202 Recently published Ornithological Works. 
their young in Britain, apparently for the first. time. Among 
these are Columba tympanistria (Dr. Butler), Tachyphonus 
melaleucus (Mr. Teschemaker), pl., Sycalis arvensis (Mr. Seth- 
Smith), and Paleornis magnirostris (Mr. Boughton-Leigh), 
while further information is given with regard to the nesting 
of other forms. 
Mr. Newman discusses Turtur decaocta (pl.), and pro- 
poses to separate the Burmese race as 7. d. xanthocyclus ; 
Mr. Meade-Waldo gives his experiences with regard to birds 
on the yacht ‘ Valhalla’ (pl.) ; Dr. Butler writes on hybrid 
Ploceide (col. pl.) and various Passerine forms ; Mr. Astley 
on the food of Nightingales; Mr. Collingwood Ingram on 
the breeding of Humming-birds ; the Duchess of Bedford on 
foreign birds at Woburn; and Mrs. Johnstone on Tricho- 
glossus johnstonie. 
5. Berlepsch and Stolzmann on Peruvian Birds. 
[Rapport sur les nouvelles collections ornithologiques faites au Pérou 
par M. Jean Kalinowski. Par Hans Graf von Berlepsch et Jean Stolz- 
mann. Ornis, xill. pp. 65-133 (1906). | 
In this article the authors continue their account of the 
extensive collections made in Peru from 1894 to 1899 by 
Mr. Kalinowski*. After an itinerary, in which the various 
localities explored by that assiduous collector are described, 
it is recorded that at Cadeua, in the province of Cuzco, m 
July 1899 M. Kalinowski was shot at by an Italian settler 
without any provocation and was severely wounded. He was, 
however, taken care of by some kind Samaritans (English, 
American, and French), and after a long illness restored to 
health, after which he returned to his farm at Cadena. 
The birds collected by M. Kalinowski are treated in five 
sections, according to their localities :— 
(1) Those from the Department of Ayacucho, Western 
Peru, 32 species ; (2) those from Santa Ana, in the Province 
of La Convencion, Central Hast Peru, 133 species ; (3) those 
from the northern part of the Department of Cuzco 
* See Berl. et Stolzm., P.Z.S, 1896, p. 322; and ‘ The Ibis,’ 1901, 
pp. 716-719. 
