6 THE GROUSE IN HEALTH AND IN DISEASE 



five thousand brace were killed upon an area of 20.000 acres, and many more 

 might have been shot without unduly reducing the stock. 



While heavy snow during the winter may do little harm though it lies till 

 far into the spring, a loss of stock may result where the fall occurs after the birds 

 have returned to their nesting ground on the higher ranges. This 

 snow on occurred on a moor in Ross-shire in the year 1909, when a corre- 

 stock. spondent of the Committee reports as follows : " A heavy snowfall 



on April 24th put all the birds down to ' black ground.' They never went 

 back to nest, and consequently the high ground, i.e., over 500 ft., was a 

 failure, and the low ground better than usual." Again, a correspondent in AVest 

 Perthshire writes : — " In spring, when the breeding season is approaching a 

 heavy snowstorm of some duration has on several occasions caused a most 

 serious loss of stock, amounting to as much as half or more of the whole 

 number of birds. After such a spring snowstorm and migration, large numbers 

 of Grouse undoubtedly remain to breed on low and favourable moors wdthin, say, 

 ten or fifteen miles. These low moors are very heavily shot every year, but 

 there is a constant migration of Grouse to them, both from overstocked moors, 

 and from the high moors aftected by snow." This is corroborated bj- a corre- 

 spondent in the south of Scotland, who says : "I have an idea that if birds are 

 forced to leave their usual ground (in spring), through deep untrodden snow, a 

 good number may remain away and not return to their former ground." 



The subject of migration is more fully dealt with in another chapter.^ 



During the mating season the pugnacity of the cock Grouse is well known, 

 and in captivity the cocks have to be kept separate at this period, or disaster 

 Pufnacitv ^'^^^ Certainly occur. Under natural conditions the fights seldom 

 of cocks. gjj^ fatally; but it is certain that the presence of a quarrelsome 

 cock-bird in search of a mate seriously interferes with the pairing of the other 

 birds in the vicinity. Observation in the field goes to prove that old cocks 

 are more pugnacious than young ones, and as they are less valuable for breed- 

 ing purposes tlie object of every moor-owner is to reduce the number of 

 old cocks by every means in his power. 



The nest, a slight hollow scratched in the ground and lined with a scanty 

 layer of grass, heather, etc., is usually placed on the sunny side of a tuft of 

 heather, and preference as regards its site seems to be given to an area 

 on which the heather is moderately well grown rather thau where it is 



' See chap. xxiv. 



