6 BIRDS OF DAM AHA LAND. 



rocks ; but I cannot specify an instance of its occurrence 

 to the northward of the Orange River. It is at once a 

 friend and a foe to the farmer, as, though it occasionally 

 devours the young lambs and kids, it is said to warn 

 the Boer of another enemy, the leopard, to which it 

 attracts notice by its piercing cries and by circling over 

 the spot where the intruder has appeared. It generally 

 selects some projecting inaccessible ledge, on which it 

 constructs a large eyrie composed of sticks. The egg is 

 nearly oval and of a whitish colour, sparsely spotted with 

 brown, more especially towards the thicker end; its 

 length is 3" 8'", and breadth 2" 7'". 



[The identification of this Eagle rests on Mr. Andersson's 

 authority, as his collection did not contain an example of it. 

 ED.] 



8. Aquila nasvioides, Cuv. Tawny Eagle. 



Aquila ntevioides, Cuvier's Regne An. ed. 2, vol. i. p. 326. 



Falco belisarius, Levaillant jeune, in Expl. de^l'Algerie, Ois. pi. 2 



(adult in worn plumage). 

 Aquila ncevioides, Lord Lilford in Ibis, 1865, pi. 5 (adult newly 



moulted, and young in pale plumage). 

 Aquila mogilnik, Alleon in Rev. de Zool. 1866, pi. 20 (young in dark 



plumage). 



Aquila senegalla, Layard s Cat. No. 11. 



Aquila ncevioides, Chapman's Travels in S. Afr., App. p. 389. 

 Elwes & Buckley in Ibis, 1870, p. 67. 



The Tawny Eagle is not uncommon in Damara Land 

 and Great Namaqua Land. It perches usually on the 

 topmost branches of lofty trees, often remaining station- 

 ary for hours together ; it builds on the top of high and 

 generally of inaccessible trees, and constructs a large 

 nest of dry sticks. It is very destructive to the young 



