504 
LAMELLIROSTRAL SWIMMERS — ANSERES. 
screened from view on all sides, and so canopied by the standing grass that the eggs 
were not visible from above. There was a rim of soft down, from the mother’s breast, 
around the eggs, partly covering those in the outer circle. On viewing the nest the 
next day this down was found to have been drawn over all the eggs. Mr. Moore took 
them and placed them under a hen ; and six days after they were hatched. This was 
early in April. It would appear, therefore, that the statement that the male forsakes 
his mate during incubation is not well founded ; for in this instance the male bird, 
about the twenty-fourth day of incubation, still kept in the vicinity of the nest. It 
is, however, the universal belief that he does not assist in rearing the young. 
Mr. Moore also informs me that in August, September, and the first part of Octo- 
ber, parties of from five to twenty of this species leave the fresh ponds and fly across 
the bay to sand-bars on the inner sides of the Keys, where they spend the night in the 
pools or coves near the mangroves, and return at sunrise the next morning. Those 
shot at this time were all males ; but in January, February, and March mated birds, 
flying in pairs, spend their nights in the same places. In one instance Mr. Moore 
came suddenly on a flock of three old birds and nine young; the latter were only a 
few days old. Two of the old birds flew off; but the mother remained, and led the 
Ducklings from the shallow pond over a dry and bare bed into a tangled mass of 
palmettoes and grass. 
Mr. Moore has no doubt that this Duck would be a much more common bird in 
Florida but for the sweeping fires that are set to burn off this coarse growth of grass, 
to allow a fresher growth to spring up for the cattle. In these fires a great many of 
the birds must be destroyed. Mr. Moore has not succeeded in inducing this Duck to 
breed in confinement, although in 1874 he was in possession of nine of this species, 
in their third summer, all of which had been hatched out under a hen. 
Mr. Audubon mentions finding the nest of a Dusky Duck, probably this species, 
on the 30th of April, 1837, on Galveston Island, Texas, formed of grass and feathers, 
and containing eight eggs. These were surrounded and partially covered with down. 
On the same island others were seen that evidently had nests. Mr. Audubon was 
informed that those which breed in Texas are resident there throughout the year. In 
South Carolina he was informed by the Rev. Dr. Bachman that this species, once rare, 
was becoming more and more abundant, attracted probably by the rice-fields ; and 
farther inland it was even more plentiful. Hybrids between this and the Domestic 
Duck had been reared, and their eggs were productive, the offspring being larger 
than either parent. The young of this species, in the opinion of Mr. Audubon, afford 
delicious eating, and are said to be far superior to the more celebrated Canvas-back. 
An egg of the Florida Dusky Duck, collected by Mr. Maynard, measures 2.33 inches 
in length by 1.70 in breadth. It has a general resemblance to the eggs of the common 
A. obscura, but is of a lighter shade of greenish white. 
Genus CHAULELASMUS, Gray. 
Chaulelasmus, Gray, 1838 (type, Anas strepera, Linn.). 
Chauliodus, Swains. F. B. A. II. 1831, 440 (type, Anas strepera,, Linn.). (Rot of Bloch, 1801.) 
Chauliodes, Eyton, Mon. Anat. 1838, 43 (same type). (Rot of Latreille, 1798.) 
But two species of this genus are known, the common and widely diffused C. streperus, and the 
more recently discovered C. Gouesi, Streets, of Washington Island, in the South Pacific Ocean. 
The latter is very similar to G. streperus, having the same form and essentially the same coloration, 
but is much smaller, with several differences in plumage. The sides are white, coarsely spotted 
with grayish, instead of finely undulated with the same, as is the case with the adult male of 
