Online Encyclopedia

MERGANSER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 164 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MERGANSER  , a word due to C .

Gesner (Hist. animalium iii . 129) in 1555, and for long used in
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English as the general name for a
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group of fish-eating ducks possessing
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great diving powers, and forming the genus Mergus of
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Linnaeus, now regarded by ornithologists as a sub-
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family, Merginae, of the family Anatidae . The mergansers have a long, narrow
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bill, with a small but evident hook at the tip, and the edges of both mandibles beset by numerous horny denticulations, whence in English the name of saw-bill " is frequently applied to them . Otherwise their structure does not much depart from the Anatine or Fuliguline type . All the
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species bear a more or less
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developed crest or tuft on the head . Three of them, Mergus merganser or
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castor, M. serrator, and M. albellus, are found over the
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northern parts of the Old
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World, and of these the first two also inhabit North
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America, which has besides a
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fourth species, M. cucullatus, said to have occasionally visited Britain . M. merganser, commonly known as the goosander, is the largest species, being nearly as big as the smaller geese, and the adult male in breeding-attire is a very beautiful
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bird, conspicuous with his dark glossy-green head, rich salmon-coloured breast, and the upper
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part of the
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body and wings black and white . This full plumage is not assumed till the second
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year, and in the meantime, • as well as in the
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post-nuptial dress, the male much resembles the
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female, having, like her, a reddish-brown head, the upper parts grey and the
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lower white . In this condition the bird is often known as the " dun
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diver." This species breeds abundantly in many parts of Scandinavia, Russia,
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Siberia and North America, and occasionally in Scotland . M. serrator, commonly called the red-breasted merganser, is a somewhat smaller bird; and, while the fully-dressed male wants the delicate
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hue of the lower parts, he has a gorget of rufous mottled with black, below which is a patch of white feathers, broadly edged with black . Both these species have the bill and feet of a bright reddish-orange, while the much smaller M. albellus, known as the smew, has these parts of a lead colour, and the breeding plumage of the adult male is white, with quaint crescentic markings of black, and the flanks most beautifully vermiculated .

End of Article: MERGANSER
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