254 Messrs. Ogilvie-Grant and La Touche on 
XI.—On the Birds of the Island of Formosa.—Part I1.* 
By W. R. Oeiiviz-GRrant and J. D. D. La Toucnue. 
Tur names of all the speeies of birds of which specimens 
were procured by Mr. Goodfellow are marked with an 
asterisk (*). Those obtained by Swinhoe and other collec- 
tors, and of which specimens are to be found in the British 
Museum or Liverpool Museum (Tristram Collection), are 
marked with a dagger (+). Some few species, which bear 
no mark, are included on the authority of Swinhoe, but of 
these no specimens have been examined, and possibly none 
were collected by him. 
STRIGIDA. 
129. +Srrix canpipa Tickell. 
Strix pithecops Swinh. Ibis, 1866, p. 396. 
Strix candida Swinh. P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 344; Sharpe, Cat. 
Birds B. M. ii. p. 308 (1875) ; Tristram, Cat. of Birds, p. 68 
(1889). 
Swinhoe procured examples of the Barn-Owl from the 
interior of South-west Formosa. 
BuBonip#. 
130. *Scorps HAMBROECKI (Swinh.). 
Scops japonicus Swinh. (nec Schleg.) Ibis, 1865, p. 348 ; 
1866, p. 307. 
Ephialtes hambroeckt Swinh. Ann. & Mag. N. H. (4) vi. 
p. 153 (1870). 
Lempijius hambroecki Swinh. P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 344. 
Scops hambroecki Sharpe, Cat. Birds B. M. i. p. 64 (1875); 
Seebohm, Ibis, 1895, p. 213; La Touche, t. c. pp. 325, 336. 
a. 9. Racu Racu Mts., 7000 ft., Jan. 1906. 
b. 2. Ho Ho Mt., 5000 ft., March 1906. 
The Scops Owl from Mount Ho Ho is somewhat more 
rufous than that from the Racu Racu Mountains. The 
latter agrees exactly with Dr. Sharpe’s careful description of 
* Concluded from p. 198. 
