ay wre eS Se SS .. 
SUPPLEMENT. 649 
Circus zetcinosus. (Vol. I. p. 143.) 
§ 6001. Two.—Norfolk? From the late Mr. Scales’s Collection, 
1885. 
Inscribed by Mr. Seales “Moor Buzz.” Most likely Norfolk specimens, as he 
would have hardly cared to keep Dutch eggs of what was in old times so common 
a bird in Norfolk. 
Circus swatnsoni. (Vol. I. p. 147.) 
§ 6002. Four.—12 June, 1864. 
From Dr. Cullen, of Kustendje. 
§ 6003. Siz.—16 June, 1864. 
These I bought of Mr.Samuel Stevens, to whom they had been consigned for sale 
by Dr. Cullen. There were some thirty or more eggs, all, if I remember right, 
marked as taken on the same two days and the different nestfuls marked. I chose 
specimens to shew the greatest variation in size and shape. Dr. Cullen had senta 
great many skins of the birds, some of which were marked as cbtaimed on the same 
days as the egzs—and all, I suppose, at or near Kustendje. 
Circus cineracets. (Vol. I. p. 148.) 
§ 6004. One.—East Suffolk, 1 June, 1886. From Mr. Edward 
Bidwell’s Collection, through Mr. Parkin, 1903. 
Mr. Parkin most kindly gave me this egg, which he bought at Mr. Bidwell’s sale, 
23 June, 1903, where it formed part of Lot 17; and Mr. Bidwell afterwards told me 
where he, and some others in his company, had found the nest in tall heather with 
one egg init. He had to go home, but returned a few days after, when there were 
three eggs, which they took. The birds had nested there for several years; but the 
young were always shot. 
Guavcipium passeRINUM. (Vol. I. p. 150.) 
§ 6005. One.—Kolmorden, (Cstergotland, 26 May, 1881. From 
Mr. Dresser, 1902. 
Mr. Dresser wrote that he had this of Herr Ramberg of Gottenburg, and that it 
was taken as above from a nest of six eggs by the head-forester Lundborg 
(lat. 58°). 
§ 6006. One.—St. Gallen, Switzerland. From Mr. Dresser, 1903. 
Received by Mr. Dresser from Herr Reiser, just before he left for Brazil, with 
the information that it was laid in confinement. 
