38 RESIDENTS AND MIGRANTS. 
became extinct about the year 1758. One of the 
last native birds killed was shot at Chisholm Park, 
Inverness, and is believed to be in the museum at 
Newcastle upon Tyne*. The species was reintroduced 
into Scotland in 1836, by Lord Bredalbane and Sir 
Thomas Fowell Buxton, through the instrumentality 
of the well-known sportsman and author Mr. L. 
Lloyd. 
Full and interesting particulars of this enterprise 
will be found in Lloyd’s ‘ Game-birds and Wildfowl 
of Sweden and Norway,’ pp. 34-36; and the reader 
may also be referred to a good account of the bird 
from recent observation in Scotland by Mr. Robert 
Gray, of Glasgow, in his lately published work 
the ‘ Birds of the West of Scotland,’ pp. 227-230. 
The Gaelic name for this bird is ‘‘ Cabar Coille,” 
whence the English “ Capercaillie” is doubtless 
derived. 
BLACK GROUSE. Tetrao tetriz, Linneus. 
Resident in Scotland and in some parts of England, 
nesting occasionally in Cornwall, Devon, Somerset, 
Dorset, Hants, Sussex, Surrey, Berks, Worcester, 
Shropshire, Staffordshire, Radnorshire, Cheshire, 
Lancashire, and Yorkshiref. To this list may be 
* Graves, in his ‘ British Ornithology ’ (1821), assigns a much later 
date than this to its extinction, observing that one was killed near 
Fort William in 1815, and another near Borrowstoneness in 1819. 
+ A. G. More, in ‘ The Ibis,’ 1865, p. 426. 
