Birds. 1 5 | 



in conjunction with Colonel H. W. Feilden and Colonel E, A. B tier be 

 made a good collection of birds and eggs, an account of which, 

 excellent field-notes by all three officers, was j ublished in the " 

 for 1882. 



A visit to Teneriffe in the spring of 1887 resulted in the pnbli 

 of some notes on the birds of that island (cf. " [bis," I - 

 1888, pp. 7:5-83). 



Capt Savile Reid has also assisted in the preparation of the third 

 fourth volumes of the " Catalogue of Birds' Eggs in the Briti ; i Museum,*' 

 since Mr. E. W. Oates, owing to ill-health, was compelled b • 



the task. 



Reijkavik Museum, Iceland. 



4 young Iceland Falcons. Presented. 11902. 1 9 L-2; L902 

 8.1,1-2.] 



Reiser (Dr. Oth mar). 



1G birds from Bosnia. Presented [1902.8.10,1 L6.] 

 Dr. Reiser is the well-known authority on the ornithology of the 

 Balkans, and is Director of the Museum at Sarajevo II 



"Ornis Balcanica" and other kindred essay s are the standard authority 

 on the Avifauna of this portion of Europe. He 1ms also carried oui 

 successful expedition to Southern Brazil (cf. " Ibis," 1903, pp. 140, I ; I ■ 



Rendall (Dr. Percy). 



23 birds, nests and eggs, from Bathurst, River Gambia. Presented. 

 [92. 1. 9, 1-23.] 



Dr. Rendall has travelled in the Zambesi regioD, where he d 

 a remarkable species of Weaver-Finch, which was named 6erintu 

 rmddUi by Canon Tristram, and afterwards mad.' the type 

 genus, Anomalospiza, by Captain Shelley (Bull. B.O.C., xii'., p. 30, 1901 •. 



Reynolds (H.). 



34 birds from Liberia. Purchased. [1905.5.28, L-34.] 

 Cf. Chubb, P.Z.S., 1905, pp. 205-210. 



Ricardo (Miss). 



8 hirds from Canada. Presented. [1900. 12. 30, 1-8.] 



Richards (Lieut.). 



Sec TbibtbaMj ( 'anon. 



Richardson (Sir Joiim. 



18 specimens from Port Bssington. Presented. [51.3.7, I 



roephila personctfa and Stictoptera anntUosa, two 

 Weaver-Finches, were new to the collection. 



Was naturalist to Sir John Franklin's Polar Expedition in L819, 

 till L822 lie was engaged in various explorations in Arctic \ 



Of. Diet Nat Biogr., xlviii., p. 236. 



Rickard (J. 0.). 



-l specimens from Porl Elizabeth. 8. Af- [87. 1. 



28, I 21.] 



sard was a correspondenl oi 



of birds from East London ai I I' I 

 nam.' occurs frequently in my edition 



