wu) 
“I 
bo 
PARID As. 
INSESSORES. PARIDA, 
DENTIROSTRES. 
THE MARSH TIT. 
Parus palustris. 
Parus palustris, Marsh Titmouse, PENN. Brit. Zool. vol. i. p. 536. 
” ” ” ” MontacGu, Ornith. Dict. 
0 % 3) 35 Berwick, Brit. Birds, vol. i. p. 292. 
3 a 3% Fem. Brit. An. p. 80. 
” ” ” ) SELBY, Brit. Ornith. vol. i. p- MBVo 
Jenyns, Brit. Vert. p. 123. 
5 oS “5 58 GouLp, Birds of Europe, pt. xi. 
Mésange nonnette, Tem. Man. d’Ornith, vol. i. p. 291. 
°° 2° 99 bb) 
99 9 
Tue Marsu Tre, if not so generally distributed as some 
others of the family, is yet plentiful as a species in many 
localities ; but, as its name implies, is more partial than 
the other Tits described to low tracts of land covered 
with thickets, to marshes, and moist meadows, bearing old 
willow trees and alders, and to swampy ground near 
