220 Dalgleish on North American Birds in Europe. 
LXIY. Sterna fuliginosa, Gm. Sooty Tern. 
Great Britain. 1. One, Tutbury,' near Burton-on-Trent. Brown, 
Zool., 1853, p. 3755. In coll, of H. W. Des Vceux. 1853. 
2. One, on the Thames, near Wallingford, Berks. Harting, Field 
Newspaper, 26 June, 1869. (Id., Zool., 1869, p. 1867.) In coll. Mr. 
Franklyn. 21 June, 1869. 
3. One, on the estuary of the Axe, near Axeminster. Selwood, Field 
Newspaper, 17 July, 1869. (Harting, Hand-book Br. B., p. 170, where 
lie regards this as a doubtful occurrence .) ? 
France. 1. One, a male, caught alive on the Arri6ge, near Yerdun. 
Degland and Gerbe, Orn. Eur.. II, p. 462. In Degland coll, in Mus. of 
Lille. 15 June, 1854. 
Germany. 1. One, caught alive at Proedal, near Magdeburg. Nau- 
mann, Yog. Deutsch., XIII, p. 267. ? 
Italy. 1. One, caught in a fishing-net, in the valley of Pinerolo. 
Salvadori, Fauna d’ Italia, Uccelli, p. 282. ? 
LXY. Sterna ansestheta, Scop. Smaller Sooty Tern. 
Great Britain. 1. One, killed on board a light-ship at the mouth of 
the Thames. Saunders, P. Z. S. Lond., Feb., 1877. (Id., Zool., 1877, 
p. 213.) Sept., 1875. 
LXYI. Anous stolidus, Gray. Noddy Tern. 
Great Britain. 1. Two, between Wexford and Dublin. Thompson, 
Trans. Linn. Soc., 1835. (Nat. Hist. Ire., Birds, III, p. 308.) “About 
four years before 1834.” 
2. One, county Dublin. Blake Knox, Zool., 1866, p. 306. ? 
Obs. — This species is recorded (Austin, Ann. Nat. Hist., IX, p. 435) 
as a “summer visitant” to St. George’s Channel, but Harting (Hand- 
book Br. B., p. 170) considers that doubtless Sterna fssipes, the Black 
Tern, is the species intended. 
France. Obs. — Degland and Gerbe (Orn. Eur., II, p. 446) say, 
evidently quoting Temminck, that it has been captured on the coast of 
France, but give no particulars. 
Italy. Obs. — Salvadori (in Fauna d’ Italia, Uccelli, p. 286) states 
that this species is mentioned by local authors as frequently occurring near 
Nice, but that it is evidently a mistake. 
LX VI I. Colymbus adamsii, Gray. Yellow-billed Loon. 
Great Britain. 1. One, Pakefield, Suffolk. Sclater, P. Z. S. Lond., 
1859, p. 206. ? 
[Podiceps holbolli, Reinh. American Red-necked Grebe. 
Obs. — This species is said by Degland and Gerbe (Orn. Eur., II, p. 
581) to have occurred accidentally in Europe, but no locality is given, nor 
any authority for such statement.] 
