APPENDIX. 
373 
tired and fifty replies to the question covering the subject of damage to domesticated 
towls and wild birds only five are positively favorable to the crow. Seventy others 
are negatively favorable in that they report no injury observed, without, however, 
giving any indication of the extent of the opportunities for observation. The reports 
of damage come from all parts of the United States and Canada where crows are 
found, and as a rule the notes are clear and exact. 
As one result of all the information thus far collected it may be stated that the 
common crow is a serious enemy of poultry, all the more dangerous because so often 
unsuspected, and because of its remarkable cunning and stealth. It is also a skilful 
and inveterate robber of the nests and eggs of wild birds. 
The entire evidence submitted on this subject is well worth reading, but lack of 
space forbids the insertion of more than a few examples under each of two heads. 
Destruction op the Eggs and Young of Poultry. 
More than one-third of all the reports relating to damage to poultry specify fre¬ 
quent or serious loss. It appears from these notes that not only does the crow rob 
the hens, ducks, and turkeys which steal their nests in the brush, woods, or mead¬ 
ows, away from the farm-yard, but it frequently conies within a few steps of the 
house or barn, destroying all nests not absolutely inaccessible to it or snatching up 
the downy young about the very doors. Usually such visits are made very early in 
the morning, or at times when no one is at hand to prevent the theft, but frequently 
the robber becomes emboldened by success and makes his visits in the middle of, 
the day and with apparent disregard of all danger. Moreover, as in the case of some 
hawks and dogs, certain individuals become particularly addicted to chicken steal¬ 
ing, and return day, after day to the same place, seldom failing to secure a victim at 
each visit. 
The following notes from different parts of the country will serve to illustrate the 
crow’s methods in relation to eggs and chickens : 
From Owen Durfee, Fall River, Mass.: 
May 5 [18881, while walking by a farm-house near the city, I saw a crow sail over the house 
and finally settle down on a stonewall about one hundred feet from the house, and begin watch¬ 
ing the young chickens running about in the lot and through the wall under him. One of the 
chickens ran under him, and after eyeing it a moment, he turned to the next one, which was 
perhaps a week or ten days old. When this one was about six feet from him, he dropped down 
over it and struck at it two or three times with his beak. Then he acted as though about to eat 
it on the spot, but a young rooster running at him, he picked up the chicken and carried it off 
still squeaking in his beak. 
From William H. Lewis, Pawtucket, R. I,: 
1 have known the common crow to take chicks when they were from one to six weeks old. I 
know of a case where twenty have been lost this season. 
From H. Neherling, Freistatt, Mo.: 
I have frequently observed crows stealing the eggs from my poultry-yard. They do this very 
slyly and quietly. As soon as the eggs are hatched they carry off young chickens whenever they 
can get them. With the exception of Cooper’s Hawk I do not know such a bold robber as the 
crow. One day in April one of these birds perched on the fence, only a few steps from my house. 
An old hen with about a dozen chickens which were only a few days old was in my barn-yard. 
Suddenly the crow swooped down, caught a chicken with its bill, and went off, flying away near 
the ground. In a few weeks the crows carried off about twenty chickens, which varied in age 
from one day to four weeks. 
From H. R. Landis, Landis Valley, Pa.: 
When the young are hatched the crows are very bold, coming up to buildings, and in one case 
that come under my notice they took from one to four chickens each morning, nearly annihilat. 
ing a brood of about one hundred. 
From J. W. Van Kirk, Milton, Pa.: 
I have seen crows catch young chickens, and frequently have seen them carrying off eggs of 
both the domestic fowl and wild birds. We have had on different occasions whole nests of sit¬ 
ting turkeys and chickens robbed by them. In some cases the eggs were taken from under the 
hens while on their nests. 
