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Pernis apivorus, Linn, (sp.)

Falco

the 11th of June, 1833, a fine male specimen of the Honey Buzzard, unrecorded as having before occurred in Ireland, was shot by Robert G. Bomford, Esq., in his demesne of Annadale, near Belfast. This gentleman, on being informed of the rarity of the bird, kindly presented it to the Belfast Museum. A similar bird, most probably the female, accompanied the one that was shot. I saw the specimen when recent, and found the bill and forehead covered with cow-dung in such a manner, as to lead to the supposition that the bird had been searching for insects in that sub- stance. On examination of the stomach, which was quite full, it was found to contain a few of the larva?, and some fragments of perfect coleopterous insects, several whitish-coloured hairy caterpillars, the pupae of a butterfly, and also of the the six-spot burnet-moth (Zygæna filipendulæ), together with some pieces of grass, which it is presumed were taken with the last-named insect, it being on the stalks of grass that the pupae of this species of Zygæna are chiefly found. This insectivorous food must have been a matter of choice to the honey buzzard, the bird being in the full vigour of its powers, and the district in which it was killed abounding with such birds, as, were they its natural or wished-for prey, it might have easily captured and destroyed.

The individual thus dwelt upon, and of which a notice appeared in the Magazine of Natural History for 1833, vol. vi. p. 447, was a mature male. The bands on the tail exhibited a greater inequality than is represented in any figure I have seen, the first and second being less than an inch apart ; the third, more than two inches and a half distant from the second band.

In the summer of 1838, a honey buzzard, shot in the grounds about Kilruddery House, in the county of Wicklow, the seat of the Earl of Meath, came into the possession of T.W. Warren, Esq. of Dublin. A second individual was in company with it,