Catalogue of Birds found in Europe and America. 413 
LAR IDA:—continued. 
America. 
from a little north of Huanchacho, 
on the coast of Peru, and it has once 
oecurred at the Bermudas. 
Hydrochelidon hybrida. 
One in the British Museum from Bar- 
badoes, presented by Sir Robert 
Schomberg. (Howard Saunders.) 
Hydrochelidon leucoptera. 
One occurred in Wisconsin, United 
States. (Dr. Coues, Bull. Nutt. Orn. 
Club, July, 1878, p. 141.) 
Europe. 
Two in Munster Land (Dr. Altun); one 
on the coast of Holstein (Hager) ; one 
on the coast of Holland, and one in 
Picardy (Dr. Selys.) 
One at Rouen and one at Dunkirk. 
(Degland and Gerbe.) 
According to Howard Saunders, it is not 
rare in Plover Bay, Eastern Siberia 
(Dall); and it breeds on the tundras 
of the Taimyr, north of 74° (Mid- 
dendorff); and Dr. Bureau has an 
adult, with full black hood, taken on 
the coast of Brittany, August 25, 
1872. 
Hydrochelidon kybrida.* Pall. (Whis- 
kered Tern.) 
From the extreme West of Europe to 
the coast of China, and the Island of 
Formosa. Throughout the Malayan 
region, down to Australia (chiefly 
Queensland), Abundant in Western 
and Southern Africa. (Howard 
Saunders, P.Z.S., 1876, p. 638.) 
According to Mr. Harting’s handbook, 
one occurred at Lyme Regis, Dorset- 
shire, August, 1836. (Yarrell, Brit. 
Birds, Vol. III., p. 517.) 
One in Dublin Bay, Sept., 1839. 
(Thompson, Zool., 1847, p. 1878.) 
One at Hickling Broad, Norfolk, 17th 
June, 1847. (Gurney and Fisher, 
Zool., 1847, p. 1820.) 
One near Trescoe Abbey, Cornwall. 
August, 1851. (Rodd, Zool., 1851, 
p. 3280.) 
And one near Plymouth, May,-1865. 
(Gatcombe, Zool., 1865, p. 9629.) 
Hydrochelidon leucoptera.* 
(White-winged Tern.) 
Abundant in Southern and South- 
Eastern Europe, and a_ straggler 
further north. 
Ranges throughout Siberia and China, 
and reaches the Transvaal, Damara- 
land, and Abyssinia ; it also occurs in 
Australia and New Zealand. (Howard 
Saunders.) 
According to Mr. Harting, it is occa- 
sional in the British Isles, and in 
Treland one was killed on the Shannon 
in 1841 (M‘Coy, Ann. Nat. Hist., Vol. 
XVes) Pp.) 2M) on saceordine to 
Thompson, not on the Shannon, but 
on the Liffey, in October, 1841. 
One in Dublin Bay. (Thomp. Nat. 
Hist. Ireland, Birds, Vol. III., p. 307.) 
Mr. Dresser says it has occurred in 
North Germany, Denmark, and 
Sweden.) 
Schinz 
