470 
LAMELLIROSTRAL SWIMMERS — ANSERES. 
times they are present on the feeding-grounds in immense numbers. They never mi- 
grate against a northeast wind, hut await a breeze from the southwest. Their course 
is first east-nortlieast, but afterward so deflected as to bring them into the Bay of 
Fundy, up which they pass, rising over the narrow neck of land to Northumberland 
Straits, where they find shoal-water and good feeding-grounds, and where they remain 
until the end of May. Leaving the Gulf of St. Lawrence, their course is said to be 
westward of Anticosti, and in a northwesterly direction, toward the Arctic Ocean. 
Their exact route is partly conjectured. They are known to arrive in the vicinity of 
Melville Island in immense numbers, and to pass along Wellington Channel to more 
northern regions. That they also reach Smith’s Sound, and breed in large numbers 
at the junction of its waters with the Arctic Sea, has recently been ascertained by 
Mr. Feilden’s observations. 
Mr. Hapgood mentions as a noteworthy peculiarity of the Brant, when in confine- 
ment, that it pecks at and eats decayed wood, and suggests that this seems to indicate 
that driftwood may be no inconsiderable portion of its food in Arctic regions, which 
in some regions is quite abundant. In their southern migrations the Brant are said 
to make no stop at Cape Cod, unless compelled by stress of weather, but spend their 
winter months along shore from Barnegat to Florida. Dr. Kane regarded the pres- 
ence of this bird in large numbers as clearly indicative of open water. 
On Long Island, where it is familiarly known as the Brant, according to Dr. 
Giraud it makes its appearance about the 15th of October. In the spring and au- 
tumn it is very numerous on the coast, exceeding in number both the Canada Goose 
and the Dusky Duck. Its manner of flight is very different from that of B. canadensis. 
It moves in more compact bodies, less rapidly, and without seeming to have any cho- 
sen leader. While in the bays of Long Island it seems to be inactive, seldom taking 
to wing, unless disturbed by a passing boat or the near approach of a gun. 
It rises slowly, and when on the wing moves sluggishly for a short distance, and, 
unless attracted by a distant flock, frequently returns to the place just left. Its food 
there consists largely of the Zostera marina, or eel-grass. At low water it may be 
seen industriously at work tearing up its favorite plant. When the tide has risen to 
such a height as to compel it to relinquish its work, it then drifts with the current, 
feeding on the fruits of its labor. 
The Brant is very fond of what is known to hunters as “ sanding,” and resorts to 
sandbars for that purpose, where it is killed in great numbers by men who secrete 
themselves in excavations made in the sand. The locality known as Fire Island Bar, 
on the south side of Long Island, is a celebrated point for procuring this species. 
Giraud was informed in 1840 that the lessees of this island sent to the New York 
market annually from this bar several hundred dollars’ worth of birds — chiefly 
Brant. In passing over the Long Island bays, these birds avoid as much as possible 
the points of land and the tussocks of grass, and this makes them difficult to obtain, 
except in the manner described, or by shooting them from batteries anchored in the 
shallow parts of the bays. These batteries are constructed by taking a box six feet 
long, two and a half wide, and one foot deep, with sides and ends shelving, on which 
sand is placed, to imitate a bar. The upper edges of these boxes are even with the 
surface of the water, and in them the hunters lie concealed, having a number of 
decoys around. By means of this arrangement one man can often discharge, with 
deadly effect, two double-barrelled guns into a flock. A statute was passed in 1838 
prohibiting the use of this method of killing birds ; but this law was defied and openly 
violated, and becoming a dead letter, was at last repealed. 
While the Brant is not known to dive for its food, it not infrequently endeavors 
