MERGUS CUCULLATUS, Um.
Hooded Merganser.
Mergus cucullatus, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 207.
Merganser Virginianus cristatus, Briss. Orn., tom. vi. p. 258.
— ■ cucullatus, Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Gen. Zool., vol. xii. p. 168.
S e v e r a l instances are on record o f thé occurrence o f this ornamental species of Mergus in England and on
the continent o f Europe; but its true home is America, over the northern portion o f which, from the United
States to the Fur-countries, it is very numerously distributed, and where, like the other members o f the
genus, its movements are influenced by the season ; that is to say, in the summer months it lives in the
north, where it breeds, and migrates southward as far as the Gulf o f Mexico in autumn and winter.
Mr. Selby has the honour of having made known its first occurrence in Britain, through the medium of
the first volume o f the ‘Transactions o f the Natural History Society of Northumberland, Durham, and Newcastle
upon-Tyne,’ p. 292. The specimen referred to was killed near Yarmouth during the winter o f 1829.
“ Since that period,” says Mr. Yarrell, “ T. C. Eyton, Esq., has obtained a specimen, which was killed in the
Menai Straits, near Bangor, in the winter o f 1830-31. Mr.' Hoy, of Stoke Nayland, in Suffolk, obtained
an adult male, as recorded in the ‘Naturalist;’ and I have heard of another that was shot at Benton Park,
the estate o f Anthony Ralph Biddulph, Esq.”
Mr. W. Christy Horsfall, of Horsforth Low Hall, informs me that he has a pair in his collection which
were killed in the neighbourhood o f Leeds. With such evidence of the occurrence o f the bird in our
islands, I must necessarily give it a place in the ‘ Birds of Great Britain.’ The spring dress of the Hooded
Merganser, like that o f the other species o f the genus, is by no means devoid o f ornament, the beautiful
hood of the male, which is capable o f being raised and depressed at the will o f the bird, adding much to
the grace of its appearance. That this hood or crest is merely a seasonal decoration, I think there can
be no doubt; for I have seen male specimens killed at the season when the female necessarily has her
entire attention devoted to her progeny, which were so much like females in outward appearance as to
convince me that at that time both sexes are similarly attired. These forlorn males now proceed southward
and rove about until the autumn,, when nature again prompts them to associate with the females ; they
gradually assume their courting-dress, once more become beaux, and when spring arrives pair and proceed
north to their breeding-quarters. This, however, only occurs in America ; for I question if any o f those that
have been found in Europe have been known to breed therein : this being the case, I shall be excused for
giving a lengthy extract from Audubon’s ‘ Ornithological Biography,’ descriptive o f the habits of the bird
as seen in America :—
“ Excepting the Smew or White Nun, the Hooded Merganser is the handsomest o f its family. Its broad
and rounded crest o f pure white, with an edging o f jetty black, renders the male conspicuous on the waters to
which it resorts, as the activity of its motions and the rapidity of its flight contribute to render it a pleasing
object. It seems to prefer fresh water, and is by no means frequent,, along the sea-coast. Long, narrow,
and moderately deep creeks, or small ponds, are more frequented by it than large rivers or lakes. On the
waters o f the Western and Southern States, these Mergansers are seen to arrive from the north early in
October. At the approach of night, a person standing still on the banks o f such a river as the Ohio, first
hears the sound of wings whistling through the air, and presently a different noise, like that produced by
an Eagle stooping on his prey, when, gliding downwards with the rapidity o f an arrow, he dimly perceives
Hooded Mergansers sweeping past. Five or six, perhaps ten, with quick beats o f their pinions, fly low
over the waters in wide circles, and, having spied the entrance o f a creek, shoot into it ; and in a few
seconds is heard the rushing noise they make as they alight on the bosom o f the still pool. Up the creek
the Mergansers proceed, washing their bodies by short plunges, and splashing up the water about them.
Then they plume themselves, and anoint their feathers, now and then uttering a low grunting note,
apparently o f pleasure. Now they dive in search o f minnows, which they find in abundance, and which
no doubt prove delicious food to the hungry travellers. Having satisfied their appetite, they rise on wing,
fly low over the creek with almost incredible velocity, return to the broad stream, and rove along its
margin until they meet with a clear sand-beach, where, secure from danger, they repose until the return
o f day.
“ This bird ranges throughout the United States during winter, content with the food it meets with in
the bays and estuaries o f the eastern coast and in the inland streams. The dam of the Pennsylvania miller
is as agreeable to it as that o f the Carolina rice-planter ; and I have found them as full o f life and gaiety on