UEOOISSA. 15 speckled with brown dashes confluent at the larger end; the ends nearly equal in size. It is very terrene in its habits, feeding almost entirely on the ground." Colonel G. F. L. Marshall remarks :— " The Bed-billed Blue Magpie is, as far as I know, an early breeder at Nairn Tal; common as the bird is I have only found one nest and that on the 24th April; it was a shallow slenderly built structure of fine roots, chiefly of maiden-hair fern, in a rough outer casing of twigs, placed on a horizontal bough overhanging a nullah about fifteen feet from the ground. The tree had mode- rately dense foliage, and was about twenty-five feet high in a small clump on a hillside covered with low scrub at 5000 feet elevation above the sea. Around the nest several small boughs and twigs grew out, and being very slight in structure it was not easy to see. The old bird sat very close. There were six eggs in the nest about haliMncubated ; in two of them the markings were densest at the small end. The egg-cavity \vas 6 inches in diameter by about 1| deep. On the 5th June I saw old birds accompanied by young ones able to fly, but without the long tails." The eggs of this species much resemble those of the European Magpie, but are considerably smaller. They are broad, rather perfect ovals, some what'elongated and pointed in many specimens. They exhibit but little gloss. The ground-colour varies much, but in all the examples that I possess, which I owe to Captain Hut ton's kindness, it is either of a yellowish-cream, pale cafe au lait or buff colour, or pale dull greenish. The ground is profusely blotched, spotted, and streaked (the general character of the markings being striations parallel to the major axis), with various shades of reddish and yellowish brown and pale inky purple. The markings vary much in intensity as well as in frequency, some being so closely set as to hide the greater part of the ground-colour; but in the majority ,of the eggs they are more or less confluent at the large end, where they form a comparatively dark, irregular blotchy zone. The eggs vary from 1-25 to 1-4 in. length, and from 0-89 to 0'96 in breadth'; but the average of 11 eggs is 1-33 by 0*93. Major Bingham, referring to the Burmese Magpie, which has been separated under by the name of U. magnirostris, says :— " This species I have only found common in the Thoimgyeen Valley. Elsewhere it seemed to me scarce. Below I give a note about its breeding. " I have found three nests of this handsome Magpie—two on the bank of the Meplay choung on the 14th April, 1879, and 5th March, 1880, respectively, and one near Meeawuddy on the Thoimgyeen river on the 19th March, 1880. " The first contained three, the second four, and the third two 48 These are all of the same type, dead white, with pale claret- coloured dashes and spots rather washed-out looking, and lying chiefly at the large end. One egg has the spots thicker at the