3 ax^J? Lt>- PotnJ^ UPLAND PLOVER, OR BARTRAMIAN SANDPIPER. Now (191 I) in imminent danger of extinction. (From a drawing made by Louis Agassiz Fuertes for the National Association of Audubon Societies, and first reproduced in Bird-Lore.) A HISTORY OF THE Game Birds, Wild-Fowl and Shore Birds OF Massachusetts and Adjacent States Including those used for food which have disappeared since the settlement of the country, and those which are now hunted for food or sport, with observations on their former abundance and recent decrease in numbers ; also the means for conserving those still in existence By Edward Howe Forbush State Ornithologist of Massachusetts Illustrated with Drawings by W. I. Beecroft and the Author and Photographs by Herbert K. Job and others Issued by the Massachusetts State Board of Agriculture By Authority of the Legislature, 1912 BOSTON WRIGHT & POTTER PRINTING COMPANY, STATE PRINTERS 18 POST OFFICE SQUARE ®l)e tfcmmntuDealtl) of Jtla00acf)ii0ett0. Resolves of 1910, Chapter 90. A Resolve to provide for the preparation and printing of a special REPORT ON THE GAME BIRDS OF THE COMMONWEALTH. Resolved, That there be allowed and paid out of the treasury of the commonwealth a sum not exceeding four thousand dollars for preparing and printing, under the direction of the state board of agriculture, in an edition of five thousand copies, a special report on the game birds of the common- wealth economically considered, to include the facts already ascertained by the state ornithologist, relating to their history, value and the necessity for their protection, to be distributed as follows : — Two copies to each free public library in the commonwealth; two copies to each high school, and two copies to such schools in towns which have no high school as the school committee may designate; one copy to the library of congress and one copy to each state or territorial library in the United States; ten copies to the state library; one copy to the governor; one copy to the lieutenant governor and each member of the council; one copy to the secretary of the common- wealth; one copy to the treasurer and receiver general; one copy to the auditor of the commonwealth; one copy to the attorney-general; one copy to each member of the present general court applying for the same; one copy to each elective officer of the present general court; one copy to each member of the state board of agriculture; five copies to the secretary of the state board of agriculture; and four hundred and fifty copies to the state ornithologist for distribution to those who have assisted by contributing material for the report; the remaining copies to be sold by the secretary of the state board of agriculture at a price not less than the cost thereof. Additional copies may be printed for sale at the discretion of the secretary of the state board of agriculture, the expense thereof to be paid from the receipts of such sales. Any amount received from sales shall be paid into the treasury of the commonwealth. [Approved May 5, 1910. Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2011 with funding from Boston Public Library http://www.archive.org/details/historyofgamebir1912forb Preface. This volume is intended to fill a place heretofore unfilled, in at least two respects, by any American work. The former abundance and later decrease of the migratory game birds of eastern North America have been studied and narrated at length for the first time, and the histories of the food species of New England which have been exterminated since the set- tlement of the country have been brought together. This has been done with a purpose. Whenever legislation for the protection of shore birds or wild-fowl has been attempted in the Maritime States of the Atlantic seaboard, certain interested individuals have come forward to oppose it, with the plea that these birds are not decreasing in numbers, but, instead, are increasing, and that they need no further protection. Some admit that certain species are decreasing, but argue that shooting is not respon- sible for this condition. Similar statements are made in sup- port of proposed legislation for the repeal of existing protective laws. The object of the investigation on which this volume is based was to secure information from historical and ornitho- logical works, and from ornithologists, sportsmen and gun- ners, regarding the increase or decrease of the birds which are hunted for food or sport. The report is published with the intention, first, to show the former abundance of resident and migratory game birds in America and their subsequent decrease in numbers; second, to furnish gunners and others with the means of identifying game birds, that the people may recognize the different species and thus fit themselves to observe protective laws; and third, to demonstrate how these birds may be conserved. The nar- ratives of early explorers and pioneers show plainly the former abundance of game birds. The unbiased statements of orni- Vi PREFACE. thologists of the nineteenth century exhibit the great decrease in numbers of many species, and estimates summarized in this volume indicate that the majority of the best informed gunners themselves now admit that the decrease of these birds has continued during the past thirty years, and that it is due largely to overshooting; therefore, the report will serve as a basis for both restrictive and constructive legislation for the protection and propagation of game birds. The descriptions in Part I, written mainly in language understood by the people, and the cuts which have been made to show the form and markings of the species, taken together, will answer the second purpose for which the book is written. Prominent markings which readily may be recognized in the field, and which will help in identifying the birds, are given under the head of "field marks." The representations of the notes and calls of birds are taken mainly from the writings of others. Attempts to suggest bird notes on paper almost always are inadequate. My own always have been unsatis- factory, but it is hoped that those given may be of some assist- ance to the beginner. Brief descriptions of the nests and eggs of the species now nesting in Massachusetts or near-by States, or which are believed to have nested here formerly are given as a possible help to identification. An attempt has been made to interest the reader in these much-persecuted birds for their own sake. For this reason the range, migration and habits of each bird are touched upon in nearly all cases. In the introduction an attempt is made to narrate briefly the history of the decrease of resident and migratory game birds along the Atlantic seaboard. Part I continues this his- tory, but particularizes and localizes by taking up separately each individual species that has been recorded from Massa- chusetts and near-by States. Part II groups together the histories of the species utilized as food which have disap- peared from New England since the settlement of the country, and exhibits the causes that brought about the destruction of these species. Part III analyzes the causes of the decrease of I 1m- species of game birds, wild-fowl and shore birds that PREFACE. Vii are still extant, and indicates how they may be conserved and how depleted areas may be restocked with certain species. It was my intention before beginning the work to under- take an investigation of the food of wild-fowl and shore birds, but as Mr. W. L. McAtee of the Bureau of Biological Survey of the United States Department of Agriculture was then engaged in a similar quest, and hoped to have the results published, I arranged with him to make use of his publication, and give credit to the Survey. Unfortunately, very little of the results of Mr. McAtee's work have been published, and this volume necessarily goes to press with but a small part of them. For this reason the observations on the food of these birds have not been brought down to date. Many of Mr. Beecroft's drawings, from which the line cuts of the birds were made, have been corrected, and some of them have been largely redrawn by myself, with the assist- ance of Miss Annie E. Chase. Miss Chase also made the drawing of the Whooping Crane, the plate of which faces page 477. Mr. Beecroft was handicapped in his work by having no opportunity to make studies from the living birds, and by being obliged to draw his inspiration from skins, stuffed specimens, photographs and the illustrations of others. The drawings for the cuts of the Wood Duck, the Mallard and the Red Phalarope are my own; also the draw- ings for the cuts on pages 40, 49, 59, 70, 111, 147, 202, 224, 228, 230, 271, 277, 326, 331 and 417 (all after C. B. Cory), and the figures on pages 133 and 147. All concerned in the prep- aration of the drawings must acknowledge their indebted- ness to many artists from the time of Audubon to the present day, and particularly to Mr. Louis Agassiz Fuertes, whose excellent drawings as figured in Eaton's Birds of New York, gave many suggestions. The faults of the illustrations are obvious, but every effort has been made to secure such rep- resentations of form, proportion and markings as to make the species recognizable. It was my intention to have the birds of each family represented in Part I figured in proper proportion one to the other, — to have the Sandpipers, for ex- ample, of such relative size as to suggest the differences in Viii PREFACE. size between the different species. The engraver has not always been accurate in his reductions, but, in the main, the idea has been carried out. The bibliography which was planned for publication here- with was crowded out because of the vast amount of material available for the work, which has resulted in increasing its bulk beyond the limit at first contemplated, and which has made necessary an abridgment of even the index; but the names of authors, contributors and collectors are inserted in the index because of the omission of the bibliography. What an embarrassment is that of the author who desires to acknowledge his indebtedness to those who have gone before! I am under obligations to many hundreds of indi- viduals from the early explorers, like Champlain and Hudson, down through the centuries to the ornithologists and sports- men of the present day. A long list of the names of observ- ers who have furnished information in regard to the commoner species is presented on the last pages of this volume, and many correspondents in many States whose names are not mentioned there are gratefully remembered. The writings of Mr. Wil- liam Brewster, Dr. C. W. Townsend and Dr. D. G. Elliot have been exceedingly helpful, and those of many others have furnished facts and suggestions. In this connection mention should be made of a description of a flight of water-fowl in "The Water-fowl Family," by Sanford, Bishop and Van Dyke, which furnished the model for a similar description on page 4 of this volume. I am indebted particularly to my friends, Mr. William Brewster and Dr. George W. Field, who have kindly read brief parts of the manuscript, and more than I can tell to my wife, who has patiently assisted in reading manuscript and proof, and to Mr. Wilson H. Fay for his work upon the index. It is a pleasure to acknowledge the courtesy of the managements of Collier's Weekly, Forest and Stream and Bird-Lore, who, with many others, have given permission to quote or to use illustrations. Acknowledgments are due to Rev. Herbert K. Job, Mr. Charlesworth Levy, Mr. Howard H. Cleaves ,'md others, whose names are mentioned elsewhere, for photo- graphs. The Bureau of Biological Survey of the United PREFACE. iX States Department of Agriculture has placed me under great obligations for much information for which the Survey has not always been given credit in the text; Prof. W. W. Cooke's paper on the Distribution and Migration of American Ducks, Geese and Swans, also his paper on the Distribution and Migra- tion of North American Shore Birds, and Mr. W. L. McAtee's paper on Our Vanishing Shore Birds, all published by the Survey, have been utilized freely in the preparation of this volume. It would be extremely ungracious for any one at the present day to write anything on the economic relations of birds without acknowledging his indebtedness to the pains- taking workers of the Survey, who have given to the world the greatest amount of valuable material on such subjects ever published anywhere. Mr. Charles W. Johnson, curator of the Museum of the Boston Natural History Society, has given every opportunity to both author and artist whenever specimens have been needed for examination. Mr. Ralph Holman has placed all his field notes at my disposal. The ornithological nomenclature used in heading each description of a species is that contained in the third edition of the Check List of the American Ornithologists Union, published in 1910. The range of each species is taken from the Check List in nearly all cases, though somewhat abridged. The statements regarding the decrease of birds taken from various authors are not quoted in full, but are abridged, care being taken not to distort their assertions. Dr. M. L. Fernald has placed me under obligations by bringing down to date the names of plants in the lists on pages 582-587. Other scientific nomenclature of plants and animals is given unchanged as taken from various authors from the time of Audubon to the present day. Much of the manuscript necessarily was written and re- vised when I was fully occupied in other work of an executive character, often when travelling by train or boat, and at a distance from any library; otherwise, the task could not have been completed within the time limit. It is to be regretted that a work of this kind should have been done of necessity under circumstances of pressure that precluded literary excellence, but care has been exercised to state only facts, and I have en- X PREFACE. deavored always to give credit to other authors whenever it has been feasible. It remains to express my gratitude to Mr. J. Lewis Ells- worth, secretary of the State Board of Agriculture, and the members of the Board, who have advocated the publication of this work and loyally supported the undertaking. This support has made the publication possible, and to these gen- tlemen is due whatever credit may be given. The responsi- bility for the shortcomings of the work is my own. Edward Howe Forbush. June 1, 1912. CONTENTS. Introduction: — America, A Country of Game Birds, ....... Abundance of Game found by Explorers and Colonists, .... Former Abundance of Game Birds in the West and South, The Decrease of Edible Birds, . PART I. A History of the Birds now hunted for Food or Sport in Massachu- setts and Adjacent States : — Grebes, Loons, Mergansers, River Ducks, Bay and Sea Ducks, Geese, Swans, Rails, Crakes, Gallinules and Coots Phalaropes, Avocets and Stilts, Snipes, Sandpipers, etc Plovers, Turnstones, Oyster-catchers, Bob-whites, Grouse, Pigeons and Doves, PAGE 1 6 12 22 39 49 58 69 111 169 193 201 224 230 235 334 358 361 367 375 393 PART II. A History of the Game Birds and Other Birds hunted for Food or Sport which have been driven out of Massachusetts and Adjacent States, or exterminated since the Settlement of the Country: — Extinct Species, . Great Auk, . Labrador Duck, Eskimo Curlew, Passenger Pigeon, Extirpated Species, Trumpeter Swan, Whooping Crane, Sandhill Crane, Wild Turkey, 399 399 411 416 433 472 472 477 483 487 Xll CONTENTS. PART III. the Decrease of Wild-fowl Birds The Conservation of Game Birds, Wild-fowl and Shore Birds: — The Economic Value of Game Birds, Wild-fowl and Shore Birds, The Decrease of Game Birds in Massachusetts, The Recuperative Powers of Nature, The Causes of the Decrease of Game Birds, Market Hunting, .... Spring Shooting, .... Summer Shooting, Settlement and Agriculture as a Cause for Night Shooting, .... Pursuing Wild-fowl in Boats, . The Use of Live Decoys, The Elements, Storms and Cold, Epidemic Diseases, Natural Enemies, .... Telegraph, Telephone and Trolley Wires, Minor Causes of the Decrease of Birds, . Lead Poisoning, .... The Destruction of the Feeding Grounds, Erroneous Opinions regarding the Causes of the Decrease of Game Wild-fowl and Shore Birds, ..... The Destruction of the Eggs of Wild-fowl for Commercial Purposes The Decline of Agriculture, ..... The Increase of Cottages and Camps, The Shortening of the Open Season, Guns Most Destructive, ...... The Viewpoint of the Hunter, .... The Introduction of Foreign Game Birds, Game Preserving, ....... The Game Preserve increases Insectivorous Birds, Methods of Attracting Water-fowl, .... Attracting Upland Game Birds, ..... Statutory Game Protection, ...... Federal Supervision of the Protection of Migratory Birds, Public Game and Bird Reservations, A Brief Summary of Needed Reforms for Game Protection, Enforcement of the Game Laws, ..... A List of the Names of those who filled out the Blank Forms for Informa- tion, which form the Basis of the Estimates on the Recent De crease of Game Birds, Wild-fowl and Shore Birds, Index, ............ PAGE 497 503 508 510 511 516 529 531 533 535 536 539 540 541 547 547 547 548 549 553 554 554 555 556 558 562 563 568 569 581 5S8 590 591 592 593 597 009 List of illustrations. Plates. Upland Plover (Colored Plate), . . . . . Plate I. — River Ducks and Swans, ..... Plate II. — Two Baldpates on Leverett Pond, Boston, Plate III. — Canvas-back and Baldpate on Leverett Pond, Boston Plate IV. — Group of Bay Ducks, Plate V. — Nest of Eider, Plate VI. — Barnacle Goose, Plate VII. — Woodcock on Nest, Plate VIII. — Spotted Sandpiper (Young), Plate IX. — Spotted Sandpiper (Adult), Plate X. — Ruffed Grouse Drumming, Plate XI. — Heath Hen, . Plate XII. — Great Auk, . Plate XIII. — Labrador Duck, . Plate XIV. — Eskimo Curlew, . Plate XV. — The Last Passenger Pigeon, Plate XVI. — Pigeon Net, Plate XVII. — Young Passenger Pigeon, Plate XVIII. — Eggs of Passenger Pigeon and Mourning Dove, Plate XIX. — Band-tailed Pigeon, Passenger Pigeon and Mourn ing Dove, .... Plate XX. — Trumpeter Swan, Plate XXI. — Whooping Crane, Plate XXII. — Sandhill Crane, Plate XXIII. — Wild Turkey, . Plate XXIV. — Propagation, Plate XXV. — Protection, Plate XXVI. — Attracting Canada Geese, Plate XXVII. — A Result of stopping Spring Shooting Plate XXVIII. — Wild-fowl on a Game Farm, . Plate XXIX. — A Breeding Pen for Bob-whites, Plate XXX. — Group of Bob-whites in Confinement, Plate XXXI. — Wild Rice in Flower, Plate XXXII. — Winter Buds of Wild Celery, . Plate XXXIII. — Seed Pods of Wild Celery, Plate XXXIV. — Wide-ranging Species of Pondweed, Plate XXXV. — Wide-ranging Species of Pondweed, Plate XXXVI. — Winter Shelter for Quail, Frontispiece faces page 39 faces page 69 faces page 69 faces page 111 faces page 150 faces page 193 faces page 235 faces page 322 faces page 322 faces page 377 faces page 385 faces page 399 faces page 411 faces page 416 faces page 433 faces page 438 faces page 450 faces page 460 faces page 460 faces page 472 faces page 477 faces page 483 faces page 487 faces page 497 faces page 497 faces page 508 faces page 524 faces page 540 faces page 563 faces page 563 faces page 571 faces page 576 faces page 576 between pages 578 and 579 between pages 578 and 579 faces page 581 XIV LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Cuts Holboell's Grebe, Horned Grebe, . Pied-billed Grebe, Loon, Black-throated Loon, Red-throated Loon, Merganser, Red-breasted Merganser, Hooded Merganser, Mallard, . Black Duck, Gadwall, . Baldpate, . Green-winged Teal, Blue-winged Teal, Shoveller, . Pintail (Male), . Pintail (Female), Wood Duck, Redhead, . Canvas-back, Scaup, Lesser Scaup, Ring-necked Duck, Golden-eye, Buffle-head, Old-Squaw (Males), Old-Squaw (Female), Harlequin Duck, Eider, Scoter, White-winged Scoter, Surf Scoter, Ruddy Duck, Snow Goose, Blue Goose, White-fronted Goose, ( !anada Goose, . J 'rant, Whistling Swan, ( llapper Rail, Virginia Rail, Sura Rail, . PAGE 41 43 46 50 56 57 60 64 67 71 76 81 86 91 95 99 102 104 105 113 118 121 124 127 129 135 139 140 144 148 153 160 163 166 170 174 175 177 183 194 205 207 210 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. XV Yellow Rail, Black Rail, Purple Gallinule, Florida Gallinule, Coot, Red Phalarope, . Northern Phalarope, . Wilson's Phalarope, Avocet, Black-necked Stilt, Wilson's Snipe, . Dowitcher, Stilt Sandpiper, . Knot, Purple Sandpiper, Pectoral Sandpiper, White-rumped Sandpiper, Baird's Sandpiper, Least Sandpiper, Red-backed Sandpiper, Semipalmated Sandpiper, Sanderling, Marbled Godwit, Hudsonian Godwit, Greater Yellow-legs, Yellow-legs, Solitary Sandpiper, Willet, Buff-breasted Sandpiper, Long-billed Curlew, Hudsonian Curlew, Black-bellied Plover, Golden Plover, . Killdeer Plover, Semipalmated Plover, Piping Plover, Ruddy Turnstone, Oyster-catcher, . Bob-white, PAGE 213 215 217 219 221 225 227 229 231 233 245 253 260 262 268 270 274 277 278 282 286 290 294 297 300 303 306 309 320 325 330 335 340 348 352 354 359 362 368 Figures in the Text. Figure 1. — Foot of Grebe, ......... 40 Figure 2. — Foot of Loon, ......... 49 Figure 3. — Bill of Merganser, ......... 59 Figure 4. — Foot of River Duck, . 70 xvi LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. Figure 5. — Axillars of Baldpate, Axillars of European Widgeon, Figure 6. — Foot of Sea Duck, .... Figure 7. — Head of Female Ring-necked Duck, Figure 8. — Head of Barrow's Golden-eye (Male), Figure 9. — Bills of Eiders, Figure 10. — Head of Male King Eider, Figure 11. — Foot of Coot, Figure 12. — Foot of Red Phalarope, Figure 13. — Foot of Northern Phalarope, Figure 14. — Foot of Wilson's Phalarope, Figure 15. — Tail of Pectoral Sandpiper, Figure 16. — Tail of Baird's Sandpiper, Figure 17. — First Primary and Axillars of Long-billed Curlew, Figure 18. — First Primary and Axillars of Hudsonian Curlew, Figure 19. — Head of Wilson's Plover, .... Figure 20. — Axillars and First Primary of Eskimo Curlew, Figure 21. — Pigeon Basket, ...... Figure 22. — Wild Rice, Figure 23. — Wild Celery, Figure 24. — Leaves of Wild Celery, showing Venation, Figure 25. — Sago Pondweed, ..... Figure 26. — Tubers of Sago Pondweed, PAGE 84 111 128 133 147 152 202 224 228 230 271 277 326 331 357 417 440 574 576 577 579 580 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. Game Birds, Wild- fowl and Shore Birds. INTRODUCTION. America, a Country of Game Birds. North America, at the time of its discovery, probably con- tained more game birds in proportion to its size than any other land. One hundred and seventy distinct species of game birds are found on this continent, and the list might be considerably extended by adding other birds which, although not considered as game, have been used for food. The check list of the Amer- ican Ornithologists' Union (1910) gives twenty -four species and subspecies of Doves and Pigeons ; six of Turkeys ; forty-two of Grouse; nineteen of Bob-whites, etc.; sixteen of Plover; seventy of Snipe, Sandpipers, Godwits, etc.; twenty-six of Rails and Cranes, etc.; and seventy-four of edible web-footed wild-fowl, — all of which (excluding some necessary duplications) might be included in the list of North American game birds. Game birds bred in countless numbers throughout the region now known as the United States and Mexico, when America first became known to Europeans. In autumn, winter and spring the migratory species swarmed in this region in num- bers unprecedented in the experience of man in any land. The shape and situation of the continent and islands of North America are such as to provide in the temperate and northern portions an immense breeding ground for migratory birds, and to congest them in the southern part during the fall, winter and early spring. The general conformation of the North American continent is that of a triangle, with its base lying in the arctic regions and its apex south of the tropic of Cancer. The distance across the northern part of the continent, meas- uring from the easternmost point of Newfoundland to the northwestern shores of Alaska, is more than four thousand miles, and from the eastern point of Greenland to the western- 2 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. most of the Aleutian Islands is quite as far. Contrast this with the distance from the lower coast of Georgia to the Gulf of California (less than two thousand miles). Note also that a line drawn across Mexico on the tropic of Cancer measures less than six hundred miles. Such conditions are found in no other continent. The position of South America is exactly the opposite in relation to bird migration, for the apex of the triangle of that continent lies toward the south pole and its base lies near the equator; therefore, there could be no such congestion of species caused by migration from the colder or southern parts of that continent toward the equator as is found in North America, when the birds that breed in the vast expanse of the north migrate to the comparatively contracted southern regions. The lands of the eastern hemisphere, taken as one large continent, are wider toward the equator than toward the poles, and no conditions are found there similar to those in North America, except perhaps in China, Indo-China, the peninsula of India and the Malay peninsula, in all of which a congestion of species similar to that once found in North America prob- ably occurs in the migration periods, but on a smaller scale. North America has an advantage over all other countries in its great arctic breeding grounds, that offer extensive nesting places and feeding grounds for water birds. A great archi- pelago extends from the arctic coast of North America a thou- sand miles toward the north pole, and the vast expanse of Greenland lies to the eastward. On all these islands, great and small, water-fowl may nest forever, unmolested by civil- ized man. In the light of our present knowledge, it is not difficult to imagine the great migration that annually occurred before the continent was peopled by the whites. When the short arctic summer drew to a close, — when the young birds had become strong on the wing, — the great exodus from the northern seas began. The Brant, which penetrated to the northernmost parts of Greenland and Ellesmere Land, even to the far shores of the Polar Sea, turned their faces to the south. As they moved southward, Auks, Murrcs, Gulls, Old-squaws and other NTRODUCTION. sea-fowl joined in the flight, part of which turned to the open waters of the Atlantic on the east and part to the Pacific on the west, but the greater part kept on, crossing the continent to the south. As this concourse moved on, the great islands of the North Georgia Archipelago gave up their quota of Snow Geese and other water-fowl; and as the widening, deepening wave rolled southward, it was swelled by countless Loons, Cranes, Swans and Plover from the great and lonely lands lying in the Arctic Ocean, between the Georgia Islands and the coast of the continent. Banks Land, Behring Land, Prince of Wales Land, King William Land, North Somer- set Land, Cockburn Land and Baffin Land gave forth their thousands and tens of thousands; and when at last the aerial hosts reached the southern shores of the Arctic Sea, they were joined by the vast swarms of Geese and Swans that bred there upon the wide-spreading tundra. From the mouth of the Yukon to the shores of Ungava, Geese, Eider Ducks and many other water-fowl and myriads of shore birds joined the advancing tide of bird life. The wave of migration secured tremendous accessions from the Barren Grounds; but it was the timbered region, the great plains of the northwest and the river valleys of British America and Alaska that furnished the greatest flights of Swans, Cranes, Canada Geese, Ducks and Teal. Moving by easy stages through August and early September, the vanguard of the host reached the boundaries of what we now know as the United States. Great flights of Wood Ducks, Snipe, Curlews, Plover and Teal were in the advance. We have no adequate early records of the move- ments of these mighty hosts. A paragraph here and there from the narratives of early explorers is all that can be found, but even as late as the middle of the nineteenth century the flights were still immense. Had De Soto and the adventurers of his company kept and published an account of the flights of birds that they witnessed, they might have told of the impressions left by their first sight of this great congregation of migratory fowl. The advance of autumn and the sharp touch of the frost king in the north had sealed the waters of the upper half of the continent, — a seal that would remain unbroken until the return of spring. 4 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. Dark clouds of coming storms obscured the northern sky, and the wind blew wild and chill. The Indian hunter, standing on the river shore at sunset, might then have seen the whole sky overcast by clouds of birds, formed in dun strata, moving fast and far in varying lines, but all trending toward the south. Dense masses of Scaup winnowed their way low over the land. Vast flocks of Teal swept close by, with a roar of rushing pinions as they swayed and turned in quest of feeding grounds. Lines of Mallards extended across the dome of the sky, flock after flock, in almost continuous array. Swift flights of Canvas-backs kept their unwavering course. Masses of Red-heads kept them company, while smaller flocks dis- charged their members like zigzag bolts to the wave below. Here and there Teal and Widgeons rode down the air with stiffening wing, concentering upon lake or river, where many a weary flock sought rest, until the water was black with float- ing birds, and still unwearied myriads high in air sped south- ward. Canada Geese, in the long " V " formation of the unbroken flock, in shattered ranks or in changing lines, trail- ing, crossing and diverging or converging in the sky, passed over in untold numbers with unslackening wing. Their musi- cal notes filled the air like the cries of a thousand packs of hounds. The upper air was full of nameless water-fowl, while far above them all great flocks of Cranes swam in the blue sky; and higher still, in the full light of a sun now passed from view, rode long lines of snowy Swans, their clang- ing, trumpet tones lost among the nearer sounds of voice and wing that fell from the mighty hosts of smaller water- fowl and waders rushing on their way. Scenes approach- ing this great concourse of moving fowl were witnessed and described even as late as the middle of the last century, in the sparsely settled country of the middle west. In early days the discharge of a musket near a marshy pool would seem to cause the whole marsh to rise in a mass that blotted out the sky. For days the sky was never clear of Pigeons, and sometimes was entirely obscured for hours. The shape and character of the continent and its elevations and depressions are such that, while the autumn movement was generally south throughout the country, much of the INTRODUCTION. wave of migration which reached across the land swept from northwest to southeast; therefore, the greatest congestion of birds in winter was found along the middle and south Atlantic coasts, and in the southern States bordering upon the Gulf of Mexico. There was also in Mexico a similar congestion upon a smaller scale, for a considerable part of the flight com- ing down the Pacific coast penetrated to Mexico and beyond. Some species went on to South America, and a few followed the South American continent to Patagonia. This line of migration continues unchanged to-day, except for the decrease in numbers. While many Alaskan birds come down the Pacific coast in their migration, a great part of them follow up the region watered by the Yukon and its tributaries, going southeast into the Mackenzie-Athabasca region, and reach the Atlantic coast, together with many of the birds of that area and others of the Hudson Bay country, by passing down south of Hudson Bay and through the region of the Great Lakes. Some thus reach southern New England and New York, while others appear on the Atlantic coast farther south; still others turn more to the southward, and, keeping east of the Rocky Moun- tains and the higher plains, or passing down the Mississippi valley, reach Florida and the other Gulf States. Southern New England was once particularly fortunate in the numbers of species and individuals which came into its territory in migration. Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut lie within the scope of the great wave of southeastern migration from Alaska and the region west of Hudson Bay, and they are also directly in the path of the flight from Greenland, Baffin's Land, Labrador and the Maritime Provinces. It was in part this fortunate position at the junction of two streams of migration that gave southern New England the abundance of migratory game birds which the early voyagers and settlers found there. Most of the maritime species from the Arctic and the north Atlantic come as far as Massachusetts in winter, while nearly all the wild-fowl and shore birds of the interior once visited our waters and shores in fall, winter and spring. GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. Abundance of Game found by Explorers and Colonists. When the settlement of America was begun, the number of individuals of these species was beyond computation, and the statements made by those who wrote about the game of the country at that time seem utterly incredible when repeated to-day. Nearly all the earlier explorers and travellers who mention birds or mammals in their narratives tell of the " great store " of fowl in the country. It is recorded that water-fowl, shore birds, Cranes and Herons bred along the Atlantic coast from Maine to Florida, and that they migrated back and forth along the Atlantic seaboard in incredible numbers. Ruffed Grouse, Pinnated Grouse, Bob-whites and Wild Turkeys were reported as appearing in great flocks, not only in the interior of the country, but along the coast, in suitable localities. We are not now accustomed to regard the Atlantic seaboard as a great breeding place and resort for water-fowl and game birds, but the early explorers and colonists found it alive with them, from the West Indies to Labrador. A few of their statements may be cited here. Beginning with the West Indian records of the early explorers, we find that George Percy of Captain John Smith's company contributes a narrative in which he asserts that on April 4, 1607, the company anchored at the Isle of " Virgines," where, he says, they killed "great store" of wild-fowl; and again he says: " On the nineth day of April, in the afternoone, we went off with our boat to the He of Moneta, [Monica] some three leagues from Mona [an island near Hayti]. After wee got to the top of the He wee found it to bee a fertill and a plaine ground, full of goodly grasse and abundance of Fowles of all kindes. They flew over our heads as thicke as drops of Hale: besides they made such a noise that wee were not able to heare one another speake. Furthermore, wee were not able to set our feet on the ground, but either on Fowles or Egges which lay so thicke in the grasse. Wee laded two Boats full in the space of three houres, to our great refreshing."1 1 Tyler, Lyon Gardiner: Narratives of Early Virginia, 1007, p. 0. INTRODUCTION. There is no clew, however, to the species of birds found, except that they were " wild fowles " which in general im- plies that they were water-fowl. Undoubtedly many of the birds seen breeding in these lower latitudes were such as are known as sea-fowl or water birds, probably including Pelicans and Cormorants. Capt. John Smith mentions the Pelican as one of the birds on which he and his adventurers daily feasted in the " Virgines Isles."1 He also states that on the isle called Monica they took from the bushes with their hands nearly two hogsheads full of birds in two or three hours. When the first explorers reached Florida they found it swarming with wild-fowl, Turkeys and birds of many kinds. In A Notice of Commodities found in Florida, Monsieur Rene de Laudonniere early in the seventeenth century writes that there is " an infinite sort of all wild fowl."2 The English gave the name of Virginia to all the country between Florida and Nova Francia (Canada); this included New England. During the period between 1600 and 1630 many writers speak of the abundance of game birds and wild- fowl in this region or parts of it. Capt. Philip Amidas, the first Englishman to set foot in North America, and Capt. Arthur Barlowe landed in 1584 upon an island in Pamlico Sound, " Virginia," named by the Indians " Wokokon." Here, their account states, they found " Deere, Conies, Hares and Fowle, even in the middest of Sum- mer in incredible abundance."3 Lawson, in his travels in Carolina (1700), speaks of large savannas on the Santee River as " plentifully stored " with Geese and other fowl. In the adjacent woods were great flocks of Turkeys.4 At sunrise flocks of Turkeys, containing several hundreds in a flock, were seen. Again he says: "We saw plenty of Turkeys, but perched on such lofty oaks that our guns would not kill them." 5 Sir Samuel Argal (1624) stated that in Virginia there were 1 Smith, Capt. John, Works of: The English Scholars Library, No. 16, 1S84, p. 386. 2 Coll. Mass. Hist. Soc, Vol. VIII, 3d ser., p. 117. 3 Jameson, J. Franklin: Early English and French Voyages, Am. Hist. Asso., 1906, p. 229. 4 Lawson, John: History of Carolina, 1860, pp. 34, 50. 5 Ibid., p. 79. 8 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. fowl in abundance, such as Swans, Brant, Geese, Turkeys, Cranes and Ducks.1 William Strachey (1610) says, in his True Declaration of Virginia: "The Turkyes of that Countrie are great, and fat, and exceeding in plentie. The riuers from August, or Sep- tember, till February, are couered with flocks of Wildfoule; as swannes, geese, ducke, mallard, teal, wigeons, hearons, bit- ters, curlewes, godwights, plouers, snights, dottrels, cormo- rants, in such abundance as are not in all the world to be equalled."2 Colonel Norwood (1649) states that great flights of fowl frequented an island on which he was cast away off the coast of Virginia.3 John Clayton (1688), in a letter to the Royal Society, giv- ing accounts of " several observables in Virginia," says that Wild Geese and Brant in winter came in mighty flocks, with wild Ducks innumerable.4 Edward Williams, writing of " Virginia," states that wild- fowl in their seasons were innumerable.5 Thomas Glover (1676) says that on the bay and rivers " feed so many wild fowl as in winter time they do in some places cover the water for two miles." 6 The above accounts refer mainly to the southern and middle portions of our Atlantic seaboard. Narratives of the Dutch, who first settled New Netherlands (now part of New York, New Jersey and the region along the Hudson), gave evidence of the vast numbers of wild-fowl and game birds found there during the early days of settlement. Johannes de Laet (1633) says: " Innumerable birds are also found here, both large and small, those that frequent the rivers and lakes, as well as the forests, and possess plumage of great elegance and variety of colors." 7 Nicolaes van Wassenaer (1624) writes: "In their waters 1 Purchas, Samuel: Ili.s Pilgrimes, GlasKow, 1906, Vol. XIX, p. 209. i Tracts by Peter Force, 1881, Vol. Ill, Tract No. 1, p. 13. Ibid., Tract No. 10, p. 23. I Ibid., Tract No. 12, p. 33. ' Ibid., Trad No. 11, p. 18. '• filoviT, Thomas: An Account of Virginia, Philos. Trans. Royal Soo., June 20, 1678, reprint of 1904, p. 8. 7 Jameson, J. Franklin: Narratives of New Motherland, Am. Hist, ^sso., 1909, p. ">ii. INTRODUCTION. are all sorts of fowls, such as cranes, bitterns, swans, geese, ducks, widgeons, wild geese . . . Birds fill also the woods." 1 Isaack de Rasieres, in a letter to Samuel Blommaert (1628), states that there were many birds which were in abundance there in the winter.2 Rev. Johannes Megapolensis, Jr. (1644), asserts: " We have here, too, a great number of all kinds of fowl . . . which sport upon the river in thousands in the spring of the year, and again in the autumn fly away in flocks, so that in the morn- ing and evening any one may stand ready with his gun before his house and shoot them as they fly past." 3 David Pieterszoon de Vries (1642) speaks of great quanti- ties of different kinds of Geese, Curlews, Snipe, Gulls and many shore birds. Turtle Doves (Passenger Pigeons) were so numerous that the light could hardly be discerned where they flew, and other species of birds in large numbers.4 Hubbard (1680) says that on Long Island there was " great store " of wild-fowl, such as Turkeys, Heath Hens, Quail, Partridges, Pigeons, Cranes, Geese of several sorts, Brant, Ducks, Widgeons, Teal " and divers others." 5 Martin Pring (1603), who visited the northern part of Virginia (New England and adjacent lands), states that there was "great store " of river and sea fowl.6 In Archer's account of Gosnold's voyage we find the statement that about May 22, 1602, the company reached an island, south of Cape Cod, which they called Martha's Vineyard, where they found wild-fowl breeding in abun- dance. This island evidently was that now known as " No Man's Land." It is given as in " latitude 41^." 7 In Brereton's account of Gosnold's voyage (1602) there is a description of a fresh-water lake (which some later his- torians have located on the island now known as Martha's Vineyard), in which stood a small island that was "exceed- 1 Jameson, J. Franklin: Narratives of New Netherland, Am. Hist. Asso., 1909, p. 71. 2 Ibid., p. 113. 3 Ibid., p. 169. * Ibid., p. 221. 5 Hubbard, William: General History of New England, Coll. Mass. Hist. Soc, Vol. VI, 2d ser., p. 672. 6 Jameson, J. Franklin: Early English and French Voyages, Am. Hist. Asso., 1906, p. 350. » Coll. Mass. Hist. Soc, Vol. VIII, 3d ser., p. 76. 10 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. ingly frequented with all sorts of fowls," some of which bred low on the banks, and others on low trees about the lake in great abundance, the young of which the explorers took and ate.1 In the various historical collections there may be found fragmentary accounts of the birds of Massachusetts, most of which will be referred to in their proper places under the heads of the various species. Josselyn (1672) particularly mentions large numbers of Wild Turkeys.2 Higginson (1630) says: "Fowles of the Aire are plenti- full here. . . . Here are likewise aboundance of Turkies often killed in the Woods. ... In Winter time this Countrey doth abound with wild Geese, wild Duckes, and other Sea Fowle, that a great part of the winter the Planters haue eaten noth- ing but roastmeat of diuers Fowles which they haue killed."3 Morton (1632), who was a "fowler," also speaks of the numerous quantities of wild-fowl, shore birds, Turkeys, Cranes, Grouse, Partridges and Quail in New England. He asserts that he often had a thousand Geese before the muzzle of his gun, and that the feathers of the Geese that he killed in a short time paid for all the powder and shot that he would use in a year.4 Wood (1629-34) also writes of the large numbers of Tur- keys, Cranes and other large birds, as well as Pigeons, shore birds and wild-fowl.5 These writers refer mainly to the region about Boston harbor and Massachusetts Bay, where the first settlements were made. Lewis says of Lynn that at the time of the first settlement (1630) the ponds and streams were filled with fish, and that the harbor was covered with sea-fowl, which laid their eggs on the rocks and sands of the shores; he says that fifty Ducks were sometimes killed at one shot.6 He states, also, that gulls in abundance bred on Egg Rock, which lies off Nahant. i Coll. Mass. Hist. Soc, Vol. VIII, 3.1 ser., p. 89. 2 Josselyn, John: Now England's Rarities, Coll. Mass. Hist. Soc., Vol. Ill, 3d ser., p. 277. 3 Higginson, Francis L.: New England's Plantations, Tracts by Peter Force, 183G, Vol. I, Tract No. 12, pp. 10, 11. * Morton, Thomas: New English Canaan, Tracts by Peter Force, 1838, Vol. II, Tract No. 5, pp. 40, 47. ■> Wood, Win.: New England's Prospect, Pub. Prince Soc, 18G5, pp.32, 33. 6 Lewis, Alonzo, and Newhall, James K.: History of Lynn, 180.r», pp. 40, 57, 80. INTRODUCTION. 11 Wood asserts that the marsh at the mouth of the Saugus River near Lynn was crowded with creeks, where lay "great stores of Geese and other Ducks." In Obadiah Turner's Journal, July 28, 1630, relating to the first settlement of Lynn, we find the following: " Of birdes wee saw great store . . . manie of wch wee knew not ye names. But wee are of a truth in a paradise of those moving things yt be good for foode." * In the same volume, under date of 1638, it is stated: "Upon ye beach they spied great multitudes of birdes of manie kindes, they being there to pick vp ye wormes and little fishes. They haue long bills wch they thrust into ye little holes in ye sand and pull up ye fat wormes with great relish. They lay eggs in ye sand and ye heate of ye sun being vpon them they speedilie hatch, and ye little birdes betake themselves to feeding. Ye beach birdes are verrie shy and quick a-wing, but our sportsmen, nevertheless, do bring down great plentie for their own vse and if need to supply their plantations." 2 In an account of Levett's voyage to New England (1623) he mentions " great plenty " of wild-fowl at a pool nine miles below the mouth of the Saco. He says, " In this place there is a world of fowl," and also speaks of " much fowl " in other places on the coast and islands.3 In Rosier's narrative of Waymouth's voyage to the coast of Maine, in 1605, he records visits to Monhegan Island and St. Georges Isles, and in both places saw " much fowl of divers kinds " breeding. He gives a list of birds, and states that there are " many other fowls in flocks, unknown." 4 The enormous numbers of game birds, which formed a staple article of food for settlers, were looked upon as a val- uable asset in the new country; and the abundance of fowl was fully set forth in the publications destined for the eyes of presumptive immigrants. The President and Council of New England (1622), setting forth the advantages of New England as a place of residence, 1 Newhall, James Robinson: Lin, or, Jewels of the Third Plantation, 1880, p. 59. 2 Ibid., p. 67. s Coll. Me. Hist, Soc, Vol. II, pp. 80, 82, 83, 85. * Coll. Mass. Hist. Soc, Vol. VIII, 3d ser., pp. 132, 157. 12 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. speak of the country as abounding with diversity of wild-fowl, as Turkeys, Partridges, Swans, Wild Geese, wild Ducks and many Doves.1 Sir Ferdinando Gorges (1658) states that there were plenty of fish and fowl for the " sustentation " of the settlers, " so that they could not say (according to the manner of their liv- ing) they wanted anything nature did require." 2 The Baron de Lahontan (May 28, 1687) speaks of the immense numbers of Geese, Ducks and Teal, with an "infinity of other fowl," which he found at Lake Champlain, and states that his party ate nothing but water-fowl there for fifteen days.3 The early explorers of Newfoundland, the St. Lawrence River and Canada, both French and English, tell similar stories of an abundance of fowl. The references to birds are fragmentary, however, and the descriptions and nomenclature of the species are often indefinite and confusing. We can see from these accounts that game was very plentiful, and we can get some valuable information regarding a few of the larger and more conspicuous species; but to get an adequate idea of the former numbers of game birds in America we must turn to the more recent accounts of conditions in the great west, which has been settled within a century, or to the narratives of those who have hunted in the thinly settled parts of the south Atlantic and Gulf coasts. Former Abundance of Game Birds in the West and South. Game has been abundant in the west and south within the last half-century, and game birds are still plentiful in some parts of these regions. Many species of game birds have been decimated and their territory greatly restricted, but by the records of their former or present abundance and their decrease in the west and south we may be able to approxi- mate the conditions that formerly existed on the Atlantic seaboard. Audubon writes in his journal, in camp at the > foil. Mji.m.s. Hist. Hoc, Vol. IX, 2d Her., p. 18. . 2 Ibid., Vol. VI, 3d aer., p. 89. 3 Lahontan, Baron de: Some New Voyagea to North America, 1703, p. 61. INTRODUCTION. 13 mouth of the Omaha River, October 1, 1843: " The wild Geese are innumerable." Again on October 3, when he passed Soldier River, he writes: "The Geese and Ducks are abun- dant beyond description." Murphy (1882) said that it was doubtful if the wild-fowl were as abundant in any other part of the world as they were even then on the North American continent, " myriads " being the only word that could give an idea of their numbers. In the seasons of migration the country so swarmed with them that they presented the appearance of numerous clouds of feathers, and the number of species was greater than those of any other part of the globe.1 In presenting the following well-considered statements of standard writers, I cannot vouch for the accuracy of their assertions; but, as most of them are known as authorities on ornithology or sportsmanship, they will no doubt receive the credence justly due them. Audubon writes (1838) that innumerable Ducks fed in beds of thousands, or filled the air at Chesapeake Bay; and that great flocks of Swans, looking like banks of snow, rested near the shores. Lewis, writing of Chesapeake Bay (1850), says that all species of wild-fowl resorted there then, in number beyond credence or computation; and that it was necessary for a stranger to visit the region, in order to form a just idea of the wonderful multitudes and numberless varieties that darkened the waters and hovered in interminable flocks around the feeding grounds.2 Frank Forester avers that the bay and its tributary rivers were frequented by innumerable hordes of wild-fowl. Murphy states that the bay during the season was like a battle ground, and that over ten thousand people were accus- tomed to shoot there. Grinnell says that in early days slave owners, who hired out their slaves to others, stipulated in the contract that Canvas-back Ducks should not be fed to them more than twice each week; and copies of such contracts are said to be 1 Murphy, John Mortimer: American Game Bird Shooting, 1882, pp. 265, 266. 2 Lewis, Elisha J.: The American Sportsman, 1855, pp. 246, 247. 14 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. still in existence in Maryland. Redheads rafted in Eastern and Hogg bays in bodies miles in extent, probably not less than fifty thousand Ducks in a mass.1 Robert Law of Chicago, who lived on the Chesapeake in his youth, is said to have hired slaves of their owners, and fed them on Canvas-backs until they rebelled and refused to be punished further with Canvas-backs, or to work longer unless fed on pork at least twice a day.2 These Ducks, so little valued then, sold at seven dollars a pair in 1890, and the demand is now unlimited. Huntington asserts that the number of wild-fowl along the Atlantic coast was almost beyond belief; that there were flocks in sight following each other in quick succession for days at a time, and acres of Ducks on the water.3 Wild Geese were, and still are, more abundant in the southwest in winter than in any other part of the continent. The Snow Geese and other species once moved in such vast flocks that they might be compared to a snowstorm. They often destroyed large crops of winter cereals, and in Califor- nia left scarcely any grain in a large district that they fre- quented. It is estimated that they destroyed crops valued at two hundred thousand dollars in one county of California in 1878, and that their depredations in other sections were as great. Shooting had so little effect on their numbers that the farmers gave up in despair and resorted to poison.4 All sorts of devices were used for killing Geese and Ducks. A man has been known to kill two hundred Geese in a day by stalking them under cover of a horse. By using a horse or an ox for stalking purposes, and a huge gun heavily loaded, one man is said to have bagged from ten to forty at each discharge, and earned in one day a hundred dollars.5 Fifty drams of powder and a pound of shot fired from a huge scatter-gun by a skilful gunner were sometimes very effective. Dr. Hatch says that a citizen of Sacramento, Cal., many years ago published the offer of a Panama hat, worth 1 Grinnell, George Bird: American Duck Shooting, 1001, p. 473. 2 Leffingwell, W. B.: Shooting on Upland, Mar.sh and Stream, 1890, p. 414. 3 Huntington, Dwight \V.: Our Feathered Game, loon, p. 141. ■' Murphy, John Mortimer: American (Same Bird Shooting, 1882, p. 240. s Ibid., p. 242. INTRODUCTION. 15 twenty-five dollars, to the person who would beat his record — nearly fifty birds — for a single shot at Geese. Fifteen years later another gunner killed seventy -five birds at a single shot on Suisun Bay.1 More recently the editor of Recreation investigated a story that W. E. Newbert and W. H. Young of Sacramento, Cal., killed one hundred and seventy-three Geese and " Brant" in seven hours shooting. He found, it to be a fact. The Geese were so destructive to the newly sprouted grain that the farmers were compelled to hire men to drive them off. In Dakota it was customary to build great fires on the roosting grounds of the Geese on dark nights, and to shoot the birds as they flew in " clouds " over the fires. One man in Minnesota is said to have killed three thousand Geese in this manner in ten days.2 Gillmore states that he and one companion killed eighty- five Geese and a " large number of duck " on the prairie in one day; and at Grand Prairie, 111., he alone killed nineteen Geese and forty Ducks one day, and would have killed more, but his ammunition gave out.3 Hunter states that in one day at Cobbs Island, Va., he had killed fifty-six Brant when his shells gave out; and that Nathan Cobb killed one hundred and eighteen, which he considered a good day's work. He stated that one hun- dred and eighty-six was his best tally for one day.4 A few of the scores made by gunners in the days of the old muzzle loader, supplied with the flint-lock or the per- cussion cap, will serve to indicate the former abundance of Ducks. Capt. John Smith, in his account of his journey to the Pamunkee, in 1608, makes the following assertion: "An hundred and forty-eight fowls the President Anthony Bagnall and Seriegent Pising did kill at three shoots."5 Hearne (1769-72) says that some Indians frequently kill as many as one hundred Snow Geese each in a day.6 1 Hatch, P. L.: Notes on the Birds of Minnesota, Zool. Ser., Geol. and Nat. Hist. Surv. of Minn., 1892, Vol. I, p. 76. 2 Murphy, John Mortimer: American Game Bird Shooting, 1882, p. 246. 3 Gillmore, Parker: Prairie and Forest, 1874, p. 249. 4 Hunter, Alex.: The Huntsman in the South, 1908, pp. 157, 158. 5 Smith, Capt. John: General History of Virginia and New England, 1819, p. 206. 6 Hearne, Samuel: A Journey to the Northern Ocean, 1795, p. 439. 16 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. Audubon states that forty or fifty Ducks were often killed at one shot with a small gun at Chesapeake Bay. Murphy says that pot-hunters sometimes killed twenty to forty " at a round " with a large naphtha lamp and reflector in a boat at night; and that he had been told that two men killed, in this way, with big guns, fifteen hundred birds from 7 p.m. to 3 a.m.; also, that two men in sneak boxes, armed with six guns, killed five hundred and sixteen birds in a day.1 Grinnell says that four men on the Chesapeake enticed or tolled in a flock of Redheads and Blackheads, and gathered forty-seven birds from six shots ; while poachers with big guns shot into flocks at night, sometimes killing seventy-five to one hundred birds at a shot.2 Many years ago there was a record of one gunner who from a battery killed five hundred Ducks in one day; and a more recent record of one who killed three hundred in a day's work.3 Mr. W. W. Levy killed one hundred and eighty-seven Ducks in one day on Chesapeake Bay, and shot seven thou- sand Canvas-backs in the season of 1846-47. A party of gunners often filled a small vessel with Ducks in two or three days, and dispatched it to the markets of Baltimore, Philadelphia or New York.4 Lewis states that in 1854, when the second edition of his work was prepared, the gunners in the vicinity of Havre de Grace killed three thousand Ducks on the first day of the shooting season.5 No wonder that the glories of Chesapeake Bay as a shooting ground have long since departed. In Ohio, before the game laws were enacted, the explosion of guns in the marshes resembled the skirmish fire of an army. A market gunner of Sandusky killed one hundred and eighteen Ducks at a shot.6 On the Kankakee marshes Huntington saw boats come in loaded to the guards with Ducks; some barely floated. On i Murphy, John Mortimer: American Game Bird Shooting, 1882, p. 292. 2 Grinnell, George Bird: American Duck Shooting, 1901, pp. 481, 482. 8 Ibid., p. 440. 4 Lewis, Elisha J.: The American Sportsman, 1855, p. 2fi9. « Ibid., v. 288. » Huntington, Dwight \\'.: Our Feathered Came, 1903, p. 142. INTRODUCTION. 17 one occasion, he avers, the whole great marsh seemed to rise up with a roar, and the water dropping from the Ducks appeared like a heavy rain. The birds, he says, almost obscured the sky.1 One clubman at the Palmer Island Club at Currituck Sound, N. C, is said to have killed one hundred and sixty Canvas-backs in a day's shooting.2 At one small lake on the Pacific coast four men shooting morning and evening made a record of over four hundred Teal, all killed on the wing.3 Enormous numbers of wild-fowl formerly migrated to Mexico in winter, and great multitudes still go there. Major Price (1877) stated that " clouds " of wild-fowl were seen by him on the River Santiago; and that even in China, one of the finest countries for Duck shooting in the world, he never saw these birds so numerous.4 Duck shooting in Mexico is largely monopolized by the owners of large estates or preserves. One of the most success- ful methods used in market shooting in Mexico is called the armada. It is built in a half circle, just above the water line of some pond. Two hundred to three hundred gun barrels are set so that one half will sweep the surface of the water; the other half are aimed a little higher. The Ducks are baited to the pond with barley and corn, and they are care- fully guarded and fed by men on horseback, who ride around, but do not molest them until the birds become accustomed to their presence. When everything is ripe for the slaughter the Ducks are carefully driven within range, and the two sets of barrels are then fired one after the other, by an ingenious arrangement. The number of Ducks thus slaughtered in Mexico cannot be estimated. At the Hacienda Grande, at the north end of Lake Texcoco, four thousand six hundred and ninety-six Ducks were killed in this way at one discharge. They sold for two hundred and fifty -six dollars. Signora Cervantes de Rivas, owner of the hacienda, said that the net 1 Huntington, Dwight W.: Our Feathered Game, 1903, p. 211. 2 Hunter, Alex.: The Huntsman in the South, Vol. I, 1908, p. 289. 3 Huntington, Dwight W.: Our Feathered Game, 1903, p. 231. 4 Price, Maj. Sir Rose Lambart, Bart.: The Two Americas, London, 1S77, p. 170. 18 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. profit in Ducks on that ranch in one winter was over thirteen thousand dollars, which represents two hundred and eight thousand Ducks; and there are hundreds of people pursuing the same business.1 We accomplish the same result in the United States, but more people share in the sport and the profits. Mr. T. Gilbert Pearson, secretary of the National Asso- ciation of Audubon Societies, who visited President Diaz in Mexico City during the winter of 1909-10, in the hope of securing government action for the protection of game in Mexico, found the armada still in operation there. Fortu- nately, few if any wild-fowl that breed in New England or pass through it migrate to Mexico. If we turn to the waders, we shall find plentiful evidence regarding their former overwhelming abundance, and the won- derful migrating army which once swept not only along our coasts but over the interior as well. Frank Forester, writing about the middle of the last cen- tury, said that from the Swan down to the Least Sandpiper every species of aquatic bird abounded in its appropriate latitude in his day. From Boston Bay to the mouth of the Mississippi River some portions of the coast were then swarm- ing at all times of the year with all the varieties of Curlews, Sandpipers, Plover and other shore birds. Long Island, New Jersey, the Chesapeake, the islands of Albemarle and Pam- lico sounds, and the tepid waters of Florida, all abounded with these aquatic myriads.2 Gillmore says (1874) that there was no portion of the world with which he was acquainted where these birds were so largely represented both in species and numbers as in North America. Along the Atlantic seaboard of the United States they abounded in spring and fall, and their principal breeding places, like the coasts and interior of Labrador and Newfoundland, fairly swarmed with them; while the western prairies at the breaking up of winter were populated with such numbers as almost to cause the surface of the soil to 1 Huntington, Dwight W.: Our Feathered Game, 1003, p. 143. 2 Herbert, Henry William: Frank Forester's Field Sports of the United Stales, 1S73, Vol. II, pp. 7,8. INTRODUCTION. 19 appear to move as they rushed about in search of the insects that formed their principal food.1 King (1866) says that one of the peculiarities of Lakes Erie and Ontario consists of the great numbers of Sandpipers run- ning along the beach in large flocks.2 Great bags of shore birds were made on the Atlantic coast, even as late as the last quarter of the nineteenth century. Giraud speaks of one hundred and sixteen Yellow-legs killed at one shot. Wilson tells of eighty -five Red-breasted Snipe taken at one discharge of the musket, and Audubon saw one hundred and twenty-seven killed by three barrels. A gunner at Egg Harbor killed thirty-three Red-breasted Snipe by shooting both barrels into a passing flock; and Frank Forester says that in his day a sportsman might fill a bushel basket with the proceeds of a day's shooting on beaches and marshes. Lewis states that he saw twenty-three Dowitchers killed at one discharge. Bogardus mentions that he, with a friend, killed three hundred and forty Wilson's Snipe in a day on the Sangamon River in Illinois, and says that his bag in the right season was seldom as small as one hundred and fifty birds in a day. Huntington states that on one occasion, in Ohio, he killed twenty-eight Wilson's Snipe in a little over an hour's shoot- ing.3 There is a story current among old gunners in Concord, Mass., that years ago one man won a wager that he could kill fifty Wilson's Snipe in an hour or two with a limited number of shots. Gillmore says that in his day, within thirty-six hours' travel of New York City, such Snipe shooting could be enjoyed as was to be had in no other portion of the globe. One of his acquaintances killed nine dozen in seven hours, and frequently killed from seven to eight dozen in the same time. 1 Gillmore, Parker: Prairie and Forest, 1874, p. 250. 2 King, W. Ross: The Sportsman and Naturalist in Canada, 1866, p. 114. 3 Huntington, Dwight W.: Our Feathered Game, 1903, p. 273. 20 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. Audubon says that adepts in the sport of Woodcock shooting have been known to kill upwards of one hundred in a day. Doughty asserts that in 1825, in the meadows bordering on the Cohansey River, in the lower part of New Jersey, three men in about two hours killed more than forty Wood- cock on a small spot of ground ; x and also that in a very small spot in the lowlands west of New York City a party of two or three men killed upwards of eighty Woodcock, while in a very small spot of a few acres in Salem County as many as one hundred and fifty were killed during that day, and very many more on the same spot on the day succeeding.2 In the early days of the settlement of America, and for many years afterward, the Ruffed Grouse was not only very numerous in the eastern and middle States and in Canada, but was a tame and apparently stupid bird, as it still is in a few of the wilder regions of the country. Lahontan regarded the stupidity of the "Wood Hen" as the most comical thing he had seen, for they sat upon the trees in flocks, and were killed one after the other, without offering to stir. The Indians shot at them with arrows, for they were not worth a charge of powder.3 Evidently he refers to the Ruffed Grouse, for he describes how they drum on a log. - Wilson, in travelling among the mountains that bounded the Susquehanna River, was always able to get an abundant supply of these birds without leaving the path. Abbott avers that in the swamps of central New Jersey these birds used to congregate by thousands, and that in the closing years of the eighteenth century it was a common sport on all farms to surround the Ruffed Grouse, and when a great host of birds had been gathered in a few trees, all the farmers would fire at a given signal, their old flint-locks loaded with bits of nails and cut pieces of lead, and repre- sentatives from the different farms would go home loaded with a " big mess of patridge." The Grouse congregated in 1 Doughty, J. and T.: The Cabinet of Natural History and American Rural Sports, 1830, Vol. I, p. 07. 2 Ibid., Vol. II, p. 15. 3 Lahontan, Karon do: Some New Voyages to North America, 1703, Vol. I, p. 66. INTRODUCTION. 21 the woods and swamps of central New Jersey by thousands, where they were netted by the inhabitants.1 Audubon states that he had bought these birds at Pitts- burg " some years ago " for twelve and one-half cents a pair, but that they now sold (1835) in the market at seventy -five cents to one dollar in the eastern cities. Abbott believes that, common as this bird still was in New Jersey in 1895, it was as nothing compared to half a century ago; and, judging from old manuscripts which refer presum- ably to this Grouse, they were extremely abundant at one time, or when the country was settled, when " their drumming in the woods would sound often as if every hive of bees was swarming." The Pinnated Grouse was found in enormous numbers along the Atlantic coast in suitable regions, and was still more numerous in the interior. Other and larger game was so plentiful that few people ate this bird during the first years of settlement. Audubon says that a friend of his killed forty of these Grouse with a rifle one morning without picking one up; and that when he first went to Kentucky no hunter of that State deigned to shoot them. In Massachusetts they were looked upon with more abhorrence than the crows, because of the injury they did in the orchards by picking off the buds in winter and picking up sowed grain in the fields in spring. Audubon states that his servants preferred fat bacon to the flesh of these birds, which often fed with the domestic fowls. As the deer and Turkeys became scarce, the Grouse were utilized; and twenty-five years later they had been nearly all driven out of Kentucky and had been nearly exterminated in the east, being then so rare in the markets of Boston, Philadelphia and New York that they sold at from five dollars to ten dollars per pair.2 Later, as settlement progressed westward, these Grouse were found so abundant in some portions of the west that it was nothing unusual for a person armed with a breech-loader to bag twenty or thirty brace a day.3 i Abbott, C. C: The Birds about us, 1895, pp. 189-191. 2 Audubon, J. J.: Ornithological Biography, 1835, Vol. II, pp. 491, 492. 3 Murphy, John Mortimer: American Game Bird Shooting, 1882, p. 63. '22 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. Mr. Samuel C. Clarke states that Pinnated Grouse were once so plentiful in Illinois that thirty to forty to a gun were killed in a day; and that one man drove from Fox River to Chicago, forty miles, with one dog, and killed about one hundred Grouse on the way. At that time they sold for only one dollar a dozen in the Chicago market.1 The Bob-white or "Quail" was also found in countless numbers in favorable localities all along the Atlantic coast. Lewis says that a gentleman living on Chesapeake Bay, not far from Havre de Grace, asserted that his next neighbor caught in nets in one season on his own estate no less than nine hundred of these birds. He kept them in coops, and fed them to his negroes.2 Lewis also avers that a gentleman living near Lynchburg, Va., killed over one hundred of these birds in a day's shooting during the season of 1851-52. 3 Sir Thomas Button states that when his crew wintered in Port Nelson River, in 1612, they killed eighteen hundred dozen Grouse. Hearne says that he has seen thousands of Ptarmigans in flight, and that the whole surface of the snow seemed to be in motion, where they fed on the tops of the short willows.4 Much more evidence might be given regarding the great numbers of game birds in America in early days; but sufficient proof has been cited of the abundance of edible fowl in this country at the time of its discovery and during its settlement. Further evidence regarding early conditions in Massachusetts will be given under the histories of the species. What have we done with this bounteous supply, — this great host of edible birds? The Decrease of Edible Birds. Josselyn, writing within forty years after the first settle- ment in New England, stated that the Wild Pigeon had decreased greatly, "the English taking them with nets;" and he said that the English and Indians had "destroyed the breed " of Wild Turkeys, so that it was then very rare to meet • Leffingwell, W. B.: Shooting on Upland, Marsh and Stream, 1890, .p. 262. ■ Lewis, JO. J.: The American Sportsman, 1855, p. 85. " U, id., p. 103. 1 Beanie, Samuel: A Journey from Eudaon Bay to the Northern Ocean, 171)5, p. 411. INTRODUCTION. 23 one in the woods. This is typical of the white man's destruc- tiveness. He puts firearms in the hands of the savages, and destroys the large game and the gregarious birds that can be taken easily in large numbers with the gun, trap, snare or net. The Indian had a plentiful supply of game until the white man came. The result of giving him firearms and a mar- ket for game was well shown in the last century in the val- ley of the Moisie River, Labrador. The Indians themselves admitted that it was the guns sold to them by the whites that proved their undoing. They shot the deer, sold the skins for more guns, destroyed all the large game in the country, and then either starved or left the country. The white men killed only the larger game at first, or such birds as could be shot in numbers from flocks. Even as late as the beginning of the nineteenth century, Wilson said that gunpowder was too precious in the mountains to be used on anything smaller than a Turkey; but in the valleys and along the coast a few years of settlement were sufficient to destroy most of the larger and much of the smaller game. Hunting was unre- stricted. Practically all the male inhabitants were accus- tomed to the use of firearms. Like the Indians, the settlers killed game at all seasons. The mother bird on her nest, the eggs and young, — all were taken wantonly, without restraint, and all utilized as food. The result of such destructiveness was never for a moment in doubt. The end came quickly. The large game and the resident game birds suffered most, particularly near the centers of population, where the larger game animals and the breeding game birds, such as the deer, Wild Turkey and Pinnated Grouse, were soon extirpated. Professor Kalm states that all the old Swedes and English- men born in America, whom he questioned, asserted that there were not nearly so many birds fit for eating "at the present time " (1748) as there were when they were children (1670-90), and that the decrease of these birds was visible. They said that their fathers also had complained of this ; say- ing that in their childhood the bays, rivers and brooks were quite covered with all sorts of water-fowl; but when Kalm was at Swedesboro, New Sweden (now New Jersey) (1748), there was sometimes not a single Duck to be seen. He was 24 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. informed that sixty or seventy years earlier a person could kill eighty Ducks in a morning; "but at present," he says, "you frequently wait in vain for a single one." The Wild Turkeys, Grouse and Cranes, which were so numerous in former years, were now nearly all gone. Kalm says that the cause of this diminution was not difficult to find, for after the arrival of great crowds of Europeans the country had become well peopled, the woods had been cut off, and the people had by hunting and shooting, partly exterminated the birds and partly frightened them away. There were no regulations or laws to prevent the destruction of birds at any season of the year, and, had any existed, the spirit of freedom prevailing in the country was such that they would not have been obeyed. He heard great complaints of the decrease of eatable fowl, not only in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, of which he speaks par- ticularly, but in all parts of America, wherever he travelled.1 Audubon, in his Missouri River journals, frequently men- tions the fact that Geese with young were shot, or shot at, by members of his party or the boat's crew; but he says that in some cases " the poor things fortunately escaped." This destruction of birds in the nesting season was even then common throughout the country. Audubon well describes the rapid destruction of game on the Ohio River during the early part of the nineteenth century. He says that when he first visited the region (about 1810) the shores of the river were amply supplied with game. A Wild Turkey, Grouse or Teal could be procured in a few minutes, and his party fared well. There were then great herds of elk, deer and buffalo on the hills and in the valleys. Twenty years later these herds had ceased to exist. The country was covered with villages, towns and farms, and the din of hammers and machinery was con- stantly heard. The woods were fast disappearing under the axe and fire, hundreds of steamboats were gliding to and fro over the whole length of the river, and most of the game was gone. The gunner and hunter were not entirely to blame for the destruction of game; the cutting down of forests drove out 1 Kalm, Peter: Travels in North America, 1770, Vol. I, p. 2S9. NTRODUCTION. 25 many birds and mammals, and many were killed by fires in the woods. These fires not only killed many upland game birds, but they also destroyed many water-fowl as well. Wild- fowl, disturbed and bewildered by the light of the burning forest at night, have been seen to circle around the fire until overcome by the heat and smoke, when they fell into the flame. Some fell like stones from immense heights; others dove down, seeming to be fascinated, like moths, by the flame.1 After all, however, the fires were local, and not nearly so destructive as the devices invented to capture the birds. Great traps were made, in which whole flocks of Turkeys or Quail were caught. Nets also were used for catching the smaller game birds, and the woods were full of snares in which Grouse and other small game were taken. The great guns used for shooting into the flocks of wild-fowl were destructive. They were usually mounted upon a swivel in the bow of a boat, like a small cannon, and the breech was held to the shoulder to take aim. The diminution of game progressed faster along the coast, in the river valleys and about the lake shores than elsewhere, for there settlement first began; while in the unsettled interior of the north and west the birds were still nearly as plentiful as ever. Up to the early part of the nineteenth century the great interior of the northwest beyond the Great Lakes and in Canada was not only unsettled, but unexplored; there- fore, notwithstanding the great decrease of the resident game birds along the Atlantic coast for three centuries after the dis- covery of America, the wild-fowl, shore birds and game birds still bred in almost undiminished numbers in the unexplored interior of the United States, British America and the lands of the Arctic Sea; and they still appeared in vast numbers in their migrations, sweeping in clouds over the interior, and moving in great flocks up and down the Atlantic seaboard. It was the unsettled wilderness, and the wilderness alone, which so far had maintained the supply; but when, in the latter part of the nineteenth century, railroads began to » Hind, H. Y.: The Labrador Peninsula, 1863, Vol. I, p. 209. 26 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. extend throughout the great west and northwest, a rapid extermination of game commenced, such as was never known before in the world's history. The railroads carried settlers into the wilderness, and opened to them the markets of the east. Before the advent of the railroads, game had been plenti- ful and cheap in the markets of the western cities. Audubon says in his journal that in 1843 at St. Louis the markets abounded with the good things of the land: Grouse could be had two for a York shilling; Turkeys, wild or tame, twenty- five cents each; Ducks, three for a shilling; Wild Geese, ten cents each; and Canvas-backs, a shilling a pair. When the railroads reached the country tributary to St. Louis, and thus connected it with eastern markets, building up also great markets in the central west, the prices of game gradually rose, while the game rapidly decreased. The fame of America as a game country was noised far and wide. Hunters and sportsmen came from every land; sportsmen, market hunters, big game hunters and skin hunters crowded into the new country. The improvement in firearms kept pace with the increased transportation facilities. The breech-loader gave the hunter an added advantage. Then followed the practical extermination of the American bison, the deer, elk, antelope, mountain sheep, mountain goat, Wild Turkey and Prairie Chicken over wide areas. Then first began the marked decrease in the numbers of game birds, shore birds and wild- fowl throughout most of the United States and British America, that has since become historic, and has had a marked effect on the migratory species that once inhabited or passed through Massachusetts and the other New Eng- land States in immense multitudes. Every chronicler, be he hunter, sportsman or naturalist, situated anywhere east of the Mississippi, records this decrease. The settler, the farmer, the sportsman and the market hunter eventually exterminated or drove out nearly all the breeding wild-fowl from the United States; and then the settlement of the country, the occupa- tion of the birds' breeding grounds for agricultural purposes, and incessant gunning at all seasons, began to make itself INTRODUCTION. 27 felt upon the vast multitudes of water-fowl that bred in the Canadian northwest. Farmers used every possible method to destroy the Ducks and Geese which consumed their crops. Market hunters systematically hunted the country. Flocks of Quail were enticed to certain points, where they were netted or trapped. Grouse were hunted by men in wagons, with trained dogs ranging near to put up the birds. Plover and Curlews were pursued by a small army of men, who fol- lowed them during their migration, and shipped the game to both western and eastern markets. The fact that these birds were among the most beneficial species on the prairie farms was not considered; they were exterminated without mercy. It was customary in the early days for a party of wild-fowl gunners to take along a horse and wagon to haul home their loads of birds. Mr. E. Hough, in writing of Duck shooting in North Dakota (1897), says that up to within two years of that time it was a daily sight at Dawson station to see the entire platform lined with Ducks. In warm weather it was not unusual to see two or three wagonloads of spoiled birds hauled away and dumped into a coulee.1 Huntington tells of a time when the Ducks were so abundant in the markets of Detroit that they could not be used, and, warm weather coming on, they were thrown away.2 He says that it was common in the old days for pot- hunters to fill their gunning boats to the gunwales, making such a glut in the market that large quantities of the birds spoiled.3 "Invisible," writing in Forest and Stream, in 1899 states that there was not then one Goose left on the River Platte to fifty in days gone by. Ten or fifteen years earlier he had known a man to kill fifty-two between 2 o'clock and sundown. Similar statements came from sportsmen and ornithologists in many parts of the middle west. The shooting scores of gun- ning clubs show the decrease of the birds during the latter part of the nineteenth century. 1 Grinnell, George Bird: American Duck Shooting, 1901, pp. 320, 321. 2 Huntington, Dwight W.: Our Feathered Game, 1903, pp. 182, 183. s Ibid., p. 206. 28 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. The following score,1 from the Winous Point Club, indicates the decrease of Redheads in their region in twenty years : — Year. 1881, 1882, 1883, 1884, 1885, 1886, 1887, 1888, 1889, 1890, Birds killed. 1,415 1,987 1,699 927 1,058 366 21 56 16 63 Year. 1891, 1892, 1893, 1894, 1895, 1896, 1897, 1898, 1899, 1900. Birds killed. 31 510 216 40 5 207 68 4 19 1 Another score2 from the same club gives some information regarding three other species during the same time : — Year. Canvas-backs. Mallards. Blue-winged Teal. 1880, 1885, 1890, 1895, 1900, 665 237 697 72 1 1,319 943 394 218 232 2,110 1,019 603 21 A club record 3 from the Sandusky marshes in Ohio shows the decrease in Blue-winged Teal and Green-winged Teal in eighteen years : — Year. Green-winged Teal. 1881, 1885, 1890, 1899, 4U 506 373 184 1 Huntington, Dwight W.: Our Feathered Game, 1903, p. 183. 2 Ibid., p. 212. a lUid., p. 232. INTRODUCTION. 29 Long before the time of Audubon a decrease of the wild- fowl in Chesapeake Bay had begun, but they were still remarkably numerous there in his day and later. All writers since then who have investigated the diminution of the birds about the bay have found it progressive and continuous, not- withstanding the periodical fluctuations in numbers. Grin- nell (1901) says that its glories as a Duck shooting ground largely have departed, that the gunning is a memory rather than a reality, and that the birds are yearly becoming more scarce. Similar reports have come from most of the ducking grounds of the United States. This decrease of game birds has been general throughout the country, except in a few far west- ern States; but even on the Pacific coast the diminution of shore birds and wild-fowl has been noticeable in many places. Dr. D. G. Elliot, author of several standard works on game birds, says: "North America at one time probably contained more Wild Fowl than any other country of the globe, and even in the recollection of some living, the birds came down from the northland during the autumn in numbers that were incredible, promising a continuance of the race forever. I have myself seen great masses of Ducks, and also of Geese, rise at one time from the water in so dense a cloud as to obscure the sky, and every suitable water-covered spot held some member of the Family throughout our limits. But those great armies of Wild Fowl will be seen no more in our land, only the survivors of their broken ranks." 1 The following is an extract from a recent work, The Water Fowl Family, by Sanford, Bishop and Van Dyke: "Between 1870 and 1875 fifteen thousand Ducks were not uncommonly killed in Chesapeake Bay in a single day. Here in February and March it was possible to see redheads and canvas-backs in rafts miles long, containing countless thousands of birds. Wild fowl up to 1860 had not been much hunted in this country, and during the Civil War were unmolested. From 1865 began their destruction, which has been steadily increas- ing since, with a result inevitable. In twenty-five years the greatest natural home in the world for wild ducks has been » Elliot, D. G.: Wild Fowl of North America, 1898, Intro., pp. 21, 22. 30 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. nearly devastated of its tenants. The past few years have shown some betterment in the shooting there, and, with care, it may still improve, but the vast hordes of the past will not return. Inland bodies of water, extending through the middle west to the mountains, tell the same story. What sights were once seen on the sloughs of Indiana, Illinois and Minnesota ! Now, in many places, the numbers left, an insignificant rem- nant, bear evidence of the past. After the large game had been destroyed and driven off, the small game was taken up, and the past twenty years have decimated the wild fowl almost beyond conception. Practically unprotected, shot from their first coming in the fall to the end of their stay in the spring, the result has been inevitable. Many of the most famous resorts are devastated, and the existing haunts exposed to such incessant persecution that local extinction is threatened, unless prompt measures of relief are afforded." Prof. Lawrence Bruner, in his Notes on Nebraska Birds (1896), says that man, the greatest enemy, has so depleted their ranks in many localities that they have become scarce. Mr. Rudolph M. Anderson, in his Birds of Iowa, tells of the decrease or disappearance of many species of edible birds. Prof. Otto Widmann, in the Preliminary Catalog of the Birds of Missouri, says that the gun is the main factor in the disappearance of all the larger birds. Mr. Witmer Stone, in his Birds of New Jersey, says that the number of gunners is vastly increased, and the number of game birds vastly decreased. Dr. Sylvester D. Judd, in his The Grouse and Wild Turkeys of the United States and their Economic Value, says that a number of our game birds are now gone or are fast disappear- ing from their former haunts. The Heath Hen is practically extinct, and the Prairie Hen is nearly or quite gone from large areas in the west where it was numerous a few years ago. Hearne said (1769-72) that in the Hudson Bay country the Snow Geese came in such numbers that when they alighted in the marshes the ground appeared like a field covered with snow. At Churchill River the people sometimes killed five or six thousand, and at York Fort they have salted forty hogs- INTRODUCTION. 31 heads in a season. But he says, naively, that " Geese do not frequent these parts in such numbers as formerly." The sequel follows. In 1909 Mr. Henry Oldys of the Bureau of Biological Survey of the United States Department of Agri- culture wrote me that Mr. Preble had learned, in his explo- rations about the west coast of Hudson Bay, that in this region, formerly one of the great highways of wild-fowl, the birds have become so reduced in numbers that the inhabit- ants, who were formerly accustomed to put down many of these birds for winter, are much straitened in their supply of food. In that wild region, where the supply of game is all- important to furnish food for the inhabitants, a diminution of water-fowl is seriously felt; and where moose are absent, cari- bou rare and the fishing poor, it is a serious matter. Many of the wild-fowl that go to the Atlantic coast in winter, as well as others that go to the gulf, breed in or pass through the region west of the bay. The destruction of these birds in the United States during migration is believed to have been the main cause of the present scarcity in these northern regions. Where one is killed there, a hundred are killed here. Only since protection in the spring has been given wild-fowl in the greater part of British America, and in most of the States, has there been any check to this continuous decrease of the wild-fowl in North America. Regarding the general decrease in the numbers of shore and marsh birds, including Snipe, Plover and Sandpipers, the older gunners practically agree that it has been tremendous and continuous for many years, and, although some of them believe that the birds have gone somewhere else or " changed their line of flight," still, they say the birds " do not come here." For about forty years, during which much of my time has been passed in the woods and fields and along the shores of Massachusetts, I have had opportunity to observe the dimi- nution in numbers of those birds that are hunted for food, for their feathers or for sport. I have noted the gradual disap- pearance of Passenger Pigeons and Eskimo Curlews, the great reduction in the numbers of Golden Plover, Wood Ducks and other species of shore birds and wild-fowl, and I have kept 32 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. informed regarding the condition of the upland game birds; but during all this time I had hardly realized the gravity of the situation, until, in the pursuit of an inquiry regarding the destruction of birds by the elements, which was authorized by the State Board of Agriculture in 1903, people began volun- tarily to send in evidence regarding the general decrease of birds. It was asserted by many correspondents that the extir- pation of certain species was imminent in the region with which they were familiar, and that many others were rapidly decreasing in numbers. The secretary of the State Board of Agriculture, on receipt of this evidence, authorized further investigation regarding the decrease of birds. Four hundred circulars asking for information were prepared and sent out in July, 1904, to naturalists, secretaries of game protective associations, sports- men, game wardens, market hunters, farmers and other interested observers. In response to these circulars two hun- dred and seventeen satisfactory replies were received, and a large correspondence was opened, all of which formed the basis for a special report of one hundred and sixty -six pages.1 The consensus of opinion of those correspondents who might be considered as competent to give expert testimony indicated a great decrease among game birds, shore birds, wild-fowl, Herons, birds of prey, and, in fact, among all the birds most hunted, and a somewhat less diminution among a certain few species of the smaller birds. It was shown that Ducks, Geese and Loons were disappearing from the ponds and rivers of the interior, and that even on the coast the most desirable species had greatly decreased. Grouse and Bob-whites were estimated to have suffered a diminution of from fifty to seventy-five per cent, within the memory of liv- ing men, and an even greater decrease was attributed to the shore birds. The completion of this report and its favorable reception led to the publication of a special report on the use- ful birds of the Commonwealth, and means for protecting them.2 1 Forbush, Edward Howe: The Decrease of Birds, and its Causes, with Suggestions for Bird Pro- tection, Mass. State Board Agr., 1004. 2 Forbush, Edward Howe: Useful Birds, and their Protection, Mass. State Board Agr., 1907. NTR0DUCT10N. 33 When this had been published, and while it was going through its several editions, my attention was again urgently called to the scarcity of game birds in Massachusetts, New England and the adjacent States. Reports indicated that Ruffed Grouse and Bob-whites had reached the lowest ebb in numbers ever known. This, with the previous decrease in water-fowl and shore birds, left New England, and particu- larly Massachusetts, with fewer game birds than at any time of which we have record. An insistent demand arose for more game. State game commissioners and individuals began to look about to see where it could be obtained. Attempts to procure Grouse and Bob-whites from other States were ineffectual, owing to laws which forbade the exportation of game. Partly as a result of these laws, large numbers of European Partridges, Grouse and Asiatic Pheasants were introduced, and liberated in New England; while attempts were made in several Legislatures to prohibit the killing of all game birds for a series of years, or to further shorten the shooting season. The unrest of the sportsmen and gunners was manifested in attempts to change the personnel of the State fish and game commissions, and to secure better enforcement of the game laws. Advocates of the abolition of all game laws arose, and gained some following. The promulgators of new game laws readily secured a hearing. People began to awaken to the fact that game was disappearing, and to seek a remedy. The Legislature of Massachusetts enacted a statute providing for the appointment of a State Ornithologist, and he was authorized by the State Board of Agriculture to undertake an investigation of the former decrease in numbers, and the present scarcity of game birds in the Commonwealth, with a view to submitting a report on the causes of such decrease and the means of increasing the supply. After a study of the literature on the subject and considerable correspondence with those who were conversant with the conditions, a sixteen-page circular of information was prepared in October, 1907, con- taining questions regarding the most important food birds resident in the Commonwealth or migrating through it. 34 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. These circulars were sent out to old and experienced gunners, sportsmen and naturalists within the State, and to others along the Atlantic seaboard from the Maritime Provinces of Canada to the Carolinas, in order to secure data regarding the species that migrate through Massachusetts and all the coast region in their annual flights. The replies on nearly five hundred blanks that were returned from these observers, together with facts from my own experience and much material gleaned from literature on the subject, formed the basis of this volume. Most of the observers who reported consulted with others when filling out the blanks; in some cases two or more assisted one another with notes and data. In other cases many of the members of a gun club were consulted, the different species were fully discussed, and the report as sent to me represented the com- bined knowledge and experience of many men. Probably these reports represent the observations of between one thou- sand and two thousand Massachusetts men (mainly gunners) regarding the present status of the game birds. They come from every county in the State. Many men give the esti- mated percentage of increase or decrease of each species; others do not. The average period during which these observ- ers have been afield is twenty-seven years and three months. A careful comparison of these reports one with another, to- gether with a consideration of the known and recorded facts relating to the subject, indicates that in nearly every case a conscientious effort has been made to state only facts. There are perhaps two or three cases where gunners in one county have overstated the increase of birds, in the attempt to show that the birds are increasing. When a man states that all species of certain families have increased two hundred per cent., where other observers in the same town see a decrease, or a very slight increase, there is something wrong with his mental attitude toward the facts. Nevertheless, in making up the average for each species I have included all the estimates, for the reason that there are probably some pessimistic reports that will balance those that are extremely optimistic. Any estimate giving the percent- INTRODUCTION. 35 age of increase or decrease of any species in a given locality must be regarded as merely an approximation; but, as these estimates are given by persons of intelligence and experi- ence, the average of their opinions throughout the State must surely approach the actual facts. The results of this investiga- tion are given in part under the heads of the individual species in the histories that follow in parts I and II, and a summary of the percentages of increase and decrease reported in Massa- chusetts is given on pages 504 and 505. Many of the suggestions noted in the blanks filled out by correspondents appeared so full of possibilities that they were made the subject of correspondence. Some observers, not content with filling out the blanks, sent in long letters detail- ing their observations and experiences with birds in which they were particularly interested. Others failed to fill out blanks, but sent letters instead. This correspondence con- tinued for three years and is not completed as the book goes to press. It will be seen that the author is so overwhelmed with material that he can publish but a small part of it in this volume, and can merely summarize a still larger part. Much of this interesting and valuable material may never reach the public; but it has aided the author greatly in reach- ing the conclusions expressed in this volume. A list of those who have filled out and returned the printed circulars will be found on the last pages of this volume. Statements from other correspondents are credited to them in the text. PART I. a history of the birds now hunted for food or Sport in Massachusetts and Adjacent States. °-s * -? Q- >> o £ -o O ^ 0> PART I. BIRDS HUNTED FOR FOOD OR SPORT. The following histories of living birds include practically all the species and subspecies that are now hunted for food or sport in Massachusetts. The list includes many which are not strictly game birds ; but most of them are of some value as food. The aim has been to present, first, a brief description of each bird and the principal marks and notes by which it may be identified ; next, in case of those species which breed or formerly bred in Massachusetts or nearby States, a descrip- tion of the nest and eggs. The history of the common birds contains such facts as could be gathered regarding their former abundance, together with some account of their deple- tion up to the year 1909 ; also some observations on interesting habits, migration movements and food. Unfortunately, the results of the work on the food of wild-fowl and shore birds, which has been undertaken by the Bureau of Biological Sur- vey, have not yet been published, and there is no authoritative publication on this subject; but such material as is readily available regarding the food of each species has been utilized in the following pages. Grebes (Family Colymbidae). In the modern system of classifying natural objects it is customary to present first the lowest and simplest forms. Since the extermination of the Great Auk, the Grebes have been the lowest in the scale of classification of the forms of bird life commonly hunted. They rank near to the flightless Penguins and the Auks, and only just above the Guillemots and Puffins. All these birds seem closely allied in some respects to the reptiles, from which birds are supposed to have originated. The beak of the Grebe is usually sharply pointed; the eyes well forward, the skin in front of them 40 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. bare; the head in most cases ruffled or crested, in the breed- ing season at least; and the neck long. The plumage is com- pact, smooth and rather hairlike, and of such a texture that when well dressed by the bird it is absolutely waterproof, and therefore Grebes, though constantly diving, never get wet. The wings are short and concave; the tail is a mere downy tuft, entirely without quill feathers; the legs are buried be- neath the skin and feathers of the body, and the tarsi (com- monly called legs, but which are in reality those parts of the foot extending from the heel to the junction of the toes) are very far back, and flattened so as to present the least possible resistance in swimming. The toes are flattened and are further widened with broad lobes, and connected at the base by webs (Fig. 1) ; the nails are short and rounded, something like human finger nails. The whole foot forms a hard, scaly, flattened compound paddle, which, on the back stroke, spreads to push against the water, and automaticallv turns or Fig. 1.— Foot of Grebe. leathers, so as to present little resist- ance to the water on the return stroke. The feet and legs are so far back and so ill suited for walk- ing that the Grebe, when on land, merely rests on its breast, or stands upright and can hardly walk at all. If hurried it flounders along on its breast, using wings and feet in an im- perfect imitation of a tortoise. The feet are principally used in swimming, and they are among the most perfect and pow- erfully designed swimming feet of vertebrate animals. When a Grebe is held in the hand its feet will sometimes move so rapidly as to give them a hazy appearance, like the wings of a humming bird in motion. In flight, the feet are carried well out behind, where they appear to be utilized as rudders, serv- ing the same purpose, then, that the tail serves on many other birds. The body of the Grebe is wide, boat-shaped and quite as much flattened as that of most other swimming birds. Grebes may be distinguished from Ducks on the water by the sharp or pointed bill, the narrow head and neck, and the relative length of the neck when stretched. BIRDS HUNTED FOR FOOD OR SPORT. 41 HOLBCELL'S GREBE (Colymbus holboslli). Common or local name: Red-necked Grebe. Winter. Summer. Length. — 18 to 20 . 50 inches. Adult in Late Spring. — Upper parts dusky; top of head, small crests, nape and back of neck glossy greenish black; chin, throat and sides of head light ashy; front and sides of neck and sometimes upper breast rich chestnut; wings with a white patch; under parts silvery white dappled with darker; sides tinged with reddish brown; bill yellow below at base, black above and toward tip; iris carmine; feet black, yellow inside. Adult in Fall and Winter. — Crests not noticeable; above blackish brown; front and sides of neck pale reddish brown; throat, sides of head and under parts whitish; mostly unspotted below. Young. — Similar, but no reddish brown; neck gray; bill largely yellowish; tip dusky. Field Marks. — Largest of the Grebes; may be distinguished from the smaller Loon by the white wing patch, which shows in flight or when the wing is flapped. Notes. — An explosive kup; exceedingly harsh note, not unlike the voice of an angry crow, but much louder; the calls given more slowly, with singular deliberation; car, car, three or four times, sometimes lengthened to caar, and again broken and quivering, like c-a-a-r or ca-a-a-r (Brewster). Season. — Not uncommon in winter coastwise; October to May. Range. — North America and eastern Asia. Breeds from northwestern Alaska and Ungava south to northern Washington and southwestern Minnesota; winters from southern British Columbia and Maine south to southern California and North Carolina; casual in Georgia. 42 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. History. Holbcell's Grebe seems to have very little history, except in the way of synonymy. American ornithologists have little to say of it. Wilson did not mention it ; Audubon notices it briefly, and no one seems to have made or published any exhaustive study of its habits or food. Nevertheless, in migration it is not rare along our coasts ; it winters here in small numbers, and sometimes visits the small fresh-water lakes and streams of the interior. Furthermore, it is one of the few species commonly hunted which does not appear to have decreased much in Massachusetts within a lifetime. This is possibly due to the fact that it is difficult to shoot while on or in the water. Possibly no other Grebe can escape a charge of shot at such close range as can this species. I believe that the bird was formerly much more common than now in the smaller fresh-water ponds, but that through the instinct of self-preservation it has learned to forsake them for the comparative safety to be found in larger bodies of water. Most of the individuals of this species seen here are believed to be young birds, but occasionally an adult may be seen in breeding plumage in the month of May. It is not uncommon on the Great Lakes and other large fresh-water lakes. In winter, when these are suddenly frozen, this Grebe is sometimes captured on the ground, ice or snow, where it has fallen exhausted in its attempts to reach unfrozen water. It is a bird of the open water, avoiding such shallow and weedy waters as are frequented by the Pied-billed Grebe. Holbcell's Grebe apparently migrates over the greater part of the United States and Canada, and it is surprising that so little seems to be known of its habits and life history. Audubon states that it feeds on small fish fry, amphibious reptiles, insects and vegetables. Dr. Warren found sand, blades of grass, small roots and feathers in the stomachs of two birds of this species. Knight states that as far as can be ascertained its food along the coast of Maine consists of small fish and surface^swimming crustaceans. In inland regions tadpoles and fish are reported as a part of the bill of fare. BIRDS HUNTED FOR FOOD OR SPORT. 43 HORNED GREBE (Colymbus auritus) . Local or common names: Hell-diver; Devil-diver. Winter. Summer. Length. — About 14 inches. Adult in Breeding Plumage. — Upper parts dark brown or brownish black, the feathers paler on the edges; a brownish yellow stripe over eye, broadening, and deepening in color toward end of crest; throat and that portion of crest on side of head below eye black; bill black, yellow tipped; feet dusky and yellowish; iris carmine, with fine white ring next pupil; fore neck and flanks reddish brown; wings varied with white; lower parts silvery white. Adult in Winter, and Young. — Similar, but grayer, with sides of head, throat and fore part of neck white, this color nearly encircling nape, and lightly washed with ashy gray on front of neck and lower belly; feathering of head not so full and fluffy as in summer; bill dusky, but somewhat whitish below. Field Marks. — In breeding plumage the crested head of black and brownish yellow is distinctive; pure white under parts, and white wing patch which shows when the wing is open, distinguish it in any plumage from the Pied-bill. In winter the white cheeks contrast strongly with the dark upper head. Season. — Common winter visitor coastwise; irregular inland; October 1 to May. Range. — Northern part of northern hemisphere. Breeds from near the arctic coast south to British Columbia, central Minnesota, southern Ontario and northeastern Maine; winters from southern Ontario and Maine south to southern California and Florida. 44 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. History. The Horned Grebe is known mainly as a salt-water bird, but is not by any means rare in fresh-water lakes and streams. Formerly a few summered in Massachusetts, according to Dr. J. A. Allen, who states that he has seen a pair in breeding plum- age in June at Springfield. Probably it is now rarely seen inland here, except when driven in from the sea by severe storms. I remember that no longer ago than the 70's and 80's large numbers occasionally came into ponds of Worcester County on such occasions and remained for several days, or until killed off or driven out by constant persecution. Mr. Ralph Holman records in his notes that during the first week in November, 1886, a large flight of Grebes of all three native species came into North Pond, Worcester, after a severe six- day northeast storm, and a great many birds were killed there. All except the cripples left on the night of November 3. Probably few alight in that pond now, but along the coast they are still common in tidal streams and off the beaches. They are usually most numerous in October, but are common along rocky shores in winter. Brewster notes them occasion- ally in the ponds of the Cambridge region, and Dr. John C. Phillips regards them as not very common on Wenham Lake. The expressive common names given this and other Grebes were suggested by their mysterious disappearances and the facility with which they seem to escape the charge of the gun by diving at the flash. The flint-lock was a poor weapon to use against them, and even with modern guns and smokeless powder the bird sometimes escapes. If it is at long range, heading toward the hunter, it is very likely to be mostly under water when the charge arrives. It then offers a very small mark, and even if it is hit the shot may glance from the feathers and bones of its back. In diving hurriedly it usually leaps forward and shoots beneath the water like a flash, but it can settle quietly down and disappear, leaving hardly a ripple to mark the spot. Sometimes it apparently remains under water nearly a minute, and it can swim or float indefi- nitely, with only the bill protruding above the surface. Dr. BIRDS HUNTED FOR FOOD OR SPORT. 45 Langdon is quoted by Dawson as stating that the young of this species, which he removed from the egg and placed in the water, immediately swam and attempted to dive.1 I have never seen this Grebe use its wings for propulsion beneath the surface, but Mr. C. W. Vibert of South Windsor, Conn., informs me that one which he kept alive for a time often raised its wings slightly when swimming under water. When driven into the ponds by storms, Grebes as well as Ducks show signs of weariness from their struggle with the sea, and are often so sleepy in the daytime that they will sleep on the water with the head drawn back and the bill usually thrust into the feathers of the right breast or shoulder. In this position a bird will often keep its place, head to the wind, or whirl about by paddling automatically with both feet or with one alone. The food of the Horned Grebes, while on salt water, ap- pears to be composed very largely of animal matter, shrimps, crustaceans, small fish and fish fry, but when on fresh water they appear to feed to a great extent on vegetable matter. They also take aquatic and terrestrial insects, leeches, small frogs, tadpoles and water lizards. Seeds and various portions of grasses and water plants are eaten ; also, all Grebes appear to eat feathers, either from their own breasts or from birds of other species. These are found in their stomachs, particularly in spring. 1 Dawson, William Leon, and Jones, Lynde: Birds of Ohio, 1903, p, 631. 46 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. PIED-BILLED GREBE (Podilymbus podiceps). Common or local names: Dipper; Didapper; Dabchick; Hell-diver; Water- witch. Adult in Summer. Length. — Varying from 12 to 15 inches. Adult in Summer. — Above mainly dark grayish brown or brownish black; chin and middle of throat black; sides of head and neck gray; fore neck and breast brownish gray; belly silvery ash; iris brown and white; eyelids white; bill very pale bluish, crossed near the middle by a black band; feet greenish black outside, leaden gray inside. Adult and Young in Winter. — Upper parts sooty brownish; throat whitish, with no black patch; fore neck, breast and sides brown; rest of under parts silvery whitish; bill dusky yellowish, without band. Young have head streaked with whitish and throat with brownish. Field Marks. — This bird has a more brownish cast than our other Grebes; the brownish upper breast distinguishes it from the Horned Grebe, but the best mark is the short and thick bill. In the breeding season the black throat patch and band on the bill are noticeable. This bird lacks the shining white cheeks peculiar to the Horned Grebe in winter. Notes-. — Somewhat like those of a cuckoo. A loud, sonorous cow-cow-coiv- cow-cow-cow-cow-cow-coio-uh, cow-uh, cow-uh, cow-uh (Chapman). Ne.st. — A mass of stalks, etc., sometimes floating, and attached to sur- rounding reeds. BIRDS HUNTED FOR FOOD OR SPORT. 47 Eggs. — Four to eight, dull white, often tinged with greenish, more or less soiled or stained, about 1.70 by 1. Season. — Summer resident; late March or early April to December. Range. — North and South America. Breeds from British Columbia and New Brunswick south to Chile and Argentina, but often rare or local; winters from Washington, Texas, Mississippi and Potomac valley southward. History. The Pied-billed Grebe is the common Grebe of eastern inland waters. Undoubtedly it once bred here in considerable numbers, and as its habits during the breeding season are very secretive, it is probably more common still, locally, than the few records of its nesting would lead us to believe. Appar- ently it was very common in Massachusetts as late as the middle of the last century; but it has diminished much in numbers of late, and has disappeared from many places where it bred no longer than twenty or thirty years ago. It is shot wantonly by boys, gunners and sportsmen at every oppor- tunity. Were it not for its facility in diving and concealing itself, it probably would have been extirpated ere now. This and all other Grebes should be protected by law at all times. Grebes are practically worthless as food, but they have a certain aesthetic value. Alive, they belong to all the people, and give pleasure to all who have the opportunity to watch their peculiar motions and antics. Dead, they are the prop- erty of the shooter, and are valueless beyond what their plumage will bring from the milliners' agent. There is a great demand for their plumage at times, and this demand alone may lead to their extinction, unless they are protected always. They are useful as decoys to lure water-fowl into our ponds and lakes, as they are less cautious than most other fowl, and whenever Grebes alight in a lake or river other wild- fowl will follow. Grebes are far more useful alive to the gunner as decoys than they can ever be for any purpose after death. These little fowls have many natural enemies. Hawks stoop at them from the air above ; turtles, fish and water snakes attack them from the depths. I once saw a Grebe, while watching a Hawk, spring out of the water to escape a 48 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. pickerel which had tried to seize it by the feet. The Grebe is able in some way to sink gradually backward into the water, like a "scared frog," sustain itself at any depth, and swim about with a little of the back showing, or with merely the head or bill out of water. When injured it will sometimes dive or sink, swim in among the water plants, come up quietly, showing only its bill above the surface, and, thus concealing itself, await the departure of its enemy. I have known a gunner to declare, at such a time, that the bird must have committed suicide, "as it never came up." I have never seen this species use its wings in flight under water, and ornitholo- gists generally agree that it does not, but the speed that it sometimes attains leads me to believe that occasionally the wings are thus used. Audubon declares that he has seen one use its wings while swimming under his boat. This species apparently is averse to flight. It cannot rise from the land, and rises from the water only after a run along the surface against the wind ; but when once in the air it flies quite fast, with rapidly beating wings, neck fully stretched and feet trailing behind. The nest, a mass of wet, muddy vegetation, anchored by growing grass or reeds, but often practically floating on the water, is an unattractive home for the little dabchicks. They tumble off into the water immediately after they leave the eggshell. Thereafter their only nest is the back of the mother bird, to which they scramble as she rises beneath them. When she dives they are left floating on the surface, but soon resume their place when she comes up. She can turn her head and feed them, and there they snuggle down amid the feathers between her shoulders, only their little heads showing above the contour of her back. The food of the Pied-billed Grebe, according to Audubon, "consists of small fry, plant seeds, aquatic insects and snails; along with this they swallow gravel." He also found in their gizzards a quantity of hair and a feather-like substance which he " at length found " to be the down of certain plants, such as thistles, with the seeds remaining undigested and attached. BIRDS HUNTED FOR FOOD OR SPORT. 49 Loons (Family Gaviidae). The bill of the Loon is stout, straight, narrow, sharp- pointed, with sharp edges so constructed that they cut into and hold securely the slippery fishes on which these birds mainly subsist. The head is feathered to the beak; the neck is long and sinuous. The plumage of. the head and neck is short and of rather a furry texture, while that of the body is hard and compact; it forms a perfect waterproof garment. The wings are rather narrow, short and pointed, but are ample to lift the heavy body. The tail, though very short, is not downy and rudimentary like that of the Grebe, but is com- posed of eighteen or twenty stiff quill feath- ers. The leg, like that of the Grebe, is placed so far back and is so bound up in the skin of the body that the Loon walks or runs with difficulty. The tarsus is narrowed, like that of the Grebe, but the foot (Fig. 2) is a simple paddle, resembling somewhat the foot of a Duck. Loons, like Grebes, have a peculiar faculty of sinking gradually in the water with- out apparent effort, and thus remaining partially submerged. It is believed that they are able to expel the air from the air cells in different parts of the body. Many water birds are provided with a cushion of air cells between the body and the skin, particularly on the breast and lower parts. If Loons are able to inflate or deflate these and other air cells at any time, the mystery of floating or sinking at will is explained. They are noted for their powers of diving and the long dis- tances that they can swim under water without rising to the surface. The large size of the Loons, the long neck and rather long, narrow, sharp-pointed bill, distinguish them from the Ducks. Loons may be readily distinguished from Geese by their larger and more pointed bills, and from Grebes by their larger size, although the larger Grebes approach the size of the smaller Loons and are sometimes mistaken for them. 50 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. LOON (Gavia immer). Summer. Fall. Length. — ■ Very variable, ranging from 28 to 36 inches. Adult in Spring. — Mantle black, spotted with white; head and neck black, with green and purple reflections; neck with three bands of white stripes; under parts white; bill and feet black; iris red. Adult and Young in Fall. — Bill yellowish or bluish white, blackening above and toward tip; iris brown; legs and feet brownish or yellowish, never black; top of head and hind neck dull brownish black; other upper parts dark grayish brown, mottled a little, but with no white spots; sides of head and neck more or less mottled with ashy and dusky ; chin, throat, fore neck and other under parts white. Field Marks. — The size of a Goose. The black and white spotted adult is unmistakable in spring. The fall birds resemble the fall Red-throated Loon, but are much larger, have a bill much thicker at base, yellowish, with much of the tip black, while the Red-throated Loon has a slender, lighter colored bill, more white on cheeks and a bluish gray cast to the top of head and back of neck, where the Loon is brownish black. Notes. — Loud maniacal laughing cries. Nest. — A slight depression in ground close to water or an old muskrat house. Eggs. — Two, about 3.50 by 2.25, elongated and pointed, olive drab, or dark olive brown, thinly spotted with dark brown and blackish. Season. — Abundant transient coastwise; September to June; less common in the interior; a few summer here. Range. —Northern part of northern hemisphere. Breeds in America from arctic coast and islands south to northern California, northern New York, New Hampshire, Massachusetts (rarely) and Nova Scotia; winters from southern British Columbia and southern New England to Lower California, Gulf coast and Florida. BIRDS HUNTED FOR FOOD OR SPORT. 51 History. Probably the Loon once bred in suitable localities through- out Massachusetts. Wilson says that it is said to breed in " Missibisci Pond near Boston." Nuttall states that he found and captured in the Chelsea marshes (now Revere) a young bird partly grown. S. Davis asserts in his Notes on Plym- outh, Mass. (1815), that the "loon cries and leaves her eggs" on the lesser island in Fresh Lake, now Billington Sea.1 Old gunners have assured me that they have seen the Loon with small young near the shores of Buzzards Bay. Others report the bird as formerly breeding on Block Island, R. I. ; and they bred about the ponds of northern Worcester County when I first visited them, more than thirty years ago. In 1888 Brewster reported them as breeding in all ponds of suffi- cient size near Winchendon, Mass.2 They have gradually dis- appeared from Massachusetts waters in the breeding season. Probably they have not been driven away, as neither human neighbors nor much shooting have driven Loons from a favorite nesting place, but their eggs have been taken and the birds have been shot one by one, until all have vanished. There may be a few pairs still breeding in the State. If so, I cannot learn of them. The Loon is not considered desirable as a table fowl. I have tasted one and do not care for more. Indians and some fishermen eat Loons and consider the young quite palatable. They are pursued mainly for mere sport by the devotees of the rifle and shotgun, and whenever one is accidentally stranded on the ice or on land it is usually pursued and clubbed to death. Boardman said that an Indian killed thirty Loons with clubs in the ice after a freeze.3 The mania for senseless slaughter seems to possess man, savage or civilized. Probably the spring shooting of Loons has had something to do with their decrease in numbers. From the middle of April to about the first of June Loons fly eastward and north- ward along our coast. One principal line of their flight is up i Coll. Mass. Hist. Soc., Vol. II, 2d ser., p. 181. 2 Brewster, William: Auk, 1888, p. 390. 3 Forest and Stream, 1874, Vol. Ill, p. 291. 52 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. Buzzards Bay to its head, where, on the way to Massachusetts Bay, they cross the neck of Cape Cod at the narrowest point near the mainland, where the Cape Cod canal is now (1910) in process of construction. Tobey and Mashnee Islands lie on either side of the channel leading from Buzzards Bay into Manomet Bay. When the wind blows from the southwest the Loons pass up the strait between these islands at morning and at night, flying comparatively low. When the wind blows from any other quarter they fly high. Mackay says that years ago he has seen three tiers, of ten or a dozen boats each, stretched across this passage, and that sometimes on a "good southwest morning" fifty or sixty Loons were killed, and as many more wounded, which could not be recovered. He states that he is informed that this sport is kept up to the present day (1892). 1 Doubtless fewer Loons are killed there now. The spring shooting of Loons should be prohibited by law. Nothing can be more destructive than shooting at that time, when the birds are paired and headed for their breeding grounds. Of all the wild creatures which still persist in the land, despite settlement and civilization, the Loon seems best to typify the untamed savagery of the wilderness. Its wolflike cry is the wildest sound now heard in Massachusetts, where nature has long been subdued by the rifle, axe and plow. Sometimes at sea, when I have heard the call of the Loon from afar, and seen its white breast flash from the crest of a distant wave, I have imagined it the signal and call for help of some strong swimmer, battling with the waves. It is generally believed that in migration at least the Loon passes the night upon the sea or the bosom of some lake or river. The Gulls, Auks, Puffins and Cormorants, which live upon the sea, usually alight upon the high shores of some rocky island or on some lonely sand bar at night, but the Loon is often seen at sea when night falls, and its cries are heard by the sailors during the hours of darkness. Notwithstand- ing the general belief Ilia I it normally sleeps on the water, I believe thai it prefers to rest on shore at night, when it can ' Mackay, George ll.: Auk, 1S92, p. 292. BIRDS HUNTED FOR FOOD OR SPORT. 53 safely do so. Audubon satisfied himself that on its breeding grounds it was accustomed to spend the night on shore. On an island off the coast of British Columbia, where there was no one to trouble the birds, I once saw, just at nightfall, a pair of Loons resting flat on their breasts at the end of a long sandy point. Cripples instinctively seek the shore when sorely wounded, but on our coast a Loon must keep well off shore to insure its safety, and probably few but cripples ever land on shores frequented by man. The Loon's nest is usually a mere hollow in the bog or shore near the water's edge on some island in a lake or pond. Sometimes the nest is lined with grasses and bits of turf ; more rarely it is a mere depression on the top of a muskrat's house, and more rarely still it is placed on the shore of the lake or on some debouching stream. Where the birds are not much dis- turbed, and where food is plentiful, two or three pairs some- times nest on the same island. No doubt there was a time when nearly every northern pond of more than a few acres contained its pair of Loons in the breeding season, and this is true to-day of ponds in parts of some Canadian Provinces. The nest is usually so near the margin that the bird can spring directly into the water, but sometimes in summer the water recedes until the nest is left some distance inland. The Loon is a clumsy, awkward traveller upon land, where when hurried, it flounders forward, using both wings and feet. Audubon, however, says that his son, J. W. Audubon, winged a Loon which ran about one hundred yards and reached the water before it was overtaken. Its usual method of taking to the water from its nest is by plunging forward and sliding on its breast. It cannot rise from the land, hence the necessity of having the nest at the water's edge. When the young are hatched the mother carries them about on her back a few days (Boardman), after which they remain afloat much of the time until they are fully grown. If food becomes scarce in their native pond they sometimes leave it and travel overland to another. Dr. Hatch says that early in the morning the parents and the well-grown young run races on the lake, using their broad paddles for propulsion 54 GAME BIRDS, WILD-FOWL AND SHORE BIRDS. and their half-extended wings for partial support. Starting all together they race down the lake, and then, turning, rush back to their starting point. Such exercises no doubt strengthen the young birds for the long flights to come. The Loon finds some difficulty in rising from the water, and is obliged to run along the surface, flapping its short wings, until it gets impetus enough to rise. It is said that it cannot rise at all unless there is wind to assist it. Its great weight (from eight to nearly twelve pounds) and its short wings make flight laborious, but its rapid wing beats carry it through the air at great speed. Mr. R. M. Barnes states that one warm sunny afternoon, about 5 o'clock, on the flooded bottom of the Illinois River he saw a Loon rising from the water in a great circle, flapping its wings and then sailing. It circled much after the fashion of a Bald Eagle, rising higher and higher, continuing its flapping movements, alternated by sailing, until it reached a great altitude. When it had attained a height at which it appeared but little larger than a blackbird, it set its wings, and, pointing its long neck toward the pole, sailed away with great rapidity. He watched the bird with the glass until it passed out of sight, and could see no movement of the wings, although it was travelling at a tre- mendous rate. He believes that the bird was coasting down the air.1 The ordinary migrating flight of the Loon is swift and steady, accompanied by rapid, powerful wing beats, and I have never witnessed anything like the performance described by Mr. Barnes. When it alights it often shoots spirally down from a great height, and plunges into the water like an arroAV from a bow. It lands with a splash, and shoots along the surface until its impetus is arrested by the resistance of the water. The Loon is almost unexcelled as a diver. It is supposed to be able to disappear so suddenly at the flash of a rifle as to dodge the bullet, unless the shooter is at point-blank range, but when two or three crack shots surround a small pond in which a Loon is resting it can usually be secured by good strategy. T once saw a Loon killed on the water with a shot- 1 Osprcy, Vol. I, No. 0, February, 1s