Teal.
Anas Crecca, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 204.
Querquedula minor, Briss. Orn., tom. vi. p. 436, pi. 40. fig. 1.
:------ secunda, Ray* Syn., p. 147, A 6.
— crecca, Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Gen. Zool., vol/xii. p. 146.
— crecca, subcrecca, et creccoides, Brehm, Handb. der Naturg. Yog. Deutschl., pp. 884, 885, 886.
T h e Teal is the least of the Ducks inhabiting the British Islands, and is much valued for the beauty o f
its plumage, the elegance of its contour, and the delicate flavour of its flesh. The collector places his
mounted specimen in the most conspicuous part of his museum, and the sportsman is often induced to
leave his marked-down Woodcock for the chance of a shot, should a flight of Teal splash into the neighbouring
rivulet, or circle over the moor.
Although not a cosmopolitan, this pretty little Duck enjoys a very wide range over the Old World, and,
besides being generally dispersed in our islands, is equally numerous in similar latitudes in all the countries
lying eastward of uS, as far as China and Kamtscliatka; northward it proceeds to the regions of the Arctic
circle, and southward to the verge of the equator; -in a word, it is found in Morocco, Algeria, Egypt, Asia
Minor, Persia, and India, as well as in Europe. In all these countries its flesh is highly prized, and consequently
much sought for as an article o f food. It is plain, therefore, that if the Teal did not extend its
range to thinly peopled countries, and select sites for the duty of incubation which are difficult of detection,
it would soon become extirpated. The Rook and the Heron nidify in the most conspicuous places, and the
cradles for their young are so prominently displayed that they may be seen from a great distance; the Teal,
on the contrary, resorts to the most secluded situations for this purpose; and hence it is the bird still
continues so abundant, and that such large numbers are annually sent to our markets during the autumn
and winter months. To what cause are we to assign the delicate flavour of the Teal ? It is most probably
due to the nature of the food upon which it subsists: this is neither fish nor any animal substances
that can impart a strong or rancid flavour, as in the case of those,species of the family whose lives are
spent upon the seas—Scoters, Eiders, &c. No - the food the Teal consists of the points of the finest
grasses, the leaves of water-plants, seeds, grain, insects, small freshwater mollusks, and probably worms.
As autumn approaches, the rivers, rivulets, and the great ponds o f the woodlands and open moors are
all more or less resorted to by the Teal in small parties of eight or ten in number, or iu flights o f fifty or
more. In these situations, the birds, if unmolested, remain during the entire day on the surface o f the
water, rising and falling with every ripple, or sitting on the banks; as evening approaches, they become
more animated, a n d the whistling crick of the male is heard; and when night begins to throw a veil over
the face of nature, they simultaneously rise, and quit the waters for the morass, the ploughed field, the oozy
mud-bank, or wherever they may obtain a supply of food; at daylight they return to their usual sanctuary,
where they preen their feathers, and the males swim round each other in circles before settling to rest for
the day.
These latter remarks apply to the bird as seen with us in autumn and winter, when it has partially or
wholly left the northern parts of our islands for the more temperate ones o f the south. As spring approaches,
most o f those that have escaped the gunner and the devices of the decoy-man return again to the places of
their former resort, and there, incubate in all suitable situations. Some, however, stay and breed in many
of the counties of England and Ireland. The site chosen is sometimes on the hill-side, in the neighbourhood
o f a river or loch, at others far away out on the heath, or on the moor, even to the distance o f many miles, the
slight nest being placed in the midst o f the heather, in a tussock of grass, or any other herbage that may
effectually screen it from sight. A little rill of water may perchance be close'at hand, or a wet sloppy morass
or a pool not far off, to w h ic h the young,, on their exclusion from the egg, are immediately conducted, and
where they are most assiduously guarded by their parents from the attacks of harriers and any other animals
by which their lives may be endangered ; but the voracious pike, which often abides in such situations,
not unfrequently lessens their number. At Scoulton Mere, in Norfolk (celebrated for one of the largest
colonies of Black-lmaded Gulls in England), several pair breed annually, and the proprietor, Major Weyland,
affords them strict protection. Their nests are usually placed in the shrubberies and plantations which
surround the Mere. . .
“ The Teal ” says Mr. Lubbock, “ is taken every year in great numbers in our decoys, in that at Wmterton,
in particular,’ where more than two hundred have been caught at once in a single pipe. Although it