184 DUTCH AND ENGLISH BIRDS. 
brackets. A single asterisk behind the name means that 
the bird is a summer visitant, a double one that it is a 
resident. 
Holland means the whole Kingdom of the Netherlands 
unless North or South being added to it, when it becomes 
the name of a province. 
The classification used, is the same as the one used in 
the List of British birds by the Br. Orn. Union so that 
no synonymy is given. 
This paper is devided in three parts: 
Part a gives a short account of the principal publica- 
tions on the birds of Holland, which have more or less 
been used for the present work. 
Part b gives the comparative list itself with notes as 
to habits etc. 
Part e contains two tables: one with the Dutch birds 
devided in Residents, Summer visitors and Occasional vi- 
sitors, and another with the English birds as they occur 
in the list of the Br. Orn. Union with the addition of 
10 species, by which that list is increased since 1883. 
For English birds the list of the Br. Orn. Union is my 
chief authority, whilst the Proceedings of the Zool. Society 
and the Ibis etc. have been consulted for occurrences of 
birds posterior to 1883. 
In this way 10 new species have been added to that 
list viz: 
Sazicola isabellina Rüpp. (Nature, Jan. 1888). 
Emberiza cioïdes Brandt (P.S. 1889, ps6): 
Tinnunculus sparverius Linn. (P.Z.S. 1884, p. 45). 
Anser minutus Linn. (P.Z.S. 1886, p. 420). 
Larus melanocephalus Natt. (P:4S. 1887, p22): 
Aegialitis asiatica Pall. (P.Z.S. 1890, p. 461). 
Pelagodroma marina Reichenbach (Ibis, 1891, p. 602). 
Oestrelata torquata Mace. (P.Z.8. 1891, p. 122). 
Anthus cervinus Pall. (P.4.S. 1884, p. 206). 
Larus philadelphia Gray (P.4.S. 1884, p. 150). 
Notes from the Leyden Museum, Vol. XV. 
