262 
ZOOLOGY. 
MELANETTA YELYETINA, (Cass.) Baird. 
Velvet Duck; White-winged Coot. 
Anas fusca, Wilson, Am. Orn. VIII, 1814,137 ; pi. lxxii. Not of Linnaeus. 
Fuligula ( Oidemia ) fusca, Bon. Syn. 1828, 390.— Nutt. Man. II, 1834,419. 
Fuligula. fusca, Aud. Orn. Biog. Ill, 1835, 454 ; pi. 247.— Ib. Syn. 1839, 280.— Ib. Birds Amer. VI, 1843, 332; pi. 401. 
Oidemia velvelina, Cassin, Pr. A. N. Sc. V, Oct. 1850,126. 
Melanetta velvetina, Baird, Gen. Eep. Birds, 805. 
Sr. Ch.— Male. —Bill very broad, wider towards thetip than at the base ; feathers extending far along the side of the bill, 
and on the forehead, for nearly half the commissure, running in an obtuse point about as far forward as the lower corner of 
the outline of feathers on the side, both reaching nearly to the posterior border of the large, open, nearly rounded nostrils ; 
culmen horizontal a little beyond the frontal feathers, then abruptly bent downwards, nearly perpendicularly, to the much 
depressed, nearly horizontal portion ; a sharp indented ridge along the base of culmen, ending in a trihedral tubercle. Color 
black ; a white elongated patch around and a little behind the eye, and a large white speculum on the wing composed of 
white secondaries and tips of greater coverts ; bill black at base and lateral edges ; red elsewhere. 
Female somewhat similar, but lighter beneath, and smaller ; a large whitish patch on the side of the head behind the eye, 
but none around it; wings with white speculum, somewhat as in the male ; bill also similar, but less swollen and elevated 
at base. Length, from 20 to 23 inches ; extent, from 36 to 39. 25 ; wing, 10.16 to 12 ; tarsus, 2. 08 ; commissure, 2. 82. 
Iris of the male, pale gray, or grayish white ; of the female, brown. 
Ildb .—Along both coasts of North America, to the north. 
The white-winged coot, or velvet duck, is common in winter in all the hays and inlets of 
Puget Sound. I obtained four or five specimen at Port Steilacoom. In common with other of 
the dark colored, fishy, sea ducks, it is called by the Nisqually Indians Jewal’-hoo. They arrive 
in that vicinity about the middle of October, and continue plentiful until about the 1st of April, 
when they nearly all disappear. They are almost always found on salt water, but I have 
occasionally heard of one being killed inland. When fat they rise from the water with difficulty, 
beating it with their wings for a long distance. The flesh is oily, and possesses a strong, and 
to many a disagreeable, fishy flavor. This is, however, much prized by the Indians, who, for 
eating, prefer them to mallards.—S. 
The black or velvet scoter is common in winter about bays and estuaries, together with the 
other two species of surf duck, but none of them seem to breed in the Territory, though a few 
linger in the bays all summer, which may be superannuated specimens.—C. 
PELIONETTA PERSPICILLATA, Kaup. 
Surf Duck ; Sea Coot. 
Anasperspicillata, Linn. Sysfc. Nat. I, 1766, 201.— Wilson, Am. Orn. VIII, 1814, 49 ; pi. Ixvii. 
Fuligula (Oidemia) perspicillata, Bon. Syn. 1828, 389.— Nuttall, Man. II, 416 
“Pelionetta perspicillata, Kaup,” Reich. leones Av. — Bonap. Comptes Kendus, XLIII, Sept. 1856.— Baird, Gen. Kep. 
Birds, 806. 
Fuligula perspicillata, Aud. Orn. Biog. IV, 1838, 161 ; pi 317 — Ib. Syn. 289 —Ib. Birds Am. VI, 1843, 337 ; pi. 402. 
Sp. Ch.— Male. —Tail of 14 feathers. Bill but little longer than the head, the feathers extending forward halfway from the base 
to the tip, and opposite the posterior border of the nostril; the bill abruptly decurved or gibbous anterior to the end of the 
feathers; nostrils open, nearly semicircular or stirrup shaped, the straight portion of the outline antero-inferior; sides of bill 
swollen at the base so as to be further apart above than below. 
Color entirely black throughout, with a greenish lustre above, duller beneath; a triangular white patch on the top of head, 
the base extending between the posterior outline of the eye and reaching forward to a point a little beyond the posterior line of 
the bill, the outlines rounded laterally and anteriorly ; the patch is separated from the eye by a narrow superciliary black space. 
There is a second triangular white patch beginning on the nape as a straight line, the width of the other patch, and running 
backwards for more than two inches. These triangular spaces are thus base to base. Iris white; bill and feet variegated. 
Female .—Bill as long as that of the male, but not swollen at the base, where the sides approach each other above ; the feathers 
