MERGULUS ALLE.
I.ittle Auk.
Alca alle, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 50.
Uria alle, Temm. Man. d’Orn., 1815, p. 611.
Mergulus melanoleucos, Leach, Syst. Cat. of Indig. Mamm. and Birds in Brit. Mus., p. 42.
Alca candida, Brünn. Om Bor,, p. 26.
Mergulus alle, Vieill. Gal. des Ois., tom. ii. p. 237, pl. 295.
----------- arcticus, Brehm, Vög. Deutschi., p. 994.
Arctica alle, G. R. Gray, List of Gen. of Birds, 1841, p. 98.
In the British Islands, the Little Auk mostly occurs during the seasons of autumn and winter, while its
principal summer haunts are Spitzbergen, Iceland, Greenland, Baffin’s Bay, and Davis’s Straits. As far as
our intrepid voyagers have proceeded, even to the eighty-first degree o f north latitude, numbers beyond
computation were observed enlivening the scene with their presence. “ So numerous were they,” says Captain
Beechey, “ that we have often seen an uninterrupted line extending full halfway over Magdalen Bay, or to a
distance o f more than three miles. This column, on the average, might have been about six yards broad
and as many deep. There must have been nearly four millions o f birds on the wing at one time.” “ The
incredible numbers o f these species,” says Meyer, “ that have been seen by voyagers on the surface of the
northern seas are very remarkable; it is said that they cover the surface of the water and the floating
masses o f ice as far as the eye can discern, and, when they take flight, actually darken the sky. This species
is so entirely a sea-bird that it is only seen on land or in the immediate vicinity of the coast during the
breeding-season, and at other times hardly ever within fifteen or twenty miles from the shore.”
Col. Sabine, in his ‘ Memoir on the Birds o f Greenland,’ observes that “ the Little Auk was abundant in
Baffin’s Bay and Davis’s Straits, and in latitude 76° was so numerous in the channels o f water separating
fields o f ice, that many hundreds were killed daily, and the ship’s company supplied with them.”
“ This pretty little bird,” says Mr. Alfred Newton in his ‘ Notes on the Birds of Spitsbergen,’ “ is
numerous almost beyond belief on the greater part of the coast. Parry’s Expedition met with it as far to
the north as the party travelled, and in August found it in great numbers between lat. 81° and 82° N. Its
breeding-places, though at a less height than those of its allies, are still far from being easily accessible; but
I found one to within a few feet o f which I could climb and superintend the capture of the young. Mr.
Lamont, in his entertaining work ‘ Seasons with the Sea-horses,’ states his opinion that it is the mutings of
this bird which produce the well-known ‘ red snow.’ I do not at all agree to th is; for, setting aside that
the cause o f that singular appearance has been fully determined, and that it occurs in regions where there
are no birds o f the kind, the mutings o f the Roche or Little Auk are like anehovy-paste, while the red
snow, or such o f it as I saw, is o f an entirely different colour, being a dull crimson.”— Ibis, 1865, p. 521.
The same author states, in his note to Sabine Baring Gould’s ‘ Iceland, its Scenes and Sagas,’ that
according to Faber it occurs in that country all the year round, but only breeds on Grimsey, where Faber found
it in 1820, and Proctor in 1837. This is probably one o f the most southern o f its breeding-quarters; for
although it has been said to breed at St. Abb’s Head and other parts o f Scotland, I believe we have no reliable
evidence o f the fact. “ Although periodically driven upon our shores,” says Mr. Hewitson, “ and sometimes
in considerable numbers during the winter months, this beautiful little bird has its home much further north.
It is abundant on some part o f the shores o f Greenland, where it breeds, and whence both the birds and eggs
have been brought to this country by the sailors employed in the Greenland fishery. Mr. Proctor, who met
with it in Iceland, says that it is very local there, and makes no nest, but deposits its single egg upon the bare
ground, amongst and under the large stones which have fallen from the cliffs above. The birds allowed him
to turn over the stones and take them off their eg g s; he found twelve or fourteen eggs on the 2nd o f July,
far advanced in incubation. Most o f these were slightly spotted with rust-colour, but only a few o f them
very distinctly.” In ‘ M‘Clintock’s Voyage ’ it is stated that the “ Rotche or Little Auk, lays its single e*g
upon the bare rock far within the crevices, and beyond the reach of Fox, Owl, or Burgomaster Gull.”
The egg figured by Mr. Hewitson measures one inch and seven-eighths in length, by one inch and three-
eighths in breadth, and is o f a pale bluish white, with a few speckles o f rusty yellow principally at the larger
end. The egg is very large for the size of the bird— so large, in fact, that it would seem impossible that it
should be laid by so tiny a creature; for it fully equals that of a Bantam, a bird nearly six times the weight
of the Little Auk.
The above account forms the pith of the information that has been recorded respecting the bird in its