in Great Britain during the Nesting- season. dl 
Subprovinces I, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 9, 13, 14, 15, 20-382, 34, 35. 
Lat. 50°-59°.  “ Scottish ” type, or Northern. 
Scarce in the south during summer, and then found mostly in 
the west. Breeds occasionally in Cornwall (Mr. E. H. Rodd) ; 
regularly in North Devon (Rev. M. A. Mathews), in South 
Devon (Mr. J. Gatcombe), near Herringston in Dorset (Mr. H. 
Groves), at Chemies (Gould, ‘ Contrib. to Ornith.’ 1849, p. 187), 
and by the little river Chess (Rev. B. Burgess), in Bucks and 
in Gloucester, where it is rare (Rev. F. J. Scott). Is believed to 
breed also in Somerset, Wilts, Hants, and Kent (as mentioned 
by Yarrell). Breeds more numerously in Stafford and Shrop- 
shire, and from Derbyshire northwards throughout Scotland, 
though considered by Macgillivray very rare north of Inverness. 
Doubtless nidifies in South and North Wales, though I have 
no record of its doing so. : 
MoraciL1ia CAMPESTRIS (Pall.). Ray’s Wagtail. 
Provinces I.—XVI. or XVII. 
Subprovinces 2-28, 30, 31, 32, 35? 
Lat. 50°-58° or 59°?. “ English ” type, or Southern. 
Throughout England and Wales, becoming very scarce or local 
in the north of Scotland. Mr. T. Edward finds it breeding on 
the east coast of Aberdeenshire ; and Mr. W. M. Snowie marks 
it as nesting also in East Inverness. Mr. R. Gray has found 
the nest in Dumbartonshire ; and the bird has been seen as far 
north as Sutherland, by Mr. St. John and Sir W. Jardine, &c. 
Obs.—Motacilla flava, L., whose nest is supposed to have 
been found in Cambridgeshire, is not included in the list which 
Mr. Bond has sent me for that county. 
ANTHUS ARBOREUS (Bechst.). Tree-Pipit. 
Provinces I.-XVI. 
Subprovinces 1-28, 29, 30, 31, 32. 
Lat. 50°-58°. “English” type. Not in Ireland. 
Scarce in Cornwall, Wales, and Scotland, though the nest has 
been found as far north as Dumbarton (Mr. R. Gray), in Aber- 
deen and Banff (Mr. T. Edward), and in East Inverness (Mr. 
W. Dunbar). 
