462 



1. Kotaglierry, IStli March {Miss Hume Coll. 

 Cockburn) . 



3. Kotagheny, 13th March {Miss 



Cockburn) . 

 1. Ceylon (^. L. Layard). 

 1. Ceylon. 



4. Lunugalla, Ceylon, March {A, L. 



Sutler). 

 3. Pegu, 27th Jan. (E. W. Oates). 

 ]. Pegu, 2nd Feb. {E W. 0.). 

 1. Pegu, 16th Feb. {E. W. O.). 



1. Pegu, 16th March {E. W. 0.). 



2. Pegu, 17th iMarch (E. W. 0.). 



5. Chin-kiang, E. China, 24th.April. 

 5. Chin-kiang, 24th April. 



3. Chin-kiang, 15th May. 



4. Ishigaki I., S. Loochoo Group, 



28th April. 



Hume Coll. 



Salvin-Grodman Coll. 

 E. L. Layard, Esq. [P.]. 

 Crowley Bequest. 



Oates Coll. 

 Oates Coll. 

 Oates Coll. 

 Oates Coll. 

 Seebohm Coll. 

 .r. D. La Touche, Esq. [0. 

 .7. D. La Touche, Esq. [C. 

 J. D. La Touche, Esq. LC._ 

 W. lladcliff'e Saunders, Esq. 

 [P.]. 



Corvus japonensis, Bonap. 



Corone japonensis, Sharpe, Cat. Birds B. M. iii. p. 41 (1877). 



CorFus macrorhyuchos japonensis, Hartert, Vdff. pal. Faun. i. p. 12 



(1902). 

 Corvus japonensis, Sharpe, liandA. v, p. 594 (1909) ; Nehrh. Kat. Eier- 



samml. p. 358 (1910). 



Eggs of the Japanese Crow are similar to those of C. cora.v. 

 They vary in length from 1-7 to 1'78, and in breadth from 

 1-28 to 1-3. 



2. Qoteniba, Hondo, Japan, 26th W. Radcliffe Saunders, Esq. 



April. [P.]. 



3. Sagami, Tokaido, S. Hondo, 16th W. Radcliffe Saunders, Esq. 



May. [P.]. 



Corvus philippinus, Bonap. 

 (Plate XXI. figs. 9 & 10.) 



Corone philippina, Sharpe, Cat. Birds B. M. iii. p. 42 (1877) ; McGregor , 



Man. Pkilipp. B. ii. p. 722 (1909). 

 Corvus philippinus, Ogtlvie-Grant ^ Whitehead, Ibis, 1898, p. 234 ; 



Sharpe, Handel, v. p. 594 (1909) ; Nehrk. Kat. Eiersamml. p. 358 



(1910). 



Five eggs of the Philippine Crow are of a broad oval shape, 

 slightly compressed at the smaller end, and distinctly glossy. 

 In three specimens, from Marinduque the ground is greenish- 

 ■white, densely and uniformly mottled and spotted all over with 

 umber-brown. In the other two the ground is pale bluish- 

 white, one being mottled all over with pale umber-brown, while the 

 other is almost devoid of markings except towards the smaller end, 



