462 



1. Kotagherry. 13tli March (Mi.is 

 Cockburn). 



3. Kotaj^lien-y, 13tli March {Mks 



Cockburn) . 

 1. Ceylon (i?. L. Layard). 

 1. Ceylon. 



4. Lunug'alla, Cevlon, March (^4. L. 



Butler). 

 3. Pegu, 27th Jan. (^E. W. Oatcs). 

 1. Tegu, 2nd Feb. (E W. 0.). 

 1. Pegu, Kith Feb. {E. IF. O.). 



1. Pegu, IGth March (E. W. O.). 



2. Pegu, 17th March (E. W. O.). 



5. Chin-liiang, E. China, 24th April. 

 5. Chin-kiang, 24th April. 



3. Chin-kiaug, 15th May. 



4. Ishigaki I., S. Loochoo Group, 



28th April. 



Hume Coll. 



Hume Coll. 



Salvin-Goilnian Coll. 

 E. L. Layavd, Esq. [P.]. 

 Crowley Bequest. 



Gates Coll. 

 Gates Coll. 

 Gates Coll. 

 Gates Coll. 

 Seebohm Coll. 

 J. D. La Touche, Esq. 

 J. D. La Touche, Esq. 

 J. D. La Touche, Esq. 

 W. Kadclitie Saunder 

 [P.]. 



rc.j 



re. 



LC. 



Esq. 



Corvus japonensis, Bonap. 



Corone japonensis, Sharpe, Cat. Birch B. M. iii. p. 41 (1877). 



Corvus macrorhynchos japonensis, Harterl, T'o//. pal. Faun. i. p. 12 



(1902). 

 Corvus japonensis, Sharpe, Hand-1. v. p. ;")94 (1909) ; Nehrk. Kat. Eier- 



samml.-p. 358 (1910). 



Eggs of the Japanese Crow are similar to those of C. cora.v. 

 They vary in length from 1-7 to 1"7S, and in breadth from 

 1-28 to 1-3. 



2. Goteniba, Hondo, Janan, 2Gtli W. Radcliffe Saunders, Esq. 



April. ' [P.]. 



3. Sagami, Tokaido, S. Hondo, IGth W. Radclitfe Saunders, Esq. 



May. [P.]. 



Corvus pMlippinus, Bonap. 

 (Plate XXI. figs. 9 & 10.) 



Corone philippina, Sharpe, Cat. Birds B. M. iii. p. 42 (1877) ; McGreyor, 



Man. Philipp. B. ii. p. 722 (1909). 

 Corvus philippinus, Ogilvie-Grant !^- Whitehead, Ibis, 1898, p. 234 ; 



Sharpe, Handel, v. p. 594 (1909) ; Nehrk. Kat. Eiersamml. p. 358 



(1910). 



Five eggs of the Philippine Crow are of a broad oval shape, 

 slightly compressed at the smaller cud, and distinctly glossj\ 

 In three specimens from Marinduque the ground is greenish- 

 white, densely and uniformly mottled and spotted all over with 

 umber-brown. In the other two the ground is pale bluish- 

 white, one being mottled all over with pale umber-brown, while the 

 other is almost devoid of markings except towards the smaller end, 



