pOAOJ uXl'C; jf*- 1 
V 
Xj> u JLfeJL0i/~ X 
JiJit XhXj^/Xuj dUxf~ <%) X$t 
PUtAi P i'4 _ * 
I if (B w^LOW ( P>_CUj x ^2^0 A> • 
VI ^£UaJ 6U J’oaJ^ J&t^cS 
a- 7 ^Pap caqu a^- 
X*JMAJ • ■ ^ &A)P «^*^**** 
S^PyurSti ^j QXI&a^ , uUuA $dX , _ 
J&JyhXj y <X® '** fe^UM^wrUz 
XXtX^e^XuXZT-'cXX^^' . 
2:2 (Xh, /f^ XtXX &CA^ S^Asr 'i— 
<-• dP^ vAAa, Jb^Xf 
/M- t ,lX*Mzr>^ Jk • 
*XCxd~XtAXj^ AA p-e^ — 1 
HP^(\SL A\*_^> 
^ZJIXju ^ i«J xxxzz 
4 Aw; 1946 ffhule/Gre enland. In an area of muskeg/ 
along Vfolstenholme Fjord we encountered severa^lparasitic 
jaegers which evidently had small young nearby. There 
was much screaming, and the birds ran bibout on the g 
ground with their wings e;cte: ded and their tails expan¬ 
ded much in the mann er o f hawks and owls which employ 
the same ruse to attract intruders away from their 
young. As the' birds wheeled at relatively close range, 
the., central- spike of the. tail was very conspicuous. I 
collected one of the adults. 
15 August I94'6 Croker Say, Devon . “Parasitic jaegers were 
more numerous here than anywhere else we have been, but 
seemed to have finished nesting. Their screams were 
h eard with conside rable~frsqueircy as they harrassed terns 
"ulls, and shorebirds- alone the beach [see account of 
black-b. plover this date. Several were seen resting 
