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Af^CTIC CIl^CUE IN TIIK Lomer ffiackenzie River District, AS OHSERVKD HY RODERICK ROSS MACFARLANE, ESQ., Chief Factor Hudson's Bay Co., ,/ Coryt'spaiidiHii Afeinhci of t/if So,ii'ty. TRANSACTION 39. SEASON 1888-9. WINNIl'KCi : MANITOHA FRKK I'RlvSS I'KINT. IHJKt. KT F^iGp-Mcm i^c.iJf -«1 The EDITH and I.ORNE PIERCE COLLECTION o/CANADIANA ^eetis University at Kingston .. wl Cfll tl ot nil Wl \ -J r t Birds Hesting in the Iiomer jVlaekenzie Hegion. When recently requested by President Cluirles N. Bell, of Winnipej^, to write a paper on Arctic Breedinj^ Binls, for publi- cation l>y the Historical and Scientitic Society of Manitoba, 1 thoiijn;ht of ineliidinj( therein n similar refereiiee Ut the collec- tions made in Ornithology and Oology by the northern officers of the Company subsequent to the year 1859, when Mr. Robert Kennicott, an able, amiable and prematurely cut-ott" American naturalist, and representative of the Smithsonian Institution at Washington, first appeared on the Miickenicie river. During his three years sojourn in that quarter he managed to infuse into one an cor- respondence carried on for years with many of the foregoing by the late eminent and much lamented Professor Spencer F. Baird, of the Smithsonian, evinced his own deep lov»' for science, it did much to intensify their inten'st in. and desire to meet more fully perhaps than was otherwise possible, the views anBo:t^ hundred and tweuivn^' ''"*' ^« ^^« westwr^ /?"'"r^'^ ^'^ ^h, ^^0 Afackon.ie '^^■"'"«' ^*^<'^Pt fion, the u'l '""^^^''^'^ one yj ^^'" Anderson to "' me /ato Cliu.f 'f 1 J: ^ «"ninit '•^•"- ^hislaro,. .,!.: ^"•* ^'"'t'lson rive,- f}.l. /^ "'^^ '-'tunted .Th»' tract of coiinf '•'veivs. wlic-e tK '"^. ^''^' '-^vinos Jid 1 ? ''^'^^^"'e sparse '"'^^' «"'' are know "„ ^'.T"'^' ^^'''>«''* ex t^j'/ ^T' ^^O'*^ vast f '« ^rest .side of tl e A f ^'^h, wbiJo n.uci ofH ^ ^-^^^'^^ ^ake.s J« said to be devo >&?• "^''^'- '^^ ""S to t^^ ^'T^ ^» <;J»an elesewbore • a, j ^T ' '"'*' ••^"^' ^'»'n|.arativ.i ^^^a^kwuie. t'^isratlul'Latrsr/'f M^^' '■-»<- j^^^^^^^ ;\l so interesting and t'*^"'' "'''^P^^"' tor tj;,,t"r '"''""" ^^'^^ -^^I'st ierritories ^ »^'», ant April. 1862. -'•. taken of a Wl,und pre- "'(• jH-incipaJ J] for wiiN sitmited *«.•' '>3- no in 'nto Liver- •"n-D6r.ale" t'lnee "tothe re exceptionally good, yet owing to ignorance and a want of in- terest displayed, both by Indians and HIs(|uimau\ in the begin- ning, one or two i-atlier unfavorable seasons, heavy annual losses of specimens by accidents and neglect, the almost total destruc- tion by animals >jf our last spring's very small list, the death by epidemii;. measles and scarletina of the majority of our Itest and most experienced native collectors, in the autumn and early winter months of iHiUi, and the abandonment of Fort Anderson in the suuuner of J.SG(), both of which last mentioned adverse factors prevented me from spending the nesting season of that and the succeeding year, as 1 ha"'bus torquatus '•"Xfi- lak,.., of ,K.'7; ?« "< also »o.,„.t „ "'^»' «''«-i- several specie. -'■' k.iie,i „'„ trx;"t,vr'r.*"'""'^" , ,-«ui»i. -, racmc 1,0011 r„i, . „ /l»x IS the „„j,, „, , Coh.,„,„„ ^ ""del- investi„at on "x"""'""* <>f all tl,,. 7>i Ihem there. J „£''*, ««^ ^n course of "ninH •''* ^"^ ^''"ken on .tr "^ *he fi7/;,:^; r»ark that It Xrii^' ""^ ^^^^^^^"1 father 'liscoivlant soum r^rr''^' «eca,sio„a° ? J''^ '"^^^'^^ »«em'- "^ noted for i J\; ^ '^ ^^^"^*^ in the w^i KP""^ "ttetance tn ! ^''^ P"st in June ; manner uJready »• "•<'in nnincrous •ountiy. torquatus (Coucs). t'i« WHtoi- on fcl,,. "»• «n the centre u Jiecayefl ve^rp. " \>y gras.s und >o instance were wded nests. «'yiMb»s torquatus ^''"unds in con- . W'iiore several ' ^'tli on the o»« to j)o.sse.s.s ^*Ven one weJI ' ^ater B^ CHt Northern •^'"•d of thi« Vmbus Artjcus "the region ne wof)ded '^nd islands -y resenibJe sixty-five in course "lo eggs of oi'oken on ^andlin^r eraJ niem- ^;»anee to 'Jc " Loon ^'tl. shriiJ Colymbus at of I/, ^t some of time, « and in the stated localities. Most of these also had two eggo. the maximum number laid by nil Loons according to native re- port and personal observation. ilO.— St(>rcoriiriiiH poiiiatorhiiiiitt. ^Temniiuck.) Pomatorhiue Jac'Ker. In June, iHd'.i, an Esi|uinuiux brought in one Jaeger, and in June, 1H04>, another man traded ii mule and female specimen, which he killetl near the outlet of Andrrson Kiver. On 11th July, IJS65, we shot a male bird in Franklin Bay. The tirst mentioned is inadvertently stated in the aforesaid History of North American Birds to be the only example of the species pro- cured, although the receipt of all of them was duly acknow- ledged by the Smithsonian Institution. We diil not have the good fortune to bect)me ac«|uainted with its eggs. 37.— St«'reorurlus imrasitieiis. (Linn.) Parasitic Jaeger. A more numenjus bird than the foi-mer, especially in the Barren Grounds, where several nests were annually di.scoveretl on our collecting expeditions from Fort Anderson to Franklin Bay (1862 and 1805). A few specimens were also obtained from viie Esijuimaux of the Lower Ander.s(»n River. There is, of course, no darkness for several months in summer within the l)e- fore defined Anderson section of the Arctic regions, while in June the sun at nudnight is .several dej^rees abovf the horizon. During the period, however, answering to the night in southern latitudes, we often olwerved in the "Barrens" and on the sea coast as many as twenty or thirty birds of the ^enus Stcrca)'- arius sitting or standing on the ground, each bird at the distance of a few yards from its fellow. They probably repo.sed at such times, as they never moved except when do.sely approached, while no eggs were ever discovered in the vicinity of tliese rest- ing places. During the day. also, two or niore birds were fre- quently noticed (piietly reposing or moving very slowly along the ground, and this, too, where no nest actually existed. 38.— Stercorarliis loii||^ieuit«liis. ^Vieillot. ^ Loiif,' Tailed Jaeger. S. Buffoni (Coues) This handsome Jaeger is (|uite abundant along the Anderson, in the " Barrens," nnd also on the Arctic coast. It lays two eggs in a depression in the soil, .scantily lined with withered leaves and grasses, etc., and as their eggs greatly resemble theii sur- roundings the nest is fi'equently very difficult to discover. The parent birds, by angry screams and hostile demonstrations, in- variably resent the piesence of intruders, and in more than one instance they became so savage in their attacks, especially the female, that she had to be shot at once if order to prevent actual injury. Over thirty nests were taken, or double as many as i that of fcl,e fon-rfoin.. n "^^ i . ^'K'^'tl...'r son.,, t J 7 «'»"cou8 Gull. I l'"'flv.l,«,l„„,,l°' "''•."^■^•' contaS two?'' '" ^"riou» doiTcHsmn in t|„l "; ^- "j""' The nost „:"" '''T "'"*■ «"■' "pt«| staijc' tJiftti *i. "^ „ '""'- H>"»>tt' U'lm in „ - "J' «* ujm ol young, «»— tttni, |,.,„ , , ''"'>'». »l«i.., was", ; "■" '«"■'■' <>■.«■ '^°"^«) American "•' ■*»'"■""««»■ Gull, or I-ranklini. (Coues * fSS"''^" ^'^ Richardson / n,, • "' J^ec 1 strougjy I f >f Jaeger .louhtle.,, inuaJJy. 85 — 7 — inplin*' t«» tliink tlmt somt* OuUs of thJH species l»ived within the U'fon- th'HiHMl section of the Arctic Kej(ions. Cull. Chroico- ci'phalus rhiladclpbia. (Coucs.) Thirty-seven nests are recorded iw having b«>en taken with oji ■ I ''" *"*^ *'^'^'^ '" tlieni, between l<»th June and 1 0th July, in the wood mosses •*" e^'g-s and ** do their the "Bar- 'I'H^ pura- ^ ^vith no icocephalus strongly I le nei^'noornooa oi rori ivnuersoii, ano o Anderson river; they were all built on tre«'s at various hoi^htn (TnHii four to Hfteen and even twenty feet from the ground), and. with one exception, which was composed of down and velvety leaves lnld toirethei- by some stringy turf, they were made of small sticks and tw'ys lined with hay and mosses, ifcc. The parents always Hy about in close proxiiuity to the nest and scream vthemently when explorers, in the interests of science, are objij^'ed to deprive them of their c<^ljs or youniT. and not in- frequently shoot one of them. Tlu'y seldom lay un»i . than three eggs. <(2.— \eniu Silliinii. (Sabine.) .Sabine's Gull. Fo'i- Tailed Gull. Quite a large number of nests were found ;/ii tlv sh( res of Franklin '* , and a few eggs wen* also received froxi the Es(|ui- nuiux of Liverpool Boy. hi^veral specimens of ibis beuntiful (lui. were shot at the former point. On the 1st July, 1«S()4, we knocked over three out of a Hock of sixty wluch caim' circling about itur encampment: they then gracefully retired to anil alighted in a pool of sea-water at a .snrna. Hruuu. Arctic Tern. S. Macrura (Coues. ) This Tern is e(|unlly common with the foregoing, and we might easily have made a considerable collection of eggs from various localities. Neither species approves of a close })roximity of man to their nests. 120.— 3Ier^auser Aiuerioanus. (Cassiu.) Amercan Merganser. I am .strongly of the belief that this species breed,s in .small numbers in the country to the south of Fort Anderson ; and that wnich were Breasted vrerganser *'^- (^"'«) MergusSerrator(Coues.) Red ^-scu^er. ' ^"'«"« ^errator (Coues ) r«h fseveral nests of fl • "nuwD„ek ,-, t„ , «.n.sH<.rationFv» ,""'"■* «'o«l''il section ,, "'"'"etwitl, '«y.s fVoniTl"' j„ i"','?'"" were receh-ed fr„Z •""""'''y >""'«• ,..;. . "* "^^"authenticated *'*^'— Alias. stroMori r Although w. ob/«;n'"!"' """'"'"• ^'^"'^'««'"«sStreperus rr - "ad -on -™trti::trKraii''r-"^^^^^ . Numbers of „e,t, ,. l. r '"■ '="''?''"■ «r„und,. I' "^'P"' "ffloents of ,I,e VVihnotHoS::" ■■'«'■. l«ft . "orton tJarren ,.uel'trl»"»,0to^o„ooft„e... "•■=•—■■. This we found to ' 2"-1"e.U.l. Anderson r ;. ., '™^<»i but one nest „ "^ ODr breeding feathe7s™nd itn ;r °f-'""" "' " oX i-^-^'-l "ear Fo"? 142.— SDa*;iiI« ^1 . ' Very rare anJ , ^^'"""-^ ^^°^«"«r- « I ''eof, which ^ere I4:i.—Dafila acuta. (Liuu.) -9 — Pintail. Sprigtail. ■ This and (this especially) the Long Tailed Duck, I think are rator (Coues.) Red the most numerous gciteni which annually resort to the Anderson land the Arctic Coast; and they are also among the first to arrive lerous Merganser fin the spring. They were always abundant in the " Barrens." ' ftnd also in the 'The nest was usually a small cavity or depression in the ground, lined with down, withered leaves and a few feathers, and it lays from six to eight eggfs. Both species desert their nests alm^^st iuunediately after the young are hatched, and take to the water with them From frecjuent ol».servation, I feel convinced that they ahnost invariably select land locked sheets of water for the purpose of rearing their young, while most of the other species of Ducks give the preference to running streams. 147.— Aytliya ValllsiU'ria. (Wilson.) Canvas Back. Kuligula v. (t ones. ) A few sets of ejjws of this famous Duck were foun«l in the vicinity of Fort Anderson, where it is tolerably abundant during the season of nidification. "d soutJj of tlie '•ons"totheea.st ; 'I .scooped out SIX eirg.s, with t'^n- thefuiiaje number of p^rgs <;c» be met with country under 3US points. Jt of down ami nd contiguous Jck. lough several authenticated Perus. (Coues. j ^ or its eggs, plat quarter. 'Jaces in the Swan river, i*ton Barren Q"erqi,edi,ia ing breed i near Fort uiposed of of ground »Jiected at i there. s 149. — Aytliya affliiis. (Eyt.) Lesser Scaup Duck. Fulijjula A. vCoues. ) Fairly numerous even to the very edge of the wooded coun- try (m the c'ast side of the Anderson river. Over a dozen nests were secured — and they were usually found in the midst of a swamp — a mere hole or depression in the centre of a tuft of turf or tussock of grass, lined with more or less down, feathers and hay. Nine was the general number of eggs in a nest, though a few contained no more than six or seven. 152.— Glaucioiietta IslaiKliea. lOniel.) Harrow's Golden Eye. Clangula I. (Coues.) Although an individual bird of this species was shot by Mr. Murdo MacLeod in the vicinity of Fort Anderson, on 29th June, 18G3, and a male (example obtained there on l-tth June, 18()4, yet our best efforts failed to discover a sinirle nest in that or any other quarter, and I think it may be classed among the rarest of ducks visitinof that reijfion. 154,— Clan{>:ula liiciualis. (Coues. ) iKiitn.) Olil Squaw. Harelda j^lacialis. The long tailed Dnck l)reeds in great numbers in the neigh- borhood of Fort Ar.iler.re taken, and the eggs varied from five to seven, the latter being the maxinmm number re- corded in an}' one instances. In its make the nest is generally very similar to that of Ddjibt Acuta. From personal observa- tion also, I have come to theconelu.sion that the usual quantity of down neces. ary for a duck's nest is .seldom met with before a — 10 — full set of eggs has been deposited, and that the process of lining with down, which is plucked off from the body of the female, goes on simultaneously with their laying. Thousands of "Old Squaws " were seen apparently feeding and otherwise disporting themselves in the waters of Franklin Bay. HJl.— Sonmteiia V-iiigra. (Gray.) Pacific Eider. * This interesting Eider breeds in immen&e numbers on the shores of Franklin Bay, it is also very abundant on the coast and islands of Liverpool Bay. The nest is usually a shallow cavity in the ground, more or less plentifully lined with down. The eggs are generally five, and but rarely six and seven in number, of a pale sea green color, "with a tinge of olive." We founone were tic Coast, upied by rded one thsonian. Hutchiu's da Goose lores and he earth, of hay, |ggs. The on four ork of a e ground ater, and n so un- ; Checked It IS large not an- han one — 13 — undoubted skin or part thereof brought in during our residence there. 174. — Branta nigricans. (Lawrence.) Black Brant. This Goose is exceedingly abundant on the Arctic Coast of Liverpool Bay ; but it is comparatively rare in Franklin Bay. Large numbers of eggs were obtained by the Esquimaux in the first mentioned, but hardly any in the latter locality. We never, however, observed any of those birds parsing the post on their usual spring and autumn migrations. Six hundred and fifty eggs were packed up for shipment from Fort Anderson. 180.— OU« ColiinibiaiiUK. (Ord.) Whistling Swan. Cygnus C. (Coues.) The maximum number of eggs taken in the twenty nests of this Swan, which I find recorded, was five, while the nest itself was always placed on the ground, and several were also found on the coast and islands of Livoipool and Franklin Bays in the Arctic Ocean. 181.— Olce buccinator. (Richardson.) Trumpeter vSwan. Cygnus B. Several nests of this species were met with in the Barren Grounds, on islands in Franklin Bay, and one containing six eggs was situated near the beach on a sloping knoll. It w»is com- posed of a quantity of hay, down and feathers intermixed, and this was the general mode of structure of the nests of both swans. It usually lays from four to six eggs, judging from the noted contents of a received total of twenty-four nests. 204. — Oriis AinerU'tiiia. (Linnceus. ) Whooping Crane. White Crane. We never succeeded in finding a nest of this Crane, which undoubtedly breeds in Arctic America, as well as in the countiy to the southward, as a few flocks were observed fiying past Fort Anderson both in spring and autumn. 20o.— Griis Canadensis. (Linn.) Little Brown Crane. Northern vSandhill Crane. A skin was obtain >d from an Esquimaux of the Lower An- d - n in the autumn of lH6'-i, and an og<^ was found in a nest in Franklin Bav in June, liSG4. A second was discovered ♦ e following season on an island in Liverpool Bay, while the eggs (two each) and parents of two othe>- nests received from the Lower Anderson in the spring of IStiG, were afterwards among those referred to tis having been destroyed by animals. The nest is usually but a mere cavity in the sandy soil, thickly lined with dry grasses, etc. '/J?J8.— Cryinophiliis fulleariiis. (Linn.) Red Phalarope. PhaleropusF. (Coues.) This bird is fairly abundant on the shores of Fvanklin Bay, — u — where nests were obtained amid marshy flats in the fir^t week in July, 1864, and again in July, 1865. ?8^3.— Pharlaropus lobatus. (Linu.) Northern Pharlaropc. Occurs in great abundance during the breeding season in the wooded country, and in the Barren Grounds righ' to the coast, where it is, however, not numerous. The nest, like that of the Red Phalarope, is a slight depression in the ground, lined with a few dry leaves and grasses, and is almost invariably situated on the margin of small j)ools or sheets of water. Upwards of seventy nests were secured, the number of eggs being always four. Although the parent usually left the nest, both birds would sometimes exhibit fjreat uneasiness and utter loud cries of distress on the approach of man. •^30.— Galliuagro deliiata. (Couee. ) (Orel.) Wilson's Snipe. G. Wilsoni. Not particularly numerous in the Anderson country, as we found comparatively few nests. I may here remark that the nests ot all the Snipes and Sandpipers are much alike in com- position, number of eggs and situation. {88?8.~Macrorliaininis scolopaceUH. (Saj-.) Long Billed Dowitcher. Western Red Breasted Snipe. The few nests of this species as recorded were taken between the '21»t of June and 1st of July, the eggs were always four in number, but it is not a very abundant bird in the Anderson sec- tion of the Polar regions. M. Griseus probably breeds in the same quarter. S83.— Micropalania hiinaiitopus. (Bonap.) Stilt Sandpiper. The Stilt Sandpijjer was fairly abundant on the shores of Franklin Bay, wher a number of nests with eggs and young were discovered. It is, however, very rare in the interior, only one nest having been taken at Hendezvoas Lake, on the borders of the wooded country east of Fort Anderson. On one occasion we could not help admiring the courage and ingenuity displayed by both parents in defence of their young, which resulted in saving two of the latter from capture. %.'{9.— Triiig:a iimciilalta. (Vieill.) Pectoral vSandpiper. Actodromas M. (Coues. ) We failed to discovei- any nests of this rather rare species. A few birds were seen Hying past the Fort, and one or two were shot. 5840.— Tringa tiisicollis. (Vieill.) White Rumped Sandpiper. Acto- dromas bonapartu. (Coues.) Several nests of th^ Sandpiper were found on or near the Arctic coast of Franklin Bay. One of these taken July 3, con- first week jpc. ason in the the coast, ;hat of the iued with a situated on pwards of ing always both birds )ud cries of G. Wilsoni. ritry, as we k that the ke in coni- i Dowitcher. m between l^'s four in ierson sec- kIs in the Diper. shores of ind young erior, only le borders |e occasion lisplayed esulted in odromas M. species. A two were jer. Acto- near the ly 3, con- — 16 — tained four eggs with very large embryos. Another discovered on the following day held but three eggs. A third found in the B.'irrt.-n Grounds on 29th June was like the rest a .shallow cavity in the ground, lined with a few decayed leaves, containing four eggs, also having very large embryos. A fourth, obtaine