OIDEMIA PERSPICILLATA.
Surf-Scoter.
Anas perspicillata, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 201.
Oidemia perspicillata, Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Gen. Zool., vol. xii. p. 219.
Melanitta perspicillata, Boie, Isis, 1822, p. 564.
Fuligula perspicillata, Bonap. Syn. of Birds of United States, p. 389.
Pelionetta perspicillata, Kaup, Natürl. Syst., p. 107.
“ T h e sea and its living wonders !” What a vast field for the contemplation o f the naturalist is embodied
in those words! for how variable and extraordinary are the productions o f the watery portion o f our globe,
and how deeply are they imbued with interest— whether we regard the forests of Fact, which grow ¡n its
shallower portions, the extensive beds o f corallines which are building up a base for some future coutinent,
the myriads o f those lower organisms shedding phosphorescent light, the Physaliae, the Gasteropoda, the
fishes o f innumerable forms, or the gigantic whale! nor less remarkable are the numerous kinds o f birds
which habitually frequent its surface, the aerial Frigate-Birds, the buoyant Albatroses, the tripping Petrels,
the diving Penguins, the rock-loving Puffins and Guillemots, and others, as numerous and as varied as those of
the dry land. To say that animal life is feebly represented in the ocean, or that a voyage over its surface is
necessarily monotonous, is untrue; for even in its midst both birds aud the lower forms of life are extremely
numerous, and it is well known that every part o f its shores is tenanted by a vast variety of different genera
and species, whose structure is as ill-adapted for the wide expause as the Albatros is for the roaring rollers
which the bird here represented loves to frequent, and whence it is called Surf-Duck or Surf-Scoter. This
remarkable species may surely be included among the “ sea’s living w o n d e r s fo r how extraordinary is the form
o f its bill and head, how brightly are they coloured, and how curiously are they marked ! Those who have not
had opportunities o f seeing the bird in a state of nature will scarcely believe that any duck is so fantastically
adorned; yet such js really the case; and fresh-killed specimens will outvie my drawing in every respect. In
America this bird is very abundant along the shores o f the eastern coast, from Florida to Labrador; but,
being a northern species, it frequently crosses to the seas o f Norway, Denmark, and Holland, and also to
those o f the British Islands, where it has been killed sufficiently often to entitle it to a place in our avifauna.
Ornithologists are divided in their opinions as to whether the Surf-Scoter found on the uorth-western portion
of America be the same as the one frequenting the .eastern coasts ; if they be identical, then the bird probably
ranges over all the northern shores o f the globe.
For a knowledge o f the habits and economy o f the Surf-Scoter, we must refer to the interesting
pages o f the celebrated American writers Wilson and Audubon. According to the former, “ this duck
frequents the shores and bays o f the sea, particularly where the waves roll over the sandy beach. Their
food consists principally o f small bivalve shell-fish, spout-fish, and others that lie in the sand near its
surface. For these they dive almost constantly, both in the sandy bays and amid tumbling surf. Their skins
are remarkably strong, and their flesh coarse, tasting o f fish. They are common in winter along the whole
coast, from the river St. Lawrence to Florida, but leave us early in May for- their breeding-places in the
north.”
“ While proceeding,” says Audubon, “ towards the sterile country o f Labrador, in 1833, I found the
waters of the Gulf of St. Lawrence alive with ducks o f different species. The nearer we approached the
coast, the more numerous did they become; and, of the many that presented themselves to our anxious gaze,
the Surf-Duck was not the least abundant. It is true that in the noble bays of our coast, in the Sound
between New York and the Hook, on the broader waters o f the Chesapeake, and beyond them to the
mouths of the Mississippi, I had seen thousands o f Surf-Ducks ; but the numbers that passed the shores of
Labrador, bound for the far north, exceeded all my previous conceptions. For more than a week after we
had anchored in the lovely harbour o f Little Macatina, I anxiously searched for the nest o f this species in
vain. At length I found that a few pairs had remained in the neighbourhood; and one morning while searching
for the nests o f the Red-breasted Merganser over a vast oozy and treacherous freshwater marsh of
about three miles in length, two miles distant from the harbour, and fully five and a half from the waters at
the Gulf o f St. Lawrence, I suddenly started a Surf-Duck from her treasure. The nest was snugly placed
amid the tall leaves o f a bunch o f grass, and raised fully four inches above its roots. It was entirely composed
o f withered and rotten weeds, the former being circularly arranged over the latter, producing a well-
rounded cavity, six inches in diameter, by two and a half in depth. The borders of this inner cup were lined
with the down of the bird, in the same manner as the Eider’s nest; and in it lay five eggs, the smallest number
I have ever found in any duck’s nest. They were two inches and two-eighths and a half in length, by one