appointed. The assemblage is large, filling the inns and the lodgings to be had at private houses. In
the morning, at the sound of a drum, the embarkation takes place on the lake named for the first attempt.
The boats, filled with sportsmen, form an extended circle round the flocks of birds at one part o f the
lake; the boats then draw in, diminishing the circle by degrees, till the crews are within gunshot of
the intended victims. At a well-known and preconcerted signal, a partial discharge takes place at the
unfortunate birds while swimming on the surface o f the water. Many are killed on the spot; those
which escape the first fire attempt to save themselves by flight, when a second discharge assails them
in the air ; many more fall, and with broken wings and loud cries are picked by the shooters, who
divide the spoil, not without many altercations, and return to land. After a short respite, tlie birds
having again collected together on that or some other neighbouring lake, a second advance takes place
in the same manner, and the day is passed in making a succession o f attacks, each followed by a retreat
for a time to allow the birds to reassemble. A citasse, as it is termed, o f a somewhat similar character,
is performed near Bastia, the capital of Corsica; but in this locality the Scoter is always accompanied
by numbers o f the Red-throated Diver, which appear to act the part of sentinels outside the flock of Ducks ;
and so quick-sighted are these sentinels, and so instantaneously do they dive, and so rapidly do they
swim under water, that hundreds o f Scoters are killed to one couple of Divers.”
Enough has been said to show that this bird is strictly a winter visitant with us ; but that it does remain
within the precincts o f the British Islands until late in the spring, and even in some instances until summer
has fairly set in, is evident, Mr. Dann having seen flocks off Dungeness as late as the middle o f June; and
a writer in ‘ The Zoologist ’ states that the Lake o f Windermere is visited every year, about the first week in
July, fourteen having been observed off Wray Castle at that period in 1848. The Scoter must, therefore,
commence the task o f nidification immediately after its return home. Up to the present time we have no
record o f its having bred in the British Islands. Mr. Dann states that it breeds in Scandinavia, where
Wallengren makes it a bird o f his second or Birch-region, nesting as it does from 800 to 2000 feet below
the snow-line ; and Mr. Procter found it breeding in Iceland, which is probably its most western limit, for
Professor Reinhardt does not include it among the birds o f Greenland. Eastwardly, according to Pallas, it visits
the Caspian Sea. In the far north, the late Mr. John Wolley found it breeding at Muionioniska in Lapland,
late in the season ; and Mr. Alfred Newton informs me that “ it is plentiful enough in the interior o f that
country, where it is known as the ‘ Sea-Bird ' par excellence, and its musical notes add to the pleasure with
which a naturalist explores the countless lakes o f that desolate region.” The nest is generally placed in
some sheltered spot on the ground, and the eggs, which are six or seven in number, are o f a pale buff slightly
tinged with green, somewhat more than two inches in length by about one inch and three-quarters in breadth.
The diving powers of the Scoter are as perfect as those o f any other species which resorts to that mode of
procuring its food from the bottom o f the turbulent sea ; its whole structure, its flattened tarsi, large feet,,
and dense plumage are all admirably fitted for the purpose. Its flight is rapid, straight, and o f sufficient
duration to convey the bird from the sea to the inland lakes, or from one part o f its feeding-ground to
another ; generally, however, these passages from place to place are performed near thè surface o f the water ;
but it is said to mount higher in the air when necessity requires it so to do.
The entire plumage o f the male is deep black glossed with greenish blue ; irides brown ; eyelash orange ;
base of the bill bluish black, the remainder dull black, except a narrow line o f orange down the middle of.
the tubercle at the base, and the central portion of the upper mandible, which around the nostrils is orange,'
and towards the tip yellow ; legs and toes reddish black.
The female differs in being dark brown instead of black, in having the chin and throat greyish white, the
under surface silky brocoli-brown, and in the tubercle at the base o f the bill less elevated.
Mr. A. Newton has kindly sent me the following description o f the young before they are able to fly,
from Mr. Wolley’s ‘ Loose Memoranda.’
“ Dull sooty black above, neutral tint.beneath, the feathers towards the middle o f the body shading into:
white at the tips. Top o f the head black to a little below the eye, where a light-grey patch commences.
Many o f the light feathers tipped with darker colour, so as to give a somewhat pepper-and-salt effect. Under
wing-coverts tipped with white. Down greyish white. Nostrils nearly halfway between the base o f the bill
and the tip, somewhat elevated towards the back. Nail o f the bill very large and expanded. Inside of
mouth yellowish. Feet and shanks yellowish brown, darker at the joints.”
The Plate represents two males and a female, a trifle less than the size o f life.