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MERGUS CASTOR, Linn.
Goosander.
Mergus merganser, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 47.
castor, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 209.
— rubricapillus, Gmel. edit. Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 545.
Merganser Raii, Leach, Syst. Cat. of Indig. Mamm. and Birds in Brit. Mus , p. 36.
gulo, Steph. Oont. of Shaw’s Gen. Zool., vol. xii. p. 161, pi. 53.
— castor, Bonap. Geog. and Comp. List, of Birds of Eur. and N. Amer., p. 59.
T h e Goosander is the largest and the finest species of Mergus known. The plumage of the male in his
nuptial dress is remarkably striking, the rich green o f the head, the delicate salmon tint of the breast and
abdomen, and the jet-black o f the back being all most harmoniously arranged; and in this state few water-
birds are more beautifully attired. The members of the genus to which it belongs dwell entirely on the
waters, and, like the Cormorants, live almost exclusively on fish : the Mergansers, however, are more
lacustrine in their habits; for they do not go far out to sea, or fish so frequently in great estuaries and
bays, but prefer the inland lochs and great lakes o f the countries they respectively inhabit. With few
exceptions, all the species are found in the northern hemisphere, in the Old and the New World, and consequently
are natives o f high latitudes. The above somewhat general remarks apply to the four species which
frequent our waters, and not to the one inhabiting Brazil, or to the two frequenting the streams of the
Andean ranges; for although they undoubtedly belong to the same family, they pertain to very distinct
genera. In summer the Goosander is to be found in the northern portions o f Europe, where, and in other
countries in similar high latitudes, it breeds. The greater part of those which come to .us in autumn are
doubtless from Iceland, Norway, and Lapland. I am aware that Macgillivray, Dr. Dewar, and others have
stated that the bird breeds in the Outer Hebrides and other parts of Scotland; but I trust I shall be excused
if I doubt this, and suggest that the Red-breasted Merganser may have been mistaken for it. It is in
November that those who live in the Midland counties o f England look for the arrival o f the Goosander;
and so truly does it keep the time o f coming that it seldom varies more than a few days. The late Duke
o f Newcastle informed me that the small number which pass the winter on his fine lake at Clumber, in
Nottinghamshire, generally arrive within a few days o f the 15th o f November, and remain until the
following spring, when they suddenly leave for their breeding-grounds in the north. The quantity of fish
that the ten or twelve Goosanders which resort to Clumber lake destroy during their five months’ sojourn
must be enormous; for a twenty-pound pike does not, in my opinion, take a larger weight o f fish per diem
than one o f these voracious birds. The Duke very kindly invited me to Clumber, and assigned me a bedroom
the windows o f which opened towards the lake, that I might see how regularly the Goosanders fished
the upper and shallow part o f the stream at sunrise. As if acting in concert, the troop kept nearly in
line, and traversed the lake from end to end; the morning meal over, and their appetites appeased, they
resorted to the low and deeper water, and there remained until evening, when they again resumed their
fishing. In a trout-stream, I know o f no bird that would be more destructive; for the alacrity it displayed
in diving clearly convinced me that no fish could escape.
The employment o f the word “ nuptial” at the commencement o f this paper, with reference to the plumage
of the Goosander, will have indicated that this fine species is subject to a change o f costume; and no metamorphosis
could effect a greater difference in appearance than is exhibited by the male before and after the
breeding-tirae. As soon as the nesting-period is over, he gradually throws off his beautiful silky green headdress,
the black colouring of his back, and the buffy colouring o f his breast, for a plumage so similar to
that of the female that, were it not for his superior size, at a short distance the two sexes could not be
distinguished from each other. The young of both sexes are alike in colour, and very similar to the old
female, until at least the second year.
The site chosen for the incubation of its eggs is a hole in a tree, under a great stone, the lee side of a
bush, or among the herbage by a lake-side. The late Mr. Wheelwright, in his ‘ Spring and Summer
in Lapland,’ tells us that the only two sets o f eggs found by him were both placed on the bare ground.
Mr. Hewitson states that “ the eggs o f this species were first added to our collections by the perseverance
o f Mr. Proctor, o f Durham, who procured them during his visit to Iceland. The nests he found there
were upon small islands in the freshwater lochs near the sea-coast. They were composed o f very few
materials—a small quantity o f dry grass, with a lining o f down and feathers—and contained from four to six
eggs, which nearly resemble those o f the Red-breasted Merganser, but larger, and o f a lighter colour.”