SPATULA CLYPEATA.
Shoveller Duck.
Anas clypeata, Linn. Faun. Suec., p. 42.
rubens, Gmel. edit. Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 519.
Spatula clypeata, Boie, Isis, 1822, p. 564.
Rhynchaspis clypeata, Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Gen. Zool., vol. xii. p. 115, pi. 48.
Spathulea clypeata, Flem. Hist, of Brit. Anim., p. 123.
Clypeata macrorhynchus, Brehm, Yög. Deutschl., p. 876.
---------- platyrhynckus, Brehm, ibid., p. 877.
---------- pomar ina, Brehm, ibid., p. 878.
---------- brachyrhynchus, Brehm, ibid., p. 879.
A l t h o u g h not very numerous at any time either in England, Scotland, or Ireland, we have abundant evidence
o f the occurrence of the Shoveller Duck, both in summer and winter, in all the three countries. It is
especially partial to meres, ponds, and shallow waters, such as are seen in Holland, Belgium, and elsewhere,
and, in India, to tanks and reservoirs; indeed it appears to have an instinctive knowledge of countries, however
distant, that are subject to heavy rains, as an evidence of which, I may mention that I saw our
Shoveller in the southern parts o f Australia during the rainy season of 1839, when nearly the whole of the
grassy flats were covered with water, and shot at a pair that rose before me on the shallow lagoons
at Segenoe, in New South Wales, but did not succeed in killing either. The late Mr. Coxen, of Yarrundi,
obtained a fine male, the skin o f which I examined, and am therefore certain as to the identity o f the species;
unfortunately it was so much mutilated by rats a few days after, that it was not worth preserving, or I should
have brought it with me on my return to England. Since that period I have never seen an Australian
specimen, neither have I been favoured with a sight o f one from Java or any of the adjacent islands; but
that it does visit those important countries, and also Borneo and the Philippines, is more than probable,
since it is a common bird in India and China, and, according to Temminck, is as numerous in Japan as it
is in any portion o f Europe, over the whole of which, except in the extreme north, it has been observed ; it
is also found in Africa, and extends its range over the northern portions of America, specimens having
been received by me from as far south as Guatemala; at the same time it appears to be less numerous in the
New than it is in the Old World. By some o f our earlier writers the Shoveller was regarded as a
winter visitant only to our islands; but the following extracts from the works of more recent authorities
will show that it very frequently breeds therein :—
Mr. Hewitson tells us that “ Mr. John Hancock has the nest and eggs of the Shoveller, which were found
upon Prestwick Carr, a piece o f waste ground o f considerable extent near Newcastle-upon-Tyne, covered
with heath and furze, boggy and intersected with drains, and having a piece of water near its centre. From
thence, towards the end o f May, a nest was brought to him containing nine eggs; it was composed of
grass, mixed with the down o f the bird, arid was placed in the centre of a furze bush, by which it was
sheltered. Two or three weeks after this a second nest was found, at a short distance from the spot from
which the other had been taken: it was constructed o f the same materials, was similarly situated, and
contained ten eggs ; these were quite fresh, and led to the suppositiori that they belonged to the same bird
which had been previously deprived o f its eggs.
“ I have likewise received the eggs o f the Shoveller from Norfolk, from Mr. Salmon, taken on the 10th
of May from a nest which was placed amongst a quantity of green rushes, but without the profusion of
feathers so generally observed in the nests o f this tribe of birds, there being barely a sufficient quantity of
dry grass to keep the eggs from the bare sand; it was much exposed, and contained eight eggs, which were
within a few days o f hatching.
“ The Messrs. Paget state that the Shoveller is occasionally not at all uncommon in Norfolk, and that
several nests, containing altogether fifty-six eggs, were found, during one summer, in Winterton Marshes.
| Mr. Charles St. John has found the eggs of this species on the banks of Loch Spynie, in Morayshire;
and Mr. Henry Milner tells me that it breeds on Hornsea Mere, in Yorkshire. The eggs differ considerably
in size.” . I ,
Further evidence of the bird’s’breeding in Norfolk is contained in the following note, obligingly forwarded
to me by Lord Walsingham, from Merton Hall, Thetford, on the 24th o f June, 1 8 6 9 You may, perhaps,
care to know that not less than eight or ten pairs o f Shovellers are in the habit o f breeding here every year;
this summer we gave away two sittings o f eggs to a neighbour, who was anxious to rear some.”