7 i6 APPENDIX. 



remove with their young to others. All finches 

 feed on the feeds of plants. 



Larks, All of thefe feed on infects and worms \ yet only 



catchers, P art °f tnem C l u ^ t tne ** e kingdoms ; though the rea- 

 Wagtails, fon of migration is the fame to all. The Nightin- 

 Warblers. Z ale -> Black- cap^ Fly- catcher. Willow-wren, Wheat- 

 ear, and White-throat, leave us before winter, 

 while the fmall and delicate G olden- cr eft ed Wren 

 braves our fevered frofts. We imagine that the 

 migrants of this genus continue longed in Great 

 Britain in the fouthern counties, the winter in thofe 

 parts being later than in thofe of the north ; Mr. 

 Stilling fleet having obferved feveral Wheat-ears in 

 the ifte of Furbeck the i8{h of November lad. As 

 thefe birds are incapable of very didant flights, 

 we fufpect that Spain * or the fouth of France ', is 

 their winter afylum. 



Titmice. Never quit this country; they feed on infects 

 and their larvae. 



Swallows, 

 axd Goat- 

 sucker. 



Every fpecies difappears at approach of winter. 



WATER F O W L. 



OF the vaft variety of water fowl that frequent 

 Great Britain, it is amazing to reded how few are 



known 



