CALAMOHERPIN &. 213 
Cetti’s BusH WARBLER. 
Length, 5° to 65; expanse, 7°5 to 84; wing, 2'5 to 2'8 ; tail, 
2:4 to 3; tarsus, 0°8; bill at front, 0°4 to 0°5. 
Bill dark horny-brown, but paler on lower mandible ; irides 
brown; legs and feet pale brown or fleshy-brown. 
A spot in front of the eyes dusky ; a streak from the nostrils over 
the eye and acircle round the eye fulvous-white ; the forehead, 
crown, and whole upper surface, a warm rufous or ferruginous- 
brown, more rufous on the rump and upper tail-coverts ; the 
quills and tail hair-brown, margined with rufescent-olive ; ear- 
coverts, sides of neck, body, flanks and vent-feathers, a pale dull 
greyish or earthy-brown ; chin, throat, breast, and abdomen white ; 
lower tail-coverts slighly rufous-brown (webs very lax and much 
disunited), narrowly tipped with white ; axillaries and wing-lining 
slightly greyish white ; the edge of the wing just above the base of 
the primaries is white ; in some few specimens the eye-streak ex- 
tends beyond the eye, above more than half of the ear-coverts, but 
in most it ceases just beyond the posterior angle of the eye. 
Cett’s Bush Warbler was discovered by Mr. Hume in the 
mangrove swamps in the Kurrachee Harbour. I am not aware 
of its having been found anywhere else within our limits. 
Genus, Locustella, Gould, 
Bill of moderate length, slender, straight, compresssd, barely 
deflected at the tip, which is slightly notched ; wings long, with 
the first quill minute; second nearly equal to the third, which is 
longest ; tail moderate, rounded, or graduated ; hind-claw very 
long, much curved. 
Locustella hendersoni, Cass. 
520.—Jerdon’s Birds of India, Vol. II, p. 159; Butler, Guzerat ; 
Stray Feathers, Vol. II, p. 479; Deccan, Stray Feathers, 
Vol. IX, p. 406. 
THE STREAKED REED WARBLER. 
Length, 5°5; wing, 2°25 ; tail, 2°12. 
Bill dusky above, paler beneath; irides, hazel; legs fleshy- 
brown. 
Above pale olive-brown, all the feathers centred dark-brown ; 
tail uniform brown, tipped pale, especially as seen from below ; 
beneath white, tinged with earthy-brown on the neck, breast, and 
flanks; lower tail-coverts fulvescent-white, with narrow longi- 
tudinal striz. In the spring moult the lower plumage is at 
first a somewhat rich yellow. 
The Streaked Wren Warbler occurs sparingly as a seasonal 
visitant in the neighbourhood of Belgaum, Deesa and Mhow, and 
must occur in other suitable localities. 
It has not been recorded from Sind. 
