PANURIDM—TITS. 



91 



Family PANURIDi©. 



Bearded Tit : Panurus biarmicus. Locally, " Reed Pheasant." 

 A scarce and local resident in Britain, and rapidly becoming 

 rarer on account of t ..-^si f/, 



the draining of its 

 haunts. It once bred 

 commonly in Essex, 

 and a nest was found 

 near Sudbury as 

 lately as 1868. It 

 may even do so yet, 

 though this has not 

 been established. 



Albin says (3. i. 46) : 

 " I have been informed 

 by Sir Robert Abdy that 

 they are found in the 

 salt marshes in Essex," 

 and Donovan quotes (5. 

 i. 6) Albin's words. "A 

 Lover of Nature," writ- 

 ing from Woolwich in bearded tits, ;3. 

 1829, says (12. ii. 222) : " Bearded Titmice inhabit the marshes bordering on the 

 Thames, both in Kent and Essex. I was told in December last that some had 

 lately been seen in a large piece of reeds below Barking Creek. * * * The 

 Bearded Titmouse is known in these parts by the name of the Reed Pheasant." He 

 next details his observations upon eight or ten of these birds which he saw at the 

 spot named, and one of which he contrived to shoot. "O," writing in 1832, 

 says (12. V, 544) that at that time it might be seen about the months of Novem- 

 ber and December feeding on the seeds of the reed, which then grew in great 

 luxuriance on the banks of the lake at Dagenham. Yarrell, in 1843, says (14. i. 

 353) it " inhabits the various reed-beds on the banks of the Thames." 



More, writing in 1865, says (23. 121) that it "still breeds in Surrey (Rev. J. C 

 Atkinson), and probably in Essex (where the bird has been noticed)." This 

 surmise seems to have been correct, for Mr. Grubb informed Canon Babington 

 (46. 65) that he believed he saw a pair in a bed of reeds in the Stour near Brun- 

 don Hall, Sudbury, in or about 1868. Mr. J. F. Hills informed the same gentle- 

 man (46. 65) that he also had seen them on the Stour at Sudbury, and that they 

 bred there in April, 1868, when he took three young birds out of a nest of five, 

 and brought them up by hand. They were exhibited at the Crystal Palace the 

 following February when nearly ten months old. Mr. Hills tells me that this 

 nest was on the Essex side of the river. In reply to my enquiry as to whether it 

 used formerly to breed in the Essex marshes, the Rev. J, C. Atkinson writes: " Yes ; 

 I never saw the nest myself, but I heard of it. There were many acres of reeds in 

 various places in my boyish days." Dr. Laver also remembers seeing specimens 



