PENDULINE TIT. 
:2l 
russet; the oclireoiis colour of the back is less deep than 
in the adult; the under parts of the body are of a light 
red. 
My figure of this bird and its egg are from specimens 
kindly sent me by the Hev. H. Tristram. The nest is 
after Gould. 
It has also been figured by Buffbn, pi. enl. 618, fig. 
3, and 708, the young before the first moult under the 
name oi Mesange de Languedoc; P. Poux, Ornith. Prov., 
pi. 124, fig. 1, adult male; fig. 2, head of young; Bou- 
teil, Ornith. du Dauph., pi. ol, fig. 6; Gould, B. of E., 
pi. 159; Naumann, Vogel. Deutsch, vol. 4, pi. 97, male, 
female, young, and nest; Temminck, Atlas; Vieillot, 
Faun. Franc., pi. 50, fig. 2 and 3; Albin, vol. 3, pi. 57; 
Bechstein, Naturg. Dent., vol. 3, pi. 38, fig. 2; Meyer, 
Vog. Dent., part 10. 
There are one or two other ParidtB, which require 
a short notice. 
Parus Carolimnsis cristatus, Brisson; P. hicolor, Lin- 
nasus and authors, was figured by Gould, pi. 152, Birds 
of Europe. It has however been omitted by Schlegel 
and Bonaparte from the European list, and is admitted 
with doubt by Degland. Mr. Gould now thinks that 
it ought to be erased, in which opinion he is joined 
by all the best modern ornithologists. 
Parus horealis, Selys; Poecilia borealis, Bonaparte. — 
Mr. Newton’s valuable remarks about this species in the 
notice of the Siberian Tit, in the last number, are I think 
sufficiently strong to warrant my excluding it from the 
European list as a distinct species. It is so closely 
allied to our Marsh Tit, f P. palustris,) that it can 
only at the most lay claim to be considered a permanent 
YOL. III. 
