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country, is derived chiefly from the journals kept by

the traders:

Engineer Cantonment, Lat. 41°, 22d of February.

Cumberland House,

Athabasca Lake,

Slave Lake,

Fort Enterprise,

540 from the 8th to the 12th of April.
590 about the 20th-25th of April.
610 about the 1st-6th of May.
64° 30" about the 12th-20th of May.

"The results of registers for various years kept at Fort Churchill, on Hudson's Bay, lat. 59°, give the 27th of April and 14th of May as the earliest and latest arrivals of different seasons. Their eggs have been found as early as the 15th of May. They collect in the marshes of that neighbourhood in some autumns as early as August 16th, and depart about September 10th, rarely continuing until October 10th, which is considered as a very late fall.

"The other two species seen in the interior arrive in separate flocks, generally about six or eight days after the Canada geese. One of these, the laughing goose, keeps the middle part of the continent in its migrations, and is rarely seen on the coast of Hudson's Bay. Its breeding station is to the northward even of the resorts of the snow goose, and is still unknown to the Europeans. The note of this bird has some resemblance to the laugh of a man, and from this its name has been derived, and not as Wilson supposes, from the grinning appearance of its mandibles. The Indians imitate its cry by moving the hand quickly against the lips, whilst they repeat the syllable wah.

"The snow goose, in its migration northwards, is seen both in the interior and on the sea-coast, and in numbers exceeding the other two.

"The brent goose (Anas bernicla) is found only on the coast of Hudson's Bay; and the barnacle, (Anas

In LONG's Expedition to the Rocky Mountains, the great migration of geese is stated to commence at Engineer Cantonment, in lat. 413° on the 22d of February, and to terminate at the latter end of March.

leucopsis,) and the bean goose, (Anas segetum,) the remaining two species of geese known to visit those countries, are rarely seen, being accidental visitors.

"The swans arrive in the fur countries still earlier than the Canada goose, and frequent the eddies under waterfalls, and other spots of open water, until the rivers and lakes break up. They are seen both in the interior and on the sea coast, sometimes in small flocks, but more frequently in pairs.

“Of the smaller birds, or ducks, that constitute the genus anas, there are about twenty-four species known in the Hudson's Bay fur countries, only three of which were seen by our navigators. Two of these three, the eider and king ducks, confine their visits to the sea coast; but the third, the long-tailed duck, (Anas glacialis,) is seen also abundantly in the interior, on its passage north."

CYGNUS, SWAN.

43. CYGNUS BUCCINATOR, RICHARDSON. TRUMPETER SWAN. SUB FAMILY, Anserinæ, Swains. - Genus, Cygnus, Auct. Keetchee wapeeshew, Cree Indians.-CH. SP. Anas (Cygnus) Buccinator, albus; rostro toto nigro etuberculato, rectricibus 24. -SP. CH. Trumpeter Swan, white; head glossed above with chestnut; bill, entirely black, without a tubercle; tail feathers, 24.

"THIS is the most common swan in the interior of the fur countries. It breeds as far south as lat. 61°, but principally within the Arctic circle; and, in its migra tions, generally precedes the geese a few days. A fold of its windpipe enters a protuberance on the dorsal aspect of the sternum, at its upper part, which is wanting both in the Cygnus ferus and Bewickii; in other respects, it is distributed through the sternum, nearly as in the latter of these species. It is to the trumpeter the bulk of the swan skins imported by the Hudson's Bay Company belong."— Richardson.

44. CYGNUS BEWICKII, YARRELL.— -BEWICK'S SWAN. GENUS, Cygnus, Auctor.—CH. Sr. Cygnus Bewickii, albus, rostro nigro pone nares flavescenti, rectricibus 18.-SP. CH. Bewick's Swan, white; bill, yellow at the base posterior to the nostrils, 18 tail feathers.

"THIS swan breeds on the sea coast, within the Arctic circle, and is seen in the interior of the fur countries in its passage only. It makes its appearance amongst the latest of the migratory birds in the spring, while the trumpeter swans are, with the exception of the eagles, the earliest. It winters, according to Lewis and Clark, near the mouth of the Columbia.* Captain Lyon describes its nest as built of moss peat, nearly six feet long, and four and three-quarters wide, and two feet high, exteriorly; the cavity, a foot and a half in diameter. The eggs were brownish white, slightly clouded with a darker tint.' - Richardson.

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CLANGULA, GARROT.

45. CLANGULA BARROWII. — ROCKY MOUNTAIN GArrot.

Head, and upper part of the neck, pansy purple, with a large crescentic white mark before each eye. White speculum separated from the band on the coverts by a black stripe. Inhabits the Rocky Mountains. The specific name is intended as a tribute to Mr Barrow's varied talents, and his unwearied exertions for the promotion of science. Mr Swainson remarks, on the subject of zoological nomenclature, that "No monument of marble or brass is so lasting as this. It is the only way of perpetuating the memories of true zoolo

"The swans are of two kinds, the large and small. The large swan is the same with the one common in the Atlantic States. The small differs from the large only in size and note; it is about one-fourth less, and its note is entirely different. These birds were first found below the Great Narrows of the Columbia, near the Chilluckittequaw nation. They are very abundant in this neighbourhood, and remained with the party all winter; and, in number, they exceed those of the larger species in the proportion of five to one." -LEWIS and CLARK, Journ. &c.

gists, or of those who have benefited the science. Latterly, however, the custom among us has been so much abused, that it may be questioned whether it expresses any thing more than a mere compliment from the nomenclator. To bestow the same honour upon a mere_collector, which is given to a Wilson, a Cuvier, or a Bonaparte, is, at best, injudicious; but, to call all the new species in the museum of a learned society after the council and office-bearers of the current year, merely because they are ex officio promoters of ornithology, is not only ludicrous, but, as we conceive, a total perversion of scientific justice. A great and pious divine, a skilful and eminent physician, or accomplished diplomatic character, can receive neither honour or pleasure from such flattery. It behoves every true naturalist to set his face against such practices; and we shall, upon all occasions, pass over every name so misapplied. For ourselves, we have studiously sought to bestow this honour' only where it was due. The name of Barrow, it is true, will not be solely indebted to us for its imperishable record. It will be associated, by the future historian, with the history and discoveries of Arctic America, Southern Africa, and China; with high benefits conferred upon the State; and with the possession and encouragement of zoological knowledge."

The following has been communicated to us as Brehm's latest arrangement of the European species of the Anatidae:

Anatidæ. Leach.

GENUS I.

Swan. Cygnus.

First Division.

Gibbous swans. Cygni gibbi.

1. White headed gibbous swan. C. gibbus, Bechst.
2. Yellow headed gibbous swan. C. olor, Illiger.

Second Division.

Singing swans. Cygni musici.

1. Northeastern singing swan.

C. musicus, Bechst.

2. Icelandic singing swan. C. icelandicus, Brehm.

[blocks in formation]

1. Broad tailed bean goose.

2. True bean goose.

A. platyuros, Brisson.

A. segetum, Meyer.

3. Rufous bean goose. A. rufescens, Brisson.
4. Field goose.
A. arvensis, Brisson.

5. Obscure bean goose. A. obscurus, Brisson.
6. Bruck's bean goose. A. Bruckii, Brisson.

Third Division.

White-fronted geese.

Anseres fronte albo.

1. Large white fronted goose. A. albifrons, Bechst. 2. Small white fronted goose. A. brevirostris, Heckel.

Fourth Division.

Dwarf geese. Anseres pygmaei.
1. Gray dwarf goose. A. cineraceus, Brisson.

GENUS III.

Bernacle, or Sea goose. Bernicla, Boje.
First Division.

Small billed bernacles. Bernicla microrhynchoi.
1. White cheeked bernacle. B. leucopsis, Bechst.
Second Division.

Ringed bernacles. Bernicle torquatæ.

B. glaucogaster, Brisson.
B. micropus, Brehm.
B. platyuros, Brisson.
B. torquata, Boje.

1. Gray bellied ringed bernacle.
2. Small footed ringed bernacle.
3. Broad tailed ringed bernacle.
4. Short billed ringed bernacle.
5. Long billed ringed bernacle. B. collaris, Brehm.

Third Division.

Red-necked bernacles. Bernicle collo rufo.
1. Red-necked bernacle. B. ruficollis, Boje.

GENUS IV.

Sheldrake, or goose duck. Tadorna, Boje.

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