MERGUS SERRATOR.
Merganser.
Mergus senator, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 208.
-— var. leucomelas, serratus, et niger, Gmel. edit. Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 546.
Merganser cristatus, Briss. Orn., tom. vi. p. 237, pi. 23.
------------ niger, Briss. Orn., tom. vi. p. 251.
senata, Shaw, Gen. Zool., vol. xii. p. 165.
I f my readers were to picture to themselves a zone in the northern hemisphere between the 40th and 70th
degrees o f latitude, and could further carry in their mind all those parts of the land that are studded with
lakes, or intersected with rivers aud salt lagoons, they would then be able to form a just conception o f the
area over which the Merganser is spread. In the British Islands generally all the northern lakes, bays, and
inlets o f the sea are frequented by it. It also occurs in similar situations in Denmark, Norway, Sweden,
Russia, Switzerland, and Savoy, and doubtless on all the other waters between the Black Sea and Kamtschatka;
the north o f China and Japan are also among the countries in which it is found. In America it frequents all
the lakes and rivers from Canada to Texas. It is also, I believe, found in Iceland. In the British Islands it
is rather a northern than a southern bird; for although it is sometimes killed as far south as the sheltered
bays o f the Hampshire coast, and as far west as the waters of Cornwall and Scilly, it is during the winter
months only that such occurrences take place. Although comparatively a common bird, and so widely
distributed, I question if more than one out of twenty of my readers has seen the Merganser in a state of
nature. To those who have the desire to do so, I may say that the bird is a constant resident in all the
northern parts of Scotland, Ireland, the Western Islands, Orkney, and Shetland, wherever such situations as
those above described occur. I must remark, however, that its presence depends greatly upon its freedom
from persecution ; if absent from its usual haunts, molestation is the cause. In the London markets, and
doubtless in those o f Liverpool, Manchester, and Edinburgh, specimens may frequently be seen during the
months of winter, showing that the gunner, in his flat-bottomed boat, has pulled his trigger at the Saw-bill
(as it is commonly called), as well as at the more profitable Mallard. As an article of food, I suspect few
birds can be more unsuited; and hence the only purchaser o f those that grace the market-shambles is the
Taxidermist, who obtains them at a price remarkably low, especially if they be females, or young males of
the year, as is mostly the case ; for the finely-plumaged males either do not migrate so far south, or by the
exercise o f greater vigilance contrive to keep out o f harm’s way.
Like the other species o f the genus, the Merganser differs very considerably in the colouring of the sexes.
The fine coral-red bill o f the male, his double-crested green head, showy epaulets, and lovely-coloured breast,
all combine to render him one o f the handsomest of our water-birds. This spring or nuptial dress is not,
however, carried all the year; for when the female has commenced the task of incubation, or has taken her
young to the water, he becomes careless, as it were, o f his finery, throws off his gaily-coloured feathers,
and assumes an appearance so much like that o f the female, that at a distance, except by their difference
o f size, one could not be distinguished from the other. The males are now said to associate by themselves
in small communities of ten or more in number, regardless both of their females and o f their progeny. On
the approach of spring the sombre dress is again exchanged, the finer garb renewed, the female sought for
and wooed, and some quiet place on the loch-side selected for the nest; and thus we are brought round to
the period whence we started.
I fear that some o f my readers will perceive an inconsistency between the accompanying illustration and the
description; but it' is not at all impossible that a male should carry his fine garb and remain with the female
till the month o f July, the period when the young are hatched; indeed it is probable that he frequently does so.
Much of the time o f the Merganser is spent on the water. The lengthened form o f its body, the oily
character o f its plumage, and its entire structure are, indeed, admirably adapted for swimming and diving.
The bird frequently hunts in companies, commencing at the lower end o f a reach or river, and gradually
fishing the whole stream from end to end; and since, as with the voracious Cormorant, digestion goes on
quickly, the amount o f fish each Merganser takes is enormous. “ Comparisons are odious ” is an old saying,
but I cannot omit remarking how vastly more destructive must be this bird to the salmon and trout
than the cheerful little Water-Ouzel.*.
Independently o f lochs and rivere, the Merganser seeks its living in most of the bays and salt-water
estuaries, where it feeds on sand-eels and other fishes common to such localities.
The young, as will he seen from the figures in the accompanying Plate, taken from examples about ten