307 
by Mr. Claude Grant in South Africa. 
262. Euprinodes florisuga. 
Apalls florisuga Reichenow, Yog. Afr. iii. p. 610. 
Z. Umfolosi Station, July, Sept. (2); Tv. Woodbush, 
Jan. (1); Klein Letaba, Sept. (3); Legogot, Apl. (1) ; 
P. Coguno, June, Aug. (4) ; Tambarara, May (1); Tete, 
Sept. (1). 
This Bush-Warbler was first distinguished by Reichenow 
(Journ. f. Orn. 1898, p. 314), whose name it should bear. 
I cannot separate Alexander’s E. neglecta , of which I have 
examined a typical example, from the ordinary South-East 
African form. 
[This dainty little Bush-Warbler was noted from Zululand, 
the Eastern and North-Eastern Transvaal, and the Inham- 
bane, Beira, Gorongoza, and Tete districts of Portuguese 
East Africa. It frequents both woods and forests and the 
ordinary “ bush veld” country, where I have usually observed 
it in pairs, but occasionally in small parties. 
Except for a low call-note it is a quiet and inconspicuous 
species, harmonizing wonderfully with the green foliage of the 
bushes, about which it actively creeps from branch to branch, 
diligently searching for insects, on which, I believe, it exclu¬ 
sively lives. It has a quick jerky flight as it moves from bush 
to bush. 
The soft parts are :—Irides pale amber-yellow ; eyelid 
pale orange; bill blackish brown; legs and toes palish 
brown.] 
261. Dryodromas icteropygialis. 
CG. Klipfontein, May, June (4). 
[Since the Central Cape Colony trip this Warbler has 
only been noted from Namaqualand, where it is by no means 
plentiful. It frequents the bushes both on the flats and on 
the mountain-sides, and is usually found in small parties, 
diligently searching for insects, on which it feeds, and con¬ 
tinually calling in a low note. 
The soft parts are :—Irides bright yellow; bill blackish 
horn-coloured; legs and toes darkish brown.] 
