814 
U. S. P. E. E. EXP. AND SUEVEYS—ZOOLOGY—GENEEAL EEPOET. 
edged, externally, with the same. The primaries and outer secondaries are black; the latter 
tipped with paler. 
The female has a compressed occipital and nuchal crest; the head and neck chestnut brown; 
the chin yellowish white; the upper parts entirely bluish gray ; the under parts like the male. 
The white on the wing is confined to the secondaries and the greater coverts, which are black at 
the base and brown at the end, producing a bar. The tertials are entirely plumbeous. The 
brown bar at the end of the greater coverts is sometimes wanting, leaving the speculum white. 
According to Mr. Cassin the American “sheldrake,” or goosander, differs from the European 
in having the prolonged feathers of the head almost restricted to the occiput and neck behind, 
while in the other species they begin almost at the base of the bill, and are erectile and crest¬ 
like. On the greater wing coverts of the American bird there is always an exposed and 
conspicuous bar of black, which in the European is entirely concealed by the lesser coverts. 
Bonaparte says that the bill of the American species is shorter and thicker. 
List of specimens. 
Catal. 
No. 
Sex. 
Locality. 
When col¬ 
lected. 
Whence obtained. 
Orig’l 
No. 
Collected by— 
Length. 
Stretch 
of wings. 
Wing. 
Remarks. 
1304 
$ 
Mar. 21,1844 
26.50 
38.25 
11.00 
879 
O 
Nov. 25, 1842 
23.25 
33.50 
9.75 
5473 
V 
Lt. Warren. 
5140 
9 
Nov. 19, 1855 
5139 
Nov. 17, 1855 
.do. 
160 
26.50 
38.50 
12.00 
black, eyes black. 
Q878 
9 
Oct. 20,1853 
Gov. Stevens... 
Q£81 
Mar. —, 1855 
33 
3 
Dec. 9, 1853 
Bill and feet vermilion.. 
Fort. Dalle?, O. T. 
Jan. 7, 1855 
155L 
Q87<J 
9877 
April —, 1854 
68 
MEBG-US SEBBATQB, Linn. 
RetUforeasted Merganser. 
Mergus serrator, Linn. Syst. Nat. I, 1766, 208 .—Gm. I, 546.— Wilson, Am. Ora. VIII, 1814, 81; pi. lxix.— Bon. Obs. 
1825, No. 249.—Sw. F. Bor. Am. II, 1831, 462.— Nuttall, Man. II, 1834, 463.— Eyton, Mon. 
1838, 175.—Aud. Orn. Biog. V, 1839, 92; pi. 401. —Ib. Syn. 298. —Ib. Birds Am. VI, 1843, 395; 
pi. 412. 
Merganser serrator, Stkph. Shaw’s Gen. Zool. XII, 1824, 165.— Bon. List, 1838. 
Mergus cristatus and serratus, Brunn. Orn. Bor. 1764, 23. 
g P _ c H .—Feathers of the forehead extending on the bill in a short obtuse angle, and falling far short of the end of those on the 
sides; the outline of the latter sloping rapidly forwards, and reaching halfway from the posterior end of the lower edge of bill 
to the nostrils, and far beyond those on the side of lower jaw. Nostrils narrow, posterior; their posterior outline opposite the 
end of basal third of commissure. 
Male. Head with conspicuous pointed occipital crest. Head and upper part of neck, all around, dark green; under parts 
reddish white. Jugulum reddish brown, streaked with black. Sides conspicuously barred transversely with fine lines of black. 
Feathers anterior to wing, white, margined with black. White of wing crossed by two bars of black. 
Female. Head with compressed occipital crest; chestnut brown. Body above ash; beneath reddish white. The black at base 
of secondaries exposed; outer tertials white, edged with black. 
Length, 23.25; wing, 8.60; tarsus, 1.80; commissure, 2.76. 
Hub Whole o North America and Europe. 
