BUFFLEHEAD
(Charitonetta albeola).
These are handsome
little ducks, length 13
or 14 inches, about
equaling in size the
Green-winged Teal.
Neither sex can be
confused with any other
species owing to their
tiny size and very
characteristic markings.
They are quite
frequently known as
"Butterballs" because of
their small, plump
bodies, and as "Spirit
Ducks" or "Dippers"
because of the extreme
speed with which they
can disappear under
water. In the days of
black powder, it was
quite difficult to shoot
one on the water, but
modern weapons of
offense give them no
warning to dive, yet
their bodies are so
small and their sight so
keen that they are well
able to take care of
themselves. They breed
throughout central and
northwestern Canada,
laying their eggs on
down in cavities of
trees near the banks of
streams. They are found
quite uniformly over the
United States in winter.
They usually add some
fish to their diet, as
do the two Golden-eyes,
consequently their flesh
is rather rank, although
they are often eaten.
OLD-SQUAW
(Harelda hyemalis).
A species breeding in
Arctic America and
wintering in great
numbers as far south as
the Great Lakes and on
the coast to North
Carolina and southern
California. Otherwise
known as "Long-tailed
Duck," "Old- wife," "Southsoutherly
"and other less common
ones, most of which
refer to their noisy
gabbling. The summer and
winter plumages are
quite different, as
shown respectively by
the bird just diving
into the water and the
lower one. The male
measures up to 23
inches, while the female
averages about 18 inches
long. Their food
consists of shellfish,
small fish and insects
which they can secure in
very deep water. Their
flesh is very tough and
quite unpalatable.
LABRADOR DUCK
(Camtorhynchos
labradorius), the
male of which is shown
in the little pen
sketch, formerly lived
off the North Atlantic
coast, but has been
extinct since about
1875.
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