HARELDA GLACIALIS.
Long-tailed Duck.
Anas glacialis, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 203.
hyemalis, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 44.
—— longicauda, Leach, Syst. Cat. of Indig.. Mamm. and Birds in Brit. Mus. p. 37.
Pagonetta glacialis, Kaup, Natiirl. Syst. p. 66.
Crymonessa glacialis, Macg. Man. of Nat. Hist., Orn., vol. ii. p. 186
Harelda glacialis, Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Gen. Zool., vol. xii. p. 175, pi. 58
Glangula glacialis, Boie, Isis, 1822, p. 564:
D u r in g the months of summer the Long-tailed Duck frequents the northern regions of Europe, Asia,
Greenland, and America, but on the approach o f autumn bids farewell for a short period to the land of
its birth, and gradually wends its way to the southward ; some proceeding to European seas, others
to China and Japan, while others, again, wander along the eastern and western coast-lines of America,
their progress southward being accelerated or retarded by the nature o f the season or the state of the
weather; seldom, however, do even solitary individuals proceed so far as the latitudes o f the Mediterranean,
the Island of Madeira, or the Azores. Scotland, Ireland, and England, lying in the direct line of migration,
naturally come in for a full share o f visitors; but, as might be expected, the northern parts of our
islands are more often favoured with its presence than the southern and western; hence, in the Orkneys,
the Shetlands, and in all the armlets o f the sea on the eastern side of Scotland, from the mouths of
the most northern rivers and Cromarty Bay to the Firth o f Forth on the east, and the Clyde on the west, the
Longtailed Duck may be seen in such numbers, during the months of autumn, winter, and early spring, as to
render the word common an appropriate term. Further south than this (for instance, the coasts o f Norfolk
and Suffolk, and the opposite ones o f Lancashire and Wales) it gradually becomes more scarce, and it is only
in rigorous winters and at stormy periods that the bird is found in Cornwall and Devonshire. What has
been said with regard to the bird’s movements in Britain, holds good in all countries o f a similar latitude.
With us, o f course, it does not breed; but in Iceland, Spitsbergen, Nova Zembla, Greenland, Hudson’s Bay,
and doubtless in northern Siberia it nidifies and rears its young. Those persons who are acquainted with the
Mallard {Anas boschas) must, as a matter of course, have remarked the changes of plumage which take place
in the male after the breeding-season, and have noticed that, having performed the duty of reproduction, he
throws off his beautiful green head-dress and short curly tail-feathers, and dons a plumage differing but little
from that o f his spouse, which he continues to wear until the young are able to fly. Another change then
takes place; and by November the Drake is again beautifully attired, and only requires the heightening of
the wax-yellow colouring o f the bill and the acquisition o f the rich glossy green tint on the head to
render his appearance sufficiently attractive to enable him to again leave his bachelor life and seek a mate
for the ensuing summer. Now this mode o f life and a similar transformation of plumage is more or less
common to all the members o f the Anatidoe, whether it be the gaily coloured and richly ornamented
Mandarin Duck o f China, or the Little Teal o f our own islands. In winter and spring the males o f those
species are conspicuously different from the females ; but in summer the sexes can scarcely be distinguished
except by dissection. The Long-tailed Duck is similarly metamorphosed at opposite seasons o f the vear, but,
unlike all other Ducks, is as beautiful, although o f a different colour, at. one season as at another, the plumage
o f both sexes undergoing a total change, so that they have a dress common to both in summer, and another
equally common to both in winter, the only differences being, that the long central tail-feathers and the
large crest o f the mature male, shown in the front figure o f the accompanying Plate, are never seen in the
female. In summervthe male has the long tail-feathers and a rich chestnut, grey, and black dress : the female
has the same colours; but being destitute o f the ornamental tail-feathers, her appearance is that o f a dumpy
short-tailed Duck. From what has been said it will be apparent that the bird is rarely seen in its summer
dress in this country; indeed the numerous notes kindly sent to me by Mr. Stevenson and others, as well
as. the evidence o f all previous writers, tend to prove that it seldom, if ever, occurs here at that season.
The somewhat flattened tarsi, large hind toe, and broad interdigital membranes of the Long-tailed Hareld,
as it is sometimes called, dearly indicate that it is one of the diving Ducks, and that it descends to the
bottom for its food, consisting of mollusks, crustaceans, sea-worms, and other lowly organized inhabitants of
the deep. When it accidentally ascends our rivers or resorts to our freshwater lakes and meres, it is out
of its place, far removed from its own element, which is low down the tide-way in the brackish salt water.