settle in such numbers, and so close together, that eighty-five have been shot at one discharge o f a musket.
They spring from the marshes with a loud twirling whistle, generally rising high and making several
circuitous manoeuvres in the air before they descend. They frequent the sand-bars and mud-flats at low
water in search of food; and being less suspicious o f a boat than of a person on shore are easily approached
by this medium and shot down in great numbers. They usually keep by themselves, being very numerous,
are in excellent order for the table in September, and on the approach o f winter retire to the south. I have
frequently amused myself with the various actions of these birds. They fly very rapidly, sometimes wheeling,
coursing, and doubling along the surface o f the marshes, then shooting high in air, there separating and
forming in various bodies, uttering a kind o f quivering whistle. Among many which I opened in May were
several females that had very little rufous below their back, were also much lighter, and less marbled with
ferruginous. The eggs contained in their ovaries were some of them as large as garden-peas.”
The above passage is extracted from Sir William Jardine's edition o f Wilson’s ‘American Ornithology,’
vol. ii. p. 337, where will be found the following note by the learned E d ito r :—
“ This bird will stand in the rank of a subgenus. I t was first indicated by Leach in the ‘ Catalogue to
the British Museum,’ under the title of Macrorhamphus griseus. I t is one o f those beautifully connecting
forms which it is impossible to place without giving a situation to themselves, and intimately connects the
Snipes with Totanus and Inmosa. The bill is truly that o f Scolopax, while the plumage and changes ally it
to the other gen era; from these blending characters it has been termed Limosa scolopacea by Say, who gave
the characters o f the form without applying the name.”
Audubon, in his ‘ Ornithological Biography’ (vol. iv. p, 287), says:—“ T he flight of this bird is rapid,
strong, and remarkably well sustained. When rising in large numbers, which they usually do simultaneously,
they crowd together, are apt to launch upwards iu the air for a while, and, after performing several evolutions
in contrary directions, glide towards the ground, and wend their way close to it until, finding a suitable place,
they alight iu a very compact body, and stand for a moment. Sometimes, as if alarmed, they recommence
their meandering flight, and after a while return to the same spot, alighting in the same manner. Then is the
time when the gunner may carry havoc amongst th em ; but in two or three minutes they separate and search
for food, when you must either put them up to have a good shot, o r wait the arrival o f another flock
at the same place, which often happens; for these birds seldom suffer any of their species to pass without
sending them a note of invitation. I t is not at all uncommon to shoot twenty or thirty of them a t once. I
have been present when 127 were killed by discharging three barrels, and have heard o f many dozens having
been procured at a shot. When wounded and brought to the water, they try in vain to dive, and on reaching
the nearest p art of the shore they usually run a few steps and squat among the grass, when it becomes difficult
to find them. Those which have escaped unhurt often remain looking after their dead companions,
sometimes waiting until shot at a second time. When they are fat, they afford good eatin g ; but their flesh
is a t no time so savoury as that o f the common American Snipe.”
In Swainson and Richardson’s * Fauna Boreali-Americana,’ p. 398, it is s ta te d :— “ This bird is well known
in the fen-countries, and has an extensive breeding-range from the borders o f Lake Superior to the Arctic
Sea. In the breeding-season, the whole under-plumage is buff-coloured, approaching to ferruginous, in
which state it has not hitherto been described. Individuals killed on the Saskatchewan plains had their
crops filled with leeches and fragments o f coleoptera. The Scolopax noveboracensis forms a link between
the Snipes and Godwits, having the bill o f the former and the feet o f the latter.”
The principal figure in the accompanying Plate represents this bird in full summer dress, the reduced
figure one in a state o f change.