The game birds and wild fowl of Sweden and Norway : together with an account of the seals and salt-water fishes of those countries / by L. Lloyd.
- Llewelyn Lloyd
- Date:
- 1867
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: The game birds and wild fowl of Sweden and Norway : together with an account of the seals and salt-water fishes of those countries / by L. Lloyd. Source: Wellcome Collection.
717/732
![]\ragpies, snaring of, 269. IMaigre, the, 472. Mallard, the, 270, 340 ; its aversion to water, 341. Mallard Drake, shooting of the, 277. Mallard trap, the, 289. Marbled Seal, 396 ; its love for its offspring, 397 (s«e Seals). Marstrand, forti-ess of, 306 ; town of, 307 ; its harbour, 310. Merganser, the, 270 ; shooting of, 355. Migrations from the Fjalls, 148,149; of the Woodcock, 196 et seq. ; always nocturnal, 199 ; of the Solitary Snipe, 225 et seq. ; of the Jack Snipe, 238 j of the Krams-foglar, 244 ; of wild fowl, 271. Migratory Game Birds, 10, 11, 77. Missel Thrush, the, 243, 246. Moonlight, otter-shooting by, 384. Morkull-drag (of the W oodcock), 191. “ Morkulla,” Swedish name of the Woodcock, 184. Mosquitoes, a deadly pest, 135. Moulting of the Dal-Ripa, 124 ; of the Fjall-Ripa, 140. Mountain-ash berries, 255. Mullet, the Grey, 481 ; the Thick- lipped, ib. Myxine, the, 567 ; its habits, 567, 568. N. Naturalists, their love of splitting hairs and inventing species for their own glorification, 14tc. Nesting of the Jack Snipe, 237. Nets for catching the Partridge, 170, 171 ; for catching Otter, 383. Nils Bagge, epitaph to the memory of, 308. Norway, anecdote of travellers to> 156. Norway Haddock, the, 470. Ny-Byggare, Finnish, 287. O. Odman, Rev. J., his history of Bohus- Liin, 458. Olof Tryggweson, king of Norway, 298 ; his royal wrongs and unfor- tunate end, 298, 299. Opah, the, 478 ;'Tts habitat, ib. Orre - Benne, a simple device for capturing the Black-Cock, 101, 102. Orre-Lek, the, 87. Orre-Tratt, a trap for catching the Black-Cock, 98 et seq. Otter, its characteristics and habits, 372, 373 ; its track on the snow, 374 ; preys on adult water-fowl, 375 ; caught in the act, 376; value of its skin, 377 ; easily domesti- cated, 378 j then caters for itself, 379; and for its owner, 380; mode of hunting it, 381; otter-nets, 383 ; otter-shooting by moonlight, 384; traps for catching the, 385 ; the Pansar-Nat, 386 ; the Keiller otter-trap, 387. Owls versus Hawks, 268. Oyster-catcher, 270. P. Pairing of the Black-Cock, 78, 81 ; of the Woodcock, 192. Pairing-grounds of the Capercali, 19, 20, 25 ; shooting Capercali at the, 37 et seq. ; shooting Black-Cock at the, 85 ; of the Solitary Snipe, 228.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b28056140_0719.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


