^v\seuin of yy .<^ 1869 THE LIBRARY Gift IJEA Title ll-C Grant WILD LIFE IN CHINA OR CHATS ON CHINESE BIRDS AND BEASTS.^ BY GEORGE LANNING, Ex-Pi i lie if^al of the Shanghai Public School. SHANGHAI : THE NATIONAL REVIEW" OFFICE. ISll. ;o7 The book may be obtained In EUROPE, from:— Messrs. Probsthain and Co., , 41 Great Russell Street, London. W. C. In AMERICA, from :— Joseph H. Colyer Jr.., 17 Madison Avenue, New York City. PREFACE pEW words will be needed to establish friendly relations between one Nature lover and an- other. For nearly sixty years, considerably more than half of them spent in China, I have loved to study the forms and habits of every living- creature with which I have come in contact, reptile life in- cluded. Unfortunately, this has been possible, not as a vocation, but as an avocation, during holidays, travels, and odds and ends of time in an otherwise busy life. During wanderings across the oceans, through Europe and Siberia twice, through a third of the United States, and along the ordinary Suez Canal Route between Europe and China notes have been made of such bird life as falls to the lot of the traveller to see. These, however, are common to many observers. Those specially dealing with Wild Life in China are now put into popular form for the first time, and it is hoped that, notwithstanding many shortcomings, this may in itself form sufficient excUvSe for their appearance in permanent form. I am indebted more than I can say to "Les Oiseaux de la Chine", the scholarly work of M.L'Abbe Armand David, et M. E. Oustalet, to the late Mr. Consul Swinhoe's re- searches, to ' 'The Royal Natural History ' ' (Lydekker), to Mr. H. T. Wade's "With Boat and Gun in the Yangtze Valley", and to various other writers. To the ever present, ever new, and ever delightful stimulus of "The Field" and "Country Life" I, in VI PREFACE. common with tens of thousands of other Nature worshippers, owe a constantly accumulatincr debt. To the friendly critic who will find in stereotyped form and length of chapters, in faulty phrasing and style, in misprints here and there, and in other matters deserving criticism, many opportunities for the use of literary caustic I would say only this, that the papers first appeared in journalistic form in the pages of "The National Review" (China), that they were necessarily confined within certain pre- scribed space, and sometimes suffered in consequence. For the rest, the writing of them, rather hurried at times, was a labour of love, and if they find but few readers to whom they give some slight pleasure, such a reward will more than suffice. G. L. Shanghai, l')!!. PUBLISHERS' NOTE. The Publishers are permitted throuo-h the Idiul- ness of Mr. Klngdon Ward to add as an Appendix to this book some account of Wild Life seen during the adventurous journey taken by himself and com- ]3anions in 1910 throu^rh unbeaten tracks in some of the western districts of China. These papers, which appeared in "The National Review" from time to time, will be found full of the original observation of a man who sees and describes things and places rarelv if ever seen bv white men before. As the order of the chapters on Bird Life was largely determined by the occurrences observed in the avian world from week to week these chapters constitute a rough guide to the doings of the birds during the year, and therefore the dates on which they appeared are inserted in the Table of Contents.- CONTENTS. Page. Preface ^' Publishers' Note vii Contents '•'^ lutroductioii -^iii CllAl'TKKS. I. — The Mysteries of Migration (\[)tk MarcUj 1 II.— Geese (-IMh March) 5 III.— Duck (Ind April) !> IV.— Snipe (dth April) 1:5 V— \fooi\cock (I6th April) 17 VI,— Rooks and Crows (2Brd JpriJ) 21 VII.— The Crow's Cousins (ZOth April) 25 VHl.— Some Shaugliai Singing Birds f7f/( -l/'f?^; 29 IX. — Herons, Egrets, and Bitterns (I Ifh ^[ay) 33 X.— Cuckoos (2ld M'lyj 37 XI.— Nests and Nestlings (Z8th May) 41 XII. — Flycatchers (ith June) 46 XIII.— The Kingfishers (IWi June) 50 XIV. — Orioles and Rollei's ('1 8t/i Jmticj 54 XV.— The Finches (25th June) 58 XVI.— The Tit Family (2nd July) 62 XVII.— Woodpeckers (9th July) 66 XVIII. — Pigeons, Doves and Sand-Grouse (16fh July ) 70 XIX. — Swallows, Martins, Swifts, and Night-Jars (23rd July) . . 74 XX.— The Shrikes (ZOth July) 78 XXL— Mynas, Starlings, etc. ('et/i .1 !((/((.-■/; 82 XXII.— Plovers (13th August) 86 XXIII.— Plovers and Sandpipers (20th AiKjust) 90 XXIV.— Curlews, Whimbrels (27th Aunust) 95 XXV.— Bustards, Rails, ecc. (3rd September) 99 XXVI.— Quails flOf/i Sci^fember; 103 XXVII.— Partridges (llth Septemher) ]«>7 XXVIII.— Pheasants f24f?i SeptoiiberJ lU XXIX.— Pheasants. (Continued) (1st October) 115 XXX.—Pheasants. {Concluded) (8th October) 119 XXXI.— Gulls (15«?i, October; 123 XXXII.— Terns (22nd October) 127 XXXIII.— Cormorants and Pelicans ('29f/i, 0'-(ober; 132 XXXIV.— The Ibis and Crane f5'; w .- '-« — WILD LIFE IN CHINA: Chats on Chinese Birds and Beasts. Chapter I. THE MYSTERIES OF MIGRATION. Rudyard Kipling has many admirers: but his only worshippers are those who know his Jungle Stories. His tale of ''The Spring Running" comes irresistibly to mind just now. A waving leaflet rouses the Black Panther, Bagheera. "The year turns" he said. "Tlie Jungle goes forward. The Time of New Talk is near. That leaf knows. It is very good." He was talking to Mowgli, the Jungle Boy. It is very good. Sunshine and wai'mth, flowers and fertility, the music of the woods, the fragrance of the fields: good indeed are they all. Nature moves. As Kipling says, we are in the spring running. Birds in particular are full of life, of joy, of motion. The time of migration has come. He would be brave indeed who dared to dogmatize on such a myster}'. The how, the why, the when, the wherefore of it all is still to seek. Science collects her facts; that is her duty, and perhaps in some long distant time, when men can read the jungle life as Mowgli did, they then will be able to fit their odds and ends of truth together and proceed to tell the tale. Till then, it is to the poet we must go for inspir- ation. He kows that ''Nature never did betray The heart that loved her: this her privilege. Through all the years of this our life, to lead From joy to joy." That is our first clue. Wordsworth is right. "To lead from joy to joy," that is the lure by \\hich Nature coaxes her children to do her will. "So careful of the type"' is she. But it would be foolish to shut our eyes to the few facts which some of our ornithologists designate as laws. We may take some of these almost as gospel. We find, for example that every bird of the northern hemisphere breeds in its most northern habitat. The "spring running," then, is for the. propagation of the species. That over, it seems to be equally certain that the turning south again is for food. 2 WILD LH-K IN CHINA. But here difficulties arise. In many cases the young migrate first whilst plenty of food remains. They travel, too, by night and at immense heights. With nobody to lead, nothing to direct, for even if they could see landmarks they could not recognize what they have never seen before, how do they find their way? Here we arrive at mystery almost at the threshold of our science. We are equally at a loss when asUed to explain why the males of song birds precede their mates, and we certainly cannot tell why the migratory instinct should turn to nothingness so fundamental a passion as love of offspring, ^'et so it is. The migrant mother caught by the autumn instinct whilst still her family cares are incomplete, forgets everything but the call of the south. Nest and nestlings go for naught, and the first care of her- self and her spouse, on returning to their abandoned home in spring, is to rid the nest of the corpses of her own starved young! Mystery of mysteries, who shall unravel it? There are pseudo-scientific pronouncements at which we can turn heavenwards a very dubious nose: such for ex- ample as that "All the regular migratory birds are insect eaters, or nearly so." Is the snipe such an one? or the goose? or the predatory bird which follows north the other migrants? Perhaps, also, we should count as questionable the statement that birds always take the same lines in their travels. For when we turn to consider our own case in China, it would seem as if the word "line" would have to be very elastic indeed to include the breadth here covered. There is a well-known Heligoland line of migration in Europe, which by and by we may be able fullj- to account for. Its breadth is comparatively little. But what are we to say of the line of spring migration in China which is pro- bably a thousand miles across? Shall we not inevitably come to the conclusion that much depends on the configura- tion of the land? Were there a HimalaNan range stretching from Tibet to Soochow, let us say, then doubtless there would be a line of migration passing over the coastline of this neighbourhood. But China has no such range. High- flying birds probably think nothing of ordinary mountain obstacles, and even those which keep low find the Chinese ranges conveniently running more or less in a northerly direction so that they may be skirted, or else provided with convenient gaps through which a passage may easily be found. There are few or no traps in which as in s(jme lands birds are caught as in a cid dc sac. It must be remembered that according to their nature birds vary greatly in the manner of their migration. Usually' the autumn migration is taken more leisurely by all. But even in the spring some kinds move along // after //, mile THK MVSTHRIKS OF MIGRATION'. 3 after mile, to-day a little, to-morrow the same, and thus a warbler from Annam may take weeks to perform the same journey which a swift would cover, at his 200 miles an hour, in a single day. Many species also move hut short distances, whilst others cover half a hemisphere, and per- haps more. And with their variety they also make mistakes at times, or else Dame Nature plays them false. One of the cocksure bits of dogmatism in "The Royal Natural History" (Lyddeker) is that no birds hibernate. Now most men who read their "Field" can remember cases when this subject has been discussed with evidence which should undoubtedly bring about at least a Scottish verdict of "Not proven." Personally I can remember many years ago watching with much interest the movements of some swallows hawking over a Hongkew ice-pond on the first of Januarj! It was a beautifully bright sunny day. Had these birds migrated at that time, or were they hibernating somewhere here, and, bat-Iil