collected in Transcaucasia. 



411 



117. 



118. 



119. 

 *120. 

 *121. 



122. 



123. 



1-24. 

 *125. 



126. 



127. 



1 28. 



129. 

 *130. 



131. 



132. 



133. 



134. 



135. 



136. 



I. 



Fringilla coelebs L m 



F. montifringilla L 



Passer domesticus L 



P. niontauus transcaucasicus, n. subsp. 



Carduelis carduelis L 



Acantbis fringillirostris JBp. et Schl. . 

 Emberiza calaudra L. ( = miliaria L.). 



E. citrinella ervtbrogenis Brhm 



E. scboeniclus JO., var. . . '. 



E. cia par Hartert 



E. bortulana L 



Sturnua purpurascens Gould 



Sturnus sp. inc 



Garrulus krynickii Kalenicz 



Pica pica L 



P. pica borealis Sfejn 



Lycos monedula L 



Corviis frugilegus L 



C cornix L 



C. corax L. (? var.) 



Number of species 



s. 







m. s. 



r. v. 



m. h. v 







n. 



b. 



b. 



m. b. 



tr. an. 



+ 



(n.) 



m. s. 











(h.) 



m. h. 



+ 



+ 



117 



II. 





 h 

 

 b. 

 

 

 

 

 

 h. 

 

 

 

 h. 

 b. 

 h. 

 

 

 b. 

 



III. 





 m. n. 

 m. n. 

 m. n. 

 m. n. 

 m. n. 

 m. n. 





 m. n. 











(n.) 

 m. n. 



















+ 

 



21 



54 



To take an instance in explanation of this list. We 

 must not suppose from " h." that Emb. cia par does not 

 nest near Akhalzikh; I merely mean that it is represented 

 in the collection from this locality by winter- specimens only. 



Additional Notes on some of the Species. 



32. Perdias perdix canescens, n. subsp. 



I have compared two January specimens of this bird 

 (? ?, 15. i. 1905, "N. 278" arid « N. 279" f) with my 

 winter specimens of P. perdix L. from Southern Livonia and 

 of P. arenicola (Buturlin, O. M. 1904, Sept., p. 148) from 

 Turgai (Kirghiz Steppes). The TiHiz birds can be clearly 

 distinguished from both; they have the chest as closely 

 vermiculated with dark cross-lines as in typical P. perdix L. 

 (not so sparsely as in P. arenicola), the « horseshoe," flank- 

 bars, and lateral rectrices as rusty chestnut as in typical 

 birds (just a shade darker, but not nearly so dark reddish, 





t So numbered on Mr. Kobylin's labels. 



