154 
Annals of the Transvaal Museum. 
754. Ginnyris venustus niassae Rchw. 
Recorded from Gazaland, Southern Rhodesia, by C. F. M. 
Swynnerton. ( u Ibis ”, January, 1907, p. 43.) 
757. Cinnyris mariquensis microrhynchus Shell. 
There are specimens in the Transvaal Museum collected at 
Boror, Portuguese East Africa, by Kirby and Roberts, and at Beira 
by P. A. Sheppard. 
702. Cinnyris neergaardi C. Grant. 
Described by Claude Grant in the Bulletin B. 0. Club, No. 
CXLIII, May, 1908, and collected by himself at Inhambane, Portu- 
guese East Africa. 
766. Nectarinia arturi P. L. Scl. 
Collected by Arthur L. Sclater, in the Melsetter District of 
Southern Rhodesia, and described by his father, Dr. Sclater, in the 
Bull. B. 0. C., CXXIX, December, 1906. 
774. Par us pallidiventris rovumae Shell. 
There are examples in the Transvaal Museum collected in the 
Boror district by Kirby and Roberts. 
776. Par us afer damarensis Rchw. 
Dr. Reichenow, in his “ Vogel Afrikas ”, Vol. III. separates the 
Darnara form of the grey tit under this name. 
778. Par us subcaeruleum cinerascens Rchw. 
Dr. Reichenow separates the Darnara form of the Rufous- 
vented tit under this name. (Vogel Afrikas, band III.) 
782. Anthoscopus robertsi Haagn. 
44iis tit was collected by Kirby and Roberts in the Boror 
district of Portuguese South-East Africa, and described by Haagner 
in the August, 1909, number of the Annals of the Transvaal 
Museum. 
787. Splienoeacus transvaalensis C. Grant. 
Collected by the describer in the Woodbush region of the 
Transvaal, and recorded in the Bulletin B. O. Club, CXLIII, for 
May, 1908. 
788. Melocichla mentalis orientalis (Sharpe). 
There is an example of this warbler in the Transvaal Museum, 
collected in Boror by Kirby and Roberts. It was also recorded 
from S. Rhodesia by Swynnerton in the “ Ibis ” for July, 1908, 
p. 441. 
789a. Cisticola rufilata Hartl. 
In working up the warblers of the Transvaal Museum we 
could not locate three skins, which on reference to Dr. Reichenow 
that authority thought they might be mulleri , Alex., but Dr. 
Hartert, who kindly compared them with the type of that species, 
says they are not mulleri, but rufilata of Hartlaub, agreeing in 
every respect with the series of that species in the Tring Museum. 
