32 THE GROUSE IN HEALTH AND IN DISEASE 



Mr Millais also, in speaking of the cock Grouse, makes use of the expression 

 autumn plumage which, he saj's, appears late in June ; and he adds that the 

 autumn plumage, together with the " spring feathers" (or what Mr Ogilvie- 

 Grant considers the first beginning of the autumn jilumage on the Grouse's neck), 

 remain till the main moult in August and September. 



Mr Millais also makes the following statement, which appears to be based on 

 a misinterpretation. He says : " as a matter of fact the male Grouse sheds in 

 September and August a plumage which is a mixture of its winter, spring, and 

 eclipse feathers." ' 



These so-called " spring " and " eclipse " feathers are no doubt, as Mr Ogilvie- 

 Grant holds, the commencement of the plumage which is completed gradually 

 during the summer months, and which he has described as the autumn plumage. 

 It is naturally a little misleading to find the autumn plumage beginning to 

 appear in early summer, but so long as the term is understood to mean the paler, 

 more buff-coloured plumage with bolder bars of black, which begins to appear 

 first on the neck of the cock at the end of May or early in June, and is eventually 

 cast for the winter plumage in October, there need be no real misunderstanding. 



That feathers of the previous winter plumage should be mentioned in speaking 

 of the moult of this autumn plumage is also quite intelligible, since the old 

 winter plumage of the breast and abdomen is being quickly shed and replaced 

 by a similar new winter plumage at the time when the autumn plumage on the 

 rest of the body is being cast. There are in addition very frequently a few 

 feathers of the copper-red j^lumage on the chin really belonging to and remain- 

 ing over from the previous winter plumage. 



Instead of going into further details, however, with regard to the two moults 

 and plumages of the cock Grouse, it will l)e simpler at this point to take its 

 plumage changes in detail, successively month by month, explaining as nearly 

 as possible what can be gathered from the examination of a series of skins such 

 as has been brought together by the Committee, including as it does a great 

 number of specimens in all stages of disease as well as in health. 



These illustrate every month of the year and most of the local variations to 

 be found in England, Scotland, and Ireland ; and there are a suflicient number 

 of sick as well as healthy birds to show the very great influence that disease 

 has in altering the individual capacity for feather growth. Unless this 

 effect, which results as a rule in the Red Grouse from excessive parasitism, is 



' In lit., "British Birds," for Ajiril 1910, vol. iii. p. 382. London : Witlierley & Co. 



