Fróðskaparrit - 31.12.2000, Side 28

Fróðskaparrit - 31.12.2000, Side 28
32 THE SNOW BUNTING (PLECTROPHENAX NIVIALIS) AS FOOD manland, famine is to be expected, if there are large flocks of snow buntings (Modin, 1916: 325). The Sami too connect the ap- pearance of this bird in inhabited areas with forthcoming snow or bad weather (Fell- man, 1906: 92; Turi, 1917: 109-110; Qvig- stad, 1934:380). A record from Østerdalen in Norway says the weather will be bad, if the uværsfuglen arrives in spring. The be- lief in Senja had it that there would be snow, if the plumage of the snow bunting was white, but bad weather if it was dark (Hodne, 1998: 122). According to Danish folk belief in Jutland, more winter was to be expected, if the snákákken tarried too long in the spring (DFS, 1904/26). A re- cord from Skive says there will be snow, if the snekok appears and comes to the hous- es (Schmidt, 1963: 225-226). It is a herald of spring, according to Estonian folk belief (Mager, 1994: 111-112). The snow bun- ting’s habit of gathering in large flocks of white males also earned it poetic names, such as snowflake in Scotland and the Orkney Isles (Swainson, 1886: 72; cf. also Chapman, 1896). In western Greenland, the arrival of the kupaluarsuk - of which the children were keenly observant - an- nounced the end of winter (Le Mouel, 1973: 72). When the time for the arrival of this bird approached, the people of Green- land searched for it eagerly, and upon espy- ing it, welcomed it enthusiastically as a sign of the forthcoming spring (Freuchen and Salomonsen, 1958: 117-118). The snow bunting has a northern circum- polar distribution. It is found in Alaska, Canada, Greenland, Iceland, Jan Mayen, Svalbard, Bjørnøya, Franz Josef Land, northern Scotland, Finno-Scandia, Russia, Siberia, Kamchatka, and the Aleut Islands. It is found as a breeding bird in the area of Finno-Scandia north of the tree line, and it is also a common breeding bird in Iceland. It was formerly a breeding bird in the Faroes, but there is no record of it breeding there at any point over the last hundred years. The scientific community has known of the snow bunting since the late 17th cen- tury, when Olof Rudbeck, the Younger, de- scribed the species during his Lapland tour (Rudbeck, 1987). Carl Linnaeus gave a full account of the species in 1740 (Fig. 1). The Snow Bunting as Food As Svabo explicitly stated, the few small- bird species in the Faroe Islands were usu- ally not eaten. Of the wheatear (Oenanthe oenanthe), he wrote that the Islanders ate “neither the bird, its egg nor the nestling”. The wren (Troglodytes troglodytes) was not eaten either, he explained. Although Svabo devoted a whole chapter to the detailed de- scription of the methods for trapping and hunting birds in the mountains, he gave no further information on the capture of the snow bunting. Details cannot be found in the available ethnographic information. It furthermore bears recalling in this connec- tion that the starling (Sturnus vulgaris), ac- cording to a more recent record, was caught during times of food shortage in the early years of the last century (Olsen, 1998: 6). The snow bunting is a ground-loving bird: hence, it is sometimes regarded in Nordic folk taxonomy as a lark. During its migration, it appears in large flocks and al- ways in open meadows. It has been hunted
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