84 CEATEBOPODID^B. 120. Pomatorhittus liorsfieldii, Sykes. The Southern Scimitar BabUer. Pomatorhinus horsfieldii, SyJces, Jerd. B, 2nd. ii; p. 31; Humej Rough Draft N. $ E. no. 404. The Southern Scimitar Babbler breeds throughout the hilly tracts of Southern India, up to an elevation of fully 7000 feet. They are common in Ootacamund, and even on Dodabet as high up as it is wooded. They seem to breed less plentifully about Kotagherry than they do at Ootacamund itself, Coonoor, Neddi- vattam, &c. They lay from February to May, building a largish globular nest of grass, moss, and roots, placed on or very near to the ground in some bush or clump of fern or grass. They lay five eggs. A nest of this species which I owe to Mr. Carter, and which was found at Coonoor on the 7th April, 1869, is a huge globular mass of moss and fine moss-roots some 7 inches in diameter, with, on the upper side, an entrance to a small egg-cavity some 3| inches in diameter, and 2 inches in depth. It is a most singular nest, a great compact ball of soft feathery moss and very fine rnoss- roots, which latter predominate in the interior of the cavity, and so form a sort of lining to it. The great body of the nest is below the cavity, the overhanging dome-like covering of the cavity being comparatively thin. Mr. Davison remarks:—" The nest of this bird is very peculiar in structure, more like the nest of a field-mouse than of a bird, being in fact merely a ball of grass rather loosely put together, the grass on the exterior being intermingled with dry leaves and other rubbish. The nest is generally placed either in a clump of fern, or at the roots of some grass-grown bush. The eggs are pure white, very elongated, and with a remarkably thin and delicate shell. The normal number appears to be five. The breeding- season is, I think, the latter end of April and May." Later, he writes :—" It must, I think, breed twice, as I found a nest on the 10th March with fully-fledged young, and late in April another nest with perfectly fresh eggs." Writing of this species Dr. Jerdon says :—" I procured its nest near Neddivattani on the Nilghiris, on a bank on the roadside, made with moss and roots, and containing four white eggs of a very elongated form." Miss Cockburn, of Kotagherry, furnishes me with the following note on the nidification of this species :—" These birds build rather large nests, among the roots of bushes, and generally prefer those which grow on the slopes of steep hills. Their nests are composed of coarse grass, a few roots of the same, and the bark of a bush, which cracks when dry and is very easily pulled off. These materials are put together into a round nest, and also form a covering above, which makes the inside look very snug indeed. But if any attempts are made to remove the nest, it generally falls to pieces, the materials having no tenacity. This bird commonly