3232 THE ZooLoGist—SEPTEMBER, 1872. 
county or place in the United Kingdom, in which the offender shall 
be apprehended or be in custody, in the same manner in all respects 
as if they had been actually committed in that county or place; 
and in any information or conviction for any such offence, the 
offence may be averred to have been committed “ on the high seas,” 
and in Scotland any offence committed against this Act on the sea- 
coast, or at sea beyond the ordinary jurisdiction of any sheriff or 
justice of the peace, shall be held to have been committed in any 
county abutting on such sea-coast, or adjoining such sea, and may 
be tried and punished accordingly. 
5. Where any offence under this Act is committed in or upon any 
waters forming the boundary between any two counties, districts of 
quarter sessions or petty sessions, such offence may be prosecuted 
before any justice or justices of the peace or sheriff in either of 
such counties or districts. 
Schedule.—Avocet, bittern, blackcap, chiffchaff, coot, creeper, 
crossbill, cuckoo, curlew, dotterel, dunbird, dunlin, flycatcher, 
godwit, goldencrested wren, goldfinch, greenshank, hawfinch or 
grosbeak, hedgesparrow, kingfisher, landrail, lapwing, mallard, 
martin, moor (or water) hen, nightingale, nightjar, nuthatch, owl, 
oxbird, peewit, phalarope, pipit, plover, plover’s-page, pochard, 
purre, quail, redpoll, redshank, redstart, robin redbreast, ruff and 
reeve, sanderling, sand grouse, sandpiper, sealark, shoveller, siskin, 
snipe, spoonbill, stint, stone curlew, stonechat, stonehatch, summer 
snipe, swallow, swan, swift, teal, thicknee, titmouse (longtailed), 
titmouse (bearded), wagtail, warbler (Dartford), warbler (reed), 
warbler (sedge), whaup, wheatear, whinchat, whimbrel,. wigeon, 
woodcock, wild duck, wood lark, woodpecker, wood wren, wren, 
wryneck. 
Another Rhinoceros at the Zoological Gardens.—In the May number 
of the ‘ Zoologist’ (S. 8. 3057) I recorded the arrival of a rhinoceros at the 
Zoological Gardens. It was reported to have been captured at Chittagong, 
and to be identical with a species described by Sir Stamford Raffles under 
the name of “ Rhinoceros Sumatranus,” and was therefore announced under 
that name in the ‘ Zoologist.’ It now appears that the name was given 
prematurely, that it is a species previously unknown to Science, and un- 
named, and it is proposed to call it ‘‘ Rhinoceros lasiotis,” on account, 
I presume, of the fringe of long hairs on the margin of its ears. During 
the last fortnight another hairy rhinoceros has arrived from the East, and 
