“ The Aquatic Warbler has a somewhat limited range. It is only knovvn with certainty to breed in 
Germany atid Holland. According toTemminck it is merely an accidental visitor to the latter country; but 
Miihle gives this as one of its breeding-places. It is plentiful in Italy and the south of France during the 
])assage. It is found in Switzerland and Sardinia, on the banks of the Var and Rhone, and in the marshes 
surrounding Arles. It is also found at Dieppe and in the marshes about Lille. It occurs in Algeria, as 
stated by Captain Loche; and Mr. Salvin, in his ‘Five Months’ Bird-nesting in the Eastern Atlas’ (Ibis, 
1859), says, ‘At the head of the little marsh of Ain Djendeli I more than once observed a pair of this Warbler. 
M^e afterwards found it more abundant at Zana, where it was breeding. Its habits much resemble those of 
the Common Reed Warbler (C. arundimced) ; its eggs also are similar.’ 
“ ‘ It is really plentiful nowhere,’ says Count Miihle, ‘ and it dwells preferably in large wild sw'amps. In 
summer it need only be sought for where the Avater is cooped up almost knee-deep with ditches and dry 
necks of land running into it, and covered with bushes, high grass, rushes, and reeds. In autumn it may 
be found in more cultmited ground. It is a very restless and lively bird, and also crafty and cunning. It 
creeps with great agility tbrougb the twigs and stalks of the thick swampy plants, in which it excels all 
other Reed Warblers. It may be seen gliding along near the ground like a mouse ; it never hops on the 
ground, but goes along step by step. On the stalks and perpendicular stems of plants it runs up and down 
with such agility that it seems to slide along without using its feet at all. Its call is like the rest of the 
Reed Warblers’ ; its love-song, though loud, is also pleasant, and comes almost alvvays from the depth of 
the reed-beds and seldom from the summit of the stalks ; it is, however, proportionally heard among trees. 
It builds its nest in the swamp : the exterior is formed of coarse grass-tops Intertwined with delicate straws, 
and is lined with horse-hair. It is placed between the slender twigs of small bushes, and ahvays in isolated 
marshy places intersected with ditches. It lays in the beginning of May four or five, rarely six, eggs of a 
grey-greenish or grey-yellowish ground, with spots more or less strongly marked, darker than the ground- 
colour.’ 
“Brehm, in Badeker’s ‘European Eggs,’ says of this species : — ‘ It breeds in Holland, Greece, Germany, 
and probably in Switzerland and Italy. At the end of April we hear its nuptial song in the marshes, among 
the bulrushes, reeds, and bog-plants which grow there. Its nest may be found at the end of May, 
containing five or six eggs, deep under a clump of sedges, in the grass behind rubbish, or on the bank of 
a hedge near water, hanging on the stalks of a plant. It is unlike that of the Sedge Warbler in being 
smaller, but is built of the same materials — namely, small rootlets mixed with strips of reed and straw, 
under which is also some horse-hair. The eggs are smaller, brighter, smoother, and more shining than 
those of S. phragmitis, and are often marked with hair-streaks. Very often the markings are so faint that 
the egg appears unieolorous. Once we found a nest containing eggs washed Avlth carmine. The male sits 
but little, the female most assiduously. Incubation thirteen days.’ ” 
An egg figured by Dr. Bree was sent to him by M. Moquin-Tandon with the following remarks : — “This 
egg comes from the environs of Angers. I had it from M. de Barace, a distinguished ornithologist. The 
nest is in the form of a cone, cleverly constructed. It contains four or five eggs of a dirty greenish grey 
with olive spots more or less dark, generally forming a wreath at the thicker end. I have seen some 
specimens of a deeper grey.” 
In a note to Mr. Harting, the Rev. H. B. Tristram says : — “ The nest of S. aquatka, which I have several 
times taken in Africa, is rather like that of S. luscmioides, of one material throughout, not suspended like the 
Reed Warbler’s, but placed in the fork or leaf-joint of a big reed or cane in the centre of a swamp. The 
nest is small, lined with horse-hair, and interlaced with the stem.” 
In size and in the similarity of the sexes the Aquatic Warbler differs but little from our Common Chat 
or Sedge Warhler (Calamodyta phragtmf is) but the conspicuous stripes over the eye and down the crown, 
and the more striated markings of the body, will at all times serve to distinguish it from that species. 
I am indebted to Mr. Sharpe for the loan of a fine specimen, from which one of my figures was taken, 
both of which are of the natural size. 
The plant is the Woody Nightshade (Solanum dulcamara). 
