|
WIGEON, or WIDGEON (Fr. Vigeon, from the See also: call-note of the male), the Anas See also: penelope of See also: Linnaeus and Mareca Penelope of See also: modern ornithologists, one of the most abundant See also: species of ducks throughout the greater See also: part of See also: Europe and See also: northern See also: Asia, reaching northern See also: Africa and See also: India in winter
.
A See also: good many pairs breed in the See also: north of Scotland; but the nurseries of the vast numbers which resort in autumn to the See also: waters of temperate Europe are in See also: Lapland or farther to the eastward
.
Comparatively few breed in See also: Iceland
.
Intermediate in See also: size between the See also: teal and the mallard, and less showy in plumage than either, the drake wigeon is a beautiful See also: bird, with the greater part of his See also: bill blue, his forehead cream-colour, his See also: head and neck See also: chestnut,' replaced by greyish-See also: pink below and above by See also: lavender-See also: grey, which last, produced by the transverse undulations of See also: fine black and See also: white lines, extends over the back and upper
See also: surface of the wings, except some of the coverts, which are
1 So See also: PIGEON (q.v.) from Pipio
.
Other French names, more or less See also: local, are, according to See also: Rolland, Vignon, Vingeon, Wagne, Woinge, Wignet, Wuiot, Vioux and Digeon
.
In some parts of See also: England the small teasing flies, generally called midges, are known as " wigeons."
Hence come the additional local names " bald-pate " and " red-head."
conspicuously white, and shows itself again on the flanks
.
The wings I are further ornamented by a glossy See also: green See also: speculum between two black bars; the tail is pointed and dark; the rest of the See also: lower parts is white
.
The See also: female has the inconspicuous coloration characteristic of her sex among most of the See also: duck tribe
.
In habits the wigeon differs not a little from most of the Anatinae
.
It greatly affects tidal waters during the season of its See also: southern stay, and becomes the See also: object of slaughter to hundreds of gunners on the coasts of Britain and See also: Holland; but, when it resorts to inland localities, as it also does to some extent, it passes much of its
See also: time in grazing, especially by See also: day, on the pastures which surround the lakes or moors that it selects
.
The wigeon occurs occasionally on the eastern See also: coast of North See also: America, and not uncommonly, it would seem, on the Pribyloff Islands in the Pacific
.
But the New See also: World has two allied species of its own
.
One of them, M. americana (a freshly killed example of which was once found in a See also: London market), "inhabiting the northern part of that continent, and in winter reaching Central America and the West See also: Indian islands as far as See also: Trinidad, wholly resembles its Old-World congener in habits and much in appearance
.
But in it the chestnut of the head is replaced by a close speckling of black and See also: buff, the white wing-coverts are wanting, and nearly all the plumage is subdued in See also: tone
.
The other species, M. sibilatrix, inhabits the southern portion of See also: South America and its islands, from Chile on the west to the Falklands on the See also: east, and is easily recognized by its nearly white head, nape glossy with See also: purple and green, and other differences; while the plumage hardly differs sexually at all
.
(A
.
|
|
|
[back] WIGAN |
[next] KATE DOUGLAS WIGGIN (1857– ) |
There are no comments yet for this article.
Do not copy, download, transfer, or otherwise replicate the site content in whole or in part.
Links to articles and home page are encouraged.