PHäLACROCORAX
■JGvuleL'&ffCEichia) äel/et'lüh/.
GABBO »
Cormorant,
Pelecanus carlo, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 51.
-------------phalacrocorax, Brünn. Om. Bor., p. 31.
Carlo cormoranus, Meyer, Taschenb. Deutsch!. Vög., tom. ii. p. 576
glacialis, Brehm, Vög. Deutschl., p. 817.
Halteus carlo, Illig. Prodr., p. 279.
cormoranus, Naum. Vög. Deutschl., 1842, tom. i. p. 52.
Graculus carlo, Gray & Mitch. Gen. of Birds, vol. iii. p. 667.
T h e r e is perhaps no group o f birds so generally dispersed over the rocky sea-shores o f the globe as the
Cormorants; for one or other species may be seen everywhere. The extreme southern parts o f Africa,
Australia. New Zealand, and Patagonia abound with them; and they are equally numerous in America,
Europe, Japao, and other parts o f the north. They are also found in most intermediate countries.
Generally speaking, each country is tenanted by its own peculiar kind ; but in some few cases certain
species may be regarded as almost cosmopolitan, being found in many different localities, of which
the present bird is an instance; for, besides Europe, the Common Cormorant is also found over a
great part o f North America, India, China, and Africa; and I now believe that the bird inhabiting Australia,
which has been named P/utlacrocora,v Novae Hollandice, can scarcely be separated from it. That it
frequents all the rocky sides o f the coasts of England, Ireland, and Scotland is certain. In winter it
ascends the inlets o f the sea, and sometimes resorts to the lakes o f the interior in summer, when it may be
often seen fishing their waters; and great indeed must be the destruction it effects among our freshwater
fishes during such visits. On this head Mr. Robert Gray states, in his 'Birds of the West o f Scotland:’—
“ There is a large breeding colony every year on Loch Moan, in Ayrshire, a place but little visited,
and distinguished for nothing but these Cormorants and the sterile scenery by which it is surrounded. In
the f>reeding-season o f 1867 the place was visited by a fishing-party, who, finding nothing in the loch (every
fish having been devoured by the birds), launched a boat they had brought across the hills, and proceeded to
the island, where they built a pyramid o f Cormorants’ eggs, which they had no difficulty in gathering, to the
height o f two or three feet, and smashed the entire lot with large »tone*. One o f the party informed me,
though the eggs were not counted, more than a thonsand were destroyed, and that a similar colony existed
a tew years ago on the lochs o f Mochrum and Dumwall, in Wigtonshire.” I commend this passage to the
notice o f those who are framing laws for the protection o f our native birds.
From time immemorial, Cormorants have been more or less subject to domestication, at least so far as to
conduce to the pleasures of sport. On this head I take the liberty of transcribing the following passage
from tin; pen o f Mr. F. H. Salvin, published in ‘ Land and Water:’-—
“ Since tbc pwMication o f my work entitled ' Falconry, its Claims, History, and Practice,’ to which I
added a few chapter* upon Cormorant-fishing, I have picked up a good deal o f its early history; and having
improved in the management o f these birds, I now venture to offer an article or two upon the subject, hoping
they may he acceptable to the readers o f ' Land and Water.’ Before I commence, I must express the hope
that the most ardent lovers o f the rod will be liberal and not begrudge a little Cormorant-fish mg during the
summer, when it is too bright and hot for them to pursue their * gentle art.’ Of course the owner
o f Cormorants should likewise be the possessor o f streams; for then he can fish them as he likes, and thus
he can keep his birds in good practice, and be ready to accept any invitation to fish distant streams, &c.
Here 1 may remark that it is a delightful summer amusement, which has its advantages. For instance,
‘ meets ’ may be got up, and will be found an excellent means o f assembling large parties o f friends for a
picnic or a ‘ swell luncheon.’ It comes in so nicely; for at that time o f the year most other rural sports
are at a standstill; and to the admirers o f scenery it must have additional charms, as the prettiest parts of
the country are always to be found by our brooks and rivers. Many and many are the ' meets ’ I have
enjoyed and have to thank my kind friends for.
“ The Cormorant is too well known to require its natural history; and so I will proceed to the ancient history
o f this curious and ingenious method o f fishing. Its origin is Chinese; and I think the first Jesuit missionaries
were the earliest to mention it in their writings. In the reign o f James I., Ogleby was sent on an embassy
to China, and in the two large volumes he afterwards published he gives a description o f the Chinese method
o f using these birds for taking fish; and no doubt it is a much older invention, as I have seen it represented