520 APPENDIX I. 



p. 387 ; 678 quint. — Platysmurus leucopterus, Tern. 



Add Tavoy, in the evergreen forests near which we obtained 

 three specimens in April. 

 p. 387 ; line 6, from bottom, for, Sturnopaster, read, Sturno- 



p as tor. 

 p. 393 ; 689 sex. — Sturnia sturnina, Pall. 



Note that in April this year we found this species extremely 

 abundant near Tavoy. 

 p. 394 ; line 15, from top, for, 691 bis, read, 690 bis. 



p. 396; 693. — Eulabes javanensis, Osb. 



Add base of Nwalabo, and forests between this and Tavoy. 



p. 403 ; 702. — Munia acuticauda. Hodgs. 



Add Tavoy, where it was excessively abundant in March, 

 at which time Davison found more than a score of nests, all but 

 one, however, containing young birds. 



p. 406 ; 706. — Passer indicus, Jard. and Selb. 



This species is as common at Rangoon as montanus, and now 

 and again a single bird may straggle over to Moulmein (where 

 Davison recently shot a single specimen) on the rigging of one 

 of the many vessels constantly passing between these two 

 ports, which are only a 12 hours run apart, and almost the 

 whole of the journey in river water. 



p. 407 ; 710. — Passer montanus, Lin. 



Add Moulmein, where, as in other large towns and villages, 

 it is common. 



p. 410; 771. — Treron nipalensis, Hodgs. 



Common at the foot of Nwalabo and in the country between 

 this and Tavoy. 



p. 412; 776. — Osmotreron phayrci, Blyth. 



Add, base of Nwalabo. This species was extremely numerous, 

 aoino- about in flocks of hundreds in the country between 

 Nwalabo and Tavoy. 



p. 427 ; In speaking of Pavo muticus, I omitted to point out 

 one very conspicuous point of difference between this — and 

 P. cristatus, viz., that whereas in this latter all the lesser wing- 

 coverts, the tertiaries and all their coverts and the scapulars, 



