BLACK SCOTER. \nas nigra, Linn Oidemia nigra, Flem Le Canard macreuse No one of this truly oceanic group of Ducks is more familiar to our readers than the Black Seoter. Visiting’ as if does, during its spring and autumnal migrations, the seas which immediately encircle our island : in fact, we can seldom at these seasons cross the channel between England and the ¢ ontinent without observing it : hnhumerous flocks of them winging their way from one shoal or fishing-place to another, or diving in pursuit of their prey. They subsist almost entirely on bivalves, such as the common mussel, &c., and they ( speci ills abound where large beds of these shell-fish afford them an unfailing supply of favourite diet, their close ad- pressed plumage and great power of diving admirably fitting them for their destined mode of life. Although SO plentiful on our shores, and on those of the ¢ ontinent, especially Holland, it does not appear that it ever breeds in our latitudes, but retires for that purpose to the Seas, lakes, and morasses of the arctic circle, whence it is annually driven southwards as winter locks up these waters and precludes the possibility of its obtaining its natural food. Of its nidification we have no positive information, as is also the case with most of those birds that resort to the higher re fions to breed. Unlike most of the Anatide, the Black Scoter and its allies undergo no periodical change in their plumage ; neither is there so great a dissimilarity between the opposite sexes as there Is In most others of this family, the bright colouring of the bill in the male and his more richly coloured plumage being the chiet points of difference. The male has the whole of the plumage of a rich velvet black : the beak blac k, with the exception of the nostrils, which are bright orange, and the spherical protuberance at the base, which Is banded with ye llow : irides brown; naked circle round the eye red; tarsus and toes brownish ash colour ; webs blue. The female is characterized by a plumage of dull blackish brown: the bill black, tinged with olive, and wanting the basal protuberance ; the sides of the face. throat, and under surface lighter in colour than the upper. The Plate represents an adult male of the natural size.