﻿ANALYSIS 
  OF 
  THE 
  MAMMALIAN 
  AND 
  AVIAN 
  FAUNA. 
  295 
  

  

  area; 
  others 
  may 
  not 
  even 
  be 
  regular 
  migrants, 
  but 
  irregular 
  or 
  

   spasmodic, 
  or 
  even 
  only 
  occasional 
  visitants. 
  

  

  (Blackcap.) 
  (Tufted 
  Duck.) 
  Sandwich 
  Tern. 
  5 
  

  

  (Pied 
  Flycatcher.) 
  1 
  (Common 
  Scoter.) 
  4 
  Roseate 
  Tern. 
  

  

  (Short^eared 
  Owl.) 
  2 
  (Pallas' 
  Sand 
  Grouse.) 
  (Richardson's 
  Skua.) 
  6 
  

   (Honey 
  Buzzard.) 
  3 
  

  

  OF 
  DOUBTFUL 
  RECORD. 
  

  

  Black 
  Redstart. 
  

   Lesser 
  Whitethroat. 
  

   Garden 
  Warbler. 
  

   Richard's 
  Pipit. 
  

   Red-backed 
  Shrike. 
  

   White-winged 
  Crossbill. 
  

   Wood 
  Lark. 
  

   Lesser 
  Spotted 
  Wood- 
  

   pecker. 
  

  

  [Square 
  brackets 
  in 
  text.] 
  

  

  Bee 
  Eater. 
  7 
  

   Little 
  Owl. 
  

   Marsh 
  Harrier. 
  

   Montagu's 
  Harrier. 
  8 
  

   Glossy 
  Ibis. 
  

   Spoonbill. 
  

  

  Hooded 
  Merganser. 
  

   Black-winged 
  Stilt. 
  

   Red-breasted 
  Snipe. 
  

  

  Temminck's 
  Stint. 
  

   Wood 
  Sandpiper." 
  

   Black 
  Tern. 
  

   Caspian 
  Tern. 
  

   Sabine's 
  Gull. 
  

   Bonaparte's 
  Gull. 
  

   Great 
  Skua. 
  

   Great 
  Shearwater. 
  

   Dusky 
  Shearwater. 
  

  

  SUMMARY. 
  

  

  N.B. 
  — 
  Bracketed 
  entries 
  are 
  not 
  counted 
  in 
  the 
  total 
  in 
  the 
  

   following 
  Summary, 
  as 
  they 
  will 
  have 
  been 
  included 
  in 
  those 
  lists 
  

   where 
  they 
  appear 
  unbracketed. 
  

  

  1 
  Breeds 
  in 
  one 
  locality 
  only. 
  

  

  2 
  May 
  once 
  have 
  nested 
  regularly, 
  but 
  we 
  have 
  no 
  information. 
  

  

  3 
  Nested 
  on 
  one 
  occasion. 
  

  

  4 
  In 
  one 
  locality 
  only. 
  

  

  8 
  On 
  September 
  11th, 
  1895, 
  Brown 
  of 
  Forres 
  saw 
  three 
  Sandwich 
  Terns 
  at 
  the 
  

   shore 
  near 
  that 
  town. 
  These 
  were 
  probably 
  on 
  their 
  return 
  journey 
  southward. 
  

   Hitherto 
  this 
  has 
  been 
  a 
  very 
  unusual 
  sight. 
  

  

  6 
  One 
  pair 
  in 
  one 
  locality 
  only. 
  

  

  7 
  Square 
  brackets 
  omitted 
  in 
  text. 
  

  

  8 
  At 
  p. 
  45 
  of 
  vol. 
  ii. 
  1 
  (see 
  our 
  remarks 
  in 
  the 
  Fauna 
  of 
  Sutherland 
  and 
  Caithness)' 
  

   these 
  really 
  refer 
  to 
  the 
  Marsh 
  Harrier. 
  

  

  