CONTENTS. 1X 
ALPHABETICAL LIST OF SUBJECTS. 
Acanthias vulgaris, 25 
Acanthiza chrysorrhea, 37 
Accentor modularis, 66 
Acherontia lachesis, 264 
Acipenser sturio, 23 
Acridium egyptium, 116 
Acrocephalus aquaticus, 467; palus- 
tris, 137 
Aigialitis cantiaca, 111; hiaticola, 
107, 141, 164, 352 
Aix galericulata, 73; sponsa, 33, 73, 
158 
Africa—Rhynchota and their para- 
sites, 193; Penguins and Seals, 
213; Chelifer, 77, 159, 193 
Agrianome gemella, 193 
Alario alario, 197 
Alauda arvensis, 164 
Alcedo ispida, 394 
Alcippe lampas, 45 
Alopecias vulpes, 24, 104 
Alytes obstetricans, 247 
Ammodytes lanceolatus, 14; tobi- 
anus, 14 
Ammophila sabulosa, 385 
Anarrhichas lupus, 443 
Anas albifrens, 157; boscas, 67, 156, 
246; brachyrhynchus, 157 
Anguilla vulgaris, 22 
Animals, prices of, 281,870; marine, | 
perforations of, 41 
Anomia ephippium, 42 
Anoplocnemis curvipes (fig.), 194 
Anser brachyrhynchus, 72; segetum, 
72 
Anthus pratensis, 66, 164; richardi, | 
32; trivialis, 31, 66 
Ants from a social and theosophical 
standpoint, Mr. W. F. Kirby on, 88 
Aphrodite aculeata, 470 
Apodemus sylvaticus, 462, 463 
Aquila chrysaétus, 405; imperialis, 
402; maculata, 131 
Arctic Whaling Voyage of 1907, notes 
on, 61 
Ardea alba, 471; cinerea, 108, 352 
Ardetta minuta, 157 
Armadillidium album, 152; nasatum, 
154 
Armadillo, Hairy, notes on, 342, 392 
Arvicola amphibius, 190 


Asio accipitrinus, 467 
Athene noctua, 113 
Atherina presbyter, 14 
Auk, Little, captured alive near Yar- 
mouth, 114; taken near Yarmouth 
in 1902, 134,—fig., 133 
Avignon, notes at, 174 
Bacillus diptheriz columbarum, 76 
Badger in Norfolk, 426 
Balenoptera musculus, 98 
Barbastella barbastellus, 391, 411, 464 
Bat, Barbastelle, in Hertfordshire, 
391,—at Jersey, 464; Great Horse- 
shoe, 464 
Batrachians of Wales and Ireland, 
828, 454 
Bean, Jumping, 353 
Beberia, 58 
Belenois taprobana, 262 
Belone vulgaris, 14 
Bernicla nigricans, 124 
Bird-names, some old local, 431, 470 
Birds of Graakallen Mountain, Nor- 
way, 64,—North Kent, 106,— 
Staines district, 187,—Ravenglass 
Gullery, 161,—Ternery at Wells- 
by-the-Sea, 861; migration of, 
106, 122, 129, 180, 429, 431,—still 
a mystery, 106; sharing same 
nest, 143; sexual selection in, 191; 
parental instinct in, 241; some 
rare Kentish, 272; which do not 
usually perch, 272; seen during a 
cruise to the Hast, 262; ringed, 
352; British, feeding habits of, 
356; Shore, migratory movements 
of, 360 
Blackbird at Avignon, 174; irregular 
appearance of, 312 
Blackeap at Avignon, 174, 176 
Blattide, 116 
Blennius pholis, 104 
Bombus terrestris, 386 
Bonellia, 44 
Booxs NovriceD :— 
Final Natural History Essays, by 
Graham Renshaw, 35 
How to Sex Cage-Birds, British 
and Foreign, by A. G. Butler, 
36 
