44 RESIDENTS AND MIGRANTS. 
but in very limited numbers, on the high mountains 
in the county of Tipperary*. An interesting account 
of its nesting-habits as observed by Mr. Heysham in 
Cumberland will be found in the second volume 
(p. 295) of the ‘ Magazine of Natural History.’ 
RINGED PLOVER. igialitis hiaticula (Linnzus). 
Although this species may be found upon some 
part of the coast throughout the year, it is nevertheless 
migratory in spring and autumn. 
KENTISH PLOVER. igialitis cantiana (Latham). 
A spring and autumn migrant, breeding annually 
on the coasts of Kent and Sussex. It has been met 
with in Cornwall (Rodd), Hants (Gurney), Suffolk 
(Hele), Norfolk (Stevenson), and Yorkshire (Boyes) ; 
but is of rare occurrence, except in the south of 
England. According to Mr. Blake Knox (Zoologist, 
1866, p. 301), it has been observed in a few instances, 
during the migration, on the Dublin coast, but it is 
at all times a rare visitant to Ireland. 
TURNSTONE. Strepsilas interpres, Linnzus. 
A spring and autumn migrant, a few remaining 
throughout the winter. It is believed to nest in a few 
localities in Great Britain. Dr. Embleton of Beadnall, 
Northumberland, who used to visit the Farne Islands 
annually in the nesting-season, wrote to me in 1866 
* Thompson, ‘ Nat. Hist. Ireland ’ (Birds), vol. ii. p. 94. 
