waterton] BRITISH ORNITHOLOGY 615 
1881. Ornithological Notes from Mayo and Sligo. (Op. cit. pp. 131-7,, 
254-6.) 
1895. The breeding birds of Longhs Conn, Carra and Mask. (Irish Nat. 
pp. 117-21.) 
Birds observed breeding on the coasts of Sligo and Mayo. (T.c. 
pp. 180-4, 198-206.) 
1896. The Terns, Skuas, and Gulls of Killala Bay. (Op. cit. pp. 145-53, 
258-63, 169-76.) 
1897. On the breeding range of the Yellow Wagtail in Ireland. (Zoologist, 
pp. 346-8.) 
1898. The Long-tailed Duck in Killala Bay and the Estuary of the Moy. 
(Irish Nat. pp. 121-4.) 
The White Wagtail in Ireland. (T.c. pp. 160-3 : Zoologist, pp. 
245-8.) 
1900. [With B. J. Ussher.] The Birds of Ireland. London : 1900. 
See Ussher (B. J.). 
1902. Increase in the numbers of breeding birds in Mayo and Sligo. 
(Irish Nat. pp. 246-9.) 
1904. Ornithological Notes from Killala Bay and the Moy Estuary. 
(Zoologist, pp. 301-6.) 
1906. Disappearance of many of our home-bred birds in Autumn. (Op. 
cit. pp. 459-62.) 
1907. Breeding of Tree-Sparrows and Dunlins in Co. Mayo. (Op. cit. 
pp. 344-6.) 
1908. Some Ornithological Notes from Mayo and Sligo. (Op. cit. pp. 75-6, 
229-30.) 
1911. White-tailed Eagle no longer breeding in Ireland. (Op. cit. pp. 346- 
348.) 
White Wagtail on migration visiting Killala Bay. (T.c. pp. 197- 
199, 385.) 
Waterton (Charles), 1782-1865 
Waterton, although, a name of considerable eminence in 
the roll of British naturalists, claims but small place in this 
work, as he did little that relates to our subject beyond his 
notable Essays, many of which relate to British birds, and a 
few notes in the journals of his day. He is perhaps best 
known by his celebrated Wanderings in South America (1825). 
He was a man of good family and estate, being the eldest son 
of Thomas Waterton, of Walton Hall, Yorks, and his wife 
Annie, daughter of Sir Henry Bedingfeld, of Oxburgh, Nor- 
folk, and was born at Walton Hall, June 3, 1782. He was 
