COMMON P T A RMIG AN.
Lagopus rautus, Leach.
Le Tetras Ptarmigan.
The great care which Nature takes o f her subjects is beautifully exemplified in the mountain Ptarmigans,
whose habits and manners lead them to dwell in situations where they experience the greatest extremes of
temperature, but against the effects o f which they are most amply provided, not only by the assumption of
a thick under-covering on the approach o f winter, but by a total change in the colour o f the plumage, which
assimilates to the surface around them, and doubly tends to their safety and preservation, and renders them
much less conspicuous to their enemies.
As might be supposed, the mountain Ptarmigans are less wary and shy in their disposition than the other
Grouse, doubtless in consequence o f being less disturbed by man, against whom tbe derated regions they
inhabit present an obstacle of too formidable a nature to be often encountered. The common Ptarmigan
appears to enjoy an extensive range throughout the whole o f the alpine districts o f tbe middle o f Europe, as
well as in the northern part o f the American continent; it is also found, but in less abundance, in Norway,
Sweden, and Russia, countries in which the Lagopus saliceti is more especially diffused. In the British
Islands it is found in all the mountain districts o f Scotland, and it is reported to have inhabited Wales at a
former period.
Our Plate will convey better than any description we can give, the great difference which exists between
the plumage o f summer and winter; a change, we may observe, which takes place by the process of a
gradual moult.
The Ptarmigan’s food consists, in summer, o f the berries o f alpine plants, and the young shoots o f heath
in the winter: when the mountains are covered with snow, it burrows beneath it in search o f food, as well as
for protection against the severities o f the season. It incubates early in spring: the eggs, which are from
twelve to fifteen in number, have a white ground colour mottled all over with reddish purple brown, and are
placed, without any nest, on the bare ground. In the colour o f their plumage, the young resemble the female
in summer, and gradually change to white with the approach o f winter.
The sexes are only to be distinguished by the somewhat larger size o f the male, and the more intense
black streak between the bill and the eyes.
In summer, the whole o f the upper surface is minutely barred with black and deep ochreous yellow; the
feathers o f the breast and flanks are also o f the same colour; the outer feathers o f the tail are black; the
under surface is greyish white; the primaries white; the shafts black, and these feathers are only moulted
once during the year.
In winter, the whole of the plumage is pure white, except the outer tail-feathers, and the spot between the
bill and the eyes, which are black.
The Plate represents an adult in the summer plumage, and one in the snowy livery o f winter.