intended doing with so many, he replied, “ They make capital pies ! ” I could have killed any number, b u t
contented myself with obtaining sufficient to supply my numerous ornithological friends. This great flight
appeared in October, and many o f the old birds retained traces of the plumage o f the preceding summer.
The first time a great number of Phalaropes were observed at Plymouth was about thirty-five years'ago,
when a dead whale was brought into the Sound, to which circumstance their appearance was attributed ; but
as the occurrence took place in autumn, it is probable the whale had nothing to do with it.
To give all the instances on record of the capture o f this bird in England would be as superfluous as it
is impossible to say on what particular day or in which week of the year a living bird may be seen on our
coast or inland waters ; for its appearance is governed by circumstances unknown to us. And, indeed, the
Grey Phalarope must be regarded as an accidental visitor, as a bird which may perhaps be met with at the
Land’s End, on the coast of Norfolk, on the Thames, the Ribble, or the Humber, or a sheet o f water in a
nobleman’s park, or a large reservoir (like that at Kingsbury in Middlesex), o r on a horse-pond by the roadside,
any day during the seasons o f autumn and winter. Its appearance in Ireland and Scotland is precisely
similar, as it also is in all parts o f the continent, and all the northern portions o f the globe from the latitude
of the Mediterranean ; further south than this it seldom proceeds, and necessity alone impels it to wander
thus far from its true home. Rarely, if ever, is it seen in this country in its red or nuptial dress ; but traces
of its assumption have been seen in the few examples killed in spring, and traces o f its remains in those
shot in autumn, as mentioned by Mr. Gatcombe.
There are two or three circumstances connected with this bird which are very remarkable. In the first
place, the female is both larger in size, and in summer is more gaily attired than the male—a difference
which is shown in the accompanying Plate, where the bird figuredlfi the act of flying, represents a female,
and that on the water a male ; in the next, I am informed by Professor Steenstrup, o f Copenhagen, that the
duty o f incubation appears to be performed by the male only—a circumstance which appears to be confirmed
by the bare state in which the breasts of specimens o f that sex are often found. We know that this duty
is executed by the male Rheas and Emus ; and it is stated that the male Turnices, which are also smaller
than the females, hatch the eggs and take charge of the young exclusively; but that such a habit should
prevail with the Phalaropes is a singular anomaly.
Mr. Newton, in his valuable Notes on the Birds o f Iceland, published in Baring-Gould’s ‘ Iceland, its
Scenes and Sagas,’ says, “ This bird has been but seldom observed by strangers in Iceland, yet in 1858 I
found it was very well known to the natives in the district where Faber had seen it in 1821. On the 21st
of June in that year he obtained a pair which were swimming in a flock o f the commoner species (Lobipes
hyperboreus) . The female contained largely developed eggs. On the following day he found a single pair
near the same locality, but searched in vain for their nest. Finally he met with a family party some miles
to the eastward. In 1858 I discovered two pairs on a lake in the same district ; but a few days afterwards
they had disappeared, and they certainly did not remain to breed there that year. Last summer, a friend
o f mine sent me four eggs as those of this bird, which had been taken under his special superintendence.
Setting aside the excellent authority on which their identification rests, they are so entirely different from
any other Icelandic bird’s I know, that I can hardly doubt their genuineness:” #
In his notes on the birds in Spitzbergen, Mr. Newton says, “ Although met with in various localities, from
the extreme south to the extreme north, and doubtless breeding in many places, the exact spots selected are
stdl unknown to us. Dr. Malmgren was as unsuccessful in his first voyage as myself. Last year the
skipper of a Swedish exploring vessel found a nest with four eggs up the North Fjord o f the Sound, a t the
beginning o f July. The contents he put in his cap ; but as he was deer-stalking at the time, he forgot the
treasures he was carrying, and they were all smashed. La ter in the month Professor Dunér found a nest,
with three fresh eggs, in Bell Sound. They lay on the ground, which consisted o f small splinters o f stone,
without any bedding. They are now a t Stockholm. Neither o f the parent birds was observed near thé
nest. Dr. Malmgren noticed this species as far north as lat. 80° 10. He states it feeds chiefly on a species
of Nostoc ; but the stomachs of those I dissected on Russo contained many gnats and their larvæ.
“ Mr. Holbcell says that it is the latest of all the Greenland birds, and does not arrive till the beginning
of June a t which time it may be seen in large flocks in Davis Straits. In his voyage to Greenland, in 1835,
whilst shut up m the ice for eighteen days, he saw this bird swimming about among the blocks of ice. In
South Greenland it is rarely seen, and then only in its migration southward. In North Greenland it is very
common, and builds its nest there on nearly all the islands possessing small ponds. Whilst the Red-necked
1 halarope always resorts to those islands which are within the fjords, this species as constantly breeds upon
those only which are outside the coast. In August the young ones are fledged, and in September they are
seen m company with the old birds, all in their winter clothing, swimming about the outermost islands,
where they seek out the bays, and delight very much in playing about in the broken water.”
front fiSures are o f the natural size. The plant is the Ranunculusflumatilis.