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ACTITIS MACULARIUS.
Spotted Sandpiper.
Tringa macularia, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 249.
Totanos macularios, Temm. Man. d’Orn. (1815), p, 422.
Actitis macularia, Boie, Isis, 1826, p. 979.
Tringóides macularia, G. R. Gray, Gen. of Birds, vol. iii. p. 574.
Some ornithologists believe that the Spotted Sandpiper is a myth, so far as regards the avifauna o f Great
Britain, notwithstanding the most positive assurances of its capture are given in the works of Bewick,
Yarrell, and others. However this may be, as regards England, there seems to be no doubt o f its occurrence
in Scotland; for Mr. Gray’s recently published valuable work on the • birds o f the western p art of that
country states that authentic instances, the only ones it is true, of this rare bird being found in Scotland
were communicated to him by his obliging friend and correspondent, Mr. Angus, of Aberdeen, who states
that a male and female were left a t the Aberdeen Museum in August 1867, in the absence o f Mr. Mitchell,
who up to the present moment does not know by whom the birds were presented o r where they were shot.
Both were in the flesh and had not been long d e a d ; they were prettily marked and somewhat dissimilar
in size, the male being the largest. The female is now in Mr. Angus’s cabinet; the other has been kindly
presented by Mr. Mitchell to Mr. Gray, and is now in his collection. With such evidence as this, published
as late as 1871, and presuming that a t least some of the fifteen occurrences recorded by Mr. Harting in his
‘ Handbook o f British Birds ’ are authentic, we can scarcely assert th at it has never been seen in the British
Islands, especially as we know that the bird, like the common Summer Snipe, is a great wanderer both over
some parts of Europe and the extensive continent o f America. Nilsson, in his ‘ Fauna o f Scandinavia,’ says
it is often seen in the north of Europe, and that specimens have been killed in Sweden, on the islands in
the Baltic, and in Gothland. Temminck also refers to it as having been killed in Germany in the
neighbourhood of the R h in e ; and Meyer and Wolf and Brehm also include it among the birds o f that country
—a fact which induces me to believe that the bird does now and then stray over to our island. As regards
America I have reason to believe it is more constant in Texas and the country lying northward from there
to Newfoundland than in any other p art of that continent. I t is also, we know, either an inhabitant or a
migrant over the West Indies and many parts of South America, Mr. Clarence Bartlett having brought
from Surinam many very beautiful specimens obtained during his short visit to that country.
The works of American ornithologists teem with information respecting the Spotted Sandpiper, the more
important of which I will take the liberty o f extracting. In th at o f Audubon it is s ta ted :—“ The Spotted
Sandpiper has a wonderfully extensive ran g e ; for I have met with it, not only in most parts o f the United
States, but also on the shores of Labrador, where, on the 17th of June, 1833, I found it breeding. On
the 29th o f Ju ly the young were fully fledged and scampering over the rocks about us, amid the putrid and
drying cod fish. In that country it breeds later by three months than in Texas ; for on the head waters of
Buffalo Bayou, about sixty miles from the margin of the Mexican Gulf, I saw broods already well grown on
the 5th of May, 1837. On the same day o f the same month in 1832, a similar occurrence happened on an
island near Indian Key, on the south-east coast o f Florida. In Newfoundland, on the other hand, the young
were ju st fully fledged on the 11th o f August. It appears strange that none were observed by
Dr. Richardson on the shores o f Hudson’s Bay, or in the interior of that country. They are quite abundant
along the margins of the Mississippi, the Ohio, and their tributaries. On the Island of Jestico, in the Gulf
o f St. Lawrence, about twenty pairs had nests and eggs on the 11th o f J u n e ; and the air was filled with the
pleasing sound o f their voices while we remained there. The nests were placed among the tall slender
grass that covered the southern p art o f the island. They were more bulky and more neatly constructed
than any that I have examined southward o f the Gulf of St. Lawrence; and yet they were not to be
compared with those found in Labrador, where in every instance they were concealed under ledges of
rocks extending for several feet over them ; so that I probably should not have observed them, had not the
birds flown off as I was passing. These nests were made o f dry moss, raised to the height o f from six to
nine inches and well finished within with slender grasses and feathers of the Eider Duck. As usual,
however, the eggs were always four when the bird was sitting. They measure an inch and a quarter in
length by an inch a t their thickest p a r t ; so that they have a shortish and bulky appearance, though they run
almost to a point. They are smooth and handsomely marked with blotches o f deep brown, and others o f a