PALLID THRUSH. 
. Turdus pallidus, Pail. 
Le Merle blafard. 
Tue claim of this bird to a place in the Fauna of Europe, says M. Temminck, (from whom we received 
the specimen from which our figure was taken,) is based on the capture of three individuals, one of which was 
taken in September 1823, near Herzberg in Saxony. It is one of the many discoveries made by Pallas, whose 
merits as a naturalist are too well known to require our praise. 
Like the Turdus Stbericus this bird is extremely common in Japan, whence, through the kindness of 
M. Temminck, we have received several examples: it is also spread over the whole of Siberia, and occasionally 
passes the boundary line and visits the centre of Europe. 
Of its habits, manners, and nidification nothing is known, but in these respects it doubtless closely resem- 
bles the other members of the genus. 
The whole of the upper surface is of an olive brown; ear-coverts brown with a faint line of white down the 
centre of each feather; tips of the wing-coverts yellowish, forming a band across the wing; sides of the 
throat pale reddish brown blotched with white; chest and flanks pale reddish brown, the former ornamented 
with numerous spots of a darker tint; throat, centre of the abdomen, and under tail-coverts white; two 
outer tail-feathers largely tipped with whitish on their inner web; bill and feet light brown. 
We possess other specimens in which the spots on the breast are wanting, and the white of the throat and 
abdomen is less pure; but whether this difference is occasioned by sex or age we are unable to determine. 
We have figured the bird in both states of the natural size. 
