SYRRHAPTES PARADOXUS. Pallas’s Sandgrouse. Tetrao paradoxa, Pall. Itin., tom. ii. 1D. JUD, thal. iP Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 755. paradoxus, Lath. Ind. Orn., tom. ii. ==llcl, Zool, Rosso.-Asiat., tom. ii. p- 74.—Gmel. edit. Linn. p. 643.—Bonnat. Tab. Ency. Méth. Orn., part i. p. 205, pl. 93. fig. 1. Syrrhaptes paradoxus, Il. Prod. Syst. Mamm. et Av., p. 243.—Temm. Man. d’Orn., 2nd edit. tom. i. p. xciv.— Gray, Gen. of Birds, vol. iii. p. 519, pl. exxxiv.— Bonap. Compt. Rend. de l’Acad. des Sci. tom. xlii. séance du 12 mai 1856.—Moore, Ibis, 1860, p. 105.—Newton, Proc. of Zool. Soc. 1861, p. 203.— Id. Ibis, 1864, p. 185.—Swinh. in Ibis, 1861, p. 341.—Gould, Birds of Great Britain, vol. iv. pl. Pallasii, Temm. Hist. Nat. des Pig. et Gall., tom. iii. pp. 282-716. Heterochtes Tataricus, Vieill. deux. édit. du Nouv. Dict. d’Hist. Nat., tom. xiv. eee Syrrhaptes heteroclite, Vieill. Gal. des Oice ronan p. 64, pl. 222. Hleterochte Grous, Lath. Gen. Syn., vol. iv. Daron —Id. Gen. Hist. vol. viii. D>. AGM. TE en ee ea Tus singular bird forms so Important a teature in the avifauna of Asia that a figure of it must necessarily be included in a work on the birds of that region; I regret, however, to say that I can give no information respecting it beyond what has recently appeared. Mr. Swinhoe, in China, and Herr Radde, in Dauria, have added largely to our knowledge of its range, habits, and economy; and Messrs. Newton and Moore, in the ‘Ibis,’ and myself, in the ‘ Birds of Great Britain,’ have each had our say with regard to the numbers which a few years ago visited Eastern Europe, Germany, Holland, and the British Islands. The Syrrhaptes paradoxus is a species the individuals of which are unusually numerous; for it is generally seen in flocks of thousands in all the great Tartar Steppes, from Northern China to the Altai. In these elevated regions it takes the place of the numerous species of Prerocles, known by the trivial name of Sandgrouse, which are found in Afghanistan, Scinde, the peninsula of India, Persia, Spain, and Africa. The following account of this singular species is compiled from the communications to the ‘ Ibis,’ which the irruption of a number of examples into this country, and other parts of Europe above mentioned, have called forth from the pens of Mr. T. J. Moore, of the Derby Museum, Liverpool, and A. Newton, Esq. “The Syrrhaptes paradoxus was first made known by Pallas (to whose notice it was brought by Nicolas Rytschoff) as a dweller on the Kirgish steppes, which may be taken as extending eastward from the northern half of the Caspian Sea to the regions around Lake Balkach. “Dr. Edward Eversmann tells us that the Syrrhaptes is found on the lofty steppes of the Southern Altai Mountains, on the upper course of the Tschuja, in the neighbourhood of the Chinese outposts. The Mongols there call it Nukturu; the Dwojedanzees, A/tin; the Kirghiz Tartars on the Aral Sea, Buddruk ; and the Russians, Sadscha. “‘ Gustav Radde, a traveller who has had great opportunities of observing the habits of Syrrhaptes paradoxus towards the more eastern limits of its breeding-range, passed the spring of 1856 in the basin of the Tarai-nor, a lake situated in Dauria, about 50° N. and 116° E. from Greenwich. He remarks particularly, in his ‘ Berichte tber Reisen in Stden von Ost-Sibirien,’ on the favourable character of the district for the resort of migratory birds, among which Syrrhaptes is one of the casliest to anne arriving paired, but keeping in flocks, on the 22nd of March. Three days afterwards, oe the winter’s ener was yet lying on the hillocks of the high steppes, these birds were living in small societies but always paired, on the adjacent salt-plains, from which they resorted early in the morning to the fresh atch springs of the Tarei to drink ; there they remained until about nine o’clock in the day, when they repaired to the nite salt-pans, among which are some slight elevations covered with grass. On these they scraped oe pits and sat therein, passing the rest of the day in quiet, some sleeping, others walking about ao plucking the young shoots of the Salicornie, unless disturbed by a Falcon, when they instantly took wing og after several ringing flights, made off, alarming as they went their nearest comrades, ee ee their example, until the air was filled with countless small flocks. Just as quickly as their quiet was heim bet, eee te ee restored. They began to descend, at first timidly, and then settled down on a ee ae - still that, owing to the colour of their plumage, they could oe ae es a : the down of grasses, placed among sand and stones under a bush. eRegesmc i , 7 i : . ae ale quits her nest only at the last extremity. On the a reddish-white colour, spotted with brown. The female q ioe ee 12th of May the first young were hatched, and by the 27th a second ae Oo a a ee “ About the second week in June, according to our reckoning, Herr Rac ae , ee +n the course of which he met with numerous bands of Syrrhaptes, of the Tarei, passing over a high steppe, ither fos : at least a thousand birds; but they were so shy that neither on and two great flocks, each consisting of i Bl ia { | | Se Oa pA Ae