Great Northern Diver.
Colymbus glacialis, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 221.
-----------Immer, Linn, ibid., p. 222.
----------- torquatus, Brünn., no. 134.
----------- glacialis, maximus et liiemalis, Brehm, Handb. der Naturg. Vög. Deutschl., pp. 970, 971, 972.
Mergus major, Briss. Orn., tom. vi. p. 105, pi. 10. fig. 1.
-------------------ntevius, Briss. ibid., p. 120, pi. 11. fig. 2 (adult).
Eudytes glacialis et Immer, 111. Prod. Syst. Mamm. et Av., p. 283.
Cepphus Imber et Lomvia, Pall. Zopg. Ross.-Asiat., tom. ii. pp. 344, 345.
T he Colymbus glacialis stands at the head of a genus, the members o f which are so strictly confined to the
northern hemisphere that none are found south of the line, neither do any of them proceed nearer the
equatorial region than the latitudes of Madeira or Teneriffe; but to the northward o f these they abound.
In all the seas surrounding the British Islands5, and especially in the firths and salt-water lochs of the eastern
and western parts o f Scotland, they may be seen, courageously breasting the waves, or making lengthened
dives in search of the fish, crustaceans, and mollusks upon which they principally live; and there seems little
reason to doubt that the bottom of the seas round our coasts and the beds o f our tidal rivers are as closely
searched for these kinds o f food as the fields or furzy commons are by the Harrier for small quadruped
and birds, or the ploughed lands by the Peewit for worms and insects.
The bony structure and the dense adpressed plumage o f the Great Northern Diver especially adapting it
for an aquatic life, it seldom resorts to the land except at the season o f reproduction, when it becomes
necessary for it to seek the shore for the purpose of depositing and hatching its eggs. This duty performed,
the parents conduct their little brood, as soon as they have acquired sufficient strength to battle with the
waves and resist the dashing of the breakers, to that element on which they are destined to dwell, and where
they remain until, like their progenitors, they are prompted to reproduce their kind, for which purpose they
retire to countries further north, such as Iceland, Greenland, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, the inland waters
o f Davis’s Straits and Baffin’s Bay, and the fur-countries o f America. In all these localities it is known to
breed in greater or smaller numbers. From Mr. Alfred Newton’s Notes on the Ornithology o f Iceland we
learn that a pair or two breed on nearly every lake in that country; they arrive about the first week in
May, and towards the end o f August begin to show themselves on the sea, where, it appears, they remain
till the winter. When the shores of the boreal regions become ice-bound, and the straits entirely frozen
over, the Great Northern Diver is o f necessity obliged to migrate to more genial latitudes, where a supply
o f its natural food is still procurable; and hence it is that such numbers are seen around our islands in the
seasons o f autumn and winter. That the birds here found do come from the far north, I think we have
convincing evidence in the circumstance o f an example killed on the Irish coast having an Esquimaux’s arrow
sticking through its neck.
There is, probably, no genus o f birds which has so puzzled the ornithologist with regard to the changes in
their plumage as the Divers, and o f them none more than the present species. We are all aware that the
Grebes are subject to a seasonal change, and that their fine tippets and ear-plumes are characteristic of the birds
in summer. Ducks and Cormorants undergo the like decorations and changes; and I am certain that the
Divers are similarly influenced, and that those parts of the birds which are adorned with markings of black and
white are thrown off and replaced by a totally different dress in winter; but we frequently find, at that season,
individuals which are as beautifully decorated as in spring and summer. Can these be birds which have not
yet bred, and have anticipated the time in which the nuptial dress is ordinarily assumed ? I think it likely
this is the case; and I believe that Mr. Gatcombe, o f Plymouth, who has paid considerable attention to the
subject, is o f the same opinion as myself; it would be well, however, if those who may be favourably situated
for observation would endeavour to throw sdme additional light upon it. That the bird never attains its
fine spotted plumage during the first autumn o f its existence, and that it carries its grey dress until at least
the second year, is, in my opinion, more than probable; and hence it is that so large a number occur in
a costume characteristic both o f winter and of immaturity.
The food of this voracious feeder appears to be o f a varied character; for while it is said to feed upon
herrings, sprats, and all the other kinds of fish of a similar size the sea affords, it also eats crustaceans and
shelled mollusks. When it visits the fresh waters, few birds, I presume, are more destructive: Mr. Bond
informs me that one, procured on the reservoir at Naseby in Northamptonshire, vomited thirty-one roach when
taken into the boat. Its diving-powers are wonderful, and it is with the greatest difficulty the bird can be