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e only seen six in about as many hundreds. In size the eggs vary from 0.53 to 0.7 in length, and from 0.42 to 0.5 in breadth; but the average of one hundred and twenty eggs measured was 0.61 by 0.45. 467. Prinia jerdoni (Blyth). _The Southern Wren-Warbler_. Drymoeca jerdoni (_Blyth_), _Hume, cat._ no. 544 ter. Mr. Davison says:--"The Southern Wren-Warbler breeds chiefly on the slopes of the Nilgiris about the Badaga cultivation. The nest is entirely composed of fine grass, and is generally placed about 2 or 3 feet from the ground, either in a clump of long grass or attached to the branch of a small bush. It is often suspended, domed, and with the opening near the top. The eggs, generally three, are blue, spotted and lined with deep red-brown." From Kotagherry Miss Cockburn tells us that "the Common Wren-Warbler has no song, but is loud and frequent in its repetition of a few notes during the breeding-season. Its nest, which is globular, is built in the same shape as that of _P. socialis_, with the entrance at one end, on some low bush, but it only uses _one_ material, namely fine long grass, and does not add any soft lining. The colour of its eggs, however, is totally different, of a light bluish green, and having a number of spots and streaks like dark threads carried round and through the spots, which are mostly at the thick end. The breeding-season lasts from April to July." Mr. C.J.W. Taylor, writing from Manzeerabad, Mysore, says:--"Fairly common throughout the district. Eggs taken on the 15th July, 1882." Mr. Rhodes W. Morgan, writing from South India, remarks:--"It builds a neat pendent nest in long grass on the Nilgiris. The nest is composed entirely of short pieces of grass fitted together, and is very compact. The eggs are three in number, and are of a blue colour, with large blotches and hair-like streaks of a dark reddish brown at the upper end. An egg measured .69 inch by .5." The eggs of this species do not differ materially in size, shape, or markings from those of _P. inornata_ which are very fully described above. 468. Prinia blanfordi (Walden). _The Burmese Wren-Warbler_. Drymoeca blanfordi, _Wald., Hume, cat._ no. 543 ter. Mr. Oates, who found this bird very common in Pegu, writes:--"The Burmese Wren-Warbler is perhaps the commonest bird of the Pegu plains. From Myitkyo on the Sittang, and possibly from further north, down to Rangoon, it is to be found in all the low tracts
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