104 BIRDS OF DAMARA LAND. 



Like all the birds of this family it is very restless, 

 now flapping its wings, then raising and expanding the 

 tail or alternately raising and depressing its whole body. 

 It makes its nest on the ground, laying three or four 

 eggs, which are either greenish grey spotted with brown, 

 or nearly white spotted with brown and grey. 



The iris is very dark brown, and the bill, legs, and 

 feet are black. 



Measurements of a male and a female : 



Male. Female, 



in. lin. in. lin. 



Entire length 62 58 



Length of folded wing ... 3 3 ..... 3 2 



tarsus 1 Oi 11 



middle toe .... 7 ..... 7 



tail 2 7 . . . . 2 6 



bill 10 08 



[I have examined the type specimen of Erythropygia Galtoni, 

 Strickland, which is now preserved in the Museum of Zoology 

 at Cambridge, and which appears to belong to the present 

 species. 



The true Saxicola sperata of Gmelin is quite a distinct 

 species, and may be readily recognized by the whitish colour of 

 the rump, which is rufous in S. familiaris. ED.] 



130. SaxlCOla Schlegelii (Wahl.). Schlegel's Wheatear. 



JErithacus Schkgelii, Wahlberg, Ofvers. 1855, p. 213. 



Wahlberg, Journal fur Orn. 1857, p. 3. 



Saxicola modesta, Tristram, in Ibis, 1869, p. 206. 

 Saxicola Schlegeli, Sharpe's Cat. No. 254. 



This species is very common in Great Namaqua and 

 Damara Land, and frequents alike broken ground, low 

 bush, and old abandoned " werfts ;" it seems to prefer 

 low bushes for perching on, whence it descends to the 



