PRATINCOLE. GRALLATORES. GLAREOLA. 



213 



COLLARED PRATINCOLE*. 



GLAREOLA TORQUATA. 

 PLATE LXIII. 



Glareola torquata, Meyer, Tasschenb. Deut. 2. 404. 

 Glareole a Collier, Temm. Man. d'Omith. 2. 500. 

 Glareola Austriaca, Lath. Ind. Orn. 2. 753. sp. 1. 



Hirundo Pratincola, Linn. Syst. 345. sp. 12 Gmel. Syst. 1. 695 Bul- 

 lock in Trans. Linn. Soc. 11. 177 

 Glareola, Briss. 5. 141. t. 12. f. 1. 

 Hirundo marina, Raii Syn. 72 Will. 156. 

 La Perdrix de Mer, Buff. Ois. 7- 544. Id. PL Enl. 882. 

 Das Rothfussige Sandhuhn, Bechst, Naturg. Deut. 4. 457. t. 13. 

 Austrian Pratincole, Lath. Syn. 5. 222. t. 85 Mont. Ornith. Diet. Sup. 



with a figure Bullock in Trans. Linn. Soc. 11. 177- 

 Glareola Senegalensis et Nsevia, Gmel. Syst. 1. 695. sp. 1. 2. and 3. v 



Lath. Ind. Orn. 2. 753. and 754, sp. 2. 3. and the varieties Briss. 3. 



147 and 148. 

 Le Perdrix de Mer, La Grise, La Brune, and La Giarole, Buff. Ois. 7- 



544 et 245. 

 Das Braunringige Sandhuhn, und Gefleckte Sandhuhn, Bechst. Naturg. 



Deut. 4. 461. var. A. B. 

 Coromandel, Senegal, Spotted, and other varieties, Lath. Syn. 5. 224 et 



225. 



Old and 

 young of 

 both sex 



sexes. 



Young 

 and other 

 varieties. 



THE Collared Pratincole was first added to the British Rare 

 Fauna by Mr BULLOCK, proprietor of the late London vlsltant * 

 Museum, who, in May 1807, received a specimen that was 

 shot near Ormskirk in Lancashire, and which is now in the 

 celebrated collection of Lord STANLEY. He afterwards, in 

 an excursion to the northern parts of Scotland in 1812, killed 

 another in the island of Unst, the northernmost of the Shet- 

 land group ; and, as the circumstances are interesting, as 



" In consequence of the different station in the system now properly as- 

 signed to this bird, its description has been removed from the letter-press 

 of the Land Birds, in the second edition of that volume ; at the same time, 

 it has not been possible to make a similar arrangement in the volumes of 

 Plates. I must therefore trust to the indulgence of my readers, and hope 

 they will not find much inconvenience in still referring to Part I. for the 

 figure of the Pratincole. 



