226 AMPELIS GAERULUS. 



^814. Five. — Nullas-jarwi-joki, Tonica Lappmark, 7 June, 



1858. 



Brought to Muoniovara, 8th June, 1858, by Maria Muotka-jarwi, 

 having been found the day before near Nullas-jiirwi-joki on tlie 

 Swedish side, immediately below Pekkala's homestead. The nest was 

 in a little spruce about a fathom and a half from the ground. 



§ 815. /S'/ci'.— Luhtaranta, West Bothnia, 11 June, 1858. 



Brought the same day to Muoniovara by Anton, having been found 

 by him outside the homestead in a Scotch fir about five fathoms high, 

 the nest placed about four fathoms up ; as it was not a fine one, it 

 was not taken. 



^ 816. Five. — Sarki-muotka, 8 June, 1858. 



Ibis, 1861, pi. iv. fig. 3. 



Brought to Muoniovara, 12th June, by Heiki^s boy Johan, having 

 been found by himself, his mother, and his uncle, Johan Hendrik, on 

 the 8th in Sarki-muotka, about three furlongs from Heiki's house, in 

 a Scotch fir seven fathoms high. The nest was about four fathoms 

 from the ground. One egg is very beautiful. 



[This last figured as above mentioned.] 



§ 817. Five. — Muonioniska, 12 June, 1858. 



Brought the same day by Anton, having been found by him a little 

 way from Tilberg's gjersgard ^ on the other side of a small marsh. The 

 nest was in a spruce, four or five fathoms high, and only a fathom 

 and a half from the ground. 



of this booty to the Finnish Scientific Society on the 5th of October, 1857 (ffifvers. 

 Finska Vet.-Soc. Forhandl. v. p. 31), at the same time doing justice toMr. Wolley's 

 discovery ; and a brief notice of it is given in the Appendix to the last edition 

 of Professor Nilsson's ' Skandinavisk Fauna ' (Foglarna, ed. 3, i. p. 571), com- 

 municated to him by Professor Alexander von Nordmann, who furnished Dr. 

 Gloger with a more detailed account, published in the ' Journal fiir Ornithologie ' 

 for 1858 (pp. 307-309), while it is also recorded by Herr Magnus von Wright in 

 his ' Finlands Foglar ' (i. p. 98).— Ed.] 



^ [Contracted from (jjerdest^ard — a clearing in the forest, fenced round for culti- 

 vation. — Ed.] 



