Pink-footed Goose.
brachyrhynchus, Bail!- Mem. de la Soc. d'Einul. d’Abbev., 1833, p.
F rom time immeraprial wild geese o f several species have migrated to the British nipmniy
as the Cuckoo and the Swallow, but with 'this difference of object: the Cuckoo nod ’;>1-• e
come here to breed and perpetuate their kind; but the geese have sought our shores u rn %iP - «
an asylum for the winter, just as the Fieldfare and Redwing do in localities suited to tlurin.
time o f Willughby and Ray to the early part o f the present century, but little has bee» record* 4 aA<
these important birds; and their distinctions were involved in obscurity; now, however, they are wew It
and I believe I shall be perfectly correct in stating that the Britisli Islands are either «
occasionally visited by seven species, viz. the Grey Lag (Anser ferns'), the Bean-Goose (
Pink-footed (A . brachyrhynchus), the White-fronted (A . albifrons) , the Bemicle ( licrnicla :
Brent (JB. brenta) , and the Red-breasted (/?. nificollis). The first o f these is the only one that r*pN*m
breeds with us, and is doubtless the origin of our common domestic goose; the five succeeding m
visitors only, and the last an accidental one.
The Pink-footed Goose was made known as a British bird by Mr. Bartlett at the first meeting at
Zoological Society in 1839, when he characterized it under the name o f Anser pfuenicopus from the colouring
o f its legs and feet, without being aware that M. Bail Ion, o f Abbeville, had previously (in 1833) pointed on*
its specific distinctions, and assigned it the name of A . brachyrhynchus from the shortness o f its beak, a term
which, from its priority, is now generally adopted.
In all probability the Pink-footed has always been the most common of our migratory -geese, but, until
the dates above mentioned, was confounded with its near ally the Bean-Goose, the two species being very
similar in size and general appearance; they are readily distinguishable, however, by the difference in the
colouring o f their legs and feet—those o f the Bean-Goose being yellow, and those o f the other pink.
The A . brachyrhynchus arrives on our shores early in October or the beginning of November, and at once
resorts to all suitable localities, and remains there, if •unmolested, until the spring, when, like all the other
migrating geese, it quits the country, many o f them proceeding to regions within the Arctic circle so far
north that man has not yet been able to follow them, nor to ascertain what is the nature o f the great
nurseries o f this family o f birds.
“ Since the specific distinctions of this short-billed Goose,” says Mr. Stevenson in his ‘ Birds of Norfolk,' “ were
first pointed out by M. Baillon in 1833, and subsequently by Mr. Bartlett in 1839, it has proVed to be both a
constant and abundant winter-visitant on our Norfolk coast, although to a great extent confined to the western
side of the county, and especially to certain localities in the neighbourhood of Holkham.
“ The earliest record of its identification in this county is apparently the notice by Yarrell of a specimen killed
at Holkham, in January 1841, by the present Earl of Leicester, out of a flock of about twenty, since which time
this goose lias proved to be by far the most common species that frequents the Holkham marshes. Of its habits
in that neighbourhood the following notes have been kindly supplied me by Lord Leicester.
“ «As long as I can recollect, wild geese frequented the Holkham and Burnham Marshes. Their time of
appearing in this district is generally the last week of October, and their departure the end of March, varying a
little according to the season. Till November they rarely alight in the marshes or elsewhere in the neighbourhood,
but are seen passing to and from the sea. Where they feed in October I know not, as I have reason to believe
that they do not obtain much food off the muds, like the brents, but live mainly on grass and new-sown wheat.
From early in November till their time of departure for the north, the Holkham marshes have almost daily some
hundreds of geese feeding on them. There are periods of a week or a fortnight when the greater portion of them
go elsewhere; but rarely all go. When on the marshes they are mostly in one or two flocks, but in stormy
weather, or even on certain still days, for some unaccountable reason they break up into small lots. My keepers
informed me that one day, about the middle of November 1870, which was perfectly calm, they were flying about
in small lots very low, and that a great many might have been killed.’
“ Referring to the goose shot by himself in 1841, and identified by Yarrell as the pink-footed, his lordship adds,
* Of the many geese killed here before then, I have reason to believe from their habits they were nearly all the
same as those now here—the pink-footed; and of the many hundreds killed since, with the exception, I believe,
of only one bean-goose and a few white-fronted, they, were all pink-footed. The greatest number killed^ in one
year was in the severe winter of 1860-61, when one hundred and thirty-eight were killed, all pink-footed.
“ Mr. Dowell, who is also well acquainted with the habits of this species and has shot several at different times,
informs me that they feed in flocks of from one or two to six or seven hundred on the uplands by day, and he