TADORNA VULPANSER.
Sheldrake.
Anas tadorna, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 39.
IH cornuta, S. G. Gmel.. Reise, tom. ii. p. 185, tab. 19.
Tadorna familiaris, Boie, Isis, 182*2, p. 563.
Bellonii, Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Gen. Zool.,vol. xii. p. 72, pl. 45.
vulpanser, Flem. Hist, of Brit. Anim., p. 122.
— gibbera, littoralis, et maritima, Brehm, Vög. Deutschi., pp. 856, 857, 858, tab. 42. fig. 1.
Vulpanser tadorna, Keys, et Blas. Wirbelth. Eur., p. 84.
It must, I think, be admitted that the Sheldrake is one of the most attractive and ornamental of the Anatidce
indigenous to the British Islands— the breadth of its markings, the purity of the white portions o f its plumage,
and the rich red of its bill and legs, all combining to render it a creature of great beauty. Besides these
features to recommend it to our notice, its actions and manners are at once pleasing and graceful: it walks
over the grass with ease, swims buoyantly, and ever deports itself with sprightliness; its flight, too, is in accordance
with its other qualifications; for when rising in the air, and displaying its colouring to the greatest
advantage, it flies off to the sea or to wherever its attention may be directed, in a style which must be characterized
as elegant and vigorous. What part in the economy of nature is this princely species of Duck
destined to perform—the useful, or the ornamental ? The former it cannot b e ; for its flesh is strong, musky,
and unsavoury, and consequently scarcely fit for human food; we must therefore regard it in the latter
sense; and in this respect no bird plays its part more to our satisfaction; for, although by nature it is a
strictly maritime species, whose places of resort are the most sterile of our sandy dunes and arid sea-coasts,
if pinioned it readily becomes domesticated, and soon makes itself at home on any lake, pond, or sheet of
water on which it may be placed ; and hence it has become a general favourite with all who take an interest in
water-fowl. Another reason for this favouritism may be assigned—namely, that while the Pintail, the Teal,
the Mallard, and other members of the Duck tribe which are subject to periodical changes of plumage throw
off their gay attire at Midsummer, and become of the dull brown hue of their females, the Sheldrakes of both
sexes, having once acquired their beautiful; adult garb, always retain it.
Much has been written respecting the breeding of the Sheldrake in the interior o f the country, some
authors affirming that salt marshes, if not salt water, are essential to its existence; but I am prepared to state
that this is not the case; for, among many other persons whom I might mention, no one has been more successful
in rearing it than Mr. John Noble, of Berry Hill, near Taplow, in Buckinghamshire, on whose
beautiful artificial lake several of these fine birds annually breed when the season *of incubation arrives, and
may be seeu busily disporting themselves from year’s end to year’s end. It is also said that water is
injurious to the young brood, and that they should be kept from it for some time after they are hatched;
this in the main may probably be worth attending to, but broods are successfully reared at Berry Hill without
any precaution of the kind. A clutch of young Sheldrakes were hatched under a hen o f the common Fowl
from eggs laid the second week in June; on the 21st of August they were nearly as large as the
adults, and at this time had the bill of a purplish flesh-colour; the eyes dark brown ; the feet clouded
purplish yellow; face white; back of the head and neck black ; all the under surface white; no band of
chestnut on the breast; tertiary mark brown; and no appearance of the knob on the bill. By the 8th of
October in the same year the chestnut band had become almost perfect, and the plumage in every respect
assimilating to that of the adult, so that in a month later the one could scarcely be told from the other.
With regard to the parts of the British Islands in which the Sheldrake is to be seen in a state o f nature,
the difficulty is to say not where it may, but where it may not be met with ; for it is to be found more or
less in every county bordering the sea, from Cornwall to the Hebrides ; wherever there are any low sandy
districts in the neighbourhood of the sea and its great inlets, denes and dunes of any extent, and warrens
in the vicinity of the ocean, there it may be seen. In Essex, Suffolk, Norfolk, and Lincolnshire, on the
east, and the flat shores of Lancashire, on the west, this bird does now, or did a few years ago, bring forth
its young. On the continent of Europe the Sheldrake inhabits all the maritime coasts, from the Mediterranean
to the Baltic, and is equally numerous in North Africa, Asia Minor, in India, and all along the
sea-shores and the borders of the great rivers of China and Japan. In America it is not found; neither did
I meet with it in Australia; and I believe, but am not certain, that it does not occur in South Africa.
“ The Sheldrake,” says Mr. Selby, “ continues in its native haunts through the whole year, and when
once paired seems to live with the same mate till accident or death dissolves the connexion. Montagu