22 
CATALOGUE. 
turous hawk is occasionally trodden under the feet of the cattle. 
When the quarry is a partridge or a florikin, the standing-gait is 
used, as described under the head of the Shaheen. Luggurs as well 
as Shaheens are always caught after they have left the nest and have 
had some instruction by their parents, the native falconers consider- 
ing them better than when taken from the nest, contrary, I believe, 
to the opinion of our English Adam Woodcocks. The Luggur ap- 
pears to inhabit the whole continent of India." — (Jerdon, 111. Ind. 
Orn.) 
22. FALCO LANARIUS, Linn. 
Talco lanarius. Linn. S. JV. I. p. 129. Lath., Hist. I. 
p. 84. G:'B. Gray, Gen. of Birds, 1. p. 19 ; Cat. B. 
Brit. Mus.p. 52. Hodgs., Cat. B. Nep.p. 43. 
Talco cherrug, G. and H., III. Ind. Zool. II. t. 25. 
Palco milvipes, Hodgs. Gray, Zool. Misc. (1844),^. 81. 
Falco sacer, Schleg. apud Bonap., G. G. Av. p. 24. 
The Lanner Falcon, Lath. 
a. Nepal. Presented by B. H. Hodgson, Esq. 
23. FALCO CERVICALIS, Licht. 
Ealco cervicalis, Licht. Kaup, Mus. Sench, (1845), p. 257. 
G. B. Gray, Gen. of Birds, I. p. 19; Cat. B. Brit. 
Mus. p. 52. Bonap., C. G. Av. p. 24. 
Ealco biarmicus, Temm., Fl. Col. 324. 
Ealco chiqueroides. Smith, S. Afr. Quart. Journ. (1830). 
The Double-bearded Ealcon. 
Ta Amoea Alaka (" principal of the birds of prey ")» 
Abyssinia, Both. 
A. B. Abyssinia. From Sir W. Harris's Collection. 
" Bears the above-given appellation from its habit of fighting con- 
tinually (even with its superiors in bulk) about their prey." — (Dr. 
Eoth's MS. Eeport.) 
Genus Hypotriorchis, Bote, Isis (1826), jt?. 976. 
^SALON, Xaup, Nat. Syst. p. 40 (1829). 
Dendeofalco, Gray, List Gen. B. (1840),^. 3. 
24. HYPOTRIORCHIS SEVERUS, Horsf. Sp. 
Ealco severus, Horsf, Linn. Trans. XIII. p. 135. 
