White-fronted Goose.
Anas albifrons, Gmel. edit. Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 509.
Anser albifrons, Bechst. Naturg. DeutscU., tom. iv. p. 898.
T h e White-fronted Goose is a regular winter visitor ‘to the British Islands. It is supposed to come from
the north ; but from what particular regions is not known with certainty. Mr. Newton has confirmed
Faber’s observations that at least a few summer in Iceland, by stating that on the 11th of May 1858 he
saw several freshly killed examples at Reykjavik, in that country ; and Reinhardt includes it in the' birds of
Greenland. Lapland is also said to be frequented by it: but this is certainly not the case; for Mr. Wolley
remarks that the only White-fronted Goose he met with in that country was the small species which
Mr, Newton believes to be the true Anas (Anser) erytliropas of Linnaeus, and for which the Laps have a
name, while they have none for A , albifrons ; he was also of opinion that Nilsson is in error in assigning
it a place in the fauna of Sweden, and in stating that it is the common Fell Goose o f that country. As
regards Norway, however, Messrs. F. and P. Godman affirm that they frequently saw flocks of from seven gj
to ten feeding in the pools and creeks o f the marsh near Bodo, in Norway, from which they all departed
towards the end o f May ; but those gentlemen make no mention of A . erythropus, and possibly the birds they
saw belonged to that species,
Sir John Richardson' states that in spring White-fronted Geese pass through the interior of the fur-
countries o f America in large flocks to their breeding-places in the woody districts skirting the Mackenzie,
to the north o f thé sixty-seventh parallel, and also the islands o f the Arctic Sea ; but whether his remarks
have reference to our bird or the American,.'Vyhich is now regarded as different, and named Anser Gambeli,
is a question I cannot determine, Their migration southwards commences in September ; and their return
to the fur-districts is often the first indication o f winter having begun within the Arctic Circle. In
England the A . albifrons arrives in September and October, occasionally appearing in very large flocks,
and departs again in March and April to its breeding-haunts, In like manner, and at the same periods, it
is very generally dispersed over the southern portions of the European continent; and there also similar
movements take place. Temminck states that it is very common in Holland during its autumnal migration,
but is less numerous in Germany and the interior o f France. Lord Lilford found it to be common in
winter in Epirus and continental Greece. The Russian naturalist Ménétriés says that, at the same period,
it appears in considerable flocks in the neighbourhood o f the Caspian Sea, particularly near Bakou and the
neighbouring lakes, where it passes the winter, and departs towards the end o f February. Dr. Leith Adams
states that it is the most common Goose on the Nile, and is usually seen in vast flocks at daybreak, returning
to the shallows from feeding all night in the wheat-fields, but decreases southwards, and is rarely seen
beyond the marsh at Edfoo. The same gentleman, elsewhere states that this bird is a winter visitant to the
lakes and rivers ô f the Punjab, In China, according to Mr. Swinhoe, it forms part o f the wild fowl procurable
in the markets o f Shanghai and Tientsin ; and he has also met with it between Takoo and Peking in
North China; and, lastly, Temminck affirms that examples from Japan are exaç|ly like our own birds.
I have been favoured by several kind friends with some fine examples of this Goose for the furtherance
o f this work. The Earl o f Enniskillen sent me a pair from Ireland; and the Earl of Ducie, besides
kindly obtaining permission from Lord Fitzhardinge for examples to be forwarded to me from his
Lordship’s estate in Gloucestershire, transmitted the following note :— “ When you are writing on the
Wild Geese, you ought to hear something of those frequenting the Severn, and their habits on the alluvial
flats belonging to Lord Fitzhardinge. The spot is about ten miles from here (Tortworth Court, Wotton-
under-Edge). There the Geese are regularly preserved, and the shooting o f them affords great sport. I
have been out the only two days o f shooting^this year, and on each day we killed nine. They are first found
feeding on the grass, and about noon are driven over towards the guns, which are posted between them and
the Severn. They then betake themselves to the mud flats, and when hungry attempt to get to the grass-
meadows again. By this time the guns are posted under hedges at right angles to their probable line of
flight ; and as they come over, in flocks o f varying size, shots are fired with long guns at from forty to
seventy yards distance. The whole system is, I believe, unique in this country. The Geese arrive about the
23rd or 25th o f September, are never known to be two days later, and generally leave again about the end
of November. The White-fronted are not so numerous as the Pink-footed, but are increasing in number.
As a bird for the table the present species is perhaps one o f the best of the wild geese ; and there are few