnificence! As soon as the young are reared
the land is deserted, and the wandering pelagic life
resumed.</p>
<p>In connection with this species mention may be
made of its former repute as an article of food.
Old records inform us that the young Puffins were
regularly gathered by the owners of the breeding-places,
and were salted down for future food.
Gesner and Caius assert that the Puffin was
allowed to be eaten during Lent, probably because,
in the words of Carew, of its coming nearest to
<span class="pb" id="Page_150">150</span>
fish in taste. More than two hundred years ago
Ligon, in his <i>History of Barbadoes</i>, complains of
the ill taste of Puffins which he had received
from the Scilly Islands (once a great centre of
exportation of these birds), and asserts that this kind
of food is only for servants. The taste for salted
and dried Puffin, however, still lingers in the land;
for at St. Kilda vast numbers are caught, and so
preserved by the natives for food. Dried Puffin,
perhaps a twelvemonth old, is one of the few
delicacies of the island; whilst the feathers help
materially to pay the rent!</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_151">151</div>
<h2 id="c4"><i>Divers, Grebes, and Cormorants</i></h2>
<div class="fig"> id="fig4"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_156.jpg" alt="GREAT NORTHERN DIVER. Chapter iv." width-obs="500" height-obs="340" /> <p class="center"><span class="small">GREAT NORTHERN DIVER. <i>Chapter</i> iv.</span></p> </div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_153">153</div>
<h2 class="eee">CHAPTER IV. <br/>DIVERS, GREBES, AND CORMORANTS.</h2>
<blockquote>
<p><i>Divers—Affinities and characteristics—Great
Northern Diver—Black-throated
Diver—Red-throated
Diver—Grebes—Characteristics—Changes
of Plumage—Great
Crested Grebe—Red-necked
Grebe—Black-necked
Grebe—Sclavonian Grebe—Little
Grebe—Cormorants—Characteristics—Changes
of
Plumage—Cormorant—Shag—Gannet.</i></p>
</blockquote>
<p>The birds included in the present chapter
belong to three well-defined families. None
of them are so completely pelagic as the Auks,
and yet, according to season, many of them are
interesting features in the bird-life of the coast.
Unfortunately for the summer visitor to the seaside,
the Divers will be absent. They are birds
that resort chiefly to inland districts to rear their
young, or are only known as winter visitors to
the British Coasts. The Divers form a small but
well-marked family known as <span class="sc">Colymbidæ</span>, consisting
of a single genus <i>Colymbus</i>, into which are grouped
the four species that are now known to science. The
Divers are allied to the Auks on the one hand, to
the Grebes on the other, although systematists are
<span class="pb" id="Page_154">154</span>
not yet agreed upon the degree of their relationship.
United, these three families form Dr.
Sclater’s order <span class="sc">Pygopodes</span>. In every way the
Divers are remarkably well fitted for an aquatic
life. Their strong tarsi are laterally compressed, a
form best suited for cleaving the water, the hind
toe is well developed, and on the same plane as the
rest, the feet are webbed, the bill is long, straight,
spear-shaped and conical, admirably adapted for
seizing the finny prey, the wings are comparatively
short, yet capable of bearing the bird at great
speed, the tail is short and fairly developed. The
Divers in nuptial plumage are remarkably handsome
birds, the neck being striped or richly marked,
and the upper plumage beautifully spotted or
adorned with white bars. They are all more or
less gregarious birds during winter, and well
marked social tendencies are displayed in some
species during the breeding season. Their migrations,
if comparatively short, are pronounced
and regular. The young are hatched covered
with down, able to swim with ease almost immediately.
Adults moult in autumn, and assume their
nuptial plumage in winter—a period doubtless
when they pair—the winter plumage thus being
carried for a short time. Young Divers carry their
first plumage through the winter until the following
spring (not moulting in December with their
parents), when they assume their summer plumage,
but the nuptial ornaments are not so brilliant in
<span class="pb" id="Page_155">155</span>
colour as in adults. Whether the vernal change in
colour is effected without moulting, as in the Auks
and some of the Limicolæ, appears not to have yet
been ascertained. All the species of Divers are
visitors to the British Islands, but only two breed
in them, and one is an exceptionally irregular
straggler. This is the largest of them all, the
White-billed Diver, <i>Colymbus adamsi</i>, and a species
apparently circumpolar in its distribution. The
Divers are all birds of the north-temperate or
Arctic regions, during summer; in winter their
range is much more extended, almost reaching to
the northern tropics. With this brief résumé of
their more salient characteristics, we will now
proceed to a more detailed examination of their
economy.</p>
<h3>GREAT NORTHERN DIVER.</h3>
<p>This species, the <i>Colymbus glacialis</i> of Linnæus
and of ornithologists generally, is, in its breeding
plumage, one of the handsomest of British birds.
Its chief characteristics are its large size—about
that of a Goose—black head and neck, double
semi-collars of white and black vertical stripes, and
black upper parts, marked with white spots of
varying size, and arranged in a series of belts.
Whether it actually breeds within our limits has not
yet been absolutely determined, although evidence
is forthcoming that seems to point to the fact.
Unfortunately for the seaside student of bird life,
the Great Northern Diver is only known as a
<span class="pb" id="Page_156">156</span>
winter visitor. At that season, however, it may
be met with pretty frequently off the British coasts,
the young birds especially venturing into our bays
and creeks and estuaries, older individuals, as a
rule, keeping further out to sea. Adult birds are,
however, often observed near the coasts of South
Devonshire and Cornwall. I have known them
linger in the waters near here until the summer has
been well advanced. Young birds of this species,
in the brown and white dress characteristic of immaturity,
may often be seen quietly fishing under
the cliffs, notably in Tor Bay. One very remarkable
thing about this Diver is its singular habit
of immersing the body to such a depth that the
back is quite under water. It often so sinks itself
when menaced by danger, and then, almost out
of sight, swims away with great speed. If pursuit
is still continued all but the neck is sunk below the
surface, and finally, if hotly pressed, the bird will
disappear entirely, and swim along under water
at a speed absolutely astonishing, Gätke records
that this Diver, when chased by a boat under these
circumstances, will dive and allow the boat to pass
over it, rising again in the rear of it, a habit which
my own observations of the bird completely
confirm. How this act of immersion, without
apparent effort, is accomplished remains a mystery,
and offers a problem in animal mechanics by no
means easy of solution.</p>
<p>The Great Northern Diver is rarely seen on
<span class="pb" id="Page_157">157</span>
land, perhaps never except during the breeding
season. Its movements on shore are ungainly in
the extreme, the legs being placed so far back that
the bird can only push itself along in a crawling
sort of a way; it is equally rarely seen in the air,
and apparently only uses its wings to fly when
performing its annual migrations. How the species
still retains the function of flight at all seems
almost a mystery, but perhaps the constant use of
the wings in the water keeps them to a standard
of efficiency. This Diver is one of the least
gregarious, and save on passage is rarely met with
in numbers greater than a pair. It seems to be the
rule for odd pairs to take up their residence in
certain spots during the breeding season; after that
period the bird is usually met with solitary, and the
young individuals, unlike so many others that
evince strong gregarious propensities, for the most
part wander about alone. This Diver, like most
big birds, is shy and wary, although I have
repeatedly watched it from the cliffs in Tor Bay
evincing little concern at my presence. As may be
gathered from the foregoing remarks the Great
Northern Diver is a proficient in the art of diving,
and is said to be able to remain as long as eight
minutes beneath the surface—a period of time
which seems incredible. The depth to which it
sometimes descends is also enormous—it has been
captured in a net thirty fathoms from the surface.
The food of this Diver is almost, if not absolutely,
<span class="pb" id="Page_158">158</span>
composed of fish. During the non-breeding
season Divers are not particularly noisy birds, but
at their nesting-places the cries they utter are both
loud and startling, described by some listeners as
similar to the screams of tortured children; as
shrieks of maddened laughter, or as weird and
melancholy howls by others.</p>
<p>It is a somewhat remarkable fact that the Great
Northern Diver breeds nowhere in Europe, except
on Iceland. It is an American species, and nests
from Greenland westwards to Alaska, south of the
Arctic circle to the more northern of the United
States. It reaches its breeding-grounds in pairs
towards the end of May, as soon as the northern
waters are free from ice. Its favourite nesting
places are secluded tarns and lakes, and an island
is always selected if possible, doubtless from
motives of security. The nest—always made upon
the ground—varies a good deal in size, according
to the local requirements. On wet marshy ground
it is large, and composed of a heap of half rotten
sedges, rushes, reeds, and such like vegetation,
lined with dry bits of broken reed and withered
grass. On drier and barer situations it is little
more than a hollow in the sand or hard ground,
with, perhaps, a few bits of dry grass for lining.
The birds are very alert and watchful whilst nesting,
as if fully conscious of their comparative difficulty
in escaping from danger on the land. One bird is
generally on the look out whilst the other sits, and
<span class="pb" id="Page_159">159</span>
at the least danger the alarm is given, and the incubating
partner shuffles off in a floundering way
to the water. A path is soon thus worn from the
nest to the lake. The eggs are almost invariably
two, elongated, and varying in ground colour from
russet-brown to olive-brown, spotted sparingly with
blackish-brown and paler brown. When the young
are sufficiently matured, the inland haunts are
deserted, and the nomad wandering life upon the
sea resumed.</p>
<h3>BLACK-THROATED DIVER.</h3>
<p>The present species of Diver (much smaller than
the preceding), the <i>Colymbus arcticus</i> of Linnæus
and most other writers, is the rarest of the three
that visit the British Islands regularly, and perhaps
we might also say the most beautiful in nuptial
dress. All its showy colours and patterns, however,
are on the head, neck, and upper parts, the under
surface being white. The head is gray, the throat
patch black, above which is a semi-collar of white
striped vertically with black; the sides of the neck
are also striped with black and white; whilst the
black upper parts of the body are conspicuously
marked with a regular series of nearly square white
spots, becoming oval in shape on the wing coverts:
the bill is black, the irides crimson. After the
autumn moult all this finery is lost, and the upper
parts become a nearly uniform blackish-brown.
This Diver breeds sparingly in various parts of
the Hebrides and the Highlands, from Argyll to
<span class="pb" id="Page_160">160</span>
Caithness; elsewhere it is only known as a winter
visitor. In many of its habits it closely resembles
the preceding species. It is exclusively aquatic,
only seeking the land during the breeding season,
but is, perhaps, not quite so oceanic as that bird
in the winter, when it not unfrequently haunts
inland waters. It dives with equal skill, flies with
the same powerful rapidity, and utters during the
nesting season very similar unearthly cries. Fish
form the chief food of this Diver, but it is said
also to capture frogs. Most of the examples of
this Diver that are seen close in-shore (on our
eastern and southern coasts principally) during
winter are immature, the older birds as a rule
keeping further out to sea. The Black-throated
Diver indulges in the same peculiar habit of
gradually sinking its body in the sea when
alarmed, and will frequently seek to escape pursuit
by diving outright, and swimming under water
for a considerable distance.</p>
<p>The Black-throated Divers that breed with us,
retire to their inland haunts in May. Its favourite
nesting places are on islands in moorland lochs,
pools, and tarns. It displays few social tendencies
at this season, although several pairs not unfrequently
nest within a comparatively small area
of exceptionally suitable country, each, nevertheless,
keeping to its own particular haunt. This Diver
may also pair for life, seeing that it evinces considerable
attachment to certain favourite nesting
<span class="pb" id="Page_161">161</span>
places. The nest is always made upon the ground,
and seldom very far from the water, to which the
frightened bird can retire readily. An island
covered with short herbage is always preferred in
Scotland, but in some places the bare shingly beach
is selected. This nest, often of the slightest construction,
is made of stalks of plants, roots, and
all kinds of drifted vegetable fragments, lined with
grass. Sometimes no nest whatever is made.
The two eggs are narrow and elongated, olive- or
rufous-brown, sparingly spotted and speckled with
blackish-brown and paler brown. The sitting bird
is ever on the alert to slip off into the water at
the first alarm; and sometimes both birds will fly
round and round in anxiety for the fate of their
treasured eggs. A movement seawards is soon
taken when the young are sufficiently matured.
This Diver has a wide geographical range outside
our limits, extending across Europe and Asia to
Japan and North-west America, perhaps as far as
Hudson Bay. American authorities, however, insist
upon the specific distinctness of most of the Black-throated
Divers found in Alaska, and have named
this form <i>C. pacificus</i>.</p>
<h3>RED-THROATED DIVER.</h3>
<p>Smallest of the British Divers, the present species,
the <i>Colymbus septentrionalis</i> of Linnæus and modern
authorities, is also the best known and the most
widely distributed. It is also the least showy in
<span class="pb" id="Page_162">162</span>
nuptial dress. In this plumage the throat is marked
with an elongated patch of chestnut; the head, and
sides of the neck are ash-brown, the latter striped
with black and white, the general colour of the
upper plumage blackish-brown, sparingly spotted
with white, and the under parts are white. The
plumage, as in all the Divers, is remarkably dense
and compact, adapted in every way to the aquatic
habits of the bird. The Red-throated Diver is
a fairly frequent visitor, during autumn and winter,
off the English coasts, often entering bays and
the mouths of wide rivers. In summer, however,
it becomes much more local, retiring then to haunts
in Scotland, especially in the Hebrides and along
the wild and little populated western districts, from
the Clyde northwards to the Shetlands. Outside
our limits, this Diver has a very wide distribution,
occupying in summer the Arctic and north temperate
regions of Europe, Asia, and America; in winter
migrating southwards for a thousand miles or more.
The Red-throated Diver is certainly the most gregarious
species, and in winter may not unfrequently
be seen in gatherings of varying size. In connection
with this trait, mention may be made of the extraordinary
numbers of this bird that, on the 2nd and
3rd of December 1879, passed Heligoland. The
movement was not strictly a migratory one, but
a grand flight of storm-driven, frozen-out birds,
seeking more congenial haunts. Gätke tells us
that during this visitation, there was about thirteen
<span class="pb" id="Page_163">163</span>
degrees of frost, an easterly wind, and a snowstorm
in the evening. The Divers were by no means
alone in their distress, for hundreds of thousands
of Ducks, Geese, and Swans, Curlews, Dunlins,
and Oyster-catchers, passed from east to west.
From early morning until noon, on both days in
succession, the Divers were seen in one incessant
stream, travelling north-east, in numbers estimated
almost by the million! Well may Gätke have
wondered whence such vast multitudes came, and
whither they were going, and what was the initial
cause of such gregarious instincts, never manifested
in this Diver under any ordinary circumstances.</p>
<p>The Red-throated Diver is a master at the art
of diving, and is often seen slowly to sink its body
under water when alarmed. It also flies with great
strength and speed, and is said to show more
preference for flying than either of its congeners.
The food of this Diver is chiefly composed of fish.
Its ordinary note is a harsh <i>ak</i> or <i>hark</i>; but at the
nesting places the same wild unearthly cries are
uttered that are equally characteristic of the other
species. These cries are said to foretell rain or
rough weather, and have caused the bird to be
called “Rain Goose” in many Highland districts.
The Red-throated Diver, however agile and graceful
it may be in the water or even in the air, is a
clumsy object on the land, incapable of walking
upright, owing to the backward position of its legs,
and compelled to shuffle along with its breast
<span class="pb" id="Page_164">164</span>
touching the surface. In winter these Divers are
by no means shy, and I have many times watched
them pursuing their fishing operations, from my
station on the cliffs.</p>
<p>In May, the Red-throated Diver retires to its
breeding stations—the wild romantic lochs and
pools so characteristic a feature of the Highlands
and the Hebrides. Solitary pairs generally scatter
themselves over a district, resenting intrusion, and
keeping to their own particular haunt. This Diver
probably pairs for life, returning each successive
season to a certain spot to nest. An island is
usually selected for the nest, which is invariably
made upon the ground, and consists generally of
little more than a hollow, into which is collected a
few bits of withered vegetation. As may be
expected, this nest is seldom made far from the
water, so that at the least alarm the sitting bird can
slip off and shuffle into the water at once. The
two narrow elongated eggs are olive- or buffish-brown,
spotted and speckled with blackish-brown
and paler brown.</p>
<h3>GREBES.</h3>
<p>In many respects Grebes are remarkable birds.
They form so well defined a group that no other
known bird can possibly be confused with them,
their characteristics being absolutely unique among
the class Aves. The most noticeable external
features of a Grebe are its relatively short body,
laterally compressed tarsi, lobed feet, rudimentary
<span class="pb" id="Page_165">165</span>
and functionless tail, and dense compact plumage
of a peculiar silky texture. The twenty or so
species of Grebes are grouped into a single family,
called Podicipedidæ, of which the genus <i>Podiceps</i>
(or more correctly <i>Podicipes</i>) contains the greater
number. The Grebes are almost cosmopolitan.
Five well-marked species are found in Europe, all
of which, being visitants or regular residents, are
included in the British avifauna. In the colours
of their plumage the Grebes are not very remarkable,
with the exception of the crests or tippets
assumed by some species during the nuptial period:
plain browns predominate on the upper surface;
the underparts are almost always glossy white.
The Grebes fly well; dive with great dexterity, but
their movements on the ground are not graceful.
The young are hatched covered with close down,
and able to swim at once. The Grebes have a
complete moult in autumn, and assume their nuptial
ornaments in spring. The quill feathers are moulted
so rapidly that for some little time the birds are
unable to fly, as is the case with the Geese and
some others.</p>
<p>It is only during the winter months that
the Grebes become pelagic or marine in their
habits, and even some species are much less
addicted to a sea life than others. We will
now proceed briefly to glance at the British
species.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_166">166</div>
<h3>GREAT CRESTED GREBE.</h3>
<p>This, the largest species, the <i>Podicipes cristatus</i>
of naturalists, is chiefly an inland bird, but resorts
to the sea when fresh waters are frozen. I have
sometimes met with half a dozen together in a
quiet bay, under these circumstances, and very
graceful interesting birds they are. They rarely
come upon the land at these times, swimming about
and diving from time to time in quest of food.
Like the Divers, they sometimes sink the body very
low in the water, but under ordinary conditions sit
rather high, with the long neck held well up, the
head turned at intervals in all directions as if on the
look out for enemies. They always prefer to dive
when pursued; and as this species more especially
is in great demand by plumasiers, and subject to
much persecution, it is wary and shy in extreme.
The food of this Grebe whilst on the sea is composed
largely of fish, but inland the bird’s tastes
are more omnivorous. Sometimes many of its own
feathers are found in its stomach, mixed with the
food, but as yet ornithologists have been unable to
assign any plausible explanation of the fact. In
Spring, the adults assume two very conspicuous
crests or horns of a dark brown colour, and a tippet
or ruff of bright bay, shading into nearly black on
the margin. The birds now retire inland to meres
and lakes, where the shallows are full of reeds,
sedges, rushes, and other aquatic vegetation, and
<span class="pb" id="Page_167">167</span>
here, at some distance from the shore, a large
floating nest is made, composed of dead and decaying
vegetation. As the bird is sometimes
gregarious several nests may often be found within
a small area—huge floating rafts moored to the
reeds, or built up from the bottom of the shallow
water. In a shallow depression at the top four or
five eggs are laid, elliptical in shape, chalky in
texture, and white, until contact with the bird’s wet
feet and the wet nest covers them with stains.
Several mock nests are often made in the vicinity
of the one containing the eggs, probably destined
as resting places for the future young. The sitting
bird very dexterously covers its eggs with weed
when alarmed, previous to slipping off the nest into
the water. The note of this Grebe is a loud <i>kak</i>.</p>
<h3>RED-NECKED GREBE.</h3>
<p>This Grebe, the <i>Podicipes griseigena</i> of Boddaert,
and the <i>P. rubricollis</i> of most modern naturalists, is
a fairly common winter visitor to the seas off our
eastern and southern coasts, from the Orkneys to
Cornwall. The range of the Red-necked Grebe
outside our limits is a wide one, and embraces
during summer the sub-Arctic portions of Europe,
Asia, and America, becoming much more southerly
in winter. During winter this Grebe may be met
with close inshore, yet it seldom or never visits the
land, living exclusively on the sea. Its habits at
this season do not differ in any marked degree
<span class="pb" id="Page_168">168</span>
from those of its congeners. It may be seen
swimming to and fro, sometimes just outside the
fringe of rough surf, diving from time to time in
quest of its food, which at this season is composed
of fish principally. The nuptial ornaments of
this Grebe are not so conspicuous as those of
the preceding species, the dark crests are shorter,
the tippet is scarcely perceptible, and the lower
neck and upper breast are rich chestnut. In
winter plumage this Grebe is best distinguished
by its large size—next in this respect to the Great
Crested Grebe—and by the absence of the white
streak over the eye, which characterises that bird
then. In April the Red-necked Grebe returns to
its accustomed inland summer haunts to breed.
These are reed and rush-fringed lakes and ponds.
Here in the shallows a floating nest of rotten
vegetation is formed, smaller than that of the preceding
species, but otherwise closely resembling it.
Many pairs may be found breeding close together—in
colonies, so to speak. The four or five
elliptical shaped eggs are laid in May or June,
dirty white in colour, chalky in texture. The same
habit of covering the eggs with weeds, previous
to leaving them, may also be noted.</p>
<h3>BLACK-NECKED GREBE.</h3>
<p>This bird, the <i>Podicipes nigricollis</i> of systematists,
is so rarely met with in the British area, that it
scarcely requires more than a passing allusion.
<span class="pb" id="Page_169">169</span>
Examples occasionally occur on our eastern and
southern coasts especially, but the bird is too rare
to form any feature in the ornithology of the
British seaboard. It may be readily distinguished
from the other European Grebes by its decidedly
up-curved bill, and by the large amount of white
on the primaries and secondaries. In the nuptial
plumage the head and neck are black. In its
habits generally it differs little from the other
species.</p>
<h3>SCLAVONIAN GREBE.</h3>
<p>Along the eastern coasts of England, and round
most of the Scottish littoral, as well as off Ireland,
this species, the <i>Podicipes cornutus</i> of most
naturalists, is of tolerably frequent occurrence
during winter. It requires all the skill of an
expert ornithologist to distinguish this Grebe in
winter plumage, so closely does it resemble the
Red-necked species. It is a shorter winged bird,
and has the three outermost secondaries dusky
brown, instead of white, as in that bird, whilst the
previous species is always distinguishable by its
up-curved bill. There is nothing in the habits
of this Grebe to call for special remark: it keeps
exclusively to the water, dives to escape danger
and to capture prey, and swims beneath the surface
as adroitly as a frog. The Sclavonian Grebe is
a wide ranging species, inhabiting during summer
the Arctic and sub-Arctic regions of Europe, Asia,
and America, retiring southwards in winter. This
<span class="pb" id="Page_170">170</span>
Grebe is exceptionally remarkable for its nuptial
ornaments, but which, as usual, are confined to the
head and upper neck. Two chestnut or bay-coloured
crests start backwards over the eyes,
whilst the tippet is black. This ornament, when
extended to its utmost, looks very beautiful, and
gives the head an appearance of being surrounded
by a glittering aureole. This Grebe is a late
breeder, the eggs not being laid before June. It
retires to fresh-water pools for the purpose of
nesting, and resembles the other species closely in
its habits at this season, making a slovenly floating
nest, and laying four or five dull white eggs.</p>
<h3>LITTLE GREBE.</h3>
<p>This species is the smallest of the European
Grebes, and certainly by far the best known
member of the family found in the British Islands.
It is rather remarkable that the Little Grebe was
unknown as a distinct species to Linnæus. It was
known to Brisson as <i>Colymbus minor</i>, and to most
modern ornithologists as <i>Podicipes minor</i>, although
some few writers speak of this bird as <i>P. fluviatilis</i>.
Outside the British Islands it has a very wide
distribution in Europe, Asia, and Africa, but the
Little Grebe of America is a distinct species. The
Little Grebe is found more or less frequently on
the coast during winter, driven thereto when frosts
seal up its inland haunts. On the coast this bird is
more partial to the brackish back-waters, dykes,
<span class="pb" id="Page_171">171</span>
and estuaries, than to the open sea. The food
of this bird consists not only of fish, but small
crustaceans and molluscs, aquatic insects, young
frogs, and various vegetable fragments. Its habits
are very similar to those of the other Grebes; its
swimming and diving powers are wonderful; its
flight on occasion is rapid and strong, whilst its
note is a shrill but not very loud <i>weet</i>. In its
nesting economy the Little Grebe closely resembles
its congeners. It quits the coast in spring, resorting
to inland pools, often of very small size,
making its usually floating or water-surrounded
nest amongst the vegetation fringing the shallows,
on which it deposits five or six eggs, dull white in
colour. The parents often dive with their young
from the nest to carry them out of impending
danger—a habit common to all species in this
genus.</p>
<h3>CORMORANTS.</h3>
<p>The Grebes are so little in evidence to the
seaside naturalist that an account of them seems
more like a digression in our narrative, than a
continuation of our observations concerning the
bird life of the sea. We now, however, reach
another pelagic group, consisting of birds that
form an important and seldom absent feature in
marine ornithology. And yet, so great is the
adaptability of some species, the Cormorant is by
no means exclusively confined to the sea, has many
inland breeding stations, and repeatedly wanders
<span class="pb" id="Page_172">172</span>
from the coast to fresh waters, where an abundant
supply of fish offers a solace to its great voracity.
The Cormorants and the Gannet are members of
the family <span class="sc">Phalacrocoracidæ</span>, although generically
distinct from each other. Their principal external
characteristics are the webbed feet, each toe,
<i>including the hind one</i>, being connected by a
membrane, the long and powerful wings, and the
strong beak. The young birds in this family are
hatched naked and blind, but soon become clothed
with down. The first plumage differs considerably
from that of maturity, and the latter is not rarely
attained for several years. These birds have but
one actual moult in the year, in autumn, but just
previous to the pairing season in winter, crests in
some species, and ornamental filaments and tufts in
others, are assumed, but are lost by abrasion during
the ensuing breeding period. Three members of
this family are British, and breed abundantly
within our limits. Cormorants and Gannets are
widely dispersed species; the former are almost
cosmopolitan, only being absent from the polar
regions and Polynesia; the latter are most abundant
in the tropics and the southern seas. A detailed
account of the three British species will now be
given.</p>
<h3>CORMORANT.</h3>
<p>From the autumn onwards to the following
spring, there are few parts of the coast, indeed,
where this bird, the <i>Phalacrocorax carbo</i> of ornithologists,
<span class="pb" id="Page_173">173</span>
may not be seen; whilst even in summer
it is sufficiently widely dispersed to merit us
classing it as common. It is, however, seldom
seen off low-lying coasts, save after the breeding
season, or except such individuals as have not
yet reached maturity. There is but one other
British species with which the Cormorant may
be confused, and that is the Shag; but even then
the difference in size is sufficiently great for the
much larger Cormorant to be readily identified.
Very black, very heavy, and very clumsy the
Cormorant looks, as he rises in slow cumbersome
flight from the sea, or unfolds his big, bronzed-green
wings, and flutters into the air from a rock
shelf, or sea-girdled pinnacle; but very soon one’s
opinion of him undergoes a change, as, when once
fairly on his way, he passes swiftly enough over
the sea to a distant resting place, or after flying
some distance, pitches down into the water. The
colours of the Cormorant are not seen to best
advantage at a distance. Certainly the prevailing
colour is black, but this is richly loricated with
green and purple tints, whilst most of the upper
plumage of the body is a beautiful bronzy-brown,
the feathers being margined with soft velvety-black,
shot with green; the throat is white, as are also the
sides of the head; whilst the bright yellow gape
and bare portions of the throat form a pleasing
contrast to the more sombre hues. As the breeding
season approaches the Cormorant increases in
<span class="pb" id="Page_174">174</span>
beauty; large white patches of silky feathers spring
out from the thighs, and the dark head and neck
become covered by feathery filaments of white.
Perhaps the Cormorant is most interesting when
engaged searching for food. This bird obtains its
food in various ways. Most frequently of all, it
swims to and fro, diving with a headlong plunge
at intervals; sometimes it swims with its body low
in the water, and the head and neck below the
surface peering about in quest of fish. Less
frequently it takes up its station on a rock, or even
on a tree, from which it flies from time to time,
Kingfisher-like, to capture a fish near the surface;
or occasionally it dives from such a situation, and
pursues its finny food far down into the crystal
depths. The Cormorant, however, never fishes
like the Gannets and the Terns, by a headlong
plunge from the sky. This bird may often be met
with fishing in fresh-water some distance inland.
Waterton records how it used to visit his lake
at Walton Hall; but the habits of the bird on
sea and shore shall exclusively claim our attention
here. After a meal the Cormorant is very fond
of resorting to a rock to rest, and to dry its
plumage, standing perfectly motionless with its
wings uplifted and outspread. Few, if any, birds
can excel the Cormorant in diving: it vies with
the very fish themselves, and seems as much at
home beneath the surface of the water as in the
air. The Cormorant when taken young is easily
<span class="pb" id="Page_175">175</span>
tamed, and from the earliest recorded times it has
been trained to capture fish for its owner. To this
day the Chinese and Japanese train Cormorants for
this purpose. In England this sport was once a
regal pleasure, the Master of the Cormorants finding
a place in the Royal household. According to
Professor Newton, the sport still lingers amongst a
few. Willughby asserts that the trained Cormorant
was carried hooded until cast off, but nowadays its
bearer protects his eyes from a stroke from the
bird’s beak, with a wire mask. A strap or a ring is
fastened round the Cormorant’s neck, to prevent
it swallowing its captures, just as we muzzle a ferret
to prevent it lying up. All who have witnessed this
novel way of fishing testify to the bird’s marvellous
skill in catching fish after fish, until the gular pouch
will hold no more, when the Cormorant is taken, and
the fish removed. The food of this bird is composed
almost entirely of fish. In winter Cormorants
become even more gregarious, often associating
in large flocks which wander far in quest of food.
This bird is not so completely pelagic in its habits
as the Auks, the Divers, and the Grebes. It generally
retires to the caves and shelves of the cliffs to sleep,
whilst stormy weather will drive it shorewards soon,
where it will sit and mope on the rocks, or shelter
in the quiet creeks, or under the lee of cliffs, as if
waiting for the sea to subside, and allow of its
labours being renewed.</p>
<p>As the Cormorant returns for years in succession
<span class="pb" id="Page_176">176</span>
to one particular spot to breed, there can be little
doubt that it pairs for life. The birds begin to
associate closely in pairs somewhat early in spring;
but actual nesting duties do not commence for a
little time after that event. In most places the
Cormorant breeds in colonies, the size apparently
varying according to the amount of accommodation.
For the present purpose we need not describe
in detail any of the inland nesting places of this
species, beyond remarking that the bird often
breeds in trees like Rooks, making a huge nest
of sticks and twigs, lined with grass. Upon the
coast the favourite breeding resorts of the Cormorant
are ranges of lofty cliffs, and small low
islands and reefs. The nest may thus either be on
the ground—as at the Farne Islands, for instance—or
on a ledge of the cliffs. When in the former
situation it is generally composed of masses of seaweed,
stalks of marine plants, and lined with green
grass or other herbage. A Cormorant’s nesting
place is by no means a pleasant one for persons
whose olfactory nerves are sensitive, the smell from
the decaying fish, and from the droppings of the
birds, that literally whitewash the whole vicinity,
being sickening in the extreme. Other sea fowl
usually give these colonies a wide birth. The eggs
are from three to six in number, of a delicate
bluish-green—where the colour can be detected
through the abundant coating of lime—small for
the size of the bird, and long and oval in shape.
<span class="pb" id="Page_177">177</span>
When disturbed the sitting Cormorants make little
demonstration, but fly out to sea at once. But
one brood is reared in the season, and the eggs
are deposited during April or May, in the British
Islands. The Cormorant is a silent bird: the only
note I have ever heard it utter has been a croaking
one at the nest.</p>
<h3>SHAG.</h3>
<p>This species, the <i>Pelecanus graculus</i> of Linnæus
and Latham, and the <i>Phalacrocorax graculus</i> of
most modern writers, is readily distinguished from
the Cormorant by its smaller size, more glossy
appearance, and much greener general colouration.
The Shag differs structurally from the Cormorant
in possessing only twelve tail feathers, the latter
bird having fourteen. The nuptial ornaments are
also very different, for just previous to the pairing
season, in early spring, a nodding plume or frontal
crest of recurved feathers is assumed. The Shag
is a much more marine bird than the Cormorant,
and its appearance inland is exceptional. Of the
two species the Shag is certainly the commonest
and most widely dispersed, being met with off
almost all parts of the British coasts, but preference
is shown for such as are rocky, and where
the ranges of cliffs are full of hollows and caves.
Outside our islands the range of the Shag is
restricted to the coasts of western Europe, and the
Mediterranean basin. As a rule the Shag keeps
well into the coast, seeking for its food in the
<span class="pb" id="Page_178">178</span>
somewhat deep water below the rocks, and retiring
to some fissure or cave to sleep. Its habits in most
respects are very similar to the larger species. It
flies well and rapidly, if in a somewhat laboured
manner, dives as skilfully as its ally, and often
indulges in the habit of sitting on the rocks with
wings extended, basking in the sun. It is equally
gregarious during the non-breeding season, and it is
no uncommon thing to see a hundred or more birds
of this species sitting in solemn statuesque rows on
some sea-encircled rock, gorged with fish and
digesting their food. At these gatherings many
birds may be noticed still fishing in the sea around,
or flying up to or leaving the rocky resting place.
The young birds congregate indiscriminately with
the adults. A fishing Shag is a very interesting
object. He may be watched quietly swimming
along, and every now and then springing half out
of the water, arching his long neck, and then diving
head first into the sea. Soon he reappears again,
the body coming into view all at once, it may
be close to where he dived, or it may be fifty or
a hundred yards away from the spot where he
descended. The Shag feeds almost exclusively on
fishes, and these are chased through the water with
incredible skill. The bird may thus be watched by
the hour together swimming and diving, propelling
itself by its feet, and bringing the captured fish to
the surface to swallow them. At the approach of
night the Shag almost invariably betakes itself to
<span class="pb" id="Page_179">179</span>
the shelter of some cave or fissure; and it is no uncommon
sight along the rock-bound shore to see a
dozen of these birds hurrying along close to the
sea in silence towards the rocks where they sleep.</p>
<p>The Shag breeds in May. Its favourite nesting
haunts are the caves and fissures in the cliffs, but
where such are wanting, or not available, the bird
will content itself with a cranny amongst the rocks
of a low island. If plenty of accommodation exists
many pairs of Shags will nest in company; where
suitable sites are scarce the birds breed in scattered
pairs along the coast. It is more than probable that
the Shag pairs for life: it returns season by season
to its old nesting-place. The nest of this species
is either wedged into some crevice of the sides or
roof, or made upon a ledge in a cave; sometimes a
hole in the face of a wall-like cliff is chosen; less
frequently a site is selected amongst the rough
boulders on a reef; or even on a ledge of the cliffs
where they overhang considerably. In most cases
the nest is bulky and made of sticks, stalks of plants,
and sea-weed, lined with straws, coarse grass, and
turf, all more or less matted together with droppings,
decaying fish, and slime, and smelling most unpleasantly.
Many nests are enlarged and patched
up year by year. The two, three, or four eggs are
a little smaller than those of the Cormorant, of a
delicate bluish-green where the thick coating of lime
does not conceal it. The Shag shows more reluctance
to leave its nest than the Cormorant does.
<span class="pb" id="Page_180">180</span>
The effect is most startling as the big birds dash
out of the gloomy sea caves one after the other.
The only note I have heard this species utter has
been a low croak.</p>
<h3>GANNET.</h3>
<p>This remarkable bird differs in many important
respects from all other pelagic species inhabiting the
temperate portions of the northern hemisphere.
Outside the limits of the British Islands its only
other breeding places in Europe are on Iceland and
the Faröes. The Gannet or Solan Goose, the <i>Sula
bassana</i> of Brisson and modern naturalists, is one of
the most pelagic of birds. Except during the
breeding season it is rarely seen near land, the
thousands of birds that congregate in a few chosen
spots round the British coasts dispersing themselves
far out to sea as soon as the duties of the year are
over. Like the Albatross, the Gannet may almost
be said to live in the air. Its powers of flight are
simply magnificent. Occasionally a few odd birds
may be observed here and there fishing in the bays,
during autumn and winter; but the person who
would study its habits and movements thoroughly
must visit one of its breeding places. There are
many colonies of Gannets round the British coasts,
one of the most accessible, and perhaps the most
famous, being on the Bass Rock, in the Firth of
Forth. There are small ones on Lundy Island and
Grassholm; large ones on Suleskerry, Sulisker,
St. Kilda, Ailsa Craig, and Little Skellig. The
<span class="pb" id="Page_181">181</span>
adult plumage of the Gannet is white, tinged with
buff on the head and neck, except the primaries,
which are black. The bare skin round the base of
the bill is blue. The bird probably does not attain
its white plumage until nearly four years old, passing
through a series of mottled stages of black, brown,
and white. The young are hatched blind and
naked, but eventually become clothed in dense white
down. Other structural peculiarities are the closed
nostrils, and the subcutaneous air cells almost covering
the body, which the bird can fill with air at will,
as they communicate with the lungs. Whether seen
at its nest, or when fishing at sea, the Gannet is a
remarkably interesting bird. As may naturally be
inferred, a bird so light and buoyant as the Gannet
does not obtain its food by diving. It is incapable
of submerging itself even for a little distance, except
by gaining sufficient momentum from a plunge
headlong from some distance in the air. Nevertheless,
the Gannet feeds exclusively on fishes, which
it catches almost like a Tern, by dropping from a
great height and seizing or impaling them with its
strong bill. The Gannets follow the shoals of fish
as they swim near the surface. First one bird, and
then another, will be seen to poise itself, and then,
with closed wings, to dash downwards, glinting like
a piece of white marble in the sun, into the sea,
disappearing for a moment, then rising again into
the air to prepare for another descent. Many
Gannets at these times may, perhaps, be seen swimming,
<span class="pb" id="Page_182">182</span>
but they are merely resting, not fishing. The
captured fish is invariably swallowed at once. The
sitting birds are kept well supplied with fish by their
mates. These fish, however, are not conveyed to
them in the beak, but in the gullet, from which they
are disgorged, and left by the nest side to be eaten
as required. Very often a Gannet will disgorge
several large fish before leaving its nest, whilst many
more fish are brought to the rocks than are actually
eaten. The Gannet is a voracious eater, and often
so gorges itself with food as to be incapable of flight.
The power of wing of this beautiful bird is wonderful
in the extreme. I have seen the Gannet repeatedly
keep the air for hours together, apparently
without effort, wheeling in graceful curves, and
ascending to vast heights, just as Vultures are wont
to do.</p>
<p>Although the Gannet is a resident in British
waters, it seldom comes near land except to breed.
During the nesting season it is very gregarious,
and some of its stations contain many thousands
of pairs. Early in the spring Gannets begin to
assemble at the breeding places, and towards the
end of April nest building commences. The nests
are made either on the ledges of the cliffs, amongst
the broken rock fragments at the summit, or on
the flat table-like tops of pinnacles and stacks.
Where the birds are numerous and the accommodation
limited, great numbers of nests are
crowded together; and as may readily be inferred,
<span class="pb" id="Page_183">183</span>
such close companionship leads to not a few battles
between the birds themselves. Indeed, a sort of
guerrilla warfare is being waged constantly, and is
by no means one of the least interesting features of
the never-to-be-forgotten scene. The nest of the
Gannet possesses little architectural beauty, and is
generally so trodden out of shape as to resemble a
mere heaped mass of rubbish, caked together with
droppings, and slime, and filth, giving off an almost
unbearable stench, especially on a calm hot day in
May or June. Seaweed, masses of turf, straws,
moss, and stalks of marine plants are the principal
materials. The nest is shaped like a flattened cone,
the cavity at the top being shallow. It is no unusual
thing to see the birds adding to their nests, even
when incubation is in progress. The Gannet lays
but a single egg, but if this be taken—as it often
is, especially in colonies easily accessible to man—the
bird will replace it several times in succession.
It is pale bluish-green, but generally so thickly
coated with chalky matter—and later with stains—as
to hide all trace of this colour. There are few
more noisy animated scenes in bird life than a Gannet
colony, during the height of the breeding season.
The stirring sight once witnessed can never be
forgotten. The air, for many yards from the face of
the cliffs and high above it, is filled with thousands
of flying Gannets; every available spot, on the
edges and face of the rock itself, is occupied by a
Gannet, the standing birds vieing with each other in
<span class="pb" id="Page_184">184</span>
uttering harsh cries, the flying birds silently drifting
to and fro in a mazy bewildering throng. Many of
the flying birds are carrying nest materials; many
of the birds standing on the rocks are fast asleep!
On every side the Gannets are eyeing you
suspiciously, some disgorging fish previous to
taking wing, others barking defiance as you approach
them, and stubbornly remaining upon their egg until
absolutely pushed from it. Rock, sea, and air teem
with birds. It will, however, be remarked that none
of the birds fly over the land; all keep to the face
of the cliffs. At the Bass Rock, numbers of young
Gannets used to be taken for food, the proprietor
baking quantities, and selling them to the country
people round about. The taste for baked Solan
Geese, however, is not so prevalent as formerly, and
the custom seems likely to die out. At St. Kilda,
however, the Gannet harvest still continues to be
gathered, and the young birds form a welcome
article of food.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_185">185</div>
<h2 id="c5"><i>Ducks, Geese, and Swans</i></h2>
<div class="fig"> id="fig5"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_191.jpg" alt="TUFTED DUCK. Chapter v." width-obs="500" height-obs="342" /> <p class="center"><span class="small">TUFTED DUCK. <i>Chapter</i> v.</span></p> </div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_187">187</div>
<h2 class="eee">CHAPTER V. <br/>DUCKS, GEESE, AND SWANS.</h2>
<blockquote>
<p><i>Ducks—Characteristics—Non-diving
Ducks—Characteristics
of—Changes of Plumage—Sheldrake—Wigeon—Pintail
Duck—Various
other species—Diving
Ducks: Characteristics—Changes
of Plumage—Eider Duck—King
Eider—Common Scoter—Velvet
Scoter—Scaup Duck—Tufted
Duck—Pochard—Golden-Eye—Long-tailed
Duck—Mergansers—Characteristics
and Changes
of Plumage—Red-breasted Merganser—Goosander—Smew—Geese—Characteristics—Gray
Lag Goose—White-fronted Goose—Bean
Goose—Brent Goose—Bernacle
Goose—Swans—Characteristics—Changes
of
Plumage—Hooper Swan—Bewick’s
Swan.</i></p>
</blockquote>
<p>Most of the species contained in the present
chapter can only be described as Sea-birds
during winter. In summer they are chiefly inland
species, and resort to fresh waters. Again, the
majority of these birds do not breed within the
limits of the British Islands; they are winter
visitors from more northern lands, and return to
those lands in spring. Still there are a few species
resident in our area eminently marine in their
habits, and forming constant and pleasing features
in the bird-life of the coast. United, the Ducks,
Geese, and Swans form the well-defined family
<span class="sc">Anatidæ</span>, which may be readily divided into half-a-dozen
<span class="pb" id="Page_188">188</span>
sub-families, all but one of which are represented
at some time of the year on our seaboard.
The most important external characteristics of the
birds in this family are the peculiar laminated bill,
the short legs, the webbed feet, and the dense compact
plumage. The family is almost cosmopolitan
in its distribution.</p>
<h3>NON-DIVING DUCKS.</h3>
<p>Representatives of no less than three of the four
sub-families into which the Ducks have been divided
by systematists, are found on the British coast-line.
Each sub-family contains some thoroughly marine
species. We will deal first with the Anatinæ, containing
the Sheldrakes and non-diving Ducks. The
birds in this sub-family are distinguished from all
others by having the tarsus scutellated or plated in
front, and by having only a narrow membrane
attached to the hind toe. A peculiarity about these
Ducks is that they never dive for their food. This
is obtained only in shallow water, by submerging
the fore half of the body and dabbling and probing
amongst the mud and weeds. In the Sheldrakes
the sexes are nearly alike in colour, but in the
remaining species there is usually considerable
difference in this respect, the males or drakes
being handsome, showy birds, the females or ducks
brown and comparatively sombre-looking. The
Sheldrakes moult once in autumn, the remaining
species the same, but the drakes of these latter
<span class="pb" id="Page_189">189</span>
change their small feathers twice, once in early
summer and once in autumn. The young are
hatched covered with down, and able, to a great
extent, to shift for themselves.</p>
<h3>SHELDRAKE.</h3>
<p>This remarkably handsome species, the <i>Anas
cornuta</i> of S. G. Gmelin, and the <i>Tadorna cornuta</i>
of most modern naturalists, is a resident on such
parts of the British coasts as are suited to its needs.
Unfortunately, continued persecution has driven
this beautiful Duck from many a haunt along the
coast, and it is now almost entirely confined during
the breeding season to the more secluded districts,
or to such places where man may accord it some
measure of protection. Low sandy coasts, and extensive
dunes by the sea, are the favourite resort of
the Sheldrake; and, owing to its secretive habits
and exceptional wariness, it is a species that may
be very easily overlooked. During the breeding
season, an observer may wander for hours up and
down the haunts of this Duck without seeing a
single bird. Once seen, however, it is easily identified—no
other bird along the coast more readily.
The harlequin arrangement of the colours is more
eccentric, perhaps, than beautiful. The bill, to begin
with, is crimson; the head and upper neck are dark
metallic-green; the lower neck is white, and below
this is a broad band of bay or chestnut; the rump,
upper tail coverts, and tail (except the tip, which
<span class="pb" id="Page_190">190</span>
is black), part of the secondaries and innermost
scapulars, the wing coverts, the sides of the belly
and the flanks, are white; the remainder of the
wings and outermost scapulars, and a broad line
from the breast to the vent are black; the alar speculum
is green; the tarsus and feet are pink. At a
distance the bird looks like a patchwork arrangement
of black, white, and red, which becomes even
more pronounced when it takes flight, and in a slow,
Heron-like way, with measured beats of the wings,
passes out to sea, or down the coast to more
secluded haunts. During the breeding season, this
Duck frequents the sand dunes on the English
coast, but is rare and local in the south; in Scotland
it is commoner, and may be met with in almost
all places suited to its requirements, including the
Hebrides. In Ireland, however, it becomes local
and uncommon, although widely dispersed. When
the young are reared the bird becomes more widely
distributed, but even then its preference for the
sand makes it still local. The Sheldrake is known
by many provincial names, among which may be
mentioned “Burrow Duck,” “Bergander,” and
“Shell-duck.” The origin of this Duck’s colloquial
name is somewhat obscure, although Willughby
and Ray attribute it to the bird’s strongly-contrasted
plumage—“sheld” being the East Anglian
equivalent for parti-coloured.<SPAN class="fn" id="fr_5" href="#fn_5">[5]</SPAN> The Old Norse name
<span class="pb" id="Page_191">191</span>
for this Duck was skjöldungr, from <i>skjöldr</i>, a piebald
horse. The Sheldrake is certainly a social
bird, but can scarcely be termed a gregarious one.
Small parties may be seen feeding in the shallows
or swimming in the sea. The bird obtains its food
either whilst wandering along the shore—its gait is
more elegant than that of most Ducks, owing to the
comparatively longer legs—or when swimming in
water just deep enough for it to reach the sandy
bottom, when the fore part of the body is submerged,
and the hind quarters held almost perpendicular.
This food consists chiefly of sand-hoppers,
crustaceans, molluscs, and small fish; but on shore
the bird also eats grass, stems and leaves of
aquatic plants, and worms. The Sheldrake rarely
wanders far from the sea, its visits to the land
seldom extending beyond the dunes or the rough
saltings. The note of this Duck is a harsh quack,
but in the pairing season an oft-repeated tremulous
cry is uttered, and when the young are abroad a
guttural <i>kurr</i> is heard.</p>
<p>The breeding season of the Sheldrake begins in
April or May. Although instances of this bird
breeding some distance from the coast are on
record (Stevenson’s <i>Birds of Norfolk</i>), its ordinary
nesting-places are never far from the sea. Its
favourite breeding-grounds are sand dunes, links,
flat sand-banks, and small islands in sea lochs,
firths, or estuaries. The bird is not very social at
this period, and although many pairs may occupy a
<span class="pb" id="Page_192">192</span>
comparatively small area of coast, each seems to
keep closely to its own particular domain. The
nest is made at the end of a burrow, a rabbit hole
being frequently selected; but sometimes the bird
is said to excavate one for itself, in which case it
follows a nearly circular direction. Sometimes the
nest is ten or fifteen feet from the entrance, and in
places where rabbits are numerous, it is often an
almost hopeless task to discover it, one burrow
running into another in bewildering perplexity. At
the end of the burrow a rude nest of dry grass is
formed—a rabbit’s nest is not unfrequently utilised—which,
as incubation advances, is thickly lined
with down from the parent’s body. Few nests are
more difficult to find; sometimes the parents will
betray its whereabouts when one bird relieves the
other; but, as a rule, the male is seldom seen near it,
and both sexes are remarkably cautious in leaving
or visiting it. The eggs are usually from six to
twelve, but as many as sixteen have been known.
They are creamy-white in colour, smooth and
polished in texture. The down in the nest of the
Sheldrake is a beautiful lavender-gray. The young
are soon taken to the beach after they are hatched,
where the little creatures are remarkably active in
catching sand-hoppers.</p>
<h3>WIGEON.</h3>
<p>Of all the more typical birds in this sub-family,
the present species, the <i>Anas penelope</i> of naturalists,
is by far the best known along the coast. The
<span class="pb" id="Page_193">193</span>
male bird is a very pretty and conspicuous one, in
his beautifully pencilled back and flanks, and distinguished
from afar by his bright buff forehead and
crown, and white wing coverts. The female is much
less showily coloured. The Wigeon arrives upon
our seaboard, from the Arctic regions, in vast
numbers every autumn, and from that time forward
to the following spring resides with us. This
autumn migration of the Wigeon begins late in
September, and lasts well on into November. The
birds begin to leave us again in March, and most
have departed by the end of the following month.
The Wigeon, whilst with us, is one of the most
gregarious of the Ducks, and flocks of vast size
may sometimes be observed in our shallower seas
close inshore, in estuaries and bays, but perhaps
more frequently further out at sea. These birds
obtain most of their food at night in such localities
where they are subjected to much persecution, as
often happens, for their flesh is valued as an article
for the table, coming landwards at dusk, and retiring
to the open sea at dawn. The flight of this species
is rapid, yet almost noiseless, and the bird may
sometimes be seen gliding down from the air to the
water on stiff and motionless wings, but flapping
them rapidly just as it drops, tail first, into the sea.
Its note is highly characteristic, a shrill, far sounding
<i>mee-ow</i>, or <i>wee-ow</i>. The food consists of grass,
buds, and leaves of aquatic plants, grass wrack,
crustaceans, and molluscs. Many Wigeons are
<span class="pb" id="Page_194">194</span>
caught in the flight-nets on the Wash, a locality
which is, or used to be twenty years ago, a favourite
resort of this Duck.</p>
<p>A few Wigeons remain in our Islands to breed,
frequenting the northern counties of Scotland, including
the Orkneys and the Shetlands, but the vast
majority return to the Arctic regions to do so. Its
favourite nesting-places are scrubby woodlands,
swamps, and heaths, clothed with coarse herbage,
studded with lakes and tarns, and intersected by
streams. Although not gregarious at this period,
the numbers of nests found scattered over a small
area, suggests at least a social tendency. The nest
is usually made close to the water-side, amongst
heath or grass, or sheltered by a little bush, and is
made of dry herbage and leaves, warmly lined with
down plucked from the body of the female. The
six to ten eggs are cream- or buffish-white, smooth
in texture, but with little gloss. These are laid in
May.</p>
<h3>PINTAIL DUCK.</h3>
<p>This elegant species, the <i>Anas acuta</i> of Linnæus,
by some modern writers generically distinguished
as <i>Dafila acuta</i>, is, next to the Wigeon perhaps,
the most abundant of the non-diving Ducks upon
the coast. Like that bird it visits the British seas
in some numbers in autumn, returning north in
spring. From the extreme length of the two
central upper tail coverts, which project two inches
or more beyond the tail, this Duck has been termed
<span class="pb" id="Page_195">195</span>
the “Sea Pheasant” in some districts, although in
others the name is applied to the Long-tailed Duck—a
member of the next sub-family. The male is
distinguished by his brown head, shot with bronze
tints, black nape, and white stripe on either side of
the neck, which runs into the white underparts; by
the green speculum emphasised above with pale
chestnut, and below with white, and finely pencilled
black and gray upper plumage: the long pointed
black scapulars, broadly edged with dull white, are
also a noteworthy feature. The female is much
less showily coloured, mottled-brown above, and
grayish-white below, but the brown tail feathers,
obliquely barred with white, readily distinguish her
from allied species. The favourite haunts of the
Pintail, during its sojourn with us, are the shallow
estuaries, especially on our eastern and southern
coasts. It arrives on our coasts chiefly in October
and November, and leaves them in April. The
Pintail is a remarkably gregarious species, congregating
in large flocks during winter, and it has been
observed that many of these gatherings are composed
exclusively of male birds. It is a shy and
wary bird, feeding principally at night, visiting the
land or the shallows at dusk, and when so engaged,
sentinels are generally on the look-out, ready to
give the alarm. It obtains its food by dipping the
fore half of the body under water, and exploring
the mud with its bill; but sometimes stubbles and
meadows near the sea are visited for the purpose.
<span class="pb" id="Page_196">196</span>
This food consists chiefly of aquatic plants, grass,
insects, worms, molluscs, and crustaceans. This
Duck swims well and buoyantly, looking very
graceful on the water; it rarely dives, even when
wounded; whilst on the ground it walks with long
neck extended and tail raised. The Pintail flies
well and rapidly, the wings making a peculiar and
easily recognised swishing sound.</p>
<p>The Pintail migrates northwards in flocks, and
reaches its Arctic breeding grounds as soon as the
ice begins to break up, crowding on the little pools
and narrow belt of open water, on the sides of the
rivers, and filling the air like swarms of bees. A
few pairs remain in the British Islands for the
summer. Swampy moors, and the banks of lakes
and ponds, are the favourite nesting-places of this
Duck. The nest, made upon the ground amongst
herbage, or under the shelter of a rock or bush, is
composed of dry grass, withered leaves, sedges, and
rushes, and lined copiously with down. The eggs
are from six to ten in number, and are pale buffish-green,
smooth, but lustreless. These are laid in
May. The Pintail is by no means a noisy bird; a
low chattering may be heard from a flock whilst
feeding, a soft quack when the bird is alarmed;
whilst the drake, during the season of courtship,
utters a deep <i>clük</i>, preceded by a hiss, and followed
by a low grating note. Outside our islands the
Pintail has a very wide distribution, breeding in
the Palæarctic and Nearctic regions, and wintering
almost to the Equator.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_197">197</div>
<p>Of the remaining five species of Ducks belonging
to the present sub-family, which are either regular
visitors to our islands, or residents in them, none
can fairly be classed as being typically marine in
their haunts. The well-known Mallard <i>Anas
boschas</i>, the Teal <i>Anas crecca</i>, and the Shoveller
<i>Anas clypeata</i>, visit the low-lying coasts, especially
during severe weather, but they are all eminently
fresh-water species, and form no dominant feature
in the bird-life of the coast. Still less familiar to
the sea-side naturalist are the Gadwall <i>Anas
strepera</i>, and the Garganey <i>Anas circia</i>. The
former species is rare in our islands, even during
winter, whilst the latter is a summer visitor only,
excessively local, but breeding sparingly in the
Broads District, where, from the peculiar note of the
male, it is known as the “Cricket Teal.” We will,
therefore, pass on to a study of the next sub-family,
which contains birds eminently marine in their
habits and economy.</p>
<h3>DIVING DUCKS.</h3>
<p>These birds, described somewhat ambiguously by
certain authorities as Sea Ducks, for all the species
are by no means exclusively marine, yet all are
expert divers, form a fairly well-defined and homogenous
group, or sub-family, termed by systematists,
Fuligulinæ. They are characterised by having a
pendant lobe, or membrane, attached to the hind
toe, and by their anteriorly scutellated tarsi. All
<span class="pb" id="Page_198">198</span>
the Ducks in this sub-family habitually dive for
their food, and their movements in the water are
remarkably agile. The sexes generally present
considerable difference in colour, the males, as
usual, being the most handsome and conspicuous.
The young are always hatched covered with down,
and soon able to accompany their parents on the
water. The females have a single moult in autumn,
but the males a partially double one. Diving
Ducks, in fact all species in the family, in first
plumage, closely resemble the old female, and
acquire the adult plumage after the first autumn
moult. We will deal first with the resident species,
as being constant features in the bird life of the
coast and sea.</p>
<h3>EIDER DUCK.</h3>
<p>No Duck is more thoroughly attached to the sea
than this species, the <i>Anas mollissima</i> of Linnæus
and Latham, but the <i>Somateria mollissima</i> of most
modern ornithologists. Unfortunately it is somewhat
restricted in its distribution, only breeding in
one locality on the English coast, occurring more or
less accidentally elsewhere. Ireland is not even so
fortunate, for no nesting station is known round the
entire coastline of the island. The Eider Duck is
a decidedly northern bird, and is found, if somewhat
locally, round the coasts of Scotland, extending to
the outlying islands, including St. Kilda, where I
have taken its nest. To most people, perhaps, the
down of the Eider Duck, in the form of a coverlet,
<span class="pb" id="Page_199">199</span>
is more familiar than the bird itself. Although
somewhat clumsy in appearance, the male Eider is
a singularly handsome and conspicuous bird—conspicuous,
one might say, when standing on the
rocks or paddling about the still water near the
shore, but even in a very moderately rough sea the
bird is detected with difficulty, especially at a
distance, for the white crests and dark waves
effectually harmonise with, and conceal, its striking
piebald plumage. The two predominating colours
of the male Eider are black and white, the latter
occupying most of the upper surface, the former
most of the lower; the head, however, is variously
marked with black, white, and pale green. The
female is dark chestnut-brown, variegated with
brownish-black. The Eider Duck is so thoroughly
sea-going in its habits, that it rarely even flies over
the land, except to reach its nest, and will rather
follow the windings of the coast than cross even a
narrow headland. In our islands it is practically
sedentary, only wandering south a little way during
winter. Its favourite haunts are rocky islands and
coasts, where bays and quiet fjords offer it a haven
of safety. The Eider is not so gregarious as many
other Ducks, but it may be seen in parties all the
year round, the drakes keeping company on the sea
while their partners are on their nests, and when
these latter come off them to feed, all join into a
scattered company. The male bird is exceptionally
wary at all times, but the female during the nesting
<span class="pb" id="Page_200">200</span>
period, becomes absurdly tame in districts where
not persecuted, often allowing an observer to
stroke her gently whilst she sits upon her eggs.
The food of the Eider Duck consists of minute
marine insects, crustaceans, and shellfish, especially
mussels and small crabs. Most of this food is
obtained by diving, the Eider being marvellously
expert at this, not only descending to a great depth,
but remaining for a long time below. A favourite
method of feeding with this species is to draw
shorewards with the tide. It may be watched
gradually swimming towards the land in some
sheltered bay, feeding as it comes, until the very
edge of the breakers is reached. Then comes by
far the prettiest sight of all, as the bird swims
through each mighty wave just before it turns over
and breaks upon the beach, floating light as a foam
fleck on the huge rollers, now high up on the white
crests, then momentarily lost to view in the green
glassy depths. If alarmed on these occasions, the
Eider generally swims quickly out from shore, but
if further pursued or fired at, it instantly takes wing,
rising from the water with little splash, and flying
rapidly and steadily just above the surface to a
safer refuge. The Eider is a day feeder, abroad at
dawn, and continuing its labours well into the dusk.
As a rule the Eider is a very silent bird. The
usual note is a somewhat low <i>kurr</i>, but in the
season of courtship the male utters a cooing sound
when paying his addresses to his mate, as he swims
<span class="pb" id="Page_201">201</span>
round and round her, guarding her from the attentions
of rivals. This cooing noise may be heard
for a long distance across a quiet loch, especially, as
often happens, if several drakes are together.</p>
<p>The favourite nesting places of the Eider Duck
are low, rocky islands, well covered with marine
vegetation, such as campion, thrift, and grass. Late
in spring the flocks begin to separate more into
pairs, although the immature non-breeding individuals
may be observed to continue gregarious all the
summer, and not to visit the nesting stations. The
laying season is in May and June. The female
alone selects a site for and makes the nest, the
male rarely, if ever, visiting the spot, although
he keeps in attendance on the sea near the islands,
and joins her when she comes to feed. The nest is
made upon the ground, sometimes amongst the
dense beds of campion, sometimes in a crevice of the
boulders, or on a ledge of rock. Occasionally, as I
remarked at St. Kilda, it may be placed on the top
of cliffs hundreds of feet above the sea. It is large
and well made, consisting of coarse grass, dry
seaweed, heather, and bits of dead vegetation,
profusely lined with down and a few curly feathers
from the body of the female alone. This lining
gradually accumulates as the eggs are laid.
Numbers of nests may be found close together,
especially where the birds are tolerably common,
as, for instance, at the Farne Islands, where, by the
way, the Eider is known as “St. Cuthbert’s Duck.”
<span class="pb" id="Page_202">202</span>
The eggs are from five to seven, or rarely even
eight, pale olive-green or greenish-gray in colour,
and smooth and wax-like in texture. In many
places the Eider is jealously protected for the sake
of its precious down, especially in Iceland and
Norway, and the taking of the eggs or down by
unauthorized persons is an offence punishable by
law. Outside our limits, the Eider inhabits most of
the coasts and islands of the North Atlantic. The
much rarer King Eider, <i>Somateria spectabilis</i>—an
occasional visitor to the British Seas—claims a
passing reference, for it is by no means improbable
that the species actually breeds within our limits.</p>
<h3>COMMON SCOTER.</h3>
<p>Of all the hordes of Ducks that pour southwards
in autumn, down the western coasts of Europe,
and find a winter resort in the British Seas, the
present species, the <i>Anas nigra</i> of Linnæus, the
<i>Fuligula nigra</i> of many writers, and <i>Œdemia nigra</i>
of others who regard the Scoters as generically
distinct from the Pochard and allied forms, is certainly
by far the commonest. It is known on almost
all parts of the coast as the “Black Duck.” Few
other Ducks are so absolutely marine as the Scoter;
no weather is bad enough to drive it ashore, and it
seldom visits the land at all, except for purposes
of reproduction. It is a gregarious bird, and so
large are some of its gatherings off the British
coasts, that it literally blackens the sea with its
<span class="pb" id="Page_203">203</span>
numbers. To see such a mighty host of birds rise
<i>en masse</i> from the water is a most imposing, nay,
even a thrilling sight. The Common Scoter begins
to arrive with us in September, and the migration
continues right through the following month. The
return passage begins in April and lasts into May.
All the birds, however, do not pass northwards, for
flocks of immature Scoters frequent British waters
through the summer, whilst a few pairs of adults
are even known to breed in the north of Scotland.
The Scoter is found most abundantly off our eastern
coasts, from the Orkneys to the Goodwins, and
thence, but in smaller numbers, along the English
Channel. The western districts are not visited so
plentifully, the flat coasts of Lancashire, the north
of Ireland, and the Solway area being its principal
resorts. This Scoter is an adept diver; in fact,
almost all its food is obtained in that way. Like
the Eider the Scoter is fond of working shorewards
with the tide, feeding as it comes, and retiring from
the land again when its appetite is satisfied. The
food of this Duck consists in winter chiefly
of molluscs and crustaceans; but in summer the
leaves, roots, and buds of aquatic plants are eaten,
as are also insects. The Scoter flies well and
rapidly, and is not unfrequently seen in the air,
especially when in flocks. These sometimes circle
and gyrate for some time after they are flushed
before settling on the sea again. The usual note of
the Scoter is a harsh <i>kurr</i>, modulated into a more
<span class="pb" id="Page_204">204</span>
musical sound by the drake during the pairing
season.</p>
<p>Even during the breeding season the Common
Scoter does not retire far from the sea. Its favourite
breeding grounds are by the lakes and rivers
amongst dwarf-willow and birch-scrub, and an
island is always preferred. The nest is a mere
hollow in the ground, into which is collected a little
dry herbage. This, however, is plentifully lined
with down before the female begins to sit. The
bird is a late breeder, the eggs not being laid much
before the middle of June. These are six to
nine in number, grayish-buff in colour, smooth in
texture, and with little gloss. Only one brood
is reared, and the female alone appears to take
the entire duty of caring for the ducklings. I
should here remark that the adult male Scoter
is uniform bright black, with the exception of an
orange-coloured stripe—said to vary considerably in
extent—along the central ridge of the upper
mandible. The female is nearly uniform dark-brown.
The Scoter is an inhabitant of Arctic
Europe and West Siberia, visiting more southern
latitudes in winter.</p>
<h3>VELVET SCOTER.</h3>
<p>Although this species, the <i>Fuligula fusca</i> of
ornithology, is a regular winter visitor to the seas
off the British coasts, it nowhere approaches in
numbers the preceding species. It may be readily
<span class="pb" id="Page_205">205</span>
distinguished from the Common Scoter by its very
conspicuous white wing bar, and less observable
white spot under the eye; otherwise it closely
resembles it in general colouration. The Velvet
Scoters that visit our seas are generally observed
mixed with the gatherings of the Common Scoter.
The habits of the two species are much alike in
some respects, very different in others. Thus it
exhibits the same skill in diving for food, and
obtains it under very similar conditions; its flight is
equally rapid and well sustained; it seldom visits
the land, and is, when on it, just as clumsy and
waddling in its gait; its food is similar; its migrations
take place at much the same periods. On the
other hand, the Velvet Scoter is not such a strictly
maritime species, being frequently found on inland
waters, and even, during winter, is partial to wandering
up tidal rivers and visiting lakes. Its breeding-places
are also, as a rule, much farther from the sea,
and the nest is not unfrequently found at long
distances from any water at all. Odd pairs of this
Scoter are occasionally met with in our area during
the summer, and it has been suggested that the
species even breeds within the British limits; no
direct evidence, however, is forthcoming.</p>
<p>This Scoter is a late breeder, its eggs not being
laid before the end of June, or even early in July.
Although migrating in flocks, the birds appear to
separate into pairs as soon as the summer quarters
are reached. The duck and drake keep close
<span class="pb" id="Page_206">206</span>
company as usual, until the eggs are laid, after
which the latter leaves his mate to bring up the
brood alone. The Velvet Scoter breeds in the
Arctic and sub-Arctic regions of Europe and Asia,
from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and winters in
temperate latitudes. The breeding-places are chiefly
situated on the tundras, amongst scrub or coarse
vegetation, near the rivers and lakes. The scanty
nest of dry grass and dead leaves is often made
under some bush, and, before incubation commences,
is lined with down from the body of the female.
The eight or nine eggs are greyish-buff in colour,
smooth, and with little gloss. As soon as the young
are capable of flight, a movement south is made.</p>
<h3>SCAUP DUCK.</h3>
<p>This Duck, the <i>Anas marila</i> of Linnæus, or
<i>Fuligula marila</i> of modern naturalists, derives its
trivial name from its habit of frequenting the
“mussel-scaups,” or “mussel-scalps,” and is tolerably
abundant round the British coasts during winter.
The adult male is distinguished by having the head
and neck black, shot with metallic-green and purple,
and the back and scapulars vermiculated with white
and black. The general colour of the female is
brown, shading into grayish-white on the belly,
whilst a broad white band extends round the base of
the bill. Scaup Ducks begin to arrive off our more
northern coasts in September, but not until a month
later in the south. They begin to leave us again in
<span class="pb" id="Page_207">207</span>
March, and the migration continues through the
whole of April into May, the bird thus being one of
the last Ducks to retire north in spring. Although
by no means unfrequently met with on inland waters
during migration and in winter, the Scaup Duck is,
for the most part, a dweller on the sea, resorting, by
preference, to bays, estuaries, and the mouths of
large rivers, especially where a considerable amount
of mud is left bare at low water. It is gregarious
at this season, often congregating into large flocks,
and not unfrequently associates with other Sea
Ducks, notably with Wigeon and Pintail. It is a
most expert and ready diver, spends most of its
time upon the water, and appears always to prefer
to dive, rather than to fly, in avoiding pursuit. If
compelled to take wing, it rises with much splashing:
but, when once fairly in the air, is capable of rapid
flight, the quickly-beating pinions making a whistling
or rustling sound. The food of the Scaup Duck
consists largely of molluscs, but crustaceans and
marine plants are also eaten by this species. When
thus diving for food, the bird often remains below
for a minute at a time. It feeds much at night, and
passes pretty regularly from its usual haunts by day
to its feeding-places. The note of this Duck is a
most harsh and discordant <i>scaup</i>, but during flight
or courtship a hoarse and grating <i>kurr</i> is uttered.</p>
<p>The Scaup Duck arrives at its Arctic breeding-grounds
with the break-up of the ice. The bird
may probably pair for life, as the sexes keep close
<span class="pb" id="Page_208">208</span>
company all the year. Even at its breeding-grounds
it is a social bird, many pairs nesting in a small
area, and collecting at certain spots to feed. Its
breeding-grounds are on the Arctic tundras, near
the rush-and-grass-fringed lakes, amidst the thickets
of birches, junipers, and willows. The nest is
placed under a bush, or amongst herbage on a
bank, and is merely a hollow lined with dry grass
and sedge and dead leaves. To this, however, the
usual lining of down is added. The eggs, from
six to nine in number, are greenish-gray, and of
smooth texture. The female, as usual, takes sole
charge of the young. The Scaup Duck inhabits,
during summer, the Arctic regions of Europe, Asia,
and America, drawing southwards in winter almost
to the tropics.</p>
<h3>TUFTED DUCK.</h3>
<p>This species, the <i>Anas fuligula</i> of Linnæus, and
the <i>Fuligula cristata</i> of most modern ornithologists,
is a fairly common winter visitor to the British
coasts. It is not so exclusively a marine species as
some of the other diving Ducks, being often met
with on inland waters during that season. The
Tufted Duck derives its name from the bushy crest
or tuft of feathers growing from the top of the head,
and drooping down over the back of the neck on
the male. The head, neck, and crest are glossy
black, shot with purple and green; the upper parts,
the breast and the under tail coverts, are black; the
remainder of the underparts and the alar speculum
<span class="pb" id="Page_209">209</span>
are white. In the female, the black is replaced by
dark brown, and the white with brownish-gray: the
white speculum remains. Many Tufted Ducks
breed, and are apparently resident in our islands in
certain inland districts; but the majority of the
birds that occur round the coasts are migrants from
the north. This Duck begins to arrive off the
British coasts towards the end of October, and continues
to do so into November. It remains in
our area until the following spring, passing north in
March and April. Its principal haunts are the more
low-lying coasts, especially in the vicinity of estuaries
and mud-banks. It is gregarious enough at this
season, some of the flocks consisting of many thousands
of birds. In its habits generally, it very closely
resembles the Scaup Duck, a species whose company
it often keeps. It swims in much the same low
manner, dives with equally marvellous adeptness,
and shows the same propensity for keeping well out
to sea during the day, coming shorewards and into
shallower water at night to feed. It rises from the
sea in the same apparently laboured way, striking
the water with its feet—the splashing thus made by
a flock of birds being audible for a long distance.
Its alarm note during winter is a harsh <i>kurr</i>, but
the bird is not a very noisy one. The food of this
Duck consists of molluscs, small fish, and the roots,
stems, leaves, and buds of various water plants—all
of which is obtained by diving, the bird sometimes
remaining beneath the surface for as long as a minute.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_210">210</div>
<p>The Tufted Duck retires to inland waters for the
summer, its favourite resorts being meres, lakes,
and marshy grounds full of small ponds. A
partiality is also shown for small pools on heaths,
or fairly well-timbered ground. This Duck
probably pairs for life; in the breeding season it is
certainly social, many males consorting together,
and many females making their nests within a small
area. The nest is usually made in a tussock of
sedge, beneath a bush, or amongst rushes and
coarse grass, and is a mere hollow lined with a little
dry vegetation, and an abundance of down from the
female. The eggs are usually from eight to ten in
number, and greenish-buff. They are laid, according
to locality, from April to June. The female
alone brings up the young. Outside our islands,
the Tufted Duck breeds in the Arctic or temperate
parts of Europe and Asia, visiting the southern
portions of those continents, as well as North Africa,
during winter.</p>
<h3>POCHARD.</h3>
<p>This handsome Duck, the <i>Anas ferina</i> of
Linnæus, and the <i>Nyroca</i> or <i>Fuligula ferina</i> of
modern writers, is another winter visitor to the
British Islands, where, however, it breeds locally,
and in somewhat limited numbers, thus coming
within the category of our resident species. In
some districts the male of this Duck is known as
the “Red-headed Poker,” the female as the
“Dunbird” or “Dunker.” The colours of this
<span class="pb" id="Page_211">211</span>
Duck are very distinctive. The head and neck of
the male are rich chestnut; the back scapulars and
flanks are white, finely-pencilled or vermiculated
with black; the gorget and tail coverts are
black; the under-surface grayish-white; the
quills brown. The female has the head and neck
reddish-brown, the chin white, and the remainder
of the plumage much browner and more dingy than
in her mate. The Pochard is by no means exclusively
a marine Duck; in fact, this species appears
to be as much attached to fresh-waters as to the
sea. Unfortunately, there is one thing about most
of these Sea Ducks which does much to detract
from their interest, and that is, they cannot readily
be observed from the shore, and appear upon our
seas at a season when the elements render the coast
least attractive. Most of these Ducks lie well off
the land, where the wild-fowler alone is tempted to
follow them; or if approaching the shore more
closely, it is generally during rough tempestuous
weather, when all but the enthusiastic naturalist and
the gunner prefer to remain warm and comfortable
at home. The Pochard is no exception in this
respect. It arrives along our coasts in October,
and remains with us until the following March. It
is thoroughly aquatic in its habits, rarely visiting the
land, feeding both by day and by night (chiefly the
latter), and often flying for considerable distances,
about dusk, to waters where food is abundant.
Although its flight, at first, is slow and laboured, it
<span class="pb" id="Page_212">212</span>
soon becomes very rapid, and the quickly-beating
wings make a rustling sound very characteristic of
this species. The Pochard is another expert diver,
and by this means obtains most of its food, visiting
the bottom and bringing up masses of weeds to eat
them on the surface. On the coast its food largely
consists of crustaceans and molluscs, as well as
marine plants. The note of this species is a loud
and harsh <i>kurr</i>.</p>
<p>The haunts of the Pochard in summer are large
and open sheets of water, surrounded by a luxuriant
growth of sedge, rush, iris, and similar plants, or
situated on higher ground clothed with heath, gorse,
and coarse grass. It is a social bird during the
breeding period, several females often nesting close
together. The nest is always made near fresh
water, and in many cases absolutely floats on
rafts of fallen and rotting vegetation several yards
from the bank, or rests in some tussock surrounded
by shallow water. A bed of iris, or a crown of
rushes, is another favourite spot. It is made of
dry grass and fragments of any aquatic vegetation
obtainable, and lined with down from the female’s
body. The eggs—usually from eight to twelve,
sometimes more—are brownish-gray. As is usual
among Ducks, the female alone brings up the
numerous family. This Duck is widely distributed
over many parts of Europe, Northern Asia, and
North America, the birds of the latter continent being
regarded by some ornithologists as a distinct species.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_213">213</div>
<h3>GOLDEN-EYE.</h3>
<p>Misled by the variations of colour, due to age,
sex, or season, in this species, Linnæus described
different examples of it under the names of <i>Anas
clangula</i> and <i>A. glaucion</i>; whilst even in our own
day the females and immature birds are known
as “Morillons,” and regarded as distinct from the
much-rarer adult males or “Golden-Eyes,” which
are locally termed “Rattle wings” or “Whistlers”
from the noise produced by the wings during flight.
The Golden-Eye forms the type of the well-marked
genus <i>Clangula</i> of Fleming and of Boie, and is
known to most modern ornithologists as <i>C. glaucion</i>.
The male is a singularly striking and beautiful bird,
with the general colour of the upper parts black,
shot with metallic-green tints on the head, which
is adorned with a small, yet distinct, drooping crest;
with a large white patch at the base of the bill
under each eye, and with the drooping, elongated
scapulars, and the underparts, white. The female
is much less conspicuous, the black being replaced
by dark brown, the elongated scapulars are wanting,
and the spot under the eyes only faintly indicated.
The white double alar speculum is, however, very
strongly marked in both sexes. The Golden-Eye
is certainly more addicted to fresh-water than the
sea, and in most cases only quits these inland lakes
and ponds, when continued frost compels it to do
so. It then prefers such coasts as are low-lying,
<span class="pb" id="Page_214">214</span>
especially delighting in estuaries. It usually arrives
in the British Islands in October, and remains in
them until the following April or May. It is not
so gregarious as some of the other Ducks, and
generally assembles in parties rather than in flocks,
the larger gatherings being caused by exceptional
circumstances. Its habits very closely resemble
those of allied birds. It is seldom seen on the
land, and there walks with the waddling gait
peculiar to most Ducks; on the water, however,
it is active and graceful enough, swimming well,
and diving with great celerity, usually seeking by
this means to escape from danger. The note of
this Duck is a low croaking <i>kurr</i>, uttered both
when the bird is flying and when at rest. Its
food consists of crustaceans, molluscs, small fishes,
and various water plants and weeds. Most of this
is obtained by diving; and whilst a flock of birds is
feeding, several individuals keep watch, all never
diving together.</p>
<p>The evidence for this Duck having bred in
Scotland, is neither reliable nor conclusive. The
Golden-eye breeds throughout the Arctic and sub-Arctic
regions of Europe, Asia, and America, up
to the limits of the growth of trees: its winter
range extends to the tropics. It retires to its
northern summer haunts with the first signs of
spring. The favourite breeding resorts of this
Duck are tracts of more open forest country,
where the woods are full of swamps and lakes,
<span class="pb" id="Page_215">215</span>
and the timber contains plenty of holes. The
nest is usually made in a hollow tree, in a hole
in the trunk, or in a hollow branch, sometimes as
many as thirty feet from the ground; whilst the
partiality of the bird for a tree near a waterfall,
or running stream, has been noticed by more than
one observer. The nest consists entirely of the
down plucked from the female’s body. The ten
or twelve eggs are laid in May or June, and are
bright green in colour. The nest-hole is never
made by the Duck itself. The peasants of
Northern Scandinavia place hollow logs in suitable
places on the tree-trunks, which the Golden-Eyes
appear readily to avail themselves of, and
from which the eggs and down are systematically
taken. The young are conveyed to the ground,
one by one, pressed between the female’s bill and
her breast. The male is not known to assist in the
task of incubation, but may possibly do so.</p>
<h3>LONG-TAILED DUCK.</h3>
<p>This beautiful and remarkably elegant species,
the <i>Anas glacialis</i> of Linnæus, and the <i>Fuligula</i>
or <i>Harelda glacialis</i> of modern writers, is another
winter visitor to the British seas. It is only of
somewhat rare occurrence in our southern waters,
but northwards, off the Scotch coasts, it becomes
more frequent, and in certain localities—notably the
Hebrides, and the Orkneys and Shetlands—even
abundant. In the latter islands it is locally known
<span class="pb" id="Page_216">216</span>
as the “Calloo”; in other parts of Scotland the
clear, gabbling cry of this Duck has been freely
translated into the words “coal-an’-can’le-licht.”
To many American gunners the bird is known as
“Old Squaw,” from its oft-repeated cries. The
male bird is singularly graceful in appearance, his
long, black central tail feathers projecting five
inches beyond the remaining white ones. The
head and neck are white, but on either side, below
the ears, is a dark brown circular patch; the gorget
and the upper parts generally are black, against
which, however, the long, elongated white scapulars
are very conspicuous; the underparts, below the
gorget, are white. The female is much less showy,
the black parts in the male being dark brown in
this sex, and the white parts are suffused with
brown; the elongated scapulars are wanting.
During exceptionally severe weather the Long-tailed
Duck sometimes approaches our coasts in
unusual numbers, and in districts where it is
generally a scarce bird. This Duck is a late
migrant, seldom reaching even our most northerly
coasts before November. It returns north in April.
It is strictly marine in its haunts during winter,
often wandering long distances from land, and
approaching the shore usually under pressure of
stormy weather. Then it shows a decided preference
for rock-bound coasts, frequenting the creeks
and inlets which afford a considerable amount of
shelter. The Long-tailed Duck is gregarious at
<span class="pb" id="Page_217">217</span>
this season, like most of its kind, although the
flocks are seldom or never so large as the gatherings
of Scoters and others. Its flight is remarkably
quick, the long tail making the bird look extremely
elegant. It is also an expert diver, disappearing as
quick as thought, and often going for long distances
beneath the surface, like a Grebe or a Shag. It
obtains most of its food by diving, and, like the
Eider, often comes shorewards with the tide. It
feeds in deeper water, too, than many of its allies,
as much of its prey is captured, not at the bottom,
but floating in the sea. This food consists of small
molluscs, crustaceans, minute marine animals,
insects, and water plants, and weeds. Its note
may be described as a loud <i>cal-loo-oo</i>.</p>
<p>The Long-tailed Duck breeds in the Arctic
regions of Europe, Asia, and North America,
above the limits of forest growth, and, possibly,
as far north as land exists. During summer, it
frequents inland pools and lakes; odd pairs taking
possession of the former, many pairs congregating
on the latter. The birds arrive in the Arctic
regions with the break-up of the ice, congregating
in the pools amongst the floes. The nest is usually
placed in some sheltered nook, amongst birch and
willow scrub, in long grass, or on the drifted
rubbish by the banks of the subsided rivers. It is
little more than a hollow, lined with down. In this,
during June or early July, from seven to twelve
buffish-green eggs are laid by the female. It is a
<span class="pb" id="Page_218">218</span>
most remarkable fact that the drake of this species
assists the duck in bringing up the young, but not, so
far as I can learn, in incubating the eggs. During
the whole breeding season this Duck is remarkably
tame, loth to take wing, and swimming out
into the centre of the lake for safety, if threatened
by danger. The winter migrations of this Duck
are not very extended, the Mediterranean Basin,
perhaps, marking the extreme southern limits.</p>
<h3>MERGANSERS.</h3>
<p>The Mergansers are a well-defined little group of
fish-eating Ducks, forming the sub-family Merginæ.
They are characterised by their slender, narrow bill,
furnished on both upper and lower mandible with
saw-like lamellæ or denticulations. The head is
always more or less crested; in most other respects
they resemble the Diving Ducks, all the species
seeking for their food by diving. The sexes differ
in colour of plumage, but not, perhaps, to such a
marked extent as in some other divisions of the
<span class="sc">Anatidæ</span>. Six species of Mergansers are known to
science, of which four are included in the British
list—one as a rare visitor from North America.
Of the remaining two species, one inhabits South
America, the other the Auckland Islands. The
young, as usual, are hatched covered with down,
and able soon to follow the female to the water.
In their moulting and progress to maturity they
resemble preceding species.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_219">219</div>
<h3>RED-BREASTED MERGANSER.</h3>
<p>This handsome sea-bird, the <i>Mergus serrator</i> of
Linnæus and most modern ornithologists, is unfortunately
a winter visitor only to English waters.
In Scotland and Ireland, however, it is one of the
most familiar coast birds all the year round. The
Red-breasted Merganser cannot readily be confused
with any other Duck. The crested head and upper
neck are black, shot with green and purple, the
lower neck and upper breast are buff, streaked with
black, the feathers on the sides of the breast having
broad black margins, the flanks are strongly vermiculated
with black, the back is black, vermiculated
with gray on the lower portions, the inner scapulars
are black, the outer ones white, the speculum is
white, barred with black, and the underparts (except
the flanks) are white. The female has the head
and neck reddish-brown, and the upper parts brown,
the black-bordered feathers on the sides of the
breast are absent. Although found in many inland
districts, the favourite resorts of the Red-breasted
Merganser are wild, rocky coasts, such as contain
plenty of quiet bays and creeks, and lochs studded
with islands. Waters where the bottom is sandy
or rocky, are preferred to those in which it is
composed of mud. Many birds of this species
visit our coasts for the winter from more northern
haunts, whilst some of those dwelling in Scottish
waters draw southwards at that season. This
<span class="pb" id="Page_220">220</span>
Merganser is more or less gregarious, and may be
met with in flocks out at sea, or during rough
weather sheltering nearer the land in lochs. Early
in spring, and onwards through the summer, the
Red-breasted Merganser lives closely in pairs, flying
and feeding in company. I have noticed that this
bird visits certain spots to feed very regularly,
according to the state of the tide; almost to the
minute I could depend upon certain pairs passing
certain spots on their way to these feeding-grounds.
I know of few prettier sights than the actions of a
pair of Mergansers in some quiet, deep sea loch in
early summer. The birds swim side by side close
inshore below the rocks, first one diving, and then
another, rarely, if ever, both descending at the
same time when feeding; but when engaged in
courtship, the drake will pursue the duck, and
splash about in the water in a most uproarious way,
often diving after her in the eagerness of his chase.
The bird swims well, if rather low in the water,
and dives head foremost with a leap just like the
Shag. The food of this species consists largely of
fish, but crustaceans, crabs especially, and molluscs
are also devoured. Most of this food is obtained
whilst diving, each capture being brought to the
surface to be swallowed, the bird drinking after
doing so, and not unfrequently rising three parts
out of the water and flapping its wings. The note
is a guttural <i>kurr</i>, heard chiefly during flight. The
bird flies well and rapidly when once free from the
<span class="pb" id="Page_221">221</span>
water, but often flaps along the surface for several
yards before that is accomplished.</p>
<p>The Red-breasted Merganser breeds in May, the
eggs being laid during the latter half of that month,
and the first half of June. Although not gregarious
during this period, it is, at any rate, social, for
several pairs may be found nesting very close
together, if keeping somewhat to themselves. An
island is always preferred to the mainland. The
nest is placed under a rock or bank, in a rabbit
burrow, or amongst dense heather and gorse at no
great distance from the water. In many cases the
eggs are laid upon the bare ground, in others a few
dry vegetable fragments are collected into a slight
hollow, but a plentiful bed of down gradually
accumulates around them. From eight to twelve
olive-gray eggs are laid, upon which the female
alone sits. The male, however, is in attendance on
the water near by, and the duck joins him there
during the short periods that she leaves her charge
to feed and to bathe. If alarmed, the hen bird
slips off very quietly. When the young are hatched
the drake retires to moult, and the female brings
them up unaided. Outside our islands this Merganser
is widely distributed over the northern parts
of Europe, Asia, and America, drawing southwards
in winter.</p>
<h3>GOOSANDER.</h3>
<p>As this beautiful Duck, the <i>Mergus merganser</i>
of ornithologists, not only occurs in some numbers
<span class="pb" id="Page_222">222</span>
in British waters as a winter visitor, but breeds
sparingly within our limits, it has some claim to be
included in the present volume, although it cannot
be regarded as a very striking feature in coast bird
life. It is also far less exclusively marine than the
preceding species. The Goosander is an even more
handsome bird than the Red-breasted Merganser,
and is the largest species in the present sub-family.
The colours of the male are arranged in a most
effective and strongly-contrasted way. The head
and neck are dark metallic-green, the breast is a
delicate and beautiful pink, the upper parts and the
wings are black and white, the under parts below
the breast white. The female has the head reddish-brown,
the upper parts grayish-brown or pale chestnut,
the lower buffish-white. In its habits and in
the haunts it frequents, the Goosander very closely
resembles its smaller ally. When, in winter, frequenting
the coast it delights in the bays and fjords,
but occasionally wanders to less precipitous shores,
notably estuaries and the mouths of tidal rivers.
It is a remarkably agile bird in the water, swimming
and diving with equal ease, but on the land
its movements are ungainly, the bird wriggling
along with its breast almost touching the ground,
in a very Diver-like manner. In diving, it often
descends to a great depth. Although not often
seen much on shore, it possesses the Cormorant-like
habit of basking on some rock jutting from the
water, sitting with its body upright and wings half
<span class="pb" id="Page_223">223</span>
expanded. Its food consists of fish, crabs, molluscs,
and aquatic insects. Most of this is obtained
whilst the bird is diving.</p>
<p>The Goosander, in our islands, is as yet only
known to breed in a few localities in the Highlands.
Its eggs are laid during April and May. Its
favourite nesting haunts are open, swampy forests,
containing lakes and rocky streams. The nest is
generally made in a hole in a tree, but crevices in
rocks, or cavities in exposed tree roots by the water
side, are sometimes selected. But little nest is made,
although when the full clutch of eggs is deposited a
thick and abundant bed of down surrounds them.
The eggs are from eight to twelve in number,
creamy white and glossy. It is not known whether
the drake assists in the duty of incubation. The
Goosander has a wide geographical range, which
extends over Arctic and North temperate Europe,
Asia, and America, and more southern areas during
winter.</p>
<h3>SMEW.</h3>
<p>This species, the <i>Mergus albellus</i> of systematists,
is not only the smallest of the Mergansers, but by
far the least common in British waters. Its visits
are chiefly confined to the eastern coast line of
England and Scotland and the south coast of England.
Even in these areas adult males—from their
strongly-contrasted black-and-white plumage locally
known as “Nuns”—are much more rarely met with
than females and young birds, called by the gunners
<span class="pb" id="Page_224">224</span>
of the east coast “Red-headed Smews.” Unfortunately,
the male Smew is a bird that does not
approach the coast much, and the female, from her
duller colouration and small size, is readily overlooked.
Lastly, it is the least maritime of the
family. The male Smee or Smew, in nuptial
plumage, is black and white—some of the former
colour displayed in curious crescentic markings on
the shoulders and in front of the wings, the elongated
crest is pearly white, emphasised by greenish
black, and the flanks are finely vermiculated with
gray. The female has the head reddish-brown.
During winter the Smew is gregarious, living in
flocks of thirty or forty individuals, mostly immature.
It prefers the more open water at some
distance from shore, seeking to evade pursuit by
swimming, but, if fired at, diving at once and reappearing
far out of danger. When feeding most
of the birds dive at once, rising in scattered order,
but soon bunching together as each bird swims to
a central rallying point. The Smew does not visit
the land much, and even sleeps upon the water.
It is a most accomplished diver, descending to great
depths, and using its wings to assist it through the
water, which it traverses with as much ease as a
Cormorant or an Auk. Upon our coasts its food
consists principally of small fishes and crustaceans.
Its note is a harsh <i>kurr</i>, but at its breeding grounds
it is said to utter a bell-like call, hence in Northern
Asia it has been called the “Bell Duck.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_225">225</div>
<p>The Smew breeds in the forest swamps of the
Arctic regions, making its nest in a hollow fallen
log, or in a hole in a tree or stump. The eggs are
laid upon the powdered wood, but are eventually
surrounded with a quantity of down from the body
of the parent. The seven or eight eggs, creamy-white
in colour, are laid late in June or early in
July. The ducklings are said to be conveyed to
the water by the female in her bill.</p>
<h3>GEESE.</h3>
<p>The Geese form an extensive and well-defined
sub-family of the <span class="sc">Anatidæ</span> termed Anserinæ. They
are distinguished from their allies by having the
lores covered with feathers, and the tarsus reticulated
back and front. The Geese differ further
from the Swans, in having a relatively longer
tarsus, and much shorter neck; and from the
Ducks by their short, robust, subconical bill.
Geese frequent both land and water, inland districts
as well as the coasts and seas. The sexes do not
present such striking contrasts of colour as in
the Ducks. Geese moult once in the year, in
autumn. The distribution of the sub-family is
almost a cosmopolitan one, but the New World
contains the greatest number of species. Half-a-dozen
species are more or less abundant visitors
to our islands in winter, but one species only breeds
within our limits, and even this has been extirpated
from most of its ancient haunts. These half-dozen
<span class="pb" id="Page_226">226</span>
species divide themselves into two distinct groups,
four of them consisting of the Gray Geese, and two
the Black Geese. The birds in the former group
are the least maritime in their haunts, visiting
the land to feed, whilst those in the latter division
are inseparably associated with the sea during their
sojourn in our area. As the former group contains
the familiar “Wild Goose”—which is the original
stock from which the farmyard Goose has been
derived—we will deal first with the species contained
in it.</p>
<h3>GRAY LAG GOOSE.</h3>
<p>This fine bird, the type of the genus <i>Anser</i>, and
the <i>Anser cinereus</i> of most modern writers, claims
distinction not only as being the origin of the
domestic race, but as the one species indigenous
to the British Islands. For nearly a hundred
years, however, the Gray Lag Goose has ceased
to breed in its old haunts, the English Fens;
it continues to breed, yet very locally, in the
Hebrides, and in certain parts of the Highlands.
Its domestication must extend to a very ancient
date; yet captivity, beyond increasing its size and
its fecundity, has caused but trifling variation in
its colour. The bird, therefore, must be too
familiar to every reader to require any description
here. Once apparently so common, the Gray Lag
Goose is now one of our rarest birds, a fact of great
significance to the student of the geographical
distribution or dispersal of species. The derivation
<span class="pb" id="Page_227">227</span>
of one of this bird’s trivial names—Lag—has
given rise to much speculation, until Professor
Skeat<SPAN class="fn" id="fr_6" href="#fn_6">[6]</SPAN> apparently solved the riddle by suggesting
that the word—which is an equivalent for late—applied
to the bird’s habit of lagging behind to
breed in the Fens, after other migratory Geese
had departed north. A few Gray Lag Geese
locally appear, chiefly on our eastern seaboard
in winter, and it is more than probable that,
normally, most of these birds are the individuals
still continuing to inhabit the British Islands.
These birds generally resort to the coast, frequenting
sand-banks and low islands during the
day, as a safe retreat in which to rest and sleep,
coming landwards again at dusk to feed. This
Goose, although gregarious during winter, seldom
or never consorts with other species, although
ready enough to mingle with its tame descendants
on the stubbles and pastures. Where not persecuted,
this Goose is a day feeder: but incessant
shooting has caused it to vary its habits in this
respect, and to defer its visits to dangerous
grounds until darkness has set in. It shows
little partiality for water, only resorting thereto
when alarmed, or during the helpless period
of its moult, when its quills all drop out together
and incapacitate it for flight. It swims well and
buoyantly, however, and when wounded has been
<span class="pb" id="Page_228">228</span>
known to dive. The flight of this species is both
rapid and powerful, the birds usually forming into
Vs or Ws to perform their journeys. The call-note
is a loud, far-sounding <i>gag-gag</i>, variously
modulated on different occasions. Its food consists
largely of grass and tender grain plants,
but grain of all kinds is sought, together with
various buds and leaves.</p>
<p>The Gray Lag Goose breeds early, in some
localities the eggs being laid in March or April,
a month later in the more northern districts. It
is a social bird at this period, and numbers of
nests are often made close together. Its breeding
grounds are secluded moors and swamps. The
huge nest, made on the ground, is placed amongst
heath or dense vegetation, and is composed of
branches of heather, dry grass, rushes, bracken,
turf, and so on, and lined with down. The six
or eight eggs are creamy-white. The gander keeps
guard close to the nest, whilst the goose incubates
the eggs; and when the young are reared a move
is usually made seawards.</p>
<h3>WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE.</h3>
<p>This Goose, the <i>Branta albifrons</i> of Scopoli, but
the <i>Anser albifrons</i> of most modern writers, is a
winter visitor to our islands, not only local in distribution,
but much more abundant in some years than
others. It may be readily distinguished from the
preceding species by its orange-yellow bill, white
<span class="pb" id="Page_229">229</span>
face (a narrow and varying line of white feathers
round the base of the bill), and broad black bars
across the belly. It is, perhaps, most abundant on
the Irish coasts, those of the south and south-west
of England coming next, whilst on the east coast—a
region so famous for Wild Fowl—it becomes rare.
In Scotland its principal resorts are in the Outer
Hebrides. The habits of all these “Gray” Geese
are very much alike. During winter the present
species is gregarious, and passes with great regularity
from the sand-banks, where it rests and
sleeps, to the more inland pastures where it feeds.
Its food, flight, and actions generally resemble those
of allied birds. The note is said to be more harsh
and cackling than that of the preceding species,
hence the name “Laughing Goose,” applied in
many places to this bird.</p>
<p>The White-fronted Goose breeds in the Arctic
regions, and was met with by Middendorff breeding
in great numbers on the Siberian tundras. The
nest was a mere hollow at the summit of a grassy
knoll, lined with down. The eggs, from five to
seven in number, are creamy-white.</p>
<h3>BEAN GOOSE.</h3>
<p>This species, the <i>Anas segetum</i> of Gmelin, and
the <i>Anser segetum</i> of modern ornithologists, is
locally distributed round the British coasts during
winter, but of more general occurrence on passage,
especially in autumn. The Bean Goose may be
<span class="pb" id="Page_230">230</span>
distinguished from the two preceding Geese by the
colour of its bill, which has only the central portion
orange-yellow, the base and the nail being black.
This species arrives in our area during October and
November. It is gregarious during winter, congregating
in flocks of varying size, which wander
about considerably, influenced by the exigencies of
the weather and the supply of food. These gatherings
are difficult to approach. During the day the
Bean Geese come inland to search for their food,
on the stubbles and newly-sown grain lands. A
long-continued frost will keep them to the coast;
but during spells of open, yet rough and stormy
weather, they prefer to remain in inland haunts,
from which, however, they soon depart at the sign
of a coming frost. When feeding, Bean Geese
generally station sentinels to guard the flock by
giving timely notice of the approach of an enemy.
Their food consists of grass, grain, tender shoots of
grain, and the roots of various plants. During night,
when they are certainly more easily approached,
they repair to sand banks and low islands, or to
the open sea, where they sleep and preen their
feathers. This Goose swims well, but rises from
water in a somewhat laboured manner. Its note is
the familiar <i>gag-gag</i>, variously modulated according
to circumstances.</p>
<p>The Bean Goose breeds on the Arctic tundras,
beyond or near the limits of forest growth, across
Europe and Asia, from the Atlantic to the Pacific.
<span class="pb" id="Page_231">231</span>
The nest is made early in June, amongst the tall
grass and sedge of an islet on one of the tundra
lakes, or on rising ground on the bank, and is
merely a hollow, into which is gathered a little dry
grass and a quantity of down from the body of the
parent. In this nest three or four creamy-white
eggs are laid. As soon as the young are half-grown,
the Bean Geese begin to collect into flocks
again, and to complete their moult. Like other
Geese, at this time they are very helpless, being
incapable of flight, as the quills drop out suddenly,
and nearly all together.</p>
<p>Allusion must here be made to the Pink-footed
Goose, the <i>Anser brachyrhynchus</i> of Baillon, long
confounded with the Bean Goose, and perhaps only
sub-specifically distinct from it. As pointed out by
Mr. Cecil Smith, the characters mainly depended
upon to distinguish this bird from the Bean Goose—pink
legs and central portion of the bill—are not
constant; but this may be due to accidental reversion.
A more important difference, because
apparently constant, is the bluish-gray colour of the
upper wing coverts. These, however, are questions
that do not come within the scope of the present
volume, and must be left to the more advanced
students of birds. The Pink-footed Goose is a
tolerably common winter visitor to our islands,
especially to the eastern districts. Its habits are
not known to differ in any important respect. But
little is known of its habits during the breeding
<span class="pb" id="Page_232">232</span>
season. The nest is said to be made on low rocks
near the sea, or on higher cliffs in the fjords some
distance inland. The four or five eggs are creamy-white.</p>
<h3>BRENT GOOSE.</h3>
<p>The “Black” Geese differ in many important
respects from their allies the “Gray” Geese, and
are generally separated from them under the
scientific terms of <i>Bernicla</i> or <i>Branta</i>. These
birds are characterised by their short, sub-conical
bills, in which the lamellæ are concealed, or nearly
so, and by the general dark colour of the plumage,
relieved by white, or, in some cases, various strongly-contrasted
colours. Two species are British, in the
sense of visiting us during winter. The first of
these the Brent Goose—the <i>Anser brenta</i> of Brisson,
and the <i>Bernicla brenta</i> of modern naturalists—is
by far the most common and widely distributed of
the Geese in our islands, but it exclusively confines
itself to the sea. It may be met with off almost all
parts of our coast-line, but is most abundant along
the east and south. The adult bird may readily be
distinguished by the general black colouration of the
breast and upper parts, relieved by small white
patches on the sides of the neck, the pale margins
to the wing coverts and mantle, and the white upper
tail coverts. The lower parts below the breast are
dark slate-gray, many of the feathers having paler
margins. Young birds, however, do not display the
white neck patches. The Brent Goose is seldom
<span class="pb" id="Page_233">233</span>
seen in any numbers on our seas before October;
but from that date onwards vast flocks continue to
arrive, and the bird continues abundant until the
end of the following March. Certainly some
districts are far more favoured by this species than
others. In my own experience I may name the
Wash, where I have seen this Goose in such
enormous packs as densely to cover many acres of
mud-flat; whilst their noisy clamour, in the still
hours of early morning, could be heard for a mile
or more across the wide, desolate salt-marshes.
The Brent Goose passes its time either on the sea
or on the muds. It is remarkably gregarious, young
and old congregating together, wary and watchful
always, and never allowing a close approach on the
land. So densely do the birds pack, that a disturbed
flock taking wing looks as though the very surface
of the mud or sea were rising in one solid, inseparable
mass. The principal food of this Goose
consists of grass, wrack, and laver. On certain
mud-banks these plants grow very thickly, and to
these the Brents resort as soon as the tide recedes
sufficiently for them to reach and to tear up their
favourite food. In studied order the birds advance,
feeding as they come, sentinels remaining on the
look-out in turn, until all are satisfied, or the incoming
tide covers their food-plants. Then back,
in a solid mass, they go towards the open sea, or to
some low bank, there to rest and preen their plumage,
and to wait until another tide has ebbed, and left
<span class="pb" id="Page_234">234</span>
exposed their pastures. This bird, for the most
part, is a day feeder; but during moonlight nights
it will visit the exposed banks, doubtless the tide
having considerable influence on its habits in this
respect. The flight of this Goose, if rather laboured,
is powerful and well-sustained; and during its progression
the birds often form into Vs or Ws, or
some other lineal pattern. The note of the Brent
Goose is a loud, oft-repeated, and variously-modulated
<i>hank</i> or <i>honk</i>, uttered, not only when
the bird is on the ground, but during flight.</p>
<p>But very little is known of the nidification of the
Brent Goose. It breeds in the highest Arctic
latitudes, selecting, if possible, an island near the
coast, making a rude nest in some hollow in the
ground, of dry grass, stalks of plants, and moss,
and warmly lined with down. The four or five
eggs are creamy-white in colour. The gander
keeps watch and ward near the nest, whilst the
goose incubates the eggs. By the end of July
most of the Brent Geese begin to moult, and during
some part of the time they are quite incapable of
flight. At this critical period they keep closely to the
sea. Mr. Trevor-Battye, in his interesting book,
<i>Icebound on Kolguev</i>, gives a graphic description of
the way the Samoyeds capture the Brent Goose
whilst it is incapable of flight. Instinctively aware
of their helplessness, the Geese endeavour to get to
the sea, and on it congregate in large flocks, until
their quills have grown. But the Samoyeds cleverly
<span class="pb" id="Page_235">235</span>
surround them—often taking advantage of a dense
sea-fog to do so—and quietly drive them into a
netted enclosure on the shore, where they are killed
at leisure. One of these grand “drives” witnessed
by Mr. Trevor-Battye resulted in the capture of
upwards of three thousand Brents! A form or
variety of the Brent Goose, with the under parts
below the breast nearly white, is commonly found
consorting with birds of the typical colour. It is
the <i>Bernicla glaucogaster</i> of Brehm, and, as far as
is known, breeds only in the Nearctic region. It
is not known to differ in its habits from the more
typical form.</p>
<h3>BERNACLE GOOSE.</h3>
<p>This somewhat larger species, the <i>Anas leucopsis</i>
of Bechstein, and the <i>Anser leucopsis</i> of most
modern naturalists, is a fairly common winter visitor
to the British coasts, where it is most abundant on
the western littoral, from Cornwall up to the
Hebrides. Unlike the Brent, the Bernacle Goose
frequently wanders inland to winter on large sheets
of fresh-water. This Goose is readily distinguished
by its white cheeks, and much lighter underparts
below the breast. Owing to peculiarities of distribution,
rather perhaps than to choice, the Bernacle
Goose frequents more rocky coasts than its ally. It
is also just as gregarious, but owing to the nature
of its food is more of a land species, and certainly
more nocturnal in its habits. Although frequenting
sand-banks and mud-flats to sleep and to rest, it
<span class="pb" id="Page_236">236</span>
does not obtain much food upon them. Its food is
principally composed of marsh grass, and to obtain
this it comes up from the sea to the saltings, and the
banks of lakes and tidal rivers. Its flight and
actions generally very closely resemble those of the
Brent Goose. The note is similar. Nothing is
known of the breeding grounds or the nesting
habits of the Bernacle Goose. It has, however,
been known to breed in confinement. The eggs
are creamy white.</p>
<h3>SWANS.</h3>
<p>These large and handsome birds form the small
but well-defined sub-family Cygninæ. They may
be distinguished from all other species in the
<span class="sc">Anatidæ</span>, by having the lores, or space between the
eye and the base of the bill, bare of feathers, and
by their reticulated tarsus. In this sub-family, as in
the Anserinæ, the sexes are nearly alike in colour.
Swans moult only once in the year, in autumn.
The young birds—known as Cygnets—are hatched
covered with down, and able to swim. In first
plumage they are uniform grayish-brown; and,
unlike the Geese, they appear not to undergo any
moult during their first autumn, but after the moult,
which takes place in their second autumn, they
acquire the pure white plumage of the adult.
Although this sub-family contains but seven species,
probably all referable to one genus, its distribution
is wide, embracing the Palæarctic, Nearctic, Neo-tropical,
and Australian regions. Besides the Mute
<span class="pb" id="Page_237">237</span>
Swan, two other species are British, in the sense of
visiting our area to winter.</p>
<h3>HOOPER SWAN.</h3>
<p>This fine bird, the <i>Cygnus musicus</i> of Bechstein,
as well as of most modern ornithologists, is a
tolerably common winter visitor to the British
Islands, frequenting inland waters as well as the
coasts. It is of more frequent occurrence in
Scotland, than in England or Ireland. The
Hooper—sometimes rendered Whooper—or Whistling
Swan, both names being derived from the
bird’s notes, may be distinguished from its two
British allies by having the basal portion of the bill
extending below the nostrils, yellow. Like many
other species that visit us during winter from the
high north, its numbers vary a good deal in
different years, according to the mildness or severity
of the winter in regions lying directly north or
north-east of our area. In periods of long continued
frost, great numbers of this Swan collect off
certain parts of our coasts, driven seawards from
inland waters. This Swan is rarely seen in British
waters before October or November, whilst in some
years it does not make its appearance in certain
localities before mid-winter. Its spring migration
northwards lasts through April and May. Whilst
on passage the flocks of this species form into some
rectilinear figure and fly at vast heights. Gätke
remarks, that at Heligoland this Swan is seen most
<span class="pb" id="Page_238">238</span>
frequently during long-continued frost, flights of
ten, twenty, or more, passing in long rows, one
behind the other, uttering their loud clanging cries
as they go. The flight of this species is rapid and
regular, the swish swish of the long wings being
heard for a long distance, and the bird’s long neck
outstretched. There are few more graceful birds
on the water than the Mute Swan, with its arched
neck and raised plumes, yet the Hooper is even
ungainly looking, the neck being held straight.
Hoopers are shy and wary birds, and generally
keep well out from shore, except when feeding.
The food of this Swan is mostly of a vegetable
nature, aquatic plants and grasses, but insects and
molluscs are also eaten. Its note sounds almost
like the short blast of a trumpet, uttered in
succession.</p>
<p>The Hooper Swan breeds in the Arctic regions
of Europe and Asia, its favourite resorts being the
islands in the deltas of the great rivers that flow
into the northern ocean, or on the banks of the
great lakes on the tundras, or beside one of the
many creeks or inlets spreading out from the main
rivers. This Swan pairs for life. The huge nest
is composed of coarse grass and other herbage,
piled up on the ground, and often increased in bulk
as incubation proceeds. The eggs, from three to
seven in number, are creamy-white in colour and
rough in texture.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_239">239</div>
<h3>BEWICK’S SWAN.</h3>
<p>Long confused with the preceding Swan, the
distinctness of the present species was recognised by
Yarrell, who named it <i>Cygnus bewicki</i>, in honour of
Thomas Bewick, naturalist and engraver on wood,
known to most readers as the author of the
<i>British Birds</i> and <i>British Quadrupeds</i>. Bewick’s
Swan is only a winter visitor to the coasts and
inland waters of the British Islands, spending the
summer far away in the Arctic regions of Europe
and Asia. The habits of this Swan are very
similar to those of the preceding species. The bird
may be distinguished from the Hooper by its
much smaller size, and by the yellow patch at the
base of the bill being much less in extent, never
extending below the nostrils. Bewick’s Swan is
perhaps not quite so maritime as the Hooper, preferring
the large inland sheets of water, and more
or less sheltered lochs and fjords, to the open sea.
It is seen in greatest numbers in Ireland and
Scotland, and during severe winters visits us in
greatest numbers. At these times some of the
flocks are remarkably large, numbering hundreds or
even thousands of individuals. Its food is not
known to differ from that of the preceding species;
its flight is equally rapid; and its note, short and
musical, has been syllabled as <i>tong</i>. Imposing as
these birds are, and by no means rare, they can
scarcely be classed as very prominent features of
<span class="pb" id="Page_240">240</span>
the bird-life of the sea, so far as ordinary observation
goes.</p>
<p>Bewick’s Swan reaches its Arctic summer haunts
towards the end of May. Although its eggs have
been obtained on the islands in the deltas of the
Petchora and the Yenesay, these were taken by
unscientific observers. Mr. Trevor-Battye, so far
as I know, was the first naturalist to see the nest
and take the eggs of Bewick’s Swan, on the island
of Kolguev. This nest—of which he gives a
beautiful figure<SPAN class="fn" id="fr_7" href="#fn_7">[7]</SPAN>—he describes as a mound, about
two and a-half feet high, and four and a-half feet
in diameter at the base, perfectly smooth, and
tapering to the circular top, which was not more
than two feet across. It was made of little bunches
of green moss, with a few scraps of lichen, and a
little dry grass pulled up with the moss. The
cavity at the top was lined with dead grass, mixed
with a little down. This nest contained three eggs.
These are smaller and whiter than those of the
Hooper.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_241">241</div>
<h2 id="c6"><i>Petrels</i></h2>
<div class="fig"> id="fig6"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_248.jpg" alt="THE STORMY PETREL. Chapter vi." width-obs="500" height-obs="343" /> <p class="center"><span class="small">THE STORMY PETREL. <i>Chapter</i> vi.</span></p> </div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_243">243</div>
<h2 class="eee">CHAPTER VI. <br/>PETRELS.</h2>
<blockquote>
<p><i>Petrels—Characteristics—Changes
of Plumage—Fulmar
Petrel—Fork-tailed Petrel—Stormy
Petrel—Manx Shearwater.</i></p>
</blockquote>
<p>Of all sea-birds, the Petrels are the most pelagic.
They are the birds of the wide ocean, even
showing small partiality for narrow seas, and chiefly
frequenting for breeding purposes only such spots
as face the widest expanses of water. They are
the most marine of birds, yet they form one of the
least apparent features in the bird-life of the sea,
and more especially when that bird-life is studied
from the coast. Their crepuscular, or nocturnal,
habits during their short visits to the land to breed,
their sombre hues, their low flight, just above the
waves, all combine in rendering these birds exceptionally
difficult of observation. The Petrels
present such exclusively distinctive characters that
many systematists relegate them to an order by
themselves. This order is termed <span class="sc">Tubinares</span>,
because the birds contained in it have the nostrils
tubular—a character which serves, at a glance, to
<span class="pb" id="Page_244">244</span>
distinguish a Petrel from all other species. Other
external characters are their hooked beak, webbed
feet, and long wings. More than a hundred species
of Petrels are known to science, which are dispersed
throughout the seas and oceans of the world.
The young, as far as is known, are hatched covered
with down, but they remain in the nest until capable
of flight. These birds moult once in the year.
None of the species are very remarkable for bright
colouration, although, in some, the colours—brown,
black, gray, and white—are strongly contrasted.
Several species of Petrel wander occasionally to
the British seas, but only four species breed within
our area, and of these we now propose to treat.</p>
<h3>FULMAR PETREL.</h3>
<p>This Petrel, the <i>Fulmarus glacialis</i> of ornithologists,
is very like a small gull in appearance, and is
one of the largest representatives of its family in
the northern hemisphere. Although it abounds in
various parts of the British seas, and was said by
Darwin to be the most numerous bird in the world,
so oceanic is it in its habits, that the wanderer by
the shore might not catch a glimpse of a single
example during the course of an entire year.
Perhaps this Petrel is more frequently observed off
our eastern coasts than anywhere else, except in
the vicinity of its breeding place; it is often caught
in the flight-nets on the Wash, and is said to be a
common frequenter of the deep-sea fishing grounds
<span class="pb" id="Page_245">245</span>
in the North Sea. Occasionally storm-driven birds
may be met with close inshore. The Fulmar
Petrel is one of the most familiar birds of high
latitudes, following in the wake of whaling vessels
and sealers, and known to the sailors by the name
of “Molly Mawk.” In its actions above the sea,
the Fulmar very closely resembles a Gull, beating
about in the same dilatory manner, and searching
for any food chancing to float upon the surface,
following in the wake of vessels for miles to pick
up the scraps thrown overboard. Its usual food,
however, appears to be cuttlefish and sorrel. It is
also very partial to whale blubber. It often alights
upon the sea, either to rest or sleep, or to eat its
food; whilst its flight is not only powerful, but
capable of being sustained for long periods. When
searching for food, this bird flies close to the waves,
every now and then gliding along with wings
nearly motionless, maintaining its speed with a
few vigorous beats from time to time.</p>
<p>The Fulmar Petrel becomes by far the most
interesting at its breeding stations. These, however,
are isolated and few. In the British area
there is only one important nesting place of this
species, and that is at St. Kilda—a group of rocky
turf-covered islets, that form an ideal haunt for every
species of Petrel that frequents the British seas, or
even a considerable portion of the North Atlantic.
A fortnight’s sojourn on St. Kilda has made me
familiar with many of the Fulmar’s habits during
<span class="pb" id="Page_246">246</span>
the breeding season. It is the bird of all others
characteristic of the place; one is reminded of its
presence in many ways, but most persistently by
the strong smell emitted by this and all birds of
the Petrel family, and which scents everything and
every person on the islands. The Fulmar is extremely
gregarious during the breeding season, and
many thousands of birds congregate here during
the summer. It is also exceedingly attached to
its breeding places, visiting them season by season,
for time out of mind, and very probably pairs for
life. At St. Kilda, its favourite nesting places are
on the downlike cliffs, places where the soil is deep
and loamy, and allows the bird to excavate a hollow
of varying depth. But there is not sufficient accommodation
of this kind for all, and great numbers
have to resort to the ledges, crevices, and hollows
on the face of the beetling cliffs, or find a site in
some cranny amongst the rough piled-up masses
of rock. Wherever possible, the Fulmar evidently
likes to burrow into the ground, but the hole in
most cases is not big enough to conceal the bird.
These hollows are lined with a little dry grass, but
in many instances a nest of no kind is made. Some
of the nests I examined on the bare ledges of the
cliffs, were made of small bits of rock. Vast
numbers of nests are made close together, and
from a distance the sitting birds—all blended
together—look like patches of snow. The Fulmar
lays but a single egg each season, white in colour,
<span class="pb" id="Page_247">247</span>
rough and chalky in texture, and with a strong
pungent smell, which is retained by the shell for
years after the egg has been taken. This egg is
laid in May.</p>
<p>There are few more stirring sights in the bird
world, than a colony of Fulmars. Time can never
efface the vivid scene that was presented to me, as
for the first time I peered over the mighty cliff
Connacher, and viewed the countless hosts of
Fulmars at their nesting-places. Just before the
summit was reached, a few Fulmars could be seen
flying above the cliff, then dropping behind the
ridge out of sight. When I got to the top and
looked over, the scene became grand, imposing,
indescribable. The suddenness of it all was well-nigh
overpowering. One moment, not a bird to be
seen; the next, countless thousands of drifting birds
flying about in all directions along the face of the
cliffs, passing to and fro, backwards and forwards,
like snow-flakes in a gentle breeze, far as the eye
could follow them! All the Fulmars drifted to and
fro in silence; not a single bird uttered a cry. No
bird flies more gracefully than this Petrel; it seems
to float in the air without effort, often passing to
and fro for minutes together without perceptibly
moving its wings. They are remarkably tame
and confiding birds, flying past one at arm’s-length,
the bright-black eye contrasting strongly
with the snowy plumage. When disturbed by
the firing of a gun, the Fulmars and other sea-birds
<span class="pb" id="Page_248">248</span>
leave the rocks in masses so dense, that
one is apt to think the entire face of the cliffs is
crumbling away. Large numbers of Fulmars are
snared by the natives, and upwards of 20,000
young birds are killed every season at St. Kilda,
which, after the fat and oil are extracted from them,
are salted and kept for food. When caught, the
Fulmar vomits a quantity of clear amber-coloured
oil, and a little flows from the nostrils. During
the Fulmar harvest in autumn, the birds, as they
are taken, are made to vomit this oil into dried
gullets of the Gannet, which the fowler carries for
the purpose hung round his waist. This oil is
valued as a sheep dressing, and is said to be a
sovereign remedy for rheumatism. The typical
race of the Fulmar is an inhabitant of the North
Atlantic basin, ranging southwards in winter as
low as the latitude of New York in the west, and
Gibraltar in the east.</p>
<h3>FORK-TAILED PETREL.</h3>
<p>A year after this species was first described by
Vieillot, under the name of <i>Procellaria leucorhoa</i>,
it was discovered at St. Kilda by Bullock. This
was early in the present century, but the islands,
known collectively by that name, still continue to
be its most famous breeding place in our area, or
even in Europe. Three years after its discovery, it
was rechristened <i>P. leachi</i> by the French naturalist
Temminck, a name which has found favour with
<span class="pb" id="Page_249">249</span>
many writers. The Fork-tailed Petrel is known
to breed on North Rona, and at some other spots
in the Outer Hebrides, as well as on the Blaskets
off the coast of Kerry. There can be little doubt
that many other breeding stations of this Petrel
remain to be discovered. This species, readily distinguished
from the Stormy Petrel by its larger size
and deeply-forked tail, is rarely seen near the land
unless during the breeding season, or when driven
thence by boisterous weather. I have known it
to be caught in the flight-nets on the mud-banks
of the Wash; whilst it is of tolerably frequent
occurrence elsewhere off our eastern and southern
coasts. In its habits generally it very closely
resembles its better known ally, the Stormy Petrel.
During the non-breeding season it wanders vast
distances from land, sleeping and resting on the
sea when tired, following ships for miles, fluttering
along close to the ocean, now down into the trough
of the wave, anon skimming over the crest to half-fly,
half-run, with patting feet, down the smooth
surface of the next. Except during the breeding
season this Petrel is not very gregarious; it may
often be seen in parties of perhaps half-a-dozen,
scattered over a considerable surface of water. The
exact nature of the food of this species is apparently
unknown. It is said, in a vague and general way,
to feed on crustaceans and small molluscs, and the
scraps of refuse cast from passing vessels, but birds
which I have dissected contained similar substances
<span class="pb" id="Page_250">250</span>
to those found in the Fulmar—a nearly clear oil,
mingled with the jaws of cuttlefish, and scraps of
sorrel.</p>
<p>The Fork-tailed Petrel resorts to its breeding
stations to nest in June. Although gregarious
during this period, its colonies are never so large
as those of the Fulmar. Most probably the bird
pairs for life, and returns season by season to
certain spots to rear its young. The largest colony
of this Petrel known to me is at St. Kilda. Here
its principal colony is located on the island of Soay,
but there is another and smaller one on Doon, and
doubtless others on Borreay. At the colony on
Doon, the ground was full of long, winding burrows,
probably disused nesting holes of Puffins and Shearwaters,
and in these the Fork-tailed Petrels had
made their nests—in some cases one earth accommodating
several pairs of birds. Usually the
selected burrows are in the loamy soil near the
summit of the cliffs; but, in some cases, the birds
will select a hole, or crevice, in ruined masonry, or
in rocks. At the end of the burrow, or crevice, a
scanty nest of dry grass is formed, but in some
cases no provision whatever is made. Here the
female deposits a single egg, white, with a zone
of dust-like brown specks round the larger end.
These eggs are remarkably fragile, and very chalky
in texture. The Fork-tailed Petrel is a close sitter,
remaining brooding over its egg until dragged out.
Many nests may be found within an area of a few
<span class="pb" id="Page_251">251</span>
yards. This Petrel is not seen abroad much at its
breeding places during daylight; all day long the
little birds skulk in their burrows, but with the
approach of night, they begin to sally forth from
their retreats and nests, and their fluttering forms
may be seen flitting to and fro in the deepening
gloom, backwards and forwards, to and from the
sea. The Fork-tailed Petrel is not a very noisy
bird. Those that I dragged from their nests
uttered a few squeaking notes; but at night the
species becomes more garrulous. But three breeding
stations of this Petrel are known—one in the
North Pacific, another in the Bay of Fundy, and
the third within the British area. Its migrations
are limited.</p>
<h3>STORMY PETREL.</h3>
<p>This diminutive species, the <i>Procellaria pelagica</i>
of Linnæus and most modern writers, and the
“Mother Carey’s Chicken” of mariners, is, perhaps,
the best known of the Petrels that frequent the
British seas. It is remarkable for being the
smallest web-footed bird—a nearly black little
creature, with a white patch on the upper tail
coverts. Small as this Petrel is, it is just as
oceanic in its haunts as its larger and more robust
congeners. During boisterous weather, especially
about the period of the equinoctial gales in autumn,
Stormy Petrels are not unfrequently driven some
distance inland; and examples of this species have
been picked up more or less exhausted, even in the
<span class="pb" id="Page_252">252</span>
centre of busy towns. At this season it is also
noticed a good deal about certain lighthouses at
night. After rough nights I have seen odd Stormy
Petrels flying over the fishermen’s cottages like
swallows, and many of them are, or used to be,
caught in the flight-nets in the Wash. The actions
of this Petrel at sea are characteristic of its congeners.
It flies about in the same fluttering
manner, following the curves of the waves, and
pattering along their sloping surfaces with its tiny-webbed
feet. It may be met with hundreds of
miles from land, following ships, or paying a vessel
a short visit, then disappearing again, lost in the
lonely wastes of water. It is able to weather many
a storm at sea, doubtless obtaining much shelter in
the deep hollows of the mighty waves. It may be
seen flitting about the storm-stirred sea quite at its
ease; and from this fact, it is very popularly
believed to be a harbinger of bad weather, and disliked
accordingly by sailors. Except during the
breeding season, the Stormy Petrel rarely visits the
land; it rests and sleeps upon the sea, swimming
just as buoyantly as a Duck. It is seldom seen to
alight, however, unless to pick up some morsel of
food, and rarely remains long upon the water. At
its breeding stations it is certainly very nocturnal in
its habits, but otherwise it may be seen at all hours
of the day fluttering above the sea. Its food
probably consists almost entirely of cuttlefish; I
have dissected many specimens of this Petrel, and
<span class="pb" id="Page_253">253</span>
never found anything but oil mixed with sorrel in
the stomach. When taken in the hand the bird
usually throws up a drop of this oil, or squirts a
little from the nostrils, just as the larger Fork-tailed
Petrel will do. I have never heard the Stormy
Petrel utter a sound, except at the breeding
stations, where its note is a noisy twitter. It is
more or less gregarious at all times of the year, and
generally roams the sea in small scattered parties,
but its gatherings are most extensive at certain of
its breeding stations.</p>
<p>It is a difficult matter to specify, with any degree
of exactness, the breeding stations of such a
secretive species as the Stormy Petrel. It may
breed for years in a place, and the fact never
become known. A specially interesting instance of
this has lately occurred within my own experience.
Lundy Island has long been thought to be the
most easterly breeding station of the Stormy Petrel
in England, but all the time, for aught we know to
the contrary, it has regularly nested on the Big
Rock in Tor Bay, where, during last season (1895),
a young bird was taken, and is now preserved in
the Torquay Natural History Society’s Museum.
The egg had been taken here several years ago,
with the parent bird; the latest nest owed its
discovery to the acuteness of a dog, attracted by
the strong smell emitted by this Petrel. Here then
was the Stormy Petrel breeding actually within
sight of my front windows, and I giving Lundy
<span class="pb" id="Page_254">254</span>
Island and the Scilly Islands as its only nesting
places in the vicinity! I have seen this Petrel on
the whiting grounds outside Tor Bay, and Manx
Shearwaters, too, during summer; but where they
<i>breed</i> is another matter, so skulking and secretive are
their movements near and on the land. So far as
is known, there is no breeding-place of the Stormy
Petrel on the entire eastern coast-line of England
and Scotland. The German Ocean is a land-locked
sea, and it is more than probable the Stormy Petrel
breeds nowhere on its coasts; but that its nesting-places
extend far up the English Channel—much
further east than Tor Bay—there can be little
doubt. There are many known breeding-places of
this Petrel from the Scilly Islands northwards,
along the west coast of England, Wales, and
Scotland to the Shetlands, and many others round
the coasts of Ireland. The favourite breeding
haunts of the Stormy Petrel are rocky islands,
rising in uneven turf-clad downs, strewn with
masses of rock and stones. The bird probably
pairs for life, and is more or less gregarious at its
breeding-places. The slight nest of dry grass is
placed in an old rabbit earth or Puffin burrow,
under a rock or heap of loose stones, or in ruins,
and amongst masonry. In some cases no nest
whatever is made. The single egg is laid normally
in June. This is pure white in ground colour, with
a faint zone of minute dust-like red specks round
the larger end. Like all its kindred, the Stormy
<span class="pb" id="Page_255">255</span>
Petrel is a close sitter, remaining in its hole until
dragged out. It is also crepuscular in its habits at
its nesting-places, becoming lively at dusk, when it
may be seen flitting to and from the sea in a silent
bat-like manner. So far as is known, the breeding
area of the Stormy Petrel is exclusively confined to
the islands and coasts of the East Atlantic.</p>
<h3>MANX SHEARWATER.</h3>
<p>The Shearwaters are a well-defined group of
Petrels, numbering twenty or more species, distinguished
by their long, slender bill, long wings,
and short tails. As the Fulmars bear a superficial
resemblance to the Gulls, so may the Shearwaters
be compared with the Auks. Four of these birds
are known to visit the British seas and coasts, but
only one of them, the Manx Shearwater, <i>Puffinus
anglorum</i>, is known to breed within our limits, and
to occur in any abundance. The upper parts of
this Shearwater are black, the lower parts white.
The Manx Shearwater is, so far as is known, a
resident in the British seas, and widely distributed
along our coasts during the season of reproduction.
Like its allies, the Petrels, this Shearwater is closely
attached to the open sea, living for the most part
away from shore, and only frequenting land during
its nesting period. Its flight is much more erratic
and rapid than that of the small Petrels, or the
Gull-like Fulmar, and reminds one more of the
Swift. It may be seen dashing impetuously along
<span class="pb" id="Page_256">256</span>
close above the waves, this way and that, one
moment high above the horizon, the next deep
down in the trough of the billows, pausing here
and there for a moment with rapid beating wings,
legs let down, and feet striking the water, to pick
up some scrap of food. During the breeding
season it is for the most part nocturnal in its habits,
but at other times it seems to be abroad both by
day and night. That it can swim well and buoyantly,
I know from abundant experience, but whether it
<i>dives</i>, as some writers assert, I am not prepared to
say. Some Petrels, however, are habitually known
to do so, as, for instance, the species composing the
genus <i>Halodroma</i>. Shearwaters delight in a rough
sea and a brewing storm, every bit as much as the
smaller Petrels; no weather seems too boisterous
for them. When on our rough night voyage to St.
Kilda, we must have passed hundreds of Shearwaters,
holding high carnival above the gray waters,
flitting round our vessel in weird, erratic flight, like
bird ghosts, their gambols in the gloom being most
interesting. So far as my experience extends, the
food of the Manx Shearwater consists entirely of
cuttle-fish and sorrel, but the bird will pick up
various scraps thrown from vessels. At St. Kilda
this Shearwater is regarded as a delicacy. The
natives also obtain quantities of oil from it.</p>
<p>Throughout the summer the Manx Shearwater is
nocturnal, and at the approach of darkness becomes
very garrulous. Its note may be expressed as <i>kitty-coo-roo</i>,
<span class="pb" id="Page_257">257</span>
uttered two or three times in succession,
and then a pause. So far as I could determine, this
note is never uttered by the bird at sea, only when
flying about its breeding station, or in or near its
burrow, and is only heard at night. At St. Kilda
the island of Soay is the grand breeding place of
this Shearwater. The St. Kildans visit this island
at times during the breeding season, going at night,
knocking down the birds as they flutter about, and
dragging others from their nests. Four hundred
Shearwaters are sometimes slain thus in a single
night.</p>
<p>The Manx Shearwater is a somewhat late breeder,
its eggs being laid towards the end of May, or
during the first half of June. There are no known
breeding places of this bird along the eastern coast
line of Scotland and England; nor have any yet
been discovered on the south coast of England,
although I am positive the species nests in the
South Hams of Devon. Its breeding area, so far
as it is known, is almost precisely the same as that
of the Stormy Petrel. Its favourite nesting-places
are islands with a good ocean aspect, covered with
turf and soft, loamy soil. Although gregarious
during this period, many scattered pairs breed here
and there along the coast. The bird probably pairs
for life, returning year by year to a favourite
nesting-place. It usually excavates a long and
often winding burrow, making a slight nest of dry
grass at the end, on which is laid a single white
<span class="pb" id="Page_258">258</span>
egg. Both birds assist in making this burrow,
which often runs under some mass of rocks, and
many holes are begun and deserted for no apparent
reason, just as we find to be the case with the
Sand Martin and other hole-boring species. At the
entrance of all of the holes that are occupied there
is a considerable heap of droppings. Few, if any,
Shearwaters are astir even at a populous breeding-station
during the day; all keep closely to their
burrows, remaining stolidly upon their nest until
dragged forth, struggling, into the light. Many
burrows are made close together, and in some cases
one main entrance will lead to several chambers,
each containing a nest.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_259">259</div>
<h2 id="c7"><i>Littoral Land Birds</i></h2>
<div class="fig"> id="fig7"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_267.jpg" alt="THE CHOUGH. Chapter vii." width-obs="500" height-obs="720" /> <p class="center"><span class="small">THE CHOUGH. <i>Chapter</i> vii.</span></p> </div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_261">261</div>
<h2 class="eee">CHAPTER VII. <br/>LITTORAL LAND BIRDS.</h2>
<blockquote>
<p><i>Littoral Land Birds—White-tailed
Eagle—Peregrine Falcon—Raven—Jackdaw—Hooded
Crow—Chough—Rock Pipit—Martins—Rock
Dove—Stock
Dove—Heron—Various other
species.</i></p>
</blockquote>
<p>Our survey of marine ornithology can scarcely
be considered complete without a brief allusion
to the various land birds that reside upon the
coast. Many of these birds are, perhaps, most
closely associated with inland districts, but others
are just as essentially marine. Some of these
species constantly reside by the sea, others are but
found there during the bright summer days, whilst
others yet again appear during autumn and winter
only. Be the shore low sand or marshy slob-land,
buttressed by precipitous cliffs, or fringed with
rocky beaches and open downs, certain land birds
form decided features in the scene, some of them
very widely and very generally dispersed. In some
cases these species show us how very readily birds
can adapt themselves to their surroundings, or
reconcile themselves to circumstances, finding as
<span class="pb" id="Page_262">262</span>
congenial a home on the seaboard as in the woods
or fields, or even cities of the interior.</p>
<h3>WHITE-TAILED EAGLE.</h3>
<p>Half a century ago this fine bird, the <i>Haliaetus
albicilla</i> of ornithologists, was very generally distributed
round our northern coasts; in earlier years
than that it bred in certain parts of England,
possibly on most of our highest headlands. Trap,
gun, and poison have done their sad work only too
well, and now the White-tailed Eagle is banished
almost entirely from the land. The birds that
still survive are mostly confined to the Hebrides,
to the wild waste of islands and sea along the
western seaboard of Scotland. Occasionally stray
birds are noticed, during autumn and winter, on the
coast of England, but these are almost invariably
immature individuals on their migration south.
The White-tailed Eagle almost exclusively frequents
maritime districts, where it may be seen at
a vast height soaring on never-tiring wing, or
standing on some rock pinnacle. It preys upon
every bird or animal that it is able to capture—newly-dropped
lambs and fawns, hares, rabbits,
grouse, and waterfowl. But its favourite fare,
perhaps, is carrion—stranded fish and other
garbage on the shore, dead sheep, and so on.
This Eagle makes its eyrie on some stupendous
ocean cliff, and, as the birds pair for life, the spot is
occupied years in succession. The nest is a huge
<span class="pb" id="Page_263">263</span>
pile of sticks and branches, lined with dry grass,
wool, and other soft material. The two eggs, laid
in March or April, are white. This Eagle may be
distinguished from the Golden Eagle by its bare
tarsi. The note is a yelping or barking cry. Outside
our limits, this bird is found in the northern
portions of Europe and Asia, from the Atlantic to
the Pacific.</p>
<h3>PEREGRINE FALCON.</h3>
<p>This bold and handsome bird, the <i>Falco peregrinus</i>
of naturalists, in spite of much persecution,
still survives on many of our rocky coasts, becoming
most abundant in Scotland and Ireland. The
favourite resorts of the Peregrine are precipitous
cliffs, especially such as are constantly washed by
the sea. From these, it not only sallies in quest of
sea-birds, but flies inland to hunt for prey. The
dash and courage of the Peregrine are proverbial,
few birds, on land or sea, escaping from its fatal
swoop. Near the coast, the food of this Falcon is
largely composed of Ducks, Plovers, Sandpipers,
Pigeons, Partridges, sea fowl, and rabbits. The
flight of the Peregrine, when the bird is in the act
of chasing its prey, is rapid, and full of sudden
turns and twists, but at other times it is slow and
deliberate. Witness the aerial gyrations of this
species above its nesting-place, when it may be
seen soaring and wheeling in lofty flight. Its note,
heard principally in the vicinity of the nest, is a
loud, chattering cry. This Falcon probably pairs
<span class="pb" id="Page_264">264</span>
for life, resorting year after year to one particular
cliff to breed, even though the nest be robbed
repeatedly. No actual nest is made, the three or
four eggs, laid in April or early May, resting in
some slight hollow in the soil, on an overhanging
ledge in the cliffs. They are creamy-white in
ground colour, thickly mottled, freckled, and clouded
with reddish-brown, brick-red, or orange-brown, of
various shades. When flushed from the nest, the
female becomes very noisy, and is soon joined by
the male, both then flying about in angry alarm,
dashing past the face of the cliff from time to time.
The Peregrine may be readily distinguished from
the other indigenous British Falcons by its superior
size. The upper parts are dark slate-gray, the
head and moustachial lines are black, the underparts
are buffish-white, spotted on the throat and breast,
and barred on the remainder with blackish-brown.
The Peregrine is distributed over most parts of the
world, but has been divided into several well-marked
forms or races. Two other Raptorial birds
may be met with on the coast—one, the Kestrel,
commonly; and the other, the Buzzard, locally.</p>
<h3>RAVEN.</h3>
<p>This species, the <i>Corvus corax</i> of naturalists, still
manages to survive, and is of tolerably common
occurrence in many localities. Formerly it was
commonly distributed over the inland districts, but
<span class="pb" id="Page_265">265</span>
now, especially in England, it is most frequently
seen along the coast. Here, its favourite retreats
and nesting-places are lofty cliffs. From these, its
headquarters, it roams far and wide, not only along
the shore, but far inland in quest of food. It is a
fine sight to see this big sable bird dash out from
the cliffs, and fly upwards on powerful wing,
croaking and barking as it goes; or, better still,
when male and female toy with and buffet each
other high in air, uttering a series of shrill and,
sometimes, by no means unmusical notes. The
Raven feeds on almost everything in the shape of
flesh, carrion, as well as living creatures, indiscriminately.</p>
<p>This bird is an early breeder. It pairs for
life, and continues to frequent one spot for nesting
purposes year after year. Formerly many Ravens
made their nests in trees, but now the usual situation
is some ledge or crevice in a lofty precipice.
The nest, added to or repaired each season, is made
of sticks, and lined with turf, moss, wool, fur, and
hair, and is generally a large, bulky structure.
Five eggs are usually laid, bluish-green, blotched
and spotted with olive-brown and gray. The
Raven very closely resembles the Carrion Crow in
colour, but may readily be distinguished by its
much larger size. This bird has a very wide
distribution over Europe, Northern Asia, and
North America.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_266">266</div>
<h3>JACKDAW.</h3>
<p>Of all the land birds that frequent the coast this
species, the <i>Corvus monedula</i> of Linnæus and most
other writers, is one of the most abundant and best
known. Colonies of Jackdaws are established on
most of our ocean cliffs, in some places, as at
Bempton or Flamborough, mixed with sea-fowl, in
others apart by themselves. The birds frequent
these colonies all the year round, coming inland to
feed at intervals each day, returning at nightfall to
rest, in noisy cackling crowds. Sometimes the
birds, where circumstances permit, may be seen
feeding on the beach or rocks below their haunts.
This bird is more or less gregarious all through the
year, and some of its assemblages consist of several
hundreds of pairs. Its food is chiefly composed of
worms, insects, and grubs; but on the coast the
bird picks up a variety of creatures from the sands.
There can be little doubt that the Jackdaw pairs for
life. The same breeding places, the same nests, are
occupied year by year. It is a later breeder than
the Rook, the eggs being laid during April and
May. On the coast the nest is made in crevices
and hollows in the cliffs; in Tor Bay a small cave is
frequented, the nests being built in crannies near
the roof. The nest is composed of sticks, turf, the
stalks of marine plants, and litter from the fields,
lined with dry grass, straws, fur, wool, and feathers.
Some nests are much larger than others, the
<span class="pb" id="Page_267">267</span>
peculiarities of the site determining the size of
the structure to a great extent. The four or five
eggs—sometimes half-a-dozen—are pale blue,
spotted and blotched with olive-brown of different
shades, and gray. The Jackdaw has the general
colour of the plumage black, shading into gray on
the nape and sides of the neck.</p>
<h3>HOODED CROW.</h3>
<p>This species, the <i>Corvus cornix</i> of Linnæus and
ornithologists generally, is only known as a winter
visitor to certain parts of England, but is a common
resident in Scotland and Ireland. From October
to March the Hooded, Gray, or Royston Crow, is a
very familiar object on the low-lying coasts of East
Anglia. Its migrations to this district from the
Continent are extremely interesting. All day long
the birds may be seen coming in from over the
sea in flocks and parties, crossing from continental
Europe along a due west course. Sometimes great
flights of this Crow pour across the North Sea—columns
of migrating birds estimated to be forty
or more miles in breadth, and travelling at the
enormous speed of more than a hundred miles
per hour! All the winter through Hooded Crows
frequent the salt-marshes or the grain fields close to
the sea. The food of the Hooded Crow is not
known to differ from that of allied species, the bird
being practically omnivorous. There are few instances
known of this Crow breeding in England, but
<span class="pb" id="Page_268">268</span>
elsewhere in the British Islands it nests freely. In
many Scottish and Irish districts it makes its nest
on a sea-cliff. This resembles that of the Raven or
the Jackdaw, being made of sticks, twigs, turf,
and stalks, lined with moss, wool, and other soft
materials. Five eggs are usually laid, green of
various shades in ground colour, spotted and
blotched with olive-brown and gray. The note
of the Hooded Crow is a hoarse <i>kra</i>, modulated
in various ways.</p>
<h3>CHOUGH.</h3>
<p>For reasons which have been variously assigned,
the present species, the <i>Pyrrhocorax graculus</i> of
ornithologists, has now become one of the rarest
and most local of British birds. Once fairly
common, not only in certain inland localities, but
on the sea-girt cliffs, many of its colonies have now
become deserted. It is a bird of the rock-bound
coast, easily recognized by its blue-black plumage
and long, curved, red bill. It is not necessary here
to indicate the places where colonies still exist.
The Chough is a gregarious bird, and many of
its habits resemble those of the Jackdaw or the
Starling. Its flight is often curiously erratic, the
bird, after rising a little way, dropping again with
wings closed. Upon the ground it runs quickly, its
bright red legs and feet being conspicuous. The
note is very like that of the Jackdaw, a chuckling
or cackling <i>chow-chow</i>; hence the bird’s name of
Chough, which, by the way, is often used with the
<span class="pb" id="Page_269">269</span>
prefix “Cornish,” although the bird is just as scarce
in Cornwall as elsewhere now. The food of this
bird is chiefly composed of beetles, worms, grubs,
and grain. The Chough breeds in colonies, which
resort to lofty ocean cliffs, especially such where
caves and fissures are plentiful. The nest is
very similar to that of the Jackdaw, and varies a
good deal in size. Sticks, heather stems, and dry
stalks of plants form the outside; the cavity is lined
with dry grass, roots, wool, and similar soft material.
From four to six eggs are laid in May, creamy-white
in ground colour, blotched and spotted with
various shades of brown and gray. When disturbed,
the Choughs fly out of their nest-holes, and
behave generally in a very Jackdaw-like manner.
The Chough appears to be a sedentary species in
all parts of its distribution.</p>
<h3>ROCK PIPIT.</h3>
<p>In the present bird, the <i>Anthus obscurus</i> of
ornithologists, we have one of the very few species
of Passeres that are confined exclusively to maritime
haunts. During the breeding season the Rock
Pipit frequents the rock-bound coasts, often resorting
to cliffs washed incessantly by the waves, rock
stacks some distance from shore, and precipitous
islands; but in winter it may be observed on the
salt-marshes and stretches of sand. It is an olive-brown
little bird on the upper parts, streaked with
darker brown; the eye stripe and throat are nearly
<span class="pb" id="Page_270">270</span>
white; the remainder of the under parts are sandy-buff,
streaked with brown. During flight the
smoke-brown patch on the outer tail feathers is
very conspicuous. During autumn and winter
Rock Pipits may generally be met with in parties,
sometimes even in small flocks, congregating on the
rocky beaches, the cliffs, and downs, or, at low
water, searching amongst the seaweed and shingle
for food. They are by no means shy birds, but, if
alarmed, rise in scattered order, and, after flitting
aimlessly about, again pitch a little farther on, and
resume their search. In spring the Rock Pipit
separates into pairs, the low-lying shores are deserted,
and the birds resort to their several breeding-places.
In early spring the simple song of the cock bird
may be heard at intervals all the livelong day,
sometimes uttered as he perches on a big stone or
clings to the cliffs hundreds of feet above our heads,
but more frequently as he flutters in the air. The
food of this Pipit is composed of insects, and worms,
and small seeds. Although small and unobtrusive,
the Rock Pipit is not easily overlooked. It flits
before the observer in a wavering, uncertain manner,
uttering its plaintive <i>weet</i> as it goes; then alights a
little further on, and waits our approach, when once
more it rises, <i>cheeping</i>, into the air, to alight far up
the cliffs, or turn back to seek its original haunt.
Although this species pairs early, the nest is seldom
made before May. Few nests are more difficult to
find than the Rock Pipit’s, hidden as it is under
<span class="pb" id="Page_271">271</span>
stones or clods of earth, or wedged into crevices
of the rocks and cliffs. It is made of dry grass,
moss, scraps of dry seaweed, and lined either with
horsehair or fine grass. The four or five eggs are
dull bluish-white in ground colour, freckled with
grayish or reddish-brown, and sometimes streaked
with blackish-brown. Two broods are often reared
in the season, the eggs for the latter being laid in
July. Many pairs of birds may be found nesting
on a short stretch of coast, but no gregarious
instincts are manifested at this season. The Rock
Pipit has a very restricted geographical distribution,
being confined to the European coasts of the
Atlantic, including our islands and the Faröes.</p>
<h3>MARTINS.</h3>
<p>Both the species of British Martins resort to
many localities on the coast to breed. To the
wall-like cliffs the House Martin, <i>Chelidon urbica</i>,
often attaches its mud-built cradle. I know of
large colonies of this Martin on the sea cliffs of
Devonshire, where the nests are placed in rows, or
stuck here and there in every sheltered niche. In
the same manner the Sand Martin, <i>Cotyle riparia</i>,
bores its tunnels into the soft earth at the summit
of the sea cliffs, or into the solid banks of earth
that in some districts take the place of cliffs. It is
not necessary to enter here into details of the
economy of these Martins. Both engaging little
species add to the life and animation of the coast,
<span class="pb" id="Page_272">272</span>
as they fly to and fro and in and out of their nests.
Then during the period of migration many Martins
pass along the seaboard, and sometimes the
observer may be fortunate enough to witness their
actual arrival from over the sea, or their final departure
across its lonely expanse.</p>
<h3>ROCK DOVE.</h3>
<p>We here have another exclusively marine species,
the <i>Columba livia</i> of Linnæus and most modern
writers, confined to such portions of the coast as
are precipitous and full of caves and hollows. The
Rock Dove may be readily distinguished from all
the other British species of Pigeons by its white
lower back and rump, and strongly-barred wings.
As may naturally be inferred from the cliff-haunting
propensities of this Dove, it is practically absent
from the low-lying eastern coasts of England, local
on the south coast, but becomes much commoner
further north and west, where the cliffs are rugged
and lofty, and full of those wave-worn hollows and
fissures that are the Rock Dove’s delight. As most
readers may be aware, this species is the original
stock from which the numerous races of dovecot
Pigeon have descended. Curiously enough, this
bird is inseparably attached to the coast; it is a
rock-haunting species, and one which rarely or
never perches in trees. Usually our first acquaintance
with the Rock Dove is made as the startled
bird dashes out of the cliffs, with rattling wings and
<span class="pb" id="Page_273">273</span>
impetuous haste. It is more or less gregarious all
the year round, and may frequently be seen in
flocks on the fields near its native cliffs. Its
food is composed of grain and seeds of all kinds,
and the buds and shoots of plants. Its flight is
rapid and well sustained. I was told by the natives
of St. Kilda that the Rock Doves frequenting the
islands cross the sea every day—a distance of
seventy miles—to feed on the Hebrides, and there
can be little or no doubt about this, for St. Kilda
contains little suitable food for this grain-loving
bird. Its note is the familiar <i>coo</i>.</p>
<p>The Rock Dove is an early breeder, congregating
in colonies on such cliffs as afford it the necessary
shelter. Wherever possible the nests are made in
caves; where these are wanting the birds scatter
themselves about the cliffs, and place their nests in
any convenient fissure or cleft. The bird pairs for
life, and yearly resorts to the same breeding
stations, some of the caves gaining a local reputation
in this respect. The nest is placed on some
ledge or in a cranny, and consists of a little dry
grass, twigs, roots, or stems of plants, arranged in
a flat plate-like form. The two eggs are pure
white. This species may be found breeding all the
summer through, and rears two, if not more, broods
each season. The Rock Dove is found on almost
all parts of the rocky coasts of Europe and the outlying
islands.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_274">274</div>
<h3>STOCK DOVE.</h3>
<p>This Dove, the <i>Columba ænas</i> of naturalists, is
very often confused with the preceding species,
from which, however, it may readily be distinguished
by having the rump uniform in colour with the
back, and the wing bars broken up into patches.
Mistaken identity is also rendered even more easy
by the bird frequenting the coast, in just the same
localities we associate with the Rock Dove. As
most readers are aware, the Stock Dove is a dweller
in wooded inland districts, as well as on the coast.
I have, however, often remarked that the two
species rarely inhabit the same parts of the coast,
and that the Stock Dove shows preference for cliffs
that are more or less densely clothed with ivy,
stunted trees, and thickets. In its flight, shyness,
method of searching for food, and habits generally,
when frequenting littoral districts, the Stock Dove
very closely resembles the Rock Dove. The note
of the Stock Dove, heard most incessantly during
spring and summer is, however, different, and may
be described as a grunting <i>coo-oo-up</i>. At all times
this Dove is socially inclined, and becomes, to a
great extent, gregarious during winter; its numbers
being increased during that season by migrants
from Scandinavia. Its food is chiefly obtained
from grain lands, clover fields, and stubbles, and
consists chiefly of grain and seeds, berries, and
various shoots.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_275">275</div>
<p>The breeding season of the Stock Dove begins
in April, and extends over the entire summer into
the succeeding autumn. When resorting to maritime
cliffs, the nest is often placed amongst ivy, in a
rabbit burrow, or in a crevice of the cliffs, and is
a mere platform of twigs, roots, or straws. In
many cases a nest is dispensed with altogether.
The two eggs are creamy-white, smooth, and
polished. In inland localities a hole in a tree, or
the deserted drey of a squirrel, or old nest of a
Crow or Magpie, is usually selected. Several broods
are reared in the season. This Dove is one of
those species that is rapidly extending its area of
distribution in our islands; the trend of its advance,
however, being always northerly. Outside our
limits the Stock Dove is found over most parts of
Europe and North-West Africa, eastwards to the
Caucasus and Asia Minor.</p>
<h3>HERON.</h3>
<p>Although this bird, the <i>Ardea cinerea</i> of most
writers, is usually associated with fresh and inland
waters, it is frequently enough met with along the
coast, especially about estuaries, salt-marshes, and
such portions of the shore where pools are left by
the tide amongst the rocks at low water. Moreover,
it sometimes establishes its colonies on marine
cliffs, or in woods adjoining the sea. Although of
recent years considerably reduced in numbers, the
Heron still justifies the prefix of “Common,” which
<span class="pb" id="Page_276">276</span>
custom generally attaches to it. There are few
places round the English coast known to me where
the Heron forms such a distinctive feature in the
scene as on the wide estuary of the Exe, or, but not
so abundant, on that of the Teign, a little lower
down the Devonshire coast. Sometimes a score or
more Herons may be counted here together,
standing like big blue sentinels on the marshes,
wading in the tidal pools, or flying in their slow
deliberate way, above the flats. Many of these
Herons breed in the valley of the Dart. Odd
Herons may also be flushed here and there along
more rock-bound coasts. The flight of this species
is very imposing, witnessed to perfection as the bird
passes to or from its feeding or fishing grounds, and
its nightly retreat in some distant wood; or
perhaps, better still, when mobbed by some Gull, or
mobbing one in return. The Heron feeds largely
on fishes, either those from salt- or fresh-water,
together with frogs, water insects, and even small
mammals. The Heron fishing is a perfect picture
of still life, an ornament to the shore. As a rule,
the Heron is a remarkably silent bird; he fishes,
like all good anglers, in absolute quietness; but
when passing through the air, on his frequent
journeys, he often utters a short, deep trumpet-like
note, startling and strange-sounding enough when
heard from the evening sky.</p>
<p>The Heron breeds locally throughout the British
Islands, its favourite nesting places being in woods
<span class="pb" id="Page_277">277</span>
and plantations, although a ledge on a cliff, or a
ruin, is sometimes selected. In many places, where
the Heron is sufficiently abundant, it breeds in
colonies, like Rooks, and resorts, year by year, to
the same localities. The nest is usually a huge pile
or platform of sticks, the cavity containing the eggs
sometimes being lined with turf and moss. Some
nests are much larger than others, the accumulation
of years, and most are whitewashed with the birds’
droppings. The eggs—three to five in number—are
greenish-blue, and chalky in texture. When
disturbed at their nests the big birds rise, crashing
through the branches into the air, and sail about
above the place in anxiety until left in peace.
They utter few or no notes of any kind. When
the young are nearly full grown, they may be seen
climbing about the trees, using their beak to assist
them in passing from one part of the tree to
another. The Heron is a bird of very wide distribution,
and is found throughout Europe, Africa,
Asia, and even Australia.</p>
<p>In conclusion, we may remark that there are
many other land birds found upon certain parts
of the coast from time to time, especially during
the two great periods of migration in spring and
in autumn. The above short list must not be
regarded in any way as being exhaustive. It contains,
however, the most constantly characteristic
species. Many small Passerine birds frequent the
shore—especially on our eastern and southern seaboard,
<span class="pb" id="Page_278">278</span>
but they are arrivals from other lands, and
often passing south or north, as the case may be,
to yet more distant haunts. Among the more
prominent of these, we may mention the Goldcrest,
which often abounds on the coasts of the
German Ocean; the Skylark and the Starling, that
come each year in countless hosts; the various
Finches and Thrushes, that visit us each season
to pass the winter in our land. Then, more locally,
there is the Snow Bunting and the Shore Lark—Arctic
birds that visit us more or less commonly.
The Common Bunting, too, is a common resident
on many parts of the littoral area. Of other species
we may mention the Short-eared Owl, the Sparrow-Hawk,
the Woodcock—migrants from over the sea,
tarrying but a short time to rest near the shore,
before speeding inland, or yet further south. The
Rook obtains much of its food from the sands in
littoral districts; the Starling often congregates in
vast flocks on the saltings. I have even seen the
Rook take its food from the surface of the sea,
precisely in the same manner as a Gull.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_279">279</div>
<h2 id="c8"><i>Migration on the Coast</i></h2>
<div class="fig"> id="fig8"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_288.jpg" alt="MIGRATION TIME. (On the Friskney foreshore.) Chapter viii." width-obs="500" height-obs="335" /> <p class="center"><span class="small">MIGRATION TIME. (<i>On the Friskney foreshore.</i>) <i>Chapter</i> viii.</span></p> </div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_281">281</div>
<h2 class="eee">CHAPTER VIII. <br/>MIGRATION ON THE COAST.</h2>
<blockquote>
<p><i>The Best Coasts for Observing
Migration—Migration of Species
in Present Volume—Order of
Appearance of Migratory Birds—In
Spring—In Autumn—Spring
Migration of Birds on
the Coast—The Earliest Species
to Migrate—Departure of
Winter Visitors—Coasting Migrants—Arrival
of Summer
Visitors—Duration of Spring
Migration—Autumn Migration
of Birds on the Coast—The
Earliest Arrivals—Departure
of our Summer Birds—Arrival
of Shore Birds—Direction of
Flight—Change in this Direction
to East—The Vast Rushes of
Birds across the German Ocean—The
Perils of Migration—Birds
at Lighthouses and Light
Vessels—Netting Birds—Rare
Birds.</i></p>
</blockquote>
<p>In order to make the subject of Bird-life on the
Coast complete, it is necessary for us briefly to
sketch the phenomenon of Migration as it may be
studied on the shore. A person could select no
better situation for the observation of this grand
avine movement than the coast. Unfortunately,
however, all coasts are not equally favoured in this
respect, and unless a proper selection of locality be
made, the observer in quest of information will
meet with nothing but disappointment. Unquestionably
the best portion of the British coast-line
for the study of bird migration is that washed by
<span class="pb" id="Page_282">282</span>
the German Ocean and the English Channel. The
western districts are everywhere less favourable
than the eastern, due partly to their much more
isolated position, and the wider extent of the
frontier seas. Two reaches of the British coast
deserve special mention for the numbers of migrant
birds that frequent them. These are the coasts
between the Humber and the Thames, and the seaboard
of Hampshire, Sussex, and Kent. The
observer of migration on the coast will do well to
bear in mind the following facts. Many birds do
not absolutely confine their flight to the indentations
of the coast, but fly from one headland to another,
so that on the coasts of the intervening bays but
little migration may be witnessed. Headlands
appear everywhere to be exceptionally favourable
points for observation. Rock-bound coasts, again,
are not so much frequented by migrants as those
that are low-lying, or present a considerable area of
beach; whilst there is some evidence to suggest
that where the shore is composed of cliffs falling
sheer to the water, fjords and river valleys are exceptionally
favoured. During the migration period,
both in spring and autumn, the early hours of
morning, or the dusk of evening, will be found
to reward observation best. Due regard should
also be paid to the direction of the wind, and the
prevailing state of the weather—a change in either
being often followed by migratory movement.</p>
<p>A very large percentage of the birds described in
<span class="pb" id="Page_283">283</span>
the present volume are migratory, although the
seasonal movements of many of the species cannot
be remarked, to any great extent, by the wanderer
along the coast. Such thoroughly aquatic species
as the Auks, the Petrels, the Divers, and the
Grebes, move south or north, according to season,
some distance from the land; and it is often only by
the chance of rough weather driving these birds
near to the land, that we are enabled to learn that
their migrations are in progress, or that certain
species have once more returned to our area for
their winter or summer sojourn therein. The
Ducks, Geese, and Swans, are birds of migratory
habits, and in certain localities much of their
seasonal movements may be observed from the
shore. Then, again, the Gulls and Terns, although
often migrating some distance from the land, may
not unfrequently be seen passing up or down the
coast on passage. This is especially the case with
the Black-headed Gull, and the various species of
Terns. These latter birds are often seen, in spring
and autumn, in flocks of varying size, flying north
or south, close inshore, fishing as they go, sometimes
remaining a day here or there, where food
chances to be plentiful. The migrations of certain
species of land birds that reside in littoral districts
are also pronounced and regular, and easily remarked
along the coast; the arrival and departure
of Martins and Swallows being a specially interesting
feature. But the most remarkable birds of all,
<span class="pb" id="Page_284">284</span>
so far as concerns migration, are those to which our
second chapter is devoted, viz., the Plovers and the
Sandpipers. Perhaps in this group more than in
any other, the habit of migration is most strongly
displayed. The journeys some of these birds
undertake in spring and autumn can only be
described as marvellous. The Sanderling breeds in
the North Polar Basin, and in winter is found in
the Malay Archipelago, in the Cape Colony, and
in Patagonia; the Knot has a similar distribution
in summer, but in winter visits such enormously
remote localities as Australia, New Zealand, the
Cape Colony, and Brazil! Well may these little
birds excite exceptional feelings of interest in the
observer who watches them, each recurring season,
running blithely over the sands and the mud-flats,
when he remembers the distances they travel.</p>
<p>But migration on the coast is by no means confined
to the birds that habitually reside upon it.
All the migratory species that dwell in inland
districts must pass the coast on their annual
journeys in spring and autumn. At these seasons,
in suitable districts (of which we have already
indicated the most favourable for observation), birds
may be watched day after day, and week after
week, entering our area to render summer glad
with their cheerful presence, passing along our
shores to yet more distant destinations, or departing
in autumn for warmer lands and sunnier skies.
Many of these birds, of course, enter our islands
<span class="pb" id="Page_285">285</span>
during the night, and thus escape observation;
many others, it may be, pass to inland haunts by
day, but without alighting upon the coast at all,
flying at altitudes which render their identification,
or even detection, impossible; but then there are
many more, and especially in autumn, when the
flight is generally far more leisurely than in spring,
which crowd upon the coasts, or pass along them,
within easy view of the most casual scrutiny. It
may here, perhaps, be advisable to allude to the
general order in which migrants usually appear
upon the coast. Of course, it is utterly impossible,
within the narrow limits of the present chapter, to
enter very minutely into the many and intricate
phenomena connected with the migration of birds.
The reader anxious for further and more detailed
information on this very interesting subject, may be
referred to the present writer’s works upon Migration,
and to that on the birds of Heligoland, by
Herr Gätke.<SPAN class="fn" id="fr_8" href="#fn_8">[8]</SPAN> Now, as regards the actual order of
appearance. In spring, the observer will almost
invariably find that the adult males are in the van;
the females are the next to arrive, whilst the young
of the preceding summer, and the more or less
weakly individuals, bring up the rear. Many of
these young and sickly birds pass the summer far
south of the usual breeding-grounds; so that it is
by no means an uncommon thing to find individuals
<span class="pb" id="Page_286">286</span>
of certain Arctic-nesting species, frequenting the
British coasts throughout that season. The
presence in our area of these northern birds
during summer, has not unnaturally led to the
supposition that they actually breed there. In
autumn the order of migration is, to some extent,
reversed. At that season a few old birds of either
sex are the first to arrive, sometimes preceding, and
always invariably accompanying, the flights of
young birds, which are then moving south. Many
of these young birds start off from their birth-place
almost as soon as their wings are strong enough to
bear them, and individuals of certain Arctic species
have been met with on our coasts with particles of
the down of their nestling plumage still adhering to
their feathers. The adult males come south next;
the females following; and last of all come the
cripples and the weakly—the individuals that have
been retarded in their flight by accidents of various
kinds, such as the loss of wing feathers, by deformities,
or by disease. The observer on the coast will
also remark considerable diversity in the social or
gregarious tendencies of these migrants. Some
migrate gregariously in numbers that are as uncountable
as the pebbles on the shore; others
journey in family parties, in small flocks, or even
singly. The migration of each species is usually
first remarked by the appearance of an odd bird
or two; then the numbers increase, perhaps with
two or more great rushes when the flight of that
<span class="pb" id="Page_287">287</span>
particular species becomes exceptionally marked,
the migration then gradually falling off almost, if
not quite, as imperceptibly as it commenced.</p>
<p>We now propose briefly to sketch a few of the
more salient features of migration on the coast,
during spring and autumn. If the weather be
favourable, the spring migration of some birds
commences in February. The species moving at
that early date are birds that we have in the
British Isles all the year round, such as Thrushes,
Hedge Sparrows, Titmice, Wrens, Finches, Buntings,
Jays, Rooks, and Carrion Crows. The difficulty
in distinguishing migrating individuals of
these species from others that are sedentary, is
sufficiently great to render the movement unseen,
except, perhaps, to experts, or to the keepers of light
vessels off the coast. The observations of these
men, however, prove that these birds actually pass
from our islands to the Continent from that date
onwards. These birds all migrate nearly due east.
The next birds to leave their winter quarters in
Britain are those whose line of migration extends
north-east, and amongst these we must include such
familiar species as Blackbirds, Robins, Goldcrests,
Greenfinches, Chaffinches, Starlings, Hooded Crows,
Jackdaws, Ring Doves, and Lapwings. For quite
a couple of months these species continue to
leave us for Continental breeding-grounds, and
their presence on the coast, during early spring, is
an unfailing sign of their departure. Then comes
<span class="pb" id="Page_288">288</span>
the departure of such birds that are found only
in winter in the British Islands—Redwings, Fieldfares,
Bramblings, Siskins, Snow Buntings, and so
on. The departure of these birds begins in
February, or early March, and lasts until the
beginning of May. About the same time, also,
many coast birds pass from our islands, such as
Golden Plovers, Lapwings, Curlews, Redshanks,
Woodcocks, and Snipes—that is to say, the
migratory individuals of these species that only
visit us during winter. Ducks and Geese also
begin to move north, and many indications of
their passage may be seen by the careful observer
of birds along the shore. March, April, and May,
the two former months especially, is the period of
their departure. At this season, also, many individuals
of these species pass along our coast
districts from more southern countries, on their
way to northern haunts. These birds are known
as coasting migrants. The most typical of these
coasting migrants, and those that may be readily
distinguished, are such species as Whimbrels,
Ringed Plovers, Sanderlings, Stints, Skuas, and
Curlew Sandpipers. Whimbrels are very regular
in their appearance, arriving at the end of April,
and the migration continuing through May.</p>
<p>Early in March, on our southern coasts, the
purely summer visitors begin to be seen, Woodcocks
and Pied Wagtails, amongst others, making
their appearance. Towards the end of March,
<span class="pb" id="Page_289">289</span>
or very early in April, the first of the purely
southern species reach us. Two of the most
familiar are the Wheatear and the Chiffchaff; Ring
Ouzels, Willow Wrens, and Yellow Wagtails follow
them closely. As April passes on, the numbers of
our summer migrants increase; Whinchats, Redstarts,
Wrynecks, Cuckoos, Whitethroats, Blackcaps,
Swallows, Martins, and so on, appearing in force.
Towards the end of the month, and in May, Terns,
various Sandpipers, Turtle Doves, and Quails, may
all be found upon the coasts on their spring migration.
Among the last to appear are such species
as Lesser Whitethroats, Spotted Fly Catchers,
Garden Warblers, and Red-backed Shrikes. This
spring migration of birds along the British coasts
lasts for a period of quite four months—from
February to the end of May, or the first week in
June. Some birds may be observed on passage
almost throughout this period; others not more
than half this time—especially the Warblers, Wagtails,
and Pipits—others, yet again, complete their
migration in a month or less, amongst these being
the Red-backed Shrike and the Greenshank. For
the spring migration of such species that visit the
British Islands to breed, the southern coasts, of
course, are the best points of observation—none
of these birds breed south of their point of
entrance to our area, as they all reach us from
winter quarters in more southerly latitudes than
ours.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_290">290</div>
<p>The spring migration of birds over the British
Islands has scarcely ceased, before the first signs of
the autumn flight begin to be apparent along the
coast. Of course, this early autumn migration is
first noticeable upon our northern and eastern
coast-lines. Certainly, by the middle of July, a
few of the Arctic wading birds may be noticed
on the shore, or flying south along the coast.
Towards the end of the month, and early in
August, the number of these returning migrants
increases. Young Knots and Gray Plovers, with
odd adult birds, appear upon the sands and mudflats.
Almost at the same time we may notice
the Common Sandpiper back again upon the
shore, followed by Lapwings, Ringed Plovers,
Greenshanks, and Curlews. Then various small
birds begin to drift along the coast, on their
passage south—Swifts, Wheatears, Willow Wrens,
and Whinchats. Throughout August the migration
of birds gets stronger and stronger, and
towards the end of the month, and early in
September, our own summer migrants begin to
leave the country. Warblers and Swallows,
Wheatears, Flycatchers, Thrushes, Wagtails, and
Pipits, may be met with from time to time, along
the coast, all bent upon early departure. The wide
reaches of mud and sand, often so dull and uninteresting,
and devoid of bird-life, in summer,
are rapidly filling with a new population, Plovers
and Sandpipers appearing upon them from day
<span class="pb" id="Page_291">291</span>
to day in ever-increasing numbers, whilst the seas
near by are becoming sprinkled with the earliest
hosts of Ducks and Geese. The Terns, once
more, are on the move, this time flying south to
warmer seas. With the advent of October, most
of our summer birds have gone, a few belated
Swallows and Wheatears, a few venturesome
Chiffchaffs and Wagtails, being all that remain.
All the autumn through, however, coasting migrants
of many species—the same that passed north in
spring—continue flying south. Most of this migration
is from the north and north-east.</p>
<p>Early in October, however, the direction of this
great migrant tide falls nearly to due east, and from
this time onwards, the English shores of the
German Ocean, say from Yorkshire to the estuary
of the Thames, become by far the most interesting
of all our coast-line to the student of Migration.
Normally the number of species is not very
extensive, but the number of individual birds can
only be described as stupendous. The vast
feathery tides of migrants that break in countless
waves upon our eastern coasts in autumn, are
composed of birds that breed in continental
Europe and Western Asia, and return to the
British Islands—the centre of their dispersal—to
winter. The mighty inrush of birds must be
seen to be properly appreciated. For days, for
weeks, the wild North Sea is swept by these
migrating myriads. By day, by night, the
<span class="pb" id="Page_292">292</span>
feathered hosts pour in; the bulk of the migrants
being composed of such birds as Starlings, Larks,
Goldcrests, Thrushes, Finches, Rooks, and Crows.
Some idea of their numbers may be gained from
the fact that these waves of birds often strike
our coast-line simultaneously, north to south, for
hundreds of miles. Waves of Goldcrests have
extended from the Faröes to the English Channel;
Larks for weeks have poured in, in successive
waves, by day and night. The Hooded Crow is
another species that crosses the North Sea in
myriads every autumn. This bird prefers to
migrate by day, and appears to do the journey
across in an astonishing short time. Starlings,
again, often migrate across in a succession of
clouds, which defy all attempts to estimate their
numbers. This migration of birds, say, on the
coasts of Lincolnshire and Norfolk, is one of
the most fascinating sights the shore can yield.
To be out by dawn on the crisp October mornings,
and to watch the vast inrush of birds to the
English coast for hour after hour, is a treat no
lover of birds can fail to appreciate. Here and
there the sea-banks and the rough saltings are
strewn with birds skulking and resting amongst
the grass, or in the hedges, that have made the
passage of the North Sea during the previous
night, and are soon about to pass inland. Tired
Woodcocks rise reluctantly from the dry grass
in the hedge bottoms; Hooded Crows, in companies,
<span class="pb" id="Page_293">293</span>
are hungrily feeding on the mud-flats;
Goldcrests, perhaps, are swarming on the thorn-bushes.
Overhead, Sky Larks are arriving in
countless numbers from over the sea, often
breaking out into gladsome song as soon as
the welcome land is reached; whilst Rooks, Ring
Doves, Jackdaws, and Finches of various species,
arrive from time to time. This state of things
continues through October, and well into November,
the steady influx of birds from time to time
culminating in an overwhelming rush. It should
also be remarked that in some years birds are
more numerous than others, and the duration of the
migration of any particular species varies a good
deal, sometimes lasting but a few weeks, sometimes
as many months. The autumn migration of birds
lasts for about five months, beginning in July, and
continuing to November. Of the two seasons of
passage, perhaps the autumn movement will prove
the most interesting to the ordinary observer of
bird-life on the coast. Birds are much more
numerous in autumn, and travel slower. The
movements of birds during winter along the
coast, are also intensely interesting, but this
scarcely comes within the scope of the present
chapter.</p>
<p>We cannot well conclude this brief account of
Bird Migration on the coast without some allusion
to those perils which beset the birds on their
journeys, and which arise principally from light-houses
<span class="pb" id="Page_294">294</span>
and light-vessels. Vast numbers of birds
kill themselves every spring and autumn by
striking against these gleaming beacons of the
coast. From this great mortality, however,
naturalists have learnt much concerning the annual
movements of birds; for the records kept by
our light men, extending, as they do, over a
number of years, of these fatalities and periodical
visits of migrants, are most instructive and suggestive.
Some of the scenes witnessed at these light-houses
and vessels, during the seasons of migration—especially
in autumn—are intensely interesting.
These beacons are most fatal during cloudy
weather; few birds strike on clear and cloudless
nights. Odd birds are continually striking against
the lanterns. Now and then, however, there come
nights when birds swarm like bees round the lamps,
and kill themselves in thousands by striking against
the glass, sometimes with such force as to shatter it
to fragments. The illustration at the head of the
present chapter also shows another peril of migration.
Many nets are placed on the shores of the
Wash, and great numbers of birds are, or used to
be, caught during the autumn months. Information,
however, has recently reached me that the birds
are learning, by many years’ experience, to avoid
these snares, flying over instead of through them,
and that nothing like the numbers are caught
nowadays. Fifteen years ago thousands of birds
must have been taken in these nets.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_295">295</div>
<p>Another peril of migration is the danger of losing
the way. Many young and inexperienced birds
go astray each autumn, and the British list contains
the names of numbers of rare species that have
visited us on abnormal flights. Many of these birds
have been captured on the coast. From Eastern
Europe, from Siberia, from Africa, and even from
America, these wanderers have come. Each period
of migration, the observer, on the coast, may be
agreeably surprised to meet with one of these lost
and wandering individuals; and it is this glorious
uncertainty that adds considerably to the pleasure
of a ramble along the shore in spring and autumn.</p>
<h2 id="c9">Footnotes</h2>
<div class="fnblock"><div class="fndef"><SPAN class="fn" id="fn_1" href="#fr_1">[1]</SPAN><i>Heligoland as an Ornithological Observatory</i>, p. 151, <i>et seq.</i></div>
<div class="fndef"><SPAN class="fn" id="fn_2" href="#fr_2">[2]</SPAN><i>Dictionary of Birds</i>, p. 712.</div>
<div class="fndef"><SPAN class="fn" id="fn_3" href="#fr_3">[3]</SPAN><i>Dictionary of Birds</i>, p. 774.</div>
<div class="fndef"><SPAN class="fn" id="fn_4" href="#fr_4">[4]</SPAN><i>Dictionary of Birds</i>, p. 399.</div>
<div class="fndef"><SPAN class="fn" id="fn_5" href="#fr_5">[5]</SPAN>Ray, <i>English Words</i>, p. 74.</div>
<div class="fndef"><SPAN class="fn" id="fn_6" href="#fr_6">[6]</SPAN><i>Ibis</i>, 1870, p. 301.</div>
<div class="fndef"><SPAN class="fn" id="fn_7" href="#fr_7">[7]</SPAN><i>Icebound on Kolguev</i>, p. 43.</div>
<div class="fndef"><SPAN class="fn" id="fn_8" href="#fr_8">[8]</SPAN><i>The Migration of Birds</i>; <i>The Migration of British Birds</i>;
<i>Heligoland an Ornithological Observatory</i>.</div>
</div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_296">296</div>
<p class="tbcenter"><span class="smaller">PLYMOUTH:
<br/>WILLIAM BRENDON AND SON,
<br/>PRINTERS.</span></p>
<h2 class="eee">Transcriber’s Notes</h2>
<ul><li>Corrected palpable typos.</li></ul>
<SPAN name="endofbook"></SPAN>
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