254 BULLETIN 15 3, UNITED STATES NATIONAL MUSEUM 



suggests that it occurs in winter in the northern part of the Anglo- 

 Egyptian Sudan, which, if true, would indicate an altitudinal, sea- 

 sonal migration. 



2. A. r. lacuum: Kenya Colony, Uganda, northern Tanganyika 

 Territory, Kuanda, Urundi, and the eastern Belgian Congo. This 

 form is grayer, less rufous, than cinnamomeus. According to van 

 Someren, the birds of Uganda are more rufescent than those of Kenya 

 Colony, somewhat intermediate between lacuum and cinnamomeus. 

 This, however, is not substantiated by a comparison of two Ruandan 

 specimens with a series from Kenya Colony and Tanganyika 

 Territory. 



The present birds are in somewhat worn plumage. 



Table 49. — Aleasurements of 13 specimens of Anthus richardi cinnamomeus from 



Ethiopia 



Zedlitz ^^ writes that this bird is chiefly an inhabitant of the moun- 

 tains, from 2,200 meters upward, although he notes that the form is 

 known from near Kismayu, at sea level. 



Erlanger^^ found a nest of this pipit near the Hakaki River, two 

 days' journey from Adis Abeba, on July 7. It contained four half- 

 grown nestlings. 



ANTHUS GOULDII TURNERI Meinertzhagen 



Anthus gouldi turneri Meinektzhagen, Bull. Brit. Orn. Club, vol. 41, p. 24, 1920: 



Kituni, northwestern Kenya Colony. 

 Specimens collected : 1 male, Tertale, Ethiopia, June 10, 1912. 



This specimen is in molt and neither the wings nor tail affords sig- 

 nificant measurements. It agrees very closely with a specimen from 

 Mitiyana, Uganda, and with another from the west shore of Lake 

 Tanganyika. 



"'Journ. fiir Orn., 1911, pp. 46-47. 



"8 See Reichenow. Journ. fiir Orn.. 1907. cp. 37-38. 



