' 1920 ] Recent Literature. 625 



Dr. Ticehurst described Crateropus terricolor sindianus (p. 15G) from 

 Karachi, Sind, and Prima flaviventris sindianus (p. 157) from Sukker, 

 Sind. 



British Birds. XIV, No. 1. June, 1920. 



Notes on Slavonian Grebe. By A. D. DuBois. -^Reprinted from 'The 

 Auk' XXXVI. 



Manx Ornithological Notes. By P. G. Ralph. 



Notes on the Harlequin Duck. By Charles E. Alford. — On the coasts 

 of British Columbia. 



British Birds. XIV, No. 2. July, 1920. 



Notes on Somersetshire Ravens. By Stanley Lewis. — Detailed obser- 

 vations at a nest site on the cliffs of Cheddar. 



British Birds. XIV, No. 3. August, 1920. 



Bird Tracks in the Snow. By Richard Clapham. — With interesting 

 photographs. 



Notes on a Pair of Bee-eaters in Scotland. By J. Kirke Nash. — The 

 pair actually started nesting when the female was caught by a local gar- 

 dener and died in captivity. 



Avicultural Magazine. (Ill Series) XI, No. 6. June, 1920. 



Birds of Paradise in Captivity. By A. S. LeSouef. — Six species in the 

 Zoological Park at Sydney, Australia. 



Avicultural Magazine. (Ill series) XI, No. 7. July, 1920. 



The Nesting of the Pilot Bird (Pycnoptilus floccosus). By S. A. Law- 

 rence and R. T. Littlejohns. — In Victoria. 



Avicultural Magazine. (Ill Series) XI, No. 8. August, 1920. 



Buff-backed Herons. By J. L. Bonhote. — On Herons in captivity in 

 Egypt. 



The Emu. XIX. Part 4. April, 1920. 



The Rufous Scrub-Bird. (Atrichornis rufescens) in Queensland. A 

 New Subspecies. By H. L. White. — A. r. jacksoni (p. 258), Macpherson 

 Range. 



Haunts of the Rufous Scrub-Bird (Atrichernis rufescens Ramsey) — ■ 

 Discovery of the female on the Macpherson Range, S. E. Queensland. 

 By S. W. Jackson. — This article is a detailed account of the search for 

 the bird described in the preceding paper, but curiously enough the new 

 name is not employed in the title of either which is to say the least con- 

 fusing. No matter what races of the bird may be recognized Mr. Jack- 

 son has presented a most valuable contribution to our knowledge of tins 

 rare type and has illustrated it with some excellent pictures of its wonder- 

 ful environment. There are interesting accounts of other species met 

 with on the trip. 



New Sub-species of Pachycephala olivacea. By H. L. White. — P. o. 

 macphersonianus (p. 273), Macpherson Range, Queensland. 



Field Notes on the Painted Honey-eater. (Entomophila picta.) By 

 J. S. P. Ramsey. 



The Tasmanian and New Zealand Groups. By Robert Hall.- — A rather 

 elaborate discussion of the faunae of these islands and comparison with 

 that of the Australian-Papuan region. 



