414 Mr. H. M. Drummond : Catalogue of Birds found 



Strix hrachyotus (B.). Numerous during its passage north in April ; 

 does not remain. 



scops (B.). Arrives about the 15th of April ; some few remain 



during the summer. 



Corvus corax (B.). Very numerous and always seen in flocks, and 

 breed among the rocks of the citadel. 



comix (B.). Occasionally seen in Corfu : very common in Al- 

 bania, where they breed. 



frugilegus (B.). Arrives in October, and takes its departure for 



the north in February. 



monedula (B.). Sedentary. 



Garrulus pious (B.). Numerous in Albania, where they breed : rare 



in Corfu. 



glandarius (B.). Very numerous : sedentary *. 



Coracias garrula (B.). Arrives at Corfu about the 15th of April and 



remains till the middle of May : not very common. 

 Oriolus galhula (B.). Very common : arrives 25th of April : a few 



remain to breed. 

 Sturnus vulgaris (B.). Common during the winter months, never 



seen in summer. 

 Pastor roseus (B.). An occasional visitant : rare. 

 Lanius meridionalis. Arrives 20th of April : very common : breeds. 

 minor. Arrives about the 25th of April : rare : does not re- 

 main f . 

 rutilus (B.). Very numerous : arrives 1st of April, remains 



all summer. 

 collurio(B.). Makes its appearance about the 15 th of April: 



rare : does not remain. 

 Muscicapa grisola (B.). Very common : arrives first week of April : 



breeds. 

 „. jj. f Common during its passage : arrives be- 



-"^"^^~~"^^~— atOtCOlCtS, I .. r A '^ !• A JTi^ 



J rn \ \ gmnmg of April, and is not seen alter 



luctuosa ^a.). ^ ^^^ ^^^^ ^^ ^^y 



Turdus musicus (B.). Common in winter, never seen in summer. 



merula (B.). Common in winter: breeds on the mountains 



on the main land. 



saxatilis. Rare in Corfu : arrives 10th of April : breeds on 



the mountains. 



cyaneus. Common : remains all the year round. 



Sylvia turdoides. Arrives in Corfu the first week of May : very nume- 

 rous in the marshes, where they squeak and screech all day long, 



* The common jay of Syria, Asia Minor and Greece, is not the Garrulus 

 glafidarius of Britain, but the nearly allied species with a black crown, 

 G. atricapillus, GeofF. (6r. melanocephalus^ Gene.), but Capt. Drummond 

 assures me that the jay of the Ionian Islands is identical with that of 

 Britain.— H. E. S. 



f Lanius meridionalis is generally considered as very rare in the south of 

 Europe, and L. minor as very common. In the Ionian Islands, however, 

 unless there be some error of transcription or of identification, the reverse 

 would appear to be the case. — H. E. S. 



