322 Lord hWhrd— List of 



72. Great Titmouse. Parus major. 



By no means uncommon wherever vegetation attains to 

 the dignity of trees ; Guillemard brought home one speci- 

 men from Kikko Monastery (referred to above as 4000 ft. 

 above the sea-level), and I have others from various parts of 

 the island. *. 



73. Guillemard's Titmouse. Furus Cypriotes. 



Cf. Guillemard, 'Ibis/ 1888, p. 119, pi. ii., and elsewhere. 

 It is only fair to the memory of Pearse to state here that he 

 obtained specimens, on Troodos, of this Titmouse which I 

 looked upon merely as belonging to a dark race of P. ater. 

 I am sorry to say that I cannot consider the figure of this 

 bird, in our volume for 1888, as by any means a satisfactory 

 characteristic representation ; but few people can be more 

 fully aware than I am of the difficulties attending the correct 

 reproduction of coloured drawings of birds. Unger and 

 Kotschy record P. ater from Cyprus, but there can be little 

 doubt that this is the species to which they refer. *, G. 



74. Blue Titmouse. Parus cceruleus. 

 Cf. Guillemard, ' Ibis,' 1888, p. 100. 



75. Grey-backed Pied Wagtail. Motacilla alba. 



We found this Wagtail tolerably comir.on near Larnaca 

 and Famagusta about the end of April. It certainly winters 

 in Cyprus. *. 



7Q. Grey Wagtail. Motacilla sidphurea. 

 Obtained by Pearse in November 1878, and by Guillemard 

 in January 1888, but not observed by me. *. 



77. Blue-headed Wagtail. Motacilla flava. 

 Common in all moist places in April and May. Guille- 

 mard obtained it near Famagusta on March 20, 1888. *. 



78. Black-headed Wagtail. Motacilla melanocephala. 

 Common in May in the same localities as the last species^ 



but not, from my own observation, nearly so abundant as on 

 the coast of Epirus and in Corfu at the same season of the 

 year. *. 



