01 June 1953CommentsLetters
SIRS,--A good deal of interest, and even some feeling, seems to have been aroused by the question whether in the Channel Islands the English name "Armorican Warbler"/ instead of "Dartford Warbler", can be properly applied to the race found there, Sylvia u...
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01 June 1953CommentsReviews
Twenty-fourth Report of the Devon Bird-Watching and Preservation Society, 1951. Recorder for birds--F.R.Smith. There are short reports on special enquiries : (a) Swift Migration.--Cold weather for 4 or 5 days in May caused such a remarkable disappearance...
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01 June 1953CommentsReviews
The Pocket Guide to British Birds. By R. S. R. Fitter. Illustrated by R. A. Richardson, xvi and 240 pages, 1/2 plates (64 in colour). (Collins, 1952). ais. This is a disappointing book. It is original and ambitious, and a first impression is that there is...
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01 June 1953CommentsNotes
White-billed Diver in Yorkshire.--A White-billed Diver (Colymbus adamsii) was picked up in an exhausted condition near the mouth of Hedon Haven, Paull, E. Yorkshire, On February 18th, 1953. It was found by Messrs. Bunting- and Stathers of Paull and died ...
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01 June 1953CommentsMain paper
(Plates 32-35) W I T H its creamy face and black crown and neck, black breast and greyish-white belly, white above and below the black tail, and grey back and scapulars barred with white-edged black, the Barnacle (Branta leucopsis) is the most pied of the...
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01 June 1953CommentsMain paper
OCTOBER 6th-7th and g t h - n t h . A. G. S. Bryson found what was undoubtedly the first of these birds on the 6th, but was unable to identify it because of its wildness and the poor light. Search next day was unproductive until Colonel R. Meinertzhagen f...
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01 June 1953CommentsMain paper
T H E scientific and technical advances of recent years have made possible considerable improvements in the methods used for recording; the songs and calls of birds. The preservation of the vocabulary of birds in some form or another is generally recogniz...
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01 June 1953CommentsMain paper
T H E Jay (Garrulus glandarius) is well-known to feed on the eggs and young of smaller birds. Indeed its behaviour in this connection is a source of much adverse comment and fantastic exaggeration. In the course of my observations of this species I have s...
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01 June 1907CommentsEditorials
EDITED BY H. F. WITHERBY, F.Z.S., M.B.O.U.ASSISTED BY W. P. PYCRAFT, A.L.S, M.B.O.U. EDITORIAL.BEFORE setting forth our plans, our hopes, and our ambitions for BRITISH BIRDS, we must first expr...
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