425 
Birds of Manchuria. 
Iris brown ; feet blackish brown; bill dark horn-brown. 
As this Thrush breeds in Siberia (its eggs were first taken 
by Mr. Popham in 1875 in the valley of the Yenesei) and 
migrates in winter to China and Japan, I fully expected 
to find it in Manchuria as a migrant ; but it was somewhat 
surprising to procure it there as late as May 19th—a date 
which suggests a possibility of its remaining to nest in the 
mountains of North Manchuria. 
2. Turdus naumanni Temm. Red-tailed Thrush. 
Tacz. p. 294 ; Dresser, p. 9. 
a,b, c, <$ £ $ . Chang-tsai-Ling, S. Manchuria. Nov. 19, 
1886. ( E . J.) 
Probably wintering in South Manchuria. Chang-tsai-Ling 
is roughly seventy miles east of Kirin. 
3. Turdus obscurus Gm. Dusky Thrush. 
Tacz. p. 306; Dresser, p. 13. 
This bird is included in the present paper on the authority 
of Bianchi, who records a specimen from Yingtzu, May 10, 
1901. 
4. Turdus pallidus Gm. Pale Thrush. 
Tacz. p. 307; Dresser, p. 15. 
a } h. Hsiao Shan Forest. July 6, 1886. (E. J.) 
These two examples, obtained by Sir Evan James, are both 
fledglings and could only just have left the nest when shot. 
Seebohm examined them and described them in his 4 5 6 Mono¬ 
graph of the Turdidse- 7 (vol. ii. p. 186). He was doubtless 
able to assign them to the present species by the character¬ 
istic broad white tips to their tail-feathers. 
They were shot in the valley of the Sungari, about seventy 
miles from the source of the river. 
5. Geocichla sibirica Pall. Siberian Ground-Thrush. 
Tacz. p. 282; Dresser, p. 19; Ingram, Ibis, 1908, 
p. 134. 
A male was procured by Capt. Karpow at Yingtzu, on 
May 10, 1901. 
