■ K a t e
Red-breasted Goose.
Anas ruficollis, Gmel. edit. Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 511.
— torquata, S. G. Gmel. Reise, tom. i. p. 181, tab. 14.
Anser ruficollis, Pall. Spie. Zool., tom. iv. p. 12, tab. 4.
Bernicla ruficollis, Boie, Isis, 1822, p. 563.
Ip the Bernicla ruficollis be not one o f the gems of ornithology, it certainly is the finest species of its own
particular family; for no other Goose excels it in the richness of its colouring or the fantastic character
of its markings. That a member of this usually sombre-coloured family of aquatic birds should be so
finely adorned, is somewhat astonishing, and cannot but have attracted the notice o f every ornithologist.
In its structure, contour, gait, and carriage while walking over the green sward, its actions are as
pleasing as it is trim in appearance and beautiful in colouring. Of the extreme rarity of the species
every ornithologist is fully aware, since few collections in Britain and still fewer on the Continent and
in America, can boast of possessing examples. Why is this (when, unlike the Alca impennis, it is still
an inhabitant of our globe, and probably as abundant in the country where it is destined to dwell as
any other species of wild Goose is in its own particular locality) ? Because that country is a distant
one and, moreover, a part o f our globe which, if not inaccessible to man, is so sterile and inhospitable
as to offer but little inducement for any one to visit it: the most northern regions of Siberia most
writers agree in stating' to be the true home o f the Red-breasted Goose—a country unequalled for
the rigours o f its1 winter-season and for being as pestiferously hot at the opposite period o f the
year. From this, its summer home, the bird probably migrates in winter towards the great
rivers and morasses o f the more southern parts o f Siberia, the Amoorland, China, and Persia, a few
wanderers sometimes extending their peregrinations still further in the same or a more westerly direction,
and finding their way to Turkey, the mouths of the Nile, Holland, France, Italy, and even Britain,
where it appears to have occurred more frequently than in any o f the countries around it. Temminck
states that in Russia it is found about the estuaries of the Rivers Ob and Lena. Latham says it breeds
there and retires south in autumn, and also affirms that it frequents the Caspian Sea, returning north
in small flocks as the summer approaches. At the time Mr. Yarrell wrote, two instances had
been recorded o f its occurrence in Scandinavia, one in Holland, one in France, and one in Germany;
more recently one has occurred in Italy, a specimen having been obtained on the 12th of February
1869, between Scarperia and Borgo San Lorenzo, twenty-two miles (or thereabouts) from Florence:
vide ‘The Ibis’ for 1869, p. 242, where Dr. H. H. Giglioli states that “ it was an adult male, in full
plumage; and this is, I believe, the only well-authenticated instance o f the occurrence of this rare eastern
Goose in Italy.”
The first British-killed specimen was taken near London, at the beginning of the severe frost o f 1766;
it passed into the possession o f the celebrated collection formed by Marmaduke Tuns tall, and is now
one o f the most important specimens in the Museum o f Newcastle-upon-Tyne.- Another, taken alive
near Wycliffe, in Yorkshire, about the same time, soon became familiar, was kept among other Ducks
in a pond, but, though it associated freely with them and seemed partial to one in particular, never
produced young. It continued alive for some years, and then lost its life by an accident. Besides the
above, others have been killed near Berwick-upon-Tweed, and in Norfolk, Cambridgeshire, and Devonshire.
Respecting the Norfolk specimen, Mr. Stevenson informs me that “ the only example of this rare
species in Norfolk appears to be that noticed by Messrs. Sheppard and Whitear, and also by the Messrs.
Paget, as having been purchased by the late Mr. Lilly Wigg, at Yarmouth, which, by some unfortunate
mistake, was plucked and eaten. It was said to have been shot at Halvergate, in 1805. Mr. Hunt, of
Norwich, in his ‘British Ornithology,’ states that he was assured by Mr. Wigg that he purchased the
bird in the Yarmouth market; other contemporary local naturalists give the same account o f it, but I
can furnish no further authority. Mr. Gurney, however, tells me that he had feathers of this bird
given to him by Mr. Sparshall, who received them from Mr. Wigg.”
In the Museum at Leyden there are two beautiful examples (an old and a young bird), which, I
believe, were captured in Holland; and I have one now before me, which has been kindly placed at
my disposal, for the furtherance o f the present work, by A. W. Crichton, Esq., who obtained it from
Mr. Stafford S. Allen, a gentleman whose travels and collections, formed in the neighbourhood of the
Nile, are so well known. Mr. Frank, of Amsterdam, assured me that he had every reason to believe,
from information which he considered to be authentic, that some few years since at least half-a-dozen