182 URZGINTHUS ANGOLENSIS 
the South Somali coast. Dr. Ansorze met with it in Ukamba; 
Mr. Jackson at Lake Naiwasha; Mr. Neumann on Mount 
Kavinjiro, near Neguruka, and at Sero in North-west Masai- 
land. In the British Museum there are specimens collected 
by Lord Delamere at Lake Nakuro and the Molo River. 
Granatina hawkert was described by Mr. Lort Phillips from 
three specimeus, the type procured by himself at Bari, one of 
Mr. Hawker’s from Daboloc, and the third, Mr. Peel’s, from 
Lohello. He mentions it as being not uncommon, in small 
flocks, throughout the tableland. Mr. Hawker, likewise, found 
it common, very tame, and generally to be seen in small flocks 
feeding on the ground around the old zarebas. Drs. G. Elliot 
and Donaldson Smith have also procured a fair series from 
this country. In its more northern range Lord Lovat shot a 
pair, in December, at Hargeisa in Northern Somaliland, and a 
month later in Southern Abyssinia, near Laga Hardim and 
Hawash, and observes: ‘‘ Seldom seen in such large flocks as 
most of the other small Finches.” Mr. Pease also records it 
as abundant in the bushy lowlands of South Abyssinia, Mr. 
Degen has obtained specimens at Mirti and Oda, and Dr. 
Ragazzi has procured two others in Shoa. 
Ureginthus angolensis. 
Fringilla angolensis, Linn. 8. N. (x.) p. 182 (1758); (xii.) i. p. 323 (1766) 
Angola. 
Ureginthus bengalus angolensis, Reichen. Vog. Afr. iii. p. 209 (1904). 
Hstrilda angolensis, Sharpe, Cat. B. M. xiii. p. 402 (1890). 
Granatina angolensis, Shelley, B. Afr. 1. No. 397 (1896). 
Loxia cyanogastra, Daud. Traité, p. 436 (1800). 
Subspecies a. 
Ureginthus bengalus damarensis, Reichen. Vog. Afr. iii. p. 209 (1904) 
Damara, Lake Ngami. 
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