B L A C K GROUSE.
Tetrao Tetrix, Linn.
Le Tétras Birkhan.
The European portion o f the globe may be truly considered the exclusive habitat o f this noble bird ; i f however
any exception is to be made to this rule it will probably be in favour o f Siberia, but o f its existence there
we have no certain information. On the Continent it occurs commonly in Russia, Norway, Sweden, Germany,
France, and some parts o f Holland. From Norway and Sweden great numbers are annually brought to the
London markets, and, together with the Capercailzie and Willow Ptarmigan, forms no trifling article of commerce.
At the same time it is far from being uncommon in many parts o f England, and in Scotland it is very
abundant. Mr. Selby, who is at once a naturalist and a sportsman, has so well described the manners and
habits o f the Black Grouse, that we trust we shall be pardoned for transcribing the observations o f this gentleman,
whose splendid work on British Ornithology is too well known to need any eulogium from our pen.
“ The present species is now confined, in the southern parts o f England, to a few of the wildest uncultivated
tracts, such as the New Forest in Hampshire, Dartmoor, and Sedgemoor in Devonshire and the heaths
of> Somersetshire. It is also sparingly met with in Staffordshire and in parts o f North Wales, where it is
under strict preservation. In Northumberland it is very abundant, and has been rapidly increasing for some
years past, which may be partly attributed to the numerous plantations that within that period have acquired
considerable growth in the higher parts of the county, as supplying it both with food and protection. It
abounds throughout the Highlands o f Scotland, and is also found in some o f the Hebrides. The bases of
the hills in heathy and mountainous districts which are covered with a natural growth o f birch, alder and
willow, and intersected by morasses, clothed with long and coarse herbage, as well as the deep and wooded
glens so frequently occurring in such extensive wastes, are the situations best suited to the habits o f these
birds, and most favourable to their increase. During the months o f autumn and winter the males associate
and live in flocks, but separate in March or April ; and, being polygamous, each individual chooses some particular
station, from whence he drives all intruders, and for the possession o f which, when they are numerous,
desperate conflicts often take place. At this station he continues early every morning, and in the evening
during the pairing-season, repeating his call o f invitation to the other sex, and displaying a variety o f attitudes,
not unlike those o f a Turkey Cock, accompanied by a crowing note, and by another similar to the
noise made by the whetting o f a scythe. At this season his plumage exhibits the richest glosses, and the red
skin of his eyebrows assumes a superior intensity o f colour. With the cause that urged their temporary separation,
their animosity ceases, and the male birds again associate, and live harmoniously together.
“ The female deposits her eggs in May ; they are from six to ten in number, o f a yellowish grey colour
blotched with reddish brown. The nest is of most artless construction, being composed o f a few dried stems
o f grass placed on the ground, under the shelter of a tall tuft or low bush, and generally in marshy spots,
where long and coarse grasses abound. The young of both sexes at first resemble each other, and their plumage
is that o f the hen, with whom they continue till the autumn moult takes place ; at this time the males
acquire the garb o f the adult bird, and quitting their female parent, join the societies o f their own sex. The
food o f the Black Grouse during the summer, chiefly consists o f the seeds of some species o f Juncus, the
tender shoots of heath, and insects. In autumn, the crawberry or crawcrook (Empetrum nigrum), the cranberry
(Vaccinium oxycoccos) , the wortleberry ( Vaccinium vitis-idoea) , and the trailing arbutus (Arbutus um-
ursi), afford it a plentiful subsistence. In winter and during severe and snowy weather, it eats the tops and
buds of the birch and elder, as well as the embryo shoots o f the fir tribe, which it is well enabled to obtain, as it
is capable o f perching upon trees without any difficulty. At this season of the year, in situations where arable
land is interspersed with the wild tracts it inhabits, descending into the stubble-grounds, it feeds upon grain.
“ In the adult state the Black Grouse displays great shyness o f character, and after the autumnal moult, is
not easily approached within gunshot. Frequent attempts have been made to domesticate this bird, but without
success ; and through all the trials that have taken place, it has never been known to breed in confinement.”
The flesh o f this species is in such general request as a delicacy fo f the table, that we need make no remark
on its excellence as an article o f food.
The male has the head, neck, breast, back, and rump black with purple and blue reflections ; abdomen,
wing-coverts, and tail deep black ; secondaries tipped with white, forming with the adjoining coverts a band
across the wing ; under tail-coverts pure white ; feathers o f the legs blackish grey; bill black ; feet brown.
The female has the head, neck, all the upper surface and tail orange brown blotched and rayed with black ;
breast and under surface pale brown barred with black and brown ; under tail-coverts white, rayed with
black ; bill and feet as in the male.
We have figured an adult male and female, rather less than the natural size.