AVES. 
67 
pp. 392, tabb. 15), a most important work for the ortiithbl6gist, 
since it gives a complete account of the avifauna of South-Eastern 
Siberia, a region of which so little was before known, as it was 
left almost untouched by previous explorers. (Cf, Ibis, 1866, 
pp. 118, 119.) 
Salvador!, Tommaso. Katalog derVdgel Sardiniens mit Noten 
u. Beobachtungen. Aus dem Italienischen iibertragen 
durch Dr. Carl Bolle. Journ. fiir Orn. 1865, pp. 45-67, 
128-144, 271-288, 314-326. 
A German translation of the work we noticed last year 
(Zool. Record, i. pp. 44, 45) . Another article is required to com- 
plete the task ; this will probably appear in the sixth Heft of the 
^ J ournaV which has not yet reached uSi 
Saxby, Henry L. Catalogue of the Birds of Shetland. Natu- 
ralist, ii. pp. 121-126, 142-146, 158-162. 
One hundred and seventy-four species are enumerated, of 
which fifty seem to be inhabitants. ' Some appear to be intro- 
duced on very slight authority. 
. Ornithological Notes from Shetland. Zoologist, pp. 9401 
-9405, 9435-9439, 9484-9489, 9518-9526, 9566-9572, 
9587-9591, 9760-9772. 
This series of papers, in continuation of that we noticed last 
year (Zool. Record, i. p. 45), contains a mass of facts, some of 
them highly interesting, but far too numerous to specify, 
ScLATER, P. L. A collection of Bird-skins from Japan. ^ Proc. 
Zool. Soc. 1865, p. 618. 
Twenty species enumerated, in addition to those mentioned 
by Capt. Blakiston (Ibis, 1862, pp. 309-333, and 1863, pp. 97- 
100), but some of them are not precisely determined. 
Seidensacher, Eduard. Die Vogel von Cilli. Mitth. naturw. 
Ver. Steiermark, 1864, 34 pp. 
Two hundred and foui* species, to which two others are added 
by the author in manuscript, are enumerated. None seem to 
be of any great rarity, but many of interest, and the whole 
article contains much useful information respecting the orni- 
thology of Styria. 
SuNDEVALL, C. J. Svenska Foglarna. Parts XVI. and XVII. 
Stockholm : 1865. Oblong 4to. 
These contain half-sheets 45 to 52, and plates Ixi. to Ixviii* 
The letterpress continues to give an account of the birds of 
prey. 
Tristram, H. B, On the Ornithology of Palestine. Part I., 
F 2 
