VOL. VII.] REVIEW. 61 



west German Stork migrating to south-western instead of 

 south-eastern Europe had been recorded {cf. Vol. IV., p. 359), 

 but now there are both Dutch and west German south- 

 easterly migrating cases, and one case of a Stork migrating 

 from Freiburg to Basses-Pyrenees ; there is evidently no 

 sharp boundary between the breeding-areas of birds following 

 these divergent routes. The point is an important one. 



Other records are : Three Hooded Crows are recorded 

 after intervals of over six years ; a number of Black-headed 

 Gull records, including the already famous Barbados case 

 {cf. Vol. v., p. 317), and recoveries from England, Hungary, 

 Croatia, Switzerland and (marked at Munich) Tunis — one 

 of the S^\'iss cases being of a Rossitten-bred bird at Zurich 

 in June two years later (breeding ?) ; two Lesser Black- 

 backed Gulls caught and marked at E-ossitten in autumn 

 were reported, five and three weeks later respectively, from 

 Saxony and Servia ; a young Woodcock marked near St. 

 Petersburg on July 3rd, 1911, was shot on December 12th, 

 1911, in Dept. Gers, south-western France ; a Wood-Pigeon 

 marked in the nest at Dresden was recovered five months 

 later in Dept. Lot-et-Garonne, south-western France ; a 

 Rough-legged Buzzard marked in the nest in July in northern 

 Swedish Lapland was shot four and a half months later near- 

 Vienna ; an Eagle {A. pomarina) marked in Russian Kurland, 

 m July, was shot two months after in southern Bulgaria. 



A discussion of certain movements of the Red-footed 

 Falcon concludes the Report. A.L.T.. 



