THE BIRDS OF HAMPSHIRE. 359 
APPENDIX. 
ICTERINE Warbler {Hypolats icterind). — A young 
female specimen of this warbler was taken by Mr. T. G. 
Cutting, at the St. Catherine's Lighthouse, Isle of Wight, 
in the early hours of the morning of September 29th, 1905. 
The bird was sent in the flesh, with other migrants, to Mr. 
H. F. Witherby, one of the members of the British Orni- 
thologists' Club Migration Committee. Mr. Witherby 
identified the bird, and exhibited it at the meeting of the 
Club held on October i8th, 1905.— Cf. Bulletin B.O.C., 
Vol. XVI., p. 23. 
This forms the first record for the Icterine warbler in 
Hampshire, and adds one more species to the list of 
accidental visitors to the county, bringing the total 
number of species up to 296. There are only some twelve 
other authentic records of its occurrence in the British 
Islands. 
Aquatic Warbler {Acrocephalus aquaticus) p. 30. — 
On the same occasion as the above a young female aquatic 
warbler was taken at St. Catherine's Lighthouse, and for- 
warded, with some sedge warblers and other migrants, to 
Mr. Witherby. This specimen, which is the third recorded 
