Page 104. Add:— 
GEOCICHLA STIERLINGI, Reichenow. 
STIERLING'S GROUND-THRUSH. 
Geocichla litsitsirupa stierlingi, Reichenow, Orn. МВ. viii. p. 5 (1900). 
G. similis G. litsitsirupe, sed pectore rufescenti-flavo lavato, et subalaribus saturatius cinnamomeis distinguenda, 
Tuts is a form of G. litsitsirupa, which inhabits South Africa below the Zambesi, and the occurrence 
of G. stierlingi at Iringa in Uhehe, German East Africa, is interesting enough, though it does not 
seem to be a very distinct species. It is distinguished from the typical G. litsitsirupa by its shorter 
bill, by its breast being more strongly washed with yellowish-red, and by the darker tone of the 
yellowish-red under wing-coverts. Тһе bill is black, with the lower mandible yellowish at the base 
and blackish at the Пр; the feet yellowish-red. 
Page 180. Add — 
TURDUS COBURNI, Sharpe. 
ICELAND REDWING. 
Turdus coburni, Sharpe, Bull. B. O. C. xii. p. 28 (1901). 
Turdus iliacus coburni, Haase, Orn. MB. x. p. 79 (1902). 
T. similis T. iliaco, sed suprà pallidè grisescens, striolis pectoralibus pallidè griseis, minimè nigris, et hypochondriis 
pallidé cinnamomeis, minimé ferrugineis, distinguendus. 
"Ме. Е. Сововх, a well-known naturalist of Birmingham, visited the north of Iceland in 1899, and 
found there nesting many interesting species of birds, such as the American Wigeon (Mareca 
americana). Amongst others he procured three specimens of a Redwing which differed so much 
in the pale colour of the breast-stripes and the pale cinnamon flanks, that I have described them as a 
distinct species. Whether this Redwing is resident in Iceland all the year, or whether it migrates, 
we have as yet no information, but it is probably the species which nests in the Faroes, as recorded 
by Mr. Knud Andersen, near Thórshavn (Orn. МВ. p. 79). Dr. Haase (1. с.) has drawn attention to 
the migratory habits of Turdus iliacus in the Faroes, and has given some interesting notes on the 
subject (2. c. pp. 79, 80). 
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