FLYCATCHERS. 99 
Fam. MUS CLOCA PID A, 
RED-BREASTED FLYCATCHER. Muscicapa parva, 
Bechstein. 
Hab. North-western Asia; India; Eastern Europe. ' 
One, Constantine, near Falmouth, 24th Jan. 1863: Rodd, 
Zoologist, 1863, p. 8444. 
One, Scilly, October 1863: Rodd, op. cit. p.11; G. R. Gray, 
Ann. Mag. Nat. Hist. (3rd series), xi. p. 229. 
One, Scilly, 5th Nov. 1865: Rodd, List Brit. Birds, 2nded. p.11. 
RED-EYED FLYCATCHER. Vireosylvia olivacea(Vieillot). 
Hab. United States of North America, asfar south as Bogota. 
Two taken bya bird-catcher, Chellaston, near Derby, May 1859: 
Sir Oswald Mosley, Nat. Hist. Tutbury (1863), p. 385, pl.6 ; 
Zoologist, 1864, p. 8965. The male, which was preserved, is 
in the collection of Mr. Edwin Brown, of Burton-on-Trent. 
Fam. PETROCINCLID. 
ROCK THRUSH. Petrocincla saxatilis (Gmelin). 
Hab. Central Europe. 
One, Thorfield, near Royston, 19th May, 1843: Yarrell, Hist. 
Birds, i. p. 245. 
One, Robin Hood’s Bay, Yorkshire, 1856: Morris, Naturalist, 
1856, p. 21. 
One or more reported to have been seen and shot at Fresh- 
water, Isle of Wight (Zoologist, 1867, pp. 823, 913)—but 
erroneously so, as I am informed by Mr. Bond, who in- 
vestigated the circumstances”*. 
* The Blue Thrush, Petrocossyphus cyaneus, is said to have been 
killed in the co. Meath in November 1866 (Zoologist, 1870, p. 2019); 
but Messrs. Sharpe and Dresser, who have inquired into the cireum- 
stance (Birds of Europe), have rejected its claims to be included in 
the list of British Birds. 
H 2 
