Supplement to Bird-Distribution Paper. 475 



Golden-crested Wren. Mid Scandinavia (and general). 



Great Titmouse. General and resident in Scandinavia. 



Blue Titmouse. Mid and South Scandinavia. 



Crested Titmouse. Scandinavia to 63' N. Not Denmark. 



Coal Titmouse. Fir forests of Mid and South Scandinavia (Continental 



form. 

 Marsh Titmouse. Add Subprovince 31.* Pairs twice seen in Stirling 



(29) during the breeding-season, and believed to breed by Mr. J. A. 



Harvie- Brown. 



South and Mid. Sweden. 



Long-tailed Titmouse. General in Scandinavia. 



Bearded Titmouse. Not in Scotland. Province vin. (bracket re- 

 moved). For 12 and 23 read (12) ? and (23). Formerly found in 

 Devonshire (fide De Moore) at Topsham and on the Exe. For 

 " Cowbitin Lancashire " read " Cowbit in Lincolnshire " (" Zool.," 

 1879, p. 305). 



Not in Scandinavia. 



Pied Wagtail. 



White Wagtail. Not in Scotland. General in Scandinavia. 



Grey Wagtail (VII. 18) Found by Mr. Wharton nesting near Beddge- 

 lert, &c. (see "Ibis," n. s., vol. ii., p. 323), and seen by myself 

 breeding on the streams near Bangor and Aber. in July, 1866 

 (9) In Oxfordshire ("Zool.," 1879, P- X 79)- 



Once only shot in S. Sweden, and very rare in Denmark. 



Ray's Wagtail. Replaced by Motacilla flava and M. melanocephala 

 in Scandinavia. 



[M. flava has nested near Gateshead, Durham (J. Hancock) 

 J. Watson, in "Zoologist," 2343-2406. " Saunders," p. 119.] 



Tree- Pipit. (29.) Regular and not scarce in Stirlingshire. Torwood 

 Forest and elsewhere (Mr. J. A. Harvie-Brown, 1868). 



To Lapland in summer. 

 Meadow Pipit. To North Cape. 



Rock Pipit. Anthus obscurus replaced by A. rupestris to North Cape. 

 Sky-Lark. 



Wood- Lark. Lat. 50-57. (xv. 29.) Mr. J. A. Harvie-Brown writes 

 that he has taken the nest and eggs of the Wood-Lark in Torwood 

 Forest, Stirling ; the only known instance of the bird having bred in 

 Scotland (Jan. 1868). North Wales (vn. 18), " Newton's Yarrell." 



* No new authority is quoted for this subprovince, but Yarrell (4th edition) 

 might have been cited. An authority for Inverness was referred to in the 

 original essay. "Newton's Yarrell" gives another additional subprovince (27) 

 to the bird's range. 



