• WILD LIFE IN CHINA OR CHATS ON CHINESE BIRDS AND BEASTS. BY GEORGE LANNING, Ex-Principal of the Shanghai Public School. SHANGHAI: 'THE NATIONAL REVIEW" OFFICE. 1911. The book may be obtained In EUROPE, from:— Messrs. Probsthain and Co., 41 Great Russell Street, LONDON. W. C. In AMERICA, from:— H. Colyer Jr., 17 Madison Avenue, NEW YORK CITY. PREFACE. FEW words will be needed to establish friendly relations between one Nature lover and an- other. For nearly sixty years, considerably more than half of them spent in China, I have loved to study the forms and habits of every living creature with which I have come in contact, reptile life in- cluded. Unfortunately, this has been possible, not as a vocation, but as an avocation, during holidays, travels, and odds and ends of time in an otherwise busy life. During wanderings across the oceans, through Europe and Siberia twice, through a third of the United States, and along the ordinary Suez Canal Route between Europe and China notes have been made of such bird life as falls to the lot of the traveller to see. These, however, are common to many observers. Those specially dealing with Wild Life in China are now put into popular form for the first time, and it is hoped that, notwithstanding many shortcomings, this may in itself form sufficient excuse for their appearance in permanent form. I am indebted more than I can say to "Les Oiseaux de la Chine", the scholarly work of M.L'Abbe Armand David, et M. E. Oustalet, to the late Mr. Consul Swinhoe's re- searches, to ' 'The Royal Natu ral History ' ' (Lydekker) , to Mr. H. T. Wade's "With Boat and Gun in the Yangtze Valley", and to various other writers. To the ever present, ever new, and ever delightful stimulus of "The Field" and "Country Life" I, in 2005441 VI PREPACK. common with tens of thousands of other Nature worshippers, owe a constantly accumulating debt. To the friendly critic who will find in stereotyped form and length of chapters, in faulty phrasing and style, in misprints here and there, and in other matters deserving criticism, many opportunities for the use of literary caustic I would say only this, that the papers first appeared in journalistic form in the pages of "The National Review" (China), that they were necessarily confined within certain pre- scribed space, and sometimes suffered in consequence. For the rest, the writing of them, rather hurried at times, was a labour of love, and if they find but few readers to whom they give some slight pleasure, such a reward will more than suffice. G. L. Shanghai, 1911. CONTENTS. PAGE. Preface v Publishers' Note vii Contents ix Introduction xiii CHAPTERS. I.— The Mysteries of Migration (\9th March) 1 II.— Geese (2fith March) 5 III.— Duck (2nd April) 9 IV.— Snipe (9th April) 13 V.— Woodcock (16th April) . 17 VI.— Rooks and Crows (23rd April) 21 VII.— The Crow's Cousins (30th April) 25 VIII.— Some Shanghai Singing Birds (1th Mail) 39 IX.— Herons, Egrets, and Bitterns (14th May) 33 X.— Cuckoos (21st May) 37 XI.— Nests and Nestlings (28th May) . . 41 XII.— Flycatchers (4th June) 46 XIII.— The Kingfishers (llth June) 50 XIV.— Orioles and Boilers (18*7* June.) 54 XV.— The Finches (25th June) 58 XVI.— The Tit Family (2nd July) 62 XVII.— Woodpeckers (9th July) 66 XVIII.— Pigeons, Doves and Sand-Grouse (16t/i July) 70 XIX.— Swallows, Martins, Swifts, and Night-Jars (23-jy? July) . . 74 XX.— The Shrikes (30th July) 78 XXI.— Mynas, Starlings, etc. (6th August) 82 XXII.— Plovers (ISfh August) 86 XXIII.— Plovers and Sandpipers (20th August) 90 XXIV.— Curlews, Whimbrels (27th Aunust) 95 XXV.— Bustards, Rails, etc. (3rd September) 99 XXVI.— Quails (10th September) 103 XXVII.— Partridges (llth September) 107 XXVIII — Pheasants (24th September) Ill XXIX.— Pheasants. (Continued) (1st October) .115 XXX.— Pheasants. (Concluded) (8th October) 110 XXXI.— Gulls (15th October) 123 XXXII.— Terns (22n