PODICEPS AURITUS.
Horned Grebe.
Colymbus auritus, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 222.
Podiceps arcticus, Boie. .
---------- comutus, Temm.
I r e g r e t exceedingly that the specific term cornutus cannot with propriety be retained for a bird which has
hitherto been so familiarly known by that appellation to every British ornithologist, inasmuch as no doubt
remains on my mind that it was to this species that Linnaeus originally applied the term auritus, and not to
the Eared Grebe ( Podiceps nigricollis'). On a perusal of my account o f the latter species it will be found that
it is a native of the warmer portions o f Europe and o f North Africa; while the Horned or Sclavoniau Grebe,
as it is frequently called, habitually frequents all countries suitable to its habits lying northward of Britain
as far as the Arctic circle. Nilsson states that it breeds in the reedy parts of the shallow waters of Sweden ;
Temminck that it is more often seen in Germany and the eastern parts of Europe, and that it is also found
in France, Switzerland, Provence, and Italy. It is said to inhabit the northern parts of Asia and the
vicinity of the Caspian Sea, America, from Hudson’s Bay and the fur-countries (where Dr. Richardson
tells us it is very common on every lake with grassy borders), Canada, and the United States, to
Florida. In England it resorts to the coast and the few fenny districts yet remaining; it is not uncommon
in several parts of Ireland in winter; and Macgillivray informs us it is not unfrequently to be met with
in the estuaries o f Scotland at the same season, and is sometimes shot in considerable numbers.
Specimens have been killed in Cornwall, Devonshire, Sussex, Norfolk, Lincolnshire, and on the coasts
of Durham and Northumberland. Mr. Dunn, in his useful ‘ Ornithologist’s Guide,’ says:— “ This beautiful
species is extremely rare both in Orkney and Shetland; but I saw seven or eight, in the month of April.
It is a very shy bird, and, when alarmed, dives to a great distance, and on coming to the surface
immediately takes wing. The young, known by the name of Dusky Grebe, is very rare. Two or three
pairs used to frequent the Loch o f Stenness, in the neighbourhood of Stromness.” Sir William Jardine,
who considers it to be, next to the. Little Grebe, the most common species in Scotland, remarks that
specimens occur during the whole winter in the Edinburgh markets.
In Ireland, according to Thompson, it “ can be positively announced only as an occasional winter
visitant.” A few individuals, killed in the north of Ireland in winter, had come under his observation—one
obtained in Strangford Lough, in November 1821, and others near Whitehouse, below Holywood, and near
Bangor (all in Belfast Bay), in Coleraine, near Dublin, &c. In Wales, a specimen was shot at Penrice,
near Swansea, by C. M. R. Talbot, Esq.
Mr. Newton, in his notes “ On the Ornithology o f Iceland,” says the Horned Grebe is very generally
distributed on lakes throughout the western half, and probably the whole, o f the island. It arrives at the
beginning o f April or the first week in May, and, after breeding, departs in the autumn.
Mr. Proctor, the subcurator of the Durham University Museum, who visited Iceland in the summer
of 1837, observed that “ this bird frequents the fresh waters and breeds amidst the reeds and other
rank herbage. The nest is large, and floats on the surface o f the water, with which it rises and falls.
It is composed of a mass o f reeds and other aquatic plants. The eggs when first laid, are of a
bluish white; but they soon become stained by the materials o f which the nest is composed. Having
observed one o f these birds dive from its nest, I placed myself with my gun at my shoulder waiting
its reappearance. As soon as it emerged, I fired and killed it, and was surprised to see two young ones,
which, it seems, had been concealed beneath the wings o f the parent bird, drop upon the water. I
afterwards shot several others o f this species, all o f which dived with their young under their wings. The
young were placed with their heads towards the tail and their bills resting on the back of their parents.”
Mr. Stevenson informs me that “ the Horned Grebe is by no means uncommon in Norfolk throughout
the autumn and winter, whenvboth young and old are to be met with in severe weather. Occasionally it
remains late enough in the spring to acquire its rich breeding-plumage. A splendid pair, in full nuptial
attire, in my own collection, and a young bird in that of Mr. Gurney, were killed on the 16th of April, 1862,
on Sutton Broad. On dissection, they proved to be an old male and a young male and female. Their
stomachs were crammed with a compact mass of feathers, mixed with, and stained by, the green Conferva
from the surface of the water, the only particle o f food being a small brown beetle in the stomach o f the
female. The fact o f the Grebes swallowing their own feathers has been alluded to by Yarrell, Macgillivray,
Fleming, and other naturalists; but no satisfactory conclusion has, I believe, been arrived at, either as to