Ea ace eh ay ai Ae ps rey insets a heaos vA ay | \ ) iN Ue ae Delft 0 Kakerviyw Erinativoe EW Man Gul f of nar CEYLON English Miles 10 20 30 40 50 vu )" Point Pedro Wet Region — comprising the WIirovince anc. the C&S Province hill zones. Pecuhar (Ceylonese Forms mostnumeous mas region; exceptions are Tockus ginyalensis: Orysocolaptes Strickland Brachypterrass Ceyloruus ; Meg alecrna Zeylanica. ; Phornicophaes pyrrhocep Aleppe nigri frons Tellornaun fuscicapilun : Madbiguda. Melanictera. and Gallus Lasayett |Armugh load Region. covered with wild jungle and forest. comparatively luxuriant, throughout many parts pa] fxaeeal : of which the above mentioned Species are common. ) Uva Patna-basin Peculiar tract of Patna hills intersected. by deep walls inhabited by Francoli > nus pictus and by both hill & low country species. _ Indo Gylonese region: low thorny jungle. Euphor: bia &c,interspersed with open tracts. Typical species. Fyrrhudauda grisea. Munia. malabarica, | Temenuchus pagodarum. Heavy jungle and open country covered, with : 2 long grass. Forest species and grass-loving > ‘ forms (Drymarea, &c) abundant J Timit of peculiar” hill species. beyond which however, Meg aleema. lavidrons, Girysocolaples Stricklandi;, Oreo cinda.spulopterc..omatoriinus Mdanurus.and Golloperdix bicalcarta wander Region inhabited by Buchanga. atra,. Lanius caniceps; Turtur Risorius, Ortigornis pondira- + ranus and Gursortus coromandcbcus The figures at the various towns denote the mean Rainfall minches during the last 8 or 9.years Diyatura ‘Dambutta D (Darteey ) «+ LitBasses ater Ova. Ratiredam B 80 Longitude East from Greenwich B82 Engraved by EWeller. Red Lions A HISTORY OF THE BinDS OF CE Y 1 iN. Caprain W. VINCENT LEGGE, R.A, FELLOW OF THE LINNEAN SOCIETY, FELLOW OF THE ZOOLOGICAL SOCIETY, MEMBER OF THE BRITISH ORNITHOLOGISTS’ UNION, SECRETARY LATE ROY, AS. SOC. (C. B.), CORR. MEM. ROY. SOC, TASMANIA, ETC., ETC. LONDON: PUBLISHED BY THE AUTHOR. 1880. FLAMMAM. PRINTED BY TAYLOR AND FRANCIS, RED LION COURT, FLEET STREET. HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS ALFRED ERNEST ALBERT, DUKE OF EDINBURGH. K.G., K.T., G.CM.G., P.C., erc., THIS WORK IS DEDICATED, BY SPECIAL PERMISSION, IN MEMORY OF THE VISIT OF HIS ROYAL HIGHNESS TO CEYLON IN THE YEAR 1870. BY HIS OBEDIENT HUMBLE SERVANT, THE AUTHOR. PREFACE. Or late years Ornithology has made more rapid strides than perhaps any other branch of zoological research. In Oriental regions more particularly many naturalists have, within the last quarter of a century, prosecuted their studies with the greatest vigour ; enormous collections have been made, entirely new regions explored, and their avifauna investigated with all that energy which collectors of the 19th century bring to bear on their work and doings in the forests of the tropics. The pens of Blyth, Jerdon, Wallace, the Marquis of Tweeddale, Swinhoe, Pére David, and Allan Hume have brought our knowledge of the avifauna of India and the countries to the eastward of it to a high degree of perfection. At the time of the author's arrival in Ceylon much had been done by Layard, and the results of his labours were being largely added to by the researches of Mr. Holdsworth; but nevertheless, up to that period, no complete treatise on the birds of the island had been written. As a rising British colony, with fast- developing resources and wealth, an increasing European community, and an educated element in the native population, the production of a book on its avifauna which should take a place in the series of zoological works which are invariably the outcome of civilization seemed to the author a positive necessity. This idea was combined with a strong desire to create a taste for natural history in the minds more particularly of the educated native community, and the hope of founding an ornithological school in Ceylon, such as had been the effect of the labours of Jerdon in the Indian empire. With this view, therefore, the author devoted his entire spare time during an 84% years’ residence in the island to the study of its ornis and the amassing of a large collection of speci- mens. Towards the close of his work he received no little encouragement in a promise of help from the Government made to him by the late Governor, Sir William Gregory, who, during his term of office in Ceylon, did so much for the advancement of science in all its branches, and to whom the author is much indebted for his recent exertions with the existing Government on his b Vi PREFACE. behalf. On his return to England in 1877 it only remained for the author to combine his acquired knowledge of the life-history of the birds of Ceylon with a comparison of his collection (the largest ever made by one individual in the island) with series of specimens and skins in the British Museum and the collections of brother ornithologists in London, illustrative of the ornis of adjacent countries; and after three years of incessant labour the work has been brought to a conclusion. A non-residence in London, within daily reach of the libraries, with their stores of ornitho- logical literature, and the collections with which that great civilizing centre teems, has been a serious disadvantage to the author. Furthermore the vast amount of correspondence and supervision which the publication of the work entailed on him was much increased by his residence at a distance from those engaged in its printing and illustration. The scientific reader will therefore, it is to be hoped, pardon the various shortcomings which the author feels must, on this account, exist throughout the work. Its mission, however, is not to impart knowledge to the scientific ornithologist in Europe, for it cannot pretend to any such degree of merit; it is intended purely as a text-book for the local student and collector in Ceylon ; and though the author has as yet met with comparatively little support among the class for which he has worked so hard, yet if he succeeds in inculcating in the minds of only a few of the inhabitants of Ceylon a taste for the study of birds, which he apprehends must always rank foremost among the wonderful creations of an all-wise and bountiful Providence, his labour of love will not have been in vain. On the other hand, while his sincerest gratitude is evoked by the patronage which the Royal Family have been graciously pleased to bestow upon his humble labours, the author cannot but tender his best thanks to his friends and the general public in England for the cordial manner in which they have supported him. W. V. LEGGE, Captain R.A. Aberystwith, September 2, 1880. — —_ bi INTRODUCTION. Tue island of Ceylon, although it contains none of those remarkable forms which characterize the birds of some of the Malay islands, undoubtedly possesses a rich avifauna; and, considering its geographical area (about five sixths that of Ireland), the number of species is very large. The tropical position of Ceylon, coupled with its location in the path of the monsoon winds and rains, fosters the growth of luxuriant vegetation and verdant forests, which, as a matter of course, teem with all that wonderful insect-life necessary for the sustenance of birds, and hence the large number of resident species inhabiting it; whilst the fact of its being situated at the extreme south of an immense peninsula makes it the finishing point of the stream of Waders and Water-birds which annually pass down the coasts of India; and, lastly, the prevalence of a northerly wind at the time of the migration of weak-flying Warblers brings these little birds in numbers to its shores. The abundance of the commoner species inhabiting the cultivated country near the towns on the west coast, and the semicultivated interior traversed by the railway and the highroads leading to the principal towns, at once strikes the traveller on his arrival in the island; and the wonderful variety of bird-sounds heard during the course of a morning stroll, though they cannot vie in sweetness with the notes of the denizens of English groves, are, notwithstanding, quite as attractive. The laughing voice of the larger Kingfishers, the extraordinary booming call of the “ Jungle-Crows” (Centropus rufipennis and C. chlororhynchus), and the energetic shouts of the Barbets when first heard fill the European traveller with astonishment, and more than compensate for the absence of the mellifluous voice of the Thrush and Blackbird. As regards brilliancy of plumage, when we consider the tropical nature of their abode, the birds of Ceylon are decidedly mediocral. We find but little of that conspicuous beauty which characterizes the avifauna of many of the islands of the Austro-Malayan region, or even some of the birds of the Himalayas, nor do we meet with the gorgeous plumage of those of tropical America, or even the handsome dress worn by so many of the feathered inhabitants of African forests. When the naturalist has made the acquaintance of the Sun-birds, Pittas, and King- fishers there is not very much left in the way of brilliant plumage to attract him. Notwith- standing, many species are conspicuous for grace and elegance of form combined with an attractive coloration; and if we except the above-mentioned families, the peculiar birds of the island number among their ranks some of the most beautiful species inhabiting it. Before proceeding to the consideration of the ornithological features of the island, it will be well to notice briefly the labours of those naturalists who have heretofore interested themselves in the birds of Ceylon. b2 vill INTRODUCTION. Labours of former Writers—In 1743 George Edwards, Library Keeper to the Royal College of Physicians, published a work entitled ‘A Natural History of Uncommon Birds,’ and in it figured several species inhabiting India and Ceylon, among which were “The Black Indian Cuckow ” (Eudynamys honorata), “'The small Red-and-green Parrakeet” (Loriculus indicus), “The Black- and-white Kingfisher” (Ceryle rudis), “The Indian Bee-eater” (Merops viridis), “The Black- headed Indian Icterus” (Oriolus melanocephalus), “The Crested Red or Russet Butcher-bird ” (Lanius cristatus), “The Pyed Bird of Paradise” (Terpsiphone paradisi), “The Purple Indian Creeper” (Cinnyris asiaticus), “'The Cowry Grosbeak” (Munia punctulata), “The Short-tailed Pye” (Pitta coronata), “The Minor” (KLulades religiosa), and ‘The Emerald Dove” (Chalcophaps indica). Of these it will be observed that but one species, the Lorikeet, is peculiar to the island. During the latter half of the eighteenth century Gideon Loten was nominated Governor of Ceylon by the Dutch, and, happening to be a great lover of birds, collected and employed people to procure specimens of species which attracted his notice; and from his labours we first learn something of the peculiar birds of the island. He had drawings prepared of many species, which he lent to an English naturalist named Peter Brown, who published in London, in 1776, a quarto work styled ‘Tlustrations of Zoology.’ His descriptions of the birds he figured were given in French and English, and related to the following species named by him thus :— The Brown Hawk” (Astur badius), “Great Ceylonese Eared Owl” (Ketupa ceylonensis), “‘ Red-crowned Barbet” (Xantholema rubricapilla), “ Yellow-cheeked Barbet” (Megalema flavifrons), ‘Ceylon Black-cap” (Lora typhia), “Spotted Curucui” (Cuculus maculatus), “ Red-vented Warbler” (Pycnonotus hemorrhous), ‘‘ Yellow-breasted Flycatcher” (Rubigula melanictera), “The Green Wagtail” (Budytes viridis), “The Rail” (Rallina euryzonoides), ‘*The Pompadour Pigeon” (Osmotreron pompadora). ‘The artist who delineated these species was Mr. Khuleelooddeen. Some of the drawings are fairly accurate; but others are grotesque and unnatural, showing the poor state of perfection to which the illustration of books had up to that time been brought. We pass on now to a man of a different stamp, Johann Reinhold Forster, who gave Latin names to several of the peculiar Ceylonese forms which now stand, having been published after the Linnean period (1776). This author was likewise indebted to Governor Loten, of whom he speaks in his Introduction that he found a great field for his tastes in the science of natural history, and to assist him in his researches taught several slaves drawing. Forster’s work, entitled ‘‘ Indische Zoologie,” was published at Halle, in Germany, in 1781, and is written in German and Latin, purporting to be a ‘systematic description of rare and unknown Indian animals.” The following species are figured and described:—Circus melanoleucus, Strix bakkamuna, Trogon fasciatus, Cuculus pyrrhocephalus, Rallus phenicurus, Tantalus leucocephalus, Anser melanonotus, Anhinga (Plotus) melanogaster, Anas pecilorhyncha, and Perdix bicalcarata. Through Loten’s instrumentality, therefore, 10 species were described by Forster, in addition to those which Brown figured, and which were afterwards named by Linnzeus, Gmelin, and others. Prior to the advent of Templeton and Layard he did more for Ceylon ornithology than any other naturalist. One or two species were made known by Latham in his ‘Synopsis,’ such as the “Ceylonese Crested INTRODUCTION. ix Falcon” (Spizaetus ceylonensis) and the “‘ Ceylonese Creeper” (Cinnyris zeylonicus) ; but these were afterwards found to inhabit India; and Levaillant figured two Barbets in his ‘ Histoire Naturelle des Barbes,’ one of which (the Yellow-fronted Barbet) is peculiar to the island. A long gap now occurs, when little or nothing was done to elucidate the avifauna of the island; and we hear nothing of the birds of Ceylon until Dr. Templeton, R.A., went out there to be stationed. Taking a great interest in the natural history of his temporary home, and at the same time not being a sportsman himself, he depended on his friends for specimens, which he forwarded to Blyth, then curator of the Asiatic Society’s Museum, Calcutta, for identification. Fortunately for ornithology one of these friends was Mr. Edgar Leopold Layard, the now well- known ornithologist, and at present Her Majesty’s Consul at Noumea. This gentleman, on his arrival in the island, set about collecting for Dr. Templeton, and, in his capacity as an officer in Government service, had ample opportunity for travel and exploration of the jungle. The same zeal and untiring energy which has throughout life characterized Layard’s career was brought to bear upon the study of the Birds of Ceylon; and in a few years his great exertions in collecting bore fruit in a series of papers called “Notes on the Ornithology of Ceylon,” published in the ‘ Annals and Magazine of Natural History,’ which demonstrated to the scientific world that Ceylon was far richer in birds than any one had supposed. The account of his important labours is best given in his own words, contained in his kind notice of this work in a late number of ‘ The Ibis’ :—‘‘I arrived in Ceylon in March 1846, and for some time. having no employment, amused my leisure in collecting formy more than friend, Dr. Templeton, who had nursed me through a dangerous illness, and in whom I found a congenial spirit. My chief attraction there was the glorious Lepidoptera of the island; but I always carried a light single-barrelled gun in a strap on my back to shoot specimens for the Doctor. He himself, like Dr. Kelaart, never shot, but depended on his friends for specimens. I, of course, soon became interested in the ‘ornis;’ and on Templeton’s leaving at the end of 1847 or beginning of 1848, he begged me to take up his correspondence with the late Edward Blyth, then curator of the R. A. S. Calcutta Museum. He left me his list of the species then known to exist in the island, numbering 183, and Blyth’s last letter to answer. From that day almost monthly letters passed between the latter and myself, till I left Ceylon in 1853, The list and the correspondence are still in my possession. “When I left I had brought up the list to 8315; deduct from this the novelties added by Kelaart, and some which I think he has wrongly identified (but which are included in my list in the ‘ Annals and Magazine of Natural History’), 22 in number, and it leaves me the contributor of 110 species to the Ceylonese ornis, examples of most of which fell to my own gun. “My collecting-trips never extended to those hill-parts where Dr. Kelaart collected, Nuwara Elliya, &c. I was twice in Kandy, once at ‘ Carolina,’ an estate near Ambegamoa, and once as far as Gillymally, v¢@ Ratnapura.” Besides this, Layard, as he informs me im epist., collected from Colombo to Jaffna, wid Puttalam, Jaffna to Kandy on the Central Road, Colombo to Galle, and round to Hambantota, x INTRODUCTION. Pt. Pedro to Mullaittivu, and thence back to the Central Road. The specimens procured on all these trips, as well as during Layard’s residence at Pt. Pedro and other parts of the island, were sent to Blyth for identification, which resulted in the names given by the latter to not a few of the peculiar forms. He published papers from time to time in the ‘Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal,’ and also in ‘The Ibis’ so late as 1867. Blyth, however, received specimens from another source, namely, from Dr. Kelaart, a native of Ceylon, and who went out from England in 1849 as Staff-Surgeon to the Forces. This gentleman, though he did not shoot himself, obtained specimens of many of the hill-birds inhabiting the vicinity of Nuwara Elliya, where he resided, and furnished Blyth with skins and notes for some of his papers, one of the most important of which is a “ Report on the Mammalia and more remarkable Species of Birds inhabiting Ceylon,” published in the ‘Journ. Asiat. Soc. Bengal’ for 1851. In 1852 Dr. Kelaart published his ‘ Prodromus Faune Zeylanice’ in Ceylon, chiefly noted for the outline account of the mammals and reptiles of the island, with which he was better acquainted than with its birds. For this work, Layard, as he writes in ‘The Ibis’ for the current year, supplied him with all his ‘lists and numerous specimens, not only of birds, but of many mammals and reptiles new to him; and it was arranged that we should bring out a second part of the ‘Prodromus’ (then in MS. only), which should consist of the Birds, to be written by me.” It appears, however, that Kelaart broke faith with him, and issued his ‘ Prodromus’ with the notice of the birds (Part II.) compiled by himself. Thus “left out in the cold,’ Layard, on his return to England, published the valuable notes referred to above. He also compiled a considerable portion of the notice of the birds of the island contained in Emerson Tennent’s ‘ Natural History of Ceylon,’ and furnished the author with voluminous notes, whilst his large collection supplied the materials for the ‘* List of Birds” printed in the work. ‘This was published in 1868, and besides describing the habits and instincts of the mammalia, birds, reptiles, fishes, and insects of the island, includes an interesting monograph of the elephant. During the interval between the last-mentioned date and the year 1854 scarcely any thing was published concerning the ornis of Ceylon, with the exception of a stray paper now and then contributed to the ‘Journal of the Asiatic Society, some of which emanated from the pen of Mr. Hugh Nevill, C.C.S., who recorded the occurrence of the Wood-Snipe in the Part for 1867, which was not published till 1870. At this time Mr. Holdsworth was devoting his attention to the ornithology of the island, and a co-worker, the author, who arrived on the island a year later (Oct. 1868), had likewise commenced to collect vigorously. Mr. Holdsworth, who landed in the island in September 1875, was sent out from England to study the habits of the Pearl-Oyster, and find out the cause of the failure of the Pearl-fisheries, with a view of advising the Government what should be dohe for their better management. His appointment necessi- tated his residence, off and on, at Aripu, which is adjacent to the Pearl-banks, and while there he devoted his spare time to a study of the birds in the vicinity of the station. He also collected at Colombo and at Nuwara Eliya during both monsoons. ‘The outcome of his labours during seven years’ residence in Ceylon was his ‘‘ Catalogue of the Birds found in Ceylon,” published in INTRODUCTION. al the ‘ Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London,’ 1872, and by far the most complete treatise which had ever been compiled on the avifauna of the island. ‘The author devoted particular attention to the synonymy of the birds, which, up to that time, was in a very confused state; and the result was the working-out of the correct title of each species, which constituted a most valuable addition to the literature of the Ceylonese ornis. The catalogue numbers 326 species. In this list 24 species were added by the author, which are published under the following titles: —Hypotriorchis severus, Picus eruginosus, Pandion haliaétus, Buteo desertorum, Huhua pectoralis, Brachypternus puncticollis, Prionochilus vincens, Erythrosterna hyperythra, Arrenga blighi, Geocichla layardi, Zosterops ceylonensis, Estrelda amandava, Chrysocolaptes festivus, Francolinus pictus, Chettusia gregaria, Terekia cinerea, Tringa salina, Sterna leucoptera, Sterna gracilis, Phaethon rubricauda, Sula fiber, Taccocua leschenaulti, Drymoipus jerdoni, Gallinago nemoricola. Of the above, Zosterops ceylonensis was not an additional species, but a new name for Zosterops annulosus included in Layard’s list. The Butalis muttui of Layard’s list appeared also under another title (Alseonax terricolor), though this identification afterwards proved to be erroneous. aes * q * as Stoparola sordida .............. * Muscicapide ................ 3 Allseonaxt mutbui yo <5 cjcis 6 3625 3 35 * Hypothymis ceylonensis.......... * * INTRODUCTION. xi TABLE OF Birps PECULIAR TO CEYLON (continued). earn Nuwara-El- ay Numb Hill-district : Families. of apeuien Name. _ (under — /Low country. ety ao 5000 feet). ene Myiophoneus blighi ............ * * Mardidsetew.1.. tial aes enue. 2 4 Turdus kinnisi (App. IL.) ........ * 7 * Turdus spiloptera .............. * * * Oreocincla imbricata ............ * ee * Brachypodide 9... ss) hiaea a 5) Rubigula melanictera .......:.... * * t Kelaartia penicillata. ............ * ne * Malacocercus rufescens .......... * * * Garrulax cinereifrons............ * t Pomatorhinus melanurus ........ * * * ‘Allcippe migritrons) rio ss nae ete * * * imalitd ieee ee ee ee 10 é Pellorneum fuscicapillum ........ * * a Py ctorhis masalish| i's, 2.0 octet * * Priniaybrevicaudays.tjceiseien cere: * * Elaphrornis palliseri ............ oP Ae * Drym'oeca svyalidai.cr. scion ceoetersets rs * * ( ?Drymeeca insularis ............ * Bake Pachyglossa vincens ............ * * Dicwide ...... 2.0.2... see. 2 { Zosterops ceylonensis............ * : * Elinondini dierent sitesi: 1 Hirundo hyperythra ............ * * § Bloceidsey shite sts cic nes ees oe ae 1 Mruniavkelaartin macs seseecies ciler * a: * Acridotheres melanosternus ...... Be * Sternidppemytucrduckin neice 3 Hulabes ptilogenys .............. * I SturNOrnisvseMexea ace itty aye aisle * q 2% Colimmachyicscooheencesce de 1 Palumbus torringtonie .......... * ans * Baa Gallusplafayettil mya schas rio * *% % TEINS Geen on dean otis 2 { Galloperdix bicalcarata .......... * * * 1 + Not common. + Certain forests of Western Province in N.E. monsoon. § Occasional. || Spreading into the forests at the base of the hills, particularly in the W. Province. 4 In the forests of the Passedun Korale, down to 600 feet near Moropitiya. It will be seen that this Table comprises 47 species. One peculiar genus (Elaphrornis) inhabits the island, its nearest ally being the Malayan and Himalayan Brachypteryx; and a subgenus (Sturnornis) is likewise recognized. Affinities of the Ceylonese Avifauna—We now come to the important point of the relationship of the Ceylonese ornis to that of adjacent regions; and this, as might be expected from the geographical position of the island and its separation from the mainland merely by a c X1V INTRODUCTION. shallow strait, is closer to that of South India than to the avifauna of any other part of the peninsula. Wallace, in his great work on the Distribution of Animals, considers the island of Ceylon and the entire south of India as far north as the Deccan as forming a subdivision of the great “ Oriental Region.” It is, however, in the hills of the two districts, which possess the important element of a similar rainfall, where we find the nearest affinities both as regards birds and mammals ; and this is exemplified by the fact of some of the members of the Brachypodidee and Turdide (families well represented in both districts) being the same in the Nilghiris and the mountains of Ceylon, while many of the Timaliide and Turdide in one region have near allies in the other. For example, Malacocercus (Layardia) rufescens, Pomatorhinus melanurus, Alcippe nigrifrons, Garrulax cinereifrons, Myiophoneus blight, Oreocincla imbricata, Turdus kinnisi, and Palumbus torringtoniw in Ceylon are respectively represented in the hills of South India by Layardia subrufa, Pomatorhinus horsfieldi, Alcippe atriceps, Garrulax delesserti, Myio- phoneus horsfieldi, Oreocincla nilgherriensis, Turdus simillima, and Palumbus elphinstonii. But though this strong similarity in the avifauna of the mountains in question, as well as their geological characters, indicate a contemporaneous upheaval and enrichment with animal life of their surfaces, a similar connexion is found between the northern parts of the island and the low country of the Carnatic. Here, again, we have in the fossiliferous limestones of the two regions an undoubted connexion, and also an affinity in their avifauna, which differs totally from the mountain-districts on either side of the straits. The northern parts of Ceylon, as well as the south-eastern, both of which I shall speak of in my remarks on the geographical features of the island, may be considered to constitute an Indo-Ceylonese subregion, and are inhabited by the same species as the south-east coast-districts of the peninsula. Brachypternus puncticollis, Anthra- coceros coronatus, Malacocercus striatus, Pycnonotus hemorrhous, Merops viridis, Pyrrhulauda grisea, Mirafra affinis, Turtur risorius, Buchanga atra, and perhaps Cursorius coromandelicus are species characteristic of the north of Ceylon and of Ramisserum Island and the plains of Tanjore, but which are not inhabitants of the damp Malabar district. On the other hand it is noteworthy that Gallus sonnerati and the Lesser Florrikin (Sypheotides aurita), common in the Carnatic, have not yet been detected in North Ceylon. It is by way of the low-lying country of the Carnatic (the fauna of which, it may be remarked in passing, is allied to that of Central India) that the cool-season migrants enter the island of Ceylon, leaving numbers of their fellows in Southern India; and this forms an additional ornithological bond between the two districts. Some of these migrants come from the regions at the foot of the Himalayas, and tend to the supposition that there isa Himalayan element in the avifauna of Ceylon; but this is but very slight, if, indeed, it should at all be recognized, for migratory species, such as Scolopax rusticula and Gallinago nemoricola (which only inhabit the upper ranges and the high mountains of Southern India, and whose /ocale depends solely on climate), cannot be taken into consideration. One genus (Pachyg/ossa) certainly does constitute a bond of affinity. The distinctness of the avi- fauna of the Southern-Indian and Ceylonese mountains from that of the Himalayas may be shown by the fact that most of the Himalayan typical Timaline genera, Suthora, Stachyris, Trochalopteron, INTRODUCTION. XV Actinodura, are wholly absent from Ceylon, and but poorly represented in the hills of South India, there being only three species of the numerous genus Trochelopteron in the Nilghiris and Palani hills and not any of the others. Again, there is only one species of Garrulax in South India and one in Ceylon. Of the widely spread genus Pomatorhinus, found in the Himalayas, Burmah, and Java, there is only one species in each of the southern hill-regions in question. The genus Alcippe is about equally represented in both regions. These data show that though there is a connexion between the ornis of the Himalayas and that of Ceylon it is but slight, and only what one would expect in mountain-districts of adjacent ornithological regions. It is noteworthy that the Liotrichidi, or Hill-Tits (one of the three peculiar families of the Oriental Region, and which are abundant in the Himalayas), are absent from Ceylon. Certain Indian families are entirely absent from Ceylon, either as residents or migrants ; they are the Eurylaimide (Broadbills)—a Himalayan and Malayan form,—the Pteroclide (Sand- Grouse), the Otidide (Bustards), Gruid (Cranes), and Mergide (Mergansers). Among these families it is remarkable that some member of the Gruide has not yet been found in the cool season in North Ceylon; for, though the country is not thoroughly suited to their habits, the members of this family being migratory (and one of them, the Demoiselle Crane, extending to South India), it is singular that they do not extend their migration a little further south and reach the shores of Ceylon. I have heard a vague rumour of a Crane being seen near Mullaittivu; and it is not wholly improbable that the above-mentioned species (Anthropoides virgo) will some day be added to the occasional migrants during the N.E. monsoon. Another family, Vulturidz, has a place in the Ceylonese avifauna, owing to a straggler having recently appeared in the island. Here, again, is an instance of species which, one would think, ought to occur as visitants in the N.E. monsoon; for I am informed that Vultures are not unfrequently seen in the Tanjore district ; and Gyps indicus breeds in the Nilghiris. Besides the widely distributed Grallatorial and Natatorial forms common to both India and Ceylon, certain Indian genera of western distribution are represented in the island. They are Cuculus, Ceryle, Halcyon, Cypselus, Caprimulgus, Corone, Lanius, Turdus, Phylloscopus, Cinnyris, Hirundo, Motacilla, Corydalla, Turtur, Francolinus. Of these the Cuckoos are remarkably numerous. If we turn now towards the Malayan region we find, in spite of its more remote geographical position, quite as close an affinity as with the Himalayas—which may perhaps be accounted for on the theory held by some that there was at one time a connexion between the two regions. It may, however, be remarked, in passing, that if this did occur it must have been, in all probability, by way of the Andamans and Malacca, as we find the 15,000 feet contour of ocean- depth passes up near the east coast of the island into the Bay of Bengal to lat. 10° N. This Malayan affinity is shown in the existence in Ceylon of a Malayan form, Phenicophaés, and a, member of a typical Sunda-Island genus, Wyiophoneus. It is also worthy of note that the island is visited by a Malaccan emigrant, Gorsachius, which has rarely been met with in India. ‘This is remarkable, as, in all probability, before the submergence took place which altered the Malayan c2 xvl1 INTRODUCTION. region, the hills of South India were just as much connected with Malacca as those of Ceylon. A closely allied Swallow to our “ peculiar” Hirwndo hyperythra is found in Malacca; and Malayan genera of Pigeons (Carpophaga, Osmotreron, and Chalcophaps) are also found in Ceylon, and perhaps to a greater extent, when we look at its small geographical area, than in India. Certain Australian and Malayan birds, such as Haliaetus leucogaster, Coturnix chinensis (found also in China), Mycteria australis, extend into Ceylon, not to mention the Waders (Limicole), which range from Asia thence to the Australian continent, taking in Ceylon in their path. The island, however, is not dependent on these latter for its migratorial Waders, in which, as also in some water-birds (Anatidee), it is very rich. It forms, in fact, the southernmost Asiatic limit of the flight of many European and Asiatic Grallatorial and Natatorial forms ; and hence the large numbers of these birds which are found in the cool season along its shores. Of these the following species are noteworthy :—Scolopaa rusticula, Gallinago nemoricola, Machetes pugnax, Tringa minuta, Totanus ochropus, Totanus fuscus, Tringa minuta, Limosa cwgocephala, Himantopus candidus, Recurvirostra avocetta, CEdicnemus scolopax, Hamatopus ostralegus, Anas acuta, Anas circia, Anas crecca, and Phenicopterus roseus. Geographical Features and Inland Distribution—Having now considered the important question of the affinities of the Ceylonese avifauna it is necessary to notice the geographical features of the island as bearing upon the inland distribution of the birds inhabiting it. Ceylon is an island of about 270 miles in length and 138 in breadth, lying between lat. 5° 50! and 9° 50! N., and between long. 79° 40! and 61° 50! E. ; it is separated from the mainland of India by a shallow strait 35 miles wide, which is traversed by a chain of islands, between which lies a long sandy shoal called Adam’s Bridge, which is alternately raised and lowered on the north and south by the action of N.E. and $.W. monsoons. For ornithological purposes the island may be divided into four regions or districts—the dry forests of the entire north and south-east, the arid mari- time belts of the north-west and south-east coasts, the damp Western-Province region, and the hill-zones of the Central and Southern Provinces. The northern part of the island consists of a vast plain covered with forest, except near the sea, where, particularly on the north-west coast, there are open tracts studded with low thorny jungle. This region is called in the present work the ‘northern forest-tract,” and is here and there studded with very rocky abrupt hills, rising suddenly out of the forest-clad plain. Sigiri, Rittagalla, and Mahintale rock are some of the most notable among these acclivities. This region, which lies to the north of the high land intercepting the moisture brought up from the ocean by the S.W. and N.E. monsoons, is alternately swept by a dry westerly and easterly wind, and is covered with tolerably luxuriant forest and wild secondary jungle, inhabited chiefly by members of those Indian families which are most strongly represented in the island, the Flycatchers, Drongos, Barbets, Bulbuls, Babblers (Timaliide), and Cuckoos, but also contains many of the forest-loving “ peculiar” forms, which have their stronghold further south. The northern forest-tract likewise is the home of many of the larger INTRODUCTION. XVii Water-birds and “ Waders” which affect the numerous tanks* in the heart of the jungle. The most luxuriant vegetation in this part of the island is to be found on the banks of the rivers, where the Koombook (Terminalia glabra) is one of the most characteristic trees. In the drier parts the forest is sprinkled plentifully with the iron-wood (JMimusops indica), the fruit of which is the favourite food of many birds. The open scrubby belt of land bordering the N.W. coast, as also the island of Manaar and parts of the peninsula of Jaffna, are characterized by a very different flora. Here almost every tree is of a thorny nature, and the low and almost impenetrable masses of brushwood are filled with Euphorbia-trees (Euphorbia antiquorum), which is the characteristic plant of the district. This region is the home of plain-loving birds, such as Pyrrhulauda grisea, Merops viridis, Munia malabarica, and is the almost exclusive habitat of Buchanga atra, Lanius caniceps, Turtur risorius, Ortygornis pondiceriana, and Cursorius coro- mandelicus, which appear to have extended their range from the Carnatic hither and not passed beyond the forests which hem in the district. Here, too, is the great haunt of the migratory Waders, which swarm on the muddy flats between Jaffna and Manaar, and also congregate round the salt lagoons of the N.E. coast. These latter are surrounded with heavy jungle, inhabited by the same birds as further inland, but which stands back at some distance from their grass-begirt shores. Southward of the region just considered we have on the west coast the damp, luxuriant, typically Ceylonese region, cultivated with rice in some parts and in others clothed with tall forest, of which the characteristic trees are the gigantic Hora (Dipterocarpus zeylonensis), the Doon (Doona affinis and Doona congestifiora), the stately Keena(Calycophyllum tomentoswm), and the lofty Dawata (Carallia integerrima). ‘This tract, which comprises the Western Province and “ South- western Hill-district,” is intersected with ranges and groups of hills heavily timbered in some parts * Many of these large irrigation-works claim a place among the most gigantic monuments of ancient enterprise and labour; they literally astonish the traveller and fill his mind with wonder as he stands on the vast bunds and looks down on the wild and lonely scene, pondering on the means and appliances which the engineers of those distant times must have used to get the great stones in their places. Whole valleys have been dammed up, and sometimes the strong floods of three rivers thrown back and spread out into a great lake, the waters of which must have irrigated thousands of square miles. The bund of the great Padewiya tank extends for 11 miles across a valley, and in olden times, before this enormous embankment was broken down by the rush of mighty floods, the water was, as Emerson Tennent tells us, thrown back for 15 miles along the valley. I regret to say I never visited this tank; but I have seen other bunds of great size, of which perhaps that which holds back the waters of Kanthelai tank is the finest. This tank, which has been lately restored, was built by King Maha Sin, a.p. 275; and the following details kindly furnished me by Mr. E. Scott Barber, C.E., who repaired the bund, may not be uninteresting to my readers :—‘* When up to ‘spill-level’ (22 feet), the tank contains 3580 acres, and is 17 miles round. The bund is 60 feet high and 290 feet in width at the bottom; it is 6800 feet in length, and contains 19,121,296 cubic yards of material. It is ‘pitched’ with large boulders from bottom to 60 feet up the slope and from 3 to 4 courses deep. The outlet was by two culverts 4 feet by 2 feet, situated at either end of the bund; the stones forming them average 13 to 2 tons in weight, and are ‘ tongued’ together in the centre.” The top of this mighty embankment was about 60 yards wide and covered with jungle and large trees. As it was, it gave one the impression, when walking along it, of standing on a natural ridge or long low hill! XV1il INTRODUCTION. and covered with bamboo-cheena in others; the valleys, constantly rained on during the south- west monsoon, and likewise receiving a heavy downfall in the north-east monsoon, are the dampest spots in the island, and harbour numbers of Timaliidie (Malacocercus rufescens, Garrulax cinerei- frons, Alcippe nigrifrons, Pellorneum fuscicapillum), also Brachypodide (Hypsipetes ganeesa, Criniger ictericus, Rubiqgula melanictera). he cultivated districts are conspicuous for the numbers of the common Bulbuls, Barbets, Doves (Zurtur suratensis), smaller Timaliide (Cisticola, Prinia, Drymeca, &c.), as well as some numbers of the Heron family, which are seen about the paddy-fields. A considerable portion of the uncultivated soil in the Western Province and also in the lower hills is overgrown with a dense bramble (Lantana mixta), popularly known as “Lady Horton’s wood,” and which was introduced (unfortunately) into the island about the year 1830. It thrives on gravelly soil, and especially on land which has once been cultivated, sometimes clothing more than an acre without a single break. ‘The fruit of this pest is eagerly sought after by many birds, particularly Bulbuls (Rudigula, Pycnonotus, Ivos); and to this fact the wonderful manner in which it has been propagated is due. ‘The damp, heavy forests of the Adam’s-Peak range descend continuously into the low country of Saffragam, and through them several true hill species (Hulabes ptilogenys, Paleornis calthrope, Garrulax cinereifrons) range to a lower level than anywhere else, being quite common in portions of the Kuruwite and Three Korales. We now come to the consideration of the fourth ornithological district, the lofty hills of the Southern Province, rising up on the north of the valley of Saffragam, of which Ratnapura is the chief town. ‘The first-named region is entirely occupied by a group of high mountains and elevated valleys, forming a perfect mountain-zone, inside of the base of which there is scarcely any land of less elevation than 1500 or 1700 feet. This lofty district culminates in the high Pedrotallagala range (8200 feet), just on the north of the plain of Nuwara Eliya, from which extends an elevated plateau, intersected by forest-clad ridges, and dotted here and there with the curious natural fields called patnas, for some 20 miles south to the Horton plains (7000 feet), whence the lofty Haputale range stretches to the east and the Adam’s-Peak range round to the west as far north as the Four Korales, the slopes of both dropping at once into the low country. The coffee-districts of Dimbula and Dickoya are enclosed by the latter on the east of the Nuwara- Eliya plateau, each with its dividing range; while the Uva patna-basin (a curious tract of grass- covered or patna-hills) forms its eastern flank, and slopes out into the Bintenne country through the valley of Badulla, being bounded on the extreme east by the lofty ridges of Madulsima. On the north of the Pedro mountain high ranges jut out towards the upland valley of Dumbara, beyond which the Knuckles and Ambokka ranges, running on each side to the north-west and north respectively, complete the Kandyan mountain-system. The southern hill-ranges bound the south side of Saffragam, and are comprised of the Kukkul, Morowak, and Kolonna Korales, the highest point being Gongalla, a little over 4400 feet in altitude. Of late years the forest has been felled for the planting of coffee, as in the Central Province; but there are still large tracts of forest in the Kukkul Korale in which Central-Province birds (Cissa ornata, Eulabes ptilogenys, Sturnornis senex, INTRODUCTION. XIX Paleornis calthrope, Zosterops ceylonensis, Culicicapa ceylonensis) abound, and in which both Gallus lafayettii and Galloperdix bicalcarata are plentiful. The northern portion of this korale, lying between the Karawita hills and the hilly forests of the Passedun Korale, consists partly of semicultivated land and partly of a curious and little-known tract of open grassy hills with wood- dotted dingles, resembling the patnas of the Kandyan country, and on the open parts of which Grass-Warblers, Wren-Warblers, and Munias are common, while Babblers (Pomatorhinus) are found in the groves; but otherwise an absence of bird-life is decidedly noticeable. It is in the coffee-districts and valleys lying beneath the estates which are dotted with patna-grasses, particularly “ Maana-grass” (Andropogon martini), and patched here and there with groves of luxuriant trees lining the courses of the streams, where the hill-species, both “peculiar” and Indian, intermingled with not a few low-country forms, abound; but it is also in these spots where the original ornithological features of the country are being gradually changed by the disappearance before the woodman’s axe of such a vast area of forest, and species such as Palumbus torringtonie, Merula kinnisi, Eulabes ptilogenys, Stoparola sordida, and Culicicapa ceylonensis (true hill-species) are being driven into the upper forests, or are locating themselves to a considerable extent about the open estates where once their forest-home stood. In the upper forests and in the Nuwara-Eliya plateau we lose the stately trees of the genera Doona, Dipterocarpus, &c., and find stunted, though thick-trunked, arboreal forms, for the most part profusely clothed with handsome mosses; and these woods, with their circumscribed patnas, are the favourite haunts of the peculiar birds enumerated in my table, as well as many Indian species, both permanent and migratory. Of the former may be mentioned Merula kinnisi, Culicicapa ceylonensis, Parus atriceps, Cisticola schanicola, Pericrocotus flammeus, Pericrocotus pereyrinus, Hypsipetes ganeesa, Pratincola bicolor, Orthotomus sutorius, Corydalla rufula; of the latter, Turdus wardi, Erythrosterna hyperythra, Larvivora brunnea, Mierococcyx varius, Phylloscopus nitidus, Phylloscopus magnirostris are noticeable. The eastern subdivision of Southern Ceylon, which is shut off from the influence of the south-west monsoon by the eastern slopes of the Kolonna and Morowak-Korale mountains and their spurs, which run south towards Matara, presents one of the most remarkable instances of a sudden change in physical aspect and floral character that can, perhaps, anywhere be met with in such a small island. Possessing a totally different climate, and consequently a distinct flora, the avifauna of this region has little relation to that of the damp south-western division. The birds of the vast forest which stretches southwards from the Haputale mountains to the confines of the scrubby maritime district are the same as those of the northern forests; and the ornis of the coast-region is precisely the same as that of the north-west coast, except that it includes several species, such as Prinia hodgsont, Taccocua leschenaulti, and Pyctorhis nasalis, which seem to have their head-quarters here, and are not found (in such abundance, at any rate) in that part. Charac- teristic species of the two regions are Xantholema hemacephala, Pyrrhulauda grisea, Merops viridis, Picus mahrattensis, Upupa ceylonensis, and Cittocincla macrura, none of which, with the exception of the latter bird, are found in the adjoining damp district. ‘The numerous shallow XX INTRODUCTION. salt lagoons and leways are the resort of Waders, Terns, Herons, Flamingoes, and Water-birds, all of which are characteristic of the north-west of the island. The north-eastern part of the sub- division in question is called the Park country, the borders only of which, I much regret to say, are known to me. ‘This tract consists of open glades and small plains covered with long grass and surrounded by heavy jungle, in which there are numbers of birds, the prevalence of Woodpeckers being noticeable. As regards the open country, it is not unlikely that some new Timaline species may be found in it. Lastly, with regard to the great families of Scolopacide and Charadriide, which form such a large proportion of the Ceylonese ornis, and which migrate to the island in vast numbers at the commencement (October and November) of the cool season, as will be seen on a perusal of this work, their great haunts are the lagoons, tidal flats, marshes, and tanks near the coast along the northern shores of both sides of the island. On the west coast these cease to the southward of Negombo, and the sea-board is only intersected with deep mangrove-lined lagoons and lakes, which are quite destitute of “ Wader”-life, save that of one or two species, as the ubiquitous Tringoides hypoleucos and the very abundant Totanus glareola. ‘The entire east coast, however, is more or less inhabited by Sandpipers, Stints, Shore-Plovers, and other members of these families. From the Virgel down to Batticaloa the sea-board is not so favourably suited to their habits as further south, where they again become very abundant, and occupy the coast-line, with its numerous estuaries, leways, and lagoons, down to Hatagala. Nowhere, however, do these interesting birds muster in such force as from the Jaffna peninsula, with its inland salt lagoon and large salt lake, down the west coast to the immense tidal flats at the embouchure of the Manaar channel. The entire coast of this region is shallow, the tide receding some distance, and leaving exposed an cozy shore, covered in places with green weed. On these flats myriads of small Waders congregate, and species (such as the Turnstone and that anomalous bird the Crab-Plover) which are not plentiful on the east coast are here found in abundance. In this district are of course included the islands of Palk’s Straits, on which these birds are likewise equally abundant. Monsoons and Seasons.—There are, roughly speaking, two seasons in Ceylon, which are ushered in by the advent of two monsoons, the south-west and north-east. The former com- mences to blow in April, after the termination of the hottest time of the year, the sultry weather of March. For about a fortnight violent squalls, accompanied by downpours of rain, drive in from the sea on the west coast; and along the western slopes of the mountain-ranges, where the moisture resulting from this wind collects, the rain is just as heavy and more continuous. This weather, which is called the “little monsoon,” is, though unpleasant, preferable to that which preceded, when there was an absence of wind and the nights were very sultry. It is the signal for the commencement of the spring migration. Insessorial birds (Warblers &c.) immediately move northwards, and the Waders, which throng the salt lagoons and estuaries on the northern and eastern coasts, commence their long flight towards northern regions. After the cessation of the little monsoon there is a lull, when the weather is again unpleasantly hot and “ steamy,” until eee eae eee eee INTRODUCTION. XXi the end of May, when the south-west wind again blows with greater violence than before, for in some years the “little monsoon” is not by any means strong. The rain at this period is also much more continuous, and sometimes very heavy downfalls are experienced, as in 1876, when 11 inches fell at Colombo in twenty-four hours. At this time of the year perfectly different weather is experienced on the east coast, when the same south-west wind, deprived of its moisture by its passage over great tracts of forest, has become intensely dry and almost warm. After the burst of the monsoon is over the wind gradually lessens throughout the months of July, August, September, and beginning of October, when the weather again becomes sultry. The great autumn migration is now setting in: myriads of Sandpipers, Stints, and shore-birds in general are now travelling southward from Northern Asia, and some species, as the Pintailed Snipe and the Golden Plover, arrive on the north coast, and even reach the south-western district (Galle) as early as the middle of September ; at the same time Warblers and Wagtails arrive in the island and rapidly spread over the country. About the middle of October, and sometimes as early as the first week in that month, the first signs of the N.E. monsoon may be looked for on the east coast. Heavy thunderstorms coming from the land every afternoon betoken the breaking up of the S.W. monsoon ; they continue for about a fortnight, and then the wind, with rain, sets in from the north-east ; at the same time on the west coast heavy thunderstorms are experienced every evening, which, in the same manner as those which preceded them on the east coast, take place later each con- secutive evening until they cease. During this time migrants from India continue to arrive, and a local movement of birds towards the west coast takes place. ‘The north-east wind, which is not so strong as the south-west, reaches the west coast only in the form of a land-breeze at night, which is scarcely felt until about Christmas. In the meantime, at the end of November, a strong northerly breeze sets in down the west coast; this is locally styled the ‘“ long-shore wind,” and is mainly conducive in adding to the ranks of migrants of all classes, but particularly to those of the Grallatorial order. Snipe now come in great numbers, and by the middle of December large bags may be made in almost any good district. Internal Migrations.—It is natural that the prevalence of two winds blowing at different seasons from opposite quarters across the island should cause a movement of species inhabiting the coast districts on each side of it. This is most observable on the coast of the Western Province, south of Negombo, as here the wind is damp, and, as we have just seen, accompanied by heavy rains, which induce certain species to leave the sea-board and retire inland in order to obtain shelter from the force of the monsoon. It would appear to any one studying the avifauna of a coast-district, like that of Colombo for example, that all these birds had left that side of the island; but this is not the case, as they are mostly to be found after the rains of June in the sheltered districts of the interior, not far from the coast. On the other hand, however, various species which are not resident on the west coast visit it when the $.W. monsoon has died away and the N.E. monsoon has commenced to blow on the east coast, tending to carry them towards d XXII INTRODUCTION, the south-west. Instances of such birds are to be found in the Paradise Flycatcher (Terpsiphone paradisi) and the Indian Sky-Lark (Alauda gulqula), which latter bird is found during the south- west monsoon in numbers at the tank-meadows in the northern forests, while the former (in the red stage) inhabits both the northern and south-eastern forest-tracts. Species that move away from the zmmediate western sea-board are Dendrochelidon coronata, Eudynamys honorata, Tham- nobia fulicata, Tephrodornis pondicerianus, and Parus cinereus; but a few miles inland, in sheltered spots, these birds may be found all the year through, except perhaps the latter, which must be classed as an uncertain N.E. monsoon visitant to the maritime districts of the Western Province. In the mountains the movements of the hill species are very noticeable in those districts west of Nuwara Eliya which are exposed to the violent winds and rain which accompany the incoming of the monsoon in May. The Hill-Myna (Hulabes ptilogenys), the Blue Tit (Parus atriceps), the handsome ‘Torrington Wood-Pigeon (Palumbus torringtonie), the large Bulbul (/ypsipetes ganeesa), the Orange Minivet (Pericrocotus flammeus), the Jay (Cissa ornata), the Hill-Barbet (Megalema flavifrons), the Jungle-fowl (Gallus lafayettii), and the Spur-fowl (Galloperdix bicalcarata) are among the more prominent species which appear in the upper ranges (from 5000 to 8000 feet) as soon as the calm weather of the N.E. monsoon has set in in November. At this season of the year also low-country birds, which, as a rule, only range into the hill-zones to an inconsiderable elevation, ascend to the upper hills. Artamus fuscus, Oriolus melanocephalus, Upupa ceylonensis, Pycnonotus hemorrhous, Layardia rufescens, Terpsiphone paradisi, and Hypothymis ceylonensis are species which either occasionally ascend to altitudes above 5000 feet, or are found yearly in the upper zone during the N.E. monsoon. True Migrants——The arrival of the migratory species, which takes place, as already mentioned, at the termination of the S.W. monsoon, greatly adds to the avifauna of the island. The Insessorial migrants consist chiefly of Muscicapidee, Laniide, Motacillide, and Sylviide, while the Grallatorial are made up of Scolopacide and Charadriide. The members of the first- mentioned order are wholly migratory; but certain species of the two latter remain to some extent as non-breeding loiterers throughout the year. The following is a table of migrants :— ACCIPITRES. Baza lophotes. Falco peregrinus. Cerchneis amurensis. Circus eeruginosus. Circus cineraceus. Circus melanoleucus, PIcARIZ. *Cuculus canorus. Cuculus micropterus. Cuculus poliocephalus. Cuculus passerinus. *Cuculus maculatus. Hierococeyx varius. Coceystes coromandus. Merops philippinus. INSESSORES. Oriolus indicus. Lanius eristatus. Buchanga longicaudata. Alseonax latirostris. TSiphia rubeculoides. Muscicapa hyperythra. *Cyanecula suecica. Larvivora brunnea- INTRODUCTION. Xxlil Turdus wardi. GRALLE. *Tringa temmincki. Geocichla citrina. *Porzana, bailloni: tLimicola platyrhyncha. *Monticola cyana. Porzana fusca. *Calidris arenaria. *Sylvia affinis. Rallina euryzonoides. §Strepsilas interpres. Acrocephalus dumetorum. ? Hypotenidia striata. Numenius lineatus. Locustella certhiola. *Rallus indicus. Numenius pheopus. Phylloscopus nitidus. *Scolopax rusticula. tRecurvirostra avocetta. Phylloscopus magnirostris. *Gallinago scolopacina. Squatarola helvetica. Phylloscopus viridanus. Gallinago stenura. Charadrius fulvus. Hirundo rustica. *Gallinago gallinula. +Agialitis geoffroyi. *Hirundo erythropygia. {Limosa wgocephala. TAgialitis mongolica. *Motacilla maderaspatensis. +Terekia cinerea. *Chettusia gregaria. Motacilla melanope. +Totanus glottis. Hematopus ostralegus. Budytes viridis. +Totanus stagnatilis. +Sterna caspia. Corydalla richardi. +Totanus fuscus. Larus brunneicephalus. Corydalla striolata. Totanus calidris. Tadorna casarca. + Pitta coronata. Totanus glareola. Anas acuta. Anas circia. Totanus ochropus. Anas erecca. CoLUMB.2. rTringoides hypoleucus. *Machetes pugnax. Spatula clypeata. *Turtur pulchratus. +Tringa subarquata. ?§ Pheenicopterus roseus. *Ardea goliath. +Tringa minuta. Gorsachius melanolophus. TTringa subminuta. * Rare stragglers to the island in N.#. monsoon, or irregular migrants in small numbers. + Migratory for the most part, non-breeding birds remaining throughout the year. + Possibly a regular migrant in small numbers. § Rarely a loiterer in Ceylon in S.W. monsoon. In this list the families Cuculide and Sylviide muster strongest among land-birds, but do not, it will be observed, furnish as many representatives as the Gralle (Waders). Among the latter it is noteworthy how many species “loiter” or remain behind in the breeding-season. A knowledge of this fact is all the more interesting, as, until very recently, it was not known that members of the Gralline order, such as Totanus, Tringa, and Aigialitis, ever remained in the tropics throughout the year ; now, however, the researches of Mr. Hume in the Andamans, and of myself in Ceylon, have fully proved this to be the case. Stragglers to Ceylon at uncertain times of the year have not been included in the list, as they cannot be looked upon in any way as migrants. Among these may be mentioned Meophron ginginianus, Nisaetus pennatus, N. bonelli, Baza ceylonensis, Buteo desertorum, Pastor roseus, Alsocomus puniceus, Sterna dougalli, Anous stolidus, Sula leucogastra, S. cyanops, Stercorarius antarcticus, Phaethon flavirostris, P. indicus, and Fregata minor. Of these, Pastor roseus and Sterna dougalli are the only species which, when they do visit the island, appear in numbers. Breeding-season.—The majority of Ceylon birds breed during the first half of the year, the exact times varying according to locality and climate. In the Western Province the height of the breeding-season is, as in India, during the rains of April, May, and June. At this time the d2 XXIV INTRODUCTION. jungles teem with insect-life, and all forest-birds are busy rearing their young. In very moist districts, such as Ratnapura and the Passedun Korale, eggs may be found in August and even September. Among early breeders in the Western Province may be cited the Barbets and Wood- peckers. On the eastern side of the island many birds commence to breed in November and December, while the heavy rains are falling ; but the season continues, nevertheless, throughout the first three or four months of the year, and many birds may be found nesting, as on the western side, in Mayand June. In the hills, and more particularly in the upper ranges, where the nights are cold and frosty in January and February, the nesting-season commences at the end of March or beginning of April, and continues until June and July, corresponding in this respect with the breeding-time in temperate climates. In the north of Ceylon the larger Waders (Ardeide), and the Water-birds that breed with them, commence to nest in November; but on the south-east coast the season is later, the Heronries not being resorted to as a rule, I think, before January. Remarks on the plan of the Work. Ast. Classification The classification followed in this work is totally different from that used by Jerdon, principally taken from Gray, and which continues still in vogue among some Indian ornithologists. This is, I must confess, inconvenient for Indian field-naturalists and collectors ; but as, in my opinion, it was not possible to follow the above-mentioned system, and as the main object of this work is to endeavour to inculcate a taste for ornithology among local students of the science in Ceylon, it behoved me to adopt that system which appeared to me to accord best with the generally recognized affinities of the various orders into which the Ceylonese ornis divides itself, and at the same time coincided best with the classification employed by Jerdon, and which I am aware many who have taken up the study of ornithology in Ceylon are familiar with. The divisions adopted have been Orders (in one case also a Suborder), Families, and Subfamilies, and, in the great Order Passeres, Sections have also been made use of. ‘The Accipitres, or Birds of Prey, have been granted precedence simply as a very favourite and specialized order, and because it has until recently been the practice among English ornithologists to follow Gray and place them first. The Psittaci, or Parrots in the possession of a cere and a very high degree of intelligence, seem to occupy a place not far distant from the Hawks. ‘The interesting order Picarie, in which the posterior margin of the sternum has a double notch, inasmuch as many of its groups possess zygodactyle feet, comes next the Parrots. The satisfactory arrangement of the vast order Passeres presents great difficulties ; and here the system adopted by Mr. Wallace in classifying according to wing-structure has been adopted. The Columbze (Pigeons) are a highly specialized order, and in preceding the Galline, or Game-birds (aptly called Rasores, or ‘‘ Scratchers,” by some systematists), must of necessity come next the Passeres. In the arrangement of the remaining orders in the work (Gralle, Gaviz, Anseres, Pygopodes, Herodiones, and Steganopodes) I have followed the bent of my own views on the subject, considering these six orders as naturally divisible into two great classes— Ist, those with autophagous or independent young ; 2nd, those with heterophagous or dependent young. It is impossible to follow a linear arrangement; but nevertheless there are forms in each of the orders composing these two divisions which possess affinities for one another, and INTRODUCTION. XXV consequently tend to group them in the rotation which they take in this work. The same rule has been followed, as much as possible, in considering the order in which the various families composing these orders should be arranged. It will not be necessary to enter into any disqui- sition in this Introduction on the much-disputed subject of classification, or to explain further my reasons for not following the more modern systems of Professors Parker and Huxley, or, still better, the modification of these systems by Messrs. Sclater and Salvin, as they have been sufficiently set forward in testifying above my desire to adopt a system best suited to the requirements of the local student, at the same time avoiding a total reversal of Gray’s classification. 2nd. Plan of the Articles.—It has been thought best to define the characters of the various orders, families, subfamilies, genera, and species in accordance with their external charac- teristics, in order to simplify their comprehension to beginners. Reference is, however, made frequently to the sternum, a generally important, though not in some families (Scolopacide, for instance) always a reliable character. The accompanying woodcut represents the sternum of the Malay Bittern (Gorsachius melano- lophus), together with the bones attached to it. It has been selected as an example of a sternum with a single notch in the posterior margin. ‘The various parts are named beneath. st, sternum; &, keel of sternum ; no, notch in posterior margin; fu, furculum ; co, coracoid bones ; se, scapula. In the great division Carinate, which comprises all living birds but the Ostrich family and its allies, the “ carina” or keel is more or less deep so as to hold the powerful pectoral muscles which lie in the angle between it and the body of the sternum. In the latter (Ratite), however, the keel is slightly developed only, the sternum being flat, inasmuch as the same development of muscle is not required for non-flying birds. ‘The furculum is in most birds a single bone, but in some Parrots, Pigeons, and Owls consists of two separate clavicles. In some genera of the Steganopodes it is anchylosed to the keel, and this latter is not produced to the posterior edge of the sternum. The synonymy at the head of the articles is not supposed, by any means, to be complete. Besides local references, only those of a leading nature, as also relating to the recent writings of Indian ornithologists, more particularly contributors to ‘ Stray Feathers,’ have been given, as these XXV1 INTRODUCTION. were all that were necessary to the local student. ‘Towards the close of the work I have been obliged to curtail the synonymy, even in its reduced form, and many Indian references have been omitted which did not relate to notes of much interest on the species in question. Mr. Ramsay’s distribution list of Australian birds has been of much service to me as regards Australian distribution ; but, owing to want of space, I have been unable to quote, except in one or two instances, this important contribution to Australian ornithology. In respect to Ceylon references, I have not quoted my paper on the “ Distribution of the Birds in the Asiatic Society’s Museum,” contained in the local journal for 1874, as it was printed in mistake during my temporary absence from the island, and contained many errors in distribution, which, owing to the result of subsequent experience, I had intended to correct. In regard to the local names for the birds of the island preference has been given to those used in Asiatic and Malayan countries, and, in the case of Waders and Water-birds, Heuglin’s Egyptian names have been quoted. Sinhalese names have been supplied from Layard’s catalogue and from a list furnished me by Mr. MacVicar, of the Survey Office, as well as from information obtained myself from the natives. This gentleman also supplied me with a list of Tamil and Ceylon-Portuguese names, which I have used throughout the work. The measurements of specimens, with regard to which I have been particular, all relate to Ceylonese specimens in the flesh, except when the contrary is stated (as in the case of Waders and sea-birds particularly) in brackets. My system of wing-measurement, it is well to remark, consisted in straightening the metacarpal joint by pressure in the hand, or on the table in the case of large birds, and then measuring on the upperside of the wing. The dimensions attained in this manner exceed those taken of dried specimens, when the metacarpal joint has stiffened in the usual convex form, by from 0-1 to 0°35 of an inch. Contrary to the usage of most writers, I have placed the measurements before the description, simply because it is in accordance with the practice of field-naturalists to measure their specimens first. In the description of the plumage I have endeavoured to follow a uniform system throughout: beginning with the head and back, the wings and tail are then described, thus completing the upper surface; the lores and face are then mentioned, and ensuite the under surface, the under wing coming last. It is hoped that the figure of a bird which has been engraved to show the various portions of the plumage in terms of scientific nomenclature will be of service to those who are not ornithologists, should they have occasion to peruse the description of the plumage of any species in which they may be interested. The observation (Qds.) on each species has been given for the benefit of the local student, in order to furnish him with as much information as possible of allied species inhabiting India, and, in fact, the entire Oriental Region. Many of my observations on kindred species and genera may seem superfluous to the ornithologist in England, with numerous libraries at his command ; but it is to be hoped that, as far as the naturalist in Ceylon is concerned, they will be of some use. Likewise with a view of assisting the local student, an owtline of the entire geographical distribution of each species has been sketched out; this matter, again, may seem, to European readers, superfluous in a work of local nature. INTRODUCTION. Xxvil As the system of spelling has recently been changed, I have followed, to the best of my knowledge, the new method, but which, however, I am bound to remark, is subject to variation * at the hands of those who conform to it. For instance, the names of some places are spelt differently in the road-maps of the Surveyor-General and in that published by the editor of the ‘Observer’; for example, the name of a celebrated tank is spelt ‘“ Kantalay ” in the one and “ Kantaleyi” in the other, whereas, after the old spelling ‘“ Kandelay ” was abolished, the word used to be spelt by some civil servants ‘“‘ Kanthelai,” and as such it appears in this work. My readers will therefore, I trust, bear with the somewhat variable orthography of Ceylonese names in the ‘ Birds of Ceylon.’ In the early part of the work the name of the territorial division “ Pattuwa” will be found, in some instances, incorrectly spelt “ Pattu ;” but in the map, compiled from road-maps of Provinces, kindly furnished me by Col. Fyers, R.E., I have followed in all instances the new method of spelling. The figures indicating the rainfall are taken from tables likewise furnished me by the Surveyor-General. As regards the nidification paragraph, I regret to say, as far as local students are concerned, that I have been compelled largely to quote from Mr. Hume’s ‘ Nests and Eggs, owing to the difficulty in obtaining information about, or finding one’s self, the nests of birds in Ceylon. Yet the admirable notes contained in that work are perhaps better than those which I could have obtained in the island. If, however, the Appendix be consulted much interesting additional information will be found supplied by my valued correspondent Mr. Parker, who has done more in Ceylonese oology than any recent collector. It now remains for me to return my grateful thanks to the many ornithologists, naturalists, and collectors who have furnished me with assistance and information, and placed their valuable collections at my disposal during the time I have been compiling this work. I am much indebted, first and foremost, to Dr. Giinther, Director of the Zoological Department of the British Museum, and to Mr. Bowdler Sharpe, Senior Assistant of the same; for, through the kind permission of the former, the vast collections, both mounted and in the skin, were placed at my disposal for purposes of comparison with my own; while the latter, under whose care these collections are placed, rendered me every assistance in the procuring and examination of the large series of specimens that it was necessary to examine, and was always ready and willing to impart information on difficult points with which his great experience and unexcep- tionally central position enabled him successfully to deal. Again, to Mr. Seebohm I am highly indebted for having placed at my disposal his large collections, the extensive Chinese series of skins collected by the late Mr. Swinhoe being of great service for purposes of comparison ; also to Mr. Howard Saunders, who, as regards his particular group (the Laridz), furnished me with much assistance. ‘To Messrs. Gurney, Harting, Dresser,Sclater, Salvin, and Godman my thanks are likewise * Letters sent me from MJannar, spelt thus correctly by the writer, are impressed with the post-mark Manaar! XXVlll INTRODUCTION. due for aid rendered as regards the several groups which they have made their study. I must not forget to acknowledge the assistance rendered to me by Mr. F. H. Waterhouse, Librarian of the Zoological Society, in answering my frequent queries as to references and data from the many scientific works required to be consulted, and which, from time to time, I omitted to collect while prosecuting my studies in London. Mr. Holdsworth’s kindness in giving me access to his valuable collection of Ceylon birds, and also benefiting me by his opinion on matters connected with island distribution &c., has been of much service to me. ‘The premature death of the late Marquis of Tweeddale, and the consequent closing to the scientific world for the time being of his collection, was no small loss to the author, who was at the time just entering on the study of the Passerine birds, and reaping the advantage of that correspondence which this distinguished ornithologist was always ready to enter into with his brother naturalists. By this untoward event an anticipated visit to the magnificent collection at Yester, which, on a former trip I had only time to glance at, was also put aside. On hisreturn to England from Afghanistan, Captain Wardlaw Ramsay, into whose possession the collection passed, kindly lent me such specimens connected with the Third Part of the work as I required. ‘To Canon Tristram, also, I am indebted for the loau of eggs and skins of several interesting species. I have likewise to acknowledge, with thanks, the receipt of information on various points from Herr Meyer, of the Royal Museum at Dresden, Herr Von Pelzeln of the Imperial Museum at Vienna, and Mr. Edward Nolan, Secretary of the Academy of Natural Sciences, Philadelphia. From a still more distant region, New Caledonia, I have had the advantage of correspondence with my enthusiastic forerunner in the field of Ceylon ornithology, Edgar Layard, who from time to time supplied me with details of his old experiences in the island. Last, but not least, I must acknowledge with gratitude the aid I have received from my correspondents in India and Ceylon. Of the former I must mention particularly Mr. Allan Hume, C.B., and likewise not omit the names of Mr. Blanford, F.R.S., President of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, Captain Butler, 83rd Regt., and Dr. Edie, of the Madras Museum. In Ceylon my valued correspondents Messrs. Bligh and Parker, Ceylon Public Works Department, kept me constantly supplied with new material concerning the habits and nidification of many species: the former furnished me with copious notes on hill-birds, while the latter worked hard on the little-known districts of the north-west, and, being a most enthusiastic lover of birds and a close observer of Nature, the information supplied by him has been most valuable. In point of fact the better part of the Appendices is made up of material supplied by this gentleman from the Manaar district, where he has recently gone to be stationed. To Messrs. H. MacVicar, Forbes Laurie, R. Wickham, L. Holden, E. Cobbold, Captain Wade-Dalton, and other gentlemen now or formerly resident in the island, I am indebted for notes on the habits and local distribution of several interesting species. In conclusion, I am constrained to remark that had others among my Subscribers corresponded as vigorously with me during the progress of the work as Messrs. Bligh, Parker, and MacVicar, much more local information would have been contained in it. WV i: Subfam Subfam Subfam Subfam SYSTEMATIC INDEX. . VULTURINE. Order ACCIPITRES. Suborder FALCONES. Family VULTURID& (1 species). Neophron ginginianus, Lath. . Page 2 Family FALCONID (SO species—2 doubtfully identified). . ACCIPITRIN . BUTEONINZ . AQUILINE ( Circus eruginosus, Linn. Bane Circus melanoleucus, Forster .......... Circus cineraceus, Mont............... Circus macrurus, S. G. Gmelin ........ Astur trivirgatus, Temm........ .....- Astur badius, Gmelin ........ 00.00. ee Accipiter virgatus, Temm. ............ ( Accipiter nisus, Linn... 06... cee eee. Buteo plumipes, Hodgson ............ ( Nisaetus fasciatus, Vieill. ............ Nisaetus pennatus, Gimelin............ Lophotriorchis kieneri, @. Sparre ...... Neopus malayensis, Zemm............. Spizaetus kelaarti, Legge .............. Spizaetus ceylonensis, Gmelin.......... ..< Spilornis spilogaster, Blyth............ | Haliaetus leucogaster, Gm. ............ \ Pernis ptilonorhynchus, Temm. ........ — Th oO OV 17 App. Page 1209 XXX SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Family FALCONIDA® (continued). Page ( Baza ceylonensis, Legge .............. 94 Baza lophotes, Temm. ...........+..+- 98 Falco peregrinus, Tunstall ............ 101 eee: “ Falco peregrinator, Sund. ............ 106 Subfam: MAGCONUN AD Secor serra << Balcoiseverts;:10rsis lcci eerine 110 alco:chicquera, Dauds 5. ..42-. ss eee 110 Cerchneis tinnunculus, Zinn. .......... 114 \ Cerchneis amurensis, Radde .......... 119 Suborder PANDIONES (1 species). Pandion haliaetus, Zinn............... 122 Suborder STRIGES. Family BUBONID (11 species—1 doubtfully occurring). ( Ketupa ceylonensis, Gm............... 127 Bubo nipalensis, Hodgs. .............. 131 | Scops bakkamuna, Forster ............ 135 | ?Scops malabaricus, Jerdon............ 56 Subiam: BUBONIN AD: 2 j.0 aaee 02 eel \ SH SCOPSISUNIA, LH OLGSi neineielelaataccvove (ole (anal 139 | Scops minutus, Legge .............-5- 142 Ninox scutulata, Raft, ............0. 145 Glaucidium castanonotum, Blyth ...... 149 \ Glaucidium radiatum, Vick............. 152 eer : e f Syrnium indrani, Blyth .............. 155 SS a are \ Phodilus assimilis, Hume............-. 161 Family STRIGID (1 species). Strix flammeay Ani. <6 ssa oc oe seit 164 Order PSITTACI. Family PSITTACID® (5 species—1 doubtfully occurring). Paleornis eupatrius, Linn. ............ 168 | Palwornis torquatus, Bodd............. 171 Subfam. PALAORNINAE .......... < Paleornis cyanocephalus, Linn. ........ 174 | Paleornis calthrope, Layard .......... 177 \?Paleornis columboides, Vigors ........ Family TRICHOGLOSSIDi (2 species). Loriculus| indicus, Gm................. 180 App. Page 1209 1209 1209 1210 1210 1210 1210 1210 Family PICIDA (10 species—1 doubtfully determined). Subfam. PICIN.A .......... Subfam. GECININA ...... Subfam. MAIGALAMIN A. . Subfam. CUCULINZ ...... Subfam. PHGZNICOPHAIN SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Order PICARIA. (Pees mahrattensis, Lath. ............ Yungipicus gymnophthalmus, Blyth .... Bee eee | Chrysocolaptes stricklandi, Layard Chrysocolaptes festivus, Bodd. ........ Gecinus striolatus, Blyth.............. Chrysophlegma wanthoderus, Malb.* | Chrysophlegma chlorigaster, cea < Micropternus gularis, Jerdon .......... Brachypternus ceylonus, Forster ........ Brachypternus puncticollis, Malh. ...... ? Brachypternus intermediust, Legge .... Family CAPITONID (4 species), Megalema zeylanica, Gm. ............ Megalema flavifrons, Cuv. ............ Xantholema rubricapilla, Gm........... Xantholema hemacephala, Mill. ...... Family CUCULID (16 species), Cuculus canorus, Zinn. .........5.05- Cuculus micropterus, Gould .......... Cuculus poliocephalus, Lath. .......... Cuculus sonnerati, Lath. ...........0. ; Cuculus passerinus, Vahl.............. seen eae < Cuculus maculatus, Gm... 0... 00. eee Hierococcyx varius, Vahl ............ Coccystes jacobinus, Bodd............. Coecystes coromandus, Zinn. .........- Eudynamys honorata, Linn. .......... Pheenicophaés pyrrhocephalus, Morster .. Zanclostomus viridirostris, Jerd......... ... < Centropus rufipennis, Jlliger .......... Centropus chlororhynchus, Blyth ...... \.Taccocua leschenaulti, Lesson .......... Family TROGONID (1 species). Harpactes fasciatus, Morster .......... Page 184 186 188 191 194 197 200 202 205 205 208 212 215 218 App. Page 1212 1212 1212 1212 1211 1211 1212 1212 1212 1212, 1 1213 1213 1213 bo bo 5 4 XXX1 * Incorrect title at head of article. Tt Vide description of “‘ Red Race.” e2 Subfam. CORACIIN Snbfam. ALCEDININA..../....... { Subfam. HALCYONINZ ..,........ Subfam. STEATORNINA .......... SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Family BUCEROTID (2 species), Anthracoceros coronatus, Bodd......... Tockus gingalensis, Shaw ............ Family UPUPID (1 species), Upupa nigripennis, Gould* |) .......... Upupa ceylonensis, Reich, Family CORACIID (2 species). { Coracias indica, Linn. ..............05 baa: aie aN Se Eurystomus orientalis, Zinn. .......... Family ALCEDINID (6 species), Weryletrndis pint ce tattere)-rentesicce eet: Alcedo bengalensis, Gm. .............. Pelargopsis gurial, Pearson ............ Halcyon smyrnensis, Linn............. Halcyon pileata, Bodd. ........++.-+» CoyxtridactylaysPall, Weresntey ecole: Family MEROPID (8 species). Merops philippinus, Zinn. ............ IMeropsiviridis) inns wesc -erstclelleer sere Merops swinhoii, Hume .............. Family CYPSELID_E (6 species). Chetura gigantea, Temm. ............ Cypselus melba, Linn. ............645- Cypselus affinis, J. H.Gray..........-- Cypselus batassiensis, Gray...........- Collocalia francica, Gi. 1.0.6... ce eee Dendrochelidon coronatus, Zickell ...... Family CAPRIMULGID (4 species). Batrachostomus moniliger, Layard...... Caprimulgus kelaarti, Blyth .......... Subfam. CAPRIMULGINZE ........ Caprimulgus atripennis, Jerd........... Caprimulgus asiaticus, Lath. .......... Page 272 275 278 281 285 288 292 295 298 301 303 306 309 312 314 317 319 322 324 328 331 337 340 343, * Incorrect title at head of article. App. Page 1224 1213, 1224 1213 1213 1213 1213, 1224 1214 1214, 1224 SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Order PASSERES. Family CORVID (8 species). Page Corone macrorhyncha, Wagler ........ 346 Subfam: CORVINA...........4.5:. Corone splendens, Vieill..........-..-.. 349 Cissa ornata, Wagler ........20.+.+0% 353 Family ORIOLID (2 species). Oriolus diffusus, Sharpe* | ..........-- 355 Oriolustndicush Jernds = iscsi ae : Oriolus melanocephalus, Linn. ........ 357 Family CAMPOPHAGID (4 species). Graucalus macii, Lesson .............. 360 Pericrocotus flammeus, Forster ... .... 363 Pericrocotus peregrinus, Zinn, ........ 366 Talage sykesi, Strickl. .........:.....-. 369 Family PRIONOPID (2 species), Suna PRIONOPIN A) 0s { Tephrodornis pondicerianus, Gm. ...... OE: Hemipus picatus, Sykes ...........0- 375 Family LANIID (S species—I doubtfully occurring). Lanius cristatus, Zinn. .............. 377 Lanius lucionensis, Zinn. ..........-. 378 Lanius caniceps, Blyth................ 383 Family DICRURIDA (5 species), Buchanga atra, Hermann............5. 386 Buchanga longicaudata, Hay .......... 390 Buchanga leucopygialis, Blyth.......... 392 Dissemurus lophorhinus, Vieill. ........ 396 Dissemurus paradiseus, Linn.........-> 399 Family MUSCICAPID (11 species—1 doubtfully occurring). Terpsiphone paradisi, Zinn............ 404 Hypothymis ceylonensis, Sharpe ...... 408 Culicicapa ceylonensis, Swains. ......-- 410 XXX1il App. Page 1214 1214 1214 1224 1214, 1224 1214 ) ) A 1214, 1: t h * Incorrect title at head of article. XXX1} SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Family MUSCICAPIDAl (continued). Are Page Page Rhipidura albifrontata, Frankl. ........ 412 Alseonax latirostris, Raff. ............ 415 Alseonax muttui, Layard ............ 417 1215 Stoparola sordida, Wald............... 419 Siphia tickellia, Blyth .......2.--22+-5. 42 Siphia rubeculoides, Vigors ............ 424 Siphia nigrorufa, Jerdon .............. 425 Muscicapa hyperythra, Cabanis ........ 428 Family SAXICOLIDi (5 species). Pratincola bicolor, Sykes .............-. 430 Copsychus saularis, Zinn. ............ 433 Cittocincla macrura, Gm............... 437 Thamnobia fulicata, Zinn. ............ 440 Cyanecula suecica, Zinn............... 443 Family TURDID (8 species). Larvivora brunnea, Hodgson .......... 446 1215 Turdusskinnisi Aelaart, oepem eres) <2 cael ele 449 1215, 1225 Turdus spiloptera, Blyth ....0.-6 2. ee 451 1215 TurdusswAardi-cel eras wm otc ere 453 Oreocincla imbricata, Layard .......... 455 Geocichla citrina, Lath. ............4. 457 1216 Monticola‘cyana, Dinn. .. 33. secs ote 460 Myiophoneus blighi, Holdsw. .......... 463 Family BRACHYPODID (10 species). Subfam: TURBINGINAR ola. eens Trenaypuellay Latha 2%. elects ier 466 ( Hypsipetes ganeesa, Sykes ...........- 469 Criniger ictericus, Strickl, ............ 472 Subfam. PYCNONOTINE ....... by xos luteolus eiesse vier selelerspereri ie tei 475 Rubigula melanictera, Gm. ..........-- 477 1216 Kelaartia penicillata, Blyth............ 480 | Pyenonotus hemorrhous, Gm. ........ 482 1216 Lee Z Phyllornis jerdoni, Blyth.............. 485 Subfam. PHYLLORNITHINA ...... Phyllornis malabaricus, Gm. .......... 488 Hora tiphiaye/aniempr teaver ee 490 Family TIMALIID A (17 species—1 doubtfully determined). (Malacocereus striatus, Swains, ........ 494 Malacocercus rufescens, Blyth ........ 497 Garrulax cinereifrons, Blyth .......... 499 : om Pomatorhinus melanurus, Blyth ........ 501 Subfam. TIMAGUIN 20 vast ene z Dumetia albogularis, Blyth is BERS 505 Alcippe nigrifrons, Blyth.............. 507 1216 Pellorneum fuscicapillum, Blyth........ 509 1216 Pyctorhis:nasalis, Legge 2.6.6.5... 512 \Elaphrornis pallisert eB thins orgs orc «1s 514 Subfam. DRYMCCIN-E Subfam. SITTINA....... Subfam. NECTARINIIN 2 SYSTEMATIC INDEX. ( Orthotomus sutorius, Forster .......... Prima socialis, Sykes* ..) ............ Prinia brevicauda, Legge } Prinia hodgsoni, Blyth.............-.- Hears < Drymeeca valida, Blyth .............. Drymeeca jerdoni, Blyth ............:. Drymeeca insularis, Legge ..........-. Cisticola cursitans, Frankl, ............ | Scheenicola platyura, Jerd. ............ Family SYLVIID (7 species). Sylviaatinisseacytinont-aeerranieeier iste Acrocephalus stentorius, Hemp. § Ehr... Acrocephalus dumetorum, Blyth........ Locustella certhiola, Pall. ............ Phylloscopus nitidus, Blyth............ Phylloscopus magnirostris, Blyth ...... Phylloscopus viridanus, Blyth.......... Family PARID i (1 species). Parus atriceps, Horsf. ...........+.... Family CERTHIID (1 species). a Nonieencene Dendrophila frontalis, Horsf........... Family CINNYRIDA (4 species). Cinnyris lotenius, Linn. .............. Cinnyris asiaticus, Lath. .............. Cinnyris zeylonicus, Linn. ............ Cinnyris minimus, Sykes.............. Family DICHID (5 species). Diceum minimum, Tick.* ...... Diceum erythrorhynchum, Lath. } Pachyglossa vincens, Sclater .......... Piprisoma agile, Tickell .............. Zosterops palpebrosa, Zemm. .......... Zosterops ceylonensis, Holdsw. ........ Family HIRUNDINID® (5 species—1 doubtfully identified). Hirundo rustica, Zann. .............- Hirundo hyperythra, Layard .......... Hirundo erythropygia, Sykes .......... Hirundo javanica, Sparrm. ............ ? Cotyle obsoleta, Cabanis ............-. * Tneorrect title at head of article. 1216 XXXY XXXV1 SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Family FRINGILLID (2 species). Page Passer domesticus, Linn............++.. 600 Passer flavicollis, Frankl.,............. 605 Family MOTACILLID (7 species). Motacilla maderaspatensis, Gm. ........ 607 Motacilla melanope, Pall. ............ 610 Limonidromus indicus, Gm. .......... 614 Bud yGes) viridis. iGo. wierere eles cieie eietsleaues 617 Corydalla richardi, Vieill, ............ 621 Corydallairufulas Vee. cei cece oe 625 Corydalla striolata, Blyth ............ 628 Family ALAUDIDA (4 species—1 doubtfully determined). Alauda gulgula, Frankl. .........-.... 630 ? Alauda parkert, Legge.............--- os Mirafra affinis, Jerdon’.............55- 634 Pyrrhulauda grisea, Scopoli............ 637 Family PLOCEIDA! (10 species—2 introduced, 1 doubtfully occurring). Ploceus philippinus, Zinn, ...........- 641 Plocens manyar; Horsfe sc. s s0 sss 646 PaddaioryaivoraeLann, scsi «et 646 Munia'kelaarti; Blyth 22... t.65e0-- as < = 650 Munia malacca, Zinn. .........-.+02%5 652 Munia rubronigra, Hodgs. ............ 652 Munia punctulata, Zinn. .............- 656 Munia striatas Wanna «cite neetetee are 660 Munia malabarica, Linn......-.....0-- 662 Estrelda amandava, Zinn. ............ 662 Family ARTAMID A‘ (1 species). Artamus fuscus, Veedls 2.00 ene 666 Family STURNID (6 species). Acridotheres melanosternus, Legge... ... 670 iPashorsroseusslaen7ies eieiclenste stone) oketseicte 673 Sturnia pagodarum, Gim..............- 677 Sturnornis senex, Bonap............++5 680 Eulabes religiosa, Linn, ......-+..+++-+ 682 Eulabes ptilogenys, Blyth ...........- 685 Family PITTID (1 species). Pitta coronata, P. L. S. Miller ........ 687 Arr Page 1217, 1: 1218 1218 bo ho ST) SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Order COLUMB. Family COLUMBID (7 species). Page Palumbus torringtonie, Kelaart ........ 693 Alsocomus puniceus, Tickell .......... 696 Columba intermedia, Strickland ........ 698 urturrisorius, Zinn. .... 0.522260. os 702 ‘Turtursuratensis, Gm: ...2-5.-.....- 705 Turtur tranquebaricus, Herm........... 708 Turtur pulchratus, Hodgson .......... 711 Family GOURID (1 species). Chalcophaps indica, Zinn. ............ 714 Family TRERONID (4 species). Carpophaga enea, Linn. .............. 718 Crocopus chlorigaster, Blyth ..... pheno (er Osmotreron bicineta, Jerdon .......-.. 725 Osmotreron pompadora, Gm. .......... 728 Order GALLINZA. Family PHASIANID (8 species). Pavo)eristatus; Zann. .......6--.+0+- 731 Gallus lafayettii, Lesson .............. 736 Galloperdix bicalcarata, Forster ........ 741 Family TETRAONID (5 species—l doubtfully identified). Francolinus pictus, Jard. § Selby ...... 744 Ortygornis pondiceriana, Gm........... 748 Perdiculavasiatica, Late a. cesecuce ces ofD2 Coturnix chinensis, Zinn. ............ 755 Coturnix communis, Bonnaterre ........ 756 Family TINAMID (1 species), Ai TEM RIAD SVL ooodob00cosd0b06 761 XXXVI App. Page 1218 1218 1218 1218 XXXVHi SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Order GRALLA. Family RALLID (9 species). ie Page Page Porzana bailloni, Viedll. .............. 766 Porzana fusca anne. einem 769 Rallina euryzonoides, Lafresn. ........ 772 Hypotenidia striata, Linn. ............ 775 Rallus indicus, Blyth ...........+.0 778 Gallinula chloropus, Linn. ............ 781 1218 Erythra phoenicura, Forster ............ 786 Gallicrex cinerea, Gini. 2. 5.0.00 cess 791 Porphyrio poliocephalus, Lath, ........ 795 Family SCOLOPACID (25 species). Rhynchea capensis, Zinn. ............ 800 1218 Scolopax rusticula, Linn............... 806 Gallinago nemoricola, Hodgs. .......... 814 Gallinago stenura, Horsf. ............ 816 Gallinago scolopacina, Linn. .......... 821 1218 Gallinago gallinula, Zinn. ............ 828 1219 Limosa egocephala, Zinn. ..........-. 832 Terekia cinerea, Guld. ........2.0..05- 836 Totanus glottis, Linn. .........22.+20- 840 Totanus stagnatilis, Bechst............. 844 Motanussuscuss Lanne ohio ee ies eee 848 Totanus calidris, Zinn, .......... 02. 852 Totanus glareola, Zinn. .............. 857 Totanus ochropus, Linn............... 862 Tringoides hypoleucus, Linn, .......... 867 Machetes pugnax, Zinn. .............. 873 Tringa subarquata, Guld. 5. 62 o0.00- 879 Tringa minuta, Leisler........... wrexke OOL Tringa subminuta, Midd. ............ 889 Tringa temmincki, Zeisler ............ 892 Limicola platyrhyncha, Temm. ........ 896 Calidris arenaria, Zinn. .............- we 1220 Strepsilas interpres, Zinn. .. ......... 900 1222 Numenius lineatus, Cuv............... 906 Numenius pheopus, Linn... .......... 910 Family PARRIDA‘ (1 species). Hydrophasianus chirurgus, Scopoli...... 914 Family CHARADRIIDA (12 species). Himantopus candidus, Bonnat. ........ 919 Subfam. HIMANTIPODINA........ ; : Subfam. HIMANTIPODINUE { Recurvirostra avocetta, Linn. .... 0.0... 925 SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Family CHARADRIID® (continued). Page Squatarola helvetica, Linn............. 929 Charadrius fulvus, Gm. .............. 934 AMegialitis geoffroyi, Wagl. ............ 989 Subfam. CHARADRIINA .......... Agialitis mongolica, Pallas............ 943 Aigialitis cantiana, Lath,.............. 947 Aigialitis curonica, Gm. .:..........-> 952 | Mgialitis jerdoni, Legge .............. 956 Chettusia gregaria, Pallas ............ 959 Subfam. VANELLINA ............ < Lobivanellus indicus, Bodd............. 962 (Lobipluvia malabarica, Bodd. .......... 966 Family GiDICNEMID (S species). Subfam. CEDICNEMINE............ { Cédicnemus scolopax, Hits paca oonacccs hy) Esacus recurvirostris, Cuv....... 0.2... 974 Subfam. CURSORINZA.............. Cursorius coromandelicus, Gm. ........ 977 Family GLAREOLIDA: (2 species). Glareola orientalis, Leach ............ 980 Glareola lactea, Temm..........-..05-- 984 Family HAAMATOPODID A! (1 species). Hematopus ostralegus, Linn........... 987 Family DROMADID i (1 species). Dromas ardeola, Paykull.. 1... 000... ue 991 Order GAVIA. Family LARIDA (18 species—1 doubtful). ( Hydrochelidon hybrida, Pall. .......... 996 Hydrochelidon leucoptera, Meisner §- Schinz 1000 Sterna seena, Sykes ..........-:. een ee 1003 Sterna melanogastra, Temm. .......... 1006 Stermaicaspiay LAllawvaase certains 1008 Sterna anglica, Montagu .............. 1011 Sterna fluviatilis, Nawm............... 1015 Subfam. STERNINZ................ . Sterna sinensis, Gin... cso. + ene 1019 | Sterna saundersi, Hume .............. 1023 Sternaibergiy Zechtn vente 1026 Sterna media, Horsf... ...2s0.00+s0+-4- 1030 Sterna dougalli, Mont. ................ 1033 Sterna fuliginosa, Gm................. 1036 | Sterna anestheta, Scop. .............. 1040 An oushstoliduss nner: 1048 XXXIX xl SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Family LARID A (continued). Page ae UE Larus ichthyaétus, Pall. .............. 1046 Subfam. LARINAS....---+ +++. sees { Larus brunneicephalus, Jerd. .......... 1049 Subfam. STERCORARIIN ......... Stercorarius antarcticus, Less........... 1050 Family PROCELLARIID (3 species—1 doubtfully identified). Puffinus chlororhynchus, Lesson ........ 1054 Daption capensis, Linn. .............. 1056 Oceanites oceanicus, Kuhl ............ 1056 Order PYGOPODES (1 species). Podiceps fluviatilis, Tunst. ............ 1059 Order ANSERES. Family ANATID/ (10 species—1 doubtfully identified). -Sarcidiornis melanonotus, Forst......... 1063 : : Nettapus coromandelianus, Gm......... 1066 Subfam. ANS INGA Pe ern Sota: ; : a UE oss BN Dendrocygna javanica, Horsf........... 1069 \ Tadorna casarca, Linn. .............. 1070 -Anas peecilorhyncha, Forst............. 1073 Anasiacutaalui. © mocrom cine ae oe 1076 Subtams “AUN AMINA. cc cteane os oe Su PAS ICINGIAeL7e707m cenyereieinel sierra eee 1080 Maton JOOW0h Gonodeotienonoasabs 1083 Spatula clypeata, Linn. .............. 1086 Sublams, HOT GUM LNG ee heres cere cise Holioularutina. seal eancy- ty.) vsieteverel creas 1087 Family PHAGSNICOPTERID® (1 species). Phosnicopterusiroseus 2 errant 1092 Order HERODIONES. Family PLATALEIDA! (5 species). Platalea leucorodia, Linn. .........05. 1096 Tantalus leucocephalus, Forst. ........ 1100 Anastomus oscitans, Bodd............. 1103 Ibis melanocephala, Lath. ............ 1106 Plegadis falcinellus, Zinn. ............ 1109 App. Page SYSTEMATIC INDEX. Family CICONIIDA (4 species), App. Page Page Leptoptilus javanicus, Horsf. .......... 1118 Xenorhynchus asiaticus, Lath. ........ 1116 Dissura episcopa, Bodd. .............. 1119 Ciconiayalbateiinn. ser: eens ceiciees 1119 Family ARDEID (45 species). Ardea goliath, Riipp. ................ 1124 Ardea-cinerea, 2ann. GOWN DA (THE INDIAN PARIAH-KITE.) Milvus govinda, Sykes, P. Z. 8. 1832, p. 81; Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 115 (1852) ; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1855, xii. p. 103; Schlegel, Mus. P.-B. Milvi, p. 2 (1862); Gould, B. of Asia, part iv.; Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 104 (1862); Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 248; Hume, Rough Notes, ii. p. 820 (1870); Holdsworth, P. Z. $. 1872, p. 414; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 52 (1873); Sharpe, Cat. Birds, i. p. 325; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 10; Hume, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 229, footnote. Haliaetus lineatus, Gray & Hardw. Ul. Ind. Zool. i. pl. 18 (young). Milvus cheela, Jerd. Madr. Journ. x. p. 71 (1839). Milvus ater, Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 31 (1849). Common Kite, Black Kite, Jaffna Europeans ; The Cheela Kite, Kelaart’s Prodromus. Chil, Hind.; Malla Gedda, Vel.; Paria Prandu (apud Jerdon). Rajaliya, Sinhalese ; Kalu-Prandu, Paria Prandu, Tam. in Ceylon. Adult female. Length to front of cere 22:0 to 22°5 inches; culmen from cere 1°2; wing 17-5 to 18°0; tail 10-0 to 11-0; tarsus 2-0 to 2-2; middle toe 1°5, its claw (straight) 0-7; height of bill at cere 0°5; expanse 55-5 (of an example with a wing of 18-0). Adult male. Length to front of cere 21-0 to 22-0 inches ; wing 16-0 to 17:3; tarsus 2°0 to 2-2. Iris light hazel-brown, sometimes tawny, with brown radii and mottlings between them ; cere pale greenish, dusky above ; bill blackish, gape and base of under mandible bluish; legs and feet whitish green, greenish yellow, or pale yellowish ; claws black. Head and hind neck brownish tawny, the feathers slightly pale-edged, and each with a fine dark shaft-stripe; on the hind néck the stripes expand slightly, and the ground-colour darkens into the glossy wood-brown of the back, rump, scapulars, and lesser wing-coverts ; upper tail-coverts paler than the back, and the margins of the feathers of the foregoing parts slightly paler than the rest, those of the least coverts tawny ; median wing-coverts lighter than the rest, the webs paling off from the shaft to fulvescent greyish at the edges ; primary-coverts, secondaries, and shorter primaries dark brown, the latter somewhat paler on the outer webs ; longer primaries blackish brown, the inner webs paling from the notch to the base, and the colour broken up with white interspaces and mottlings ; inner secondaries and adjacent tertials crossed with narrow blackish-brown bars, the interspaces being ashen, paling to white on the shorter and innermost tertials; tail ashen brown, with a tawny hue near the shafts of the feathers, and the laterals paling to whitish at the bases of the inner webs, the whole crossed with narrow bars of MILVUS GOVINDA. 81 dark brown, more or less incomplete towards the margins ; tips of all but the two outer feathers whitish ; a line of blackish above the lores, and over the ears a dark brown patch ; face greyish with the shafts dark; beneath brown, paling to tawny rufous from the lower breast to the under tail-coverts ; the centres of the feathers dark brown and the shafts blackish, the web adjacent to the mesial stripes being somewhat paler than the margin ; margins of the throat-feathers fulyous, and the basal portions of the webs whitish ; on the belly and under tail-coverts the mesial stripes are wanting, the shafts alone being dark ; least under wing-coverts deep tawny, the feathers dark- centred; greater series blackish brown with tawny edges; primary under wing-coverts ashen-brown with dark softened bands; basal portion of the 2nd and 3rd quills beneath more or less whitish, the amount of white varying much in individuals, some being quite as dark as MZ. affinis. : Young. In the first, or nestling plumage, the head, back, rump, and wing-coverts are dark brown with a purplish gloss, the feathers of the head and hind neck with terminal whitish-buff “ points” or streaks, surrounding a shaft- stripe darker than the rest of the feather; those of the back and rump with terminal margins of a slightly more rufous hue, the wing-coverts and tertials with much deeper tips of fulvous, passing with a rusty tint into the brown, and surrounding a dark shaft-stripe; primaries and their coverts blackish brown, tipped with fulvous, slightly on the longer primaries, and deeply on the rest; the inner webs of the quills mottled with dusky greyish ; tail obscure ashen-brown, tipped with fulvous and crossed with indistinct bars (as in the adult) of darker brown. Loral streak and postorbital patch darker, and the latter more extensive than in the adult; throat and lower part of cheeks fulvous, with narrow shaft-stripes of brown; fore neck, chest, breast, and flanks brown, the centres of the feathers rufous, enclosing pointed shaft-stripes of blackish brown; on the lower parts the brown hue pales into brownish fulvous, and the shaft-stripes disappear ; tibial plumes and under tail-coverts more rufous still ; under wing-coverts dark chocolate-brown tipped with fulvous, the primary-coverts ashen-brown with the outer webs whitish, as is also the edge of the wing; basal portion of primaries beneath scarcely showing any white in some birds, and in others even more than in old birds. In the following season the terminal margins throughout the upper surface are less conspicuous, and those of the back- and scapular feathers less rufous, the margins of the head- and hindneck-feathers, however, are often more fulvescent, and the dark stripes on the latter part less conspicuous than in the nestling; the tips of the secondaries are likewise less in extent; on the under surface the throat becomes more ‘ lined,” the streaks on the chest and upper breast diminish, and their pale borders contrast less forcibly with them, while the ground-colour of these parts is browner than in the youngest stage ; the amount of white at the base of the quills beneath varies, but it is usually more extensive during this period. When not fully adult, the signs of nonage show themselves in the pale tips of the back, seapulars, and tertials, the Obs. softened and less intense shaft-lines of the head and hind neck, and the pale borders of the dark chest-strie ; the markings of the throat are variable at this stage, the shaft-lines being marked in some and faint in others, while the ground-colour is at times conspicuously rufous; the quills are quite untipped in these birds, and the lower parts more rufous than in adults. The difference of opinion among some ornithologists as to what Kites in India should be classed as MZ. govinda and what as MW. affinis makes it somewhat difficult to define what the Ceylon birds really are, as they present some points of dissimilarity to the types of both these species. If typical I. agfinis be represented by the small rufous- plumaged Kite inhabiting the east coast of Australia and the Malay Archipelago, and AZ. govinda by the ordinary brown-plumaged bird of the plains of India, having a certain amount of white (which, however, is a variable and uncertain characteristic in Ceylon birds) at the base of the primaries beneath, then the Ceylon Kite has more affinity with the latter than with the former. From M. affinis it differs, as an adult bird, in the less rufous coloration of the head, hind neck, and lesser wing-coverts, and in youth in the less-rufescent character of the upper-surface tippings, a Macassar example being taken for comparison. It is likewise a larger bird, the wings of six examples of M. affinis measuring as follows—(Sydney) 15°8, (Australia) 15-0, (Australia) 15-2, (Timor) 16-5, (Macassar) 166, (Timor) 16:5. As regards the pale markings of the under wing, adults of MW. afinis are on the whole darker than Ceylon birds, which, though quite as dark in the young stage, are variable when mature. From the type of M. govinda in the India Museum, and similar examples in the British and Norwich Museums, the insular bird differs in the more rufous edgings of the head- and hindneck-feathers, the paler median wing-coverts, more cinereous tail, more conspicuous striation of the upper part of the throat, more ashy hue of the dark chest-stripes, and more fulvous colour of the abdomen and under tail-coverts ; but though these differences are numerous, they are less appreciable than are those in the case of the Australasian bird. The Ceylon Milvus is also a somewhat smaller bird than the Indian MW. govinda, Sykes’s type, a female measuring 18-5 inches in the wing, and others I have examined 18-0, 17°8, 17:8 and 17:4, while Mr. Hume gives the wing in five females as from 18-25 to 19:10. M 82 MILVUS GOVINDA. In several examples of the young of Indian M. govinda I have observed that there is more whitish at the base of primaries than in adults ; some juvenile Ceylonese examples have scarcely any, while others haye more white than old birds; so that I incline to the belief that this character in the medium-sized Kite is entirely worthless. In referring to the species M. govinda, and speaking of its type in the India Museum, I select the example of the medium-sized Indian Kite, which, I believe, Sykes’s description relates to, and which has, on the bottom of the pedestal, the name govinda written in pencil by Dr. Horsfield. Sykes’s description is too short to identify with certainty the specimen which it refers to; but the smaller bird agrees better with it than with the young example of M. melanotis mentioned by Mr. Brooks (‘ Stray Feathers, 1876, p. 272). Then there is, in fayour of the smaller bird being the type, the indisputable evidence of the habits and locality of the bird referred to by Sykes. He says it is the Common Kite of the Deccan, and is “ constantly soaring in the air in circles, watching an opportunity to dart upon a chicken, upon refuse matter thrown from the cook-room, and occasionally even haying the hardihood to stoop at a dish of meat carrying from the cook-room to the house.” This is not the habit of the larger Kite, which, according to most Indian observers, is a wary bird, and is furthermore not found in the district dealt with by Sykes. Mr. Hume, who has, I conclude, the largest series of Kites of any one in India, says, “ I have examined more than 30 specimens of Kites from Bombay, Matteran, Sholapoor, Sattara, and Poona, and I never found one M. major among them; nay, when at Bombay and Poona, I specially noticed the Kites, and, while I thought I recognized some M. affinis, I can positively affirm there were no MM. major.......... Eyerywhere in the plains M. major is a bird of the jungle, very rarely approaching towns or even villages, and living more on frogs, locusts, &c. than on offal.” With regard to the measurements given by Sykes, ornithologists so far back as thirty or forty years ago rarely measured birds in the flesh; and I agree with Mr. Hume that Sykes’s bird must have been measured from theskin. The tail, which is 11 inches, is decidedly that of the medium-sized bird, and corresponds in size with that of Ceylonese examples. Distribution —The Pariah Kite of Ceylon has a somewhat local habitat, being almost entirely confined to the northern half of the island. Its headquarters are the Jaffna peninsula and the west coast of the Northern Province, as far south as Manaar. It is, singularly enough, notwithstanding its limited range, subject to a seasonal movement from the east coast to the west during the south-west monsoon. Although tolerably common from the peninsula down to Trincomalie, from October until March, scarcely a bird is to be seen in that quarter during the opposite season. I am likewise informed by my friend Mr. W. Murray, of the Ceylon Civil Service, who has made Jarge collections of birds in the Jaffna district, that its numbers are greatly decreased during the same time of the year—a circumstance which may be explained by its retiring into the jungle to breed, and also by its undertaking a partial migration to the southern coasts of India. In the island of Manaar and in the adjoining district of Mantotte it is plentiful, Mr. Holdsworth recording it as very common at Aripo; to the southward of the latter place it occurs in less numbers, taking in the island of Karativoe into its range, down the coast to Puttalam, at which place it is again tolerably numerous in the cool season. South of this it is rare, occurring as far as Madampe and perhaps to Negombo, below which I have uever observed it. In Ceylon it is exclusively a sea-coast bird, except in the very north of the Vanni, where it may now and then be seen about the villages of the interior. I have no record of its occurrence south of Batticaloa, on the east side of the island. Nor does it ascend into the hills as it does in the Nilghiris and Himalayas. Tn India this Kite is almost everywhere abundant. It is found alike at seaport and inland towns ; and most villages even have their attendant flock, who act the part of scavengers in quickly disposing of every thing which it is possible for a bird to digest. In the south it inhabits the Nilghiris, in which hills Mr. Davison says it is very common, ascending to their summits, and often roosting with Haliastur indus. In the Travancore hills, likewise, Mr. Bourdillon writes that the Pariah Kite occurs in numbers in the hot weather ; and it is to be presumed that the present species is intended, as the larger bird (M. melanotis) is not found in the extreme south. Sykes, who first discriminated the species, says it is the common Kite of the Deccan, while at Bombay and up the coast to Sindh, as well as throughout the whole region of Mount Aboo and Northern Guzerat, and in the Kandhala district, it is recorded by various writers in ‘Stray Feathers’ as very common. It inhabits the southern slopes of the Himalayas, up which it ascends to an elevation of 6000 or 7000 feet. It has been procured by Mr. Ball as far west as in the Suliman Hills, which form the western boundary of the Punjaub. The same writer observes that it is common at Chota Nagpur, and that specimens from the jungle are often intensely dark. In Kashgar Dr. Scully obtained nothing but the large bird, although the late Dr. Stoliczka MILVUS GOVINDA. 83 mentions seeing what appeared to be true M. govinda in the hills between Yanjihissar and Sirikul; this, I am inclined to think, was a wrong identification. In the plains of India and at Calcutta it abounds; but from Burmah Mr. Hume has only received what he considers to be the rufous (Australian) species, M. affinis, which inhabits the Malay peninsula, the Archipelago, and the eastern coasts of Australia. From the Andamans M. govinda appears to be entirely absent; and doubtless, if a Kite is procured from the islands of the Bay of Bengal, it will be the Malayan bird, which, as I have just mentioned, inhabits the peninsula. At the Laccadives, Mr. Hume mentions that a Kite not uncommonly occurs, which must be either govinda or affinis ; and as the former species is represented in Ceylon, it is doubtless the same bird which affects these islands. Habits——This Kite, in the north of Ceylon, as it does in India, plays the part of an extremely useful scavenger. There, as in the districts on the mainland frequented by it, it resorts to villages and towns, more particularly those situated on the coast, and, collecting in large flocks, performs the office of devouring all the offal, refuse of human food, thrown out of the doors of native houses, garbage, and decaying organic remains which it can possibly get hold of in the course of the day’s peregrinations. At the hauling-in of the morning seine net it is also a constant and regular attendant, disputing with the usual crowd of “ Kakas”’ for the pos- session of stray fish and crabs rejected by the fishermen. In the town of Jaffna, where it is exceedingly abundant and extremely useful in a sanitary point of view, it resorts in scores, nay, hundreds at times, to the grand old banyan tree upon the fort-ramparts, roosting in it at nights, and perching on its outspreading branches between “meals,” sallying out thence to the sea-beach and various parts of the town, as well as to the open fields of the surrounding country. At the beach, attracted by the arrival of fishing-boats and small craft from the adjacent islands, they present a lively scene: scores of birds circle round and fly to and fro with squealing notes and eager glances at the boats beneath them; some glide over the roofs of the houses, and, taking a wider tour than their mates, return again, sailing back through the streets in utter disregard of the busy human throng ; meanwhile their more fortunate companions, alighted here and there on the sand, are discussing dainty (?) morsels of the most various description picked up with a quick and sudden swoop, or robbed from their sable allies the Crows, who stand off at a respectful distance, ruefully “ cawing ” their disappointment and rage. Layard, who lived for a considerable period in the north of the island, markedly alludes to their daring when pressed by hunger, and says :—“ They are bold enough to make frequent depredations on the fish- stalls ; and in one instance I saw a lad of about thirteen years struck to the ground by the sudden pounce of a Kite, who bore off a good-sized fish from a basket the boy was carrying on his head.” This statement of its boldness is corroborated by a letter which has lately appeared in ‘ Stray Feathers,’ vol. v. p. 347, in which a correspondent states that a Kite, whose nest had been robbed by the son of a sepoy, persistently watched for the lad, swooping down and attacking him whenever he left the house, ample evidence of which maltreatment was afforded by the appearance of the lad’s head and arms. Jerdon has the following paragraph in his ‘ Birds of India,’ on the habits of the “ Chil” in India :—~ When a basket of refuse or offal is thrown out in the streets to be carted away, the Kites of the immediate neigh- bourhood, who appear to be quite cognizant of the usual time at which this is done, are all on the look-out, and dash down on it impetuously, some of them seizing the most tempting morsels by a rapid swoop, others deliberately sitting down on the heaps along with crows and dogs, and selecting their scraps. On such an occasion, too, there is many a struggle to retain a larger fragment than usual; for the possessor no sooner emerges from its swoop than several empty-clawed spectators instantly pursue it eagerly, till the owner finds the chase too hot, and drops the bone of contention, which is generally picked up long before it reaches the ground, again and again to change owners, and perhaps finally revert to its original proprietor. On such occasions a considerable amount of squealing goes on.” The flight of the Pariah Kite is buoyant and easy, the points of its wings being much turned up, and its long tail swayed to and fro as it gracefully curves about and alters its course with motionless pinions. It devours much of its food on the wing; and what it cannot thus consume it disposes of on the ground. In the north of Ceylon the bare and broken leaves of the Palmyra palm afford it a favourite perch. When not occupied in seeking for garbage it quests about marshes and other open places near the sea-coast for frogs, water-snakes, small crabs, &e. Mr. Holdsworth has observed a large flock at Aripu, feeding on winged termites, which they M 2 84 MILVUS GOVINDA. were taking in the air, with apparently but little exertion, by seizing them in their talons! The note of this Kite is a tremulous squeal, uttered much when on the wing, or when congregated to feed on any newly-found garbage, when they become very noisy, as observed by Jerdon in the above paragraph. Nidification.—The Pariah Kite breeds, as I am informed, in the north of Ceylon about May, retiring into the jungle for the purpose, and often building on trees near village tanks or in the vicinity of villages. I have not myself seen their nests ; nor have I any description of them as built in Ceylon; I therefore subjoin the following account from Mr. Hume’s voluminous notes in his ‘ Nests and Eggs of Indian Birds :’—-‘‘ They build, almost without exception, on trees ; but I have found two nests (out of many hundreds that I have examined) placed, Neophron-like, on the cornices of ruins. The nest, mostly placed in a fork, but not uncommonly laid on a flat bough, is a large clumsy mass of sticks and twigs, the various thorny acacias appearing to be the favourite material, lined or intermingled with rags, leaves, tow, &c. The birds are perfectly fearless, breeding as freely on stunted trees situated in the densest-populated bazaars or most crowded grain-markets as on the noblest trees in the open fields. Two appears to be the normal number of eggs; but they often lay three.” The same author remarks that the variety of types of coloration is countless, and that ‘‘ the ground-colour is almost invariably a pale greenish or greyish white, more or less blotched, clouded, mottled, streaked, penlined, spotted, or speckled with various shades of brown and red, from a pale buffy brown to purple, and from blood- ved to earth-brown. Many of the eggs are excessively handsome, having the boldest hieroglyphics blotched in blood-red on a clear white or pale-green ground. Others, again, are covered with delicate markings, as if etched on them with a crow-quill.” The average size of 273 eggs, measured by Mr. Hume, was 2719 by 1:77 inch. ACCIPITRES. FALCONID. AQUILINA. Genus ELANUS. Bill weak, the tip considerably produced, margin slightly festooned. Nostrils oval, and protected by the long loral bristles. Wings very long, reaching to or beyond the tip of the tail when closed, the 2nd quill the longest, and the 1st and 3rd slightly shorter; the distance between the tips of the secondaries and those of the primaries almost equal to length of tail. Tail slightly sinuated, or even at the tip. ‘Tarsus short and stout, covered throughout with small reticulate scales, its anterior portion feathered for more than half its length. ‘Toes very strong and short, inner toe very slightly longer than the outer one. Claws well curved, acute, and all but the centre one rounded beneath. ELANUS CAHRULEUS. (THE BLACK-SHOULDERED KITE.) Falco ceruleus, Desf. Mém. Acad. R. des Sciences, 1787, p. 503, pl. 15. Falco vociferans, Lath. Ind. Orn. i. p. 46 (1790). Falco melanopterus, Daud. Traité, ii. p. 152 (1800). Elanus cesius, Savign. Syst. Ois. d’ Egypte, p. 274 (1809). Elanus melanopterus, Leach, Zool. Mise. iii. p. 5, pl. 122 (1817); Gould, B. of Eur. i. pl. 51 (1837); Gray, Gen. B. i. p. 26 (1845); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 115; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. xii. 1853, p. 104; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 112 (1862); Layard, B. 8. Afr. p. 26 (1867); Hume, Rough Notes, p. 338 (1870); Shelley, Ibis, 1871, p. 44; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 415; Hume, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 21; Jerd, ‘ Nests and Eggs,’ p. 56 (1873); Legge, Ibis, 1874, p.10; Butler, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 449; Hume, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 462; Inglis, Str. Feath. 1877, p. 16. Elanoides cesius, Bonn. et Vieill. Enc. Méth. iii. p. 1206 (1823). Buteo vociferus, Bon. et Vieill. Enc. Méth. iii. p. 1220. Elanus minor, Bp. Consp. i. p. 22 (1850). Hlanus ceruleus, Strickl. Orn. Syn. p. 137 (1855); Shelley, B. of Egypt, p. 198 (1872); Sharpe, Cat. B. i. p. 336; Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 279; Dresser, B. of Eur. pts. xxxv. xxxvi. (1875). La Petite Buse criarde, Sonn. Voy. Ind. ii. p. 184 (1782). Criard Falcon, Lath. Gen. Syn. Suppl. i. p. 38 (1787); Black-winged Kite, Europeans in India. Kapasi, Hind. ; Chanwa, Nepalese ; Adavi Ramadasu, Tel., lit. “‘ Jungle-Tern” (apud Jerdon). Ukkussa, Sinhalese, West Province. Adult male. Length to front of cere 11:4 to 12:0; culmen from cere 0°75; wing 10-4 to 10°8; tail 5:2 to 5-6; tarsus 1:3 to 1:4; mid toe 1-0 to 1:1; claw (straight) 0°5 to 0:6; height of bill at cere 0°35. The wings exceed the tail in old birds. 86 ELANUS CARULEUS. Female. Wing 10-6 to 10-9. Iris, varying according to age from orange-red to pale scarlet or carmine ; cere and base of under mandible yellow ; bill black ; legs and feet rich yellow, claws black. Crown, hind neck, back, seapulars, major wing-coverts, and central tail-feathers bluish or ashy grey; forehead, a line above the supercilium, ear-coyerts, entire under surface, under wing, upper edge of the same, axillaries, and under surface of tail white; lores, a short supercilium, lesser and median wing-coyerts, and the winglet coal-black ; quills dark ashen-grey, the shafts black, and the under surface of the primaries blackish, the three lateral tail-feathers whitish, sullied on the outer webs with grey, shafts of all the rectrices black except at the tip. Young. After leaving the nest, the iris is hazel-brown, and the bill, cere, and legs much as in the adult; in a few months the iris pales to olive-grey. Crown and nape brownish fulvous, paling into buff over the eyes; upper part of hind neck edged whitish ; back, seapulars, and greater wing-coverts slaty brown, broadly edged with fulvous white; quills dark slate, with deep whitish tips ; secondary wing-coverts only, black with pale margins ; tail with the central feathers brownish slaty, the rest slaty-grey ; chin, gorge, and ear-coverts white ; throat, chest, and breast richly tinged with buff, paling into the pure white of the lower parts ; lores and eye-streak as in the adult. With age the forehead and chest become whitish, or, in some, pale greyish, while the back and scapulars lose their brown hue and become ashy, but the two latter parts still remain tipped with whitish ; the shoulder of the wing becomes blacker before the end of the first year; but the greater coverts, the primaries, and their coverts remain tipped with white until after the next moult. It is not until the bird is fully adult, probably two years old, that the back loses entirely the brown shade, and the lateral tail-feathers their grey hue. Distribution.—The Black-winged Kite is widely dispersed over the low country, and is a common bird throughout the Kandyan Province, more especially during the cool season (October until April), during which period it breeds in many of the hill-dlstricts. As regards the lowlands, it is not at all uncommon in the south-eastern, eastern, and northern portions of the island, where the characteristic grass-lands, surrounded by forest, or bordering the shores of large tanks or inlets of the sea, and often, too, studded with dead trees, furnish it with a hunting-ground and many a favourite perch. In the extreme north I have seen it in the Jaffna peninsula; and Layard procured at Pt. Pedro. In the Western Province south of the Chilaw district it is not often seen during the south-west monsoon ; but in the dry season it is not uncommon, and has been procured as near Colombo as the cinnamon-gardens. It occurs in many places in the Galle district, more particularly about citronella-grass estates and young cocoa-nut plantations. I have found it more particularly in the open lands of the delta of the Mahawelliganga and the Batticaloa district, in the low jungles and scattered scrubs between Madampe and Puttalam, and in grassy wastes surrounding the tanks near the south-east coast, than in other parts of the low country. In the Central Province it confines itself to the open country in Uva, and the patnas and cultivated valleys interspersed with woods which are characteristic of the hills from the neighbourhood of Kandy to the base of the main range, as also to the so-called “ plains ” surrounded by forest in the latter district, among which I may cite Nuwara Elliya, the Kandapolla, Elk, and Elephant Plains, where it is a well known bird, particularly in the breeding-season. 1 The Black-winged Kite is a bird of wide geographical range, inhabiting the entire Indian peninsula, South- eastern Europe, and the whole of the continent of Africa. As regards the Indian empire, in which its range has more interest than elsewhere for my readers, it is found in the south of the peninsula, but perhaps not commonly, as it is absent from Mr. Hume’s First List of Birds from the Travancore Hills, Mr. Bourdillon not having observed it there. In the Khandalla district it is rare in the vicinity of Ahmednagar ; but this is a local peculiarity, for it is fairly plentiful further north. Dr. Stoliczka procured it at the Gulf of Cutch, Captain Butler says it occurs all over the plains of Northern Guzerat ; and Mr. Hume records it as plentiful in Nepal, though it is rare in Sindh, which region is probably too barren for its habits. Along the base of the Himalayas it is not uncommon, Mr. Thompson having found it breeding in Lower Gurhwal and the Dehra Doon. About the Sambhur Lake Mr. Adam says it is not uncommon ; and Mr. Ball found it tolerably so in the western parts of Chota Nagpur, while in the Satpura hills it was rather abundant. Bearing towards Burmah, we find that in the boundary-district of Cachar it is rare, Mr. Inglis only having seen half-a-dozen ELANUS CASRULEUS. 87 specimens in four-years ; and at Thayetmyo Captain Feilden merely notes its occurrence, while Mr. Oates met with it only in the Arracan hills. In Tennasserim Mr. Hume has reason to think it occurs ; and if so, this is its furthest range to the south-east. It has not been met with at the Andamans. In the Laccadives, however, it is a visitant, presumably from the west coast; and Mr. Hume procured specimens at the islands of Amini and Cardamum. Turning towards Western Asia, we find Mr. Danford observing it in Asia Minor in winter, and Canon Tristram recording it as a summer visitant to Palestine and haunting the thickets on the Jordan, where it is very shy—the reverse of its nature in Egypt, where it is said to be tame and easy to shoot. In South-eastern Europe it occurs as a straggler; and Lord Lilford mentions having seen a specimen killed in Southern Spain. The example recorded in ‘ The Ibis,’ 1872, as killed at Harristown Bay on the east coast of Ireland, was probably an escaped bird from some ship. As regards Africa, Captain Shelley says that it is abundant in Egypt. On the Gold Coast Mr. H. T. Ussher, now Governor of Labuan, observed it in considerable numbers ; it frequented there low ground sloping towards the sea, and hawked in the evening towards sunset. Mr. T. E. Buckley found it fairly common in Natal; and Mr. Barratt procured it near Rustenberg ; and it is seen in most South-African collections. Habits.—This handsome bird, frequently called the “ White Hawk” in the coffee-districts, affects grass- land surrounded by forest, dry pastures interspersed with low timber, cocoa-nut estates, citronella-grass plan- tations, and such spots as are open and dotted here and there with large trees. The maana-grass patna teeming with life and here and there broken by strips of jungle is a favourite resort ; or, in the upper hills, a tall dead tree by the border of the lonely forest-begirt “plain ” forms an equally appreciated look-out. It is usually a solitary bird, and is abroad at early dawn, lazily flapping its way across the silent jungle-glade to some accustomed perch, where it will sit preening its feathers in the rays of the rising sun, and if disturbed will fiy off to the nearest prominent tree, of which it invariably selects the topmost branch to rest on. In some places, however, where no doubt it is very plentiful, it forsakes its solitary habit ; for Mr. Hume writes in his ‘ Rough Notes,’ that he once saw more than a dozen pairs hunting together over the dry reedy bed of a jheel. I have usually found its diet to consist of lizards and large coleoptera; but it is said to carry off wounded birds in India. It likewise feeds on field-mice and rats ; and when quartering over grass-land I have often seen it stop and hover like a Kestrel, but with a slower motion of the wings. Its usual flight is performed with a heavy flapping of the wings ; and this action, combined with its short tail and white plumage, imparts to it much the appearance of a Sea-Gull. I have often admired it, showing its handsome plumage off against the dark green forests in the upper hills, as it would leisurely course round the edge of one of the open patnas, now and then stopping when its attention was arrested by something in the grass beneath it, and hovering for a minute, perhaps rapidly to descend with outstretched talons and uplifted wings, or to resume its quiet tour of obser- vation round the forest. Concerning its economy in India Jerdon writes, ‘‘ It is not very much on the wing, nor does it soar to any height, but either watches for insects from its perch on a tree or any elevated situation, or takes a short circuit over grain-fields, long grass, or thin jungle, often hovering in the air like a Kestrel, and pounces down on its prey, which is chiefly insects, but also mice and rats, and probably young or feeble birds.” In Northern Guzerat, Capt. Butler writes (doc. cit.), “it is generally found singly or in pairs. Its modus volandi is very varied. Sometimes it flies lazily along like a Gull; at other times it sails round and round in circles, often stopping to hover in the air like a Kestrel, as recorded by Dr. Jerdon. Then, again, when hunting, it flies with quite the swiftness and quite the style of a Falcon. I have seen one of these birds stoop and carry a wounded Quail with quite the rapidity and dash of a Peregrine.” Concerning this Kite’s note, although it is generally a very silent bird (I have never heard its voice, though I have seen it dozens of times), it is said sometimes to utter loud screams. So far back as 1782, Sonnerat, who met with it in his voyages to India, named it the “ Petite Buse criarde,” doubtless on account of the loud notes it uttered; and Mr. F. A. Barratt writes, in his “ Notes on the Birds of the Lydenburg district,” South Africa, of one which he shot:—“ It attracted my attention by a harsh ery, high in the air, which I thought to be that of an Eagle; but, to my surprise, I found it proceeded from this bird.” The Black-winged Kite appears to thrive in confinement. Mr. W. Murray, of the Ceylon Civil Service. ELANUS CARULEUS. og GL kept a young bird, which he took from a nest at Nuwara Elliya, for some time. It partook greedily of meat ; and I noticed that it perched with the outer toe reversed. The iris of this bird took two months to change from dark brown to light hazel. Nidification.—This species breeds from December until March, and, I have reason to believe, resorts in con- siderable numbers to the hills during its nesting-season. I have known it to build both near and in Nuwara Ellya, in Deltota, and in Kadugunawa, in which latter place I took its nest myself in December 1876. This nest was built in a moderately tall, umbrageous tree, in an exposed situation on one of the patnas of the Kirimattie estate, and within a few hundred yards of the bungalow. It was placed among the topmost leafy branches, supported by a fork so slender that the small boy I sent up had great difficulty in reaching it. It was a very openly constructed fabric, about the size of a common Indian Crow’s nest, made of small sticks laid over one another so far apart that daylight could be seen anywhere through it except just in the centre. ‘The interior was flat, and formed of small twigs, on which lay the two eggs. One of these was almost a perfect, and the other a broadish oval, of a dull white ground-colour, in one stippled all over with reddish-brown dots and encircled just beyond the centre with a ring or zone of the same, in the other blotched openly throughout with smeary markings of brownish red, confluent round the smaller end, and mingled in other parts with lighter patches of reddish brown. They measured respectively 1°54 and 1°61 inch in length by 1:23 and 1:17 inch in breadth. The female bird was frightened from the nest by our approach, and flew off with the male, not returning until after we had left with the eggs, and then only to fly heavily round the tree, and make off again to a neighbouring wood. The nest from which Mr. Murray procured his young bird was situated in the compound of the Agent’s house at Nuwara Elliya, and built in the top of an Australian lghtwood (Acacia melanozylon). It con- tained two young. Conflicting descriptions have been given of the eggs of this Kite by various natu- ralists ; and a résumé of the information possessed concerning its nidification up to date will be found in ‘ Stray Feathers, 1873, as above quoted. So many nests have, however, now been taken and thoroughly identified that the eggs have been satisfactorily proved not to vary more than those of other Hawks. Messrs. Blewitt and Adam in India, and hkewise Captain Shelley in Egypt, found the number to vary from three to four; and most of the eggs found by these gentlemen seem to have been more heavily and darkly blotched than mine. From Mr. Adam’s account, quoted by Mr. Hume in ‘Nests and Eggs,’ it appears that the nest is built in less than a week, which is a short time for a hawk to construct its nest in. After writing of the discovery of a nest near the Sambhur Lake in July 1872, he says :—‘‘ On the 7th of August I sent a man to see if the nest contained eggs ; but he found that it had been abandoned and a new nest commenced in one of a group of six Lasora trees (Cordia myxa), which stood near to the Khajur tree. Healso informed me he had seen the birds together. I inspected the nest on the 10th of August, and found one of the birds sitting on it. The nest was so loosely constructed that with my binocular I could see that it contained no eggs. I again inspected the nest on the 4th August, and found that it contained two eggs. One of the birds sat close on the nest, and could not be frightened off by a man beating on the trunk of the tree with a stick ; and this same bird made a swoop at my servant as he was climbing the tree. The nest was situated on the very top of the Lasora tree, and was from 25 to 30 feet fromthe ground. Inshape it was circular ; and, with the exception of two or three pieces of Sarpat grass (Saccharum sara), there was no attempt at lining. It was about 10 inches in diameter ; and the egg-cavity had a depression of about 2 inches.” Of the eggs he writes, they “ are without gloss ; both have a light creamy-white ground, of which, however, little is shown. One had the broad end all blotched over with confluent patches of deep rusty red, while the smaller had numerous spots of a much lighter brownish- red.’ Captain-Shelley, who found these nests at different times in Egypt containing each four eggs, says that in that country the nest is carefully constructed of sticks and reeds, and is smoothly lined with dry leaves of the sugar-cane. ACCIPITRES. FALCONID/. AQUILIN A. Genus PERNIS. Bill long, rather weak, curved from the base, the tip not much hooked, wide at the base, the sides slanting from the culmen to the margin, which is not festooned; cere much advanced and bare. Nostrils linear, oblique, overlapped by the membrane of the cere. _ Lores feathered like the forehead. Wings moderately long, pointed; the 3rd and 4th quills subequal and longest. Tail rather long, broad, even at the tip. Tarsus stout, shorter than the middle toe, the upper half plumed in front, and the remainder covered with small reticulate scales. Toes protected above with narrow bony transverse scales; lateral toes rather long and subequal. Claws acute, rather straight, trenchant beneath. ‘Tibial plumes reaching down to the foot. Head usually furnished with an occipital and somewhat scanty crest. Eyes placed in the head posterior to the gape. PERNIS PTILONORHYNCHUS, (THE INDIAN HONEY-BUZZARD.) Falco ptilorhynchus, Temm. Pl. Col. i. pl. 44 (1828). Pernis ptilonorhynchus, Steph. Gen. Zool. xiii. pl. 85 (1826); Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 414; Sharpe, Cat. Birds, i. p. 347 (1874); Ball, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 381; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 56 (1874); Legge, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 364; Butler, ibid. p. 448 ; Tweed- dale, Ibis, 1877, p. 286. Pernis cristata, Cuv. Régn. An. i. p. 335 (1829); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 18, no. 82 (1849); Horsf. and Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E.I. Co. no. 74, p. 63 (1854); Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 108 (1862) ; Wall, Ibis, 1868, p. 17; Hume, Rough Notes, ii. p. 330 (1870). Pernis torquata, Less. Traité, p. 76 (1851). Pernis ruficollis, Less. l. c. p. T7 (1831). Pernis albiqularis, Less. 1. c. p. 77 (1831). Pernis apivorus, Temy. and Schl. Faun. Jap. Aves, p. 24 (1850). ‘The Crested Honey-Buzzard of some authors. Madhava, Nepalese, from madhu (honey); Shahutela, Hind., from shahud(honey); Tenngedda, Tel.; Zen Prandu, Tam.; Jutalu, Yerklees ; Malswwari of the Mharis (Jerdon). Rajaliya, Sinhalese. Adult male. Length to front of cere 23°5 to 245 inches; culmen from cere 1-0; wing 15°5 to 15°8; tail 9:0 to 10°3; tarsus 1°9 to 2:0; middle toe 1-9 to 2:1, its claw (straight) 0°95 ; height of bill at cere 0°38 to 0-4. Female. Length to front of cere 24:5 to 25:5 inches ; culmen from cere 1:0 to 1-1; wing 15°7 to 17-9; tail 10-0 to 11:5; tarsus 1-9 to 2-1; middle toe 1°9 to 2-2, its claw (straight) 1-0 to 1:02; height of bill at cere 0°48. Expanse of an example with a wing of 16-5, 55-0. ny 90 PERNIS PTILONORHYNCHUS. The above dimensions of males are taken from four specimens, and those of females from twelve, of Ceylon-killed birds. It is the exception to find a female measuring in the wing more than 17:0 inches. Four in my own collection measure as follows—15°7, 16-5, 16:5, 16°6: eight others, five of which are in the Norwich Museum, and two in Lord Tweeddale’s collection, 15:7, 16-8, 16°7, 16°4, 17-5, 16°6, 17°9, 16-4. The last but one is included in a list my friend Mr. Gurney sent me, of two or three birds in Lord Tweeddale’s collection, measured by himself, and is most exceptional if the measurement is correct, which I have no doubt it is. The specimen must be an extraor- dinary and quite abnormal one—a giant among the Ceylonese Honey-Buzzards! I may remark that Mr. Gurney sends me the wing-measurement of a male in the same collection as 17°78. I take it for granted that this specimen has been wrongly sexed by the collector. Iris golden yellow, yellow mottled with brown, or yellow with a pale outer circle ; cere deep leaden colour ; bil blackish, gape and the base of under mandible bluish ; legs and feet dull yellow, in some citron-yellow. The iris being very variable, I have enumerated the several colours which I haye found in dark birds. It is never red as in the North-Bengal race. Fully adult or very old stage. Crown, hind neck, and upper surface rich dark earth-brown, the tips of the hindneck- feathers often darker than the rest ; back and wing-coverts suffused with a purplish lustre, a short occipital crest of 4 or 5 stiffish ovate feathers attaining a length of 2°3 inches, sometimes black, and at others concolorous with the nape ; the forehead above the eye, entire face, ear-coverts, and throat iron-grey, blending into the surrounding plumage ; quills ashy brown, crossed with three or four widely separated bars of dark purplish brown, and a broad terminal band of the same, the extreme tip pale, the inner webs whitish from the notch inwards, with the inter- spaces mottled with brownish ; upper tail-coverts, in some examples, tipped with whitish ; tail dark purple brown, crossed by a broad, 2-inch, smoky-grey band about the same distance from the tip, and in some with a narrow bar of the same near the base. Throat and entire under surface dark chocolate-brown, the feathers dark-shafted ; a dark stripe on each side of the throat, frequently continued across the fore neck in the shape of a gorget; under wing-coverts at times tipped with fulvous ; under surface of light portion of tail grey. In two very dark specimens I examined in Kandy the feathers of the lower breast and abdomen were pale-tipped. A younger stage of plumage, but one which represents the generality of apparently adult birds killed in Ceylon, is as follows :— Aboye rich sepia brown, the margins of the feathers somewhat paler, and the feathers of the occiput and hind neck, as well as the fore neck and entire hinder surface, a fine chestnut brown, with blackish shafts ; a well-developed crest of black feathers ; the lores and round the eye, in some examples, dark iron-grey mingled with brown, while in others the forehead and above the eye is whitish, the centres of the feathers being concolorous with the crown ; the dark moustachial stripe is present, and, in the darker examples, is black, spreading over the throat and some- times running up in a point to the chin; the median wing-coverts are usually light-tipped, and have a considerable amount of white at the base of the feathers; the quills are not so dark as in the above, and haye more white at the tips, the bars being also closer together, and the interspaces more or less crossed with wavy light rays; in the tail, the lighter or earthy-brown hue is the ground-colour, and contains numerous pale wavy cross rays ; the tip is whitish, and adjacent to it is a broadish deep-brown bar ; about 24 inches above this, across the centre of the feathers, is a narrow bar of the same, and another similar one near the base. The under surface is variable, being in some examples a light fulvous brown, with the stripes very broad; while in others the strie are almost want- ing on the breast ; the colour of the whole breast, however, is more or less uniform and devoid of white spaces in the younger bird; most of the basal portion of the inner webs of the primaries is white. In this stage the tail wants the characteristics of the very old bird, viz. the smoky-grey nearly uniform bands; but the lores and the space beneath the eye have the grey appearance, which is a marked adult sign. The presence of the white forehead in this adult stage, I consider to be quite abnormal, as many younger birds (as will be presently noticed) have it uniform with the head. Founy. In birds of the first year the wing varies from 15-6 to 16-0, the other parts equal those of the adult. Tris in some yellow, in others brownish yellow, sometimes with a dark inner edge; cere bluish with greenish patches, in others greenish yellow; legs and feet greener than in the adult. Back, scapulars, and wing-coverts darkish hair-brown, the wing-coverts more or less pale-edged, the median series being the lightest, some examples having the lesser rows edged with whitish, and the outer series of primary-coverts broadly margined with the same ; crown and occiput rich tawny brown, the feathers with blackish shaft-stripes ; the hind neck with the larger part of the feather whitish, and the terminal portion pale brown with a dark shaft- stripe ; the crest-feathers blackish brown, broadly margined or tipped with white; forehead and a broad space above the eye white ; lores and a broad posterior orbital streak dark brown with a slightly greyish shade, inner primaries and secondaries deeply tipped with white, pale brown on both webs, and barred with dark brown, longer primaries with more of the inner webs white than in adults, and with the basal portion of the outer webs light PERNIS PTILONORHYNCHUS. Ot brown, crossed with dark bars alternating with the interspaces of the inner webs ; tail smoky brown, deeply tipped with white, and crossed with four narrow and rather irregular bars of dark sepia-brown, the subterminal one not much broader than the others, and the hight portions crossed with wavy light rays; throat and entire under surface, with the under wing and the edge above the metacarpal joint, pure unmarked white ; ear-coverts pale brownish. From this stage the first advance towards adult plumage is made (probably after the first moult) by the head, hind neck, and upper surface generally becoming more uniformly dark, although there is usually still a good deal of white about the hind neck; the dark lores and space behind the eye extend, and the cheeks and face become striated with dark brown, and a series of streaks from the gape down each side of the throat appear as the first signs of the future dark stripe; the bars on the tail, especially the subterminal one, become broader; the chest and breast assume blackish-brown stripes, more or less broad, on the white ground, while the lower breast, flanks, and abdomen become, in some examples, barred with brown, and in others washed over the whole feather with the same, the flanks and thigh-coverts generally being the darkest. In this stage, I believe, a considerable advance in the plumage is made by a change in the feather itself; and hence the great variety in the birds at this age. The dark grey hue of the lores spreads over the cheeks; the ear-coverts and forehead become nearly concolorous with the crown; the broad lateral throat-stripes of black develop and spread across the fore neck, the chin and gorge becoming brownish; at the same time the bars on the lower parts of those examples having the barred feature spread over the feather, or the brown of the flanks in the other type encroaches gradually on the breast. Obs. Mr. Gurney has noticed that Ceylonese specimens of this Honey-Buzzard are larger than those from India. As will be seen, the above list contains some very high wing-measurements ; but if an extensive series of Indian birds be examined, I have no doubt some will be found equally large. Mr. Hume gives the largest wing, in six females measured, as 17-25, and Mr. Sharpe, in his Catalogue, the average of a large series as 16-5. Some I have measured in the British Museum are as follows—(Deccan) 16-2, (Nepaul) 16-2, (N. Bengal) 17-4, (Kamptee) 16-3, (Himalayas) 17-1, (Darjiling) 15-9. All our largest specimens have been shot in the hills of Ceylon; and, as I demonstrate below that the species is for the most part migratory to Ceylon, these large birds must be not inferior to their fellows elsewhere, or they must be bred on the hills of the island. Mr. Sharpe has measured an example from Java with the wing 17:8, which favours the idea that Ceylonese birds may migrate from that quarter, although it must be remarked that Javan birds have longer crests than ours. Much has been said about the irregular plumage of the Honey-Buzzards; but if a series of examples of different ages be examined, a regular gradation in the plumage, from the pale-chested bird up to the one with the grey face (which is an unmistakable sign of age) and the dark under surface, can be noticed. The fact of white-chested birds breeding with dark ones can be easily explained by assuming that there is in the Honey- Buzzard, as in some Hagles, a permanent light phase. Distribution —The Honey-Buzzard is to a certain extent a migratory bird to Ceylon, and appears, from what I observed while in the island, to make its appearance first of all on the north and north-east coasts, which leads to the inference that it migrates with the north-east monsoon from Burmah, or perhaps from the southern part of the Indian peninsula, to Ceylon. It used to appear yearly on the coast about Trincomalie during November and December, and then depart into the interior. In 1874 I obtained two newly arrived and very tame examples in the Fort, which is a point of call for many migrants arriving with the north-east wind on that part of the coast. Several other birds haunted the vicinity of the town at the same time ; in the following year, however, scarcely an example was to be seen, although it was comparatively numerous in the Kandy district. It was first recorded as a Ceylonese bird by Mr. Holdsworth (oc. ci¢.), from an adult female shot by Mr. Forbes Laurie in the Madoolkella district, not far from Kandy. It had prior to this been received from Ceylon, but its occurrence omitted to be noticed in print. It locates itself in the northern forests, preferring the vicinity of the tanks which abound in that part ; and many birds remain there yearly, and doubtless breed in those unfrequented haunts. I have seen it in such places during the south-west monsoon, and have likewise received specimens from Avisawela and Kurunegala, in the western part of the island, at the same season of the year. I have shot it in August in the Park country, where it is not uncommon ; and I have no doubt it inhabits the forests between Badulla and Hambantota. In the south-west I have never known it to occur. As regards the mountain-region, it is principally found about Dumbara and other places of intermediate altitude in the direction of Kandy. ;Occasionally, however, it ascends much above this ; for Mr. Bligh has shot it in Dimbula. It is possible that some of the birds occurring on the hills have been bred there, as they appear to be larger than those which are evidently migrants. n2 | ‘ 7 y 92 PERNIS PTILONORHYNCHUS. One of the most interesting points yet to be decided with reference to Ceylon ornithology is that relating to the movements of this fine bird. Whether it comes from Burmah or from South India, or even from Sumatra, remains yet to be seen. If an extensive series could be obtained from South India, a comparison of it with another from Ceylon would easily settle the matter with reference to that quarter. This species is scattered throughout India, extending into Burmah and a portion of the Asiatic archi- pelago. It is not unfrequent in the south of India, but appears to be local in its distribution there. Jerdon says of it, in the ‘ Madras Journal :’—“ I have only met with this bird in the jungles of the western coast and Nilghiris. It is by no means common......... I procured a female at the foot of the Conoor pass, and another on the summit of the hills.’ Mr. Bourdillon appears not to have found it in the Travancore district. Near Khandala and in the western parts of the Deccan it is common ; in the region about Mount Aboo and in Northern Guzerat Captain Butler states that it occurs, but not commonly ; and at Sambhur it appears now and then as a straggler. Mr. Hume does not record it from Sindh. In the North-west Provinces it occurs ; and in Chota Nagpur Mr. Ball has procured it ; but it is found in that district sparingly, though this gentleman says that it appears to be common near the Ganges at the north-east corner of the Rajmehal hills; this, however, has reference to the red-eyed race, which is spread through Bengal, and which some think is specifically distinct from the southern bird. The Pegu race, likewise, Mr. Hume considers differerent from the Bengal on account of its smaller size ; it appears to be not uncommon there. From Tenasserim I do not find that it has as yet been received ; and it has not yet been discovered in the islands of the Bay of Bengal. From Java it is well known; and of late it has been procured by Mr. Buxton in South-east Sumatra, having been also previously known from the island of Banka. Habits —Well-wooded districts and large tracts of jungle are the favourite habitat of this handsome bird. It is solitary in its habits, and is partial to the vicinity of water. I have more than once surprised it in shady trees on the borders of forest-rivers or lonely tanks, when it would make off with a straight quick flight to another inviting perch. I have also seen it perched on the tops of high trees in forests, when it much resembles the Serpent-Eaglein the distance. It soars high in the air at times, taking short circles as it ascends, and, according to some observers, has the habit of descending with a rush, much to the terror of the small birds in the neighbourhood. This I have not seen myself, though I have witnessed it soaring at a considerable height. Jerdon observed it attempting to hover, which he said it did in a clumsy manner. Its usual diet consists of honey, which it robs in spite of the attacks of the inmates of the nest, against whose stings, however, its peculiarly-feathered face and lores well protect it. With the honey it also devours the young ones, remains of which I have invariably found in its stomach. It is said also to eat other insects, white ants, and small reptiles ; but the latter focd, I imagine, is only resorted to when pressed for want of its usual diet. One that was shot in the Fort at Trincomalie was associating with Crows, and flying round the barrack-room at the dinner-hour in company with them, on the look-out for scraps thrown out from the verandahs. Another haunted the fine trees shading the officers’ quarters for more than a day, and appeared not to mind the frequent passers-by in the least, finally allowing me to shoot it in the tamest manner. Its habits do not appear to have been paid much attention to by Indian observers, Jerdon being the only one who has recorded much concerning it. He writes in the ‘ Madras Journal :'-—“‘T occasionally saw it seated ona tree, alternately raising and depressing its crest, and in the Nilghiris frequently noticed it questing diligently backwards and forwards over the dense woods there.......... Their usual flight is rather slow; but I onee observed one flying more rapidly than m general, with a continued motion of its wings, and every now and then attempting to hover, with its wings tured very obliquely upwards.’ He further remarks in the ‘ Birds of India,’ that Burgess mentions his having been told by some natives that, when about to feed on a comb, it spreads its tail and with it drives off the bees before attacking it. Nidification—The Honey-Buzzard may possibly breed in the central and northern forests of Ceylon ; but I know of no evidence to this effect. In India it breeds from April until July, nesting in the forks of trees. It builds a nest of sticks and small twigs, and lines the interior with green leaves or fresh grass—a common habit with raptorial birds. Captain G. Marshall observes that the female sits very close during the period of incubation, and is not easily driven away from its nest. This is unusual with the Hawk tribe, the PERNIS PTILONORHYNCHUS. 95 majority of which leave their nests when they are approached. The eggs are two in number as a rule; but some nests have been found only to contain one. They are round in shape, of a ‘ whitish pinkish-white or buffy-yellow ” ground-colour, and vary much in the character of their markings, although they are usually very highly coloured with blotches and clouds of reddish or purplish brown and dark red, sometimes quite confluent round one end. ‘hey average 2:03 inches in length by 1°72 in breadth. Subfam. FALCONIN/K. ‘Outer toe only connected to the middle toe by interdigital membrane; tibia much longer than tarsus, but the latter not contained twice in the former; hinder aspect of tarsus reticulate ; bill distinctly toothed.” (Sharpe, Cat. Birds, i. p. 350.) ———EE—— el ACCIPITRES. FALCONIDA. FALCONIN A. Genus BAZA. Bill stout, curved rapidly from the base of the cere; tip much hooked, and notched with a double tooth; cere but slightly advanced. Nostrils linear, oblique, covered as in Pernis by the superlying membrane. Wings moderate, rounded, with the 4th quill the longest, and the Ist subequal to the secondaries. ‘Tail moderately long, much exceeding the closed wings. ‘Tarsus short, the front and sides plumed for more than half its length; the remainder covered through- out with reticulate scales. Middle toe subequal to the tarsus; lateral toes nearly equal; the whole covered with bony transverse scales. Claws rather straight, the inner less than the middle. Head with an elongated occipital crest. BAZA CEYLONENSIS. (THE CEYLONESE CRESTED FALCON.) (Peculiar to Ceylon 7) Baza ceylonensis, Legge, Str. Feath. 1876, vol. iv. p. 202; Whyte, ibid. 1877, p. 202. Similis B. magnirostri sed crista nigra laté albo terminata, secundariis late albo terminaliter marginatis : rectricibus 4-fasciatis, plagé subterminaliter minore quam fascia apicalis brunnea: subtus fulvescenti-brunneo nec rufescenti transfasciata : gutture fulvescenti nec cinereo lavato. Adult. The following are the measurements of the two type specimens described by me Joc. cit., the larger of which is presumed to be a female :—Length to front of cere (from skin) 16°5 and 16°8; culmen from cere 1-01 and 1-03 ; wing 11°7 and 12°0; tail 7-5 and 8-0; tarsus 1:5 and 1:5; middle toe 1:35 and 1:45; claw (straight) 0°65 and 0°68 ; height of bill at cere 0-4 and 0-5; tarsus feathered to 0°5 from the root of the middle toe. Iris yellow ; bill blackish leaden, lower mandible pale at base ; cere (judging from the skin) dusky plumbeous ; legs and feet yellow ; claws plumbeous, pale at base. Mule. Back, scapulars, lesser wing-coverts, and centres of the feathers on the hind neck and head deep brown, paling on the ramp slightly, and with a strong purple sheen on the mantle as well as on the under-mentioned caudal bars; the feathers of the back with perceptibly pale edgings, those of the head and hind neck broadly margined with pale tawny, the superciliary region being entirely of this colour, the forehead slightly darker with the shafts of the feathers blackish ; crest 1 inch in length, black, conspicuously tipped with white ; greater secondary-coverts and tertials paler brown than the scapulars, many of the feathers tipped whitish, primaries and secondaries smoky brown, the latter and the inner primaries deeply tipped with white, and the whole crossed with blackish bars, the ulterior one being terminal, inner edges of the primaries white on the lighter portion of the feather; tail drab- brown, pale-tipped, a broad subterminal band of purplish black, and three narrower of the same, the basal one hidden beneath the coverts. Lores and a stripe behind the eye blackish brown; cheeks and ear-coverts slate-grey, with dark shafts ; chin and throat buif, the feathers down the centre with blackish shaft-stripes; chest and sides of the fore-neck almost uniform tawny cinereous, under surface from the chest, with the under wing-coverts and lower surface of the basal portion BAZA CEYLONENSIS. G6 of quills, white, barred on the breast and flanks with rufescent brown bands equal to the white interspaces, narower and further apart on the tibial plumes, and almost absent on the under tail-coverts; inner sides of legs buff-white ; lesser under coverts crossed with narrow rufous markings, major series with a few transverse promnan patches ; lower surface of light portions of tail greyish white. Presumed female. Has the upper surface generally somewhat paler; but the crown is darker, the blackish central stripes being broader than in the above example; crest consisting of four long feathers 2 inches long ; the primaries and secondaries, which are just acquired after moult, very deeply tipped with white ; the chest differs in its less uni- form hue, having the feathers with broad rufous centres and widely margined with buff-whitish ; the under surface is similarly barred, under tail-coverts and wing-lining the same. Young. The example referred to below as presented by Mr. S. Bligh to the Norwich Museum is a young bird. The posterior tooth is not developed, and the anterior less deep than in the adult. Its length (from the skin) is 17-0 inches; wing 12°25; tail 8:0; tarsus 1:15. Above glossy dark brown, the feathers of the back, scapulars, and wing-coverts edged with whitish ; centres of the head- and hindneck-feathers brown, with broad margins of fulvous white; crest black, deeply tipped with white, and 1-8 inch in length ; primaries and secondaries smoky brown, with blackish bars and white inner edges to the basal portions of the former, similar to the adult ; median and greater secondary wing-coverts deeply tipped with white, adjacent to which the brown hue changes into rufous, giving the wing-coverts arufescent appearance; tail smoky brown, banded with five brown bars narrower than in the adult; under surface white; a very fine chin-stripe of brown, formed by dark shaft-lines on one or two feathers; chest marked with well-defined brown stripes ; breast and flanks widely barred with broad pale sienna-brown bars. Another immature example, in the British Museum, from the collection of Messrs. Whyte and Co., and which is a Iris female, is very similar to the above, but may perhaps bea little older : wing 12-1, tail 7-8, culmen from cere 1:01. The posterior tooth slightly developed, but not so prominent as the anterior. yellow ; feet and tarsi yellowish; head and hind neck fulyous tawny, with dark central stripes increasing in width at the lower part of the neck; the crest black, deeply tipped with white, and 2-0 inches in length; the back and wings are deep brown with a purplish lustre, the feathers margined with rufous brown ; greater wing-coverts barred with pale brown ; the barring of the quills is the same, and the inner part of the lighter interspaces on the inner web white; tail as above, the tip whitish, and the subterminal dark bar equal in width to the adjacent interspace ; lores blackish brown ; cheeks and ear-coverts with tawny-brown striz ; throat and under surface bufi- white; the chin with a pale brown mesial stripe, widening and darkening on the throat; chest marked with broad “drops” of rufous-chestnut, changing on the breast, flanks, abdomen, and shorter under tail-coverts into bars of the same; longer under tail-coverts unmarked; thighs crossed with bar-like spots of rufous. A third immature specimen has been sent home to the Norwich Museum by Messrs. Whyte and Co., since this article was written. Mr. Gurney writes me that it measured, as he was informed, 18°45 inches in the flesh, and weighed 1 lb. The wing, according to his system of measuring, is 12°5 inches (which would be equal, after my plan, to 12-2 or 12°3), tail 8-5, tarsus 1:5, crest 2-3. It is older than the specimen presented by Mr. Bligh, ‘ having much less of the white margins to the feathers on the Obs. upper surface, and the throat and breast being decidedly more fulvous; the tail has 4 bars instead of 5.” This latter feature testifies to its age; and I think its plumage may be taken as representing an intermediate stage between the young and the old bird. I do not consider this a very good species. It comes very close to B. magnirostris from the Philippines; but as this latter has sucha remote habitat, I have allowed the slight differences that exist to weigh in favour of keeping the Ceylonese bird distinct for the present. The adult type of B. magnirostris is a smaller bird than B. ceylonensis : it has the wing 11-1 inches, tail 7-2, tarsus 1°3. The crest is not deeply tipped with white as in the latter, but has the terminal portion of the webs laterally edged with it only; the secondaries and primaries are not deeply tipped with white ; and the tail-bands are narrower and five in number ; the cheeks are much paler, and the chin-stripe inconspicuous and of alight iron-grey colour uniform with the cheeks; the chest is very simular, but the breast- and flank-bands are more rufous than in my bird. ‘This latter characteristic, however, is not to be depended upon. B. ceylonensis likewise has a considerable general resemblance to the example in the British Museum, which Mr. Sharpe considers now to be B. jerdoni; but this has the head very dark indeed, and is rufous on the cheeks and sides of the head. Mr. Hume’s species, B. incognita (Str. Feath. 1875, pp. 314-316), from Sikhim and Tenas- serim appears to be more closely allied to this species than to the Ceylonese bird, being considerably larger (wing, gd 13:12, 2 13°75) than the latter ; and the specimens described seem, moreoyer, to be immature. If identical with any other member of the genus, one would naturally seek to join my bird to B. sumatrensis, which has a comparatively adjacent habitat, to it. L have, however, compared this, in company with Messrs. Sharpe and Gurney, with two of the immature examples of the Ceylonese form ; and these gentlemen concur with me that the 96 BAZA CEYLONENSIS. Sumatran bird, as far as can be proved by the evidence of the single immature example which exists of it, is distinct. The testimony of an immature bird, it must be allowed, is not a very safe one to go upon; but never- theless, as the specimen exists, it is a larger bird (wing 12°75, tail, very long, 9°6), has no chin-stripe, which is a marked characteristic of B. ceylonensis, has the under-surface bars much broader and of a different appearance, and the tippings of the back and scapular feathers fulvous and not white. Unless, therefore, B. magnirostris from the Philippines turns out some day to be identical with swmatrensis from Sumatra, and both the same as ceylonensis, L think the latter species may hold its own, as it can scarcely be one with the Philippine bird, a species not hitherto procured to the westward of those distant islands. As yet every member of the genus (except the curious Baza lophotes, totally unlike any other in its plumage) has proved very local in its habitat ; and were it not for this fact, it would be difficult to imagine our bird restricted to so small an island as Ceylon *. Distribution and Discovery.—This interesting Crested Falcon was described by me (loc. cit.) from two adult examples which I found in the collection of Messrs. Whyte and Co., naturalists, in Kandy, in August 1876. They were both shot on the same day, the 6th of the same month, by Mr. F. H. Davidson, of Matale, on the Kudupolella estate. In May of the same year, however, I had met with an immature specimen (the one now in the Norwich Museum) at Mr. Bligh’s bungalow, and identified it from Mr. Sharpe’s plate in the ‘ Catalogue of Birds,’ vol. i., as B. sumatrensis. This example was therefore the first that came under my notice; it was shot in the early part of 1875 by a Mr. Colville, near Nilambe, in the Kandy district, and preserved in Messrs. Whyte and Co.’s establishment. Inthe beginning of last year the immature bird referred to above as now in the National collection, was procured near Kandy by Messrs. Whyte and Co.’s collectors ; and a third example has been lately sent by this firm to the Norwich Museum, a female, and shot in the Central Province on the 3rd of January last. Since the publication of my account of the species, Mr. A. Whyte has stated, in a paper which appeared in ‘ Stray Feathers,’ August 1877, that the “bird was discovered + by us eight years ago, a pair having been shot by one of our collectors not far from Kandy.” With regard to this pair Mr. Whyte writes to me lately as follows :—‘ They were shot on the same day, from the top of Oodoo- wella crag, about four miles from Kandy, by a Singalese collector, Carolis, in the fall of 1870; since then at least ten specimens of the bird have passed through our hands; and I can quote Kandy, Matale, Rattota, and Deltota as among the situations in which it has been found.” It would appear, therefore, that it has only been procured within the very limited district stretching from Matale 10 miles north of Kandy, to Deltota, about 12 miles, in a direct line, to the south of the town. This part of the hill-region of Ceylon, it should be remarked, is that in which most of the birds are shot that are sent to Messrs. Whyte and Co.’s for preser- vation, Imasmuch as they can be forwarded by Coolie runners, and skinned before suffering from the decom- posing effects of tropical heat; it is not, therefore, to be inferred that the habitat of the Ceylon Baza is restricted to such a very small tract of country as this, but rather that it is a hill-bird scattered throughout the * T have just heard, since correcting the proof of this article, from Mr. Hume, that he has lately received a young specimen of a Baza from the Wynaad, which he considers must be identical with this species. Mr. Hume has not, as far as I am aware, seen examples of B. ceylonensis; but his surmise may be correct. I accordingly put it doubtfully * peculiar to Ceylon.” 7 In the interests of Ceylon ornithology I am constrained to make some remarks on Mr. Whyte’s note on this species. Were it not my aim to give a faithful history of all the peculiar Ceylonese forms, I should not have referred to the subject. It is difficult to see in what sense the writer uses the word ‘“‘ discovered.” The species was in reality discovered by the collector who shot it ; for the specimens were afterwards skinned, sold unidentified, and lost for ever to science ! In continuation of the above paragraph, follows :—‘ Three more specimens have been collected by us, one of which Captain Legge obtained from us.” Two of these I will remark are comprised in the pair shot by Mr. Davidson and sent to Messrs. Whyte and Co.’s for preservation, one of which Mr. Whyte sold me under the impression that it was a Crested Goshawk (a not unlikely mistake for one who had formed no acquaintance with the genus Baza); and the other he sent me on the order of Mr. Fraser, of Colombo, a friend of Mr. Davidson, and who kindly presented it tome. The words collected by us, in reference to this pair are therefore misapplied. When I wrote to Mr. Whyte, shortly after the purchase of the type specimen, that it was a new Baza, I much wish that he had informed me of his having previously received a pair. I could then have made inquiries concerning the birds, and should perhaps have succeeded in tracing them to their destimation: in which case I could have verified Mr, Whyte’s identification, BAZA CEYLONENSIS. oii Central-Province subranges, although it has not yet been recorded beyond the vicinity of the Kandyan capital. Habits —I am unable to furnish any information concerning the habits of this species, beyond that I learn it frequents the borders of forests, the vicinity of steep-wooded hill-faces and patnas interspersed with jungle. When killed it has doubtless been met with in such localities ; but as a rule it will be found, like its congeners, to be a forest-loving species, like Baza lophotes and B. reinwardti. The front figure in the Plate accompanying this article is the adult male bird killed at Matale, and that in the background the young bird sent home by Messrs. Whyte and Co. to the British Museum. BAZA LOPHOTES. (THE INDIAN CRESTED FALCON.) Faico lophotes, Temm. PI. Col. i. pl. 10 (1823). Buteo cristatus, Bonn. et Vieill. Enc. Méth. iii. p. 1220 (1823). Baza syama, Hodgs. J. A. 8. B. v. p. T77 (1836). Baza lophotes, Gray, List Gen. B. p. 4.(1840); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 17 (1849); id. J. A. S. B. xix. p. 825 (1850); Kelaart, Prodromus, p. 115 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. N. H. 1853, xii. p. 102; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i. p. 62. no. 72 (1854); Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 111 (1862); Hume, Rough Notes, ii. p. 337 (1870) ; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 415; Sharpe, Cat. B. i. p. 352 (1874); Walden, Ibis, 1876, p. 541. Hytiopus syama, Hodgs. J. A. 8. B. x. p. 27 (1841). Hytiopus lophotes, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xii. p. 312 (1843). Pernis lophotes, Kaup, Contr. Orn. 1850, p. 77. Baza indicus, Bp. Rev. et Mag. de Zool. 1854, p. 535. Cohy Falcon, Lath. Gen. Hist. i. p. 165, pl. x. (1821). Black-crested Kite, * Baza,’ Cohy Falcon, Cohy Pern, in India. Cohy of the Parbutties ; Syama, lit. ‘* Black,” Nepal. Adult male*. Length to front of cere 12:5 inches; culmen from cere 0°8; wing 9:2 to 9:4, expanse 30-5; tail 5:0 to 5-5; tarsus 1:05 to 1:1; middle toe 1-0 to 1:1, claw (straight) 0°47 ; height of bill at cere 0°35, No difference in size exists between examples from Nepaul, Ceylon, and Pinang. Iris brownish red; cere bluish leaden; bill pale bluish leaden, darker at the sides above the tooth ; legs and feet pale bluish, claws black. Entire head, throat, body above. wing-coverts, longer scapulars, quills, tail, and body beneath from the upper breast black, with a dark green gloss above and on the under tail-coverts. A long occipital crest of 3 or 4 narrow feathers 23 inches in length ; tertials and some of the concealed scapulars rufous towards the tips; a broad edging of the same near the extremities of the secondaries; tertials and scapulars white across the middle, showing conspicuously on the longer feathers, the terminal portions of which are black. Chest pure white, succeeded by a band of deep vinous chestnut, many of the featbers of which are edged with black ; below this the black sides of the breast are overlaid with long ochraceous white plumes, meeting across the body below the band, and barred down the sides with the chestnut ; lower surface of quills and tail stone-grey, with a dark patch near the tips on the outer portion of the latter. The black plumage underlying the stiff breast-plumes is a singular character in this bird’s attire. Young. In the bird of the year the anterior tooth is less developed than in the adult, and the second or posterior notch is not developed; the crest is of much the same length as in the old bird. The chief characteristic is the great amount of white and rufous, handsomely intermingled, on the wings and scapulars. Head and upper surface dusky black, with a rufescent tinge on the back-feathers everywhere but at the tips; the scapulars and tertials are vinaceous rufous, with their centre portions white, and a bar of the same extends across the outer webs of the secondaries in the same position as the rufous edgings in the adult ; lateral tail-feathers paler than the rest and tipped with white ; throat a brownish or paler black than the head: the white of the chest narrower than in the adult; the pectoral band a paler and handsomer rufous, variable in width, and only continued im bars on the breast-plumes to a very limited extent; the abdomen and underlying breast-feathers with pale edgings ; under surface of tail wanting the black patch. * An example in the British Museum from Nepaul, which has a wing of 9-4 and is not sexed, may be a female; a Ceylonese male, however, measures 9:3. BAZA LOPHOTES. 99 With age the back becomes blacker and more glossy, and the rufous colouring of the scapulars and tertials gradually gives place to the nigrescent adult hue; the white patch on the outer webs of the secondaries becomes rufous at the margins, and then black near the shafts, till in the old bird it finally disappears altogether. Obs. The immature plumage of this bird appears not to have been hitherto described. In looking over the specimens in the National Collection, I came upon the example treated of above, which is undoubtedly in yearling plumage. The absence of the posterior tooth, the undeveloped crest, the pale edgings of the abdominal feathers, and the appearance of the under tail-coverts unmistakably indicate its immaturity, and have furnished a key by which at last the gradations in the plumage of this interesting species may be understood. The existence of this specimen precludes the possibility of the bird shot by Col. Tickell (J. A. S. B. 1833, p. 569) being the young of this Baza. This example was 18 inches in length, had a “ fine long occipital crest black with white tips ; the head, nape, and wing-coverts clouded with ashy and rusty ; back clouded with brown; lower parts white, with a streak of black down the centre of the throat, and with rusty bars on the breast and belly.” This bird cannot be referable to B. lophotes ; but it may be Sp. alboniger or another species of the genus Baza (B. jerdoni?). Distribution.—This beautiful Falcon is one of our rarest raptorial birds, and is, as far as observation has hitherto tended to prove, a cool-season migrant to Ceylon; and the fact of its having been observed to be migratory to Burmah and the east coast of India is, I think, for the most part, confirmatory of this belief. During its visits to the island it appears to confine itself mostly to the low country, and to be most partial to the northern half of the island. It was first recorded from Ceylon by Edgar Layard, who obtained a specimen near Jaffna, and who speaks in his “ Notes” of another having been procured by Mr. Mitford, of Ratnapura. Subsequent observers do not seem to have met with it until Mr. Bligh obtained another, which was caught near Lemastota. In January 1876 I came suddenly upon a little troop of five in close company, and out of them secured an immature male. In the following October I saw another example near Ambepussa ; and in January last year (1877), through the kindness of Mr. Chas. Byrde, of the Ceylon Civil Service, I received a second specimen, shot at Pasyala, in the Western Province. Mr. Simpson, of the Indian Telegraph Depart- ment, who has spent much of his time in the northern forests, and who is an accurate observer of birds, informed me that he had seen this Falcon at Kanthelai tank. Mr. Holdsworth mentions having seen specimens from the Kandy district which, with the exception of the evidence afforded by the Lemastota specimen, is the only record we have of its occurrence in tbe hill-region. This species has a limited geographical distribution. As far as can be judged, it has its head-quarters in Assam and Burmah, and migrates thence down the east coast of India to Ceylon. Jerdon procured one specimen on the east coast near Nellore; and he remarks that it is occasionally killed at Calcutta, and is spread very sparingly throughout India. Of late years, however, it has not been recorded from the Deccan, North-west Provinces, Chota Nagpur, nor any of the western districts, the ornithology of all which regions has been so fully worked out in ‘ Stray Feathers’; neither has it been recorded from the Travancore, Palani, nor Nilghiri forests. It can only therefore locate itself in few places (and those far between) when it makes its annual visits to the Peninsula. The strangest feature in its distribution is, that it is hikewise nothing more than a migrant to Burmah and Tenasserim. In the latter district Mr. Davison found it not uncommon in December and January throughout the southern parts of it ; but no mention is made of its occurrence at other seasons, so that it is undoubtedly non-resident on the eastern side of the Bay of Bengal. There are specimens from Malacca and Pinang in the British Museum; but it has not been met with in the Andamans or Nicobars. Neither Mr. Oates nor Capt. Feilden appear to have found it in Upper Pegu; but im North-eastern Cachar, which lies to the north of it, Mr. Inglis found it consorting together, in November, in the same sociable manuer that I did in the northern forests of Ceylon. Where, then, is its home throughout the greater part of the year? Where are those birds bred which mysteriously visit the above-mentioned regions for so short a time and again vanish as suddenly as they appeared ? The northern portion of Burmah, together with the immense Chinese provinces of Yunan, Sechuen, and Quei Chorn, which lie to the north and north-east of the Burmese kingdom, are traversed here and there by extensive mountain-systems, such as the Palkoi, ‘ Snowy,” and other ranges—a vast and little-known ornithological district extending over 12° of latitude, all of which forms a territory sufficiently large to furnish a home for a bird of far less local disposition than a Baza. It is pretty certain that this species does not inhabit the more eastern parts of the Celestial Empire, for Pére David makes no mention of its occurrence there or in the Moupin mountains in his new work on the Birds of China. 02 LOO BAZA LOPHOTES. Habits —This “Baza” frequents forest or large tracts of jungle, and usually keeps to districts of no considerable altitude. It appears to be more gregarious than most Hawks ; for with the exception of the Kestrels and Kites, none seem to be so fond of each other’s company. The little troop that I met with more resembled Pigeons in their actions than birds of the hawk-tribe ; three were seated among the branches of one tree, and two others flew from branch to branch close by; when I approached the whole made off with short flight, from tree to tree, during which movement I dropped my bird. They had a quick irregular mode of flying, and with their white chests and handsome wings, contrasted against the green foliage, had a very unhawk- like appearance. I notice, with regard to their sociability, that Mr. Inglis, in the “ First List of Birds from Cachar”’ (‘Stray Feathers,’ vol. v.), speaks of finding three in company with Bulbuls and King-Crows. Jerdon remarks that it is entirely insectivorous in its diet; and a pair that Mr. Mitford met with near Ratnapura, referred to by Layard in his notes, were catching bees on the wing, and also by darting at them as they issued from their hive ; they sat on the dead branches of a tree, and raised and depressed their crests, and this they have the power of doing vertically, like the Crested Swift (Dendrochelidon coronata). Layard’s specimen had a Lizard (Calotes viridis) in its stomach ; and one of my birds, which was shot by Mr. Chas. Byrde, sitting in a jack-tree near the Rest House at Pasyala, had been feeding on Coleoptera. I know nothing of its note, nor can I find any thing recorded concerning it. Jerdon writes of it in the ‘ Birds of India’:—<‘‘It is almost entirely insectivorous in its habits, and keeps to the forests or well-wooded districts. It takes only short flights, and certainly is not usually seen soaring high in the air, as Mr. Gray says in his ‘ Genera of Birds.’ ” Comparatively little is known concerning any of the Malayan members of this interesting genus, conspi- cuous in which, for its singular and beautiful plumage, is the present species. It is therefore to be hoped that naturalists in India and Ceylon will, when they have the good fortune to come upon it in their wanderings, pay particular attention to its actions and habits, as far as their opportunity will permit of. AC CLE TA Rents: FALCONID. FALCONIN&. Genus FALCO. Bill very stout and strong, short, the tip well hooked, and its margin indented with a deep notch or tooth; culmen curved gently from the base of the cere; cere well advanced. Nostrils circular, exposed, and with a tubercle. Wings long, much pointed, reaching in some to the tip of the tail; the 2nd quill the longest, the Ist subequal with the 3rd, and notched near the tip on the inner web ; secondaries falling short of the primaries by more than half the length of the tail. Tail moderately short, stiff, and somewhat cuneate at the tip. Tarsus shorter than the middle toe, plumed somewhat below the knee, covered in front with small hexagonal scales. Toes very strong; middle toe much longer than the outer, which exceeds the inner; the whole shielded Do? with narrow transverse scales nearly to the base. Claws much curved and acute. FALCO PEREGRINUS. (THE COMMON PEREGRINE.) Falco peregrinus, Tunstall, Ornith. Brit. p. 1 (1771); Gm. S. N. 1. p. 272 (1788); Gould, B. of Eur. pl. 21 (1837); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 13. no. 63 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 115 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 101; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 16. no. 18 (1854); Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 21 (1862); Gould, B. of Gt. Britain, pt. 1 (1862); Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 234; Hume, Rough Notes, i. p. 49 (1869); Jerd. Ibis, 1871, p. 237; Delmé Radcliffe, ibid. p. 363 ; Swinhoe, P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 340; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 410: Hume, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 367, et 1874, p. 140; Swinhoe, Ibis, 1874, p. 427; Legge, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 360; Hume, ibid. p. 443; Scully, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 117; Hume, ibid. p. 461 ; Dresser, B. Eur. pts. 47, 48 (1876). Falco communis, Gm. 8. N.i. p. 270 (1788, ex Buff.) ; Sch. Vog. Nederl. p. 6, pls. 1-3 (1854) ; Sundev. Sy. Fogl. p. 206, pl. 26. fig. 2 (1867); Sharpe, Ann. & Mag. Nat. H. 1873, xi. p. 222, et Cat. B. i. p. 876 (1874); David and Oustalet, Ois. de la Chine, p. 32 (1877). Falco calidus, Lath. Ind. Orn. i. p. 41 (1790). Falco lunulatus, Daud. Traité, ii. p. 127 (1800, ex Lath.). Falco anatum, Bp. Comp. List B. Eur. & N. Am. p. 4 (1838, ex Audubon) ; Scl. et Salv. Ibis, 1859, p. 219. Falco micrurus, Hodgs. in Gray’s Zool. Misc. p. 81 (1844). Le Faucon, Briss. Orn. i. p. 321 (1760). Le Faucon pélerin, Briss. Orn. i. p. 541 (1760). Le Faucon sors, Buff. Pl. Enl. i. pl. 470 (i770). Oriental Hawk, Behree Falcon, Latham, Gen. Syn. Suppl. p. 34* (1787). ———— 102 FALCO PEREGRINUS. “ Falcon” (female), ‘ Tiercel” (male), in Falconry ; “ Duck-Hawk” in America. Bhyri (female), Bhyri bacha (male), Hind. ; Bhyri Dega, Tel.; Dega, Yerklees (apud Jerdon) ; Bahri or Water-haunting Bird, Turkestan (apud Scully); Basi, Persia (apud Pallas) ; Raja wali, Malay; Sikap lang, Sumatra (apud Raffles); Laki Angin of the Passmu- mahs; /alcén, Spain. Ukussa, Sinhalese. Adult male. Length to front of cere 15:2 to 16-0 inches; culmen from cere 0°8 ; wing 12°6 to 12°8; tail 6-5; tarsus 1:9 to 2-05; middle toe 1°85 to 1:9, claw (straight) 0°65 to 0°7. Adult female. Length to front of cere 17:5 to 18-5 inches ; culmen from cere 1°05 to 1:2; wing 14:0 to 14:6; tail 73 to 8:5; tarsus 2:1 to 2°2; middle toe 2°1 to 2°3, claw (straight) 0°75; height of bill at cere 0°45 to 0:48. Weight of a female (wing 14-5) killed at Trincomalie 2 Ib. 4 oz. Iris dark hazel-brown ; eyelid and cere above nostril rich yellow, greenish near the gape ; bill pale blue at the cere and yellowish at the base beneath, darkening to blackish at the tips ; legs and feet yellow. Above bluish ashen, darkening into blackish or blackish brown on the head and hind neck, and paling into bluish grey F on the rump and upper tail-coverts, all the feathers with dark shafts conspicuous on the back and scapulars, and banded with narrow, softened, wavy bars of cinereous blackish from the hind neck downwards; on the rump and upper tail-coverts these markings take a spear-shaped form; bases and sides of the feathers, in many examples, on the hind neck rufescent ; least wing-coverts edged pale; quills dark brown, pervaded with ashy on the outer webs ; the tips finely edged with greyish, the inner webs barred with rufescent grey or greyish white; tail dusky ashen, palest at the base, and crossed with narrow wavy bands of blackish, and tipped deeply with buft-white. Forehead usually whitish close to the cere; lores, cheeks, and a short broad moustachial streak black ; chin, throat, fore neck, and all beneath with the under wing-coverts white, tinged on the upper breast with faint isabelline grey, and often on the lower parts with bluish grey; the throat and fore neck unmarked, the chest streaked with narrow shaft-stripes of brown, which change gradually on the upper breast into the narrow wavy bars of blackish brown of the whole under surface and thighs ; under wing-coverts with broader bars of the same. Obs. It is the opinion of many naturalists, and among them Mr. J. Hancock, who has made the Falcons a life-long study, that the Peregrine, as well as other members of the genus, acquires its adult plumage at the first moult*. From observations I have made of a number of specimens in the barred plumage, but showing here and there a thorough immature feather, it seems evident to me that the change does take place in the second year. Notwithstand- ing this, however, it is equally evident that modifications take place in the adult plumage as the bird grows older ; the streaks on the chest become finer and less numerous, and the change to the bars just beneath is more sudden than in the two-year old. Considerable variety exists in the depth of hue of the upper surface in birds from different parts of the world, and some examples are very rufous beneath; an instance of this coloration is afforded in the bird now in the Zoological Gardens, captured off Yucatan, which is almost as rufous as the Indian Peregrine. Asiatic-bred birds shot in India seem to be, as a rule, very heavily streaked on the chest. “ Young male on leaving the nest (Sharpe, Cat. B.i. p. 378). Brown, all the feathers edged with rufous, a clear greyish shade pervading the upper surface, and particularly distinct on the secondaries ; head and neck rusty buff, the sides of the crown and oceiput, the nape and hind neck, the feathers behind the eye, and the moustachial line mottled with blackish ; under surface of the body rusty buff, with longitudinal median spots of dark brown, fewer on the thighs, and changing into bars on the under wing- and tail-coverts ; throat paler and unspotted.” The bird of the year attains almost its full size before the first moult, and has the cere and bill much as in the adult : legs and feet greenish yellow. When fully acquired the plumage is as follows :—Head, back, and wings dark brown, paling, in some, on the rump into light umber-brown, in others into cinereous brown, the feathers more or less edged with rufescent brown, * Mr. Hancock argues from the testimony of caged specimens in his possession, which have invariably acquired the barred plumage at the first moult. Now all who have kept Raptors in confinement know that they are slower in acquiring their adult plumage, owing to loss of vigour, than when ina wild state; if, therefore, the Peregrine makes the sudden change in captivity, how much more must it do so in a state of nature. FALCO PEREGRINUS. 105 paling on the scapulars into fulvous ; front of the crown and the forehead whitish or fulvous, with the centres of the feathers blackish ; sides of the hind-neck feathers marked with the same; shafts of the scapulars and upper tail-coverts black, and the tips of the latter part deeper than elsewhere ; quills brownish black, barred on the inner webs with rufous-grey ; tail cinereous brown, crossed with incomplete bars of rufous- or fulyous-grey and tipped deeply with whitish. Cheeks and moustachial streak blackish brown, the white portion of the ear-coverts streaked with the same ; chin, throat, and entire under surface white, in some slightly tinged with rufescent on the lower parts, and boldly streaked from the chest downwards with umber-brown ; the markings are usually broader on the flanks, and in very many examples, even at this age, have a bar-like form; on the under wing-coverts the brown predominates, the white markings being confined to the tips. Distribution —The Peregrine was first recorded from Ceylon by Layard, who gives an account (loc. cit.) of shooting three specimens at Pt. Pedro in the month of January. Doubt has been thrown by the late Dr. Jerdon and others on Layard’s identification, chiefly on account of the latter’s statement that he found them nesting ; but I have carefully examined the two specimens that still exist in the Poole collection—-an adult and an immature bird; and there they are, veritable Peregrines, in spite of their having been found breeding in so strange a latitude as Ceylon. It appears to confine itself principally to the sea-coast during its visit to Ceylon, which is of course during the north-east monsoon. During the latter part of 1872 a pair frequented the Fort-Frederick cliffs at Trincomalie ; but, fortunately for themselves, eluded several attempts I made to procure them ; they tenaciously kept to one place on the face of the great ‘‘ Sami” rock, where they commanded any approach to their haunt either by land or sea. In February 1874 Mr. R. Pole, of the Ceylon Civil Service, shot a fine female at Puttalam, which is now in the British Museum, and was the first procured since Layard’s time, as far as | am aware. In October of the following year I failed in killing one which frequented the dead trees in the bed of the newly-restored tank at Devilane ; but on the 28th of the same month I succeeded in shooting a female on the cliffs at Fort Frederick. During the cool season of 1876-77 another example, also a female, judging by its size, was observed by myself on two occasions in the cinnamon-gardens near Colombo ; and in December of the same season I met with and wounded a second at the top of Allegalla Peak. Beyond this latter locality, 1 do not know of any place in the mountain-zone in which it has been observed. This fine hill, which is one of the bulwarks of the mountain-range of Ceylon, rises 3400 feet sheer out of the low country, and consequently furnishes the present species with a seasonal shelter and the next with a permanent home. The Peregrine is a cold-weather visitant to the peninsula of India, the Laccadive and the Andaman Islands ; but a good many birds, probably young, remain behind in India, and take up their quarters on the borders of extensive jheels and tanks, attracted by the quantity of wildfowl and waders, which form their chief sustenance. It arrives, says Jerdon, in India, about the first week in October, and departs again in April, and during its visit is less abundant on the west coast than on the east. It is common in Burmah, and finds its way, according to Mr. Hume’s observations, to the Andamans vid Cape Negrais. Professor Schlegel records it from Sumatra; and on the east coast of China Mr. Swinhoe says that it is a permanent resident. Pére David, however, remarks that it is driven by the Saker out of the south of China. It is not uncommon in Japan. It is spread throughout Central Asia, extending northwards into Siberia, and, according to Dr. Scully, remains about Yarkand even in the winter. Canon Tristram found it all times of the year in suitable localities on the coast, but to the eastward of the watershed of Central Palestine he never observed it. It is distributed throughout the continent of Europe to the extreme north, and it occurs likewise in the islands of the Mediterranean. It is found chiefly on the coast-line of Northern Africa, being, however, not very abundant in Egypt, though it is, according to Mr. T. Drake, numerous in Tangiers and Eastern Morocco ; southward it extends its range to Natal and the Cape. From the Canary Islands MM. Berthelot and Bolle record it; but it does not seem to have been noticed in Madeira. In the New World it enjoys a very wide range ; commencing in Greenland it extends down the east coast to South America, and spreads across the continent to Vancouver Island, and thence along the entire Pacific coast of the continent to Peru, being replaced in Chili and to the south of that country still by Falco cassini, a species somewhat akin to the Australian Peregrine, F. melanogenys. It is not my province to go so minutely into its distribution as to record those localities from which it is absent ; but from the above sketch of its habitat it will be seen that the Peregrine has one of the widest ranges of the birds of prey, rivalling even the Osprey in its wanderings. 104 FALCO PEREGRINUS. Habits—This noble Falcon is perhaps too well known to need much comment on its habits. Bold, swift on the wing, and keen-sighted to a degree, as well as extremely docile in confinement, the female has long been celebrated for its employment in the ancient and royal pastime of Falconry ; and although this sport has declined much in Europe during the last century, it is still practised to a certain extent both on the continent and in ngland, the birds used with us being brought over principally from Holland, where they are netted. In India it has always, in common with the next species, been prized by the natives for Falconry, and is still trained there for that purpose; but used to be so, according to Jerdon, much more than now. He writes, in the ‘ Birds of India,’ “ It is trained to catch Egrets, Herons, Storks, Cranes, the Anastomus, Ibis papillosa, Tantalus leucocephalus, &c. It has been known, though very rarely, to strike the Bustard. Native faleconers do not train it to hunt in couples, as is done in Europe sometimes. I may here mention that the idea of the Heron ever transfixing the Hawk with its bill is scouted by all native faleoners, many of whom have had much greater experience than any Europeans. After the prey is brought to the ground, indeed, the Falcon is sometimes in danger of a blow from the powerful bill of the Heron, unless she lays hold of its neck with one foot, which an old bird always does. When the Kulung (Grus virgo) is the quarry, the Bhyri keeps well on its back to avoid a blow from the sharp, curved inner claw of the Crane, which can, and sometimes does, inflict a severe wound.” Jerdon comments on the curious mistake that artists, even Landseer included, have made in depicting the Peregrine as striking with its bill! This erroneous idea, however, is not confined to artists, for I have more than once seen it in the writings of naturalists. No raptorial bird that I have ever heard of uses its bill either for defence or offence ; this organ is constructed for, and only used in, tearing the food on which the bird subsists. The talons alone are used in striking the quarry and in fighting or defending itself against attacks from any source whatever. I have kept half a dozen species of diurnal birds of prey, and have often had occasion to catch them by hand; but have never known one to use its bill when caught further than in giving a very incipient sort of peck. It is well known what a tremendous wound the Peregrine inflicts with the hind claw when striking its quarry ; and in America, where it is called the “ Duck-Hawk,” on account of its partiality for ducks, these birds have been found with the whole back ripped up by the stroke of the Hawk’s sharp talon, combined with the great momentum of its downward swoop. Peregrines have their favourite localities in India and Ceylon, which they tenaciously keep to throughout the season ; they usually take up their quarters near water, and are very partial to sea-coast cliffs, which afford them a tolerably secure refuge. The birds that almost annually frequent the rocks at Trmcomalie feed on the Pigeons frequenting the islets lying off the coast some 12 miles to the north. I observed them flying home at usually about nine or ten o’clock, when they would shelter themselves during the heat of the day, and sally out again in the afternoon. The favourite food of the Peregrine in India consists of waterfowl and waders, the latter being chiefly preyed upon by those birds which frequent the sea-coast. Mr. Adam writes that at the Sambhur Lake “ they sit on stakes which are required to form a low retaining wall to separate a portion of the lake-water for the formation of salt, and from these perches they pounce on the numerous waders which feed along this wall.”’ It is well known to what an extent Coleoptera are preyed upon in the Hast; and Mr. Pole assures me that the specimen he shot at Puttalam was flymg round his compound at dusk, and appeared to be darting at the large beetles which were swarming in the air at that hour. The ordinary flight of the Peregrine is regular and straight on end, being performed, as in other Falcons, with a quick wing-stroke ; it is moderately swift, but nothing out of the common ; when, however, it is in pursuit of a quick-flying quarry, such as a pigeon, duck, or limicoline bird, its wonderful powers of progression are fully brought out, and in making its final dash on the doomed victim its speed for the moment is estimated at 160 miles an hour, Nidification.—As the Bhyri is not known to breed in India, the fact of its having been found nesting at Pt. Pedro by Layard has been a matter of dispute. As mentioned above, I have identified Layard’s birds, and they are not the Jugger (F. jugger), as has been suggested ; and consequently the interesting fact remains that the species (probably quite an abnormal occurrence in tropical latitudes) has bred in Ceylon. He writes as follows :—‘ I found them breeding in a palmyra tope on the left-hand side of the road from Jaffna to Pt. Pedro; the nest a rough structure of sticks laid on the dead ‘ matties’ or fronds of the palmyra, from which the leafy parts had been cut away........ I shot the first specimen early in the month (January) ; but the FALCO PEREGRINUS. 105 female was so shy that, though I long remained concealed near the nest, she never afforded me a shot, and I was obliged to return home without her. I was surprised to find another male at the same nest when I revisited the spot at the end of the month, and procured both him and his mate with a double shot.” Schlegel affirms that the Peregrine has bred in Sumatra; and Swinhoe found it nesting on the cliffs of North rock, in the province of Shantung, North China, and remarks that it appears to be a resident species down the whole length of the Chinese coast, young birds in their down having been brought to him at Amoy. No further testimony beyond that of these three writers is forthcoming of its breeding im the south-east of Asia or in the Indian empire southward of the Himalayas. Dr. Adams is supposed to have found its nest on the banks of the Indus ; but the occurrence is mentioned with doubt, as to the correct identification of the bird, by both Jerdon and Hume ; and the latter does not include it in his list in ‘ Nests and Eggs.’ In more northerly latitudes it usually chooses an inaccessible cliff on which to build and rear its young. There, on some ledge which it deems secure from the attack of man, it constructs a nest of sticks, often mingled with the bones of its quarry, which, collecting year after year, have at last become part and parcel of the structure. The eggs are either three or four in number, and vary both in size and markings, these characters depending on the age of the bird. In Mr. Hewitson’s plate (vol. i. of his ‘ British Birds’ Eggs’) are two examples : the first laid by an old bird, and measuring 2°13 by 1:7 inch; the second by a younger bird, not exceeding 1:92 by 1:55. In the larger of the two the general colour is reddish white, closely freckled, except at the small end, with brick-red, and blotched openly over that with reddish brown, the markings on the smaller half being the largest. The second egg is not so decided in its markings, is of a paler ground, covered with a stippled wash of pale reddish, in which there are a few darker clouds and several openly distributed large blotches round the centre. Pr FALCO PEREGRINATOR. (THE INDIAN PEREGRINE.) Falco peregrinator, Sund. Phys. Tidssk. Lund, 1837, p. 177, pl. 4; Gray, Gen. Birds, i. p. 19 (1844); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A.S. B. p. 14 (1849); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 102; Gould, B. of Asia, pt. 3 (1851); Blyth, J. A. 8. B. xix. p. 321 (1891); Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 18. no. 20 (1854); Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 25 (1862); Hume, Rough Notes, i. p. 55 (1869); Jerd. Ibis, 1870, p. 237; Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 410; Sharpe, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. ser. 4, xi. p. 223 (1873); id. Cat. B. i. p. 382 (1874); Legge, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 195; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 23 (1874): Walden, on Col. Tickeil’s MS. Hl. Ind. Orn., Ibis (1876), p. 342. ° Falco shaheen, Jerd. Madr. Journ. x. p. 81 (1839); id. Tl. Ind. Orn. pls. 12 & 28 (1847). Falco sultaneus, Hodgs. in Gray’s Zool. Misc. p. 81 (1844). Falco ruber, Schl. Mus. P.-B. Fale. p. 5 (1862). The Shahin Falcon, Jerdon, B. of India; Royal Falcon of some. Shahin, “Royal bird” (female), Kohee Koela (male), Hind. ; Jawolum, Tel.; Wallur, Tam. Ukussa, Sinhalese. Adult male (from Ceylonese and Indian examples). Length to front of cere 13-9 to 14-2 inches ; culmen from cere 0-9 to 1:0; wing 11-4 to 11°6, expanse about 34-0; tail 6-0 to 6-4; tarsus 2-0; middle toe 2-1, claw (straight) 0°7; hind toe 0°85, claw (straight) 0-9; height of bill at cere 0-45. ‘vmale. Length to front of cere 15:0 inches ; culmen from cere 1-1; wing 12:0 to 13°3, expanse of the latter 38-2. A male from Ceylon measured 11-6, and a female 12°8 in the wing. Iris dark umber-brown ; cere, eyelid, and gape ochre-yellow ; bill dark plumbeous, changing to greenish near the cere ; legs and feet chrome-yellow, claws black. Head, hind neck, and upper back ashy blackish, deepest on the sides of the neck and paling gradually into bluish ashy on the rump and upper tail-coverts, the latter part being the lightest; all the feathers with dark shafts, the scapulars and wing-coverts edged with pale ashy and the lower back and tail-coverts crossed on the centre of the feathers with dark wavy bars, often concealed by the tips of the overlying feathers ; lesser coverts darker than the median ; quills blackish brown, the shorter primaries slightly pervaded with grey, and the whole narrowly barred on the inner webs with fulyous or light rufous-grey, according to the age of the bird; the secondaries paler than the primaries, and tipped with dull whitish ; tail ashy blackish, tipped with rufescent and barred chiefly at the base with softened slaty markings ; edge of the forehead buff with dark shafts. Cheeks and moustachial stripe black, blending into the paler hue of the head ; chin and throat rufescent white, passing on the chest into pale rufous, and from that into the rich rufous of the breast, flanks, and lower parts ; shafts of the chest-feathers darker rufous than the web; flanks and under tail-coverts crossed on the centre of the feather with narrow lines of blackish ; under wing-coverts dark rufescent, with darker shafts and cinereous black barrings ; greater row brownish, barred with rufescent. Obs. The rufous of the under surface is variable in depth, notwithstanding that the bird may be fully adult. Ceylonese examples in my collection correspond well with Indian, old birds, devoid of any barring on the breast, being scarcely less dark on the head and hind neck than the blackish-headed Nepaul birds (/alco atriceps, Hume). Some examples in the British Museum from Northern India present puzzling characteristics. There is one from Simla, presented by Capt. Pinwill, which has the appearance of a rather small Common Peregrine with a very rufous under surface. The feathers of the back and rump and the scapulars are as much barred as in F’. peregrinus ; the chest is marked with fine mesial points like that species ; the breast and lower parts are rufous-grey, and barred with narrow cross rays of blackish brown as in an old Peregrine, with the exception that the markings are closer together ; the flanks and under tail-coyerts are likewise tinged with bluish grey. FALCO PEREGRINATOR. 107 Young. Wing of a male 10-6 inches. Cere yellowish, tinged with green, in some entirely bluish; legs and feet greenish yellow. Above brownish black, the feathers of the back and wing-coverts with fine pale margins, the scapulars tipped with rufous and some of the concealed portions of the feathers barred with the same; rump edged with rufous, upper tail-coverts tipped and barred with a paler hue; quills deep brown, the bars of the inner webs more rufous than in the adult ; tail barred obscurely with rufous, which on the central feathers is of a dusky hue. Cheeks and moustachial stripe blackish brown; throat and chest white, passing into rufescent buff on the breast and flanks ; the chest and the white space above the moustache streaked with shaft-lines of brown, expanding at the tip; breast streaked broadly with brown, the lower flank-feathers deeply tipped and marked with bar-like spots of the same; the abdomen, under tail-coverts, and thighs are paler than the breast, the former streaked similarly to the chest and the thighs more boldly marked, some of the longer feathers having bar-like spots ; under tail- coyerts barred with brown ; under wing-coyerts whitish, with irregular cross-markings of brown. At the first moult the following change takes place :—the rump and the base of the tail assume a cinereous hue, the edgings of the scapulars are less conspicuous, the bars of the primary inner webs become paler and the shaft- stripes on the chest narrower, the breast and flanks darker rufous, this hue extending to the belly and thighs, and the stripes on the flanks turn into bars. The back and rump from this stage onwards begin to turn grey, the shafts of these parts and of the scapulars standing out darkly; the stripes on the centre of the breast disappear altogether in some examples, leaving the flanks barred to a greater or less extent. Distribution.—This bold and handsome Falcon was recorded by Layard (loc. cit.) as having been shot by his collector and servant near the beautiful upland plain of Gillymally. The account of the specimen in question referred chiefly to its long wings causing the native “ Muttoo” to think that it was a “large Swift,” deceiving Layard also, who says of the bird, “ which I also mistook for a Swift, so much did its wings overlap its tail.’ I have carefully examined the whole collection at Poole, and there is not in it any example of F. peregrinator ; but there is one of a female Falco severus, a bird not recorded by Layard in his list. I am therefore of opinion that he did not correctly identify the bird shot on the occasion in question, but that it was in reality a specimen of the Indian Hobby, to which his remarks as to length of wing &c. would relate with correctness. I have written to him on the subject; and in his last letter to me from New Caledonia he says that he has no doubt the bird was the latter species. Should this surmise be correct it is difficult to say when the bird was first discovered in Ceylon ; but I imagine that my reference in ‘ Stray Feathers,’ 1875, to the Pigeon-Island specimens is the first actual record of the bird’s occurrence in the island. It is resident in Ceylon, but by no means common, and frequents such very retired spots or inaccessible cliffs that it is rarely met with by the ordinary sportsman. A pair usually affected the cliffs at Fort Frederick during the cool season, dividing their time between foraging on the mainland and making inroads upon the Rock-Pigeons which swarmed at the island beyond Nilavele. At this spot a pair out of three or four birds which had taken up their abode on the northern face were killed by myself and a brother officer in October 1874. This island is an out-of-the-way locality, which, stocked as it is with fine pigeons, forms a welcome refuge for the Shahin. As it has so seldom been shot in Ceylon, I quote here the following passage from my notes in ‘ Stray Feathers ’:— “The islet is situated 14 miles north of Trincomalie at about 14 mile from the mainland. Near this place, about 4 a mile nearer the shore, is another rocky islet frequented by flocks of Columba intermedia, which furnish many a dainty meal for the Royal Falcon. Pigeon Island itself is rarely visited except by fishermen, who can only land at the south side, where there is a little beach backed by a tangled thicket, which rises gradually to the pinnacle in the centre, whence the northern side descends in the form of a perpendicular face right into the sea. This cliff, under which it is very difficult to pass on foot, forms a splendid shelter for the Shahin ; for he can perch and roost on the shelves which jut out into the numerous crevices in the face of the rock without being disturbed by any one in the island who does not choose to scramble along the almost inaccessible rocks at its foot. I visited the spot on the 6th October 1874, in search of pigeons, and finding none, was clambering over the rocks on an adjoining islet, separated at high water from the main portion, when I espied a large Faleon coming along over the water and making for the cliff. I quickly turned back, reached the cliff, and got out on to an enormous boulder which enfiladed the precipice, affording a good view of the whole of it, but not a vestige of the Falcon was to be seen. I then determined to get right underneath, and jumped across a 9 7a) 108 FALCO PEREGRINATOR. chasm to a lower boulder, from which I could see almost every spot in the precipice ; but still no falcon. I then shouted, and out shot three splendid fellows, which I missed with my first barrel ; but back they came, dashing up to the rock, and not caring the least for my shot, when bang went the weapon, and down came a fine fellow between two large rocks, where I judged him to be safe, and then fired several shots at impossible distances at the other two, which wheeled and dashed round the summit of the hill in such a manner that I thought they must be breeding. After a while the third bird made off, the second disappearing suddenly from the battle- field. Thinking it was about time to pick up my dead bird, I made my way across and through the water to the spot where I had dropped him, and to my extreme disgust found that he had fallen into a sluice, out of which the first receding wave must have carried him. Not a sign of my prize anywhere; high and low I searched, and at last gave up in despair, convinced that a monstrous blue rock-fish, with which the water beneath the cliff swarmed, had long since polished him off! On returning to the other side of the island, where my companion was hungrily waiting breakfast, the first sight that greeted me was a magnificent winged Shahin hanging by his knotted primaries to the branch of a tree. My companion (Major Sir John Campbell) had dropped him as he shot past ; and hence his sudden disappearance from my side of the island.” Elsewhere in the lower country I have met with the Shahin in the Friars-Hood district, and at Yakkahatua mountain near Avisawella ; and Captain Wade, 57th Regt., shot a fine adult specimen at Tissa- Wewa Tank, near Anarad- japura, in December 1875. In the hill-zone it is more often seen, and no doubt breeds in the mountains. I killed an old male at the top of the celebrated Yakka rock, Hewahette, in May 1876, and in the following mouth Myr. Bligh procured another in Haputale. During the same season a young bird, which I saw after- wards alive in the possession of Messrs. Whyte and Co., was caught in the act of dashing at some pigeons near Kandy. I have seen it on the Alagalla Peak, im the precipices of which I have reason to believe it nests. This Falcon was first described by Sundevall from a specimen which settled on the vessel he was sailing in, “in lat. 6° 20! N., between Ceylon and Sumatra, rather nearer the last-named island, and at least 70 Swedish miles from the nearest land, viz. the Nicobar Islands.”” From what follows in the Professor’s remarks on this occurrence, he was of opinion that it was either flying to or from Sumatra. It has not, however, been discri- minated from that island; and it is more probable that the specimen in question was on its way to or from the Nicobar Islands, but where also it has not been found up to the present time. It is said by Jerdon to be found “ throughout the whole of India, from the Himalayas to the extreme south, extending into Affghanistan and Western Asia.” As regards the two latter regions I imagine that it has been here confounded with another species, as the bird does not appear to extend beyond the confines of the Indian empire, and the northern race, inhabiting even the Himalayas, is separated as F. atriceps by Mr. Hume. I have, however, examined individuals in the National Collection from Nepaul, and they are not separable from Ceylonese specimens. -It is more often found in Central than Upper India, and is more frequent still in the South, mhabiting the Nilghiris and breeding there. In the Carnatic it is seldom met with ; but m the Eastern Ghauts it is tolerably common, according to Jerdon, breeding there, and migrating in the young stage to the former locality. As this writer has stated, it is no doubt far from being a common bird, confining itself to forest-clad districts. I observe that it is not mentioned in Mr. Fairbank’s list of birds from the Palani Hills, nor in Mr. Bourdillon’s from Travancore, although Jerdon shot it in the latter district. Col. Tickell states that it is a commoner species in Burmah than in India, and that he frequently observed it on the sea-side at Amherst. It must be local, however, in Burmah, as I do not find it recorded thence by any of the naturalists whose work has been described of late years in ‘Stray Feathers.’ With regard to the specimens of this Falcon said to have been procured at sea in the Indian Ocean, I have to remark that the bird mentioned by Mr. Whyte (Ibis, 1877, p. 149) as being captured in the Gulf of Socotra, and belonging to the present species, has eventually proved to be “ Common Peregrine; and I am strongly of opinion that the source to which the presence of another (mentioned in a footnote, ‘Stray Feathers, 1877, p. 502, as being procured in 1833 on board ship between Mauritius and Madagascar) might be traced is that which has led to many mistakes in “ distribu- tion,” viz. an escape from a state of confinement. Habits.—In Ceylon the Indian Peregrine frequents lofty mountain-precipices or inaccessible cliffs on the sea-coast. It is an excessively shy bird, retiring when not engaged in the pursuit of its quarry to sequestered ledges, and easily escapes all notice, unless observed to fly towards its retreat. It is as bold and courageous FALCO PEREGRINATOR. 109 in the hunt as its larger and more esteemed congener ; but of course is not so powerful in its’ attack on large birds. It is taught to catch partridges, florikin, and jungle-fowl by native falconers in India, and is usually caught by the ordinary contrivance of bird-lime, with which it comes in contact on stooping at a decoy-bird. Jerdon, who narrates, in his work on the ‘ Birds of India,’ that it is trained for what is called “a standing gait,” or the art of hovering or circling in the air over the falconer and his party, says that “it is indeed a beautiful sight to see this fine bird stoop on a partridge or florikin which has been flushed at some considerable distance from it, as it often makes a wide circuit round the party. As soon as the Falcon observes the game which has been flushed, it makes two or three onward plunges in its direction, and then darts down obliquely with half- closed wings on the devoted quarry with more than the velocity of an arrow.” I can testify to the accuracy of this account of the Shahin’s powers of flight, as I was once myself an eye-witness to its capturing a Palm- Swift at Trincomalie. A little colony of these birds had their nests in a solitary palmyra-palm which grew near the sea-beach ; and one evening I observed one of these Falcons, which had been haunting the cliffs of the Fort, dash past me, and, mounting higher and higher, go away at a tremendous pace, and with a twisting flight, for about 300 yards. I could not see at the moment what he was pursuing, as it was getting dusk ; but he suddenly checked himself and shot down with meteoric swiftness almost into the sea. I then perceived a poor little Swift just in front of him ; close to the surface of the water it dashed along in a horizontal direction for about 100 yards, closely pursued by the Falcon, and then twisted hither and thither for the space of a few seconds, the Shahin following its every movement, until he struck it with his talons, and, seizing it in his bill, flew past me to the cliff. These Falcons frequently sally out thus from their perch about sunset, and make a meal off the first unlucky bird that crosses their path; and they would seem to have rather a partiality for Swifts and Swallows, for I noticed the bird I shot at the Yakka rock dart at a Swallow that was flying about the cliff. They may be always distinguished from the Peregrine on the wing, even at some little distance, by their smaller size and by the conspicuous blue-grey of the rump. I have now and then observed them perch on trees ; but I think it is the exception for them to do so, as they prefer the rocks of the precipices about which they almost entirely live. This species lives exclusively on birds ; and Jerdon remarks that in India it kills large quantities of game, partridges, quails, &c., and that it is very partial to parrakeets. He observes, further, that its habits vary according to the locality in which it lives, birds from open districts, where they require to be more on the wing in pursuit of their prey than in forest districts, being by far the best fliers and the most useful in falconry. It is more highly prized by the natives than any Falcon in the Hast, the Peregrine being considered even second to it. Nidification —But little is known concerning the nidification of this Falcon. I have no doubt whatever but that it breeds im such localities as the Yakka rock, Alagalla Peak, and perhaps in the low country in hills like Yakdessagalla, Rittagalla, Friars Hood, &c. It nests usually on inaccessible cliffs. Jerdon mentions three eyries in India—one at Rutoor, another in the Nilghiris, and a third near Mhow. It builds a nest of sticks on a projecting or receding ledge of rock, and sometimes takes possession of the old nest of another Raptor. Mr. Hume speaks of an egg taken by Mr. Blewitt in the Raipoor district as being narrow and oval, of a pale pink ground-colour, clouded with pale purplish, and finely speckled and spotted with deep reddish brown. It measured 2:0 by 1:43 inch. This egg was taken in January; but Jerdon says it lays also in March and April. FALCO SEVERUS. (THE INDIAN HOBBY.) Falco severus, Horsf. Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii. p. 135 (1822); Blyth, Ibis, 1863, p. 8; Schl. Vog. Nederl. Ind., Valkv. pp. 4, 45, Taf. 2. figs. 2, 3 (1866); Radcliffe, Ibis, 1871, p. 366; Sharpe, Cat. B. i. p. 397 (1874); Bourdillon, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 354. Falco aldrovandii, Temm. Pl. Col. i. pl. 128 (1823). Falco rufipedoides, Hodgs. Calc. Journ. N. H. iv. p. 283 (1844). Falco guttata, Gray, Cat. Accipitr. Brit. Mus. p. 26 (1844). Hypotriorchis severus, Gray, Gen. of B. i. p. 20 (1844); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 14 (1849); Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i. p. 22 (1854); Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 34 (1862); Wallace, Ibis, 1868, p. 5; Hume, Rough Notes, i. p. 87 (1869); Holds- worth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 410; Walden, Trans. Zool. Soc. viii. p. 33 (1872). The Severe Falcon, apud Horsf. & Moore. Dhuti (female), Dhuter (male), Hind. Allap-Allap-Ginjeng, Java. Adult male. Length to front of cere 10°3 to 10°5 inches; culmen from cere 0°65; wing 8°0 to 9:0; tail 4:5; tarsus 1-1 to 1:2; middle toe 1:2, claw (straight) 0°5; height of bill at cere 0-27. In ‘Stray Feathers,’ vol. iv. p. 355, the wing of a male shot in Travancore is given at 9°25, This is most eaceptional, or it is a misprint for female. Two Ceylonese examples, one of which, on account of its small size, must be a male, measure 8°6 and 9:0. Three males in the Norwich Museum, from the Philippines and Java, measure 8:3, 8°6, and 8°7; two others in the British Museum do not exceed 8°3; Jerdon, however, gives the wing of a male as 9-0, from which I have taken the above limit. FALCO CHICQUERA. (THE RED-HEADED MERLIN.) Falco chicquera, Daud, Traité, ii. p. 121 (1800, ew Levaill.); Less. Traité, p.90 (1831); Gould, Cent. B. Him. Mts. pl. 2 (1832); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 14 (1849); Sharpe, Cat. Birds, i. p. 403 (1874). Hypotriorchis chiequera, Gray, Gen. B. i. p.20 (1844); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 115; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 102; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus, E. I. Co. i. p. 23 (1854); Jerd. B. of Ind. 1. p. 36 (1862) ; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 410; Butler, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 444. salon chicquera, Kaup, Class. Siiug. u. Vog. p. 111 (1844). Chicquera typus, Bp. Rev. et Mag. de Zool. 1854, p. 536; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 19 (1873). Turumtia chicquera, Blyth, Ibis, 1863, p. 9. Lithofalco chicquera, Hume, Rough Notes, i. p. 91 (1870); Anderson, P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 681. Toorumtee, Europeans in India. Turumti, Turumtari, Tutri mutri (female), Chetwa (male), Hind.; Jellaganta, Jelgadda, Telegu; Jelkat, Yerklees (apud Jerdon). Adult male. Length (from skin) to front of cere 10-5 inches; culmen from cere 0°7 ; wing 7°9 to 8-1; tail 5-0; tarsus 1:3 to 1-5; middle toe 1:3, claw (straight) 0-48; height of bill at cere 0°34, i» — ee ee FALCO SEVERUS. Jere Adult female. Length to front of cere 11:0 to 12-0 inches; culmen from cere 0°65 ; wing 92 to 9°7; tail 4-9; tarsus 1:3 to 1-4; middle toe 1:3, claw (straight) 0-5. The wing sometimes reaches 0°5 beyond the tail. Iris deep brown ; cere and bill at base yellow, the upper mandible and tip of the lower blackish; legs and feet yellow. claws black. Entire face, head, hind neck, and interscapular region glossy black, paling into blackish slaty on the back, wings. rump, and upper tail-coverts ; the feathers on these parts have the shafts black and the bases blackish brown, the slaty hue being confined to the tips of the feathers; on the head and hind neck there is an ashen hue; quills blackish brown, the inner webs more or less barred with rufous (in some very old birds these are almost absent or reduced to pale transverse dashes); tail slaty black, tipped finely with rufous, and in some with a subterminal band, such examples having the outer feathers with rufous or greyish bars on the inner webs. Some examples have undefined slaty bars across the whole tail. Throat and fore neck buff, tinged with rufous, the colour running up into the sides of the neck, all beneath from the fore neck, with the thighs, under tail- and under wing-coverts, deep chestnut or ferruginous ; under primary-coyerts paler rufous, barred with black ; the remainder of the wing-lining with black shaft-lines ; sides of the chest with a few black patches, running into the black hind neck ; middle of the chest usually with a few black shaft-lines. Young. The immature bird is almost as dark above as the adult ; but the exposed portions of the sides of the hind- neck feathers are more or less rufous, the central tail-feathers are crossed with greyish markings, and the inner webs of the remaining feathers barred with rufous; extreme tips of the secondaries whitish ; chin and throat as in the adult, the rufous of the under surface not quite so deep; the chest streaked with drop-shaped striz of black, and the breast and flanks marked with oval central drops, the thighs and under tail-coverts with central streaks, longer and narrower than the breast-markings. Distribution —The handsome Indian Hobby can only be classed in our lists as a straggler, having been but twice procured in the island. The first record of it as a Ceylonese bird is contained in Mr. Holdsworth’s Catalogue (loc. cit.), from a specimen shot by Mr. Bligh, at Catton Estate, Haputale ; but from recent investi- gation, as noticed in the preceding article, I find that Layard killed another example, which is, in all proba- bility, referable to his Falco peregrinator shot at Gillymally; and he therefore must be looked upon as the discoverer of the species in Ceylon. I imagine that both these specimens were killed during the cool season, and that without doubt the species is migratory to Ceylon, as it is to South India. This Hobby is a bird of fairly wide distribution, being found throughout the whole of the Indian peninsula Adult female. Length to front of cere (from skin) 13:0; wing 8°5 to 9:1; tail 65 to 6°83; tarsus 1-6 to 1:7. Weight 8°5 oz. (Hume). The above measurements are from N. Bengal and Nepaul specimens. “Tris rather light brown; orbits yellow; bill greenish yellow at base, bluish black at tip ; legs and feet pure (slightly orange) yellow.” (Hume.) Head, back, and sides of neck cinnamon-rufous ; a moustachial streak of a paler hue than the head, between which and the eye is a blackish streak ; a dark superciliary line; back, rump, scapulars, and wing-coverts bluish slate, paling gradually towards the tail, and blending somewhat into the hue of the neck; the feathers of these parts with dark shafts; wing-coverts at the point of the wing barred with blackish grey; feathers along the ulna edged with rufous, and beyond this the edge of the wing is buff-white ; primaries deep brown, the inner webs barred narrowly with white, nut reaching on the terminal half to the edge of the feather ; primary-coverts and secondaries slate- grey, the inner webs albescent and barred with blackish grey ; tail pale bluish grey, lighter than the coverts, deeply tipped with greyish white, and crossed with a broad subterminal black band, the remainder crossed with narrow widely separated rays of blackish grey. Chin, throat, sides of the face, and under surface white, barred from the breast downwards with blackish grey or dark slate-colour, and the markings on the centre of the breast somewhat pointed at the middle of the feather ; flanks more heavily barred than the breast; under wing-coverts white, the external feathers with dark mesial lines, the inner ones barred like the chest. Females that I have examined in the British Museum have the under wing-coverts more darkly barred than males. The tail-band appears to fade very much in this species, turning brown when the feathers become old. 112 FALCO SEVERUS. from the Himalayas to Travancore, and likewise in the Malayan peninsula, whence it extends through the whole Asiatic archipelago by way of Celebes and New Guinea to the Philippmes. I have seen specimens of it from Java, Salwati, Borneo, and Makassar; and it in all probability inhabits many of the smaller islands in the Malayan region. In India it is chiefly confined to the Himalayas ; but it is not very numerous even there, and does not extend to the north of this range. § long L ; 212 ~_ — JAd SURNICULUS LUGUBRIS. birds, not quite mature, have fine white tips to the wing- and upper tail-coverts, and a greyish-white edging to the under-surface feathers. Obs. The Indian species, S. dicruroides of Hodgson (which was described from a specimen from ‘the mountains ” in Nepal), has generally been kept distinct from the much earlier described and reputedly smaller Javan species, S. lugubris. I notice, however, that so high an authority as Lord Tweeddale remarks (Joc. cit.) that “ Himalayan, Ceylon, Malacean, and Javan individuals do not differ,” and are all the same as an example from Borneo, which is the subject of his notes. 1t appears to be a very variable species as regards size. The wings of two adults from Java, as given in the note in question, measure 5°75 and 4:82 inches, one from Nepal 5-37, one from Darjiling 5-75. Ihave examined a good series of Ceylonese examples and have found none to exceed the limit given above (5°3), and the usual dimension is from 5:0 to 5:1 in fully adult black birds. Distribution —This singular Cuckoo is rather locally dispersed in Ceylon, being common in one district and absent in another adjacent tract of country. As regards the Western Province, it is occasionally found not far from Colombo, and is very common in the Three Korales and country intermediate between that and Ratna- pura, and it extends into the hills, above the latter place, to a moderate elevation, occurring at Gillymally. In the south-west it is less frequent; in the Kurunegala and Puttalam district it is fairly represented, and it ocewrs here and there throughout the northern forest-tract at all times of the year, from the latter place across to Trincomalie, where it is not uncommon in the forests. In the Eastern Province I saw many examples, but did not meet with it in the Kattregama and Hambantota districts. In Madulsima and Uva I have seen it up to 4000 feet elevation, and procured it once near the Debedde gap ; in the Kandy country it is found towards the Hangerankette side and in Dumbara valley. Layard mentions, in his notes, that Mr. Thwaites sent him numerous specimens from the neighbourhood of Kandy ; it is probably more plentiful there some seasons than others. In India it is sparingly distributed throughout the country. Jerdon writes, “I have procured it on the Malabar coast, the Wynaad, in Central India, and at Darjiling. I have found it in other parts of the Himalayas, .... and in Tenasserim and Burmah.” Mr. Hume records it as rare in Tenasserim. It has been procured in different parts of the Malaccan penimsula and in Sumatra at Lampong, and, as above noticed, was first deseribed from Java, where, according to Horsfield, it is found ‘ in districts of secondary elevation, which are diversified with extended ranges of hills and covered with luxuriant forests.” To the east of that island it has been found in Labuan and Borneo; and Mr. Swinhoe remarks that it was procured by him in Szechuen, China, in the month of May. In India, judging by the experience of collectors recently, it is less common than in Ceylon. Habits. —The Fork-tailed Cuckoo frequents a variety of situations, inhabiting the interior of dry forests throughout the north, scrub and low jungle in other places, grassy patnas dotted with isolated trees, and last, but not least, burnt clearings and vegetable plantations in the woods of the interior. In the latter it is chiefly observed in Saffragam and at the base of the western ranges, delighting in perching on the charred stumps and saplings which remain after the first firing of a cheena. It is exceedingly docile in its disposition, some- times alighting on a fence by the side of a jungle-path and flying tamely on in front of the traveller, and at others sitting on a stump until approached within a few yards. At adistance, its tame habit will always serve, in conjunction with its small-looking head and bill, to distinguish it from a Drongo, to which it bears an otherwise absolute resemblance. Its remarkably human-like whistle, which consists of six ascending notes (sounding as if some one were practising a musical scale in the wilds of the jungle), is, I think, uttered chiefly in the breeding-season. I have heard it always in the north during the north-east monsoon; at other times, in July and August, in the Western Province, it is quite mute. Its diet is mixed, consisting chiefly of caterpillars and beetles, but often combined with various seeds. When on the wing it is very different from a Drongo, flying along with a steady movement, and not dipping in its progress through the air. Nidification.— Judging from my examination of various specimens shot in the north, the breeding-season of this species appears to be in the early part of the year; it is most noisy then. I have no information as to SURNICULUS LUGUBRIS. 245 its eggs, or the bird in whose nest they are deposited. Jerdon suggests that it may possibly lay in those of King-Crows, to which it bears such a wonderful resemblance. He writes, ‘‘One day, in Upper Burmah, | saw a King-Crow pursuing what at first I believed to be another of his own species; but a peculiar call that the pursued bird was uttering, and some white on his plumage, led me to suppose that it was a Drongo-Cuckoo, which had. perhaps been detected about the nest of the Dicrurus. Mr. Blyth relates that he obtained a pure white egg in the same nest with four eggs of D. macrocercus, and which, he remarks, may have been that of the Drongo-Cuckoo.” It is extremely probable, I think, that it was. Fenus COCCYSTES. Head crested. Bill more curved and compressed than in the preceding genera. Nostrils ovate, basal, exposed, and placed near the margin. Wings rather short, rounded, the 4th quill the longest. ‘Tail long, much graduated. Tarsus longer than in Cucu/us, exceeding the inner anterior toe; the upper portion feathered, the rest covered with broad transverse scales; outer posterior toe considerably longer than the inner one. COCCYSTES JACOBINUS. (THE PIED CRESTED CUCKOO.) Cuculus jacobinus, Bodd. Tab]. Pl. Enl. 872 (1783). Cuculus melanoleucos, Gm. Syst. Nat. i. no. 35, p. 416 (1788); Lath. Ind. Orn. i. p. 211 (1790). Oxylophus edolius, Jerd. (nec Cuv.) Cat. B. S. India, Madr. Journ, 1840, xi. p. 222. Oxylophus melanoleucos, Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 74 (1849); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 401. Oxylophus serratus, Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 128 (1852). Coccystes melanoleucos, Horst. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. EK. 1. Co. p. 694 (1856); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 359. Coccystes jacobinus, Cab. et Heine, Mus. Hein. iv. p. 45 (1862); Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 452; Hume, Nests and Eggs (Rough Draft), p. 157 (1873); Sharpe, P. Z. 8. 1873, p. 597; Legge, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 866; Ball, ibid. p. 394 ; Butler, ibid. 1875, p. 461 ; Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 284; Morgan, ibid. 1875, p. 315; Hume, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 457. Jacobin huppé de Coromandel, Daubent. Pl. Enl. pl. 872 ; The Pied Cuckoo, in India; Popiya, Hind., also Chatak ; Kola Bulbul, Bengal.; Gola hokila, lit. ** Milkman Cuckoo,” also Tangada gorankah, Telugu (Jerdon). Konde koha, \it. “* Crested Cuckoo,” Sinhalese. Adult male and female. Length 12:0 to 13-0 inches; wing 6-4 to 6°7; tail 5-4 to 5-5; tarsus 1:0; outer anterior toe 0°8, its claw (straight) 0-3; bill to gape 1-1. Tris dark brown; bill black ; legs and feet bluish slate, edges of scales whitish, claws blackish. Head, cheeks, upper surface, tail, and wings glossy green-black, the crown-feathers lanceolate and rather stiff, forming a fine crest one inch in length ; quills dull black; basal half of primaries, with the exception of that part of the outer web of the Ist and inner web of the last, white; central rectrices tipped white, and the terminal 4 inch of the rest the same hue; entire under surface and under wing-coverts sullied white, which passes up behind the ear-coyerts on to the sides of the neck ; greater lower primary-coverts blackish. 7 Young. Birds of the year have the bill pale at the base; the legs and feet paler than the adults. The upper surface is sepia-brown, with the nape, ear-coverts, and sides of neck blackish ; the forehead paler than the head, and the lesser wing-coverts are edged with greyish ; beneath fulvous-grey or buff-white, with the sides of the throat brownish from the chin to below the ear-coverts. Obs, An individual frem the hills in the nerth-west of India measures—wing 5:7 inches, tail 6-8, bill to gape 1:3 COCCYSTES JACOBINUS. 24 another from Pegu, wing 5°9: both are identical with Ceylonese examples. Mr. Sharpe unites the African species with the Indian. A specimen from Damara Land, described by him Joc. cit., had the wing 64 and the tail 8-0 inches. Distribution.—The Pied Cuckoo, which is a showy species, is widely distributed over the low country of Ceylon, but is subject to a partial migration away from the wet regions on the western and south-western sea-board during the prevalence of the S.W. monsoon. It appears about Colombo in November and December, and, when first arrived, lurks in any thick cover that may be to hand. I have seen it in the trees on the borders of the Slave-Island lake, but it soon disappeared for the jungles of the interior. In the Galle district it arrives about the same time and frequents the low jungle in the cultivated portions of the country. In the scrubby jungles of the Girawa and Magam Pattus and throughout the Eastern Province, in the jungles between the Mahawelliganga and the coast, in the maritime portions of the north and west, as far south as Chilaw it is a resident species, and in some of these districts is abundant. It is partial to those dry districts which are covered with low scrub, such as the neighbourhood of Hambantota and many similar spots on the east coast, the Jaffna peninsula, the N.W. coast, and the island of Manaar, as also the Puttalam and Chilaw district. JI have seen it occasionally in the interior of the northern division of the island, but it is scarcer there than in the maritime portion. It ranges into the Central Province to a considerable elevation, occurring in Uva up to 3000 feet ; but in the western portions (to wit, the valley of Dumbara and adjacent districts) it is not found at such ai altitude. This Cuckoo enjoys a wide range on the main land. Jerdon sketches out its distribution as follows :— “Tt is found all over India, being rare on the Malabar coast, common in the Carnatic, and not uncommon throughout Central India to Bengal, where it is only at all common in the rains. It is more abundant in Upper Pegu than anywhere else that I have observed it... . I have seen it on the Nilghiris up to 5000 feet.” Tt does not appear to be found on the hills of the peninsula, but is common in the low country, on the Madura coast, and in Ramisserum Island. In Chota Nagpur it occurs rarely, as also in the Sambhur district. As regards Mount Aboo and Northern Guzerat, Captain Butler says it is very common, arriving just before the monsoon. In Cachar, Mr. Inglis met with it but once, and that was in May; but in Upper Pegu I find that Captain Butler and Mr. Oates corroborate Jerdon in saying that it is common ; further south I observe that it has not been actually procured in Tenasserim, though it is doubtfully included in Mr. Hume’s first list of birds from that Province. In North-east Africa it is, according to My. Sharpe, probably a migrant, and has been found in various parts of that region from August to November. Mr. Blanford has procured it in the Anseba valley, Antinori on the Blue Nile, and Ehrenberg in Nubia. It has been met with on the east coast and in various parts of South Africa, in Natal, the Transvaal, and other localities, and in the south-west of the continent it has been obtained in Damara Land, Habits.—Low scrub, thorny jungle round the edge of forest, and open plains dotted here and there with brush-wood are the localities chiefly frequented by this Cuckoo; but it now and then occurs in avenues of trees or isolated shady groves, particularly when newly arrived in a district and the first cover to hand is being eagerly sought after. It is tame and usually solitary, although now and then I have seen a pair together ; and in Pegu Mr. Oates has observed five or six in company. It is commonly seen sitting on the top of a low bush, and when flushed takes a short flight, but does not seek concealment in the bushes to any great extent. It has a rather plaintive, not unmelodious call, uttered when perched on some low tree ; but at the commencement of the breeding-season, Mr. Holdsworth writes, ‘they are very noisy and incessantly flymg from one place to another, one or more males apparently chasing the female, and uttering their clamorous cries.” Jerdon remarks the same fact, and says that the call which the males utter at this time “is a high-pitched metallic note.” Its diet is insectivorous, consisting of caterpillars and various larvee, grasshoppers, Mantidie, &c. Nidification.—In Ceylon the Pied Crested Cuckoo lays its eggs during the N.E. monsoon, choosing the nest of the Mud-birds or Babblers (Malacocercus) to deposit them in. Mr. Holdsworth observed them fighting 248 COCCYSTES JACOBINUS. with these birds at Aripu, and Layard records an instance at Port Pedro of a pair of these Babblers tending a young Crested Cuckoo in a bush ; and when he drew near they flew away before him, feigning lameness, and endeavoured to draw off his attention from their fosterlng. An egg taken from the oviduct of a female killed in the Puttalam district was of a pale greenish or faded greenish-blue colour, and measured 0:95 by 0°74 inch. In Aboo, Captain Butler states that they chiefly lay in the nests of the Striated Bush-Babbler (Chatarrhea caudata) and also in those of the Bengal Babbler (Malacocercus terricolor). The eggs are highly glossy and closely resemble, says Mr. Hume, those of the first-named species, so that they are well fitted for deposit in Babblers’ nests; in shape they are ‘round ovals . . . very glossy, and of a delicate full sky-blue,”’ and average 0°94 by 0°73 inch. COCCYSTES COROMANDUS. (THE RED-WINGED CRESTED CUCKOO.) Cuculus coromandus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 171. no. 20 (1766); Lath. Ind. Orn. p. 216 (1790). Cuculus collaris, Vieillot, N. Dict. d’Hist. Nat. viii. p. 229 (1816). Oxylophus coromandus, Jerd. Cat. B.S. Ind., Madr. Journ. 1840, xi. p. 272; Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1842, p. 920; id. Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 74. no. 363 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 128 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 451. Coccystes coromandus, Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. ii. p. 693 (1856); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 341 (1862); Cab. et Heine, Mus. Hein. iv. p. 45 (1862); Holdsworth, P. Z.S. 1872, p. 482; Hume, Nests and Eggs (Rough Draft), p. 138 (1873) ; id. Stray Feath. 1875, p. 82; David & Oustalet, Ois. de la Chine, p. 61 (1877). Coucou huppé de Coromandel, Buffon, Pl. Enl. p. 274; Coromandel Cuckoo of some; The Collared Crested Cuckoo, Welaart. Yerra gola Kohila, Telugu ; Tseben, Lepchas (Jerdon). Konde-koha, lit. “ Crested Cuckoo,” Sinhalese. Adult male. Length 15:0 inches; wing 6:3; tail 9°3; tarsus 0-9; outer anterior toe 0-95, claw (straight) 0°35 ; bill to gape 1:3. Adult female. Length 16 inches; wing 6-7; tail 9°7; bill to gape 1:4. Iris hazel-brown ; bill black, inside of mouth and nostrils coral-red ; legs and feet bluish slate, claws black. Above, the head, including the lores, upper part of cheeks and ear-coverts, the hind neck, back, scapulars, tertials, and least wing-coverts black, with a bronze-green lustre on the upper parts, and a deep blue-green gloss on the upper tail-coverts and tail; the head is less glossed than the back and crest, which latter is 1$ inch in length, and stands out boldly from the nape; the green of the tertials is paler or more overcast with a brownish lustre than other parts; a conspicuous collar of white across the hind neck; quills, greater and median wing-coyerts rich chestnut, the primaries dusky towards the tips ; tips of rectrices fulvous-white, the centre pair only edged with it ; beneath, the throat, fore neck, and sides are yellowish ferruginous, paling into white on the breast and upper part of belly, the abdomen, vent, and thigh-coverts becoming dusky grey ; under tail-coverts green-black, edged with fulvous-white, some of the feathers having pale centres. Female. Differs slightly ; somewhat less deep in hue above; tips of rectrices whiter; throat not so rich, the colour not extending to the chest, and the lower part of breast not so pure, the grey of the abdomen pervading it somewhat. Young. In Hodgson’s drawing of the “ young, hardly fledged,” the bill and eyelid are pale red ; the iris is pale brown, and the legs and feet reddish fleshy. Head, upper surface, and tail brown, the feathers of the head, back, ramp, and scapulars with broad fulvous margins ; the quills and wing-coverts more deeply margined with the same ; tail-feathers edged outwardly and tipped with pale rufous ; ear-coverts and entire under surface white. The bird of the year has the green portions of the upper surface, including the upper tail-coverts, tipped and edged towards the extremities of the feathers with rufous, and the ground-colour brownish metallic green ; throat whitish, washed with yellowish rufous; under tail-coverts and abdomen tipped with ferruginous. Distribution —The Red-winged Crested Cuckoo, one of the handsomest of its tribe im Ceylon, is a migratory bird to the island, arriving about October and departing again in April. Whether or not it leaves the extreme north of the island altogether, I have been unable to ascertain with certainty ; but there is no question about its being a visitor to the southern parts of the west coast, for in October 1876, while I was at 2K 250 COCCYSTES COROMANDUS. Colombo, an individual was captured on a canoe, some miles from the coast, and on which it had alighted in an exhausted state. When it first arrives it is not unfrequently seen in the Western Province, and then disappears from the sea-board, takimg up its quarters in the interior of the low country and ascending the hills to some altitude. It occurs sometimes in Dumbara, and in March 1877 Mr. Bligh saw an example near his bungalow on the Catton Estate at an elevation of more than 4000 feet ; he informs me that they are very rare in the Haputale district, and, indeed, its numbers throughout the island are very limited. The island of Manaar and the adjoining coast may perhaps be considered an exception ; in the former I saw a good many in March, and Mr. Simpson says it is found about Illepekadua, and in the interior between that place and Mahintale. Mr. Holdsworth does not record it from Aripu. Layard procured it at Ratnapura. On the mainland the Coromandel Cuckoo enjoys a wide range, but seems to be nowhere numerous. Jerdon writes of its distribution :—“ It appears to be a rare species everywhere, though generally spread through India and Ceylon, extending into Burmah and Malayana. It is said to be common in Tenasserim and the Malayan peninsula. I have seen it in Malabar and the Carnatic, and it is also found in Central India and not very uncommonly in Bengal; in the latter country only during the rains. I obtaimed it in Sikhim in the warmer valleys.” It has been procured by very few collectors of late years either in South or Central India. I find no record of it in ‘Stray Feathers’ from the Peninsula; but I am aware that it is not uncommon in Ramisserum Island, having received specimens from there, and it must consequently be found on the adjacent coast about Tuticorin. Concerning its range to the east of the Bay of Bengal, Mr. Oates writes that in Pegu it is widely distributed, but not common. Captain Feilden seems to have fallen in with it to a much greater extent; he says :—‘‘ This bird is the commonest Cuckoo at Thayetmyo ; in the thicker parts of the jungle every bamboo valley contains one or more pairs. They arrive in the beginning of the rains, and the young birds do not leave until October.”’ This is the period at which the species visits us in Ceylon, so that there would appear to be a regular migration north and south at the beginning and end of the rains. In Tenasserim Mr. Davison only found it at a place called Meeta myo, which is about the centre of the province. There is a specimen in the British Museum from Sarawak; it goes, as we know, to Celebes, and it probably occurs in intermediate localities, perhaps in Java, but from there I have not heard as yet of any specimens. It is very desirable that we should know more of the movements and seasonal distribution of this bird, as it is one of the most attractive of its tribe in India. Swinhoe procured it at Amoy. Habits ——I have observed this species in thick scrub and thorny jungle. A specimen was shot by Mr. MacVicar in the cinnamon- gardens near Colombo, a locality decidedly favourable to its habits. It is very shy, flying quickly up from the ground on being surprised, alighting then on the nearest bush or low tree, and speedily threading its way through the branches to the other side, when it again takes wing. The stomachs of those I have procured contained beetles, grasshoppers, Mantide, and other large insects. Captain Feilden notices that they have a Magpie-hke chatter usually, but that they utter a “harsh, grating, whistling seream when watching over their young ;” and this, I imagine, would be their ordinary note of alarm. Nidification—The breeding-season appears to be during the rains, 7. e. from June until October. Mr. Hume describes an egg, which was taken from the oviduct of a female shot in Tipperah, as being a broad oval and of a “ fine and glossy texture; in colour it was a moderately pale, somewhat greenish blue, without any specks or spots.” Captain Feilden has reason to believe that it lays in the nests of Quaker-Thrushes (Alcippe phayrei?). He writes, ‘I have frequently shot the young bird from the middle of a brood of young Quaker-Thrushes ; and, as far as I could see from the thickness of the jungle, the old Thrushes were feeding the young Cuckoo. An egg taken from the nest of a Quaker-Thrush, that I believe to have belonged to this bird, was very round and pale blue.” The dimensions of the egg alluded to above are 1:05 by 0°92 inch. Genus EUDYNAMYS. Bill stout, wide at the base, not so much compressed as in Coccystes. Nostrils oval, exposed, not so near the margin as in the last. Wings long; the 3rd and 4th quills subequal and longest, the Ist nearly equal to the innermost. Tail not so much graduated as in the last genus. Legs and feet stout. Tarsus about equal to the anterior toe, and shielded with stout, broad, transverse scutee. EUDYNAMYS HONORATA. (THE INDIAN KOEL.) Cuculus honoratus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 169 (female) (1766); Lath. Ind. Orn. i. p. 214 (1790). Cuculus niger, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 170. no. 12 (male) (1766). Cuculus indicus, Lath. Ind. Orn. i. p. 221 (1790). Eudynamys orientalis, Sykes (nec Linn.), P. Z. 8. 1832, p. 97; Jerd. Cat. B. S. India, Madr. Journ. 1840, xi. p. 222; Blyth, J. A. 8. B. 1847, p. 468; id. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1847, p. 885; id. Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 73 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 129 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 451; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 708 (1856) ; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 342; Irby, Ibis, 1861, p. 230; Legge, ibid. 1874, p. 16. Cuculus (Eudynamys) honoratus, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. 1842, p. 912 (female). Eudynamys honoratus, Gray, Gen. Birds, ii. p. 464 (1845). Eudynamys honorata, Walden, Ibis, 1869, p. 827 ; Holdsworth, P. Z.S. 1872, p. 432; Hume, Nests and Eggs (Rough Draft), p. 139 (1873); Ball, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 394; Anderson, Ibis, 1875, p. 142; Hume, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 463. Eudynamys horonata, Hume, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 173. The Black Indian Cuckow, Edwards, Nat. Hist. Birds, p. 58 (male); Brown and Spotted Indian Cuckow, Edwards, tom. cit. p. 59 (female) ; Coucow tacheté de Bengal, Daubent. Pl. Enl. pl. 294 (female); Black Cuckoo of some; Koel, Hind. (female), sometimes Koreyala, lit. “ spotted”; Kokil, Bengal.; Kokila, Tel. (male Nalak, female Podak). Kaputa koha (male), Gomera koha (female). Coosil and Koel, Ceylonese Tamils (apud Layard). Adult male. Length 15:0 to 15:3 inches; wing 7:0 to 7-4; tail 7-0 to 7-5; tarsus 1-15 to 1:2; outer anterior toe 1:25, its claw (straight) 0-45; bill to gape 1°55. Iris crimson ; bill pale bluish green, blackish or dusky round the nostrils ; legs and feet leaden blue. Entire plumage black, with a strong metallic green lustre; the scapulars, wing-coyerts, and tail with a bluish sheen as well. Adult female. Length 15:5 to 16:5 inches; wing 7-3 to 7°75; tail 7-8; tarsus 1:25; outer anterior toe 1-3, claw (straight) 0°45. ; Iris red ; bill faded bluish, dusky at base and round the nostrils ; legs and feet dusky slaty green or faded bluish. Above metallic brownish green ; hind neck, back, and lesser wing-coverts spotted and barred with white, the markings on the first-named part are limited to spots, and the barring on the wing-coyerts consists of interrupted bar- like spots ; the wings vary considerably in the character of their markings; quills, upper tail-coverts, and tail 2x2 252 EUDYNAMYS HONORATA. barred with white, tinged generally to a greater or less extent with fulvous; forehead marked with fulvous terminal spots or bread mesial stripes ; beneath white, with basal or longitudinal blackish marks on the throat, angular or arrow-headed on the chest, gradually changing into wavy bars on the breast; the flanks and the under tail-coverts boldly barred with dark greenish brown: the lower parts from the breast downwards more or less washed with fulyous. Foung. Males in nestling plumage have the iris mottled red; bill greenish, dusky at the base ; legs and feet plumbeous. Upper surface and wing-coverts dingy or brownish metallic green, the feathers with white terminal spots; under surface the same, with terminal bars of white; under tail-coverts and under wing-coverts barred with white ; tail-feathers tipped and adjacently marked with whitish. The female in immature plumage has the head, hind neck and its sides, face, and throat striated with rufous ; the spottings on the back and wing-coverts, and the bars on the scapulars and tertials, tinged strongly with the same : the bars on the tail-feathers rich tawny, and the under surface washed with the same. Young females vary in their coloration, as, in fact, the adults also do; scarcely any two female Koels are marked exactly alike, differmg in the extent of the spotting and barring of the upper surface, and in the amount of rufous on the forehead, of which our birds seem to have more than Indian. Obs. A comparison of a series of Indian examples with my Ceylonese specimens does not disclose any points of difference between the two races except in the above-mentioned respect. A male from Madras has the wing 7-2 inches, and is identical with examples in my collection; another from Central India is larger, wing 7:8 inches. The several species of Koel which inhabit the region to the east of the Bay of Bengal and the Malayan archipelago are closely allied, the males being black, and the chief specific difference lying in the coloration of the females. LE. malayana, Cab, et Heine, from Assam, Burmah, Tenasserim, Malacca, and Sumatra, has a larger bill than our bird, is longer in the wing, and the females are boldly marked with rufous. I have measured examples in the national collection varying from 7:4 to 7°6 inches in the wing, but it is said to reach 8-0 inches. E. ransomi, from Ceram and Bouru, is a very fine species, with the wing 8°6 to 9-0 inches, tail 8-0 to 9-0, bill to gape 1-4; the female is very handsomely marked, its coloration being likewise rufous. £. orientalis. An example, male, from Lombok has the wing 8-1 inches: a female is greenish black, barred with fulvous and white; the forehead and a superciliary band yellowish rufous, centre of the crown dusky green; wings and tail barred with rufous: another female is rufous beneath, barred with black; the upper surface dark green, barred with black. Distribution —The Koel is found all over the low country. It is equally common in the northern and southern portions of the island, including the Jaffna peninsula. Mr. Holdsworth only observed it at Aripu from November till April, and inferred that it was migratory toCeylon. It moves about a good deal according to the weather, leaving the sea-board of the Western Province for the interior during the wet windy months from May until October; but this is all: away from the sea I have seen it at all seasons. On the east side of the island it appears to be stationary, being at all times to be observed in that part ; and this is likewise true of the north-east. It is numerous in the delta of the Mahawelliganga and on the coast in places to the north of Trincomalie. In the interior it is much rarer, and, in fact, is liable to be passed over in a cursory inspec- tion of many parts of the northern half of the island, as it is local in its distribution there. I have not seen it from the hills, but have been given to understand that it has occurred in Dumbara. On the continent this noisy bird is very common in most parts of the Indian peninsula. It is abundant in Ramisserum Island and on the south coast of India; in the Palani hills it likewise occurs ; in the Deccan it is common and widely distributed. Mr. Ball says it is tolerably common in the eastern parts of Chota Nagpur, but is seldom met with in the western, more jungly districts. Further to the west it appears to be a visitant only in the breeding-season, from April until October. Myr. Adam remarks that during his stay at Sambhur it only visited the place once or twice during the rains; in Sindh it is likewise non-resident, and in the Mount-Aboo district it occurs during the above-mentioned period of the year. Its inhabiting the Laccadive islands is especially worthy of remark. Mr. Hume found it on every inhabited island that he visited ; he writes that, “unless perhaps at Amini and one or two of the Cannanore Islands, where there are Crows, they can only be, as the people affirm, seasonal visitants, there being no bird in whose nests they could lay their eggs.” Habits.—This is one of the noisiest birds in Ceylon, making the woods and paddy-fields ring with its EUDYNAMYS HONORATA. 253 peculiar scale-like call. It frequents groves of trees, compounds, wooded knolls in paddy-fields, and jungle near water or bordering open ground. It is a skulking bird, loving concealment in thick trees and tangled bushes, and delighting in the shady foliage of trees which are matted at the top with creepers. It moves actively about when flushed and driven into a tree, hopping along the slanting limbs, and springing from branch to branch till it gains the other side, and then escapes to a further place of concealment. It is the male which utters the peculiar note kw-il, ku-il, or koyo koyo, which mounts each time higher and higher and increases in vigour until it fairly rings through the woods ; he is usually perched in some thick tree, and when he has finished his vociferation one or two females may be seen issuing from their places of concealment and flying towards him. This cry may often be heard at night. Adult males seem usually to be in the minority, or else they do not move about as much as the other sex, many more of which may always be scen in the course of a day’s ramble. The Koel is almost exclusively a fruit-eating species, and feeds greedily on all sorts of luscious seeds and berries ; from the stomach of a male I once took two entire nuts of the Kitool-palm: it is fond of the banyan- fruit, but in Ceylon does not much affect localities in which this tree grows. Blyth states that it ejects the large seeds of any fruit that it has eaten by the mouth: he syllabizes another note uttered by the male as ho-whu-ho ; but I have not heard this. Both sexes are much more noisy in May and June than at other times as this is the breeding-season in Ceylon. Layard remarks that the natives so much admire the note of this bird, that their poets compare it to the voices of their mistresses, which, however, as he aptly continues, cannot be very soft, for the Koel can be heard a mile away ! Nidification—In the Western Province this parasitic Cuckoo breeds in May and June, laying nearly always in the nest of Corvus levaillanti (the Black Crow), and not in that of the smaller citizen species, as in India, for the simple reason that the latter does not inhabit the jungle to which the Koel resorts to rear its young. Iam indebted to Mr. MacVicar for many valuable notes on the nesting of this bird, a number of whose eggs he has taken in the Western Province, and more especially in the vicinity of Keesbawa. The following are the particulars of four nests found in the months of May and June, 1875 :— (1) Eggs: 4: Crow’s ; 4: Koel’s. Differed considerably, as if they had been laid by different birds. Two were of a pale green ground, spotted rather thickly with longitudinally-directed markings of olive-brown, confluent slightly round the obtuse end, and laid over numerous blotches of lilac or pale bluish grey : dimensions, 1°24 by 0°93 inch and 1:2 by 0:9 inch. The other two were of a light brown colour, covered with small reddish-brown and purple spots: dimensions, 1°35 by 1:1 inch and 1:34 by 1-0 inch. (2) Eggs: 5 Crow’s; 3 Koel’s. Ground-colour olivaceous green, blotched and marked (sparingly at the small end) with two shades of olive-brown over numerous smaller spottings of indistinct bluish grey; the markings almost confluent at the obtuse end. (3) Eggs: 2 Crow’s; 4 Koel’s. Two distinct types. Ground-colour of two olive-brownish grey, marked all over, but mostly at the large end, with reddish brown, over numerous smaller spots of bluish grey; at the obtuse end the spots are large, but all over the rest of the surface in the form of small specks: dimensions, 1°32 by 1:0 and 1°38 by 1:0. The other two were of a greenish ground-colour, speckled with purplish and brown spots, mostly towards the obtuse end, where the markings become confluent : dimensions, 1:36 by 0°95 inch and 1:25 by 0:96 inch. (4) Eggs: 2 Crow’s; 2 Koel’s. In shape very stumpy. Colour dark olive-green, spotted with dark reddish brown, confluent round the obtuse end. Dimensions, 1:18 by 0-92 inch and 1:15 by 0°95 inch. The average size of these eggs was 1°31 by 0°95 inch. In India the Black Crow lays too early for the Koel; and my lamented friend Mr, Anderson* remarks * In Mr. Hume’s ‘ Nests and Eggs of Indian Birds’ will be found a lengthy extract from a paper by this observant naturalist on the nesting of the Koel. ¢ 254 EUDYNAMYS HONORATA. that this is why the nest of the Common Grey Crow is chosen. These clever birds seem to know that they are imposed upon by the Koels, and consequently hold them in strong dislike, constantly attacking and pursuing them during the breeding-season. When the female Koel is about to intrude her egg into the Crow’s nest she is accompanied sometimes by the male. It is supposed that the young Koel ejects the Crows from the nest, as in the case of the Common Cuckoo; for Mr. Hume found a young one in a nest with three Crows newly fledged, and a week later “the Crows were missing, and the young Cuckoo thriving.” Cuckoos persistently follow the Crows for some time after they have “ flown,” with as much care as if they were their own offspring. The young and are even then fed by them Subfam. PHOSNICOPHAIN A. Bill robust, in most species higher than wide; culmen much curved. Nostrils not swollen and more or less linear. ‘Tail long and graduated. Tarsi robust and naked, or slightly feathered on the upper part. PICARI &. CUCULIDZ. PHASNICOPHAIN &. Genus PHCNICOPHAES. Bill stout, wide at the base, and suddenly compressed, the tip well bent down; the upper mandible very high: the nostrils linear and close to the margin, which is lobed just beneath them. Face clothed with a short papillose substance. Wings rounded; the 5th quill the longest and the Ist the shortest. Tail very long, broad, and much graduated. Tarsus longer than the middle toe and its claw, covered with broad transverse scales; outer anterior toe considerably longer than the outer posterior one; claws short and much curved. Feathers of the throat with stiff shafts projecting beyond the webs. PHENICOPHAES PYRRHOCEPHALUS. (THE RED-FACED MALKOHA.) (Peculiar to Ceylon.) Cuculus pyrrhocephalus, Forster, Ind. Zoologie, p. 16, pl. vi. (1781); Gmelin, Syst. Nat. i. p. 417. no. 40 (1788); Lath. Ind. Orn. i. p. 222 (1790). Phenicopheus pyrrhocephalus, Stephens, Gen. Zool. ix. i. p. 59 (1825); Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1842, p. 927; Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av. i. p. 98 (1850). Phoanicophaus leucogaster, Vieill. N. Dict. d’ Hist. Nat. xviii. p. 461 (1816). Melias pyrrhocephalus, Less. 'Traité d’Orn. p. 131 (1831). Phenicophaus pyrrhocephalus, Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1845, p. 199; Gray, Gen. Birds, ii. p. 459; Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 75. no. 369 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 129 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xii. p. 453; Legge, J. A. S. (Ceyl. Br.) 1870-71, p. 37; Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 433; Legge, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 346; id. Ibis, 1874, p. 16, et 1875, p. 285. Phenicophaus ceylonensis, Licht. in Mus. Berl. Phenicophaés pyrrhocephalus, Cab. et Heine, Mus. Hein. pt. iv. p. 68 (1862). The Red-faced Cuckoo (rothképfige Kukkuk), Forster ; Malkoha, Pennant and Kelaart. Mal-kendetta, Sinhalese, Western Province ; Warrelliya, in Friars-Hood district. 3 supra metallicé viridis, alis dorso concoloribus, primariis extis vix cyanescentibus : rectricibus olivascenti-viridibus, laté albo terminatis: pileo colloque postico nigricantibus, plumis albido marginatis, quasi striolatis: facie laterali tota nuda, papillosa, rubra: genis et regione paroticaé, mento gulique summa striolatim albis: gutture reliquo nigro: prepectore et colli lateribus nigris albido striatis : corpore reliquo subtus albo: tibiis fuscescenti-viridibus : subalaribus metallieé chalybeo-viridibus, remigibus quoque subtus chalybeo nitentibus: rostro flavicanti-viridi, mandibula pallidiore: pedibus cyanescenti-schistaceis, unguibus brunnescenti-corneis ; iride brunnea. Q mari similis, sed iride alba distinguenda. 256 PHENICOPHAES PYRRHOCEPHALUS. Adult male. Length 17:8 to 18-2 inches; wing 6-0 to 6-2; tail 10-5 to 11-1 (lateral feathers only 5); tarsus 1-3 to 1:4; anterior toe 1:1, claw (straight) 0-35 ; bill to gape 1°5 to 1:6. Expanse 17:5. Iris brown: bill apple-green, paling at the tip, and the lower mandible lighter than the upper; legs and feet bluish slate, claws brownish horn. Female. Length 18-0 to 18-7 inches; wing 6-2 to 6:4; tail 11:0 to 11:3; bill to gape 1°5 to 1-65. Tris white. Whole face as far back as the ears, passing over the eye and across the base of the upper mandible, clothed with a short blade-like crimson substance, resembling a rudimentary feather; crown, back, and sides of neck greenish black, with the terminal margins of the feathers white; back and wings deep brilliant metallic green, blending into the hue of the neck; quills slightly darker, with a bluish lustre ; tail metallic bronze-green, the terminal portion white, increasing from about an inch on the central feathers to two inches on the laterals, and separated from the green by a smoky-brown margin; throat and upper part of chest deep black, the feathers of the chin and of the space beneath the crimson cheeks white, with black shafts; breast and lower parts pure white, changing abruptly from the black of the chest, at the lower edge of which the feathers are tipped with white ; flanks and thighs dark greenish black; under wing-coverts metallic green. The tips of the head- and neck- feathers are furcate, the shaft protruding from the fork. The extent of the striations on the hind neck, and the amount of white tipping at the edge of the black chest, vary in individuals. Some examples, probably immature birds, have the thigh-coverts and lower flanks tinged with fulvous. Obs. This remarkable genus has no representative in India. Jerdon speaks of Ph. curvirostris, an inhabitant of Burmah ; but this bird has a very different shaped and situated nostril, on account of which Mr. Sharpe, and justly so it would appear, has made it into a new genus, Rhinococcyx. It has the same singular facial clothing, but not to so great an extent as in our bird. The most singular feature in the economy of the present species is the difference in the colour of the eye in the two sexes, as noticed in my description above. Layard probably procured a female and noted the colour as white ; specimens sent to Lord Tweeddale, and a living bird which Mr. Holdsworth had, appear to have been males and had brown eyes. I was fortunate enough, on two occasions, to shoot a pair together, and was able to demonstrate the fact of the sexual difference. Distribution —The Malkoha is found in most of the forests and heavily-clad jungle-districts of the low country ; but, notwithstanding, has always been considered one of our rarest species, an idea which naturally arose from the extreme difficulty of penetrating its haunts. It occurs sparingly throughout the south-western hill-region, or the tract of country extending from the Kaluganga, through the Pasdun and Hinedun Korales, to the eastern confines of the Morowak Korale. It is likewise to be found in most of the damp forests of the Western Province, particularly in the hills stretching from the neighbourhood of Avisawella to Kurunegala, and oceurs even at Mahara and Kotté, in the vicinity of Colombo. It occurs throughout the jungles of the great northern forest-tract, extending from the Western Province through the Seven Korales to the Vanni, the most northerly point in which I have seen it being the forests on the road from Trincomalie to Anarad- japura. In the Eastern Province, however, it is far more numerous than in the aforesaid districts, for I have met with it in flocks of ten or a dozen in the jungles at the base of the Friars Hood, and also near Bibile beneath the Madulsima range. Mr. Bligh has procured it at a considerable altitude in the Lemastota hills, into which it doubtless ascends from the Wellaway-Korale forests in the dry season. On the western side of the hill-zone Mr. Holdsworth has observed it in the Kandy district ; but I have no evidence of its being found at a greater elevation than that. This species is one of the earliest known Ceylon birds. Its gay plumage no doubt made it an object of attraction to the early travellers ; and Forster described it in his ‘ Indische Zoologie’ so far back as 1781, giving a plate of it done in the crude style of that period. He, however, does not make any mention of the discoverer of this interesting Ceylonese form, which leads to the inference that natives first made it known to Europeans in the island. Habits.—This handsome bird is a denizen of forest and heavy jungle, and is of such a shy and retiring disposition that it is but little known to Europeans, even those who are stationed in the wilds of the interior. PH(ENICOPHAES PYRRHOCEPHALUS. 257 The natives of the Western and Southern Provinces, a part of the island in which the population is chiefly located in the cultivated districts, are less acquainted with it than with most birds; but the inhabitants of the northern and eastern jungles, whose scanty villages are situated, for the most part, in the depths of those primeval wilds, recognize the Mal-kendetta, without hesitation, as a not uncommon bird. Layard, who considered its range to be limited to the mountain-zone, speaks of it as being eaten by the natives, and probably alludes to the Kandyans of the Dumbara district before it was denuded of forest, and when it contained this bird in much greater numbers than it does now. The natives of the “ Friars-Hood” jungles, where it is commoner than in other parts of the island, call it “ Warreliya,” or “long tail.” The Malkoha is fond of tall or shady forest in which there is a considerable amount of undergrowth or small jungle, into which it often descends, after making a meal off the fruits of the lofty trees overhead. When flushed it invariably flies up into high branches and is difficult to come up with, as it quickly makes off, taking short flights from tree to tree. I have seen a flock of six or seven feeding among the topmost boughs of one tree, and noticed that they moved very quicky about among the leaves, sharply wrenching off the berries which they were seeking and devouring them whole. Asa rule it is a silent bird, the only note with which I am acquainted being a rather low monosyllabical call like kaa, which it utters when flying about. Although I have occasionally found the remains of small insects in its stomach, it is almost exclusively a fruit-eating species, and its flesh is consequently by no means to be despised. It is tender and not unpleasantly flavoured ; and Layard remarks, with justice, that the natives consider it a great delicacy. I have known an individual persistently return to a tree, on the berries of which it had been feeding, a few minutes after being shot at. Nothing is known of the nidification of this species. In the Plate accompanying this article, the figure in the background with the white eye represents a female shot in the Vanni. RAV Genus ZANCLOSTOMUS. Bill more slender than and not so deep as in the last genus, not so inflated near the base ; the gape more festooned. Nostrils ovoid, basal, and placed higher up than in Phenicophaés. Kye surrounded by nude skin. Wings with the 4th and 5th quills subequal and longest. ‘Tail, legs, and feet much as in the last. Shafts of the throat-feathers rigid. ZANCLOSTOMUS VIRIDIROSTRIS, (THE GREEN-BILLED MALKOHA.) Zanclostomus viridirostris, Jerd. Cat. B. S. India, Madr. Journ. 1840, xi. p. 225, et Ill. Ind. Orn. i. pl. 3; Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1845, p. 200; id. Cat. B. Mus. A.S. B. p. 76. no. 375 (1849); Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av. p. 99 (1850); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 129 (1852) ; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xii. p. 453; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. ii. p. 690 (1856); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 346 (1862); Holdsworth, P. Z. 8S. 1872, p. 432; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 16, et 1875, p. 284; Hume, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 458 ; Fairbank, ibid. 1877, p. 397. Phenicophaus jerdoni, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. 1842, p. 1095. Rhopodytes viridirostris, Cab. et Heine, Mus. Hein. pt. iv. p. 65 (1862). The Small Green-billed Malkoha, Jerdon, B. of India. Kappra-popya, Hind.; Wamana kaki, lit. “ Dwarf Crow,” Telugu. Mal-kendetta, Sinhalese ; also Handi-koota (apud Daniell); HKoosil, Ceylon. Tamils (Layard). Adult male and female. Length 15:0 to 15-75 inches; wing 5:1 to 5-4; tail 8-4 to 9°3; tarsus 1:3 to 1-35; outer anterior toe 0-9, its claw (straight) 0-3; bill to gape 1:2 to 1-4. Iris deep brown; bill pale leaf-green; orbital skin in front of eye cobalt-blue, paling behind into pale bluish; legs and feet dusky green or greenish blue. Above greenish grey, overcome with a strong green gloss from the hind neck down to the rump; lores, at the base ot the bill, and round the orbital region shading into blackish; wings and tail deep metallic green, the tips of the quills dusky ; terminal portion of tail-feathers white, deepest on the outer webs of all but the central pair, which are evenly tipped and with less white than the rest ; throat blackish, with greyish or pale fulvous striw, formed by the double tips of the feathers being of that colour, and exceeding the black shaft; on the chest the feathers gradually become fulvous-grey, and from that pure fulvous on the breast and abdomen ; flanks, thighs, and under tail-coverts cinereous, the two latter washed with fulvous. Some examples, probably immature birds, have the under surface paler than the above, and the upper surface less glossed with green ; the striw of the throat are less fulvous in some than in others. Che fureate formation of the throat-feathers is most singular, and was, it appears, first pointed out by Blyth, with his usual habit of minute and accurate observation. Obs. On comparing Ceylonese with South- Indian examples, I find no appreciable difference ; an individual from Madras measures as follows—wing 5'1 inches ; tail 9°2; tarsus 1°35; bill to gape 1:23. This species does not differ widely in plumage from the North-Indian Z. tristis, which has not got the under parts rufous, and has the throat whiter, with the nude skin round the eye crimson, instead of blue. The latter species, however, is much larger, the wing measuring 63 inches according to Jerdon, and it is consequently styled the “ Large Green- billed Malkoha.” Distribution —This Cuckoo is widely diffused throughout the low country of Ceylon, being most numerous ZANCLOSTOMUS VIRIDIROSTRIS. 259 in the northern half and south-eastern division of the island, including, as regards the former, the Puttalam and Chilaw districts and the Seven Korales. It does not, as far as I am aware, ascend into the hill-zone to any considerable altitude, although it is found in the hilly country at the base of the Hewa-Elliya ranges, at an elevation of about 1000 feet. In the above-mentioned low-country districts it is dispersed throughout the forests and low jungle, being everywhere to be found by those who know what sort of locality it frequents; in the south and west, however, it affects only those spots which are suitable to its habits. It is found in tangled thickets here and there throughout the Colombo district, and in the south-west corner of the island is more local still; for instance, it frequents the thorny tangled brake covering the peninsula on the east side of Galle harbour, and is scarcely to be found anywhere else in the neighbourhood. Mr. Holdsworth records it as abundant at Aripu; and further north, as well as in the island of Manaar, it is equally so. It is found in the Jaffna peninsula. Elsewhere this Malkoha is found only in the south of India. In Ramisserum Island it is common, and likewise on the mainland of the peninsula. In the Palani hills Mr. Fairbank procured it at the eastern base. Jerdon says that it is found as far north as Cuttack, where it meets the larger species. “In the bare Carnatic and the Deccan,” he writes, “it is chiefly to be met with in those districts where the land is much enclosed, as in part of the zillah at Coimbatore, where large tracts of country are enclosed by thick and, in many cases, lofty hedges of various species of Huphorbia.......... Throughout the west coast, where jungle and forests abound, it is much more common, especially in those parts where bamboos occur, and where numberless creepers entwine themselves and hang in luxuriant festoons from every tree.” Habits.—The Green-billed Malkoha frequents dense low jungle, the tangled edges of forest, scrub near the sea-coast or surrounding large woods, thickets, and so forth. It is not particularly shy, but does not care to subject itself to long observation, making off with a stealthy flight, and threading its way quickly through the most tangled underwood. I have often noticed it in pairs, but just as frequently flushed it singly, its mate being probably not far distant. In the Northern Province and the jungles to the south of Haputale, where it is abundant, it may frequently be seen flying across the roads. Its diet consists of various fruits and berries and also insects ; in the stomach of one I found a large locust almost whole. In India it is said to be almost entirely insectivorous. Jerdon writes that it “diligently searches the leaves for various species of Mantis, Grasshopper, and Locust, whose green colours and odd forms, though assimilating so strongly to the plants on which they rest, are but of little avail against its keen and searching eye.” In his ‘ Birds of India,’ he remarks that he never found it feeding on fruit; in Ceylon it is the exception to find that it has partaken of any thing else. It is difficult to flush a second time ; for when thoroughly alarmed it skulks in the thickest underwood it can find, or escapes, by the use of its legs, among the branches forming its retreat. Its note is a low crake, sounding like kraa, generally uttered after it has been flushed; but it is usually of a silent habit. Nidification—We are indebted to Miss Cockburn for the only information yet to hand of this bird’s nesting. She obtained one nest in March on the Nilghiris. It was large, and consisted of sticks, put together much in the style of a Crow-Pheasant’s nest. It contained two white eggs. bo ls bo Genus CENTROPUS. Bill very strong, high at base, well curved throughout. Nostrils lateral, and protected by a membrane. Wings rounded, the 6th quill the longest. Tail long, wide, considerably graduated. Tarsi stout and shielded with broad transverse scales, longer than the anterior toe with its claw. Toes stoutly scaled; hind claw very long and straight. Feathers of the head, neck, and throat spinous. CENTROPUS RUFIPENNIS. (THE COMMON COUCAL,) Centropus rufipennis, Mliger, Abhandl. Akad. Wiss. Berl. (1812) p. 224; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. ii. p. 681 (1856); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 348 (1862); Holds- worth, P. Z. 8S. 1872, p. 453; Jerdon, Ibis, 1872, p.15; Hume, Nests and Eggs (Rough Draft), p. 142 (1873); Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 16; Morgan, Ibis, 1875, p. 315. Centropus philippensis, Sykes, P. Z. 8. 1832, p. 98; Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1842, p. 1099; id. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1847, p. 385; id. Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 78 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 128 (1852) ; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 450. Centropus castanopterus, Steph. Gen. Zool. xiv. i. p. 215 (1826). Centropus pyrrhopterus, Jerdon, Cat. B. 8. Ind., Madr. Journ. 1840, xi. p. 224. Centrococcyx rufipennis, Ball, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 394; Fairbank, Str. Feath. 1877, p. 397. The Philippine Ground-Cuckoo, Kelaart ; The “ Crow-Pheasant,” Europeans in India and Ceylon, also “* Jungle-Crow,” in Ceylon; “ Lark-heeled Cuckoo,” Jerdon’s Catalogue. Mahoka, Hind.; Kuka, Beng.; Marmowa, at Monghyr; Jemudu-kaki, lit. ‘* Euphorbia Hedge-Crow,” Tel.; Aalli-kaka, lit. “ Hedge-Crow,” Tam. (Jerdon). Aitti-kukkula, Sinhalese ; Chembigum, Ceylonese ‘Tamils. Adult male and female. Length 17:5 to 18:5 inches; wing 7:3 to 8-1; tail 9°5 to 10-0; tarsus 1:9 to 2:0; outer anterior toe (with claw) 1°75 to 1:9; hind toe 0-6, its claw 0-8 to 0°83; bill to gape 1:65 to 1:85. Females appear to average larger than males. Iris vermilion ; eyelid blackish leaden ; bill black; legs and feet black. Entire plumage, with the exception of the scapulars and wing-coverts (which are glossy cinnamon-rufous) black, dull on the crown and throat, and with the hind neck and its sides, as well as the chest and upper breast, illumined with steel-blue edgings, blending into a greenish hue at the centres of the feathers ; these hues are brightest on the hind neck; back, rump, and flanks moderately glossed with greenish; tail-feathers glossed with green, mostly on the four lateral feathers ; forehead and chin brownish, gradually darkening into the hue of the crown and throat respectively ; tips of the quills smoky brown; scapulars somewhat darker rufous than the wings; under wing- coverts shaded with blackish. The gloss on the tail-feathers varies in individuals; in some the central pair have scarcely any, the ground-colour partaking slightly, if examined carefully, of a ruddy-brown hue. Young. The yearling bird has the head and nape marked with rufous strie; hind neck barred with fulvous; scapulars and wings crossed with rather broad bars of blackish ; tail barred with spear-shaped bands of dusky whitish ; throat-feathers centered and barred with fulyous; breast and thighs the same. The above description of the young is from an Indian individual; I have not had the opportunity of examining Ceylonese examples in the immature stage, but they have been described to me as similar to the one here noticed. CENTROPUS RUFIPENNIS. 261 Layard procured an albino of this Cuckoo at Pt. Pedro, in which “the black and purple portions were changed to a dirty creamy white, the dark red portions to a light brown.” Obs. Ceylonese C. rufipennis differs from the Indian bird of this species in its paler forehead and throat, these parts, as a rule, being in the latter concolorous with the adjacent dark plumage. I say, as a rule, because I find that, as in Ceylon, so in India, examples vary inter se in this respect ; an example from Kamptee and another from the North-west Province are so close to the insular bird that the latter cannot well be discriminated as a separate race. Mr. Swinhoe, when at Galle, shot a pair of Coucals, which he considered (‘ Ibis, 1873, p. 230) distinct from the true C. rufipennis, on account of their smaller size and larger bills (the size of bill is not given), as well as their broader tail-feathers barred obscurely across. The wings measured 7} inches, which corresponds with those of Indian specimens ; the tails evidently point to the individuals being immature. An example in the British Museum from Kamptee measures 7-3 inches in the wing, and four measured and recorded by Mr. Ball are as follows :—Sex?, Gangpur, 7°7; ¢, Rajmehal hills, 7-2; 3, Satpuras, 7°38; 3d juv., Calcutta, 7°55. These would compare very well with five Ceylonese examples taken at random froma series. The tails of the first three here enumerated measure 10-8, 10-5, 10°5 inches respectively; this is longer than they ever attain to in the insular bird, and I have observed the same inferiority in this respect when comparing my specimens with those in the national collection. The larger species (C. ewrycereus) from Borneo, Labuan, Sumatra, Java, as well as from Tenasserim, Burmah, Nepal, Sindh, Sikkim, and other parts of India (if the continental species be the same), differs from C. rufipennis in having the back coloured red like the wings, which are a paler rufous than in the latter species ; likewise in the blue- glossed tail and the much more metallic blue lustre of the hind neck, and finally in the darker under wing-coverts : it is, in all its races, a larger bird than C. rufipennis. A Labuan specimen measures 88, a Sumatran 8°7, and a Bornean 8-6 inches in the wing; the Sindh and Sikkim birds vary from 9:0 to 9°5 according to Mr. Hume, and some I have measured from other localities 7:9 to 8-3. Distribution —The “ Jungle-Crow,” or “ Crow-Pheasant ” as it is popularly called, is found throughout all the low country, including the island of Manaar and the Jaffna peninsula, in which latter districts, as well as in most of the north of the island, it is extremely abundant. It ascends the hills, ranging up to 3000 feet throughout the year in some districts, and reaching the altitude of the Nuwara-Hlliya plateau in the cool dry season. In June I have met with it in Upper Hewahette, and in January I have heard it behind Hakgala mountain and in the railway gorge. It is very abundant in the south-west and west of the island, and is tolerably numerous in the Eastern Province and along the north-east coast. At Trincomalie it frequented the native gardens in the heart of the Bazaar. In forest-districts it is local, being chiefly found where the jungle has been cut down and low scrub grownup. Itis common in Dumbara, and particularly about Kandy, Paradeniya, and generally along the banks of the Mahawelliganga. On the Uva patnas it is not uncommon; and in Haputale Mr. Bligh has seen it above 4500 feet. On the continent the Common Coucal inhabits chiefly the southern and central portions of India. It is common in Ramisserum Island and on the adjacent coast, and Mr. Fairbank observed it up to 3500 feet in the Palani hills; it likewise inhabits and breeds in the Nilghiris. It is common in the Deccan and in the Khandala district especially. Mr. Ball writes, ‘‘ The Crow-Pheasant is tolerably common throughout the Chota- Nagpur division,” but “ circumstances, which it is not easy to detect, seem to influence the distribution of this bird. In some portions of the district I have been for weeks without seeing a single specimen, suddenly then I come upon a tract in which I do not fail to hear or see several every day.” In the North-west Provinces it is also found, as well as in the plains of Upper India. Mr. Hume remarks that it is abundant along the banks of the larger rivers in Sindh, but that im lower Sindh it is less common than in upper. In the Sambhur-Lake district it is “‘ very rare’ (Adam). Habits —The Common Coucal inhabits almost every variety of situation except gloomy forest, the interior of which it shuns. In the south and west of the island it is found in low woods, cultivated lands, the outskirts of heavy jungle, compounds, native gardens, and the borders of paddy-fields, and is usually a shy bird, betaking itself, when flushed in the open, to the cover of the adjacent wood, and quickly climbing and making its way through the branches out of sight. In the north, particularly in the Jaffna peninsula, it is the very reverse of 262 CENTROPUS RUFIPENNIS. shy, walking about the native compounds sometimes close to houses, and exhibiting no concern with regard to the inmates. It may be that it finds its food scarcer here in the dry season than in the less parched-up districts in the south. It walks with an even and stately gait, or proceeds with long hops, and, when winged and pursued, runs with great speed through the jungle, and is exceedingly difficult to capture unless stopped with a second shot. Some of its habits are very curious ; and Layard remarks with truth, ‘On being alarmed it scrambles rapidly to the summit of the tree in perfect silence, and glides away in a contrary direction to that whence the cause of its terror sprung.” It resorts often to a favourite tree to roost, probably a shady “ Jack,” or, better still, an Aveca-palm, of which it is very fond, and which generally stand in the vicinity of native houses. Into these it flies late in the evening, when it can take refuge in them unobserved, and then hides itself in the thickest part of the foliage. At daybreak the following morning its deep notes are heard issuing from the thick foliage and answered by the bird’s mate, who is in another tree close at hand; but there is not a sign of either to be seen: this conversation goes on at intervals, and I have known it sometimes to last for twenty minutes before either of the Coucals stirs from the spot in which it has passed the night: when the time has come for a moye, they hop out from their night’s quarters, and fly away sometimes in opposite directions, and are seldom scen in close company during the day. There is perhaps no bird-note in Ceylon so well known, nor one which strikes the new arrival from Europe with such astonishment, as the wonderful sound which this Cuckoo issues from its capacious throat. It is heard far and wide for miles on a still evening, and is so deep and weird-like that it is difficult to imagine it is produced by a bird, still less by so small a one as this. It consists of a single call quickly repeated, which may be syllabized as hooop, hooop, hovop ; and this is uttered with the mouth wide open and the bird’s head thrust down sideways at each note, an exertion which appears necessary to bring out such a voluminous sound. The most lengthy description on paper would fail to give any idea of the nature of the voice of this and, still more, of the next species; but Iam perhaps not wrong in maintaining that the luxuriant woods, the sequestered vales waving with verdant fields of rice, the forest-clad hills and shady palm-groves, all of which go to form the smiling face of nature in Lanka’s isle, would lose no little of their charm for the ornithologist were they devoid of the Crow-Pheasant’s resounding call. It feeds on a great variety of imsects and even reptiles, consuming beetles, slugs, scorpions, centipedes, lizards, and, I believe, small snakes sometimes. It pilfers birds’ nests, and eats either eggs or very young birds. Mr. Parker informs me that he has seen one trying to get up the tube of a Weaver-bird’s nest to attack the young in it, but in this it failed. Jerdon records the fact of a gentleman in the Indian Custom’s department having seen one of these birds dragging along a young hedgehog by the ear, a task which it could not well have undertaken had it not contemplated making a meal off the unfortunate animal. Nidification.—The species breeds from May until September. Its nest, which is not often discovered, is built in a low tree, generally in the midst of thick woods, and is a large globular structure, composed of twigs and small sticks, with an opening in the side near the top, and is fixed in a fork of a branch or among a mass of small thick boughs. One which I found close to the bungalow on the Gangaroowa estate was placed in a Lantana-thicket ; it was near the top of a tangled mass of the branches of this well-known pest (Lantana miata) ; the body of the structure rested in a large saucer-like foundation constructed by the bird of the branches of the Lantana, mixed with others brought to the spot; it was about a foot in external diameter, and the exterior was lind with roots. The eggs were two in number, stumpy ovals in shape, and of a chalky texture, although the surface was smooth ; the colour was pure white in one and buff in the other, and they measured 1-54 by 1:14 inch and 1:45 by 1:16 inch. In India it has been observed by Mr. Blewitt that the nests are not always domed, some that he has found being simply structures about the size of a large round plate, with a depression in the centre for the eggs ; In some instances the nests are placed high up in large trees and in an exposed situation. Three appears to be the normal number of the eggs, although four or five are sometimes met with. CENTROPUS CHLORORHYNCHUS. (THE CEYLONESE COUCAL.) (Peculiar to Ceylon.) Centropus chlororhynchus, Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1849, xviii. p. 805; Gray, Gen. Birds, i. App. p. 22 (1845); Blyth, Cat. Birds A. S. B. p. 78 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 128 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 450; Cab. et Heine, Mus. Hein. iv. p. 116 (1862); Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 298; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 483; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 16. Green-billed Jungle-Crow, Europeans in Ceylon. Aitti-kukkula, Sinhalese, Western Province. Sinmilis C. rufipenni, sed rostro viridi et magis curvato: pileo et collo postico amethystino-purpureo nitentibus: inter- scapulu plumarum apicibus scapularibusque concoloribus: remigibus terminaliter magis quam in C. rufipenni infuscatis. Adult male and female. Length 16-2 to 17°75 inches ; wing 6°3 to 6:5; tail 9°0 to 9°5; tarsus 1°7 to 1-8; outer anterior toe 1°35 to 1:5, its claw (straight) 0-5; outer posterior toe and claw 1-4, long posterior claw 0-7 ; bill to gape 1°6 to 1°75. Iris deep red or dull crimson; bill pale apple-green, slightly pale along the margins ; inside of mouth, except towards the tips, orbital skin, and nostril-membrane black ; legs and feet black; claws dusky, greenish at the base. Entire plumage, except the wings, scapulars, and tips of interscapular feathers, black, glossed on the back of the head, hind neck, upper part of interscapulary region, and the throat with purple, changing towards the tips of the feathers into beautiful amethystine; the lower parts and upper surface of tail with blue, and the back with obscure metallic green ; the quills are dark chestnut, much more infuscated at the tips than the last species ; the wing-coverts and scapulars are darker still, or of a dull maroon, with the bases of the feathers blackish ; under wing-coverts blackish. Young. The fledged nestling has the iris slate-grey; bill dusky at base and along the culmen, with the apical portion greenish ; legs and feet dusky flesh-colour. ; Wings and scapulars red as in adult, black plumage the same; but the feathers of the head are encased in soft sheaths or “ pens,” each of which terminates in a long white hair-like process, which in time drops off, the feather emerging from the tip. The yearling bird has the bill as in the adult, but with the tip of the lower mandible dusky. The upper plumage is not so highly bronzed as in the old bird; wing-coverts obscurely barred with blackish, tips of quills more infus- cated ; inner webs of tertials concolorous with the tips. Obs. This species is closely allied to the preceding, its most conspicuous distinguishing characteristic being its green bill, which is also more curved than that of C. rufipennis; but the richer metallic hues and dark-tipped wings would well suffice to separate it even were the bill of the same colour. Distribution —This handsome species was discovered by Layard in 1848 on the Avisawella road ; but one specimen was then procured by him, which was forwarded to Blyth and described by this naturalist under its present title. In 1852 Layard again met with it, securing another example at Hanwella and three more “ in the dense jungle near Pallabaddoola, at the foot of the Peak.” These researches, therefore, gave but a very small range, the extreme limits falling within forty miles. Mr. Holdsworth records the fact of seemg an individual of the species once, but did not procure it. Mr. Neville, I understand, obtained several specimens in the Western Province, probably between Ratnapura and Colombo, and was, prior to the date of my acquaintance with it, the only collector who, besides Layard, as far as I am aware, ever procured it. Instead of being so rare as was hitherto supposed, this “ Jungle-Crow”’ exists in considerable numbers throughout the tract of country which it inhabits. This consists of the south-west hill-region, ranging from 264 CENTROPUS CHLORORHYNCHUS. the many jungles near Galle up to the altitude of the coffee-districts of the Morowak Korale, the whole of the Western Province, and the strip of country lying between Kurunegala and Dambulla. In this latter region I do not think it extends into the Seven Korales beyond the influence of the hill raims. It is not uncommon on the Deduru-oya and in the jungles between the Ambokka range and the outlying rocky hills, of which the Dolookanda forms the most conspicuous point; and I have met with it as far north as the Kimbulana-oya, where it is crossed by the direct road from Kurunegala to Anaradjapura vid Rambawe. This portion of the Seven Korales is very dry, and this bird only inhabits there the heavy jungle on the borders of the seasonal rivers and streams. Whether it extends out to the north-west beyond the locality indicated I am unable to say; but near the hills I have traced it from Kurunegala up to the vicinity of Dambulla. To return to the Western Province, which is its head-quarters, this bird is there common in all the heavy forest and jungle, as well as in bamboo-cheena from Ambepussa to Ratnapura, inhabiting all out- lying dense woods between this line and Colombo. About Hanwella, in the Ikkade-Barawe forest, in the jungles near Poré, and thence south to Horemne, its deep booming note may always be recognized by those who know it, and in the forest named it is abundant. I found it numerous in the Ratnapura district, and traced it up to Pallabaddoola, which is high up (2500 feet) im the Peak forest. ‘To this elevation, and perhaps somewhat higher, it doubtless ascends all along the western slopes of the Kandyan hills and round through the Peak jungles for some distance east of Ratnapura. Westward of this place I met with it through the Pasdun Korale to Agalewatta ; and southward of this it will be found to occur sparingly in the jungles on either side of the Bentota river, and other heavily timbered localities between there and the Hinedun-Pattu hills. Ihave heard it near Denniya and in the Singha-Rajah forest. Near Galle it is met with in the Kottowe jungles. I have thus far taken pains to trace out the distribution of this little-known bird perhaps more minutely than may at first sight be thought necessary ; but it seems expedient so to do, as it is so seldom seen that many who are not acquainted with its note would pass it over entirely did they not know in what districts to look for it. I cannot say how far eastward of Ratnapura it extends, nor whether it occurs on the eastern slopes of the Kolonna Korale; but in all probability future research will much extend its limits both in the south and probably also round the northern base of the Kandyan hills. Habits —Of all our forest birds perhaps the present species is the most wary and seldom seen, scarcely ever emerging from the almost impenetrable fastnesses in which it lives. The Ceylon Coucal almost defies all discovery except by those who have made themselves acquainted with its note and care to follow it into its retreat. It is a denizen of tangled thickets, underwood im forests and on the banks of rivers, dense bamboo- jungle (to which it is especially partial), ratan-cane brakes, and such like, and rarely shows itself in the open except by the side of a road passing through forest, to which it will drop for an instant from an adjoining tree on espying a grasshopper or other insect, quickly retreating again under cover before any but the quickest shot can secure it. In the early morning, when the bamboo-cheenas in the wild parts of the Western Province are resounding with its deep far-reaching call, it mounts up from the underwood into some creeper- covered tree, which is a favourite situation with it, and gives forth its sonorous, long-drawn hoo—whoop, whooop, which can be heard with distinctness for many miles round, echoing far over the luxuriant glades and waving rice-fields into the distant beetling wooded crags, from which it is answered back by more than one of its lurking fellow mates; for, as is the case with its congener, one note thus given out is the signal for many more, called forth from all sides, until there is a sudden cessation, as if by common consent. As will be gathered from my remarks on its habits, it is an exceedingly difficult bird to procure ; for years I had been secking it in the jungles of Ceylon, knowing well that the loud peculiar Coucal-notes which I often heard in the damp forests of the west could not be those of any other bird, but was never able to procure a specimen, until one morning, i the Hewagam Korale, I penetrated into a dense bamboo-thicket towards a huge overgrown tree, in which one of these birds was sending forth an unusual number of its sepulchral calls, and succeeded in bagging it, thus identifying the species with its note and enabling me, by adopting this device, to procure many specimens, and to jot down in my notebook, on auricular testimony, its distribution wherever IT went. Its habit is to call for several hours in the morning and evening, or after a shower of rain, when it mounts up into a tree to escape the dripping underwood and dry its plumage. When disturbed, or after re-alighting on being flushed, it has a very singular monosyllabic note, somewhat resembling the dropping of a CENTROPUS CHLORORHYNCHUS. 265 stone into deep water, and which may be likened to the syllable dhjoonk ; this is uttered by both sexes ; but whenever I procured a specimen uttering the loud call in question it proved to be a male. Its diet consists of Coleoptera, spiders, snails, and grasshoppers, and in the stomach of one example I found a number of minute Ammonites. When winged it runs, like the preceding, very rapidly through the dense jungle and quickly escapes pursuit. Nidification.—The breeding-season probably begins in April or May and lasts until July. In August I procured the nestling which forms the subject of the accompanying Plate, and which had not long left the nest. It was seated on a low branch in some dense underwood and uttered a sound resembling the note of the adult, but not so deep. On the first occasion that I heard it I was unable to find the bird, supposing it to be an old one which had flown away on my approaching it; but on passing the exact spot the following day I again heard the note, and succeeded in finding its author, which must have remained in precisely the same position during the 24 howrs that had mtervened. The nest and eggs are, in all probability, almost identical with those of the Common Coucal, the latter being perhaps somewhat smaller. The figure in the Plate represents an adult bird, shot in the Seven Korales, feeding the nestling alluded to, which was procured in Mr. Chas. de Zoysa’s fine forest at Kuruwite, where the species is abundant. bo a Genus TACCOCUA. Bill higher than wide at the nostrils, the culmen much curved and hooked at the tip, the margin boldly lobed at the base. Nostrils exposed, basal, almost linear and pierced in a depression near the margin. Wings short and rounded, the 4th quill the longest. Tarsus as long as the inner anterior and outer posterior toes without their claws, covered with very broad scales. Feathers of the fore neck and chest with very stiff shafts. Eyelid furnished with stout eyelashes. P TACCOCUA LESCHENAULTI. (THE DARK-BACKED SIRKEER.) Taccocua leschenaulti, Lesson, 'Traité d’Orn. p. 144 (1831); Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1845, xiv. p. 201; id. Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 77 (1849); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 352 (1862); Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 433 (first record from Ceylon); Hume, Nests and Eggs (Rough Draft), p. 145 (1875); Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 285; Hume, Str. Feath. 1877, p- 219. Zanclostomus sirkee, Jerdon, Cat. B. S. India, Madr. Journ. 1840, xi. p. 223; Blyth, J.A. 8S. B. 1842, xi. p. 98. The Southern Sirkeer, Jerdon. Jungli totah, Hind. ; Adavi chilluka and Potu chilluka, lit. “ Jungle-Parrot” and ‘“ Ant-hill Parrakeet,” Telugu (apud Jerdon). Adult male and female. Length 15°5 to 16-0 inches; wing 5°9 to 6°25; tail 8-2 to 9:0; tarsus 1-6 to 1:7; outer anterior toe 1-0, its claw (straight) 0°35; bill to gape 1-4 to 1:55. Weight 5j0z. Longest upper tail-covert feather 4-5 (about). The bill is very variable in size. Tris reddish, with a brown inner circle and sometimes a yellowish exterior edge ; bill cherry-red, with the tips yellowish and an angular black marginal patch continued along the edge to the gape; legs and feet bluish plumbeous or plumbeous, claws blackish ; orbital skin blackish (?). Above olivaceous brown, with a strong greyish-green lustre on the back, scapulars, and wings ; the shafts of the head, neck, interscapular region, as well as the throat bristly and blackish in colour: tail metallic brownish green, becoming much darker towards the sides, the two outer pairs of feathers being deep brown above ; all but the centre pair deeply tipped white, increasing towards the outer feathers. Orbital bristles or eyelash black, with white bases ; feathers of the lores and round the orbital skin whitish ; chin and upper part of throat whitish, passing into pale brownish on the fore neck and chest; beneath this the under surface is rufous, deepest on the lower parts and tinged with yellowish on the breast; vent and under tail-coverts grey-brown, the feathers of the latter tinged with rufous at their extremities; rectrices dark brown beneath. Examples vary in the depth of the rufous of the under surface, and in those which have it deep the throat is pervaded with a fulvous hue. Young. Birds of the year have the wing-coverts, tertials, and scapulars tipped strongly with fulvous. Obs. Ceylonese examples all belong to the dark-backed race, considered to be the typical leschenaulti. Four species have been recognized of this genus, two of which were separated by Mr. Bligh from Lesson’s and Gray’s types (LT. leschenaulti and T. sirkee) and styled by him 7’, infuscata and 7’, affinis. All four are very closely allied ; and TACCOCUA LESCHENAULTI. 267 Mr. Hume, who appears to have now a larger series than has ever been before got together, writes that he can only satisfy himself of the existence of two forms—the present, with the dark olive-brown back, and Z. sirkee with the pale sandy or satiny-brown upper surface. From an examination of a small series in the British Museum from different localities, I think that his conclusions are likely to prove correct. Three examples from Capt. Pinwill’s collection, now in the British Museum, measure in the wing 6-4, 5-9, 6-3 inches, two exceeding my maximum dimension ; these are the dark-backed race ; but they differ slightly from the Ceylonese bird in the forehead being somewhat rufous and in the rufescent hue of the breast ascending up the throat : the island race is characterized, on the contrary, by its darker or grey fore neck and whitish chin, and the forehead is concolorous with the crown. Typical specimens of 7’. sirkee, the Bengal species, have the back, scapulars, and wing-coverts very pale sandy yellowish above, and the throat and fore neck very pale rufous. Distribution.—The first specimen of this curious Cuckoo procured in the island was killed by Mr. Forbes Laurie in Dumbara, whither the species ascends from the low country at Bintenne. It is not a rare bird, but, being very shy and inhabiting the densest thickets, appears to have escaped the researches of ornithologists previously working in Ceylon. Its head-quarters, I consider, are the hot jungle-clad districts lying to the south of Haputale and stretching thence from the eastern slopes of the southern ranges through the Bootala and Maha Vedda Ratas to the country lying between Bintenne and the east coast. Thence it ascends the mountain-slopes—on the south, those of the Badulla and Haputale ranges ; on the east, those extending from Hewa Elliya past Maturata to Medamahanuwara. Although I have not met with it north of the latter region, it is most probable that it inhabits the whole of the Vedda country round the “ Gunner’s Coin’? mountain almost to the Virgel river, for this is precisely similar in character to that about Kattregama, where I first saw it and where it is common. I have procured it in the Wellaway Korale, and Mr. Bligh has killed several specimens above Lemastota at about 2500 feet elevation. It is pretty common near Nilgalla, inhabiting the open jungle on the elevated cheenas between Kaloday and Bibile. Here I saw three or four specimens in a single day. The most elevated region in which it has as yet been observed is the Uva patna-district, in which I have met with it near Wellemade on a hill about 3500 feet in altitude. This portion of the Central Province, consisting of steep patnas and deep wooded ravines, is little known to naturalists, or, in fact, to any but occasional sportsmen, who descend to it from the neighbouring coffee-estates either for Snipe- or Partridge- shooting. It attains an altitude near Banderawella of about 4000 feet, and on the north-east slopes away to Badulla, and thence into the low country at Teldeniya, where the Sirkeer is found, and whence it ascends into the patnas, very probably inhabiting the whole region. On the mainland this species is found in Southern India. Jerdon writes that he procured it on the Eastern Ghats, in the Deccan, and on the Nilghiris, finding it in grassy slopes from 5000 to 6000 fect elevation. Its range, however, would appear to extend to the north of India. I have seen specimens from the N.W. Provinces; and Mr. Hume has it from Dehra Doon and Kumaon Bhabur (still further north), as also from Sumbhulpoor, Raipoor, Khandala, and other places in Central India. The Bengal species is found in the Sambhur, Guzerat, Kutch, and other western districts, as well as in other parts of the Presidency. Habits —The Sirkeer is a shy bird, frequenting dry jungle in open grassy country, low scrub, tangled thickets, and bushy patna-tracts in the Central Province. It feeds almost entirely on the ground in long grass, never straying far from its native fastnesses, and, as faras I have been able to observe, only issuing from them in the morning and evening, at which times it principally feeds. It is found by the sides of jungle- roads and on patches of ground under native cultivation which are surrounded by dense scrub. I have, fol- lowing the winding native track, more than once entered these enclosures, generally from 5 to 10 acres in extent, and immediately on my emerging from the wood into the open have espied one of these birds at the far end making off instantly for the cover; on alighting at the edge of the jungle they quickly thread their way, like a Centropus (“ Jungle-Crow ”’), from branch to branch, and are not many seconds before they disappear into the impenetrable thicket around them. Its diet principally consists of grasshoppers, Mantide, and other insects, which it captures in long grass and with which it crams itself to excess. Mr. Bligh writes me that since I left the island he shot one near Lemastota with a freshly killed brown lizard in its stomach ; it was very thick and about 8 inches long, and 2mMZ 268 TACCOCUA LESCHENAULTI. was coiled away neatly, even to the tip of its tail; it had one deep cut across the brain-region nearly severing its head in two. Jerdon writes that in India it is seen much about white ants’ nests, whence its Telugu name, “ the appellation of Parrot being given to it from its red bill.” I know nothing of its nesting; but Mr. Bligh writes me that a female killed during the S.W. monsoon showed signs in its breast-plumage of haying lately incubated, which points to the breeding-season being in June and July. Fam. TROGONID®. 3ill short, stout, very wide at the gape, and consequently somewhat triangular ; culmen curved. Nostrils concealed by bristles. Tail of twelve feathers, long and broad, sometimes surmounted by a long caudal train. ‘Tarsus very short; feet small and zygodactyle. PIG ARE As. TROGONID. Genus HARPACTES. Bill very short and broad ; upper mandible deep; culmen much curved, the tip with a small notch ; gonys short, deep, and much ascending. Nostrils basal, narrow, situated in a membrane, which is protected by bristles. Chin furnished with weak bristles. Wings short, the primaries much decurved; the 4th and 5th quills the longest, the Ist rather short. ‘Tail broad, much graduated, even at the tip. Tarsus half-feathered ; inner anterior toe slightly longer than the outer ; inner posterior toe much longer than the outer one. Eye surrounded by a naked skin. HARPACTES FASCIATUS., (THE CEYLONESE TROGON.) Trogon fasciatus, Forster, Ind. Zool. p. 54, pl. 5 (1781); Gm. ed. Linn. Syst. Nat. i. pt. 1, p. 405 (1788). Trogon ceylonensis, Briss. Orn. vol. ii. p. 19 (1763). Trogon malabaricus, Gould, Mon. 'Trogonide, Ist ed. pl. 31 (1838). Harpactes malabaricus, Sw. Classif. Birds, vol. ii. p. 337 (1839) ; Jerd. Cat. B. S. India, Madr. Journ. 1840, xi. p. 232. Harpactes fasciatus, Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 80 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 118 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 171; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. ii. p. 714 (1856); Legge, J. A. S. (Ceylon Br.), 1870-71, p. 35; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 422; Hume, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 432, et 1876, p. 498; Ball, ibid. 1874, p. 385, et 1876, p. 231; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 18, et 1875, p. 281; Bourdillon, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 382; Fairbank, ibid. 1877, p. 393. Pyrotrogon fasciatus, Cab. et Heine, Mus. Hein. iv. p. 156 (1862). Der Band-Kuruku, Forster ; The Fasciated Curucui, Gmelin ; The Fasciated Trogon, Kelaart ; Red Flycatcher, Europeans in Ceylon. Kufni churi, Hind.; Karra, Mahrattas ; Kakarne hakki, Canayese. Nawa nila kurulla, Ranwan kondea, Ginni kurulla, Sinhalese. Adult male and female. Length 10°5 to 11:2 inches; wing 4:4 to 5:0 (average about 4:7); tail 5-4 to 6-0, outer- most feather 3:0 shorter ; tarsus 0°55 to 0°7; inner anterior toe 0:6, its claw (straight) 0°3; inner posterior toe 0-4; bill to gape 0-9 to 1:05. Females slightly the smaller of the sexes. Iris hazel-brown or reddish brown, in some with a pale outer circle; bill, orbital skin, eyelid, and gape French blue, the orbital skin being the palest; culmen and tips of mandibles black; legs and feet delicate greyish blue, claws bluish horn. Male. Head, nape, face, and chin dull black, paling gradually to dark slate on the fore neck and upper part of the chest; hind neck partially denuded of feathers ; back and scapulars yellowish olive-brown, paling into rufescent 270 HARPACTES FASCIATUS. fulvous on the rump and upper tail-coverts ; least wing-coverts concolorous with the back, the remainder of the wing black, crossed with narrow bars of white on the wing-coverts, tertials, outer webs and tips of secondaries ; all but the first primary with a clearly-defined white outer edge ; the three centre pairs of tail-feathers cinnamon- rufous, the central pair almost entirely so, with a fine black tip ; the next two black at the tip and on the terminal portion of the inner web; the next two with almost all the inner webs black ; the three outer pure white on the terminal half, black on the basal, and with a rufous edge except on the outermost. Female. Has the back and rump as in the male; but the head and hind neck are brown, darker than the back; the throat and fore neck light olive-brown and the chin blackish; the wing-coverts, outer webs of secondaries, and the tertials are barred with bands of fulvescent-rufous, broader than the white bars of the male: breast and under surface fulvous, the white pectoral band wanting. Young male. Bill and orbital skin duller than in the adult. In nest-plumage the male has the head and face slaty black, back and tail as in the adult; the median wing-coverts barred with narrow bars of fulyous, and the outer webs of the secondaries with broader bars of the same, slightly paler than these markings in the female ; the chin is black and the fore neck slate-colour; the under surface is paler fulvous than the adult female, and the white pectoral band is present. An individual shot in January, in the Northern Province, has the wing-coverts with white-and-rufous barred feathers, and the under surface with fulvous and scarlet ones. Obs. Mr. Hume has called attention (Joc. cit.) to the fact that Ceylonese examples are smaller than Indian; and he points out the following difference in the tail of the island race :—‘ Instead of the central tail-feathers being entirely chestnut with moderately black tips, and the next pair entirely black, they have all the four central tail- feathers black on the inner webs and on the outer webs for about one inch, the rest of the outer webs being chestnut.” As a matter of fact the pair adjacent to the central one have the black only on the inner web, at least ina good series I have obtained, so that these feathers may be said to be almost entirely rufous, which is a great dissimilarity to the same in the Indian bird. I have not been able to examine any South-Indian specimens, and cannot express an opinion as to whether it is the rule to find them with such black tails. If the Indian species is to be separated, it must bear another name, as it is the Ceylonese bird which is fasciatus, it having been described by Forster, in his ‘ Indische Zoologie,’ from Ceylon. Mr. Fairbank gives the following measurements of specimens killed in the Palanis :— leneth 12-5 inches, wing 5:0, expanse 16-0, tail 7-0, bill from gape 1-1; 9, length 12-0, wing 5:0, expanse 15-75, tail 7-0, bill from gape 1-0. An individual shot in Sambalpur by Mr. Ball measures—length 11°5, wing 5:0, tail 7:0. From these dimen- sions it would appear that Indian examples differ chiefly in the length of the tail, but do not much exceed Ceylonese ones in the wing. Vorster’s plate of this species is a good representation of it; the figure is that of a male bird lying on the stump of a tree. Distribution —TVhis very handsome bird is widely diffused throughout Ceylon, and is by no means uncommon, although, being entirely a denizen of the forest, it is not much known among Europeans. In all parts of the island it is found wherever there is lofty jungle, which it frequents by choice. It is met with near Colombo, at Atturugeria and Ikkade Barawe, and inhabits the forests in the interior of the Western Provinee. In the south it is found in the timber-jungles near the Gindurah, those throughout the Hinedun Pattu, and in the Kukkul and Morowak Korales. The Singha-Rajah forest is a great stronghold of this species; its gloomy ravines clothed with fine timber-jungle, entwined in many places with enormous ratan-canes, which flourish on the incessant rains of that region, afford it a paradise. In the Eastern Province I found it common in the Friars-Hood hills, in the Nilgalla district, and other localities clothed with heavy jungle. In the north it is locally distributed, being confined to heavy forest, in which I have procured it about 15 miles from Trincomalie. At the northern base of the Matale ranges it is common, and is diffused throughout all the coffee-districts, ascending to the upper ranges in the dry season. Mr. Holdsworth met with it at Nuwara Elhya in February, and I have seen it at Kandapolla in January. In India Jerdon found it in the forests of Malabar, from the extreme south up to about north latitude 17°, reaching up the Ghats and hill-ranges to at least 83000 feet. Referring to ‘Stray Feathers,’ we find Mr. Fair- bank procuring it first on the Palani hills at an elevation of 3500 feet, and finding it up to 5000 feet elevation. Mr. Bourdillon records it as a common bird in heavy jungle on the Travancore hills above 1000 feet ; north of this region the former gentleman notices it as found in the woods of Sawant Wade, in the Khandala district. In the Central Provinces Mr, Thompson has procured it in the Ahiri forests, in lat. 19° 30'; Mr. Ball at HARPACTES FASCIATUS. FATAL Jaipur, and also at Rehrakole in 21° N. lat.; and Mr. Blanford has obtained it further to the east in the Godaveri valley. Rehrakole appears to be the most northerly locality to which its range has as yet been traced. Habits.—The gloomy recesses of the forests this Trogon inhabits serve to bring out its beautiful plumage in striking relief; nothing can form a greater contrast than its brilliantly-coloured breast does with the sombre trunks and subdued foliage of the timber-jungles in the south of Ceylon. Were it not for its shyness in taking wing at the sight of man, it would seldom be observed ; for it loves to perch across some horizontal limb, many feet from the ground, and there remains utterly motionless, with its head sunk between its shoulders, until the sight of a passing moth rouses it into activity, and it launches itself out with a loud fluttering of its wings, seizes the prey, and starts off to another branch not far distant from its first. It sits bolt upright, and when viewed from behind appears to have no neck and but very little head! The natives of India have named it Kufni churi, from this smgular appearance, as if dressed in a fakir’s “ kufni.”” I have usually found it in pairs, and not solitary, although the two birds are seldom seen close together; but if one be shot the other will almost sure to be seen close at hand. It is this bird which makes the curious monosyllabic note chok, which is often heard in the Ceylon forests ; for many years I was unable to identify this sound with any species, until I saw a Trogon in the act of uttering it in some dense forest near Ambepussa. It has another purring call, which it commonly utters; but I am not aware that the Ceylonese birds have any querulous note like the mewing of acat. Mr. Bourdillon says that it gives this out continuously in the Travancore forests. In the recesses of the timber-jungles in the south of Ceylon, considerable tracts of forest may be traversed without seeing or hearing a single bird; as the naturalist is perhaps commenting on the dearth of bird-life, he suddenly comes on a sociable little troop of his feathered friends, who seem to have collected together in these lonely solitudes for companionship’s sake: several Forest-Bulbuls (Criniger ictericus) and some Black-headed Bulbuls (Rubigula melanictera) are sure to be among the assembly, the rest of which is made up with one or two Azure Flyeatchers (Myiagra azurea) and a casual Pomatorhinus leisurely uttering its melodious call as it clings to the mossy bark of some giant trunk, while, lastly, at a little distance from the sociable gathering, sits aloof a solitary Trogon, as if it had come to see what was the matter, but scorned to associate with its lively neigh- bours. Jerdon remarks that he has sometimes seen four or five of these birds together. The food of this species consists chiefly of coleopterous insects, bugs (Hemiptera), moths, &c., which it catches on the wing like a Flycatcher; and hence its ordinary name with gentlemen in the Survey Department, and others who frequent the jungle and have made its acquaintance. It is peculiar for the extraordinarily delicate nature of its skin and consequent looseness of the body-feathers, which fall out in abundance on the bird striking the ground when shot. It is on this account that the Trogon is the most difficult of all Ceylonese species to preserve for the cabinet. I know nothing certain as to its nidification ; but a gentleman in the Survey Department assured me that he found a nest with two young ones in a Kitool-palm during the month of May. It was situated im a hole in the trunk of the palm which stood near his hut in the Three Korales, and the young were lying on the hard wood of the nest-cavity. PVC AR ee Fam. BUCEROTID. Bill very large, curved from the base, with or without a casque on the upper mandible. Nostrils small, pierced in the bill, without a membrane, at the junction of the casque with the upper mandible or near the ridge. Wings short. Tail long, of ten feathers. Tarsus short. Feet syndactyle ; three toes in front. Tongue short and heart-shaped. Sternum wider at the posterior edge than in front, and with a shallow emargination on each side. Genus ANTHRACOCEROS. Bill enormous, curved. from the base to the tip; the upper mandible surmounted by a long, high, and sharp casque, its anterior edge projecting forward. Nostrils narrow, situated at the base of the casque; orbital and gular skin nude. Wings short and rounded, the Ist three quills evenly graduated; the Ist short and the 5th and 6th the longest; tertials reaching beyond the primaries. ‘Tail very long, of ten feathers. Legs and feet stout, covered with broad, prominent, transverse scales. ‘Tarsus longer than the middle toe; toes syndactyle, the outer connected with the middle as far as the last joint; sole very broad, claws short and stout. ANTHRACOCEROS CORONATUS. (THE CROWNED HORNBILL.) Buceros coronatus, Bodd. Tabl. Pl. Enl. p. 53 (1783); Blyth, Ibis, 1860, p. 352. Buceros violaceus, Shaw, Gen. Zool. viii. p. 19 (1811); Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1849, p. 803; Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 126 (1852). Buceros malabaricus, 'Tickell, J. A. 8S. B. 1853, ii. p. 579; Jerdon, Cat. B. S. India, Madr. Journ. 1840, xi. p. 88; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 260. Anthracoceros coronata, Reich. Syst. Av. pl. 49 (1849). Hydrocissa coronata, Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. ii. p. 588 (1856); Cab. et Tleine, Mus. Hein. ii. p. 170 (1860); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 245 (1862); Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 425; Ball, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 387. Anthracoceros coronatus, Elliot, Mon. Bucerotide, pt. iv. (1877). The Large Hornbill, Kelaart; The Malabar Pied Hornbill, Jerdon ; Toucan, Double-billed Bird, FKuropeans in Ceylon; Danchuri, Hind. ; Bagma-dunes, Bengal.; Wayera, Mahrattas ; Peshta-ganda, Gonds; Suliman murghi, lit. “ Solomon’s Fowl,” Musselmen in South India; Awchla-kha in Goomsoor (Jerdon). Porowa kendetta, lit. “Axe Hornbill” (from the shape of the bill), Sinhalese; Afta- kandetta, apud Layard; Errana-chundoo-kuruvi, Ceylonese Tamils, lit. ‘ double- billed bird ” (apud Layard). ANTHRACOCEROS CORONATUS. 273 Adult male. Length 36-0 inches; wing 13-0 to 13-3; tail 13-0; tarsus 2°5; middle toe 2°1,its claw (straight) 0-75 ; hind toe 1:1, its claw (straight) 0-8; bill from gape to tip across the are 7:0, casque along ridge 7-5 to 9:5, height of bill with casque 4:0, Adult female. Length 34-5 inches; wing 12°75; tail 14:0; bill from gape to tip across are 6°8, casque along the ridge 7:0 to 8°5. The casque projects back over the crown and gradually becomes compressed to a sharp edge at its anterior part, which recedes downwards to the mandible, joining it about 23 inches from the tip. The size of the projection forward beyond the point of contact and the consequent angle of connexion depend on age. Iris crimson; eyelid black; orbital skin and gular region “fleshy;” bill and casque fleshy white; above and beneath the gape, the posterior face of the casque and its anterior three fourths black, the colour never descending onto the mandible, and not reaching quite to the anterior edge of the casque; legs and feet blackish leaden colour ; edges of tarsal scales whitish, soles yellowish. In the female the black at the gape does not extend to the upper mandible, nor is the posterior edge of the casque black. Entirely glossy green-black, except the under surface from the chest downwards, the terminal portion of the secondaries and all but the first two primaries, the three outer tail-feathers, and terminal half of next pair, all of which parts are pure white; base of primaries whitish. In some examples the tips of some of the tertials are white, as also those of the centre tail-feathers; while the 4th tail-feather is sometimes entirely white, and the corresponding one perhaps of the normal colour. Young. In the bird of the year the casque is partly undeveloped, the posterior edge is perpendicular, and the anterior portion grades into the bill, the curve of the ridge being continuous with that of the tip. In the second year the anterior projection of the casque begins to develop. The bill is devoid of the black, there being merely a dusky patch at the gape and a slight dark wash near the anterior portion of the casque. A male shot at Jaffna measures :—wing 12°3 inches; tail 13-2; tarsus 2:5; bill across arc, gape to tip 5-4, along gape 5°5. A female :—wing 11-8 inches; tail 11:5; tarsus 2°5; bill, gape to tip across are, 4:85. The terminal 2 frais of the primaries only are white, while in the adult this colour extends to 3 inches from the tip; on the secondaries the white diminishes to } inch on the innermost feather. Obs. Ceylonese individuals are quite as fine as those from India. Mr. Ball gives the wing of a Chota-Nagpur male as only 11-25 inches, and the bill from gape 6:2. The present species is closely allied to A. malabaricus, which has been described under the names of Hydrocissa albirostris and H. affinis, and frequently referred to by these titles in the writings of Indian naturalists. It differs from the present species in the slightly smaller casque, which has the black patch evtending onto the wpper mandible, and in the coloration of the tail-feathers, the three outer pairs of which have the terminal portions only white instead of being entirely so, as in A. coronatus. Distribution —This fine Hornbill frequents the wild dry jungle-districts of the low country, perhaps ascending into the Haputale range and up the eastern slopes of Madulsima, Medamahanuwara, and the Knuckles to some elevation during the N.E. monsoon. Commencing in the south, its range begins in the Hambantota district, where it is numerous, and, taking in all the forest-country up to Lemastota, extends northward through the eastern and northern portions of the island of Jaffna. Down the west coast it is found as far south as Chilaw and the Seven Korales; but near Kurunegala itself I was unable to detect its presence, although I searched diligently for it. I have seen specimens from the Kurunegala district; but I imagine they must have been killed nearer Puttalam than that place, for Mr. Parker tells me that it is found at Uswewa, but probably does not extend further inland than Nikerawettiya. It occurs throughout the interior of the north-central part of the island, but not so commonly as near the coast, along which it is always more abundant than further inland. Layard speaks of a second species of Pied Hornbill which he said he saw twice in the hills ; he supposed it to be the Buceros albirostris, above referred to. On one occasion his collector “‘ Muttu” saw it at Gillymally in forest. As will be seen, the slight differences existing in this species are not such as could ensure its identification on the wing; and I am therefore of opinion that Layard must have met with the immature of the present bird, the peculiar bill of which might have led to the supposed identification of a 2N 274 ANTHRACOCEROS CORONATUS. new species. I was told by a native superintendent that a large black-and-white Hornbill is seen sometimes in the jungles at the eastern end of the Haputale range; but I have no doubt that it is the present species, which ascends from the low country to the higher jungles during the N.E. monsoon. Jerdon remarks that the Malabar Pied Hornbill is found in all the heavy jungles of Southern India, and that he met with it in Malabar, Goomsoor, and Central India. It does not seem to be an inhabitant of the hills in the extreme south of the peninsula, where, however, the Great Hornbill (Homraius bicornis) is found. Mr. Fairbank records it from Ratnaghiri, near Bombay, and Mr. Ball from Chota Nagpur ; the latter writes, “The Malabar Pied Hornbill affects certain localities in Chota Nagpur, where it may generally be found in a flock numbering from 6 to 10 individuals. I have shot it in Manbhum, Singhbhum, and Sirguja, and seen it in the fine jungles which border the Ghat from the Ranchi plateau to Purulia.” Habits —The Crowned Hornbill lives in small parties, frequenting the tops of trees and feeding on the many fruits with which the Ceylon jungles abound. These it swallows whole, whether large or small. Layard says that to procure its food, “ when attached to a branch, it resorts to an odd expedient—the coveted morsel is seized in its powerful bill, and the bird throws itself from its perch, twisting and flapping its wings until the fruit is detached; on this the wigs are extended, the descent arrested, and the bird regains its footing.” An individual which Layard kept in captivity was observed to use its bill in recovering its perch in the same manner that a Parrot would do, except that instead of the upper mandible only it employed the whole of the bill to hook itself on by. It is a shy bird, taking wing at once on seeing itself approached ; but it usually does not take long flights ; when it does the momentum of its huge bill and heavy neck are such as to cause it on alighting to topple forward before gaining its equilibrium. When flying it proceeds with rather quick flapping of the wings, and then sails along with them outstretched, its long tail and motionless primaries giving it a singular aspect. It has aloud harsh note, and is very noisy in the morning and evening, three or four together without much difficulty making themselves heard far and wide. In the jungles of the eastern side of the island it is partial to the tall forest-trees growing on the margins of the rivers, as in the less fertile tracts away from the influence of the water there is not so much means of subsistence for it, except where the iron-wood tree is to be found, the luscious fruit of which attracts to it every fruit-eating bird in the forest. It is likewise very fond of the banyan fruit. Layard remarks that they are often to be seen feeding on the ground; but this I have never been fortunate enough to see myself. Nidification —This bird breeds in the cavity of a tree, and the male, as is the case with other species, closes up the entrance while the female is incubating her eggs, leaving a small hole only sufficiently large to admit of his feeding his imprisoned partner. After the young are hatched the mud wall is broken down either by the male or the female, and both assist in feeding their offspring. In the case of the present species we have nothing but native evidence in support of this extraordinary habit ; but I think it may well be credited, in the face of what has been seen by reliable witnesses of the nesting of other Hornbills. The natives attribute the cause of this strange proceeding to the birds’ fear of the monkeys, which inhabit the Ceylon forests in such numbers: be this as it may, I doubt not that the incarceration actually does take place ; and it would be very interesting if some undeniable proof of it could be obtained by observation on the part of some of my readers in the Ceylon Civil Service or the Public Works Department, who, by offering a reward for the finding of a nest in the forests surrounding their Station, might perhaps succeed in making some valuable notes on the subject. I have no information concerning the eggs of the Crowned Hornbill, for they do not appear, as yet, to have been procured. Genus TOCKUS. Bill much smaller than in Anthracoceros, without the casque, but with the ridge of the culmen sharp and slightly elevated, and with the sides of the upper mandible vertical at the base ; the cutting-edge serrated. Nostril basal and round; orbital region wide. Lyelids furnished with stiff lashes. Wings, tail, and feet as in the last genus. TOCKUS GINGALENSIS. (THE CEYLONESE HORNBILL.) (Peculiar to Ceylon.) Buceros gingala, Wilkes, Encycl. Lond. iii. p. 480 (1808). Buceros gingalensis, Shaw, Gen. Zool. viii. p. 57 (1811); Temm. Pl. Col. ii. p. 17 (1824); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 44 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 126 (1852) ; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 260; Schlegel, Mus. P.-B. 1862, p. 12. Buceros pyrrhopygqus, Wagl. Syst. Ay. (1827). Tockus gingalensis, Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av. 1850, p. 91; Jerdon, B. of Ind. p. 250 (1862, in part); Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 296; Jerd. Ibis, 1872, p.5; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 425; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 14, et 1875, p. 282 ; Elliot, Mon. Bucerotidee, pt. iv. (1877). Rhinoplax gingalensis, Bonap. Consp. Vol. Anisod. 1854, p. 3. Buceros (Penelopides) gingalensis, Von Mart. Journ. fiir Ornith. 1866, p. 18. The Small Hornbill, Kelaart ; Toucan, Europeans in Ceylon; The Grey Hornbill or Jungle Grey Hornbill. Kendetta, Sinhalese. g ad. supra sordidé cinerascens, pilei plumis vix brunnescentioribus medialiter albido obscuré lineatis: tectricibus alarum purius cineraceis, nigro limbatis: remigibus nigris vix viridi lavatis, primariis ad basin extremam albis, primariis medialiter albo extts marginatis et albo laté terminatis, secundariis extus cineraceis angusté albo limbatis, intimis dorso concoloribus: rectricibus centralibus cineraceis, reliquis viridi-nigris, basaliter cineraceis, exterioribus laté albo terminatis: regione paroticé nigricanti-brunnea, albido angusté striolata: genis et corpore subtus toto albidis, crisso rufescente: tibiis cineraceis: rostro albido, frontem versis rufescente, culmine et mandibula nigricantibus : pedibus cinereis, unguibus nigris : iride rubra. Q haud a mare distinguenda. Adult male and female. Length 22 to 23 inches; wing 8:0 to 83; tail 9:0 to 9°5; tarsus 1:6 to 1-7; middle toe 1:3, claw (straight) 0°55 ; bill, gape to tip, straight 3°9 to 4:3, along culmen 4°3 to 44. Expanse 27-0. Tris red; orbital skin and eyelash black ; bill fleshy white in some, with a reddish tinge adjacent to the forehead, the vertical part of the upper mandible black, lower mandible with a blackish patch beneath ; legs and feet slaty bluish or greenish plumbeous, claws blackish. Head and nape reddish cinereous brown, each feather with a pale mesial stripe; ear-coverts blackish brown, with pale centres ; back and upper tail-coverts cinereous brown, paling to slaty on the hind neck, and with a slightly rufous cast on the back in some; wing-coverts greyish slate, the feathers margined with blackish ; quills black, the outer webs of secondaries mostly slaty, with a still paler edge; terminal portion of 3rd, 4th, 5th, and 6th primaries white ; tail greenish black, the central feathers pervaded with a cinereous hue, and the terminal portion of the remainder white; normally this extends to half the feather on the two outer pairs, and decreases on each 2N2 276 TOCKUS GINGALENSIS. succeeding pair ; beneath, including the sides of the neck, greyish white, the vent and under tail-coverts rufescent yellowish, and the thighs bluish cinereous. Youny. Birds of the year have a total length of about 20 to 21 inches ; wing 7-7 to 7-9; bill from gape to tip (straight) 3°2 to 3°6. The bill is shaped somewhat differently from the adulf, inasmuch as the perpendicular lateral portion extends forward until it meets the margin; with age the upper edge of this ‘“ wall” disappears, leaving only about # inch of this part at the base of the mandible. Tris red ; bill black, usually a white stripe of greater or less extent on the wall of the bill, and in some with patches of the same on the lower mandible; legs and feet bluish brown. Head and hind neck darker than in the adult ; under tail-coverts perhaps, as a rule, more rufous. Obs. The amount of black even on the bill of the adult varies slightly. In the young stage this bird was thought by Layard to be perhaps a different race; he had only procured specimens in one district, viz. the south, which coincidence, I suppose, strengthened his belief as to there being two species in the island. I was, at one time, inclined to think that he might perhaps be correct in his supposition, basing my ideas, however, on a difference of size in the bill ; but a good series, afterwards collected by me, demonstrated both the cause of the black bill and the variability in size of that of the adult. The development of white in some specimens is more than in others ; in certain individuals the penultimates may both be entirely white, while one of the primaries in others may be similarly coloured. Tockus gingalensis is allied to the South-Indian 7. griseus, which Jerdon confounded with it in his notice of the Indian bird (loc. cit.). The latter has the plumage more of a brownish grey than a slate-colour ; the bill is reddish at the base, paling to yellowish at the tip ; the orbital skin is purplish. Tockus griseus has not yet been detected in Ceylon. Distribution —This Hornbill, commonly known, as is also the last, by the name of Toucan, is an inhabitant of most of the tall forests and heavy jungles of the low country, ascending the mountains of both the Central and Southern Province, in the former of which I have met with it at an elevation of 4000 feet. It is plentiful throughout the northorn forests, and Mr. Holdsworth found it inhabiting the scrub-country round Aripu. I do not know that it has been detected in the Jaffna peninsula, but it may possibly be found in the jungles near Elephant Pass. Passing over the Seven Korales and the Puttalam district, in which it is tolerably plentiful, we find it in the forests about Ambepussa and Avisawella, in the Raygam and Hewagam Korales, in Saffragam, the Pasdun and Kukkul Korales, and in the jungles between Galle and the ‘“ Haycock.” In the forest of Kottowe I never failed to notice it whenever I visited that place. In the Wellaway Korale and the Friars-Hood Hills it is likewise tolerably frequent. As regards the Kandyan Province I think it is commoner in Uva than elsewhere; I have seen it from the Knuckles district, and have been told that it has occurred in the main range at Kandapolla ; to such an elevated region, however, I should say it could only be a straggler during the dry season, unless, indeed, it be a resident in Udu-pusselawa, from which it would naturally extend to the jungles above the Elephant Plains. Habits.—The Ceylonese Hornbill is a shy bird, frequenting the tops of tall trees, and rarely descending into the low jungle beneath them. In the lofty timber-forests of the south and west, therefore, it is difficult to procure ; but in the north, where the jungle is of altogether a different character (thick, with rather low trees), it may easily be shot, as the dense wood conceals the sportsman, and the distance of the bird from him is much less than when it is feeding in the top of some noble Keena-tree, or kaing in the upper branches of a gigantic Hora. It generally consorts in troops of five or six and is very noisy, its note being a loud laugh, commencing with the syllables ka-ka-ka, slowly uttered, and then quickening into kakakaka. In the early morning it roams about a good deal in search of fruit, but after feeding is not much on the wing. — Its flight, like that of the last species, is laboured and slow ; it isa combination of flapping of the pinions and quick dips, particularly when descending to alight on a tree. Its diet consists mainly of fruit, that of the Banyan, Bo, wild cinnamon, and Dawata (Carallia integerrima) being much in favour with it; it also devours reptiles and insects, for I have found green lizards and scorpions in the stomachs of some individuals. Its flesh is tender and not distasteful, and when subjected to the usual jungle-test (curry), makes a meal which the hungry hunter is far from despising ; on such occasions it is always in great demand with one’s Cingalese and Tamil servants. TOCKUS GINGALENSIS. 277 I have never been able to procure any information concerning its nesting beyond the native assertion that it breeds in hollow trees like the last species. The figures in the Plate represent an adult in the foreground, and an immature bird (placed by the artist, failing a knowledge of its habits, upon a cocoanut-tree) in the background. The feet and legs, I regret to say, have been coloured much too dark. IP ILCOA IR E48, Fam. UPUPID. Bill very slender, long, and curved from the base. Wings rounded. ‘Tail moderately long, even or rounded at the tip. Tarsi short. Feet with three toesin front and one behind. ‘Tongue small and heart-shaped. Sternum with either a notch on each side of the posterior edge or a foramen in place of a notch. Subfam. UPUPIN &. Bill more slender and longer than in Jrrisorinw. Wings with ten primaries. Tail with ten feathers. ‘Tarsus shielded in front with broad transverse scales. Sternum with an open notch on each side of the posterior edge. Head crested. Of terrestrial habits. Genus UPUPA. Bill typically long and slender, much compressed ; gape rather wide. Nostrils round, partially concealed by the plumes. Wings with the 4th quill the longest, and the Ist a little more than half the length of the 4th. ‘Tail even. ‘Tarsus equal to the middle toe without the claw. Outer toe joined to the middle one at the base, and considerably longer than the inner ; hind toe equal to the inner one, its claw long and straight. Crest very large and deep. UPUPA NIGRIPENNIS. (THE SOUTH-INDIAN HOOPOE.) Upupa nigripennis, Gould, MS.; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. ii. p. 725 (1856) ; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 392 (1862); Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 435 ; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 163 (1873); Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 286; Hume, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 458. Upupa senegalensis, Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 46 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p- 119 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 174. Upupa ceylonensis, Reich. Handb. Scansorie, p. 820. no. 753, tab. 595. fig. 4036 (1851). Upupa indica, Sharpe & Dresser, B. of Europe, pt. vii. U. epops, p. 6 (1871). Hudhud, Hind. ; Kondeh pitta, lit. “ Crested Bird,” also Kukudeu guwa, Telugu. Chaval kuruvi, lit. “* Cock Bird,” Tamils in Ceylon. Adult male. Length 10-8 to 11-75 inches; wing 5:1 to 5-5; tail 3-5 to 40; tarsus 0°85 to 0°9; middle toe and claw 0°85 to 0°95; bill from gape (straight) 2-1 to 2°56. Female. Length 10-25 to 10°8 inches ; wing 4°7 to 5-0 ; bill to gape 2:0 to 2-2. Iris brown; bill black, pale brown at the base of upper mandible, fleshy red at the base of lower; legs and feet pale slate-blue or plumbeous, in some tinged with brown. General hue of head, crest, hind neck, and throat fine cinnamon-brown, becoming smoky brownish on the interscapular region, and pale vinaceous on the fore neck and chest ; crest-feathers, which are about 2 inches in length, with a terminal black bar and occasionally a pale adjacent patch ; back, upper tail-coverts, tail, and wings black; the lower part of back crossed with white, and the rump entirely so; an angular bar across the centre of the tail, a broad band across the terminal portion of primaries (the first excepted), three on the secondaries, and another on the median coyerts and scapulars white ; 1st primary sometimes witha white spot, at other times without ; tertials with white edges, an oblique streak across the inner webs and another down the centre from the base, the light parts often deeply tinged with buff; the point of the wing concolorous with the hind neck; beneath, from the upper breast, white, dashed on the belly in some, and in others on the sides only, with blackish mesial streaks ; under wing pale cinnamon-red. Young. The nestling is covered at first with pure white down, which is quickly interspersed with feathers of the normal colour, the crest showing at once. Obs. In Ceylonese examples of this Hoopoe, a great variety in the depth of coloration is met with ; this is particularly noticeable on the head and hind neck; again, scarcely any two specimens have the lower parts striated alike or the tertials similarly marked ; the spot on the 1st primary is sometimes absent, and may perhaps be a character of nonage. I have noticed that the largest individuals that I have met with are the palest in colour and always have the white spot on the Ist primary. It is the exception to find an example with the whitish or pallid bar anterior to the black tips of the crest-feathers ; but notwithstanding it does exist, though it is not so white as in examples from northern parts of India—the race, U. indica, of the European bird; and it is in the form of a marginal spot at each side of the shaft, the web next to which is of the same colour as the rest of the feather. The length and shape of bill cannot be relied upon at all as a characteristic of this Hoopoe ; some are tolerably straight, others much curved ; some long, others short. The North-Indian variety (Upupa indica of Hodgson), if it be considered distinct from the present, has more white (and has it more constantly) at the edge of the black crest-bar ; Hodgson’s type was collected in Nepal, and the race it represents seems to me worthy of being considered intermediate between the present species and U. epops. Specimens from “ North Bengal,” in the British Museum, have the pale heads of the European bird ; but they are longer in the bill than the generality of the latter, and the light patch anterior to the black tip is not so white ; two examples have the wings 5-6 and 5:1 inches, and the bill to gape 2°4 and 2°3 respectively. In U. epops the bill is variable in length, but its pale plumage and white covert-bar make it very distinct from the North-Indian bird, than which also it has a longer wing. UPUPA NIGRIPENNIS. 279 As to the Ceylonese bird, it is identical, in all respects, with specimens I have examined from Mysore, which represent the true niyripennis of Gould. The Burmese form (U. longirostris, Jerdon) has not got a longer bill than Ceylonese specimens often have ; it has the white spot on the quill which I have shown to exist in the latter, although this is a worthless character in the present species, its absence in specimens which Jerdon handled probably causing him to err in saying that the species wanted it; this, however, was afterwards corrected by him in the ‘ Ibis,’ 1872, p. 22. Both species want the white on the hinder crest-feathers; and examples of each may, I think, be found equally dark as to their rufous coloration ; I therefore imagine that the two races are scarcely separable. Distribution.—The Indian Hoopoe is an inhabitant of many of the dry districts in Ceylon. It is very common both in the north and south-east of the island. In the former district it spreads from the Jaffna peninsula down the west coast as far as the neighbourhood of Puttalam. I have seen it in the island of Manaar; and Mr. Holdsworth says that it is very abundant at Aripu during the winter months, its numbers being largely increased about October. In the south-east it is common throughout the year between Hambantota and Yala, and likewise in portions of the Park country and the Eastern Province.’ I found it in August on the patnas near Bibile, at the foot of the Madulsima range. It is not unfrequent in Uva, and oceurs occasionally on the Elephant and Kandapolla plains and at high elevations in Maturata. I am indebted to Col. Watson for the possession of an example which he shot at Kandapolla in May at an ecleva- tion of 6300 feet ; and he informs me that he has often seen it in that locality. It is sometimes found in Dumbara, straying thither, in all probability, up the valley of the Mahawelliganga from the low country ot Bintenne. Near this locality I have met with it at Minery Lake ; but I never saw it nearer Trincomalie than this, although it may possibly visit the plains in the delta of the Mahawelliganga. Layard writes that he procured a solitary specimen at Colombo; but any occurrence of it im that neighbourhood, or anywhere south of Chilaw, must be looked upon as that of a straggler down the west coast. It has never been found in the south-west. Jerdon writes of this species that it “is found throughout Southern India, extending through part of Central India to the North-west Provinces and the Dehra Doon.”” Whether the examples from the latter locality really belong to this species or to the race U. indica, 1 am unable to say. In the Khandala district My. Fairbank says it is common, and Burgess writes of it as the same in the upper portion of the Deccan. Mr. Adam speaks of it as “not common” in the Sambhur-Lake district, and Captain Butler writes the same of it in the Guzerat region ; but these birds, I imagine, probably pertain to the intermediate form. From Sindh, Mr. Hume remarks that he has never seen it. In the extreme south of India it appears to be chiefiy restricted to the east coast ; for it is found in the island of Ramisserum, and Mr. Fairbank observed it in the lower Palanis, whereas I find no record of it in Mr. Bourdillon’s list of the birds of Travancore. The Burmese race, U. longirostris, is common in the plains of Pegu throughout the year, but is, according to Mr. Hume, most numerous in February and March. In the Irrawaddy delta, Dr. Armstrong found it very abundant in open country. Swinhoe found it at Hainan, in China, and records it from Siam. Habits —Vhis charming bird frequents, in the island of Ceylon, open sparsely-timbered ground, scrub- dotted plains, cultivated fields, dry grazing-land in the jungles of the interior, and patnas in the Central Province. In its nature it is a tame bird, and when scratching for insects, with its handsome crest depressed, allows a near approach before taking flight ; when flushed it does not usually fly far, but takes refuge in a neighbouring tree, where it will sit quietly, giving out its soft and melodious call, hoo-poo, hoo-poo, accompanied by a movement of its handsome crest and an oscillation to and fro of its head at each note. In Jaffna it may be seen close to the houses of the English residents, and I have known it breed in the garden of a bungalow within a few yards of the verandah. It feeds entirely on the ground, strutting about with an casy gait, and scratching vigorously for insects in dry soil. It often scrutinizes the odure of cattle, bencath which it finds an abundance of food. In India Jerdon remarks that it frequents ‘‘ old deserted buildings, such as mosques, tombs, and large mud walls ;” he found its food to consist of ants, Coleoptera, and small grasshoppers. Burgess says that in the Deccan it affects sandy plots of ground outside the walls of villages, where the ground is perforated with the conical holes of the ant-lion, on the larvie of which it feeds. 280 UPUPA NIGRIPENNIS. There is something very striking in the soft tone of this bird’s note when heard amidst the chatter and chirping of the numerous Passerine birds which inhabit the Ceylon coast-jungles. Though perhaps uttered tolerably close to the listener it seems to be wafted on the mild sea-breezes from afar off, and tends to rivet the sportsman’s attention as he is returning to his bivouac beneath the already burning rays of an 8 o’clock sun, after a long morning’s shooting in the parched-up scrubs of the northern coast. The flight of this Hoopoe is buoyant but undulating, and when pressed it is able to show considerable powers of wing, for in India a trained Hawk is said generally to fail in seizing it. Nidification.—The breeding-season in the north of Ceylon lasts from November until April, and possibly a second brood may be reared later on in the year, as Layard mentions the shooting of young birds in August. It breeds in holes of trees, showing, in this respect, as well as in points of anatomy, its affinity to the last family, the Hornbills. It sometimes, however, chooses a hole in a wall, in which I have known it to nest in the garden of an English residence in the Jaffna fort. Burgess writes, with reference to its habit of building in walls in India, ‘‘it breeds in the middle of April and May, constructing its nest in holes in the mud walls which surround the towns and villages in the Deccan.” The nests are composed of grass, hemp, and feathers. In the same district a nest made of soft pieces of hemp was found in a fort wall. Miss Cockburn, again, tells us that at Kotagherry it selects holes in stone walls and in earthern banks to build in, making a mere apology for a nest of a few hairs and leaves, which in a short time has a most offensive smell. This, it is asserted, arises from the oily matter secreted by the sebaceous gland on the tail-bone, which in the female at the breeding-time assumes an intolerable stench, whence obtains the idea, according to Jerdon, that the bird constructs its nest of cowdung. Mr. Holdsworth found one ina hole in a small mustard-tree (Salvadora persica) at Aripu; the young were reposing on the bare wood at the bottom of the cavity. The same fact has been noticed by Indian observers, viz. that when holes in trees are resorted to no nest whatever is constructed. The eggs vary from three to seven, five or six being the usual number. Mr. Hume writes that they “are commonly a very lengthened oval, almost always a good deal pointed towards one end, and sometimes showing a tendency to be pointed at the other end too—a most remarkable form of egg, which I cannot recall having observed in any other species .. . . When quite fresh they are of a pale greyish-blue tint, but many are of a pale olive-brown or dingy olive-green, and every intermediate shade of colour is observable. As a rule they have scarcely any gloss at all, and of course are devoid of markings. In length they vary from 0°9 to 1:05 inch, and in breadth from 0°65 to 0°73 inch.” Fam. CORACIIDA, Bill large, wide at the base, more or less curved and the tip hooked. Legs and toes covered with strong scuta. Sternum with two emarginations of variable depth in the posterior margin. Plumage gay, especially on the wing ; feathers of the body with an axillary plume, PCA RA A. CORACIID. Subfam. CORACIIN @. Bill variable in length and width. Wings moderately long. ‘Tarsus shorter than the middle toe. Genus CORACIAS. Bill long, broad, and high at the base, from which the culmen is gradually curved to the tip, which is bent down. Nostrils basal, oval, and oblique; gape armed with short strong bristles. Wings long, the 3rd and 4th quills subequal and longest, the Ist longer than the 6th. Tail moderately even. Legs and feet robust. Tarsus subequal to the outer toe, and covered, as well as the toes, with strong transverse scales ; inner toe much shorter than the outer, and slightly exceeding the hind one ; claws strong, moderately straight. CORACIAS INDICA. (THE INDIAN ROLLER.) Coracias indica, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 159 (1766); Gmelin, Syst. Nat. i. p. 378 (1788) ; Sykes, Cat. Birds Deccan, J. A. S. B. 1834, iii. p. 541; Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 51 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 118 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 171; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. 1. Co. p. 571 (1856-8) ; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 214 (1862); Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 423; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 103 (1873); id. Str. Feath. 1873, p. 167; Butler, ibid. 1875, p. 456; Morgan, Ibis, 1875, p. 314 ; Bourdillon, Str. F. 1876, p. 882; Fairbank, ibid. 1877, p. 394. Coracias bengalensis, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 159 (1766). a Garrulus nevius, Vieill. N. Dict. d’Hist. Nat. xxix. p. 431 (1819). Rollier de Mindano, Buffon, Pl. Enl. pl. 285; Blue Jay from East Indies, Edwards, Glean. pl. 526 (1764); Blue Jay or Jay, Europeans in India and Ceylon. Subzak, lit. “Greenish bird;” also Nilkant, lit. ‘“‘ Blue Throat,” Hind.; Zas, Mahratta ; Pala pitta, lit. Milk-bird,” Tel. ; HKatta-kade, Tamul; Towe, Mahri (Jerdon). Doong-kowluwa, lit. “ Smoke-bird,” Sinhalese ; Panang karda, Tamils, North Ceylon; also Kotta-killi, lit. “* Palmyra-Parrot,” apud Layard. Adult male and female. Length 12°5 to 13-2 inches; wing 6-9 to 7:1; tail 4-6 to 4:9; tarsus 0°9 to 1:0; middle toe 1:0, its claw (straight) 0-38 ; bill to gape 1:8 to 2:1, The bill appears to vary in length without regard to size. Male. Iris grey or yellowish grey, with a rufescent brown inner circle, orbital skin and eyelid dull orange-yellow ; bill black or blackish, paling to reddish at base beneath ; legs and feet olivaceous yellow or smoky yellow, claws brownish. 20 282 CORACIAS INDICA. Head dusky bluish green, brightening above and behind the eye to turquoise-blue; above the nostril the forehead is greyish yellow, with a tinge of violet in some ; lower hind neck, interseapular region, and scapulars dull brownish green, separated from the blue of the nape by a vinous collar ; lower back cerulean blue ; upper tail-coyerts, base and terminal portion of all but centre rectrices, least wing-coverts, greater part of primaries, and terminal half of secondaries deep violet-blue, with a brilliant cobalt lustre close to the shafts and at the edge of the wing-coverts ; central rectrices dusky green, with a blue wash at base; a broad band across the remaining rectrices, another across the six outer primaries, primary-coverts, and bases of secondaries pale cerulean blue. Lores tawny brown; beneath the eye and the ear-coverts vinous-brown, with whitish mesial streaks ; throat and chest pale greyish vinous, the feathers with mesial buff lines, and broadly margined on the fore neck and upper part of chest with purple-violet ; beneath, from the chest, with the under wing, pale greenish blue. Young. Iris brown, the grey outer portion in the adult reduced to a narrow ring; this latter increases with age very gradually, imparting considerable variation to the eye; bill blackish brown, pale or reddish at the base beneath ; tarsus slightly tinted with olivaceous ; gape yellowish. Head and back duskier than in the adult ; forehead with more of the pale colour; band across hind neck fawn ; lesser wing-coyerts (in the nestling) almost concolorous with the back; chin and throat paler than in the adult, the purplish lilac on the latter faint. Obs. Ceylonese examples average, I think, smaller than Indian. Two of the latter from Kamptee measure 7-1 inches in the wing; another 7-4—the former being the maximum limit (according to my experience) of the insular bird. The lilac tints show considerable variation in continental as well as in Ceylonese specimens, the depth of tint depending on age. Distribution.—The Roller has a peculiarly local distribution in Ceylon, dwelling in the dry portions of the island, and migrating to the damp district of the west chiefly during the dry season (N.E monsoon). Its head-quarters may be said to be the Jaffna peninsula, the open portions of the northern sea-board, and certain parts of the interior of the Northern and N.W. Provinces. In these districts it is common in many places and absent from others. Neither Mr. Holdsworth nor myself observed it in the Aripu district, but on the adjacent island of Manaar it occurs. To the south of the jungles bordering the coast of the Bay of Kalpentyn it is not uncommon. I have seen it in the Kalpentyn peninsula itself, and about Puttalam and Chilaw it is a well-known bird. It is a resident as far south as Madampe, and likewise in the region between that and Kurunegala ; but below this line it occurs chiefly as a straggler between the months of October and March. In this season it may often be seen about Veangodde and Ambepussa, and I have procured it in the Hewagam Korale, a little to the south of Colombo, in July. I doubt, however, if it resides in that district. I have never seen or heard of it to the south of the Kaluganga, nor did I meet with it in the very likely country between Haputale and Hambantota. It may occur in the Eastern Province, but I have no infor- mation to that effect. In the Trincomalie district it is now and then seen from December to February ; but a little inland, about Ratmalie, it is common enough. Eastward of this point, through the centre of the island, it musters, as above remarked, strongly, confining itself, of course, to open districts, fields surrounded by the village tanks, and dried-up paddy-land. Even here, however, it is local; for although it is common near Hurullé, I have never seen it about Haborenna, which is separated from the former place by a tract of forest. It has been found now and then in the valley of Dumbara, but I do not know that it occurs elsewhere in the Kandyan country. On the mainland this species is found throughout nearly all India, from the extreme south to the Himalayas ; it does not extend into Burmah, being there replaced by the closely-allied race C. affinis. The two forms blend into one another in such a gradual manner that it is difficult to say where indica ends and affinis begins. Mr. Hume remarks of Mr. Inglis’s specimens from N.E. Cachar, that “they are not very typical, but that they are nearer to typical affinis than to indica.”’ Its range is not by any means so limited towards the north-west ; for in that direction it extends through Persia to Asia Minor, mingling thus with its European ally C. garrula. Mr. Danford observed it in Asia Minor at the base of the Aladagh mountains ; and Messrs. Sclater and Taylor haye seen a specimen in the Museum of the American College at Constantinople which was shot on the Asiatic side of the Bosphorus. CORACIAS INDICA. 283 Returning to India we find that it is a seasonal visitant to some parts of the country, perhaps avoiding the extreme temperature of the hot season. It is said to leave the Deccan about the middle of April; and Captain Butler notices that it quits the hills at Aboo during the hot season, although the singular fact is testified to that it remains in the plains at that time. In the wooded and cultivated portions of Sindh, Mr. Hume observes that it is common, but absent from the desert tracts; he further remarks that it is in the Terai between Darjiling and in Eastern Bengal that the two races indica and affinis first commence to intermix. Habits.—In Ceylon the “ Jay” is found in open compounds, cocoanut-groves, tobacco-fields, waste scrubby land, grass-fields near the borders of tanks, and also newly cleared spaces in the forest. It perches on some bare tree, fence, or other prominent object, and sallies out after insects, which it captures cleverly on the wing, either returning to its original post or taking up another close by to devour its quarry. It is fond of perching on cocoanut-fronds, and in the Jaffna district often selects the lofty well-whips used to draw the water for irrigating the native tobacco, and presents a striking appearance with its head drawn into its shoulders aud its bright plumage glistening in the sun. It is generally difficult of approach, flying from one fence or stump to another before one can get within shot of it; and when fired at, if not hit, flies off, mounting above the tree-tops and rolling from side to side in its course as if it had a difficulty in balancing itself on the wing. However much it is alarmed it generally returns to the field from. which it has been chased, making a wide detour and reappearing perhaps at the opposite end from that at which it left. When the ripe paddy has been cut in the fields round the village tanks the Roller is sure to be seen taking his part in the harvest-making, which consists in consuming as many of the newly exposed terrestrial insects as it can, and flying in the meanwhile from one haycock to the other. Grasshoppers and beetles at such times form its chief diet. Its harsh cry is often uttered when it has been shot at and wounded, it being one of the few birds I have ever met possessed of this singular habit. Its flight is performed with vigorous flappings of the wings, the points of which appear almost to meet beneath its body while it turns or rolls about in that strange manner which has acquired for it its peculiar name. It variesits course in the air by darting off sometimes at right angles to the origial direction and then almost tumbling over in rapidly descending to the ground. These extraordinary evolutions it performs to some purpose when flown at by the Turumti, or Red-headed Merlin, mention of which I have already made at page 112. Jerdon has some interesting notes on this handsome bird which I subjoin here. He writes, in his ‘ Birds of India’ :—‘‘ It is often caught by a contrivance called the chou-gaddi. This consists of two thin pieces of cane or bamboo bent down at right angles to each other to form a semicircle and tied in the centre. To the middle of this the bait is tied, usually a mole-cricket, sometimes a small field-mouse (Mus /epidus). The bait is just allowed tether enough to move about in a small circle. The cane is previously smeared with bird-lime, and it is placed on the ground not far from the tree where the bird is perched. On spying the insect moving about down swoops the Roller, seizes the bait, and on raising its wings to start back one or both are certain to be caught by the viscid bird-lime. By means of this very simple contrivance many birds that descend to the ground to capture insects are taken, as the King-Crows (Dicrur?), Common Shrikes, some Thrushes, Flycatchers, and even large Kingfishers (Halcyon) . . “The Nilkant is sacred to Siva, who assumed its form; and at the feast of the Dasseragh, at Nagpore, one or more used to be liberated by the Rajah, amidst the firing of cannon and musketry, at a grand parade attended by all the officers of the station. “ Buchanan Hamilton states that before the Durga Puja the Hindoos of Calcutta purchased one of these birds, and at the time when they threw the image of Durga into the river, set the Nédkant at liberty. It is considered propitious to see it on this day, and those who cannot afford to buy one discharge their matchlocks to put it on the wing. The Telugu name of the Roller, signifying Milk-bird, is given because it is supposed that when a cow gives little milk if a few of the feathers of this bird are chopped up and given along with grass to the cow the quantity will greatly increase. It is one of the birds on whose movements many omens depend. If it cross a traveller just after shooting it is considered a bad omen.” The Roller is very tenacious of life, requiring a large amount of hitting before coming to earth. 202 a 284 CORACIAS INDICA. Nidification.—In Ceylon the Roller breeds from January until June, chiefly rearing its young about March. It nests in holes in trees, one which Mr. Parker found being situated in a palm-tree, and con- tained 3 white eggs, much resembling those of Halcyon smyrnensis. Myr. Hume writes :—‘“‘ They build in hollow trees, in old walls, in roofs, or under the eaves of bungalows ; they sometimes make a good deal of a nest of feathers, grass, &c., especially when the site they choose is not well closed in; but when they build in a small-mouthed hole there is usually a very scanty linmg. I have found the nest in a large niche in an old wall, in which the birds had contracted the entrance with masses of torn vegetable fibre and old rags ; but this is quite exceptional; and, again, I have taken the eggs from a hole in a Siris-tree, in which there was not the slightest hning beyond a few fragments of decayed wood. I have never found more than five eggs in any nest, and four I take to be the normal number . . . . The eggs are very broad ovals, in some instances almost spherical and like those of the Bee-eater’s ; they are of the purest china-white and highly glossy. The average of a large series of measurements is 1°3 by 1-06 inch.” Genus EURYSTOMUS. Bill very broad at the gape, shorter than the last, much curved, abruptly so at the tip. Nostrils oblique and narrow ; rictal bristles absent. Wings longer than in the last genus; 2nd quill the longest, the Ist slightly shorter. Feet differing from those of Coracias by having the outer toe slightly joined at the base to the middle one. EURYSTOMUS ORIENTALIS. (THE INDIAN BROAD-BILLED ROLLER.) Coracias orientalis, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 159 (1766). Eurystomus orientalis, Steph. Gen. Zool. xiii. p. 99 (1826); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. no. 220, p. 51 (1849); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 171; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. no. 148, p. 121 (1854); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 219 (1862); Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 423; Hume, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 164; Morgan, ibid. p. 551; Bourdillon, ibid. 1876, p. 382. Eurystomus cyanicollis, Vieill. N. Dict. @ Hist. Nat. xxix. p. 425 (1816). The Oriental Roller (Horsfield); Tiong Batu, Sumatra (Raffles) ; Tihong Lampay, Malay. Adult male and female. Length (from skin) 11:0 to 12-0 inches ; wing 7-2 to 7:5; tail 3°7 to 3-9; tarsus 0-75; middle toe 0°85, claw (straight) 0°35 ; bill to gape 1-5. The above are from 3 Ceylonese examples. A Nepaul bird in the British Museum measures, wing 7:4 inches; another from Labuan, wing 7°3 inches. Tris hazel-brown ; bill deep orange-red, the tip of the upper mandible red; orbital skin red; tarsi and feet orange- red; feet duskier than the tarsus. Head, face, and chin brown, darker in some adults than in others, and slightly suffused with greenish on the nape, which passes into the opaque leaf-green of the hind neck, back, least wing-coverts, tertials, and rump ; median and greater wing-coyerts greenish blue, blending into the duller hue of the lesser coverts ; primary-coverts, primaries. and secondaries black, washed on the outer webs and on the inner just inside the shaft with ultramarine ; a broad band of pallid cerulean blue extending from the inner web of the 1st primary to the outer web of the 7th, and tinging the surrounding ultramarine at the point of contact; tail black, the feathers washed with ultramarine at the edges, and the reverse ‘part beneath, except near the tip, blue; centre of the throat cerulean blue, blending into the obscure greenish blue of the fore neck and under surface ; the centre of the breast and abdomen verditer- blue ; under wing-coverts concolorous with the breast. The above description is from Ceylonese examples. One from Nepal has the head and hind neck darker, and the blue colour of the breast not so bright ; another is very similar to the Ceylonese birds, but has the back and wings more sombre, the wing-bar smaller (its hue spreading down the outer edges of the quills in the form of an edging), and the under surface much greener. Young. Mr. Hume writes of the immature bird that the bill, which is much smaller than in the adult, is almost black, with the gonys pale orange, which gradually deepens in colour with the age of the bird and spreads over the whole mandible, the upper mandible becoming reddish black, after which the orange hue spreads from the gape over the whole upper mandible except the tip. An example which I have examined from the Andamans is paler on the head and neck than an adult ; the feathers of the upper surface are slightly pale-edged ; chin and along the base of the under mandible brown; a portion of the throat tinged with hyacinth-blue, the rest greenish blue, and the feathers pale-tipped, with a faint tinge of the hyacinth hue on the centres of many. The under parts are paler than in the adult, and the feathers of the chest tipped with a light colour. Obs. This is a variable species in colour, which character is no doubt due to the age of respective individuals: one example from Labuan corresponds with Ceylonese and Indian ones; it is slightly more nigrescent on the hind neck and interscapulars, and the blue of the throat is more extensive. Another from the island of Negros and one from Java are also not to be separated. ; Eurystomus pacificus, of which I haye examined specimens in the national collection from Ceram and the Sula Islands, is closely allied to Z. orientalis. The wings of three specimens measure 78, 7°8, and 7°5 inches respectively. The upper surface is greener, the under parts paler, and the throat less coloured with blue than in £. orientalis ; the basal outer margins of the tail-feathers are tinged with greenish blue. A Sula-Island individual, however, has 286 EURYSTOMUS ORIENTALIS. the threat quite as blue as a Ceylonese ; and a Pinang example has a slight inclination towards the greenish edging of the caudal feathers. It would seem that there are connecting-links between the two species. Distribution. —This handsome Roller is, almost without exception, the rarest resident form in Ceylon. T conclude that it és resident, as the only two specimens I have ever met with, and both of which I failed m shooting, were seen during the south-west monsoon. Oue was at Maha-oya, on the new Batticaloa Road, and the other in Mr. Chas. de Soyza’s timber-forest at Kuruwite, near Ratnapura. _ Layard remarks that but three specimens fell under his notice, one of which he killed in the Pasdun Korale, and the other two near Gilly- mally. In the British Museum is an example from the collection of Mr. Cuming ; but the precise locality is not stated. Another example was shot some years ago near Kandy, and preserved by Messrs. Whyte and Co. In addition to these instances of its capture I am indebted to Mr. Delaney, of the Kirimattie Estate, near Kadugannawa, for an account of three or four birds which visited the neighbourhood of his bungalow for several days at the close of 1875, and after remaining about some tall trees, disappeared again; from his description of these visitors, and observations which he made on their habits, they must have belonged to the present species. In Southern India it appears to make its appearance in certain localities and then disappear again. Mr. R. W. Morgan says that it is by no means rare in the Malabar forests, and he procured several specimens at Nellumbore. Captain Vipan observed it near the foot of the Carcoor Ghat of the Nilghiris ; Mr. Bourdillon remarks that it is nowhere abundant in the Travancore hills, and that it is, he thinks, only a visitor; he has observed it “in August, durmg the winter months, in April, and as late as May.” Regarding its distribution in the northern parts of India and elsewhere, Jerdon writes (/oc. cit.) that ‘(it is found at the base of the Himalayas in Lower Bengal, Assam, and the Burmese countries, extending to Malayana and China;” and he further remarks that it is said to visit Central India in the cold weather. In Cachar, Mr. Inglis says it is not uncommon and is a resident in that district; Mr. Oates records one specimen as being brought to him from the Arrakan hills, and remarks that it occurs rarely in Pegu. From Tenasserim Mr. Hume notices it as procured by Mr. Davison ; this gentleman writes to Mr. Hume that in the Andamans it is comparatively common about Fort Mouat, Mount Harriet, and other wooded places; it has also been procured about Port Blair from December until April. I have already remarked that specimens are in the British Museum from Pinang, Java, and Labuan, and there is likewise an example from Negros, in the Philippines, which I cannot separate from Indian. It is said to occur in Sumatra. Concerning Chinese individuals, the late Mr. Swinhoe writes (“ Cat. Chinese Birds,’ P.Z.S. 1871, p. 347) that they do not agree quite with specimens from Java, India, and Lombok ; and therefore they are, as suggested by Blyth, referable to the nearly allied E. pacificus. Habits.—On both occasions that I met with this species, it was frequenting lofty dead trees, on the outer- most branches of which it was perched. On the Maha-oya, the individual which I attempted to shoot flew out of the tree and returned at once to its perch, which, being at the top of an enormous tree, was beyond the range of my shot, and on my firing a second time it flew off into the forest. In the distance it has the appearance of a short-tailed Nightjar when perched, its short neck and broad bill giving it a curious outline. Its flight has the same peculiar swerving or rolling character as that of the last genus, but in a modified degree. Layard shot all his specimens in the act of tearing away the decayed wood round holes in trees; they clung to the bark after the manner of Woodpeckers, and were probably seeking a situation to nest in; he found their stomachs full of wood-boring Coleoptera, swallowed whole, and he observed that they beat their food against the bark before swallowing it. It is entirely a forest species, and is only found in regions which are well-wooded throughout. Mr. Morgan writes that in the Malabar forests it may frequently be seen perched on a lofty bamboo in the neighbourhood of some forest-stream, and that it’is an exceedingly silent bird, sitting for hours together on a twig, occasionally taking ashort flight after some passing insect, but almost invariably, unless disturbed, returning to the same perch. Blyth had one, which he kept in confinement for some time, and which displayed the somewhat abnormal propensity of eating plaintains ; it devoured” them eagerly, and would fly to him for one when he had it in his hand. The experience of Messrs. Motley and Dillwyn of it in the Malay Islands was that it is a most active and lively bird, haunting very tall jungle in parties of five or six EURYSTOMUS ORIENTALIS. 287 together ; these fly rapidly im large circles with quick strokes of the wing, like Woodpeckers, frequently swooping down upon one another with loud chattering. When perched, their note is a single, full, deep-toned whistle, or something between that and the sound “you”? when uttered with forcible expulsion of the breath. Its mode of flight, when executing these circular mancuvres, must be somewhat abnormal, for any thing less like those of a Woodpecker than its actions when ordinarily on the wing cannot be imagined ! Nidification—My. Bourdillon has lately had the good fortune to discover this interesting bird breeding in Travancore. Mention is made of this occurrence by him in his interesting paper on the birds of the Travancore Hills; and I am indebted to Mr. Hume for the following account written to him by Mr. Bourdillon for publication in the revised edition of ‘ Nests and Eges of Indian Birds ’?:— “On March 17th I was attracted by hearing the chattering of a pair of these Rollers. On going to the spot I found them engaged in ejecting from a hole im a Vedu-pla stump (Cullenia excelsa), about 40 feet from the ground, a pair of our Hill-Mynahs (Hulabes religiosa). One of the Rollers was in the mouth of the hole, and enlarging it by tearing away with its beak the soft rotten wood. The other Roller, seated on a tree close by, was doing most of the chattering, making an occasional swoop at the Mynahs whenever they ventured too close. I watched the birds for some time, until the Mynahs went off and there and then began building in a ‘Pinney ’-tree (Calophyllum elatum) within the distance of 100 yards. Ten days after I sent for some hill- men (‘ Khanirs,’ we call them here), who managed to ascend by tying-up sticks with strips of cane, in the way that they erect ladders to obtain the wild honey from the tallest trees in the forest. It was past six o’clock in the evening before the Khanir reached the hole in which the birds had bred. He found not the slightest vestige of a nest, but a few chips of rotten wood, upon which were laid the three eggs. These I found to be slightly set. While the man was climbing the tree, the birds behaved in a very ridiculous and excited manner. Seated side by side on a bough, they alternately jerked head and tail, keeping up an incessant noisy chatter, and as the crisis approached, and the man drew nearer their property, they dashed repeatedly at his head. “ After the eggs were taken, the birds disappeared for about a fortnight, but returned, and, I believe, laid again in the same position. I did not molest them this time, wishing to get the young. Unfortunately I had to leave home, and on my return I found the birds, old and young, had disappeared.” Mr. Hume writes :—“ Eggs of this species, sent me from Mynall by Mr. Bourdillon, closely resemble those of the Indian Roller, but are somewhat larger, though not quite so large as those of the European Roller. They are very broad ovals, pure white, and faintly glossy. «The specimens I have vary in length from 1°34 to 1:42 ich, and in width from 1:14 to 1:16.” Fam. ALCEDINID. Bill long, straight, conical, and very acute at the tip; gape wide and smooth. Wings with 10 primaries. Tail short. Legs and feet small; the toes syndactyle, the inner one sometimes wanting ; soles broad and flat. Sternum with two emarginations on the posterior edge. Head large. ‘Tongue diminutive. PICA RIA, ALCEDINID. Subfam. ALCEDININE. Bill long, compressed, with the culmen keeled and the gonys straight. Wings reaching, when closed, beyond the middle of the tail; the Ist quill longer than the 5th. ‘Tail moderate or short. Legs and feet small. Tarsus hardly longer than the inner toe; outer toe nearly as long as the middle, and united to it as far as the last joint; inner toe united to middle as far as the first joint. Genus CERYLE. Bill typically long, very straight, the culmen scarcely bent towards the tip, flattened above, with a well-pronounced groove adjacent to it; gonys very long and straight; gape angulated. Nostrils linear and oblique. Wings moderate; the 2nd and 3rd quills subequal and longest, and the 4th considerably longer than the Ist. Tail moderately long, about equal to the bill from tip to the gape, even at the tip. ‘Tibia bare above the knee. ‘Tarsus smooth, very short, much Jess than the middle toe ; feet with a broad sole. Outer toe nearly as long as the middle, and joined to it as far as the last joint; inner toe much shorter, and joined to the middle as far as the Ist joint ; hind toe very short. CERYLE RUDIS. (THE PIED KINGFISHER.) Alcedo rudis, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 181 (1766); Sykes, P. Z. S. 1832, p. 84; Gould, B. of Eur. pl. 62 (1857). Ceryle rudis, Boie, Isis, 1828, p. 816; Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 49 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 119 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 172; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 131 (1854); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 232 (1862); Layard, B. of S. Africa, p. 67 (1867); Tristram, Ibis, 1866, p. 84;. Sharpe, Monog. Alced. pl. 19 (1868-71); Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 424; Shelley, B. of Egypt, p. 167 (1872); Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 109 (1873); Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 14, et 1875, p. 282; Hume, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 52. Ispida rudis, Jerd. Madr. Journ. 1840, p. 232. Ceryle varia, Strickl. Ann, & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1837, vi. p. 418. Ispida bitorquata, Swains. Classif. B. p. 336 (1827). Ceryle leucomelanura, Reichenbach, Handb. Alced. p. 21, pl. 309. fig. 3488 (1851). The Black-and-white Kingfisher, Edwards, pl. 9; Kelaart, Prodromus. Martin Pécheur noir et blane de Sénégal, Button, Pl. Enl, 62. CERYLE RUDIS. 289 Korayala kilkila, lit. ‘Spotted Kingfisher,” Hind.; Phutka match-ranga and Karikata, Beng. (Jerdon) ; To-he-haw, lit. “ Fishing Tiger” (Swinhoe). Pelihudwwa, Waturanuwa, Gomera pelihuduwa, Sinhalese. Adult male and female. Length 11°5 to 11°75 inches ; wing 5:3 to 5-6; tail3-0; tarsus 0-4 to 0-45; middle toe 0°6, its claw (straight) 0°35; hind toe 0-25; bill to gape 2°8 to 3-0, at front 0-23. Females average slightly larger than males. Iris brown; bill black, the tip somewhat pale; legs and feet blackish, soles paler. Adult male. Head, nape, terminal portions of the back, rump, and wing-covert feathers, primaries, and secondaries, central portion of tail, cheeks, a broad band across the chest (sometimes complete, at others interrupted in the centre), and another narrower one across the breast black; a broad patch above the lores continued as a super- cilium to the nape, basal half and tip of tail, basal portion of the primaries and secondaries, the inner webs and tips of the latter, lateral margins of the crown and nape-feathers, the tips of the back, scapular, and wing-coyert feathers, the major portion of the median wing-coverts, and the entire under surface with the under tail- and under wing-coverts pure white ; edge of Ist primary likewise white ; the lower plumage with a silky texture; the fore- head more or less uniform black ; a few fine black streaks on the white of the lower part of cheeks; a patch of feathers at each side of the belly, with large black subterminal markings. Female. Differs from the male in wanting the lower or breast-band of black, and in having the upper broad chest- band interrupted in the centre. The extent of the white edgings on the upper surface is variable in both sexes, and the older the bird the greater the gap in the breast-band of the female. Young. Iris pale brown; bill reddish black, with a considerable portion of the tips yellowish white; legs and feet brown. Very similar to adults, but with more white perhaps about the back of the neck; the feathers of the back more deeply tipped, and the wing-coverts and outer webs of the secondaries more marked with white. In the female, the chest-band is rather narrow and complete, dividing in the centre more and more as the bird grows older ; in the male it is very broad, and likewise uninterrupted in the centre; more of the feathers of the lower flanks are spotted with black than in the adult. As considerable confusion has existed concerning the pectoral bands in the two sexes, I have noted the above peculiarities from a male and female nestling, able to fly, taken from the same nest. Obs. Mr. Hume observes that in India females are larger than males; Ceylonese examples correspond in size with those from the mainland. Four females in the national collection measure as follows :—(1) wing 5:6, bill to gape 3-0 (Assam); (2) wing 5-4, bill to gape 2°38 (Kamptee) ; (8) wing 5°6, bill to gape 2°85; (4) wing 5:5, bill to gape 2°55. Four males :—(1) wing 5-2, bill to gape 2°7 ; (2) wing 5-4, bill to gape 2°95 ; (3) wing 5:5, bill to gape 2°85; (4) wing 5:45, bill to gape 2°85. The fourth female example is exceptionally short in the bill. The white of the primaries appears, as a rule, to approach nearer the tips of the feathers than in Ceylonese specimens that I have examined ; in one Indian example it is 13 from the tip of the first quill, while in Ceylonese it varies from 2-0 to 15 inch from it. I also observe that the heads of the specimens above enumerated are more conspicuously striated with white; but this, as I have remarked with regard to Ceylonese examples, is variable. Reichenbach separated the Ceylon Ceryle as C. leucomelanura, on account of what he stated to be a large roundish spot under the shoulder, and of the band on the outer tail-feathers being divided into two parts: the first characteristic is nothing more than the incomplete breast-band in the female; and with regard to the second feature, this band will be found to be more or less divided in specimens from all districts ; in scarcely any two examples are these feathers the same. A Mesopotamian female example measures 5:7 in the wing, another from Knysna, South Africa, the same, and one from Egypt 5°65. Western-Assam and African birds would seem, therefore, to be larger than Ceylonese. Distribution.—The Black-and-White Kingfisher is more or less common throughout the whole sea-board, and in the northern half of the island its range extends inland to the great tanks, such as Kanthelai, Minery, Topare, &c., where it is tolerably frequent. In the Western Province it is found on the Kaluganga, and on the Bolgodde and Pantura lakes, the Negombo and Puttalam Canal, and other waters which are surrounded with open land. It is likewise common on the Gindurah and other large rivers in the south, keeping chiefly to those parts which flow through cultivated districts. On all the leways and salt lakes of the south-east and 2P 290 CERYLE RUDIS. round the whole of the east and north coasts it is common; on the Batticaloa lakes it is especially numerous. I have not observed it on any waters near the base of the hill-zone, nor have I any testimony of its having ever been procured in Dumbara or in other valleys in the upland. This is the most widely-distributed of any Kingfisher, being found throughout the greater part of the continents of Asia and Africa. Commencing with India, we find it recorded by all observers as common in all open and well-watered districts, be they inland or skirting the shores of the peninsula. It is plentiful in the south, in the Deccan, in Chota Nagpur, and lower Bengal, but locally rare about the Sambhur Lake and in Rajpootana, though very abundant further east in Sindh ; it extends to the base of the Himalayas, but does not ascend above the low country, as is the case in South India. Eastward of India it is found throughout Burmah and Tenasserim, extending thence into Siam and northwards into China, in some parts of which it is plentiful and in others rare. Of the latter localities Mr. Swinhoe cites Ningpo as one ; on the Yangtsze, according to him, it does not occur below Szechuen, and this river seems to be its northernmost limit in China. Capt. Blakiston, however, records it from Hakodadi in Northern Japan. Turning westwards from India, we find Canon Tristram speaking of it as the commonest and most conspicuous Kingfisher im Palestine, being parti- cularly abundant about Tyre and Sidon, along the shore to Mount Carmel, on the Jordan, and on the lake of Gennesarct. In Asia Minor, Mr. Durnford observed it at the waterfalls of the Cydnus, On the sister continent of Africa it is equally well distributed : Captain Shelley and Mr. E. C. Taylor have it as common in Nubia and Egypt; but Mr. Drake does not seem to have observed it in Morocco. On the Gold Coast, again, Captain Shelley with Mr. Buckley met with it, and Governor Ussher writes of it as very common in Fantee generally, and it literally swarms on the river Volta. Messrs. Layard, Shelley, and Buckley all record it from South Africa—the latter gentleman mentioning it as pretty common in Natal, but much more so in the north of the Transvaal. As regards Europe, Degland recorded it from Spain; but Mr. Saunders says that he has no authentic information of its occurrence there. Malherbe records it from Sicily. Lindermayer, as quoted by Mr. Sharpe, observes, in his ‘ Birds of Greece,’ that it is found on the islands of Thermia and Mykone, and that Erhardt includes it as a summer visitant to the Cyclades. Demidoff says that it is confined, as regards the Black Sea, to the Sea of Marmora, not being found on the northern coast of the Euxine. Habits.—This interesting Kingfisher is not particular in its choice of position, provided a plentiful supply of fish exists to tempt its clever fishing-powers ; it certainly avoids rivers and water in forest-country, but otherwise it is equally at home on freshwater tanks or lakes, the half-dried leway, the broad and brackish estuary, the meadow-lined river or winding canal, the salt lagoon or land-locked bay, or even, in some parts of the world, the foaming shore. Although found in all such situations in Ceylon, it is, I think, most partial to brackish lagoons or backwaters, whereon it is a most persevering fisher, perching on stakes driven in to assist in laying nets or to mark the road across the shallows, or seating itself on some outstanding rock ; thus it is to be seen flymg about in the blazing noonday heat when scarcely another bird is abroad, and patiently hovering with downward-pointed bill about 50 feet in the air over some “ fishy” spot, until with a sudden plunge it captures its well-earned prey and makes off to its favourite perch. It is generally in pairs and is most wary and watchful in its nature, starting off long before it is observed, and flying straight away to a place of safety ; but when not alarmed it is constantly on the wing, flying up and down in a restless manner, and uttering its querulous quick-repeated note generally while on the wing. In addition to being so shy, it is a bird which is exceedingly tenacious of life, flying away more or less no matter how hard it is hit, and even when picked up exhausted from its wounds is hard to deprive of life. It darts invariably on its food from the wing, and descends perpendicularly and not in a slanting direction like other Kingfishers. Governor Ussher has seen them “ hawking over the surf, and picking up waifs and strays brought in by the rollers, or now and then pouncing on an unwary fish.” On the shores of the Holy Land, to which these birds resort in immense numbers in winter, Canon Tristram observed them “hovering by dozens over the sea about a hundred yards from the land, and occasionally perching with loud cries on an outlying rock. . .... During the most stormy gales of winter they continue, regardless of the weather, to hover over the breakers, ever and anon dashing down into the surf, and apparently diving to the bottom for their prey.” I haye observed them hover three CERYLE RUDIS. 291 successive times without flying back to their perch ; but they usually settle down again after making a plunge, from which they do not often return empty-mouthed. Nidification—Throughout the northern countries included in its geographical range this Kingfisher breeds in March, April, and May. In the former month I found it nesting in Ceylon in the earthy or alluvial banks of the Gindurah: the nest was situated about 3 feet from the entrance of the hole, which was about 4 inches in diameter; the eggs were deposited in a cavity of some 7 or 8 inches in diameter. As a rule grass is found on the floor of the chamber ; and Canon Tristram speaks of finding an “abundantly heaped nest of grass and weeds” in all that he dug out in Palestine ; bones, however, do not seem to be used, although by the time the young leave the nest it is a mass of such, the refuse of the large supply of food brought for their sustenance. Captain Marshall, as quoted by Mr. Hume (loc. cit.), notices a singular feature in this bird’s economy, viz. that it is sometimes a gregarious breeder; he speaks of finding a hole leading to a sort of cavern about 3 feet across which was plentifully strewn with grass and rubbish and contained eggs in different corners. The number of eggs is usually four, but sometimes six; they are, of course, white and glossy, some- times nearly spheroid and at others pointed at one end; they average, says Mr. Hume, 1:15 by 0°92 inch. Mr. Blewitt witnessed these birds constructing the hole leading to their nest, and writes as follows :— “They alternately relieved each other at the work, and when tired sat together some short distance off for a few minutes.” When the young first leave the nest they sit together on the bank near at hand, while the old birds bring them food; this I have observed in the meadows bordering the Gindurah river. In South Africa, where the seasons are opposite to ours, it breeds at the end of the year. Layard found its nest in November, and says that it was composed entirely of fish-bones and scales. Genus ALCEDO. Bill not so straight as in the last, the culmen perceptibly curved from the base, not flattened above, compressed throughout; the groove slightly developed. Nostrils oblique and nearer the commissure than in Ceryle. Wings moderately rounded; the 2nd and 3rd quills subequal and longest; the 4th shorter and slightly exceeding the Ist. Tail very short and rounded at the tip. Legs and feet as in Ceryle, the hind toe longer in proportion to the inner. iw) " bo ALCEDO BENGALENSIS, (LITTLE INDIAN KINGFISHER.) Alcedo bengalensis, Gm, Syst. Nat. i. p. 450 (1788) ; Kittl. Kupf. Vég. pl. 29 (1852) ; Sykes, P. Z. S. 1832, p. 84; Jerd. Madr. Journ. 1840, p. 231; Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 49 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 119 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 172; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 129 (1854); Temm. & Schl. Faun. Jap. Av. pl. 38 (1850); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 230 (1862); Sharpe, Mon. Alced. pl. 2, p. 11 (1868-71); Holdsworth, P. Z.S. 1872, p. 424; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 107 (1875); id. Str. Feath. 1873, p. 168, et 1875, p. 173; Ball, ibid. p. 887; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 14; Oates, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 52; Butler, ibid. p. 456; Armstrong, ibid. 1876, p. 307; Inglis, ibid. 1877, p. 19. Alcedo minor, Schl. Mus. P.-B. Alced. p. 7 (1863). Alcedo japonica, Bonap. Consp. Vol. Anis. p. 10 (1854). The Little Blue Kingfisher of some; The Common Indian Kingfisher, Jerdon ; “ King of the Shrimps,” China (Swinhoe). Chota kilkila, Hind.; Chota match-ranga, Beng. ; Nila buché gadu, Telugu; Ung-chim-pho, Lepch. ; Garin, natives in Himalayas; To he-dng, lit. “ Fishing Reverence,” or “ the old gentleman that fishes!” Chinese of Amoy (Swinhoe). Mal-pelihuduwa, lit. “ Flower-Kingfisher,” from its bright colours; also Diya pelihuduwa, Sinhalese. Adult male and female. Length 6-0 to 6°3 inches ; wing 2°7 to 2°82; tail 1-2 to 1-4; tarsus 0°3 to 0-4; middle toe and claw 0°67 ; bill to gape 1°72 to 1°95, average length 1-8. Iris deep brown ; bill, upper mandible blackish brown, lower yellow or reddish yellow ; legs and feet coral-red, claws dusky. Some male specimens which I have shot, and which seem fully adult, have the under mandible black, from which it appears that the coloration of this is uncertain. Mr. Armstrong notes it in some Irrawaddy examples as brownish white. Basal portion of feathers of the head, hind neck, and a broad stripe leading from the lower mandible down the sides of the neck blackish brown; the terminal parts of these feathers, together with the tips of the wing-coverts, French blue; seapulars, ground-colour of the wing-coverts, outer webs of the quills, and the tail-feathers duller blue; back, rump, and upper tail-coverts bright cerulean blue (this colour becomes a shining green if held away from the light); inner webs of the primaries and secondaries, and terminal portions of the latter, dark hair- brown; lateral feathers of the ramp and upper tail-coverts cobalt-blue. Lower part of loral region black ; upper part of the same, a broad streak passing over the ears, chest, and under surface, with the under tail- and under wing-coverts orange-rufous ; chin, throat, and a continuation of the ear- stripe white, the latter separated from the throat by the blue cheek- and side-neck stripe; bases of the under- surface feathers white, imparting a non-uniform appearance to the plumage. Young. Bill in some examples (males) with the under mandible black, like the upper, and tipped with whitish ; in a female example which, from the green hue of the blue parts and the state of the organs, appears to be immature it is yellowish. The distribution of the colours in the nestling is the same as in the adult, but the blue tints are greener than when older. This greenish blue is an individual peculiarity, as some immature examples are quite as blue as old birds. Obs. This species is a small race of A. ispida, the European Kingtisher, differing from it in its proportionally longer bill and much less bulky body, although it measures very nearly as much as the latter in the wing. Ceylonese and ALCEDO BENGALENSIS. 298 Indian specimens of A. bengalensis correspond very fairly in size, the balance perhaps being in favour of the latter. The measurements of several from different parts of India, which I have examined in the British Museum, are as follows :—(1) wing 2°95 inches, bill to gape 1:72; (2) wing 2°9, bill to gape 1-82; (3) wing 2:8, bill to gape 1°85 (Assam) ; (4) wing 2°85 (Kamptee). The dimensions of four specimens from the Irrawaddy delta, recorded in ‘ Stray Feathers,’ are :—wing 2°75 to 2°8 inches, bill to gape 1:8 to 2-0, the latter measurement exceeding any that I have note of from Ceylon. Mr. Sharpe, in his exhaustive article in the ‘Monograph of the Alcedinide,’ gives the wing of Central-Asian and Philippine birds as 2:9 inches; and one I have examined from Celebes measures 2°7, bill to gape 1-97, and very stout. Compared with the above dimensions, Mr. Sharpe notes the average size of the wing in A. ispida as from 2°95 to 3-1. An example from Belgium, examined by myself in the national collection, has the wing 2°95, and the bill to gape 1:6; another from England, wing 3-05, and bill to gape 1:95. A Cairo specimen of A. bengalensis has the wing 2°8, bill to gape 2-0, and is referred to this species by Mr. Sharpe purely on account of its length of bill. Im fact the two species grade into one another at the north-west confines of India and throughout the west of Asia to the borders of Europe in such a manner that it would be difficult, from a mere perusal of dimensions, to arrive at a proper identification ; typical specimens of the Indian form are found far to the west and out of its usual habitat, but no typical examples of the European form are found further within the habitat of .A. bengalensis than Sindh. In this latter region Mr. Hume considers the race to be an intermediate one, which averages as large as A. ispida, while the bills are, as a rule, shorter than in either species. He also notes that the birds from the Andamans and Pegu have very short bills. Distribution. —The present species inhabits the whole island of Ceylon, from the sea-coast to the level of the Nuwara-Elhya plain. Wherever there is water, be it the tiny pond resorted to by buffaloes and wild animals in the midst of a parched-up district, or the flooded paddy-field, the lonely tank or forest river, the brackish lagoon, or even the rocky sea-shore, the Little Kingfisher is sure to be found. In the wet districts of the west and south its numbers are greater than in the north and east, but nevertheless in these it congregates in great numbers in those few spots where water is to be found. Every forest-lined river has its pair of Kingfishers at every quarter of a mile, which dwell in the out- spreading branches of the Koombook and Mee-trees, and ever and anon plunge into the trickling stream beneath them. It is common enough in the Central-Province valleys drained by the Mahawelliganga and its affluents, but above 3500 feet becomes tolerably scarce. It finds its way to the Nuwara-Elliya lake up the streams from the Fort-Macdonald patnas; but I have not seen it on the streams between there and the Horton Plains, nor on the source of the Maha Elliya in the plain itself, the rise through forest from Galagama of the latter stream to the level of the plain (about 5600 feet) being too great for the explorations of the Little “ Fisher.” This bird is found all over India, being in nearly all parts the most numerous of its family in the peninsula. It is not frequent in some of the hill-districts of the south, for I observe that neither Mr. Bourdillon nor Mr. Fairbank met with it on the Travancore and Palani hills. It is, however, not uncommon in the Nilghiris, and has been found nesting as high as Ootacamund. It is noted as being very common in the Kandhala district and alsoin Chota Nagpur. Turning to the north-west we find it rare at the Sambhur Lake, common at Mount Aboo and in the Guzerat plains, and very rare again in Sindh, where it is replaced by a larger race as above noticed. It extends north of India into Central Asia and the Amoorland, where Schrenk procured it; and to the westward Mr. Sharpe notes it from Cairo, the Sinaitic peninsula, and Nubia. Canon Tristram, however, only met with A. ispida in Palestine. To the east and south-east of India it has an extensive range, being found in Burmah, Tenasserim, Malacca, the Andamans and Nicobars, Java, Sumatra, Labuan, Borneo, and Celebes, extending northwards again to Formosa, the Loochoo Islands, Eastern China, and Japan. Swinhoe received it from Hakodadi, Northern Japan, which is its most northerly observed limit on the eastern bounds of Asia. The only locality in Sumatra from where I can find it recorded is Lampong, on the south-east coast; but when this vast island has been more explored it will doubtless be found in its western portions, Habits —This tame and watchful little bird passes the entire day in the constant search for its prey ; no bird in Ceylon is more diligent in seeking for the means of existence than this pretty little Kingfisher, which takes up its post on any object over water, and while calling to its mate, who is generally close at hand, executes its curious little gesture of frequently jerking up its head with a combined similar movement of its 294 ALCEDO BENGALENSIS. tail, and darts with an unerring aim on the tiny inhabitants of the pool. It is bold and regardless of man to a degree, not hesitating to seize a fish close to a bystander ; and, indeed, I have more than once seen it take up its quarters over my head while camped on the sandy bed of a forest river, and dash over and over again into the water at my feet. It is possessed of the keenest sight, pouncing often on its prey from a very considerable height above the water. It usually lives in pairs, which dwell together on terms of the greatest sociability ; on one joining its companion the two become quite garrulous for some minutes, uttering in consort their clear piercing little whistle, accompanied by a vigorous bobbing up and down of heads and sundry spasmodic up-jerkings of their tails. The flight of this species is very swift; it flashes past like an arrow, its blue plumage gleaming against the sombre green of the forest, and its clear note often rousing the tired sportsman from his reverie. I have more than once observed it hovering for an instant close to the water, it having suddenly checked itself in its flight, perhaps to observe some fish too deep at the moment to pounce upon. Swinhoe notes the same habit, remarking that it is done close to the surface of the water and not high up after the manner of the last species. Concerning this little bird’s temerity in seizing fish, there is an interesting note in ‘Stray Feathers,’ 1873, by Mr. H. J. Rainey, which shows likewise the occasional rapacity of the Brahminy Kite. This gentleman writes :—‘‘I observed a Brahminy Kite make a rather leisurely swoop at a fish swimming on the surface of the stream ; but when almost within its grasp a King- fisher (4. bengalensis), which had darted down swiftly, carried off the prey. This appears to have infuriated the Kite, and it immediately followed in hot pursuit of the Kingfisher, and after a long and ‘stern’ chase, it eventually succeeded in seizing its unresisting quarry ; holding the screeching bird securely in its talons it bore it to the shore, and after complacently plucking the feathers of its (then still living) victim it set about devouring its flesh with evident satisfaction. On my approaching the spot, soon after the Kite had commenced its savage repast, it flew away, leaving little else than a few bare bones of the Kingfisher” (and, as I should have added, me vowing vengeance against the whole race of Brahminies). Layard speaks of this little Kingfisher being caught in Ceylon by Moormen, who export the skins to China, where they are used for embellishing fans. ‘This trade does not seem to be carried on now. Nidification.—In South, West, and Central Ceylon the breeding-season of this species is from February until June; but in the north I have known it to nest in November. It excavates a hole about 2 feet 6 inches or 3 feet deep in the soft or upper earth of a stream or river-bank, or, in fact, in any situation where such soil exists, for I have found its nest in the sides of the cavities excavated by coolies in making roads and far away from any water. At the end of the hole the little miners scoop a cavity about 6 inches in diameter and deposit frequently a layer of small fish-bones on the earth, on which the eggs are laid. In this its habits are one with those of its European representative. The eggs are said in India to be usually five to seven in number ; three are, however, sometimes laid, as Dr. Holden writes me of finding a nest with three young in Hewahette. They are very round and glossy, and pinky white when unblown, averaging 0°8 by 0°68 inch. One specimen brought to me as the egg of this species, from Baddegama, measured 0°81 by 0°76 inch. Ele © AQ RSC: ALCEDINID. Subfam. HALCYONIN A. Bill shorter, much broader at the base, and less compressed than in the last subfamily ; lower mandible very deep at the gonys-angle, with the gonys ascending in a curve to the tip. Wings more rounded, the Ist quill shorter, and the tips of the primaries not reaching, when closed, to half the length of the tail. Mostly of large size, and, to a great extent, reptile feeders. Genus PELARGOPSIS. Bill very large, stout, the culmen flat and perfectly straight to the tip; groove pronounced and parallel to the ridge. Nostrils slightly advanced, gape angulated ; gonys deep and ascending in a curve to the tip. Wings with the 5rd quill the longest, and the 1st much shorter than the 5th. Tail rather long and even; tibia bare in front above the knee; tarsus stout; toes scutellate, the outer and middle subequal, but the middle claw much longer than the outer; claws deep and expanded at the sides. Of large size. PELARGOPSIS GURIAL (THE INDIAN STORK-BILLED KINGFISHER.) Halcyon gurial, Pearson, J. A. S. B. 1841, x. p. 633; Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 47. no. 200 (1849), et Ibis, 1865, p. 30. Halcyon capensis, Jerd. Madr. Journ. 1840, Cat. no. 245, p. 231; Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p- 118 (1851); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 177; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 14. Halcyon brunniceps, Jerdon, 2nd Suppl. Cat. Madr. Journ. 1844, p. 143. Halcyon leucocephalus, Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 125 (1854); Jerdon, Birds of Ind. i. p. 222. Pelargopsis gurial, Cab. & Heine, Mus. Hein. ii. p. 156 (1860); Sharpe, P. Z.S. 1870, p. 66; id. Mon. Alced. pl. 54 (1868-71); Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 428; Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 275; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 105 (1873); Ball, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 386. The Gurial Kingfisher, Latham, Hist. iv. p. 12; The Cape Kingfisher, Kelaart; Brown- headed Kingfisher, Jerdon; Gurial, Beng.; Alcyone, Portuguese in Ceylon. Maha pelihuduwa, lit. “« Great Kingfisher,” also Waturanuwa, Sinhalese. Adult male. Length 14°75 to 15:3 inches; wing 5°75 to 5:9; tail 3°75 to 40; tarsus 0°7; middle toe 1-0, its claw (straight) 0°42; outer toe 1-0, its claw (straight) 0°3 ; bill to gape 3:6 to 3°75, depth at gonys-angle 0°S. 296 PELARGOPSIS GURIAL. Female. Length 15-0 to 15:3 inches ; wing 6-0 to 6-3; tail 40 to 4-4; tarsus 0-8; bill to gape 3:8. Iris brown, chestnut-brown in some; eyelid dull red; bill arterial blood-red, dusky at tips of both mandibles; inside of mouth coral-red ; legs and feet coral-red, claws dusky. Head and hind neck, including the face and ear-coverts, dull brown, tinged with greenish on the crown and hind neck, which is most perceptible when the feathers are new ; forehead and lores slightly paler ; interscapular region and scapulars dingy bluish green; lesser secondary wing-coverts almost concolorous with the scapulars, while the greater wing-coyerts, outer webs and tips of secondaries, and tertials are dull greenish blue ; primaries and mner webs of secondaries dark glossy brown, the basal portions of the outer webs of the primaries concolorous with the blue of the secondaries, and the terminal portions faintly tinged with blue ; back and rump brilliant pale azure- blue, with a silky lustre; upper tail-coverts bluish green; tail greenish blue, with the inner webs changing into French blue ; shafts deep black. Entire under surface, sides of neck, and a broad nuchal collar just below the lower cap orange-buff, paling to albescent buff on the gorge and chin, and deepest on the flanks and under wing-coverts ; under surface, quills, and tail pale brown. Females have the head scarcely tinged with greenish, and the brown in old feathers paler than in new. Young. Bill darker at the tips than in the adult; eyelid yellowish red; legs dusky red. Birds of the year have the chin almost quite white, the buff of the under surface overcast with a brownish hue, particularly on the chest, and the feathers of the fore neck, chest, nuchal collar, breast, and flanks with crescentic margins of brown, coalescing on the sides of the chest, just beneath the point of the wing when closed, into a narrow band, which joms the green of the interscapular region; lores and forehead darker than in the adult; least wing-coverts faintly edged with fulvous; ground-colour of the scapulars darker than in the adult. With age the dark pencillings on the under surface disappear from the chest and remain only on the sides of the breast, from which they do not vanish until the bird is fully aged. Obs. The Ceylon race of this Kingfisher appears to be, as a rule, more tinged with green on the “cap” than Indian birds, and resembles, in this respect, Pelargopsis malaccensis, Sharpe, differing from this, in the adult stage, in the less dark mantle, although I must say young birds are very like the latter species: this is, however, a smaller bird, the wings of two specimens measuring 5°55 and 5°65 inches. Indian examples of P. gurial from Madras measure 5°7 to 5:95 inches in the wing, and 3-7 to 3-9 in the bill from the gape. Mr. Ball gives the following dimensions, loc. cit. :—(Rahmehal) wing 6°15 inches, bill from gape 3:6: (Caleutta) wing 5-95, bill from gape 3°7 ; (Satpuras), ¢, wing 6:1, bill from gape 3°55. The Indian and Ceylonese bird comes very near to P. frasert from Java and P. burmanica from Burmah, two other closely allied species ; the former has the back and wings of that peculiar blue tint considered to be characteristic of P. malaccensis, and the brown cap is sometimes absent. The wing of an example which I have examined is 6:1, bill to gape 3-5; the latter has the cap very pale and the back greyer than in P. gurial, being simply a pale form of this bird. All these species are so nearly allied that they appear to me to be merely races of P. gurial; and I observe Mr. Hume remarks to the same effect, ‘ Stray Feathers,’ 1877, p-19. Mr. Holdsworth was the first to rectify the synonymy of this species as a Ceylonese bird, Kelaart and Layard having followed Jerdon’s name of capensis, bestowed on it in the Madras Journal, 1840. Distribution.—This large and noisy Kingfisher is found more or less on all the rivers and wild streams throughout the island, frequenting likewise the brackish lagoons and backwaters round the eastern and northern coasts, and the large sea-board lakes of the Western Province; in the latter district it is found in large jungle-begirt paddy-fields, and on the Gindurah, Kaluganga, Kelaniganga, and Maha-oya rivers. It is also an inhabitant of the Ikkade-Barawe forest and other large jungles not far from Colombo which are traversed by streams. It is pretty generally diffused through the hill-country near Galle, in which there are numerous isolated paddy-fields lymg between hulls, and generally drained by a stream fairly stocked with fish. The lonely tanks, particularly the smaller sheets of water surrounded by large trees which are scattered throughout the northern half of the island, and the romantic rivers which flow both east and west through that region from the hill-zone, are its favourite abode; along the whole course of the Mahawelliganga from Kottiar to the base of the hills it is common, and, I believe, ascends this river into Dumbara, though it is not of very frequent occurrence in that valley. Jerdon remarks of this Kingfisher that it is found over all India, from the extreme south to Bengal, chiefly where there is much jungle or forest or where the banks of rivers are well wooded—precisely the same conditions which regulate its habitat in Ceylon. Mr. Fairbank saw it at the base of the Palani hills, PELARGOPSIS GURIAL. 297 and once near Mahabaleshwar, and Jerdon remarks that it is rarely seen in the Carnatic or the tableland. It is common in Bengal, but has been met but rarely in the north-west. At the Sambhur Lake and in Sindh it does not appear to be found. In the contrary direction, in Chota Nagpur, Mr. Ball says it is met with occasionally, as also on the Rajmehal and Satpura hills. It is not uncommon about Calcutta, and Dr. Hamilton observed that it bred in mud walls in that neighbourhood ; it extends to the lower Himalayas. In Burmah it is replaced by the paler race P. burmanica, and even in Cachar Mr. Hume says the Stork-billed Kingfisher belongs more to the latter than to the present species. Habits —The Stork-billed Kingfisher always frequents the vicinity of water, and, as far as my experience goes, feeds entirely on fish and frogs. It is solitary in habit and rather sluggish, taking up its post on the branches of forest-trees overhanging water, or in the mangroves lining brackish lagoons, and at long intervals plunges headlong down on its prey, splashing up the water in its descent. Every now and then it gives out its loud discordant cries, and generally moves on to some other likely spot with a straight-on-end and powerful flight. It is very early astir in the morning, awakening with its far-sounding laugh the traveller who has halted for the night on the borders of the forest-lined river, or welcoming the sportsman on the termination of his long and early morning drive to some lonely Snipe-ground. I have seen it, when disturbed by gun-shots, take long flights across extensive paddy-fields, and after reaching a place of safety shout vociferously for a quarter of an hour. When wounded it is capable of inflicting a severe blow with its huge bill; and a Mr. Smith, in his MS. notes quoted by Dr. Horsfield, mentions an instance in which he “once observed a contest between one of these birds and a Hawk of considerable size, in which the Hawk was worsted and obliged to leave his hold, from the effects of a severe blow which the other administered to him on the breast.” Mr. Ball remarks that he has only once seen it plunge into water for the purpose of capturing a fish. I have been more fortunate than this; for I have seen it several times in the act of seizing its prey; but it certainly is a far less active fisher than other members of its family that have come under my notice. Layard found this bird feeding on crabs and small Mollusca, as well as on fish. Nidification— Breeds in secluded spots, excavating a deep hole in the side of a river-bank or in the bund of a tank beneath shady trees. The nesting-time in Ceylon is during the first three or four months im the year. Mr. Edward Creasey, Ceylon Survey Dept., found a nest in the Jaffna district which was situated 7 feet from the entrance to the hole; it contained two eggs, which were spherical in shape, pure white, and measured 1:45 by 1:23 inch. Mr. Thompson found it breeding in May on the streams debouching from the Himalayas, and speaks of a nest containing five young ones, near which there were some deserted habitations, each having the appearance of having served its turn as a breeding-place in former years. Another writer, Mr. Theobald, notes its laying in the fourth week in June, Genus HALCYON. Bill differing from the last in having the culmen sharply keeled and curved slightly near the tip, and the upper mandible suddenly compressed. Nostrils more oblique, less advanced ; gape less angulated. Wings with the 2nd quillsubequal to the 3rd. Tibia feathered in front to the knee. Of smaller size than Pelargopsis. HALCYON SMYRNENSIS. (THE WHITE-BREASTED KINGFISHER.) Alcedo smyrnensis, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 181 (1766). Halcyon smyrnensis, Steph. Gen. Zool. xiii. p. 99 (1826); Sykes, P. Z. 8. 1852, p. 84; Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8S. B. p. 47 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 118 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 172; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 125 (1854); Tristram, Ibis, 1866, p. 86; Sharpe, Mon. Alced. pl. 59 (1868-71); Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 424; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p.105 (1873); Adam, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 572; Hume, ibid. 1874, p. 167; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 14. Alcedo fusca, Bodd. Tab. Pl. Enl. 54 (1783). Halcyon fuscus (Bodd.), Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 224; G. R. Gray, Gen. of Birds, i. p. 79 (1849). The Smyrna Kingfisher, Latham; The Indian Kingfisher, Horstield; Blue Kingfisher, Europeans in Ceylon. Kikila, Hind. ; Sade-buk match ranga, Beng.; Lak muka, Vel.; Vichuli, Tam. (Jerdon) ; Matsya-ranga, Sanscrit ; Fei-tsuy, China (Swinh.). Pelihuduwa, Sinhalese; Kalavi kuruvi, lit. “* Wide-mouthed Bird,” Ceylon Tamils (Layard). Adult male and female. Length 10°8 to 11:1 inches ; wing 4:4 to 4°6; tail 3-2 to 3-4; tarsus 0°5 ; middle toe 0-7 to 0-75, claw (straight) 0°37; bill to gape 2°5 to 2-7; depth at gonys-angle 4:9 to 5-7. Iris sepia-brown ; bill deep arterial red; inside of mouth vermilion; anterior portion of legs and feet dark brownish red; posterior portion and soles of feat orange-red ; claws blackish. Head, cheeks, back, and sides of neck, sides of chest, and all the lower parts from the breast downwards with the under wing-coverts deep chestnut-brown or reddish chocolate-colour, darkest on the head, hind neck, and sides of chest ; back, scapulars, rump, upper tail-coverts, tail, secondaries, and basal portion of outer webs of all but the first primary, when viewed against the light, turquoise-blue, brightest on the back, ramp, and secondaries, and when viewed with the light malachite-green ; tertials and margins of the tail-feathers with a decided greenish hue ; first primary, terminal portion of the rest, tips of secondaries, and inner half of the inner webs blackish brown ; least wing-coverts lighter chestnut than the head, the median secondary coverts coal-black; shafts of tail-feathers black ; a fine line just beneath the lower eyelid, chin, fore neck, centre of the chest, edge of the wing, and basal portion of the inner webs of the primaries white, increasing on the latter towards the inner feather, on which it approaches close to the tip. Some examples have a brownish wash on the forehead and crown, and, in fact, the chestnut portions of the plumage are, as a rule, variable, some birds being darker in this respect than others. It is worthy of remark that if this Kingfisher be held away from the light, the white chest assumes a greenish hue. Young. The nestling has the bill red at the base, paling to yellowish towards the tip, which is black. The feathers of the head and hind neck are pale-tipped, mostly so on the forehead ; the least wing-coyerts are tinged with black. HALCYON SMYRNENSIS. 299 Obs. Although the chestnut colour in this species is variable, I doubt not that, if a large series of Ceylonese examples were compared with a good many from most parts of India, they would be found to be, as a rule, darker than the latter; and I do not think they attain the same size as some Indian specimens. Mr. Hume gives the largest of forty birds as 4°85 in the wing, and remarks that his extreme southern specimens from Anjango are the darkest and smallest, and therefore correspond best with ours. The least wing-dimension in Anjango birds is 4-4. have, however, a specimen from Ramisserum Island with the wing 4°5 inches, but with a very small bill, measuring 2°35 to gape and 0-48 in depth at gonys-angle. It likewise has the chest very strongly tinged with green. As regards the head and hind-neck hues, Ceylonese birds resemble those from the Andamans; but these latter, in addition to being darker-than those from any other part of Asia, are larger, and have therefore been separated as H. saturatior by Mr. Hume. The greenish-blue tint on the white chest is observable in Nepal, Kamptee, and Beloochistan specimens, also in one from Jericho ; but they must be held from the light, with the bill pointed towards the eye, in order to produce this colour to the greatest extent. The Jericho specimen is somewhat paler on the head than one from Colombo; but the under parts and sides of the chest are darker if any thing: it has the wing 5:1 inches; bill to gape 2°7.. Another from Beloochistan is shghtly greener in all lights than Ceylonese individuals, and has a white stripe above the lores; wing 4°95, bill to gape 2°7.. An example from Bagdad is pale on the head and has a white superciliary line. For purposes of comparison, I will add that an Andaman example of H. saturatior measures 5-1 inches in the wing, but the bill to gape is only 2°75. Distribution —This handsome Kingfisher is extremely common in Ceylon, and is spread over the whole island, inhabiting the Kandyan Province up to the altitude of Nuwara Elliya, at which place it has made its appearance since the lake was found. It is more plentiful in the Western and Southern Provinces and in the cultivated portions of the northern district than in the jungle-covered country of the interior, for though it occurs on the forest-rivers it is not so abundant as the Stork-billed or little Blue Kingfishers. It is fairly numerous in the islands of the Jaffna district and in Manaar, and Mr. Holdsworth says it is not uncommon at Aripu. In the northern forests it is more often found near village tanks and on new clearings than else- where. In the Kandyan Province it is chiefly an inhabitant of the terraced paddy-fields, and is tolerably numerous in the well-cultivated valleys. Out of Ceylon it has a very wide range, being found all over India, extending eastward to China and westward to Palestine and Asia Minor. As regards India it has been recorded as a common bird from all parts of the low-lying districts which have been worked out ; but though Mr. Bourdillon found it plentiful at the foot of the Travancore hills, it did not ascend there to any height. Mr. Fairbank likewise only observed it in the lower Palanis. From the low districts of Bengal, where it is very common, it extends to the base of the Himalayas, and westward through Sindh into Persia and Palestine, where Canon Tristram found it in the Jordan valley up to the sources of the river; beyond this Russel recorded it, in the last century, in his ‘ Natural History of Aleppo,’ to be an inhabitant of Asia Minor. Captain Graves met with it in the same locality after the lapse of a century, during which time it had escaped the observation of naturalists. Canon Tristram and Mr. Sharpe note it as a doubtful straggler to Europe. From Burmah it extends into Tenasserim and the Malay peninsula. In many parts of China it is common, and resident, according to Mr. Swinhoe, from Canton to the river Yangtsze; he likewise procured it in Formosa. Habits —Although this Kingfisher frequents paddy-fields, streams, rivers, swamps, and fresh water in all situations, it is almost as often found affecting clearings in the jungle, dried-up fields, cultivated gardens, and the edges of open wastes, and in such places subsists on lizards, grasshoppers, crickets, locusts, and even small snakes. It invariably resorts to new clearings in the forest after they have been burnt off, and takes up its position on stumps or branches of charred trees, and therefrom flies down on the lizards and insects which it espies on the blackened soil. Mr. Inglis, in his ‘ List of Birds of Cachar,’ mentions seeing one so occupied for half an hour, and on shooting it found its stomach crammed with crickets. Mr. Ball has seen it dive for fish on one occasion ; but this must be an occurrence of extreme rarity ; he writes that in Chota Nagpur it is snared, and the flattened-out skins disposed of to merchants, who sell them to Burmese traders for ornamenting court- dresses. In Ceylon it is best known to those who do not penetrate into the wilds as an inhabitant of the paddy- fields, of which it is one of the chief ornaments in the way of bird-life, and is the first bird which attracts the attention of the new arrival in the island as he trudges through his first hot December-day’s Snipe-shooting. 2Q2 300 HALCYON SMYRNENSIS. It is, perhaps, the first bird astir at daybreak, and when there is scarcely enough light to discern it, flies up to the top of the highest tree near at hand and pipes out its plaintive trilling note for a considerable time, and then makes off to some favourite outlook, uttering its loud harsh call, very different from that which it has just indulged in. This latter is always uttered when the bird is on the wing, while the former is only heard when it is perched. When a lizard, which is a favourite meal, is captured, it is hammered against a stone or branch of a tree until dead, and then devoured whole, and crabs and mollusks are treated in the same way when the bird has taken up its quarters by a stream. I have observed one launch out from a high tree, in the manner described by Layard, on_a butterfly ; but this writer records an evil deed against the lovely bird, which is worthy only of such a cannibal as the Koforuwa (Megalema zeylanica). He relates that one which was “unluckily introduced into an aviary, destroyed most of the lesser captives ere he was detected as the culprit ; he was at last caught in the act of seizing a small bird in his powerful bill; he beat it for a moment against his perch, and then swallowed it whole!” The habits of this species as observed in Palestine by Canon Tristram are somewhat different to those which obtain with it in India and Ceylon. He writes :—“ It loves to sit moodily for hours on aslender bough overhanging a swamp or pool, where the foliage helps to conceal its brilliant plumage, and where, with cast-down eyes and bill leaning on its breast, it seems benumbed or sleepy, until the motions of some lizard or frog in the marsh beneath rouse it to a temporary activity. When disturbed, it rather slinks away under the cover of the overhanging oleanders than trusts for safety to direct flight.” In one example he found a snake 18 inches long, entire. In the Holy Land it is solitary in habit as in Ceylon, where two birds are scarcely ever seen together. Nidification—In the west and south of Ceylon this species breeds from January till April, and in the north I have found its nest as late as July. It nests in a bank generally near water or in the bund of a tank, penetrating from 2 to 4 feet, and then excavating a large vault, sometimes 9 inches in width, in which it lays its eggs, which are usually four in number, though sometimes six. In a nest which I took in the breach in the great “bund” of Hurullé tank there were no bones, nor any thing used for a lining to the nest; the passage and egg-chamber, however, frequently contain remains of frogs, lizards, &c., which have been taken in by the old birds for feeding their young. The eggs are pure white, round in shape, and those that I have seen from Ceylon vary from 1-14.to 1:2 inch in length by 1:0 to 1:04 inch in breadth. In India this bird often nests in mud walls and sometimes in open wells, Mr. Hume recording an instance of one building in a hole in the side of a well 100 fect below the surface of the ground. The eggs, when first laid, have, it is said, a beautiful gloss ; but they rapidly lose this, as those I have taken were rather dull than otherwise. Some attain a size of 1:27 by 1:12 inch, or as large (as Mr. Hume remarks) as a Roller’s egg. _ a HALCYON PILEATA. (THE BLACK-CAPPED PURPLE KINGFISHER.) Alcedo pileata, Bodd. Tabl. Pl. Enl. 41 (1783). Halcyon pileata, Gray & Mitchell, Gen. of Birds, i. p. 79 (1844); Sharpe, Mon. Alced. p. 169, pl. 62 (1868-70); Holdsworth, P. Z. 8S. 1872, p. 424; Hume, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 51; Armstrong, ibid. 1876, p. 306; Sharpe, Ibis, 1876, p. 33. Alcedo atricapilla, Gm. Syst. Nat. 1. p. 453 (1788). Dacelo pileata, Schl. Mus. P.-B. Alced. p. 27 (1863); id. Vog. Ned. Ind. Alced. pp. 22, 54, pl. 9 (1864). Halcyon atricapillus, Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. no. 204, p. 47 (1849); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 171; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 124 (1854); Gould, B. of Asia, pt. xii. (1860); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 226 (1862) ; Hume, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 168. Entomobia pileata, Salvad. Uce. di Borneo, p. 102 (1874). Martin Pécheur dela Chine, Buff. Pl. Enl. 673 (1770); The Black-capped Kingfisher; Black- winged Kingfisher. Udang, Malay; Burong udang, Sumatra (Raffles). Adult male and female (Burmah). “ Length 11:7 to 12°5 inches; wing 4:9 to 53, expanse 18-0 to 18°75; tail from vent 3°3 to 3°75; tarsus 0°6 to 0-7; bill to gape 2°9 to 3°15” (Armstrong). Layard’s Ceylonese specimen measures 5-4, a male shot by Mr. Oates 5-3, and two examples in my own collection 4-8 and 5:1 inches (the former is an immature bird). Iris reddish brown, dark brown, or olive-brown ; bill deep coral-red; legs and feet dull red, brownish on the front of tarsus; claws ‘* horny brown.” Head, face, ear-coverts, nape, and wing-coverts coal-black ; back, scapulars, upper surface of tail, primary-coverts, and the outer webs of the secondaries and tertials ultramarine-blue, very brilliant on the interscapular region, and changing into a lustrous smalt-blue on the upper tail-coverts; a broad band of white across the hind neck, immediately beneath which the blue of the back is shaded with black; terminal half of primaries and tips and inner webs of secondaries dull black, the basal half of the former delicate bluish, or bluish white on the outer webs and pure white on the inner. Chin, fore neck, centre of chest, and upper breast white; sides of chest and fore neck, flanks, lower breast, abdomen, under tail-, and under wing-coverts fine tawny rufous, blending into the white of the fore neck, and often tinging the hind-neck collar; under surface of tail blackish. Young. Birds of the year have the black of the upper parts and the blue of the back and rump less pure, and the sides of the chest and breast, as also the feathers of the hind-neck collar, marked with crescentic tippings of blackish brown ; but in some examples the latter part is striated with brown instead of barred. These crescentic markings appear to remain until the bird is fully aged, as they are present in many specimens which have the upper surface in beautiful adult feather. Distribution —This lovely Kingfisher has been only once recorded from Ceylon. Layard speaks of one specimen having been shot in the island of Valenny, near Jaffna. This bird, which must have been a straggler driven to the coasts of Ceylon by the northerly winds of December, is now in the Poole collection and is in a fair state of preservation. Its occurrence in Ceylon is very interesting, as it is a rare bird in India, and particularly so in the south. Jerdon shot a specimen at Tellichery, on the Malabar coast, and saw others from the same locality ; he speaks of it having been procured as high up the Ganges as Monghyr, although it is rare in Bengal. It affects wooded country near the sea, and consequently is more common in 302 HALCYON PILEATA. the Sunderbunds than elsewhere in India. It has not, I believe, been found anywhere to the west of Lower Bengal. In Burmah it is common near the sea, though rare up at Thayetmyo. Mr. Armstrong writes :— “This beautiful Kingfisher formed a marked characteristic of the avifauna belonging to the Irrawaddy delta. It was to be seen everywhere. It was abundant among the mangroves on each side of every creek and nullah; the shore-jungle along the coast from Elephant Point to China-Ba-keer resounded with its discordant cry.” It is found in Tenasserim and throughout the Malay peninsula, where it is far from uncommon, inhabiting likewise the islands in the Bay. In these, however, it is rare, both as regards the Nicobars and the Andamans. Mr. Davison saw it at Trinkut and Kondul in the former, and Mr. Hume has received it from Port Blair, Andamans. It is known from both Java and Sumatra, and Count Salvadori includes it in his ‘ Birds of Borneo, where also Mr. Alfred Everett has of late years procured it. Further north it is an inhabitant of China, in which country, Mr. Swinhoe remarks, it is found from Canton to the Yangtsze, and is rare in the neighbourhood of Amoy. Dr. Zelebor, who accompanied the ‘ Novara ’ Expedition, found it at Hong Kong. Habits —This species loves thickly wooded estuaries and brackish creeks such as are found in the great Sunderbunds near Calcutta, in the delta of the Irrawaddy, and other similar localities, in the impenetrable jungle of which it passes a generally unmolested existence, feeding on the crabs which abound in the muddy creeks and nullahs. These crustaceans form its favourite food. Mr. Armstrong says that in the Irrawaddy delta “ under every little projecting twig along the sea-shore a quantity of white excreta and the remains of the legs and bodies of small crabs showed where one of these birds had been making its dinner and indulging in its siesta. Each bird appears to have its own favourite watch-tower, and when disturbed flies away with a shrill ery, taking a semicircular stoop to some dry twig on ahead, and as soon as it thinks that the danger is passed by returns again to the post from which it has been dislodged.” | Captain Wimberley, who shot this bird at Port Blair, says it is excessively shy and wary, and that he had to go out day after day before he could procure it. It has a harsh crowing call according to Jerdon, and which is described by other writers as discordant. Dr, Zelebor likens it to the ery of the European Great Spotted Woodpecker. The Chinese, with their usual admiration for the feathers of Kingfishers, put those of this species also to ornamental purposes, using them for the manufacture of their fans. I am unable to give any information concerning the nesting of this species. Genus CEYX. Bill much as in Halcyon, the culmen less keeled. Wings with the Ist quill as long as in Alcedo, and the 4th not much shorter than the 3rd. Tail short and broad at the base, rounded at the tip. Tarsus much shorter than the anterior toes; inner toe wanting ; claw of outer toe very short. CEYX TRIDACTYLA, (THE INDIAN THREE-TOED KINGFISHER.) Alcedo tridactyla, Pall. Spic. Zool. vii. p. 10, pl. 11. fig. 1 (1769). Ceyx tridactyla, Sykes, P. Z. 8. 1832, p. 84; Jerdon, Il. Ind. Orn, pl. 25 (1847); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 118 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xiii. p. 172; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 229 (1862); Sharpe, P. Z. S. 1868, p. 270; id. Mon. Alced. pl. 40, p. 119 (1868-71) ; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 424; Hume, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 173, et 1875, p. 51, et 1876, p. 287 ; Inglis, ibid. 1877, p. 19. Alcedo erythaca, Gm. Syst. Nat. i. p. 449 (1788). Ceyx erythaca, Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. no. 220, p. 50 (1849). Ceyx microsoma, Jerd. Cat. B. 8. India, Madr. Journ. 1840, xi. p. 231. Martin Pécheur de Pondicherry, Buff. Pl. Enl. 778. fig. 2. The Three-toed Kingfisher, Kuropeans in Ceylon ; The Pinang Kingfisher, Sharpe, Mon. Alced. Dein-nygeen, Arvacan ; Raja whodan, Malay (Blyth). Punchi Mal-pelihuduwa, Sinhalese. Adult male and female. Length 5:25 to 5-4 inches; wing 271 to 2°3; tail 0-9; tarsus 0°35; innermost toe and claw 0-65; hind toe and claw 0°3; bill to gape 1-44 to 1-6, at front 1-3. Expanse 8-3. Tris brown; bill coral-red ; legs and feet coral-red, slightly paler than bill; claws yellowish. Head, hind neck, face, lower back, rump, and tail with the least wing-coverts and under wing rufous, overlaid on the back, upper tail-coverts, and behind the eye with delicate shining lilac, and tinged with the same on the head : upper back black, overlaid with a patch of brilliant cobalt-blue; wings blackish brown; a spot at the side of the nape, a wash over the back and tertials, and edges of wing-coverts fine deep violet-blue ; beneath the nuchal spot a white streak; forehead edged with deep blue at the bill; eyelid and a spot in front of eye black; outer web of Ist primary and edge of winglet, inner margins of quills, and base of secondaries pale cinnamon ; chin, throat, and centre of abdomen flavescent whitish ; rest of under surface saftron-yellow, shaded with rufous onthe flanks. In some specimens the centre of the head wants the violet tinge, this part being plain rufous ; others, probably not adult, have the tail tipped dark. Obs. Ceylonese examples are identical in character with Indian and Malaccan. A Pegu specimen, recorded in ‘ Stray Feathers,’ measures 2-2 in the wing and 1°55 in the bill from gape; another I have seen from Malacca, 2-3 in the wing and 1:6 in the bill from gape. A male example, with a similarly large bill, I procured at Kanthelai ; but the average size of the bill in Ceylon specimens is about 1-45. Mr. Sharpe figures an example in his plate (‘Monog. Alced.’) with a brown tail, and remarks that it may be sexual or a sign of immaturity ; it certainly is not the former, as I haye sexed males and females without any trace of dark colour in the tail; and as to the latter the nearest approach to a dark tail in what appeared to be a young bird, from the state of the organs, was a dark tip of about =1, inch in depth to the centre tail-feathers. It seems not unreasonable to infer that the coloration in the specimen figured by Mr. Sharpe was abnormal, and at the same time very remarkable. To many of my readers who are not well acquainted with this beautiful genus of Kingfishers, it may not be uninteresting to peruse a short réswmé of its members, taken from Mr. Sharpe’s magnificent ‘ Monograph of the Kingfishers,’ which I here give. Commencing with the species which ranges next to ours in its habitat, we have :— Ceyx rufidorsa, Strickland, P. Z. 8. 1846, p. 99 ; Sharpe, Mon. Alced. pl. 41. Indo-Malayan region. Differs chiefly from C. tridactyla in haying the back and wing-coverts of the same hue as the head, rump, and tail, which are lilac-rufous. Wing 2-2. Ceyx dillwynni, Sharpe, P. Z. S. 1868, p. 591; id. Mon. Alced. pl. 48. Labuan. Larger than the above ; head, back, rump, and tail lilac-rufous; scapulars black, washed with blue. Wing 2-45. Ceyx sharpit, Salvad. Atti R. Accad. Tor. 1869, p. 463; Sharpe, Mon. Alced. pl. 42. Borneo. Nearly all the upper surface brilliant lilac-rufous, with a portion of the scapulars black, and the wing-coyerts tipped with blue. Wing 2°3. 304 CEYX TRIDACTYLA, Ceya solitaria, Temm. Pl. Col. 595 ; Sharpe, Mon. Alced. pl. 38.. New Guinea and adjacent isles. Back rich ultramarine; the head, tail, and wings chiefly black ; bill black. Wing 2-1. Ceyx cajeli, Wall. P. Z. 8. 1863, p. 25, pl. v.; Sharpe, Mon. Alced. pl. 44. Bouru Island. Chiefly black above, with the back and rump silvery blue ; head and wing-coverts spotted with silvery blue. Wing 2°5. Ceyx wallacei, Sharpe, P. Z. 8. 1868, p. 270; id. Mon. Alced. pl. 45. Sula Islands. A large species, chiefly black above, with the back very rich shining cobalt: distinguished by its black scapulars from the next. Wing 2°5. Ceyx lepida, Temm. Pl. Col. 595; Sharpe, Mon. Alced. pl. 46. Ceram, Amboina, south-west coast of New Guinea. Likewise a large species. Chief characteristics of upper plumage black, spotted with rich ultramarine on the head and hind neck; back “rich ultramarine.” Wing 2°5. Ceyx uropygialis, Gray, P. Z. 8. 1860, p. 348; Sharpe, Mon. Alced. pl. 47. Smaller than the above. Upper surface chiefly black, spotted minutely and striped with ultramarine on the head ; back ultramarine ; rump silvery blue. Wing 2-4. Ceyx melanura, Kaup ; Sharpe, Mon. Alced. pl. 39. Philippine Islands. Above chiefly lilac-rufous, with a patch of feathers on each side of the neck blue, under which is another white patch; head spotted with lilac-blue. Wing 2°1. Ceyx philippinensis, Gould, P. Z. S. 1868, p. 404; Sharpe, Mon. Alced. pl. 37. Philippine Islands. Chiefly indigo-blue above, banded with light cobalt on the head and face ; under surface deep rufous. Resembles the Indian Kingfisher somewhat in general appearance. Wing 2:3. Distribution.—This diminutive and beautiful little Kingfisher is the rarest of the indigenous species of the family in Ceylon, oceurring here and there in localities few and far between throughout the low country, and inhabiting the upland valley of the Mahawelliganga and its affluents to an elevation of about 2000 feet. I have procured it in forest on the Trincomalie and Anaradjapura road, near Kanthelai tank, and at Devilane in the Friars-Hood district. In 1875, while residing at Hurellé tank, Mr. Cotteril, C.E., met with a little flock of four, and it has been seen in the Mullaittivu district. Layard speaks of meeting with it at Galle, Trincomalie, Anaradjapura, Matale, Puttalam, and Ratnapura. I closely scrutinized the rocky streams and rivers during two years’ wanderings in the jungles of the south-west, but never saw it, nor did I ever encounter it in any of the humid districts of the island, and am therefore convinced that it is chiefly to be found in the dry portions only. It is not uncommon in Dumbara; but is chiefly located, I imagine, down the valley, from Kandy towards the bend of the Mahawelliganga. Mr. Holdsworth “ at various times obtained three specimens, which were killed in the central district ;”? and it has been described to me (whether correctly identified or not I cannot say) as inhabiting the tributaries of the Kelani in Lower Dickoya. It is scattered all over India, but nowhere, says Jerdon, common. He procured it in the south of India, and remarks that it seems to be a coast-bird for the most part. Col. Sykes got it in the Deccan ; but Mr. Fairbank does not appear to have met with it in that part. In the north-west of India it has not, that I am aware of, ever been found, its distribution being decidedly castern. Mr. Ball does not even record it from Chota Nagpur or the Satpura jungles, and we next find it in the Sikhim Terai, and thence eastward in Cachar and Burmah. In Pegu Mr. Oates only found it on the eastern slope of the Pegu-Yama hills, where the country is covered with evergreen forest, in the deep-wooded nullahs of which it was not uncommon. In Northern Tenasserim Mr. Davison found it between Tavoy and Mceta Myo, at Karope, and near Ye. In the peninsula and the island of Pinang it is well known, and it has been procured at Ross Island, Andamans, and at Kondul, a small islet adjoining the Great Nicobar Island. It has been found in Java and Sumatra and some of the Indo-Malayan Islands, and Mr. Sharpe instances it as having been procured in the Philippines ; but the last- named locality requires confirmation. Habits —The Three-toed Kingfisher, which is the loveliest of all Ceylon birds, is a shy and usually solitary species, delighting in the gloom of the forest, where it frequents the edges of tiny brooks and damp or swampy spots containing small water-holes, subsisting on diminutive fish and small aqueous insects. It is so small that it is next to impossible for the collector, however keen-eyed he be, to detect it on its little perch before it is alarmed and takes wing with a shrill piping note, glancing instantaneously round the nearest tree to a place of safety. It is consequently very difficult to procure ; but in the evening, just as darkness is setting in and the jungle becomes gradually enshrouded in gloom, it becomes restless and noisy, continuing to whistle ee - (Su) S oT CEYX TRIDACTYLA. and fly from place to place round its diurnal position until dark, and may then be watched and easily shot. Unless when breeding it is always found alone; and though it frequents the banks of streams and rivers in the jungle, it evidently prefers the interior of the forest to the vicinity of exposed water. We find Mr. Inglis noting it, in Cachar, as affecting thick jungle with small streams running through it; and at Devilane I procured one of my specimens frequenting the jungle through which the sluice-stream ran, and rejecting completely the open water of the tank which abounded with fish. Mr. Inglis observes that they sit very close, and that he has more than once attempted to catch them with his hand. ‘This is an illustration of the many instances in which the habits of different species vary entirely according to the district or country which they inhabit, for, as I have just remarked, this is a very shy bird in Ceylon. I have been told that the Singhalese occasionally catch it on the Mahawelliganga, but in what manner I do not know. No information appears as yet to have been acquired concerning the nidification of this little Kingfisher. PEC A Ril A. Fam. MEROPIDZ. Of small size. Bill long, slender, curved, both mandibles much pointed. Wings long and pointed. ‘Tail with the central feathers often elongated. Legs and feet feeble. Sternum with two emarginations on the posterior edge. Genus MEROPS. Bill much lengthened, slender, acute, compressed from the nostrils to the tip; both mandibles curved gently throughout. Nostrils oval, basal, placed midway between the margin and the culmen, partially protected by short bristles; rictal bristles short and stiff. Wings long and pointed; ist quill minute, 2nd the longest. Tail of 12 feathers, even at the tip, or with the two central rectrices prolonged beyond the rest and much attenuated. ‘Tarsus short, covered in front with transverse scales» Feet with the lateral toes joined to the middle, the outer beyond, and the inner as far as, the last joint ; claws curved and hollowed beneath. 2R MEROPS PHILIPPINUS. (THE BLUE-TAILED BEE-EATER.) Merops philippinus, Linn. Syst. Nat. ed. xiii. tom. i. p. 183 (1767); Lath. Ind. Orn. tom. 1. p. 271 (1790); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 52 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 118 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 173 ; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 87 (1854) ; Gould, B. of Asia, pt. vil. (1855); Holdsworth, P. Z.S. 1872, p. 422; Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 281; Hume, Nests and Eggs, i. p. 101; id. Str. Feath. 1876, p. 287. Merops javanicus, Horsf. Trans. Linn. Soc. xiii. p. 294 (1820). Merops daudinii, Cuv. Regn. An. 1829, t. 1. p. 442. Merops philippensis, Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 207; Blyth, Comm. Jerd. B. of Ind., Ibis, 1866, p. 344; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 13. Grand Guépier des Philippines (juv.), Buffon, Pl. Enl. 57; Le Guépier Daudin (juv.), Levaill. pl. 14, p. 49; “ Flycatcher” of Europeans in India and Ceylon. Boro-putringa, Beng. ; Burra-putringa, Hind.; Komw passeriki, Tel. (Jerdon); Kachangan, Java (Horst.); Berray Berray, Malay; Shale, Nicobarese (Davison). Kurumenne kurulla, lit. “Beetle-bird,” Sinhalese; Aattalan kuruvi, lit. “ Aloe-bird”’ *, Tam. ; Pappugai de Champ, Portug., lit. “ Ground-Parrot ” (apud Layard). Adult male and female, Length 12:0 inches; wing 5-0 to 5-4; tail 5-9, central feathers 2°3 longer than the rest ; tarsus 0-45 to 0°5; mid toe and claw 0°85; bill to gape (straight) 2°0 to 2-1. Expanse 16°75. Iris scarlet; bill black ; legs and feet blackish, hinder part of tarsus paler. Head, back, and sides of neck, back, seapulars, and wing-coverts shining brownish green, brownest on the head and hind neck, and passing into the bright green-blue of the rump and upper tail-coverts ; external edges of the primaries and secondaries greenish blue, the remaining portion of the feathers pervaded with brown, which changes at the basal part of the inner webs into cinnamon-rufous; tips of the shorter primaries and of all the secondaries blackish brown; terminal portion of the tertials and the tail (with the exception of the blackish elongated tips of the central feathers) bright greenish blue, the rectrices brownish internally. A broad black streak from the gape over the eye and ear-coverts, above it a faint line from the forehead to the posterior corner of the eye, and beneath it a broader stripe of bright greenish blue, the latter very pale at the termination ; chin and upper part of throat yellowish; fore neck chestnut-colour, gradually changing into the faded greenish of the breast, which brightens into cerulean blue on the under tail-coverts ; the basal portions of the under-surface feathers light brownish, showing more or less throughout ; under wing concolorous with the cinnamon bases of the quills; shafts of the quills and rectrices white beneath. Young. Iris dull red or brownish red, changing into the hue of the adult during the first year. Above greener than the adult; the bases of the feathers brownish green ; rump and upper tail-coverts not so bright as in the adult; central rectrices not elongated, but slightly exceeding the rest and more pointed at the tips. The blue loral and cheek-stripes less conspicuous, and the chin not so yellow as in the adult; under tail-coverts: paling at their lateral margins. The above is the plumage of the young birds arriving in Ceylon in September ; they quickly acquire the adult tail, and meanwhile the normal yellowish feathers of the chin and the chestnut ones of the throat make their appearance, the latter part in the quite young bird being much paler than in the adult. Obs. I have examined some examples from Sumatra, and one or two from India, in the British Museum, which haye * According to Layard from a fancied resemblance in the tail of this bird to the aloe-plant. MEROPS PHILIPPINUS. 307 the blue cheek-stripe broader than in any I have procured in Ceylon. Philippine specimens are identical with Ceylonese in plumage, but they are a smaller race ; the wing of a Negros example is 4:9 inches, another 5-0. A Sumatran example measures 5:2 inches; two from Japan 5°15 and 5:25 respectively. Distribution —This fine Bee-eater, migratory to Ceylon, arrives in the north of the island about the beginning of September, and rapidly spreads more or less through all parts of it before the end of the month. It seems to find its way to the south-west corner, or Galle district, almost as soon as to any part of the island, and collects there in greater numbers than elsewhere on the western side. I have met with it in the interior of the country, between Galle and Akurresse, as early as the 8th of September. It locates itself in great numbers in the Jaffna peninsula, and on the north-west coast as far south as Puttalam, and spreads in tolerable numbers into the interior, passing over the forest-clad portions, however, to a great extent, and ascending to the patnas and open hills of the Kandyan Province. In Uva and Pusselawa and on the Agra, Lindula, and Bopatalawa patnas, at an elevation of 5000 feet, it is common; but I have never seen it on the “ plains” of the Nuwara-Elliya plateau. In the Eastern Province it confines itself mostly to the sea-board, being less numerous in the Park country and the south-eastern “jungle-plain ” than the next resident species. Its departure from the island is as sudden as it is regular, in proof of which I may state that at Galle, in two successive seasons, I observed it collect in large flocks between the 29th and 31st March, and disappear entirely on the Ist April. Mr. Holdsworth, who writes that at Aripu it was so abundant that the common resident species (M. viridis) was scarce in comparison with it, states that it left about the beginning of April ; and by the end of that month I believe it has quitted the island entirely. In the neighbourhood of Colombo it is chiefly located in large tracts of paddy-ground and about the great swamp between there and Negombo. Tt is now and then met with in the cinnamon-gardens. The Blue-tailed Bee-eater is found throughout most of the empire of India, being very generally distri- buted throughout the central and eastern portions of the peninsula during the cool season, while in the breeding- time it locates itself in those parts which furnish it with localities suitable to its nesting-habits. In some places it is rare: Mr. Fairbank met with it but once in the Khandala district ; and it is mostly replaced by the Egyptian Bee-eater in the north-west, for though it ‘ often occurs,” according to Mr. Hume, in the Mount- Aboo district, it is neither found in Northern Guzerat nor in Sindh. In Chota Nagpur it appears to be local; but Mr. Ball writes, in ‘Stray Feathers,’ 1875, that he met with large numbers in the vicinity of a river in that region in April, and that he infers that they were breeding there. To the eastward of India this species is found in Tenasserim and Burmah, and likewise in the Malay peninsula, taking into its range the Nicobars and South Andamans. Further south still it is found in Java, Sumatra, Flores and Timor, and the Philippine Islands, and has been met with in China and Formosa by Mr. Swinhoe. Habits.—In Ceylon this species prefers to frequent open lands, plains studded with bushes near the sea-; shore, esplanades, paddy-fields, swamps, and the patnas of the hill-region. It passes a great part of its existence on the wing in pursuit of insects, after which it dashes with a very rapid flight, constantly uttering meanwhile its loud notes. When reposing from its labours, it rests on low objects, such as stumps of trees, fences, low projecting branches, little eminences on the ground, and often on the level earth itself. It is tame in its nature, allowing a near approach before it takes wing. On rainy evenings in November and December, when the air is swarming with insects, and particularly with winged termites, which issue forth from their nests on such occasions, the Blue-tailed Bee-eater congregates in large flocks on the wing, dashes to and fro for hours together, ascending to a great height in pursuit of its prey, and keeping up its not unpleasant notes without intermission. When exhausted with these exertions, they settle on walls, trees, or the ground in little parties, and when rested resume their flight. I have seen such flocks as these night after night on the Galle esplanade, and often observed them flying round and round high above the fort before finally moving off for the night to some distant and common roosting-place. When its prey consists of beetles, dragonflies, or other large insects, which it espies from its perch, it is captured after a sometimes prolonged flight, brought back, and killed before being swallowed by being repeatedly struck against whatever object the bird is seated on. This may often be witnessed when the bird is perched on telegraph-wires, which are a very favourite look-out with it. Ihave seen it dash on to the surface of ponds and rivers, and seize insects which were passing over the 2R2 508 MEROPS PHILIPPINUS. water. Mr. Holdsworth has observed it hunting close to the surface of the sea, at a distance of a quarter of a mile from the shore. Jerdon notices its habit of congregating together, and writes that on one occasion he saw an ‘‘ immense flock of them, probably many thousands, at Caroor, on the road from Trinchinopoly to the Nilghiris.” They were sallying out from the trees ling the road for half an hour or so, capturing insects, and then returning to them again. As a rule they do not consort in close company, but live in scattered flocks of about half a dozen, and often one or two birds constantly frequent the same locality. The note is difficult to describe. Jerdon not inaptly speaks of it as “a full mellow rolling whistle.” This Bee-eater retires Jate to roost, collecting to one spot from many miles round, and forming a large colony which pass the night in thickly foliaged trees or bushes. On Karativoe Island I discovered one of these roosting-places ; the birds were flying over from the mainland some miles distant, and continued to arrive from various points on the opposite coast until it was too dark to distinguish them on the wing. They resorted to the borders of a small back-water beneath the high sand hills of the island, which was lined with mangrove-trees, the thick branches of which afforded them a safe refuge. Nidification—Mr. Hume writes, in ‘Nests and Eggs’ (Rough Draft), that “the Blue-tailed Bee-eater breeds from March until June pretty well all over continental India, in well-cultivated and open country. Like all the rest of the family it breeds in holes in banks, and lays usually four or five eggs. The holes are rarely less than four feet deep, and I have known them to extend to seven feet. At the far extremity a rounded chamber, as a rule not less than six inches in diameter, is hollowed out for the eggs, and at times this chamber has a thin lining of grass and feathers, which I have never yet met with in the nests of the other species.” The banks of the Nerbudda, Mahanuddee, Ganges, a stream near Baraich, and localities at Lahore, Nujgeebahad, and Mirzapore are cited as breeding-places of the species ; and Mr. Hume himself found a colony established in a railway-cutting at Agra, where the engines “ passed twenty times a day within two feet of the mouths of the holes.” The eggs are white, highly glossed, and very spherical ovals, averaging 0°88 by 0°76 inch. MEROPS” VIRIDIS, (THE GREEN BEE-EATER.) Merops viridis, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 182 (1766); Bonn. Enc. Méth. Orn. pt. i. p. 273, pl. 105. fig. 3 (1790) ; Sykes, Cat. no. 23, J. A. S. B. iii. (1834); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A.S. B. no. 236, p. 53. (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 119 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 173; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 84 (1854); Gould, B. of Asia, pt. vii. (1855); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 205 (1862) ; Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 422; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 99 (1873); Adam, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 371; Hume, ibid. 1875, p. 49; Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 281; Oates, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 304; Dresser, B. of Europe, pt. 51 (1876). Merops orientalis, Lath. Ind. Orn. Suppl. p. 33 (1801). Merops indicus, Jerd. Madr. Journ. xi. p. 227 (1840). Merops torquatus, Hodgs. Gray's Zool. Misc. 1844, p. 82. The Indian Bee-eater, Edwards, pl. 183. Le Guépier & gorge bleue, Levaill. pl. 10. p. 39. The Common Indian Bee-eater (Jerdon) ; Flycatcher, Europeans in India and Ceylon ; Hurrial, Patringa, Hind.; Bansputtee, lit. “ Bamboo-leaf,’ Bengal; Chinna passeriki, Tel., lit. “Small green bird” (Jerd.) ; Mo-na-gyee, Arracan (Blyth). Kurumenne kurulla, Sinhalese ; Kattalan kuruvi, ‘Tamils in Ceylon. Adult male and female. Length 9-5 to 10°5 inches, according to length of tail; wing 3-6 to 3-8; tail 5-1, central feathers 2:0 to 2:3 longer than rest ; tarsus 0°4; middle toe and claw 0-6; bill to gape 1:4 to 1-55. Tris scarlet ; bill black; legs and feet brown, the edges of scales whitish. Above leaf-green with a bronze lustre, paling to bluish green on the tertials, ramp, and upper tail-coverts; basal or concealed portion of the head- and nape-feathers golden fulvous, showing on the surface at the occiput and nape : quills deeply tipped with blackish ; inner webs of secondaries and borders of those of primaries pale cinnamon, which is likewise the colour of the under wing; tail green, with the tips of the shorter and elongated portion of the central feathers blackish. A broad black stripe from nostril and gape over the eye and ear-coverts; above it a narrow yellowish-green super- cilium; chin and throat greenish turquoise-blue, deepening into brownish green on the upper breast, aud paling into bluish green on the lower parts and under tail-coverts ; across the throat a conspicuous black band, edged: above and beneath with bright yellow-green; vent whitish. Birds in old plumage have the nape and occiput much yellower than those in good feather, the paler colour being the result of abrasion; this must not, however, be confounded with the fine aureous lustre observable in some specimens, particularly those from N.H. India and Burmah. FYoung. Iris light red or yellowish red; bill generally pale at the base beneath ; legs and feet blackish slate. Central tail-feathers not lengthened. Above green, the feathers edged with bluish; aural stripe blackish brown; throat, neck, and chest greenish blue, palest on the chin ; lower breast and belly albescent; under tail-coverts bluish green. Some nestlings have the throat tinted with yellowish. The black throat-bar is acquired at a very early age, but is narrow and ill-defined, and in some edged with blue; the long central tail-feathers are likewise acquired, about the same time, by a “nestling ” moult, although tolerably old yearlings may now and then be seen without them. Obs. Ceylonese specimens of this Bee-eater vary, as above mentioned, in the golden hue of the nape and hind neck, but do not exhibit the brilliant hue of birds from Cachar and Burmah, to which Hodgson gave his name of 310 MEROPS VIRIDIS. ferrugineiceps: they are typical M. viridis, like birds from Central and Southern India; but it must be remarked that occasionally very rufous-headed specimens are procured in Madras. That the species is variable in this character throughout its entire habitat may be gathered from the fact, demonstrated by Mr. Hume, of the Sindh race almost wanting the rusty golden tinge. In Ceylon I have observed that nestling birds vary in the extent of the brighter colours of their plumage when these are first put on, the development of such tints depending perhaps on the physical vigour of the individual. I once shot a pair of young green Bee-eaters together, which were, of course, out of the same nest—one with the normal plain green throat and short tail of the nestling, the other with the blue throat-band appearing and the central tail-feathers half-grown. Perhaps the latter would always have been a more brilliantly plumaged bird than the former; for the difference in age, at most 24 hours, could scarcely have accounted for the backwardness of the plainer specimen in acquiring its adult character. As regards the relative size of Indian and Ceylonese birds, I find that the wings in 8 specimens from Pegu (as given in ‘Stray Feathers’) vary from 3-6 to 3°8 inches, precisely the measurements given above for Ceylonese birds. Some Indian examples have the central tail-feathers longer than any I have seen in Ceylon ; one specimen from Kamptee in the British Museum has them 2°6 inches beyond the adjacent pair, 2°3 being my limit. The dimensions given by Mr. Armstrong of the wings of several Burmese specimens, viz. 4°6 to 5°2 inches, are most probably those of some other species entered by a printer’s error in his note on A. viridis. Concerning the species in North Africa, Mr. Dresser writes that examples from Egypt, India, and Abyssinia all have the throat markedly green and the head but slightly tinged with rufous. This is, of course, to be expected, in continuation of the characters displayed by the westernmost of Indian birds, viz. those from Sindh. He further remarks that, according to his experience, Indian specimens have, as a rule, the throat tinged with verditer-blue, and that those from Ceylon exhibit this-character to a still greater extent; this, however, is with us somewhat variable, as I have demonstrated above. ; Distribution —The Green Bee-eater is a resident species and very numerous in all the dry parts of the low country. It is most abundant about open scrubby land near the sea-coast round the north of the island and along the south-east and eastern sea-boards. Its habitat seems to be restricted to a nicety by the influence of climate. It is common in the interior of the northern half of the island, as well as in the maritime regions, and can be traced along the foot of the western slopes of the Matale ranges from Dambulla to Kurunegala, and thence across the dry country on the north of the Polgahawella and Ambepussa hills to Chilaw and Madampe, near which it stops, not beimg found south of Nattande. So much does it avoid a moist atmosphere that it extends for a few miles south of Kurunegala, on the high road to Polgahawella, and suddenly vanishes on the road entering the hills. South of these limits it is unknown throughout the Western Province and the south-west hill-region, reappearing again just to the eastward of Tangalla, where the climate again becomes dry; beyond this all round the coast it is common, being particularly numerous in the Tambantota and Yala districts. I have traced it through the interior to the foot of the Haputale hills, but it is much scarcer there than at the sea-coast. In the Eastern Province it inhabits the high cheenas in the neighbourhood of Bibile, which attain an altitude of 1000 feet, and which is the highest point I have found it to attain in Ceylon. Mr. Holdsworth remarks, Joc. cit., that it occurs about Colombo. I conclude that the evidence on which this place is included in its range must be that of a stray bird; for I have never observed it anywhere nearer to it than the above limits, neither has Mr. MacVicar nor the taxi- dermist of the Colombo Museum, both of whom have collected for many years in that part. This species is spread all over India, extending into Burmah, Tenasserim, Arrakan, and the Indo-Chinese countries. It is common in the south of the Peninsula and ascends the hills. Mr. Fairbank procured it at the base of the Palanis, and Mr. Davison has shot it at an elevation of 6000 feet above the sea in the Nilghiris and found it breeding at about 5000 feet. In the Deccan and Khandala district it is common according to Mr. Fairbank, and the same is true as regards the north-west of India; for Mr. Adam records it as very plentiful about the Sambhur Lake, and Mr. Hume found it pretty common all the year round in Upper Sindh, though comparatively rare in Lower Sindh. It is found along the base of the Himalayas, but does not extend to any elevation. In Chota Nagpur it is one of the ‘most abundant of birds.” In Cachar Mr. Inglis says it is common between August and April, in which latter month a large number migrate. In Pegu it is extremely numerous in the low country, but not in the hills. In Tenasserim it is generally distributed ; but it is absent from the islands of the Bay of Bengal, where our other two species are found. It appears to be a seasonal visitant to the neighbourhood of Caleutta, for Capt. Beavan records MEROPS VIRIDIS. 311 that it arrives at Barrackpore in October. Westward of India it extends through Beluchistan and Persia to Northern Africa, and there is not uncommonly found in Egypt, Nubia, and Abyssinia. Habits.—This is one of the most charmingly fearless little birds in Ceylon; unlike the last it is very terrestrial in its habits, perching all day on some little bush or low stick near the ground, and sallying out like a Flycatcher after its food, when it at once returns to its perch or sweeps off to another close by. It is generally found in pairs, or three or four in scattered company, which frequent roadsides and dry open ground of all description where they can find objects to take up their watch upon. About Trincomalie, and, in fact, anywhere on the sea-coast of the eastern side of the island, it is very fond of the sandy scrubby wastes lining the sea-beach, and is so tame that it may be almost knocked down witha stick, so near an approach will it allow before taking wing. In the interior a favourite locality with it is the dried-up paddy-fields in the neighbourhood of the village tanks. It roosts in little colonies, retirmg early to rest and congregating in close company ; it resorts usually to the same tree, round which much noisy preparation goes on—flying up and wheeling round, alighting on a neighbouring tree-top and then returning, after which the little flock will start out again from the branches and make another little detour, keeping up all the while a continuous clamour. Its note is a sweet little chirrup, unlike the loud voice of the last species. It is either uttered when the bird is perched or when it is sailing along in pursuit of an insect, which it seizes with an audible snap of its bill. It usually preys on small flies or minute Coleoptera, avoiding large dragonflies and other giants of the insect kingdom, upon which the last species feasts and beats to death in the manner aforementioned. Jerdon says that he has seen one occasionally pick an insect off a branch or a stalk of grain or grass; and Blyth has seen them assembled round a small tank seizing objects from the surface of the water, after the manner of a Kingfisher. I have also observed them about rushy jheels and small tanks, but they are not particularly partial to the vicinity of water. Nidification.—This Bee-eater breeds in the sand hills at Hambantota and other similar localities in Ceylon. I found the young fledged, on the south-east coast, in June, but did not succeed in finding any nests. The nesting-time is in April and May. Mr. Hume says that it prefers to breed in sandy banks or cliffs, but that he has found the nest in a mud wall, and once in a perfectly level barren plain. It cuts the hole, after the manner of the last species, with its bill, scraping away the loose earth with its little feet, and sometimes excavates to a depth of 5 feet, the passage increasing in width and often, according to Mr. Adam, declining at an angle of 30° from the entrance to the egg-cavity, which is about 34 inches in width. No nesting- materials are used, the eggs, which vary from three or four (the usual number) to seven, being laid on the bare ground. The eggs are nearly spherical in shape, milky white, and ‘brilliantly glossy.” The average size of a large series is 0:78 by 0:7 inch. MEROPS SWINHOIL (THE CHESTNUT-HEADED BEE-EATER.) Merops quinticolor, Vieillot, N. Dict. xiv. p. 81 (1817); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 119 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 174; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 88 (1854); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 208; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 423; Walden, Ibis, 1873, p. 301; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 13. Merops erythrocephalus, Brisson, Av. iv. p. 563; Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 55 (1849) ; Swinhoe, P. Z. 8.1871, p. 348. Merops swinhoei, Hume, Nests and Eggs (Rough Draft), p. 102; id. Str. Feath. 1874, p. 163 ; Ball, ibid. p. 386; Armstrong, ibid. 1876, p. 505. Le Guépier quinticolor, Levaillant, Hist. Nat. Guépiers, p. 51, pl. 15 (ex Ceylon). The Five-coloured Bee-eater, Kelaart, Prodromus ; ‘* Flycatcher” of Europeans in India and Ceylon. Kurumenne kurulla, Sinhalese, Southern Province ; Pook-kira, Sinh., N.W. Province. Adult male and female. Length 8-4 to 8-6 inches ; wing 4:2 to 4:3; tail 3°3; tarsus 0°45, middle toe and claw 0:65 ; bill to gape 1:6 to 1-8. (In this species the tail-feathers are not elongated, but the tail is somewhat sinuated, the central pair being rounded at the tips and longer than those adjacent, though shorter than the laterals.) Iris scarlet ; bill black; legs and feet dark vinous brown or purplish brown. Ilead, hind neck, sides of the same, interscapular region, and upper edge of black throat-band bright chestnut ; wings and tail dull green, edges of wing-coverts, terminal portion of tertials, and edges of rectrices bluish; rump and upper coverts pale cerulean blue, tips of the longer-coverts darker; tips of quills and rectrices, with the exception of the centrals, brownish black ; inner webs of secondaries, borders of those of primaries, and under wing cinnamon- red as in the other species. . A black facial stripe, narrower than in the last, passing from the gape beneath the eye; chin and throat rich saffron- yellow; black throat-band bordered beneath with golden yellow ; beneath this the underparts are green, passing into pale greenish blue on the lower breast, abdomen, and under tail-coverts. 7 Young. Birds of the year have the chestnut of the upper surface paler, the throat whitish, the black band ill-defined and slightly edged with yellow beneath, the wing-coverts and secondaries margined with blue, and the chest greenish blue like the lower parts. The nestlings, which are blind for the first few days, quickly acquire the feathers of their first plumage as here described. Obs. This species was first made known from Ceylon—that is to say, specimens were sent to Levaillant from there, and the bird was named by him, in his work on the ‘ Guépiers,’ the Guépier quinticolor ; but by some oversight he gave a plate of the species inhabiting Java, and accompanied it by a description, in which he stated the colour of the throat to be “d'un jaune jonquille, lequel jaune est terminé au bas par un collier noir,” making no mention of the triangular chestnut throat-patch above the black mark, which character is wanting in the Javan bird, as it likewise is in his plate. His plate and description did not therefore apply to the Ceylon bird, nor can Vieillot’s name, Which was founded on the plate. Merops quinticolor accordingly is the Javan bird, and not the Indian. The matter has been referred to by the late Mr. Swinhoe and Lord Tweeddale in the references above given, and Mr. Hume gave the Indian bird its present title in his notice of it in ‘ Nests and Eggs,’ as it was without a name. Ceylonese examples correspond with Indian and Burmese in size and likewise in coloration of the throat, though individuals from any district will differ inter se in this latter respect. One specimen I have examined in the British Museum from Madras has a wider black throat-band than any Ihave seen from Ceylon. Pinang specimens correspond with Ceylonese. Distribution.—This handsome Bee-eater is sparingly dispersed over the island, inhabiting some localities MEROPS SWINHOII. 31 oo in considerable numbers, while in other districts mere stragglers are met with. In the south it is common on the Gindurah river, commencing above Baddegama and extending up into the hills of the Hinedun Pattu ; it likewise frequents the banks of the Kaluganga, Kelaniganga, and Maha-oya in the Western Province, and is found here and there through Saffragam. To the north of these localities it is located about Kurunegala, on the Deduru-oya, in the Puttalam district, and in isolated spots in the neighbourhood of Dambulla. Mr. Parker has met with it in the Anaradjapura district, and it occurs sparingly throughout the northern forests. I have seen it between Trincomalie and Mullaittivu, but I do not think it is to be found much to the north of the latter place. In the Kandyan Province it is much more common than in most parts of the low country, inhabiting the vale of Dumbara, Deltota, Nilambe, Maturatta, and Uva generally. It does not ascend to the Nuwara-Elliya plateau. This species is found in most of the forest-districts of India, Burmah, and Tenasserim, inhabiting the Andamans and extending to Pinang. Jerdon writes that it occurs in the Malabar forests and adjoining moun- tains, and is not uncommon in the Wynaad and other elevated wooded districts. I notice that Mr. Bourdillon did not procure it in the Travancore hills, nor Mr. Fairbank in the Palanis. The latter gentleman found it on the sides and base of the Goa and Savant-Wade hills, and records it as an inhabitant of the entire west coast as far north as Guzerat, whence, however, I do not observe that it has been procured. Capt. Marshall writes, in ‘ The Ibis,’ 1872, that it is found in the Doon and the Terai, and along the whole of the southern skirts of the Himalayas to the valley of the Brahmapootra. In Chota Nagpur it is rare, Mr. Ball recording the occurrence of a single pair only ; in Cachar it is migratory, being common during April and May: in Southern Pegu it occurs very sparingly ; Mr. Armstrong met with it there in the month of February: at Thayetmyo Captain Feilden says it is rare, and in the plains of Pegu Mr. Oates did not meet with it at all. Mr. Davison ~ found it throughout Northern Tenasserim, and in the Andamans he procured many specimens, meeting with it in Port Blair, Great and Little Cocos Islands, &c., but in the Nicobars it was not found. Habits.—The banks of rivers which flow through forest or the borders of jungle-begirt tanks are the favourite localities of this bird in the low country. In the Central Province I have seen it principally in the vicinity of rivers in the deep valleys leading to the Mahawelliganga, on roads leading through jungle, and in spots studded with high trees on the sides of steep ravines. It is usually in pairs, and is very arboreal in its habits, sitting on the topmost or most outstretching branches of high trees overhanging water, and darting thence on its prey, much after the manner of a Flycatcher. It takes short flights, and often returns to the same perch again. It is a very pretty object, with its bright green plumage and glistening rufous head, as it darts from the fine old trees lining the forest-rivers down to the edge of the sparkling stream, and glides over the sandy bed, quickly catching up some passing insect. A pair may sometimes be seen seated ona dead twig, touching one another, so very sociable is it in its disposition. It has a soft note, differing from that of either of the foregoing species, which it generally utters from its perch. Nidification—I found the nest of this bird on the banks of the Gidurah in the month of April. The hole was excavated in the soft mould near the top of the bank, went in about 2 feet, with an average diameter of 2 inches, and at the end widened into a cavity 4 or 5 inches in height and nearly double that in width. There were four young ones lying on the bare ground, which was swarming with living maggots, ants, and flies, brought in for their food by the old birds. The nestlings showed a marked difference in age ; two were perhaps not three days old, and the others had the green scapular feathers already sprouting. Layard found the nest in the same month, and says the eggs are two in number. Mr. Davison writes that the hole is sometimes 6 feet in depth when excavated in sand, and that some turn off at a right angle, while others take a circular direction. The eggs are stated to vary from four to six im number, and to be pure white, very glossy, and nearly spherical in shape; they average 0°87 by 0°76 inch. The old birds are said to sit very close, allowing themselves to be dug out. PICAR iA: Fam. CYPSELID. Bill very small, but with the gape enormous, unfurnished with rictal bristles ; tip hooked. Wings very long and pointed, with ten primaries. ‘Tail variable, short and even, or long and much forked, of ten feathers. Legs and feet small and feeble ; hind toe either directed forward or more or less reversible to the front. Sternum with the keel very deep. Humerus very short. Throat furnished with large salivary glands. Genus CHETURA. Bill very small, triangular, the gape receding far back and very wide; culmen curved, flattened at the base, the tip hooked. Nostrils exposed. Wings very long and pointed. The humerus and ulna very short; the Ist quill the longest; the inner very short, imparting a sickle-shape to the wing. Tail short, even or rounded at the tip; the shafts rigid, very acute, and projecting some distance from the web. ‘Tarsus short, stout, feathered just below the knee, and the rest covered with a naked skin. The three front toes nearly equal, the hallux directed backward but reversible to the front ; claws stout, deep, and much curved. CHATURA GIGANTEA. (THE BROWN-NECKED SPINE-TAIL.) Cypselus giganteus (V. Hasselt), Temm. Pl. Col. 364 (1825). Acanthylis caudacuta, Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 84 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 118 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 170. Acanthylis gigantea, Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 172 (1862); Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 419; Ball, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 55; Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 280; Tweeddale, Blyth, B. Burmah, ext. no. 1875, p. 84. no. 183. Chetura gigantea, Sclater, P. Z. S. 1865, p. 608. Chetura indica, Hume, Str. Feath, 1873, p. 471, et 1876, p. 286. Hirundinapus giganteus, Walden, Ibis, 1874, p. 131. The Needle-tailed Swallow, Lath. Gen. Synopsis ; The Spiny-tailed Swift, Kelaart. Wehelaniya, Sinhalese. Adult (from three Ceylonese specimens). Total length, estimated from skins, 9°5 inches; wing 7:8 to 7:95, reaching 1:5 beyond tail when closed ; tail 2°7 to 2-9, bare shafts of central feathers 0°35 to 0:4; tarsus 0°65 to 0:7; middle toe 0:5, its claw (straight) 0°35; bill to gape 1-0. Tris brown; bill blackish or dark brown ; legs and feet livid brown or fleshy purple, claws blackish brown. lfead, back and sides of neck, upper part of back, anterior scapular feathers, wings, sides of rump, and upper tail-coverts shining green-black, glossed on the wing-coyerts, secondaries, and sides of rump more or less with blue; back CHATURA GIGANTEA. 315 whity brown, of variable paleness, blending into the surrounding green; inner margins of quills and tertials light mauve-brown, palest on the latter; shafts of tail-feathers blackish brown. Lores intense black, between which and the nostril there is a whitish or whity-brown spot; throat a corresponding pale colour—that is, lightest in those birds which have the palest frontal spots; beneath umber-brown, glossed obscurely with green, and blending gradually on the throat into the pale hue of the chin; under tail-coverts and a broad streak leading from them above the flank to opposite the centre of the back white; shafts of under tail- coverts black ; under wing-coverts pale mouse-brown. Young. Immature birds have the frontal patches scarcely discernible, the head browner than the adult, the back darker, and the under surface less suffused with green. Obs. This Swift is variable in the pale markings about the face and chin, in the light hue of the back, and in the extent of the blue gloss on the upper plumage. I have examined a series from Labuan, Malacca, Singapore, and South India, and I find that the dark-backed birds, which are evidently not fully aged, have the chin and loral spots of a correspondingly dark hue. Mr. Hume has separated the Indian birds as C. indica, on account of their more pronounced white chin and frontal patches, as distinguished from what he considers to be true C. gigantea from Java, without the white chin. If the type from this island had not the whitish markings it must have been, in all probability, an immature bird. Temminck’s plate shows no white nostril-patches ; but in those days artists were not particular. I am not conversant enough with Indian specimens to say whether they never show an absence of the white patches either as young birds or as individuals; but those from all other quarters, as I have just remarked, vary in this respect. Birds from each end of the geographical limit of the species, viz. from India and Celebes, have the white spots alike, which argues in favour of there being but one species. Two examples from Labuan measure 8-1 and 8-2 inches in the wing ; one is a dark-backed bird, the other a light one, and the chin and forehead tally with the back in each: two from Malacca measure 8-1 and 7-9 inches in the wing; one has a dark back and no loral spot, the other is slightly paler and has an indication of the light patches. One from Singapore measures 7-9 inches, has a very dark back, no frontal patches, and a dull brown under surface ; it is evidently a young bird. Another from the Nilghiris is entirely a pale bird, with light chin- and nostril-spots. Lord Tweeddale finds that adolescent examples from the Andamans agree with Malaccan ones in his collection. Distribution —The Brown-necked Spine-tail is a resident in the Ceylon hills, wandering at uncertain times during its day’s pereginations over the whole island. In the upper ranges it is most often seen frequenting the Horton, Nuwara-Elliya, Kandapolla, and Elephant Plains, over which it dashes at one moment, while at the next it sweeps round the adjacent hills in its headlong course. It is frequently noticed in the coffee-estates in the surrounding districts. Mr. Elwes writes that it is often seen in Dimbulla; and Mr. Bligh, who observes it yearly in the Haputale gorges, tells me that it comes into that district to breed usually about the month of April. It inhabits the Morowak-Korale and Kukkul-Korale hills, in which I have seen it in various months, and I have no doubt it breeds there in sequestered places. I have seen it in large flocks on the sea-coast at Tangalla, and Capt. Wade has met with it at Yala. On one occasion, too, I encountered it in the north of the island. It hawks, as I have seen C. caudacuta in Australia, at an enormous height, and when rained on by a monsoon shower descends to earth, and is thus seen for a few minutes in the low country, vanishing again on the return of sunshine. Layard knew it principally from Nuwara Elliya. In India Jerdon observed it chiefly in the south of the peninsula, specifying the Nilghiris, Malabar, and the Wynaad as the localities where he met with it. Mr. Carter found it during the S.W. monsoon at Coimbatore, Salem, and on the Anamully hills at various elevations up to 6000 feet. The species does not seem to extend into the north of India, where its Australian and Chinese congener, C. caudacuta, singularly enough, is found in considerable numbers. Our bird inhabits Tenasserim, and Mr. Inglis obtained it in Cachar. It is common in the Andamans, but has not been procured in the Nicobars. It extends down the Malay peninsula (taking in Pinang) to Singapore, and thence to Java, Labuan, Borneo, and Celebes, to the south-east of which latter group it has not yet been observed. Habits —This magnificent Swift and its Australian ally are the swiftest creatures in existence, excelling all other living beings to such an extent in their powers of locomotion that they cannot fail, as the per- 282 516 CHATURA GIGANTEA. fection of an all-wise Creator’s handiwork, to excite wonder and admiration in the mind of the naturalist and true lover of nature. That any bird can sustain an aerial course of such rapidity for 12 or 14 hours at a time, without any cessation from its exertions, must of necessity excite the astonishment of the most careless thinker, while to the inquirmg mind it amply demonstrates what a marvel of strength and perfection of structure are exhibited in this wonderful bird. A casual glance at one of these Swifts will show that it is entirely formed for speed. The pointed aspect of its face and bill, with the thick lores and stiff super- ciliary feathers to protect the eye from the rush of air, its broad body, gradually tapering from the rump to the acute tip of the tail, give it the form of a feathered projectile constructed to acquire immense velocity, which, in truth, its rigid sickle-shaped wings, with their specially lengthened metacarpal bones imparting so much power to the downward stroke, cannot fail to give it. It is this peculiar outward form which imparts to it a so much higher power of speed than exists in other Swifts, such as the next species, for the structure of the sternum is not so very much superior to that of the Alpine Swift. Dr. Sclater writes, in explanation of the drawing of the sternum of this Spine-tail which is contained in the P. Z. 8. 1865, that it is broader in proportion and less elongated than in Cypselus, and that the anterior point or apex of the keel is not carried so far forward. Apparently these slight differences would not give the Spine-tail the superiority over the ordinary Swift which it possesses were it not for its admirable external shape and greater length of metacarpus. This Spine-tail haunts the vicinity of rocky precipices and steep hill-sides, dividing its time between careering round them and up.and down adjacent valleys and sweeping over the surrounding country, especially where there exist open tracts, in search of food. When hawking in a large flock its flight is not unlike that of the Alpine Swift ; but it is varied by vast circles and detours made with astonishing swiftness, as if merely for exercise, returning in a moment to its place in the flock. It is not in this manner, however, that its great powers of flight are put forth; it is in returning at nights from its day’s labours to its far-distant roosting-place that these are brought out, and then its flight is as swift as the momentary rush on its quarry of the Peregrine Falcon. I have experienced this on more than one occasion in the Ceylon hills, where a whiz just over my head, like that of a bullet, has brought my attention to the onward course of one of these birds, which the next moment had disappeared far away in the gloom of the tropical evening. Mr. Carter writes, concerning a flock that he fired at, “I should not like to say how many I missed; but some idea of their rate of speed may be formed when I say that in seeing one coming towards me and turning sharp round, by the time I sighted it it was too far .. . . The two I got I killed passing over me, making great allowance and firing far in front. One, although quite dead when I came up to it, had managed to clutch a stone, which remained tight in its claws.” Mr. Davison observed that they hawked very high in the air, betraying their almost invisible presence by a sharp clear whistle. At nights they were found, in company with other Swifts, about ponds or tanks. Concerning the roosting of this Swift, which is one of the most interesting points in its economy, very little seems to be known. Its spinous tail is evidently a provision of nature to afford it support against the rock to which it clings at night. It most probably, as suggested by Jerdon, has some fixed roosting-places, to which large flocks resort from immense distances, arriving no doubt at a late hour, and thus preventing the possibility of their haunt being discovered from observations of the birds on their way thither. He observed that they flew towards the coast, and on one occasion witnessed an enormous flock passing him on their way towards the sea some time after sunset, although there was no situation on the west coast where they could have roosted; consequently the idea suggests itself that they make for the sea-shore and then travel along it to their nightly rendezvous. Layard was informed by the natives that this species nested in rhododendron-trees, which, it is scarcely necessary to remark, is an erroneous idea. It breeds, as its near ally the White-necked Spine-tail, in lofty cliffs. Mr. Bligh informs me that they yearly resort to some inaccessible precipices in the Haputale ranges for the purpose of breeding, but he has been unable to find their nests or procure their eggs. Genus CYPSELUS. Bill slightly stouter and more curved from the base than in Chetura. Wings equally long, the metacarpus shorter in proportion; the 2nd quill equal to, or longer than, the first. Tail variable in length, emarginate or deeply forked. Tarsus very short, feathered; all four toes directed forward, but the two inner reversible, shorter than in the last. CYPSELUS MELBA. (THE ALPINE SWIFT.) Hirundo melba, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 345 (1766). Hirundo alpina, Scop. Ann. i. Hist. Nat. p. 166 (1769). ‘ Cypselus melba, Wig. Pred. Syst. Mamm. et Av. p. 230 (1811); Gould, B. of Europe, pl. 55 (18387); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. no. 421. p. 85 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 117 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 167; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 175 (1862); Tristram, P. Z. 8. 1864, p. 431; Sclater, P. Z. S. 1865, p. 598 ; Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 419; Severtzoff, Faun. Turkestan, pp. 67, 145 (1873); Dresser, B. of Europe, pt. 51 (1874); Butler & Hume, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 483. Le Grand Martinet a ventre blanc, Mont. Hist. Ois. vil. p. 516 (1783). Le Martinet @ gorge blanche, Levaillant, Ois. d Afr. (1806). Andorinhio gaivio, Portuguese; Avion, Spanish ; Alpensegler, German. The Conmon Large Swift, Kelaart, Prodromus. Wehelaniya, Sinhalese. Adult male and female. Length 8:5 inches ; wing 8:0 to 8-25; tail 3:0 to 3°5 tarsus 0°55; middle toe 0°35, its claw (straight) 0°32 to 0°35; bill to gape 0°85 to 0°9. The tail is slightly forked in this species. Obs. These measurements are taken from three Ceylon examples, and are below those of birds from Europe and Africa, some of which, from Switzerland, range as high as 8-7 in the wing. Possibly these Ceylonese specimens were bred in the island, and would almost of necessity be smaller than those from cold countries. Iris brown ; bill blackish, darkest at the tip ; feet livid brown, claws black. Head, all the upper surface with the wings and tail glossy earth-brown, passing over the chest and dewn the flanks to the under tail-coverts ; on the wings and tail a strong brownish-green lustre is often present; feathers of the back, rump, and upper tail-coverts with the shafts perceptibly darker than the web; quills and rectrices darker than the back; lores black, surmounted by a thin whitish line; chin, throat, breast, and abdomen white; the feathers above and below the brown pectoral band and those of the flanks more or less tipped with the same ; thighs and tarsal feathers concolorous with the flanks ; under wing-coverts dark brown, some of the feathers tipped with white ; edge of the wing more or less narrowly margined with white. Foung. Birds of the year have the feathers of the head, sides of the neck, and all the upper surface with fine whitish terminal margins, external edge of wing-lining with conspicuous white edgings, the white throat-patch more extensive, reducing the extent of the brown pectoral band ; under tail-coverts tipped with white. Distribution—The Alpine Swift takes up its quarters almost exclusively in the upper regions of the Kandyan Province ; but, being a bird of such immense powers of flight, it wanders with ease, in the course of a day’s hawking, over all parts of the island. Hence Layard observed it at Dambulla and Ratnapura, and I 318 CYPSELUS MELBA. have seen it at Topare tank. Mr. Holdsworth records it as frequenting Nuwara Elliya throughout the cool season, and Mr. Bligh has noticed it both there and in Haputale at various times of the year. In May I found it in great numbers congregated about the high cliffs of Ragalla, which rises above the Elephant Plains, where, as Mr. E. Watson informs me, it is often to be seen. It probably frequents the Gongalla range, in the southern coffee-district, in common with the last species. Ceylon appears to be the most southerly point of this Swift’s range in Asia. It is found all through India, more particularly in the Ghats, Nilghiris, and Cashmere hills, from which it extends through Western Asia to Europe, which may be most properly styled its head-quarters, and where it is well known in the Alps, Pyrenees, and other groups of mountains. Through Africa it wanders as far as Cape Colony, whence it is recorded by Layard, Andersson, Ayres, Shelley, and others, but in the tropical region south of the Atlas it has not as yet been observed ; in the northern parts of the continent it is common, wandering over Egypt and Algeria in the summer, and the same may be said of the northern sea-board of the Mediterranean. Mr. G. C. Taylor records it as plentiful in the Crimea and at Constantinople ; Mr. Danford noticed it as a summer visitant to parts of Asia Minor, and Severtzoff found it breeding in scattered localities in Central Asia (Turkestan). To parts of India it is a cold-weather visitant; at Mount Aboo it arrives, according to Captain Butler, in large numbers about the beginning of September, and remains throughout the season. It has not been found to the eastward of the Bay of Bengal, being replaced in Burmah and Tenasserim by C. pacificus. Habits.—This splendid Swift, which, next to the larger species of the foregoing genus, is the swiftest bird in existence, loves to haunt the vicinity of great mountain declivities, towermg precipices, ravines, or great river-gorges, about which it dashes at tremendous speed, either in search of its insect-prey, or, as would appear to an eye-witness, from some normal habit of exercising its marvellous muscular power. It is most active, like other Swifts, before rain, when the atmosphere teems with life, or on still evenings, when it may be seen varying its headlong flight with extensive curves and vast swoops, from which it will rise with renewed swiftness and redoubled beatings of its long, sickle-shaped wings. It hawks late in the evening, and it is generally nearly dusk before it directs its course towards the far-off roosting-place which it left in the morning, and the reaching of which will perhaps add some hundreds of miles to the immense distance which it has traversed during the day. Dr. Jerdon, who, to judge by his writings, took much interest in this family, observed them in the south of India flying towards the sea-coast about sunset, and was of opinion that it was their habit to make for the seaside and then follow the coast-line, “ picking up stragglers from other regions on their way to the cliffs of Gairsoppa,” where he discovered that they roosted. Tickell, as quoted by the same author, noticed these Swifts assembled “of an evening near large ponds in the jungle, dashing into the water with loud screams,” lke the Common Swift of Europe. They assemble in very large flocks, and, as I noticed at Polanarua, suddenly appear in a locality, and, after hawking it well, as quickly disappear again. It has a shrill, tremulous cry, which has a curious sound as the bird rapidly approaches the spectator, and, instantly passing overhead, is again quickly out of hearing. It is said to roost against cliffs, clinging to the rock in an upright position, for which its powerful and much-curved claws are well adapted. Nidification.—As regards Ceylon, little or nothing is known of this Swift’s breeding. Mr. Bligh is of opinion that it nests in April and May near Nuwara Elliya and on the southern slopes of the Haputale range, and it is not impossible that some of the birds observed by me at Ragalla were breeding in the great precipice there. It does not confine itself to cliffs and rock-faces, but will nest in churches and other large buildings. Mr. Hume describes nests sent to him by Miss Cockburn from the Nilghiris as being made of “ feathers firmly cemented together with saliva ; but vegetable fibre of different kinds and dry grass formed part of the structure, which was a coarse felt-like mass of about 5 inches in diameter, with walls 1 inch thick; and several nests appear to have been grouped together. The eggs are four or five in number, pure white.” CYPSELUS AFFINIS. (THE INDIAN SWIFT.) Cypselus affinis, J. HE. Gray, Il. Ind. Zool. i. pl. 35. fig. 2 (1832); Sykes, P. Z. 8. 1882, p. 83; Jerdon, Cat. B.S. India, Madr. Journ. 1840, xi. p. 235. no. 255 ; Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 86 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 117 (1852) ; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 167; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 106 (1854); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 177 (1862); Sclater, Ibis, 1865, p. 235; id. P. Z. S. 1865, p. 603; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 339; Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 419; Hume, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 166; Ball, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 370; Hume, Nests and Eggs, i. p. 85 (1873); Dresser, B. of Eur. pt. 33 (1874); Aitken, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 214. Cypselus nipalensis, Hodgs. J. A. 8. B. v. p. 780 (1836). ©. galilejensis, Antinori, Cat. Collez. di Uccelli, p. 24 (1864). C. galileensis, Tristram, Ibis, 1865, p. 76. C. abyssinicus, Streubel, Isis, 1848, p. 354. The Allied Swift, Gray; White-rumped Swift, Jerdon. Ababil or Babila, Hind.; Huwa bil-bil, Natives at Saharunpore (Jerdon). Wehelaniya, Leniya, Sinhalese. Adult male and female. Length 5-1 to 5°5 inches; wing 5:1 to 5:3; tail 1-8; tarsus 0°4; mid toe and claw (5; bill to gape 0°65 to 0-7. In this species the tail is short, slightly forked, but the feathers not pointed. Iris deep brown; bill black; feet vinous-brown, claws black. Head, hind neck, wings, and tail blackish brown, with a slight greenish lustre, and the forehead paler than the crown; back and scapulars glossy green-black, blending into the hue of the hind neck; primaries pale on the inner webs, the tertials and the feathers along the metacarpal joint with fine light edges; rump and its sides, with the chin and centre of the throat, white, some of the feathers of the former region generally with dark shafts ; under surface glossy black, paler on the under tail-coverts ; under wing brownish black. Young. Immature birds have the feathers of the under wing-coverts margined with whitish, and the rump more lineated than in the adult ; the breast and lower parts are likewise more or less finely edged with whitish. Obs. This Swift varies considerably in size in different portions of its habitat. In India Mr. Hume has found it varying in the wing from 4°8 to 5:5 inches; and Dr. Finsch gives the wing of specimens frem the Blue Nile as high as 5:6 inches ; he likewise remarks that a more or less visible superciliary stripe is occasionally visible. 1 have found the amount of white on the throat to be variable in some examples; it does not quite extend te the chin ; probably such are mature birds. Distribution.—The common Indian Swift is not migratory to Ceylon, as was supposed by Layard, but is merely a wanderer throughout the low country, its movements appearing to be regulated by the weather and monsoon winds. In the south-west of the island I have noticed it at the seaside only during the first three months of the year, although I have seen it in the hilly parts of the interior during the S.W. monsoon, at which season Mr. Parker, of the Ceylon Public Works Department, has observed it at Puttalam. In the north-east I have seen it at both seasons of the year, but am of opinion that it is no more than a straggler over that flat region, traversing it in the course of a day’s wandering from its head-quarters in the hills. In the Kandyan Province it is a common bird and a permanent resident there. It appears to prefer the dry climate of Uva to other parts, although I have noticed it in most of the coffee-districts. It is sometimes 32 CYPSELUS AFFINIS. met with about Nuwara Elliya and on the Horton Plains, but in all probability does not roost in such high regions. It is a bird of very extensive range, for besides inhabiting the whole of India and Western Asia as far as Palestine, where it is the C. galileensis of Antinori, it extends through Africa to the extreme south. Although found throughout India from the south to the Himalayas, Jerdon remarks that large tracts of country may be traversed at times without seeing a single individual, and Mr. Hume has likewise found it to be very local. In many parts of Sindh he met with it commonly, but throughout Upper Sindh to Sehwan he did not see it. At Mount Aboo and the plains of the surrounding country it is common, breeding in the celebrated Dilwarra temples. It is rare in the Deccan; and Col. Sykes remarks that though found in all districts in India, it is often confined to a small tract in the neighbourhood of some fine large pagodas and other buildings. In the central regions of Nepal it is said by Hodgson to remain throughout the year. In Palestine Canon Tristram records that it is a permanent resident in the Jordan valley, while every other species of its genus is migratory there. In the portions of Africa which are inhabited by it it is likewise non-migratory. With regard to this peculiarity in its economy, it is singular that the same is true of its representative on the eastern side of the Bay of Bengal, the Cypselus subfurcatus of Blyth, which Mr. Swinhoe recorded as “resident on the Chinese coast ”’ as far north as Amoy. Habits —In the mountains of Ceylon this stout little Swift is usually seen coursing over coftee-estates, steep patnas, or the so-called “ Plains”’ in the upper ranges, while in the low country it affects every variety of open situation, particularly on sultry rainy evenings, when the damp tropical air is teeming with an abundance of insect-food. It congregates in large flocks, and hawks about with a rapid powerful flight, careering round and round at a great height, and then suddenly descending, will fly as low as the Common Swallow, picking up its evening meal right and left with no apparent exertion. In the hills it consorts with the Swiftlet, and may often be seen late in the evening flying with that species in some given direction on its way to a distant roosting-place, probably some inaccessible cliff where it has been bred. It is not usually a noisy bird, its note beg a weak scream, resembling that of the European Swift, but not so soft in tone, and which Blyth styled a “shivering” cry. In the breeding-season, however, its cries are incessant ; packing in small troops like the common Swift of Europe, it dashes round the spot where its nests are swarming with young, alighting for an instant to convey to the hungry mouths the food which it carries in its bill, and then sweeping off in a body, separates in search of a fresh store or continues its circular peregrinations. Jerdon, who remarks that its flight is fluttering and irregular in the morning and evening, writes that “small parties at these times may be seen flying close together, rather high up in the air and slowly, with much fluttering of the wings and a good deal of twittering talk; and after a short period of this intercourse all of a sudden they separate at once and take a rapid downward plunge, again to unite after a longer or shorter interval.” They may occasionally be seen flying beneath culverts and road-bridges like a Swallow, evidently feeding on the insects which congregate about the water in such places. Mr. Blyth, it may be remarked, has stated that he has seen this Swift rise from off the ground. Nidification—This species breeds either in large colonies or in company with a few of its fellows, and rears its young at various periods between the months of March and July. It builds in the verandahs of outhouses, beneath bridges and culverts, under overhanging rocks, or in caves, in all of which situations [ have known its nest to be found. Layard found them breeding at Dambulla in April about the rocks there, and at Tangalla beneath a bridge. I met with a large colony nesting in March in a salt-store at Kirinde, and another in May under the celebrated wooden bridge at Wellemade in Uva. In the month of April several pairs used to breed annually in a small seaside cave near Trincomalie. Mr. Holdsworth found it nesting “under the rocks overhanging the entrance to the famous temple at Dambulla.” The nest is constructed of feathers, straw, grass, and at times pieces of rag, wool, twine, or any miscellaneous material which the bird can find and which will assort well with the rest of the structure. The whole mass is firmly cemented together with the saliva of the bird, and is shaped in accordance with the situation in which it is built, which likewise determines the position of the aperture. The interior is spacious, and sometimes several nests are fastened together. Nests which I have seen in caves or beneath bridges CYPSELUS AFFINIS. 321 have had the entrance at the top, and others fixed under tiles have been very long structures with the opening at the end. My correspondent, Mr. Parker, writes me of a pair which took possession of a Red-bellied Swallow’s nest under a road-bridge near Kurunegala. To get possession of the eggs a hole had to be made in the side of the nest, which the bird used afterwards as an outlet. On a second visit a piece of the side came out, which the bird clumsily repaired the third year with feathers and leaves, making up a piece of patchwork which reminded one of a “hole in a window-pane stuffed with a piece of cloth!’? The number of eggs is generally three; they are long ovals in shape, smooth in texture, and pure white in colour; they vary from 0°8 to 1:0 inch in length by 0°55 to 0°65 inch in breadth. From what has been written of its nidification in India, it appears that there its nest varies in character, as in Ceylon, according to its situation. Mr. Aitken, writing of its breeding at Berar, remarks that when the nest is attached to the roof of a building and not supported in any way, the straws of which it is composed are so firmly agglutinated that it tears like a piece of matting. 27 CYPSELUS BATASSIENSIS. (THE PALM-SWIFT.) Cypselus batassiensis, Gray, Griff. An. Kingd. ii. p. 60 (1829); Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 128 (1854) ; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 180; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 540; Sclater, P. Z. S. 1865, p. 602; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 420. Cypselus balasiensis, Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 86 (1849) ; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 167. Cypselus balisiensis, Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 117. Cypselus palmarum, Gray & Hardwicke, Ill. Ind. Zool. i. pl. 55 (1852); Hume, Nests and Eggs, i. p. 87; Ball, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 384. Putta-deuli and Tari ababil, Hind.; Tal-chatta, Bengal, lit. “ Palm-Swallow ;” Batassia, Bengal (Jerdon); Chamchiki, Beng., a name also applied to Bats (Blyth). Wehelaniya, Sinhalese. Adult male and female. Length 5:1 to 5°3 inches; wing 4:3 to 4:7; tail 2°4 to 2:8, outer feather 1:0 longer than the middle ; tarsus 0°4; middle toe and claw 0°32; bill to gape 0-5. The wings reach 0-5 beyond tail, which is deeply forked, with the feathers pointed at the tips. Iris sepia-brown ; bill black ; legs and feet vinous-brown ; claws blackish. Above glossy ash-brown, darkest on the head and tail; the lower back and rump paler than the interscapular region and with dark shafts to the feathers; quills blackish brown, with the internal margins slightly paler than the rest. Bases of the loral feathers white ; beneath mouse-grey ; the under tail-coverts with dark shafts, and the flanks darker than the breast. Young. On leaving the nest the young bird is clothed like the adult, but the upper surface is not so glossy. Distribution.—The little Palm-Swift is the most numerous of its genus in Ceylon, and is found throughout the entire low country and sub-hill region. It is seen now and then in the Kandy district ; but is not a permanent resident there, and on the Uva side of the Central Province it ascends from the plains in fine weather to a considerable altitude, Mr. Bligh informing me that he has seen it in Haputale as high as 4000 feet. It is a common bird in the south and west of the island, and more numerous on the sea-board than in the interior. In the palmyra-districts, on the northern coasts, it is very abundant, and is the only Swift, as far as I can ascertain, which commonly affects the Jaffna peninsula and adjacent islands. As regards the Palm-Swift’s distribution in India, Jerdon informs us that it is abundant in all districts where palmyra- and cocoannt-palms are found, and that it is common on the Malabar coast, the Carnatic, the northern Cirears, and Bengal, but rare in the central tableland and North-west Provinces. In Chota Nagpur Mr. Ball says it is found in abundance where its favourite trees are common, and so local is it that he has observed a small colony settled in a single tree, where, perhaps, for many miles around not another tree or Swift could be found. It is said to extend into Assam and Burmah; but this can only be as a straggler, as it is not recorded in ‘ Stray Feathers’ from either Pegu or Tenasserim ; it is replaced in these provinces by Cypselus infumatus, the Sooty, or, as called by some, the ‘ Palm Roof-Swift.” It has not as yet been procured in Sindh. Habits.—The localities preferred by this Swift are fields and open lands in the vicinity of cocoanut- and palmyra-groves. In the northern parts of the island it is seen much about the sea-shore, which is, in many places, completely lined with the widely spread Borassus palm, its favourite tree all over India; indeed Jerdon remarks that it is seldom found at any distance from where this palm grows. This, however, is not its habit in Ceylon ; for it abounds in many parts of the Western Province, where the tree is unknown, but where its place is supplied by the cocoanut, and particularly the areca-palm, around which latter it careers CYPSELUS BATASSIENSIS. oo in little flocks with lively screams in just the same manner. These remain about the place of their birth throughout life, roosting in the trees which contain the nests in which they were reared, and to which they return early in the evening, flying up to the fronds and again darting off in search of their evening meal. It associates in parties of considerable numbers, and may often be seen, in company with the Swiftlet, hawking at evening time over the paddy-fields in the Western Province. Its flight is swift and regular at times and fluttering at others, particularly when hawking in a flock; it flies late at nights, and, as Dr. Jerdon remarks, it is not uncommon to see Bats and these Swifts hawking together at dusk, a circumstance which perhaps has given rise to the belief that it is nocturnal in its habits, and is also doubtless the origin of its Bengal appellation “Chamchiki.” J have seen it flying rather leisurely about, taking winged termites, at sunset. Its note, which it constantly utters, is likened by Blyth to the sound ¢iféeya, which is a very correct rendering of it, although there is a pretty shrillness in the ery that cannot be well expressed in words. Dr. Hamilton considered this bird to be nocturnal in Bengal, appearing at sunset and going to rest at sunrise! It certainly hawks very late; but it is difficult to understand what became of those that were scen at sunrise, and whose disappearance must have given rise to this strange belief. Nidification—This species breeds from October until April, probably rearing two broods in the season, as I have found eggs and young of the same colony during both these months. Although it invariably nests in the palmyra-palm wherever these trees are to be found, I am of opinion that it takes to the areca in the south of the island, as I have seen them thronging around these trees at Galle during the breeding- season. It very often selects an isolated palmyra, and sometimes one situated in a most public spot, to breed in—to wit, the solitary tree which stands on the shore in front of Fort Frederick at Trincomalie, and in which there is always a little colony to be found. The nest is built on the under surface of the hanging fronds, which droop round the head of the trunk beneath the cluster of more vital and horizontal ones; it is attached principally to the ribs of the leaf, and situated high up where these lie at a convenient distance from one another. If, however, it is placed low down, near the tip, it is firmly fixed to the hollow portions as well as the ribs. In shape it resembles a little open pocket, with a shallow interior of about 1 inch in depth and 1% in width; the back part, adjoining the leaf, which is thin, is continued for some distance up, affording an additional support, and often a partial foundation, for another nest built immediately above it. The materials consist of “wild cotton,’ the down from the pod of the cotton-tree, mixed with feathers which are placed in regular layers round the front and firmly incorporated with the cotton, which is agglutinated with the saliva of the bird. Sundevall, remarks Jerdon, shot these birds with their mouths slimy and filled with the down of some syngenesious plant which they appeared to catch during their flight. Myr. Hume finds the nests in India to be constructed of the fine down of the Argemone mexicana and similar plants. The eggs are two or three in number, much elongated and smooth in texture, pure white, and the shell very thin ; they measure from 0°65 to 0:7 inch in length, and from 0-43 to 0-46 inch in breadth. The young, when able to use their feet, cling to the leaf above the nest, supporting themselves im an upright position ; the old birds, when feeding them or entering their nest, alight at the bottom of the palm-leaf and run nimbly up the ribs. Genus COLLOCALIA. Bill smaller and more hooked than in Cypselus. Wings with the Ist quill considerably shorter than the 2nd. Tail slightly forked, and the tips of the feathers rounded. Tarsi and feet very small and feeble; tarsus naked, the hind toe directed backward and only partially reversible. COLLOCALIA FRANCICA. (THE INDIAN SWIFTLET,) Collocalia francica, Gm. Syst. Nat.i. p. 1017. no. 15 (1788); Walden, Ibis, 1874, p. 152. Hirundo brevirostris, M‘Clelland, P.Z.S. 1839, p. 155. Hirundo unicolor, Jerdon, Madr. Journ. Se. xi. p. 258 (1840). Collocalia nidifica, G. R. Gray, Gen. Birds, i. p. 55. no. 1 (1844); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 86 (1849); Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. 1. Co. i. p. 98 (1854) ; Bernestein, J. f. O. 1859, p. 118; Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 182 (1862); Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 13. Collocalia brevirostris, Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 118; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 168. Collocalia fuciphaga, Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 420. Collocalia unicolor, Bourdillon and Hume, Str. Feath. 1876, pp. 874, 375. Esculent Swallow of Latham and Stephens; Indian Edible-nest Swiftlet. Wehelaniya, Sinhalese. Adult male and female. Length 4:5 to 4°8 inches; wing 4:1 to 4°6, reaching 0°8 to 1-1 beyond the tail; tail 1-9 to 2-1; tarsus 0-4; middle toe and claw about 0-4; bill to gape 0-4. . Iris brown ; bill black, vinous-brown at base ; legs and feet dusky fleshy reddish, in some fleshy brown. Above uniform dark smoke-brown, with a green lustre on the back, wings, and tai] ; primaries and tail deep glossy brown ; the feathers of the rump albescent at the margins near the base, the light portions concealed beneath the overlying feathers ; lores whitish at the base and tipped black; beneath glossy mouse-grey, palest on the neck and chest ; the under tail-coverts with a slightly greenish gloss. Young. The nestling is plumaged like the adult as soon as fledged; the tips of the quills finely margined with albescent. The skin of the unfeathered chick is dark brown; and the head becomes quite feathered before the body commences, the scapulars following next. Obs. No little confusion has existed in the synonymy of this and the Javan Swiftlet, C. fuciphaga of Thunberg; and ornithologists are therefore much indebted to Lord Tweeddale for his note on these species in the ‘ Ibis,’ 1874, in which Indian, Ceylonese, and Andaman specimens of the species are shown to be identical with those from Mauritius and Seychelles. His lordship writes me that a specimen which I have lately forwarded him for examination is identical with birds from the Nilghiris, Darjiling, Andamans, and Malacca. The peculiarity of this species is that the tips of the concealed basal parts of the webs of the dorsal feathers are albescent, which increases in paleness towards the rump, showing in some specimens on the surface of the plumage and imparting a light appearance to that region. I regret that I did not collect more examples of this Swiftlet while in Ceylon; in the several that I have examined this latter degree of paleness has not been perceptible on the surface of the rump-plumage, although the basal portions of the feathers exhibit the above-mentioned character. Layard, in his correspondence with Blyth on the subject of this Swiftlet’s nesting, writes of itas C. nidifica, but styled it C. brevi- rostris in his published notes, an older title bestowed by M‘Clelland on a specimen from Assam, but which Mr. Hume is of opinion in reality applies to Cypselus infumatus, Sclater. Gmelin’s title has not yet come into use in the pages COLLOCALIA FRANCICA. 325 of ‘Stray Feathers, as Mr. Hume still applies Jerdon’s name of C. wnicolor (bestowed in the Madras Journal on the first specimens he received from the Nilghiris) to examples from Southern and Northern India. C. fuciphage from the Andamans as well as Java is a much smaller bird than C. francica. Total length about 3°5 inches ; wing 3°8, reaching 1:5 beyond tail ; tail 1-5. Above glossy black-green, with a very strong lustre on rump and upper tail-coverts and tail; throat and sides of fore neck dark brownish grey, chest-feathers edged with whitish; breast and abdomen white, the feathers with mesial brown lines ; under tail-coverts concolorous with the back, the shorter feathers broadly margined with white. Distribution.—The little Swiftlet of Ceylon is spread over the whole island, taking up its quarters in the low country near the many isolated rocky hills which abound therein, and wandering thence over the surrounding districts, while in the Kandyan Province, full of precipices and caves, it everywhere finds a home. There are consequently many parts of the low-lying forest districts where it may always be found, such as the rocky ranges in the Eastern Province, the hilly Pattus and Korales in the south-west, from which it strays to the neighbourhood of Galle, the vicinity of the curious rock-ridges stretching from Kurunegala to Dambulla and northwards to the isolated and singular mountain of Rittagalla, whence it overruns all the Vanni to the extreme north; in these localities, as also about sundry rocks on the north-east coast to the south of Tirei, the precipices of Yakhahatua near Avisawella, and other crags in the Raygam Korale, I have invariably noticed the Swiftlet. It is occasionally seen, on fine mornings, about the cinmnamon-gardens of Colombo, but not so often as round the southern port. It is abundant in the higher parts of Uva, round Nuwara Elliya and Hakgala, and similar spots in the main range. This species is found throughout the south of the Indian peninsula, and is said to be more abundant on the Travancore and Nilghiri hills than in the low country. In the north of India it is found in Sikhim and in the neighbourhood of Darjiling. Southward it extends into Malacca and to the Andamans, where a nearly allied species, C. spodiopygia, Peale, with a paler rump, is found. In the opposite direction it reappears in the Mauritius and Seychelle group of islands. Habits —This Swift generally affects the crags and rocky hills in which it has been bred, wandering great distances during the day over the surrounding country. At early morn, when sallying out from its roosting- places, the caves of its birth, it flies about the vicinity with a rather tardy, uncertain flight, and then starts off for distant questing-grounds, when numbers may be met with, all making for the same direction, whence they doubtless spread outwards in search of food. In the afternoon they return in great numbers and pack into a large flock, dashing about their native rocks in close company, uttering their low, hissing cries. They commonly associate with the Palm-Swift, and when questing with these on open ground, such as the “cinnamon,” fly very low and may easily be shot. They can always be recognized from C. batassiensis, ou the wing, by the short tail and the absence of the well-known note of this latter species. I have noticed them hawking about the bunds of large tanks, flying close to the water and keeping up their evening meal until quite dark. Jerdon mentions them returning to the caves in Pigeon Island, off Honore, as late as 9 P.m., and comments on the vast distance they must have flown to arrive at their roosting-place three hours after dark! Their powers of flight are certainly very great, their progress being much more rapid than that of the Palm-Swift. The food of this species consists of gnats, mosquitos, and other small flies. It appears, like other Swifts, to be constantly in the act of catching its food; even late at night, when sitting on a lofty cliff overlooking one of the magnificent prospects of the splendid province of Uva, I have watched them picking off insects in their rapid progress homeward. Nidification—The breeding-season of this little Swiftlet in Ceylon lasts from March until June. It nests in large colonies in various caves in the hills and mountains of the central and southern parts of the island. Many of these are known from seeing the birds haunt the vicinity of certain precipitous hills; but few have been visited and examined, on account of the general inaccessibility of these resorts. Among those which are known are :—two situated on the rocky hills of Diagallagoolawa, near Pittegalla, on the banks of the Bentota river, and which are referred to in the extract given below from Layard’s notes ; several occupied by large and small colonies on the Dambetenne and Piteratmalie estates on the south face of the Haputale range; one on Pedrotallagalla, spoken of by Kelaart ; and another which I was informed of in a hill called Maha-ellagala, near 326 COLLOCALIA FRANCICA. the “Haycock” mountain, as also another in the Nitre-cave district. Besides these there are, I believe, colonies in the “Friars-Hood” or some of the surrounding rock-hills and in Rittagalla, the above- mentioned mountain situated between the Central and Trincomalie roads. The celebrated cave in the Haputale range, and the only one which I have had the good fortune to visit, is situated in a bold peak standing out above and towering over the Dambetenne and adjoining estates, which form one of the finest sweeps of coffee-ground in Ceylon. On a sultry day in May 1876, my friend Mr. Bligh and myself set out from Catton bungalow to see the Swifts’ cave. A long tramp round the adjacent spur brought us to the gorge in which lies the fine estate of Mousakella, up which we toiled, gradually winding our way up the zigzag paths, and at last reached the inviting shade of the tall forest crowning the top of the ridge. Here our journey was enlivened by the notes of the usual denizens of these belts of fine jungle; and as we trudged along, listening to the clear, strong whistle of the Grey-headed Flycatcher, the churr of the handsome Trogon, and the twittering of the brilliant ‘ Sultan-bird” (Pericrocotus flammeus), we congratulated ourselves that we had reached the highest point of our journey (6000 feet), and that we had but a short and immediate descent to our destination. Another half-mile and we had passed over the ridge and came into sudden view of the glorious prospect beneath, such a one as only can be witnessed in the higher ranges of the beautiful Central Province. Before us lay a magnificent amphitheatre, the top of it a dark sweep of forest, and the middle a splendid basin of coffee, consisting of the Dambetenne and Piteratmalie estates, in luxuriant growth, between which and ourselves a narrow ravine ran down from the range on our right and suddenly opened out into an abysmal gorge, the wooded slopes of which stretched up to the foot of the coffee. In these woods Mr. Bligh, some years previous, had discovered the handsome Whistling Thrush (drrenga blighi). At a point where the great gorge suddenly commenced, by asheer precipice dropping down about 1000 feet into the lower estate, stood the fine bungalow occupied by the gentleman, Mr. Imray, who was to be our kind host for the night; and at the back of this, at the top of a rich slope of coffee, towered up a rocky buttress, in which the Swiftlets of Haputale propagate their species. In this precipice a vast boulder, about 70 feet in height and 50 in breadth, has at some period slipped away from the face of the mountain, and leans against it at an angle of about 30°, forming a lofty narrow cavern. Here about 300 pairs of birds have their nests built against the imner side of the boulder, which is convex and corresponds with the concave face of the main mass. There are no nests on this latter, down which there is doubtless a considerable amount of drainage ; and the instinct of the little birds is here wonderfully displayed in rejecting the wet side of the cavern, which would seriously impair the stability of their gelatinous nests. These are placed in tiers, one above the other, about 15 feet from the guano at the bottom of the cave ; in places three or four were joined together, the back part of the under nest being prolonged up to the bottom of the one above it. The little structures were by no means edible, being constructed of moss and fine tendrils, arranged in layers and cemented with the inspissated saliva of the bird, the back part attaching the nest to the rock, as well as the interior of the cup, being, however, entirely of this material. I have seen one or two nests from Pittegalla almost wholly made of this substance ; but even these were mixcd, to a certain extent, with foreign or vegetable material. The interior of these Dambetenne nests was in most cases oval, the longest diameter, which varied from 2 to 24 inches, being parallel to the rock. In depth the egg-cup was, on the average, about 1 inch. At the date of my visit, the 22nd May, nearly all the nests contained young, two being the average number. EX 338 CAPRIMULGUS KELAARTTI. Mahabaleswar and Ahmednuggur, and also from Raipore, Sankra, and Etawah, while silver-grey and black-mottled birds are found near Simla, altogether out of the accepted range of C. kelaarti. Moreover in Travancore Mr. Bourdillon has procured both grey and rufous birds, the latter being quite as much so as North-Indian speci- mens. There is no reason, however, that the two species should not inhabit the same regions; and if we extend the limits of the range of each, this difficulty will be got over. As regards the Ceylonese birds, it is necessary to remark that they are all grey and like typical C. kelaart:, which militates against the possibility of suppressing the species in Ceylon, whatever may be done in future as regards India, where it seems difficult to draw the line of separation between it and C. indicus. Two of Mr. Bourdillon’s specimens from Travancore measure— g, wing 6°75 inches; 2, wing 7-25. In Ceylon the females are much the smaller of the sexes. Distribution —This very handsome Nightjar, first noticed in the island by Dr. Kelaart, and named by Blyth from specimens sent him by the Doctor, is almost entirely confined to the mountain-zone, and therein inhabits chiefly the upper ranges and the higher parts of Uva. I have seen it in great numbers about Nuwara Elliya, where its discoverer remarks, in his ‘ Prodromus,’ that it swarms in the dusk of the evening in the marshy plains. It is, however, equally abundant during the S.W. monsoon in all the higher parts of the main range which are open and favourable to its habits, such as the Kandapolla and Elephant Plains and similar localiti:s as far south as the Horton Plain. It appears to leave these high regions for warmer districts during the cold nights of the opposite season, as I found it rare in all the above districts in December, and did not meet with it at all on the elevated plateau between Totapella and Kirigalpotta. In Haputale and other parts of Uva, as well as in most of the coffee-districts of about 3000 to 4000 feet in altitude, it is common enough throughout the year; but it is almost unknown in Dumbara, its usual limit being the neighbourhood of Deltota and Hewahette on the south of the valley, and Kalebokka on the north. It does not appear to have been hitherto known from any portion of the low country, although Mr. Holdsworth records as his opinion the probability of its leaving Nuwara Elliya during the cold season; but in August, 1875, I met with it in one locality of the Eastern Province which is at the sea-level, and where it was not at all to be expected. This was in the forest-region at the base of the Friars-Hood group of isolated hills, which form so prominent an object in the Batticaloa country. This tract is connected with the eastern slopes of Uva by detached groups of hills ; but they spring from a low base, and are not situated in such a manner as to favourably foster a migration from the mountains to such a remote part as the Devilane district ; and I therefore am inclined to think that the species must be resident in portions of the Eastern Province, particularly as I found it there at the season when it flocks to the upper hills. In corresponding parts of the Western Province, which lie much higher than the Friars Hood, it does not appear ever to be found; nor have I any evidence of its inhabiting the Morowak-Korale mountains, although it doubtless does do so, but has been overlooked by gentlemen collecting in that part of the island. On the continent of India, Kelaart’s Nightjar is found in the Nilghiris and the wooded Ghats of the Central Provinces, all over which latter hills Mr. R. Thompson records it as being common. Mr. Bourdillon notes it as a winter visitor to the Travancore hills, occurring rather abundantly from November until March. It must, in this case, ascend the range from the low country, which is the very opposite of its habit in Ceylon. I observe that Mr. Fairbank did not meet with it on either of his trips to the Palani hills, which does not augur in favour of its being widely spread in the mountains of South India. Habits.—This Nightjar affects stony patnas, open glades in the forest, and all the confines of the Downs or so-called Plains which are such a singular feature of the fine jungle-clad ranges of Ceylon. It hides during the day among rocks near the edge of the jungle or among coffee-bushes, and from such places of concealment sallies out early in the evening and on all sides simultaneously is heard its curious call-note, chump-pud, chump-pud, repeated for several minutes and then suddenly stopped on the bird moving out to some conspicuous perch, such as a stump or huge rock, from which it reeommences to utter its call. It is a very noisy bird in the breeding-season, but m the cold weather is almost silent, a peculiarity which was curiously noticeable in the birds I met with at Devilane tank, which, on three consecutive evenings before I shot them, were observed silently hawking on the bund of the tank. This species has a bold and dashing flight, rapidly and noiselessly performed, with frequent dexterous turns in the air, as it seizes its prey, and when disturbed in the daytime it quickly darts off and realights on the ground. It is, however, more rarely flushed during the day than either CAPRIMULGUS KELAARTI. 339 of the two following species, as it lies very close and does not repose in open spots like the Common Nightjar. Dr. Jerdon writes, in his ‘ Birds of India,’ that “ it is now and then flushed from the woods when beating for game ; and more than one has fallen before the gun of the inexperienced sportsman, its extent of wing and the lazy flapping having caused it to be mistaken for the Woodcock.” I have myself observed this peculiarly lazy flapping, which is not the usual mode of progression, at sunset, and several times have heard the strange sound which the bird makes, resembling the beating of an immense fan or wing in the air: whether this is caused by the motion of its pinions, or by the utterance of a guttural note, 1am unable to say ; but much as it resembles a mechanical effect, it is doubtless the result of some curious vocal power in the bird. Its food consists almost entirely of beetles, of which it consumes immense numbers, its stomach being crammed with these, one would think, indigestible insects at an early hour in the evening. It is worthy of remark that the majority of specimens procured of this species are males: what becomes of the females in the evenings it is hard to say ; but one thing is certain, that they keep out of the way and are seldom shot, except when flushed in the daytime from their nests or in company with a young brood. Nidification—Myr. Holdsworth remarks that the breeding-season about Nuwara Elliya commences in March and April. Its eggs appear to be seldom found ; and the only instance of their being taken that ever came under my notice was related to me by a gentleman in Haputale, who informed me that his sons some- times procured them on the estate. In India they are well known. In the Nilghiris and Central Provinces, according to Mr. Hume’s correspondents in ‘ Nests and Eggs,’ it commences to breed in March and continues to lay until August. The eggs are deposited ‘in a slight depression under a bush or tuft of grass ;” but they have been found, Mr. Davison relates, in a heap of ashes produced by the Burgas burning weeds in their fields. The eggs are two in number, and are said to be counterparts of those of the closely allied C. indicus ; they are of a pale yellowish or salmon ground-colour, marbled with brown among blotches of a lighter shade, which sometimes resemble a darker tint of the ground-colour; they are long ovals in shape, and ‘‘ vary from 1:08 to 1:23 inch in length, and from 0°8 to 0°9 inch in breadth.” Mr. Rhodes Morgan on one oceasion found the eggs deposited on a heap of ashes ; he describes them as of a “ pinkish buff, blotched with pale violet-brown.” DEXG2, CAPRIMULGUS ATRIPENNIS. (THE JUNGLE-NIGHTJAR.) Caprimulgus atripennis, Jerdon, Il. Ind. Orn. pl. 24, letterpress (1847); id. B. of Ind. i. p- 196; Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 421; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 12. Caprimulgus spilocercus, Gray, List Fissirostres Brit. Mus. p. 7 (1848) ; Hume, Stray Feath. 1873, p. 432. Caprimulgus maharattensis (Sykes), Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 117 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 166. Maharatta Goatsucker, apud Kelaart; The Spotted-tailed Goatsucker, Gray. The Ghat Nightjar, Jerdon; Goatsucker, Night-Hawk, Europeans in Ceylon. Bim-bassa (West Prov.), Ra-bassa, Omerelliya (South Province), Sinhalese; Pathekai, lit. “ Roadside-bird,” Jaffna Tamils, also Pay-marrettai (Jerdon). Adult male. Length 10°6 to 11:0 inches; wing 7:0 to 7-2; tail 4-9 to5:3; tarsus 0°7; middle toe and claw 0:95 to 1:0; bill to gape 1°3 to 14. Adult female. Length 10-0 to 10-4 inches ; wing 6°6 to 6:7. Iris deep brown; eyelid pale reddish (yellowish in female) ; bill reddish brown, tip black ; legs and feet reddish brown or pale reddish, claws dusky brown. Male. Top of the head and upper part of hind neck cinereous brown, very finely stippled with grey, the feathers of the centre of the crown and nape having broad black mesial stripes, the ground-colour of the latter part passing with a ferruginous hue on the hind neck into the blackish of the back, rump, and upper tail-coverts ; the margins of the feathers on these parts stippled with fulyescent grey, and the black confined chiefly to a central stripe ; scapulars very handsomely marked with oblique bands and spade-shaped patches of velvety black, the shorter feathers with oblique external margins of rich buff, the longer feathers being mostly grey near the tips, vermiculated with blackish ; lesser wing-coverts blackish, mottled with ferruginous; anterior feathers of the remaining series black, marked with mottled spots of buff, and in some examples with white tips to many of the feathers ; inner secondary coverts mostly mottled with grey on a black ground, and with buffy white tips to some of the feathers ; primaries blackish brown, mottled at the tips with pale cinereous ; the 1st quill with a white spot on the inner web, and the next three with a white bar in continuation, interrupted on the 2nd quill at the centre; inner secondaries paler than the primaries, marked in places with ochraceous buff; tertials mottled with cinereous grey at the tips: tail blackish brown, the four central feathers mottled with dusky fulvous, the two lateral feathers on each side black, with the terminal third white and the lateral margin tinged with buff, inner margins of all indented with buff. Lores and ear-coverts russet-brown, mottled with black; rictal bristles black, with white bases; chin and along the base of lower mandible mottled black and fulvous; a thin white stripe at the gape; across the throat a broad white band, its lower edge deeply margined with black, or, in some, barred with this hue and tipped with rufous- buff ; chest and upper breast cinereous, finely stippled with brown, and the latter part washed with a russet hue ; beneath this the under surface is fulvous, crossed with narrow bars of blackish brown, the centre of the breast being, in many specimens, slightly albescent ; under wing-coverts fulvous, cross-marked with brown. The seapulars vary much in this bird, searcely any two examples having them marked the same; in some individuals the broad oblique buff margins are almost entirely wanting ; the white tips of the wing-covert feathers likewise are variable. Female. Has not the scapulars so conspicuously marked as the male; the wing-spots are buff or buffy white, small and bar-shaped, that on the 4th quill almost wanting; two lateral rectrices on each side with a buff-white tip, varying up to half an inch in depth, or with the tip only mottled with buff (such examples being probably young) ; white throat-spot smaller than in male, ground-colour of lower parts duller. CAPRIMULGUS ATRIPENNIS. 341 Young (mate of the year). Wing 6-6. Bill and feet paler than in adult. White tail-spots smaller than in adults, the black running out on the outer web much further than on the inner ; the outer margin of the white spot mottled with brown ; throat-bar as in females. Note. The section to which this species and one or two others in India belong is characterized by having the two outer tail-feathers in the male terminated with white and the tarsus feathered. Obs. Layard speaks of C. mahrattensis, in conjunction with C. asiaticus, being very abundant in the vicinity of Colombo and throughout the Southern Province. As there is no other Nightjar besides the latter which is common, or even found, in the districts named, it follows that OC. mahrattensis was mistaken for the present species, as Mr. Holdsworth (Joc. cit.) has already suggested. Mr. Hume points out (‘Stray Feathers,’ 1873) that Ceylon specimens do not agree over well with Nilghiri ones. Distribution.—This fine Nightjar is a denizen more or less of the entire sea-board of Ceylon, and extends into most of the inland districts, being very numerous in all parts which are clad with forest or are even moderately well-wooded. Mr. Holdsworth does not record it from Aripu on the north-west coast; but it is abundant in parts of the Jaffna peninsula, and I have met with it on the coast at Illepekadua, north of Mantotte, and at Pomparipu to the south of it; so that I imagine it is simply locally absent from the open country near the Pearl station, and probably an inhabitant of the adjacent interior. It is very numerous in the northern forest-tract and around Trincomalie, in the wooded districts of the south-west from Kalatura round to Tangalla, and in the jungle-country north of Kattregama. The same may be said of the country north of Kurunegala and many parts of the Western Province, although I found it conspicuously absent from most parts of Saffragam. It ranges into the hills up to an altitude of about 3500 feet, at which elevation I have seen it in Hewahette, and in Dumbara it is common. Mr. Parker does not record it in his letters to me from the Uswewa district ; but I have no doubt that it is found there. On the mainland, the Ghat Nightjar, as it is styled by Jerdon, is found in various parts of the south of India, to wit, on the Malabar coast and in the Ghats of the north of the Carnatic. It is tolerably common in the Nilghiris ; but Mr. Bourdillon has not procured it in the Travancore hills, nor Mr. Fairbank in the Palani ranges, which proves that it is a bird of local distribution in the peninsula. Habits.—This species inhabits dry forest, low jungle, scrub, and wooded tracts in semicultivated country. It is very partial to the “ cheena”’-woods in the Galle district, and similar secondary jungle in the east and north of the island, such haunts affording it secure shelter whilst it roosts on the ground, and from which it sallies out at dusk, settling in roads, pathways, or any bare spaces in the woods. I have always observed that it avoids localities in which there are not large trees, which habit is exemplified in its locating itself in numbers about the outskirts of the cmnamon-gardens at Colombo, while it does not haunt the open bushy gardens them- selves, where the next species isso common. It comes out a little later than the Small Nightjar, first of all flymg up to a low stump or branch and uttering its curious call, like the striking of a hammer on a thin plank ; as soon as it is heard this cry is answered by its companions, and in a few minutes these notes resound on all sides and are continued until it is dark enough for the birds to take wing in pursuit of the myriads of beetles and other insects which throng the calm air of a tropical evening. This loud note is generally preceded by a low grog, grog-grog, which can only be heard when one is close to the bird. It is a gluttonous feeder, its stomach being generally crammed with beetles or winged termites before dark, which it captures with a powerful swooping flight, often sailing along with very upturned motionless wings. It is just as fond of sitting on roads and paths as the next species; but it is not so tame, and will not suffer itself to be almost kicked as it will. The Tamils in the north of Ceylon call it the ‘‘roadside bird” from this habit, and have a strange superstitious notion that it has the power of plucking out the eyes of their cattle ; but they do not seem to be able to account for the fact that there is no ocular testimony of this objectionable habit ever having been put into practice! It is noteworthy that this Nightjar perches continually on the tops of small dead branches of low trees; and once I think I saw it sitting in a diagonal manner, though not quite transversely, aeross a branch, as an ordinary Passerine bird would have done. Nidification.—In the west of Ceylon the Jungle-Nightjar breeds during the latter part of the dry season 342 CAPRIMULGUS ATRIPENNIS, and the commencement of the monsoon rains in April and May. It lays two eggs in a slight depression in sandy ground, beneath the shelter of a shrub; they are of a buff ground-colour, and very sparsely spotted with very dark sepia-brown, rather roundish blots. I have seen several eggs, and have not detected any of the streaky markings peculiar to those of other Nightjars. I unfortunately have no data of the size of this Nightjar’s eggs, as I omitted to measure those which I examined im Mr. MacVicar’s collection ; they are, however, considerably larger than those of the next species, measuring, according to Layard, “14 lines by 11 lines.” The dimensions given by Mr. Hume of a pair of eggs from the Nilghiris, viz. 1:13 inch by 0°72, and 1:01 by 0:74, are, I am sure, inferior to those of Ceylonese birds. CAPRIMULGUS ASIATICUS. (THE COMMON INDIAN NIGHTJAR.) Caprimulgus asiaticus, Latham, Ind. Orn. ii. p. 588 (1790); Gray & Hardwicke, Ill. Ind. Orn. i. pl. 34. fig. 2 (1832); Sykes, Cat. J. A. S. B. iii. no. 30 (1834); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8S. B. p. 83. no. 415 (1849); Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 115 (1854) ; Holdsworth, P. Z.S. 1872, p. 419; Hume, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 432; id. Nests and Eggs, p. 97 (1873); Adam, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 371; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 12, et 1875, p. 281; Ball, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 885; Butler, ibid. 1875, p. 455. The Indian Goatsucker, Kelaart; Night-Hawk, Goatsuchker, “ Ice-bird,’ Europeans in Ceylon (the latter name from the resemblance in the bird’s note to a stone scudding on ice). Bim-bassa, Ra-bassa, Sinhalese ; Pathekai, Tamils in Ceylon. Adult male. Length 8-9 to 9-1 inches; wing 5:65 to 5:8; tail 4:0 to 42; tarsus 0°85; middle toe and claw 0-85 to 0-9; bill to gape 1-2. Iris deep brown; eyelid light reddish yellow ; bill reddish or reddish brown, with the nostril and tips black ; legs and feet brownish red, darker at the ends of the toes, claws dark brown. Light portion of head and upper surface cinereous ashy, finely and distinctly pencilled with brown, and the scapulars and wing-coverts richly marked with buff-yellow; centre of the forehead and crown striped with black, the feathers edged with rufescent yellow; back and upper tail-coverts pale cinereous, most of the feathers with a narrow mesial black line, and the whole finely pencilled with brown; scapulars with arrow-shaped velvety black centres, bounded by broad, rich buff margins ; secondary wing-coverts with the terminal portions buff, paling to white at the edges; quills and primary-coverts dark brown, the latter, together with the secondaries, barred with reddish buff; the primaries mottled with grey near the tips, the first with a white spot on the inner web (in some with a corresponding external pale edge) and a similar one on both webs of the next three; centre tail-feathers cinereous, with narrow wavy cross bars; remainder blackish, with wavy cross lines of reddish buff, the two outer feathers with a terminal white spot (14 inch in depth in old birds), the tip of the lateral feather nearly always with some dark mottling and its outer margin buff. Ear-coverts dark brown, beneath there is a narrow whitish rictal spot; a white bar across the throat, divided by a buff-mottled patch in the centre, and continued as a buff collar round the hind neck; chest with the feathers across the centre deeply tipped with pale buff; breast, flanks, and sides of belly barred with brown on a butt ground ; belly and under tail-coverts whitish buff, unbarred. Female. Length 8-4 to 8-6 inches; wing 5:6 to 5-8. Bill paler than in the male, brownish olivaceous at the base and gape: legs and feet brownish olive, claws brown. Upper surface similar to male; quills paler, edges of primaries greyish near the tips; spots on the outer web of 2nd, 3rd, and 4th quills buff, in some examples wanting altogether ; tail-spots not so large as in the male, about } of an inch in depth, the lateral margin of the outer tail-spot sullied with brown, except in old birds. Young. Iris as in adult; bill dusky olive-brown, the tip dark brown; legs and feet brownish fleshy, palest on the sides of the tarsi. Above paler or less marked with dark brown and black than in adults; scapulars in some broadly margined with buff, in others almost uniform with the back; quills tipped with buff, the primaries apparently darker in the male than in the female ; the white spots on the outer webs of the primaries more or less tinged with buff, as is also that on the inner web of the 4th quill; outer margin of the terminal tail-spots washed with buff and mottled with brown; exterior of lateral tail-feathers broadly edged and indented with buff in those birds which have richly marked scapulars. Chin and along base of bill whitish in some, this part being, as in the adult, variable in its marking ; under surface in the quite young bird fluffy, and the markings undefined in older examples; the ground-colour is greyer than in adults ; under tail-coverts usually barred with brown. Note. This species and its allies have the tarsus bare and the tail-feathers as in the last. 344 CAPRIMULGUS ASIATICUS. Obs. With age the white terminal spots of the rectrices increase in size, and the throat-band develops and becomes whiter. Examples from the dry, hot districts in the south-east and north of the island are more rufous in their tints than those from the west and south; they thus resemble Indian examples of the species, which are, as a rule, as Mr. Holdsworth remarks, Joc. cit., much less grey than those from the island. It must, however, be borne in mind that this Nightjar is a very variable bird in its coloration; some individuals seem to have the tendency to buff markings more exaggerated throughout the entire plumage than others, this being particularly noticeable in the scapulars and tail-feathers ; the wing-spots vary considerably in character, and while the ground-colour of the primaries is almost black in one bird, it will be a medium brown in another of the same age. Distribution —This little Nightjar inhabits, in considerable numbers, all the maritime portions of the island, affecting, by choice, those localities where sandy scrubs or sparsely clothed open lands border the sea-coast ; it is consequently less common in the damp wooded district of the south-west than in the hot eastern and northern divisions of the island. It is very abundant in the Batticaloa, Hambantota, and Trincomalie districts, and likewise in the Jaffna peninsula and down the western coast as far south as Kalatura. In the interior it is less numerous, and such wooded tracts as Saffragam, the Pasdun, and lower portion of the Kukkul Korale are haunted but little by it. It ascends into the Kandyan Province, and is by no means uncommon in Dumbara and Deltota and in the low-lying basins drained by the affluents of the Mahawelliganga. In Uva it ranges to a considerable altitude, and I have seen it in May as high as 4000 feet in the Fort-Macdonald district. Higher than this I have no evidence of its occurring. Elsewhere on the continent this species, which is the commonest of the Indian Nightjars, is found throughout all India, and ranges, according to Mr. Hume, into the Himalayan mountains in the spring and summer, at which season it may be met with as high as 6000 fect. It extends into Burmah, and is common in the British Provinces there, Mr. Oates recording it as numerous in the plams of Pegu, but not in the hills. As regards India proper, I find that it is local in Sindh, having only been met with at Sehwan. In the Sambhur-Lake district Mr. Adam says it is not common, but in northern Guzerat and the surrounding plain country it is so. Mr. Fairbank notes that it is plentiful m the Deccan ; it is likewise so in the southern parts of the Madras Presidency, but does not appear to occur im the hills, as Mr. Bourdillon does not record it in his list of Travancore birds, and Mr. Fairbank procured but one example of it at the base of the Palanis. Habits —The Common Indian Nightjar affects scrubby waste lands, low sandy jungle-tracts, cinnamon- plantations, and openly wooded country intermingled with small wood. It is a tame and familiar bird, and is better known to most people than the last species. It roosts during the day on bare ground between shrubs and sleeps soundly, suddenly getting up when almost trodden on, and quickly realighting again at a little distance off. The young brood remain with the parents for some time, and thus a little party of three or more may often be surprised roosting in close proximity to native houses. It is a well-known bird in the cinnamon-gardens of Colombo, alighting in the roads just after sunset, and on dull afternoons an hour earlier, and allowing itself to be almost driven over before it rises. Layard well describes the habits of this and the last species when he says that “the belated traveller hurrying homeward ere the last dying gleams of the setting sun fade in the west, is startled by what seems to be a stone flying up with a few rapid querulous notes, and gliding along on noiseless pinions settling again within a few yards of him.” It is a very noisy bird at sunset and before daybreak, uttering its notes likewise on moonlight nights, although it is quite silent in darkness. Its well-known note, persistently repeated for a long time together, is wearisome when heard around one’s bungalow at midnight, and many liken it, both in India and Ceylon, to the sound made by a stone scudding along ice. It resembles somewhat the sounds chuk-chuk-chuk chuk-urrr-ruk ; but some liken it, according to Jerdon, to the syllables tyook-tyook-tyook. However this may be, the peculiar note has given rise to its name “Tce-bird ;” and not unappropriate it is too, notwithstanding that the idea does not assimilate well with a temperature of 84° Fahr.! Its flight is buoyant and skilful, enabling it to capture its coleopterous prey with great ease. It feeds more on beetles than moths, and some say that the singular pectination of the middle claw is adapted by nature for the removal of beetles’ claws from its gape. This species usually settles on the ground ; but I have several times seen it perched on stumps, like the preceding. CAPRIMULGUS ASIATICUS. D45 Nidification —The breeding-season on the western side of the island is during the first three or four months of the year. It lays usually two eggs on the bare ground, often without any depression or nest- formation ; but the shelter of a bush or stump is generally chosen. ‘The eggs are ovals in shape and smooth in texture, of a light salmon or reddish-grey ground-colour, marbled slightly and blotched openly throughout the surface with sienna-red over faint clouds of bluish grey. An egg obtained in the cinnamon-gardens measured 1:12 by 0°73 inch ; but in ‘ Nests and Eggs’ the average is given at 1:04 by 0°77 inch. The eggs are much more salmon-coloured than those of the last species and smaller. In India this species breeds chiefly in April and May, but its eggs have been taken in July; and Captain Butler is of opinion that it lays twice in the year, he having shot a hen bird, in company with a young one just fledged, on the 20th of July, and found, on dissecting her, that she was about to lay again. It is said not to be so particular in choosing its situation as other Nightjars. Mr. R. Thompson, as quoted by Mr. Hume, says that he has found the eggs “in a quite unsheltered spot in the middle of a dry pebbly nullah.” Order PASSERES. Primaries usually 10, in one section only 9; greater coverts arranged in a single row, not reaching beyond the middle of the secondaries; rectrices usually 12, rarely 10. Hallux stout, furnished with a larger claw than the other toes. Sternum with a single notch at each side of the posterior margin. Sect. A. Turporp or THRUSH-LIKE PassERES*. Wing with 10 primaries, the 1st reduced in size. Fam. CORVIDA. Bill without a distinct notch in the tip of the upper mandible; stout and straight in most genera, curved in some. Wings variable. Legs and feet stout, the tarsus strongly scutate. Hind toe very strong, claws well curved. Sternum broad, the keel rather high, the posterior edge with a wide deep notch in each half near the side. Subfam. CORVIN Al. Bill more or less long and straight, stout, and the culmen high and much curved, an obsolete notch near the tip of the upper mandible. Nostrils placed in a deep depression, and protected by an impending tuft of bristles. * The system of classification of the great Order Passeres which I shall follow in this work will be that of Mr. Wallace, as drawn up in ‘The Ibis’ for 1874, with such modifications adopted by Mr. Sharpe in the ‘ Catalogue of Birds’ as seem to me justified by my own personal experience. 2y Genus CORONE. Bill very stout, straight, the culmen very high, and curved from the base, the ridge keeled. Nostrils round, concealed by overlying bristly plumes. Wings long and pointed, the 5rd and 4th quills much exceeding the 2nd and 5th; the Ist about half the length of the 5rd, and longer than the outer secondaries, but shorter than the innermost. Tail moderate and rounded. Legs and feet stout; the tarsus longer than the middle toe and claw, and protected by strong trans- verse scute. Toes strongly shielded, lateral ones nearly equal. CORONE MACRORHYNCHA. (THE BLACK CROW.) Corvus macrorhynchus, Wagler, Syst. Av. Corvus, sp. 3 (1827); Hume, Stray Feath. 1877, p. 461; id. ibid. (B. of Tenasserim) 1878, p. 660. Corvus levaillanti, Less. Traité, p. 328 (1851); Holdsw. P. Z. S. 1872. p. 460; Hume, Nests and Eggs, ii. p. 411; id. Str. Feath. 1874, p. 243; Ball, ibid. p. 418; Hume, ibid. 1875, p. 143. Corvus culminatus, Gray, Cat. Mamm. &c. Nepal Coll. Hodgs. p. 102 (nec Sykes) (1844); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 89 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 124 (1852) ; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. xiii. p. 213 (1854); Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. ii. p. 553, in pt. (1856) ; Jerdon, B. of Ind. ii. p. 295 (1863); Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 28, et 1875, p. 398. Corvus sinensis, Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. ii. p. 556 (1856), Corone levaillanti (in pt.), Sharpe, Cat. Birds, iii. p. 39 (1877). The Indian Corby, The Bow-billed Corby, The Indian Raven (of some) in India. The Carrion- or Jungle-Crow in Ceylon. Dhar, Wind. in the north ; Dheri-kowa, Hind. in the south ; Dad-kag, Beng.; Kaki, Telugu ; Ulak, Bhotias. Kaka or Goyegamma kaka, lit. “ High-caste Crow,” Sinhalese ; Kaka, Ceylonese Tamils. Adult male. Length 17-0 to 19°5 inches ; wing 11°5 to 12:3; tail 6-75; tarsus 2-1 to 2:2; mid toe 1:3 to 1:35, its claw (straight) 0°6; bill to gape 2°0 to 2-2; culmen 1:9 to 2-1. In this species the culmen is much arched. Female. Length 16-5 to 18-0 inches ; wing 10°75 to 11:5. The smallest birds are from the south of the island. Iris hazel-brown ; bill, legs, and feet black. Entire plumage black, highly glossed on the scapulars, wing-coverts, and rump with purple; outer webs of the tail- feathers glossed in a less degree with the same ; feathers of the throat and breast more or Jess illumined with steel- blue reflections. : The throat-feathers are stiff and furcate at the tips. Obs. The Ceylon Crow is the smallest race of the species, upon which Wagler bestowed his title of macrorhyncha (cf. Sharpe, Cat. B. iii. p. 38), and which is spread over a great part of Asia and its archipelago, culminating in the very large form inhabiting Japan, which is named japonensis by Bonaparte. In Malacca and the Malayan archi- CORONE MACRORHYNCHA. 347 pelago it is of medium size, and exhibits the peculiar character of white bases to the feathers of the body ; passing round into India it gradually decreases in size southwards towards Ceylon, the white bases becoming scarcer until, in the latter locality (as far as I can judge from a small series), they disappear altogether ; while stretching north- wards through China and Eastern Siberia to Japan, it increases in bulk and also again loses the white-based feathers. Our bird has usually been styled C. levaillanti, in common with that from South India; but in accordance with the results arrived at by Mr. Hume on an examination of an immense series of examples from India, Burmah, and Malacca, as well as by myself from an inspection of a number of specimens from a still wider range, in the British Museum, I do not see the propriety of separating it from the Malaccan species. Mr. Hume, in his exhaustive notice of this bird in ‘ Stray Feathers, 1877, p. 461, shows that the characteristic of the white bases to the body- feathers is not of much value, as it is found in Indian examples and is absent in some from Malacca. He, more- over, remarks that this character is not constant in the same bird, as in some specimens the bases of the mantle- feathers were of one colour and those of the rump or the breast of another. I would surmise, in passing, that these were not fully adult birds, which would eventually have acquired the white bases throughout. As regards size, Mr. Hume’s tabulation of seventy specimens shows that the wing in males from Malacca, Pegu, and the Andamans varies from 11-7 to 13°5, and in the Indian race as far south as Ootacamund from 11-5 to 14:0 (the latter dimension being, however, very exceptional, and that of an example from Cashmere). In Ceylon, as will be seen above, it diminishes still further. The Andaman birds are characterized by their length of bill; the culmen of one measured by Mr. Hume was 2°85 inches, and the length of another, from gape to tip, examined by myself, 2:5; the latter had the wing 13:3 inches, and the bases of the body-feathers white ; the smallest bill in the series in question was 2°15 along the culmen. One example from Fokien, in the British Museum, has the wing 13°8, and the bases of the feathers the same as in Ceylon specimens; the wing-coverts and secondaries have the same amount of purple reflection ; one from Sumatra, wing 12°75, bill to gape 2°3, white bases to body-feathers ; another from N. India, wing 14-0, bill 2°3, feathers whitish at the base ; one from Timor and another from India are greyish white at the base of the body-feathers, but the first-named has the bill very long, 2-6 to gape. ‘Two from Japan have wings 14-16 and 15-0, bills 2-75 and 2-85 to gape; the wing-coverts in these are a richer purple than in any others. The tint of the hind neck varies: in some it has a greyish-green hue; but this is not constant in any locality, and a specimen from Nynee Tal is identical with one from Ceylon in this respect. Concerning the coloration of the bases of the clothing-feathers in our birds, I am unable positively to say whether it is ever found to be white, as I did not procure a sufficient series to form an opinion; in one example some of the feathers have a tendency to a light greyish hue about the base, the others being pale brownish. I commend this subject to future workers in Ceylon ornithology. The tendency with Malayan birds to exhibit white bases to the feathers may be analogous to the grey plumage in the Hooded Crow of Europe (C. cornia’), which freely interbreeds with the black form, and is, according to the opinion of many writers, a mere variety of the latter. Distribution.—The Black Crow is very abundant in Ceylon, being found throughout the whole island, but chiefly in the imterior, with the exception of the coast between Kalatura and Hambantota, along which it replaces the next species as “a citizen” of the towns and villages there. At Colombo it is common in the cimmnamon-gardens, but does not come into the bazaars and streets of the town. Some miles to the south of that place it commences gradually to inhabit the cocoanut-lined coast, until it becomes common along the above-mentioned strip. It is very numerous throughout the whole interior, being found in the forest as well as in the open regions, in which latter it locates itself principally near native villages. In the Central Province it is common up to 2000 feet, frequenting the towns of Kandy, Gampola, Matale, &c.; above this altitude its numbers materially decrease, and it seldom ranges above 4000 feet. It has, however, been reported of late years several times to have visited Nuwara Elliya for a few days, departing as suddenly as it came. Jerdon writes as follows concerning this bird’s distribution :— The Common Carrion-Crow of India is found throughout the whole country, from the extreme south to the Himalayas, as far west as Cashmere, and eastwards it occurs in Assam, Burmah, and the Malayan peninsula.... . In the south of India, as at Madras, the Nilghiris, and elsewhere, it is almost as familiar and as impudent as the Common Crow, but towards the north it is perhaps less seen about towns and villages.” Mr. Ball remarks that in Chota Nagpur its distribution is somewhat capricious, and its presence or absence in particular tracts it is not always easy to account for. It occurs as high up in the Himalayas as Mussoorie throughout the year; and Mr. Hume records it from Simla. In Pegu it is common away from large towns (Oates), and southward of this it extends through the peninsula to Malayana, where it has been found in Java, Sumatra, Borneo, Flores, Timor, and Bali (Sharpe, Cat. Birds). It occurs, according to Mr. Davison, all over the Andamans, including the uninhabited islands ; 2Y2 348 CORONE MACRORHYNCHA. but in the Nicobars it is only found in Camorta and Trinkut, having been introduced into the former place from Port Blair. From Burmah its range extends as far east as China and Eastern Siberia. Swinhoe notes it as being found throughout the former, including Formosa and Hainan; and, in its large form of C. japonensis, it inhabits North China and Japan. The smaller Raven, designated Corvus culminatus by Sykes, and kept distinct by Mr. Sharpe, has been found at Yarkand. Habits —This bold bird frequents native villages, some of the towns in Ceylon, pasture-lands, and other situations in open country, as well as the wildest forest and jungle of the low country. It is usually found in pairs, except when collected to feed on carrion, when large flocks come together.. They are constantly im attendance on cattle and buffaloes, perching on their backs and feeding on the ticks which infest these animals. In the interior it is very destructive to poultry and young chickens and is particularly partial toeggs. Several pairs always take up their quarters during the breeding-season in the swamps and tanks where Herons and 2grets breed, and rob the nests right and left while the owners are absent. I have seen one drop into the nest of a Purple Heron, turn over the eggs, and selecting one, adroitly carry it off in his bill, in less time than it takes to write this. On two occasions I have known them to kill squirrels (Sciwrus penicillatus), in one of which the marauder seized the animal by the tail and dashed it against the limb of a tree until it was killed ; in the other, which I witnessed myself, my attention was attracted by the creature’s cries, when I observed it to be doubled up, in its agony, round the bird’s bill, which had transfixed its stomach, the Crow holding it firmly, without any apparent exertion. It is a bird of powerful flight, traversing wide tracts of country high in the air, and frequently mounting to considerable altitudes in its pursuit of Hawks and Eagles. In its own turn it is subject to the feeble but troublesome attacks of the “ King-Crow” (Buchanga leucopygialis). The “ caw” of this Crow is louder than that of C. splendens, but it has the power of modulating it and altering the tone to an extraordinary extent. Jerdon speaks of it in India as eminently a carrion-crow, and often the first to discover a dead animal ; while Mr. Ball writes of it as being a most useful guide to the sportsman as to the whereabouts of both dead and living game, for, he says, ‘‘ A tiger or a bear cannot walk about in the daylight without beg made the subject of some loudly-expressed remarks on the part of the Crows of the neighbourhood.” I have myself observed this inquisitive tendency in the Corby in Ceylon; and Layard remarks that though a wounded deer may retire to the most tangled brake to die, its covert is invariably revealed to the hunter by the Crows, who, congregating im small parties on the surrounding trees, patiently wait till life is extinct to begin their repast with the jackals and wild hogs. Nidification —TVhe principal months for breeding are May, June, and July, most nests being built during May. The nest is placed in the fork of a top bough, often so slender that it will not admit of the eggs being safely reached ; or it may rest at the bases of cocoanut-fronds, entirely concealed from sight below. It is a large structure of sticks and twigs, lined with fine roots, hair, wool, &. The exterior is often very straggling ; but the nest is very little larger on the whole than that of C. splendens. As remarked in a former article, it is the favourite receptacle for the eggs of the Koel, containing sometimes as many as three or four of them. The eggs are usually four in number, and much resemble those of C. splendens. 'They are long ovals, and in many cases somewhat pyriform, of a pale sea-green or light bluish-green ground, some being thickly spotted with small specks of pale brown or umber-brown over the whole surface, mingled with linear spots of the same; others have the markings much darker, larger, and more openly distributed. They vary, in general, from 1:7 to 1°58 inch in length by 1-2 to 1-7 in breadth; but Mr. Hume records one specimen as 1:95 in length, and says that im India they vary infer se surprisingly in size, in tone of colour, and in character of marking, and that the birds of the plains lay slightly larger eggs than those of the Himalayas or Nilghiris, the average of twenty of the former being 1:74 inch by 1:2 against 1°73 by 1:18 and 1:7 by 1:18 respectively. CORONE SPLENDENS. (THE COMMON GREY CROW.) Corvus splendens, Vieill. N. Dict. d Hist. Nat. viii. p. 44 (1816); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 90 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 124 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 214; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. ii. p. 559 (1856); Jerdon, B. of Ind. ii. p. 298 (1863); Nevill, J. A. S. (Ceylon Br.) p. 33 (1870-71); Legge, ibid. p. 52; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8S. 1872, p. 460; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 23; Butler, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 493; Hume, ibid. 1876, p. 463. Corvus impudicus, Gray, Hand-l. B. i. p. 14 (1870); Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 413 (1873); id. Str. Feath. 1873, p. 206; Adam, ibid. p. 386; Ball, ibid. 1874, p. 418. Corone splendens, Sharpe, Cat. B. il. p. 33 (1877). The Indian Hooded Crow, Kelaart ; The Common Indian Crow, Jerdon. Kowa, Patti-kowa, Desi-kowa, Hind., in various districts; Kag or Kak, Beng.; Manchi-kaki, Telugu; Nalla-kaka, 'Tam. (Jerdon). Karavi-kaka, lit. ‘* Low-caste Crow,” Sinhalese; Aakum, Ceylonese Tamils; Grdaya, Portuguese in Ceylon. Adult male and female. Length 15:75 to 17-0 inches; wing 10-0 to 11-0; tail 6-0 to 6:5; tarsus 1-9 to 2:0; mid toe 1-4 to 1:5, claw (straight) 0°5; bill to gape 1-9 to 2-0. This species is as variable as the last in size, but females average smaller than males. Tris dark brown ; bill, legs, and feet black. Forehead, crown, chin, cheeks and throat, back, wings, and tail black; the back, wing-coverts, and outer webs of secondaries with purple, and the throat, primaries, and tail with green reflections; nape, ear-coverts, sides and back of neck cinereous grey, blending into the black of the surrounding parts, and passing on the chest into a slightly duskier hue than that of the hind neck; breast and lower parts greyish black, glossed slightly with greenish and blending into the hue of the chest ; under surface of primaries, particularly near the base, pervaded with greyish. Young. Birds of the year have the wing varying from 9-0 to 10-0 inches. In the nest-plumage the hind neck is dull grey and the crown is pervaded with the same; the chest and under surface are of an earthy brown, and at the age of three or four months the greenish-black feathers appear on the breast. Obs. The plumage of this Crow is subject to variation dependent on age and freshness of the feathers; in abraded plumage the hind neck becomes quite fulvous, losing the grey tint of the newly acquired feather. This character is not the result of age in the individual: birds that are in moult may be seen with grey feathers intermingled with old fulyous-coloured ones. The amount of metallic reflections present on the upper-surface plumage increases somewhat as the bird grows to maturity. Ceylonese specimens have been said to be blacker than Indian; but I do not know whether this alleged character would invariably hold good as regards the upper surface, were an equally large series of adult examples from the two localities compared ; certainly continental birds are paler on the chest, and the grey tint descends lower down than in those from Ceylon, but some examples from India will coincide as regards the hind neck with insular ones. Birds which I have examined from Nepal and Darjiling are very pale on the hood and chest. The wings of eight specimens measure respectively 11-2, 11-0, 11-4, 10-8, 10:0, 11:9, 11-0, 10°8 inches; the largest are from Nepal. Ceylonese examples compared, therefore, with the above series will be seen to be smaller than their Indian fellows ; but in regard to size insular birds vary very much; one has only to look at a number of adults as they hop about in the streets to notice at once the variation in size which exists among them. Mr. Hume writes that specimens shot in the Laccadives were very dark, recalling C. insolens. In Burmah is a nearly allied race or subspecies of the present, the Corvus insolens of Hume. It differs from the Indian bird in being blacker with a somewhat dull appearance about those parts which in the Indian Crow are 350 CORONE SPLENDENS. of a pale brownish grey or pale greyish white, and it has moreover, says Mr. Hume, a somewhat longer, slenderer, and more compressed bill. Examples in the British Museum resemble C. splendens in the back, wings, and tail, but have the hind neck, its sides, and the chest blackish grey, faintly suffused with greenish, and the upper part of the breast concolorous with the rest of the under surface, which is greenish black suffused with grey. The wings of six examples measure respectively 10-4, 9°5, 10°6, 10-2, 9°5, 10°55 inches. Distribution.—This Crow, which is very abundant in Ceylon within its limits, is localized in a curious manuer round the coast. It is found on both sides of the north of the island, following the west coast down to about Kalatura, and the east to somewhere in the neighbourhood of Arookgam Bay ; beyond this, towards Hambantota, it may occur as a straggler, but certainly not in any numbers. Its cessation on the west coast under similar conditions of climate and food to those at Colombo, where it is so abundant, is most singular. The fact was first noticed by Mr. Nevill, C.C.S., in the J. A.S., C. B., 1870-71, and was at that time received by many with some little reserve. For my part, however, I very soon verified his statement on going to Galle, at which place, as likewise round the whole southern sea-board, I found it entirely absent. It is chiefly confined to towns and their immediate environs, being found in the interior only as a straggler, and even then is not met with many miles from the coast. Even at small villages on the sea, between many of its favourite resorts, it is almost replaced by its inland relative, thus appearing to congregate almost entirely where large native populations afford it an abundance of food. Mr. Nevill, in his above-mentioned notice of this Crow, remarks that there ‘“‘is no doubt that it is not indigenous to the south of the island, having been introduced by the Dutch at their various stations as a propagator of cinnamon, the seeds of which it rejects uninjured.” I do not know whether there is, in the records of the former rulers of Ceylon, any thing to support this statement ; but I am inclined to think, with Mr. Holdsworth, that it is the habits and inclinations of the species which prevent it from spreading into the south ; being a bird of powerful flight it has been long enough in the island to diffuse itself over the whole surface of the low country, no matter in what manner it was first introduced ; and the fact that it is still remarkably local goes to prove that it confines itself to districts which suit its disposition, and that probably it avoids the south-west corner of the island owing to the humidity of the climate, a cause which alone localizes so many Ceylonese species. This well-known bird inhabits the whole of India from the south to the Himalayas; it is found in Nepal, but does not extend as far into the range as the interior of Sikhim; it is obtained at Darjiling, however, wheuce there are specimens in the national collection. To the eastward of the Bay of Bengal the dark race, Corvus insolens of Hume, replaces it, but it reappears, whether as a migrant or resident is still uncertain, in Malacca. The specimen in the British Museum from this region was purchased from Mr. Boucard, who got it from a collector who shot it himself. I do not observe any other instance of its capture in Malacca, and some further light upon its presumed existence in that country is much to be desired. As regards the peninsula of India it extends as far to the north-west as Sindh, where it is plentiful. In Chota Nagpur Mr. Ball remarks that it is more plentiful than the preceding species, and that it usually inhabits a distinct tract of country from that bird, although sometimes found with it about towns and villages. In the south it does not ascend the hills as it does in the Himalayas; Mr. Fairbank only found it at the base of the Palanis, and it is not recorded from the Travancore ranges at all. It extends across to the Laceadive Islands, in which group Mr. Hume found it at Amini, and heard of it at one or two of the islands nearest Cannanore. Habits—The space allotted to me in such a work as the present is far from sufficient to describe the habits of this bold “ citizen’ of Eastern towns. He is gifted with as much as, if not more intelligence than any member of his sagacious family ; and annoying as he is, on account of his large share of brains, he is nevertheless a most useful adjunct to the sanitary regulations of Indian towns. He thrives to a marvellous degree in all these, his prosperous condition depending mainly on his utter audacity, his entire disregard of man, his thieving propensities, and his accurate powers of observation. He devotes himself to the timely occupation of the back yard, the bungalow verandah, the barrack-square, the abattoir, and the commissariat meat- CORONE SPLENDENS. 301 store; or he resorts to the scene of the fisherman’s occupations on the sea-beach, or the door of the native cottage at the morning hour of cooking, in all cases exactly at the opportune moment, and he is sure not to come away without his wants being satisfied. While living at Trincomalie I always found him winging his way at early morn, while it was yet dusk, in long lines to the sea-beach and to the troops’ meat-store, to be in time for the dragging of the sein-net or the cutting up of the oxen; and gathering on the sands in noisy knots, or lining the branches in “ cawing ” rows, these skilful robbers would never miss a chance of snatching up an unguarded morsel. But it was at meal-time in the barrack-squares of Colombo that he was more particularly in his element ; crowding in scores round the verandahs at the bugle-call of “dinners up,” the audacious thieves waited until the tables were spread and eagerly watched for the opportunity of acquiring a midday repast. Luckless was the soldier who turned his back for an instant! From the adjacent branches to the table and back was the work of a second, and in this space of time the savoury meat had disappeared from the gunner’s plate and was being discussed by half a dozen sable beaks. In the bungalow verandah the Crow proves himself a terrible nuisance ; seated on the tops of the green ‘tats,’ or slyly perched on the window-sill with his head awry, he does not scruple to pounce down, and in the momentary absence of the Ayah snatch the bread from the children’s hands, or dart into the nursery and upset the milk-jug on the table ; or he will glide noiselessly through the breakfast-room window and in an instant pounce upon the sideboard or table, and having from afar selected the most tempting-looking cutlet or the best viand is off again before the Appu, who is laying “ master’s” breakfast, can, with a well-aimed blow, effectually stop the thief. The only satisfaction that “master” gets is the Appu’s tale, “Sar! I go to kitchen for a minute, and that Crow take away master’s breakfast.” I have witnessed one of these birds come into the mess-room at Colombo, pull off the napkin that had been placed over a cold joint on the sideboard, and begin pecking away most vigorously at the meat. Concerning the Crow’s exploits in Ceylon, Layard writes as follows :—“ He levies contributions on all alike: leave but your breakfast-table for a moment, and as you return the rustling of hurrying wings, the marks of many feet on the white table-cloth, the gashes in the pat of butter, and the disappearance of plantains and small viands, proclaim who have been the robbers. The old ‘hopper woman’ sits frying her cakes under the lonely ‘ pandal’ of her cadjan hut, and over her, with head inclined, taking a bird’s-eye view of her cookery, sits the ‘caca;’ and now the ‘appah’ (anglice ‘ hopper’) is done, lifted from the pan, and laid on the little circular basket ready for a customer. With a grunt of satisfaction the aged crone surveys her handiwork, and drops her spoon to feel for her beloved betel-pouch: a tiresome little bit of areca-nut has got into a corner, and the old dame bends over it, unmindful of her charge ; a dark figure drops from the roof, and though she is instantly on the alert and aims an ineffectual blow at the thief, the nice white ‘appah’ is borne off. Sometimes, however, the robber has but a poor hold on it and drops it on the red cabook road; down pounce a host of Crows that have been looking on from many a tree, and a scuffle ensues: but anxious at least to cheat them of their booty, if not to retain the damaged article for her own eating, the old woman hurries to the rescue; but this makes matters worse, the castle is defenceless, and unseen foes drop down from beam and rafter or fly in through open doors. The rice-basket is invaded, the chilli-box overturned, the dried fish stolen, and lucky is the dame if the crash of most of her little store of crockery and glass, swept to the ground and scattered in shining fragments, does not hastily recall her to her hut.” This account is by no means overdrawn, for to the natives of the bazaars the Crow is an utter pest. T question, however, whether his absence from the towns would not im the end lead to much harm, for he is a most useful scavenger, and clears the streets and back premises of every thing thrown out from the houses, which would otherwise speedily decompose in the rays of the tropical sun. Notwithstanding its utter dis- regard for the native (which is so great that I have seen one pounce on to a basket carried on a boy’s head and seize from it a cake or a fruit), it entertains a marked respect for the white man, and stands im whole- some dread of the gun, flying off the moment a stick even is pointed at it; and so quick-sighted is it that it espies any one trying to stalk it and decamps at once, though it has not seen the gun in the enemy’s hand ! At certain hours in the day these Crows assemble in large flocks and hold a noisy parlance which lasts for some time. At Colombo it was usually on the beach at the “‘ Galle Buck,” over an evening meal 392 CORONE SPLENDENS. on sandflies, which they are very fond of, or engaged in pranks with the hermit-crabs, that the affairs of the day seemed to be discussed. Often at midday a noisy meeting would take place on the banks of the lake, and while several dozen birds held an angry debate on some fellow Crow who was posted in the middle of the circle, others would bathe up to the thighs in the water, ducking themselves and splashing in all directions. A striking instance of the Crow’s love of mischief and his innate impudence was exemplified at Colombo in his habit of annoying the unoffending little Grebes which frequented the lake ; apparently for the sake of seeing them disappear under the water, he would dart down on them over and over again. In the towns the Grey Crow invariably roosts on the fronds of cocoanut-trees, sitting close together in rows, but not settling down for the night until a considerable time has been spent in noisy discussion. It appears to feel the tropical heat at midday, taking shelter under the shadiest branches, and often panting with its bill wide open. Nidification—The breeding-season on both west and east coasts lasts from May until July. The nests are built in trees near human habitations, generally at a considerable height from the ground. Scarcely ever more than two are found in the same tree, and it is usual to find but one. They are placed in the fork of a tree and made of sticks lined with coir-fibre, small roots, wool, hair, or any substance which will suit the purpose; the interior is very shallow m some and moderately deep in others, and usually measures about 6 inches across. The eggs are from three to four in number and vary much in shape, although typically they are slightly pomted ovals. The ground-colour is also somewhat varied, being in some of an olivaceous bluish green, and in others of a light blue-green. Normally they are rather closely freckled and spotted with brownish grey and light brdwn all over, but chiefly at the large end, where there are, in some instances, afew darker brown streaks. They vary considerably in length, but not in general bulk, averaging about 1-4 by 1:06 inch, the largest that I have measured not exceeding 1°6 by 1:08 inch. It breeds in the Himalayas up to 4000 feet; the season, par excellence, says Mr. Hume, ‘is June and July ; but occasionally nests will be found earlier even in Upper India, and in Southern and Eastern India a great number lay in May.” Miscellaneous material is used for the construction of the nests, particularly in the matter of ning ; and Blyth speaks of some nests being exclusively composed of wires taken from soda- water bottles, which had been purloined from heaps set aside by native servants for sale. The same variety of form and marking of the eggs is observable in Indian specimens, and the average of a large number “is 1-44 by 1:06 inch.” Genus CISSA. Bill moderately short, stout, wide at the base; culmen well curved, the tip with a plainly indicated notch; nasal bristles short; gape furnished with short rictal bristles. Eye surrounded by a prominent naked wattle. Wings short, rounded, the 6th quill longest. Tail long and graduated. Legs and feet stout. ‘Tarsus equal to the middle toe with its claw; lateral toes subequal. CISSA ORNATA., (THE CEYLONESE JAY.) (Peculiar to Ceylon.) Pica ornata, Wagler, Isis, 1829, p. 749. Cissa puella, Blyth, J. A. S. 1849, xviii. p. 810; id. Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 93 (ex Layard, MS.); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 124 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 213. Cissa pyrrhocyanea, Gould, B. of Asia, pt. i. pl. 13 (1850, ex Licht. MS.). Kitta ornata, Bp. Consp. i. p. 166 (1850). Citta ornata, Licht. Nomencl. Av. p. 9. Cissa ornata, Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 298; Schlegel, Coraces, p. 69; Gray, Hand-l. B. ii. p. 7 (1869); Holdsworth, P. Z.S. 1872, p. 461; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 23; Holdsworth, ibid. p. 124; Sharpe, Cat. B. ili. p. 87 (1877). The Mountain-Jay, Europeans in Ceylon ; also Blue Jay. Kahibella, Sinhalese. Ad. capite et collo undique castaneis: dorso leté ultramarino, uropygio cum dorso postico et supracaudalibus magis cyanescentibus: tectricibus alarum omnibus ultramarinis: primario primo nigro: remigibus reliquis extts castaneis, intis nigris: cauda cyanea, rectricibus laté albo terminatis, fascia subterminali nigra transversim notatis : subalaribus ultramarinis, interioribus cineraceis: remigibus infra nigris, extis castaneis, intus versus basin rufescentibus : palpebra et iride sanguineis: rostro rubro: pedibus corallinis. Adult male and female. Length 18-0 to 18-5 inches; wing 6:5 to 6-7; tail 10-25 to 10°7, outer feathers 6-5 shorter than central; tarsus 1:6 to 1°8; mid toe and claw 1:5; bill to gape 1-5 to 16. Expanse 20-5. Tris ight brown ; eyelid deep red, orbital skin somewhat paler ; bill, legs, and feet coral-red; claws reddish yellow at base, dusky at tip. Whole head, neck, and chest deep shining chestnut; interscapulary region, lesser wing-coverts, and beneath the hue of the chest cobalt-blue, paling into light cerulean blue on the lower back, rump, and underparts ; greater wing- coverts duller blue than the lesser; quills light chestnut on their outer webs, and dull black on the inner, those of the tertials overcast with blue, basal inner edges of quills rufescent grey; tail greenish blue, the edges brightest and the terminal inch white with a dividing black band chiefly developed on the inner web, the four lateral pairs of feathers with the white running up the outer edge; thighs dusky cobalt-blue. Young. Tail in nestling plumage about 6 inches in length; feathers pointed. Iris brown, with the outer edge pale, orbital skin brown ; bill dusky orange with a pale tip; legs and feet dusky red. Head, hind neck, throat, and chest pale chestnut: back and upper breast bluish green, becoming dusky on the lower breast, with the belly albescent; lesser wing-coverts as the back; the greater coverts and quills as in the adult. Ata further stage the chestnut of the head and throat becomes darker, and the back and breast more blue, but not nearly so pure as in the second year or fully adult dress. Distribution —The Ceylon Jay inhabits the mountains of the Central Province, including the detached Muneragala range beyond the south-eastern slopes of Madulsima, and all the peak forests which descend into the Western Province and form the northern slopes of Saffragam. Beyond this district, to the south and west respectively, it is found in the jungles of the Rakwana district, the Morowak and Kukkul Korales, and the immense forests covering the low ranges between the Singha-Rajah jungle and the Kaluganga. This latter district comprises the lower part of the Kukkul Korale and the Pasdun Korale, and the highest parts do not exceed 1700 feet. I found it in the valleys of this wild and little-known region during the rainy month of August, at an elevation considerably under 1000 feet, which leaves no doubt that it is a resident there. 22 354 CISSA ORNATA. Since the jungle in the Central Province has been felled to such an enormous extent for coffee-planting, the Jay has decreased very much in numbers below 4000 feet. Its chief home now is in the forests of the main range, the Nuwara-Elliya plateau, the Peak wilderness, the upper part of Haputale, and the summits of the Knuckles. In patna-jungles, however, it is always liable to be found, particularly during the boisterous weather of the S.W. monsoon, when it is driven down from the mountains above. The Jay was first made known by Wagler, who described it in the ‘Isis’ for 1829, from a specimen in the Berlin Museum, to which the East Indies was assigned as the habitat. It seems to have escaped the notice of subsequent ornithologists until Layard’s time ; while collecting in Ceylon he met with it, and, being under the impression that it was new to science, he gave it its appropriate synonym, C. puelia, and transmitted his specimens to Blyth, who established the name. Layard writes of it, “This, the most lovely of all our Ceylon birds, was discovered by me along the course of a mountain stream in the jungle near Ambegamoa.” I am glad to hear that many gentlemen in the planting districts are endeavouring to preserve this hand- some species, and thus prevent the disappearance of such a pleasing ornament to the woods in the vicinity of their estates. These efforts, I understand, are chiefly beimg made in the Dimbulla and Lindula districts. Habits —This beautiful bird is of a shy disposition ; it associates generally in parties of about half a dozen, and passes most of its time in the branches of tall trees, searching for lizards and large beetles, and partaking of fruit of many kinds. It is, however, often met with in low underwood ; and I have several times flushed it from the ground, when it flies on to low branches and speedily makes its way off. It is fond of the green lizard (Calotes), which I have on several occasions found in its stomach in large fragments. At early morning they roam about the forest, keeping to the tops of the trees, and following each other with a loud clanking ery, until suitable trees to feed in have been found, in which they settle down, uttering a harsh croaking note as they move from branch to branch. When feeding in underwood or on the ground I have noticed that they are usually silent and very watchful, which they have need to be, for their beautiful blue plumage quickly attracts the attention of the sportsman. It has, notwithstanding its wary habits, a considerable amount of inquisitiveness in-its disposition. Layard writes thus of it :—‘ The last I procured fell a victim to that curiosity so characteristic of the Jays. I was creeping through some thick jungle to get a shot at a large Wood-Pigeou, when a Cissa flew down from some lofty trees, and, coming close to me, peered into my face. Steg S. heres 1 waited until the bird had leisurely surveyed me and flown to a little distance, still watching my movements. This enabled me to shoot it.” Mr. Holdsworth remarks, “'They are very noisy, continually uttering a Jay-like scream, both when perched and flying. There is consequently little difficulty in finding them out when they are in the neighbourhood ; but from their keeping so much to the dense jungle, I have on several occasions worked my way quietly through the bushes to within a few yards of the birds without being able to get sight of them.” The beauty of the Jay’s plumage has caused it to be recklessly shot for the sake of its feathers ; but in this matter people in Ceylon are no more to blame than those in Norway, South America, and Australia, who have so ruthlessly slaughtered Kingfishers, Humming-birds, and Parrakeets to satisfy a culpable taste on the part of the fair sex for the ornamentation of their hats with the feathers of many of the most lovely members of the bird creation ! Nidification—This bird breeds during the cool season. I found its nest in the Kandapolla jungles in January; it was situated in a fork of the top branch of a tall sapling, about 45 feet in height, and was a tolerably bulky structure, externally made of small sticks, in the centre of which was a deep cup, 5 inches in diameter by 23 in depth, made entirely of fine roots; there was but one egg in the nest, which unfortunately got broken in being lowered to the ground. It was ovate and slightly pyriform, of a faded bluish-green ground, thickly spotted all over with very light umber-brown over larger spots of bluish grey. It measured 0°98 inch in diameter by about 1:3 in length. The front figure in the Plate accompanying this article is that of a fine female example shot in the forest surrounding the Horton Plains, and the one in the background that of a young bird. PASSERES. Fam. ORIOLIDZ. Bill rather long, wide at the base ; culmen curved towards the tip, which is distinctly notched. Nostrils exposed, linear in form, placed in front of the base of the bill and near the margin of the mandible. Tarsus considerably longer than the middle toe. Feet small. Sternum narrow in front, widening posteriorly, with a deep pointed notch in each half of the posterior edge ; the posterior part of the opening almost united. Genus ORIOLUS. Bill with the characters of the family. Wings rather long, the 4th quill the longest; the difference between the secondaries and primaries less than half the length of the tail, Tarsus stout, covered in front with broad transverse scales. Feet rather small; the lateral toes unequal, the outer one joined at the base to the inner. ORIOLUS DIFFUSUS. (THE BLACK-NAPED INDIAN ORIOLE.) Oriolus sinensis, Swains. An. in Menag. p. 342 (sub O. coronatus). Oriolus chinensis (nec Linn.), Jerd. Cat. B.S. India, Madr. Journ. 1859, x. p. 262; Swinhoe, P. Z. 8. 1871, p. 374; Hume, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 477. Oriolus indicus, Jerd. Ill. Ind. Orn. pl. 15 (1847); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 216 (1849); Layard et Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. Birds Ceylon, App. p. 58 (1853); Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i. p. 270 (1854); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 124; Holdsw. P. Z. 8.1872, p.452; Blyth & Walden, B. Burm. p. 139 (1875). Oriolus diffusus, Sharpe, Cat. Birds, iii. p. 197 (1877). Adult male and female. Length 9:5 to 10:0 inches; wing 5°8 to 6-3; tail 4:0 to 4:1; tarsus 0-9; mid toe 0°8, claw (straight) 0°3; bill to gape 1:4, width at nostrils 0°45. These measurements are taken from a series of examples in the British Museum; the wings of the two examples procured by Layard in Ceylon measure 6°1 and 6:5 respectively ; these are now in the Poole collection. “Tris rich blood-red ; bill pinky red; legs and feet plumbeous” (Jerdon). Male. Forehead, as far back as the centre of the crown, throat, entire neck, upper and under surface of body, including the upper and under tail-coverts and the underwing bright yellow, as also the lesser wing-coverts, the outer webs of the greater coverts, and the terminal portion of all but the central tail-feathers; tips of the primary-coverts and edge of wing paler yellow than the aforesaid parts, and the outer webs of the secondaries marked with the same as follows—the entire web of the innermost and those of the remaining feathers decreasing gradually to an edging on the outermost; primaries marked with a still narrower margin ; lores, a space above and behind the eye, posterior part of crown, occiput, and nape, as also the wings and tail, with the exception of the parts above named, jet-black. Female. Back and scapulars slightly tinged with olivaceous. Young. Bill dusky or dingy pinkish. Upper surface with the scapulars and those parts of the wing which are bright yellow in the adult dusky greenish PRA P 356 ORIOLUS DIFFUSUS. yellow, brightest on the upper tail-coverts ; in front of the eye a small black spot ; outer webs of greater coverts clear yellow, the parts of the wing which are black in the adult dark brown; sides of neck yellower than the back part; throat, chest, and breast whitish, tinged strongly with yellow on the sides of the breast, flanks, and under tail-coverts, and streaked on the fore neck and under surface of body with blackish lines, finest on the fore neck, and boldest on the breast and flanks. Obs. Mr. Sharpe has given this species the above title, although it has generally been known by that of indicus, as it appears that the name given by Brisson is not admissible, inasmuch as it related to a bird which had blue in its plumage, a character not to be found in any Oriole. As it is found in China it is more widely diffused than any other Black-naped Oriole, and hence Mr. Sharpe’s name for it. Linneus’s name chinensis is said to be referable to the Philippine bird. Examples from China differ somewhat from Indian ones in having a “ slightly larger bill, a somewhat larger wing-spot, and decidedly more yellow on the tertiaries” than the latter; but Mr. Hume, whose remarks I quote, finds Tenasserim specimens to match both Chinese and Southern-Indian, thus establishing an unbroken chain, The Black-naped Orioles form a closely allied and very interesting group. 0. tenwirostris from Burmah, as its name implies, has a slenderer bill and has more yellow on the primary-coverts and tail than O. diffusus. O. andamanensis from the Andamans and O. frontalis (a splendid species) from the Sula Islands are chiefly distinguished by their black, almost unmarked wings ; and the latter has the head nearly all black, with only a narrow frontal band of yellow. O. macrurus, Blyth, from the Nieobars is another black-winged species of Black-naped Oriole with a broader occipital band than O. andamanensis. Distribution —The present species has proved to be only a straggler to the island of Ceylon, but two specimens of it having been procured as yet. Layard, who introduced this Oriole into our lists, writes of it (/.c.) :— A single pair of these birds fell under my notice ; they were shot by a native at the back of the Bishop’s residence near Colombo,” It enjoys a wide range, and no doubt is much in the habit of moving from place to place, so that it may occur again at some future period within our limits. Jerdon remarks that it is spread more or less throughout India, but is rare everywhere ; he procured it in the Malabar jungles. Mr. Elliott found it at Dharwar, and it occurs near Calcutta; it is, however, as Jerdon says, much more common in the countries to the east of the Bay of Bengal, extending southwards into the peninsula of Malacca as low down as Pinang. Mr. Hume records it from Tenasserim, in which province Mr. Davison procured it south of Moulmein. It is spread eastward from Burmah as far as China, where Swinhoe remarks of it as follows :—“ Throughout China, and Formosa in summer. Resorts in winter to Cochin-China, Tenasserim, and India.” It would appear from this that it is merely a visitant to India, a fact which would well explain its beimg a casual straggler to the shores of Ceylon. As it is a summer inha- bitant of China, it probably breeds there, and that country may be considered to be its proper headquarters. Habits.—But little is recorded concerning the habits of this Oriole. It appears in India to frequent forest- districts, and to keep more to jungle than most other species of its family. It is evidently a bold bird, and well able to hold its own in the forests. Mr. Swinhoe, in writing on the ornithology of Formosa in 1865, gives the following account of its prowess :—‘ Walking along the avenue this morning, my attention was attracted by a Halcyon’s scream, and two birds, one chasing the other, dashed through the thicket. The first bird I was not quick enough to catch sight of. The pursuing bird was an Oriole (Oriolus chinensis). The Oriole discon- tinued the chase, and, perching on a tree not far from me, began to whistle its absurd attempt at a song, as if glorying in the defeat of its enemy. It was a mature bird, and looked very showy in the sunlight.” The diet of this species is probably of a mixed nature, as is the case with many of its congeners, who are both imsectivorous and frugivorous. I know nothing of its nidification. ORIOLUS MELANOCEPHALUS. (THE BLACK-HEADED ORIOLE.) Oriolus melanocephalus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 160(1766); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 215 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 122 (1852) ; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 123; Horsf. & Moore (in pt.), Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i. p. 269 (1854); Jerdon (in pt.), B. of Ind. ii. p. 110 (1863); Hume, Nests and Eggs, ii. p. 301 (1874); id. Str. Feath. 1874, p. 230; id. t.¢. (1878) (B. of Tenass.), p. 330. Oriolus ceylonensis, Bonap. Consp. Av. i. p. 347 (1850); Jerdon (in pt.), B. of Ind. ii. p. 111 (1863); Holdsw. P. Z.S. 1872, p. 453 ; Hume, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 439; Fairbank, ibid. 1877, p. 406; Sharpe, Cat. Birds, iii. p. 216 (1877) The Black-headed Indian Icterus, Edwards, Birds, p. 77, pl. 77; Le Loriot de Bengale, Brisson; The Southern Black-headed Oriole, Jerdon, B. of Ind.; Mango-bird, Euro- peans in Ceylon. Pilak, Zardak, Hind. ; Konda-ranga pandu, Telugu. Ka-kurulla, lit. * Yellow-bird,” Sinhalese; WMamkoel, Mambala kuruvi, Tamils in Ceylon. "Adult male. Length 9°5 to 10-0 inches; wing 5:0 to 5:2; tail 3-2; tarsus 0-9 to 1:05; middle toe and claw 0:95 to 1-0; bill to gape 1:25, width at nostrils 0°37. Iris bright ruby-red ; bill faded lake-red, paler about the base beneath ; legs and feet dusky bluish, claws dusky. Entire head, hind neck, throat, and fore neck down to the centre of the chest shining jet-black ; wings and a patch on the centre of the four middle tail-feathers black, less lustrous than the head; rest of upper and under surface, wing-coverts, upper and under tail-coyerts, tail and under wing rich yellow, with a slight greenish tinge on the back and rump ; tips of the primary-coverts, varying from 0-3 to 0-5 inch in depth, tips of the secondaries, varying on the outer webs of the innermost feathers from 0-3 to 0°6 inch in depth, bright yellow; primaries more finely tipped with pale yellow; in most specimens, except those which are evidently very old, the yellow of the central rectrices next the black is sullied with greenish ; the black band varies from 3 to 1 inch in width on these feathers. In some examples the outer web of the shortest secondary feather, which is almost concealed by the scapulars, is entirely yellow. Adult female. Length 9°5 inches; wing 48 to 5-0. The yellow of the back and breast is less vivid than in the male. Examples not fully adult of both sexes have the back strongly tinged with greenish. Young. The bird of the year measures 8°7 to 9-1 inches, and has a wing of 4:7 to 4:8. Iris brown; bill black or blackish brown, with the edge of the base of lower mandible light; legs and feet slightly duskier than in the adult; a yellowish stripe runs from the nostril over the eye ; orbital fringe yellowish ; throat white, with black mesial stripes ; the wing-coverts, which are yellow in the adult, have blackish centres; tips of secondaries less conspicuous ; margins of primaries whitish at the centre; tail-band brownish, very broad, and extending across all the feathers, but limited to the outer web on the two laterals ; the breast striated with black, and apparently more so in males than in females; back washed with brownish. In the nestling just plumaged the head has the feathers edged greenish. Obs. The Oriole inhabiting Southern India and Ceylon has been usually styled O. ceylonensis, a name given by Bona- parte to a bird with less yellow on the wing.than he supposed the species described by Linnzus, angles the name of O. melanocephalus, exhibited. Linneus, however, founded his species on Edwards’s plate of the Black-headed Indian Ieterus, which is no other than a representation of the Ceylonese and Peninsular-Indian Oriole with the tertials tipped only with yellow ; the spot formed by the yellow tips of the primary-coverts is, it is true, very large, and answers well to that which exists in the Himalayan bird usually styled O. melanocephalus. This is, however, a mistake of the artist, as is manifest by the letterpress, which runs as follows :—“ The remainder of the quills next the body are tipped with yellow, which colour extends alittle way along their outer webs; the tips of the covert-feathers where they fall on the greater quills are yellow, which form a distinct spot of yellow a little above the middle of v9 (| CO ORLOLUS MELANOCEPHALUS. the wing.” Now the alleged differences between Linnieus’s and Bonaparte’s species lie in the smallness of the wing-bar and the scanty amount of yellow on the tertials of the latter, characters which in reality, by virtue of Edwards’s plate, apply to the former (O. melanocephalus). If, therefore, there be two races of this Oriole which deserve subspecific rank, it is the northern bird, which must be separated from the southern and receive a name, which I would propose as O. himalayanus*, because the birds from that region principally, as I shall presently show, exhibit the characteristic on which they could alone be specifically separated. As much has been written for and against the characters which have been held to separate the northern and southern races of this Oriole, I have carefully examined the whole series in the British Museum, and give here a Table of the results of my examination. The specific names are those used on the labels of the specimens from the localities named. Coloration of outer Wing-spot web of innermost Wing. Bill to gape. (broad). exposed secondary. in. in. in. - Oriolus melanocephalus. N.W. Himalayas...... 56 1:32 0-7 Entirely yellow. ” a Nepal .2sae saen ote see 545 1°25 0-65 > a ” FS N.W. Himalayas...... 5-4 1:45 0-45 “, = 9 3 Nepal sic asihalam saat 5:65 igs 0-7 oF 7 *) be Nee pale yaunscisicuetneere tists 57 13, 0-62 a A * Peg Uisiss s,s cu ares nad 5-4 broken 0-7 + “ ) KGampbee lec ae 5°12 1:35 0-4 Large spot at tip. 3 “5 Madras’ 2.4 s'aec as orl 113} 0-55 a A = es Madras .........0%. 5-2 1e25 0°45 PP a 5 Madras! is, sss teers 5-4 13 0-5 Pe AA 7 Fe Travancore! saeco = 561 1:35 0-75 5 3 * ms Tenasserim 2.5.20 + 5:2 1:28 Or4 35 “ 2 pe Behan. ace nese sare 5:4 1S} O-4 4 = a5 ee Behar’ ayac oc ersrate, «015 a5. 1:3 0-6 > a . Oriolus ceylonensis. Nuwara Elliya............ pl ees 0-3 of a - 53 Nuwara Elliya........ ee 4:8 2 0-3 3 3 5 - Gallo” facecectioets yo a taeG i} 1-25 0-5 ss 3 FA A Nuwara Hiliya..........-. 5:0 1:25 0-5 a a Examples g to o are not to be separated from the four last Ceylonese specimens ; the size of the spot at the tip of the outer web of the innermost secondary, as well as the extent of yellow at the termination of the adjacent feathers, varies in each, but it is no larger in the South-Indian than in the Ceylonese series ; it will also be seen that no dependence can be placed on the width of the wing-spot formed by the yellow tips of the primary-coverts, the Travancore specimen having it as wide as any Himalayan, although it must be acknowledged that it is larger as a rule in the northern form than in the southern. There is, however, a constant difference in the coloration of the long, exposed inner secondary of the Himalayan bird, which is very remarkable when seen in a series Jaid side by side with another from the various localities indicated in the above table; so that in the birds from the region above mentioned, in addition to the secondaries having more yellow at the tips than others, there is the fact that the feather in question has always (as far as I can judge from the series examined) the entire web yellow, while others (the true O. melanocephalus) have merely a large spot at the tip of the outer web. In most families of birds it would amount to an absurdity to base a separation of two species on the coloration of a single feather ; but in the Orioles, which depend so much on the distribution of the yellow for their specific rank, it may not seem an unnatural point to lay stress upon. As long as the distinction which I have pointed out is found to hold good, I see no reason why the Himalayan and Pegu form should not stand as a subspecies or local race of the Indian. Distribution —This Oriole is a very common bird in Ceylon, being found throughout the entire low country and the hills, ranging up to an altitude not unfrequently of 6000 feet. It has, indeed, on several oceasions been found at Nuwara Elliya; and in Uva, where it is very common, it often occurs at 5000 feet. Tu the north it is numerous, inhabiting the island of Manaar and those adjacent to Jaffna, as well as the extreme north of the mainland; and in the dry forests of the north-central district, in the Seven Korales, and interior of the Eastern Province it is likewise common. In the west and south it is chiefly found in * Oriolus melanocephalus, Sharpe, Cat. B. iii. p. 215 (nee Linn.), ORIOLUS MELANOCEPHALUS. 399 the cultivated portions of the interior and on the sea-board, and in the Galle district retires inland during the rains of the south-west monsoon. In the arid country between Haputale and the sea it is mostly confined to the forest on the rivers. On the Kandy side it is noticeable chiefly in Dumbara and the open valleys through which flow the numerous affluents of the Mahawelliganga. In India this species is found throughout the greater part of the peninsula from Bengal southwards. Jerdon writes of the race which he styles O. cey/onensis, that it is found in Southern India, being common on the Malabar coast, comparatively rare in the Carnatic, and almost unknown in the bare Deccan. On the western confines of this district, however, it has been found by Mr. Fairbank, who records it from “Konkan and the western declivities of the Sahyadris, from Khandola to Goa.’ ‘There are specimens in the British Museum from Madras, where it is said to be common. As the examples above cited from Behar belong to this species it may be presumed that the Oriole which Mr. Ball says is common in Chota Nagpur belongs to the scantily marked form and not to that which inhabits the sub-Himalayan region. Passing over Pegu, in going eastward of Bengal, we find it again in Tenasserim, whence comes one of the specimens enume- rated in the above table. Mr. Hume says that it “extends through the Province as far south as Mergui, but is rare south of Tavoy.’’ I conclude the birds spoken of are the same asthe example cited. In the Andamans Mr. Davison says it is a seasonal visitant, leaving them in October and returning in March. Habits.—This showy bird, which is one of the ornaments of Ceylonese cultivated nature, frequents open paddy-lands studded with woods, detached groves, wooded compounds, the interior of forests in the dry parts of the island, and the borders of rivers and large tanks. Being a tame species, it dwells much in the proximity of houses, and remains perched sometimes on the top of a prominent tree, repeating its well-known note, ko-ko-wak, which it also utters on the wing. It has considerable powers of flight, progressing with alternate beating and closing of the wings. Its food consists chiefly of fruits and seeds of jungle-trees, and it consumes largely the berries of the Lantana. The Oriole is almost universally styled the ‘‘ Mango-bird ” by Europeans on account of its yellow plumage; but I imagine the name was imported from India in the first instance. It is a well-known species in the western parts of the island to sportsmen, and often pays with its life the penalty usually imposed upon the unfortunate members of the feathered creation who, unhappily for themselves, are arrayed in more gorgeous dress than their fellows. The first shot fired in the dawn at the much sought after “ Kaswatua”’* usually arouses the Oriole, and cuts short the morning preening of his yellow dress, frightening him across the misty paddy-field, out of which the Snipe are getting up before the sportsman’s gun. When thus frightened it does not fly far, but quickly settles in some thickly folaged tree and gives out its not unmelodious whistle. It is not a sociable bird, although two or more are often seen not far from each other, and occasionally I have aroused a pair from the same tree. Concerning its habits in India Jerdon writes :— It frequents both forests, gardens, and groves. It is a lively and noisy bird, constantly flymg from tree to tree, and uttermg its loud mellow whistle, which Sundevall has put into musical form. It feeds chiefly on fruit, especially on the figs of the Banian, Peepal, and other Fici, and it is said also to eat blossoms and buds.” Nidification—The “ Mango-bird”’ breeds, on the western side of the island, during the first six months of the year, the favourite time being March and April. In the north-east I have found its nest in December. It builds at the fork of a horizontal branch some distance out and high above the ground, suspending its nest by twining the material of the top round the branches. The nest is variable in construction, but is generally large and loose, composed of grass, bark, and small twigs, ornamented with lichens and bleached leaves. The eggs are usually three in number, pointed ovals in shape, and some so much so that they might be called pyriform; the texture is smooth and the ground-colour pinkish white, sparsely spotted and blotched with openly distributed smooth-edged markings of reddish brown, umber, and purplish black. In some eggs the markings are more confined to the large end than in others, and in one or two I have seen sundry hieroglyphic-like spots. Mr. Hume remarks, in ‘Nests and Eggs,’ that “the dark spots are not unfrequently more or less enveloped in a reddish-pink nimbus.” ‘The average dimensions are 1:2 by 0°82 inch. * * Native name for Snipe. PASSERES. Fam. CAMPOPHAGID. Bill generally stout, moderately hooked and moderately notched ; generally thick at the base, rather widened ; the nostrils hidden. Wings in most species lengthened, never short. Shrike-like birds of soft plumage ; the feathers of the lower back and rump with stiffened shafts. (Sharpe, Cat. Birds, iv. p. 7.) Genus GRAUCALUS. Bill stout, massive, wide at base; culmen keeled and much decurved, with the tip notched distinctly. Nostrils covered with setaceous feathers; rictal bristles moderate; the lores bristly. Head massive. Wings long; the 4th quill the longest, and the Ist less than half the length of the 4th. Tail tolerably long, and slightly graduated at the exterior. Tarsus longer than the middle toe. Feet strong, claws curved and strong. GRAUCALUS MACIL (THE LARGE INDIAN CUCKOO-SHRIKE.) Graucalus macti, Lesson, Traité, p. 849 (1831); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A.S. B. p.190 (1849) ; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i. p. 173; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 417 (1862); Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p.368; Hume, Nests and Eggs,i. p. 181 (1873); Walden, Ibis, 1873, p. 310; Hume, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 204; Adam, t. ¢. p. 400; Hume, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 94; Butler, t.c. p. 464; Blyth & Walden, B. Burm. p. 123 (1875); Armstrong, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 316; Hume, ibid. 1877, p. 29; Fairbank, ¢.c. p. 400; Hume & Davison, ibid. 1878, p. 210; Sharpe, Cat. Birds, iv. p. 34 (1879). Graucalus nipalensis, Hodgs. Ind. Rev. 1. p. 327. Campephaga macei (Less.), Gray, Gen. B. i. p. 285 (1845); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 123 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xii. p. 128. Graucalus layardi, Blyth, Ebis, 1866, p. 868; Jerdon, Ibis, 1872, p. 117; Holdsw. P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 437; Wald. Ibis, 1873, p. 311; Hume, Stray Feath. 1873, p. 485; Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 287. Mace’s Caterpillar-catcher, Kelaart; The Large Caterpillar-catcher. Kasya, Hind. ; Kabasi, Beng. ; Pedda akurai, Tel., lit. “ Large File-bird.” Adult male and female. Length 10:1 to 10-4 inches; wing 5:8 to 6:05; tail 43; tarsus 1-0 to 1-1; mid toe 0:85, claw (straight) 0°39 ; hind toe 0:5, claw (straight) 0-35; bill to gape 1:3 to 1-4. These measurements are from a good series of Ceylonese examples, in which the females average the larger of the sexes. Tris reddish brown, variable in intensity of colour; bill black ; legs and feet black, edges of tarsal scales whitish. Male. Above the nostril, lores, round the eye, and the gape and point of chin jet-black, passing into blackish on the ear-coverts. The feathers of the lores are bristly. Above slate-grey (individuals varying in depth of colour), paler on the forehead and rump, which latter part is indistinctly barred with white; head and back in some examples with dark shafts; wing-coverts duskier than the back and with dark shafts; wings and tail black, the former — GRAUCALUS MACII. 361 with the quills edged white, and the outer webs of the tertials and secondaries paling into grey towards the edge ; central rectrices dark grey, and the whole tipped white, the two external pairs mostly so, and the white extremity passing up into the grey. Throat, sides of neck, chest, and upper breast slate-grey, lighter than the upper surface, and paling on the breast gradually into the white of the lower parts, leaving a few very faint traces of barring on the sides of the breast ; under tail- and under wing-coverts white, the edge of the wing with a few light bars of bluish grey; thighs slate-grey, the edges of the feathers more or less edged with white. The generality of adult examples have a not inconsiderable amount of light barring on the lower breast. Adult female. In this sex the lores are less black than in the male, as also the space beneath the eye and the ear- coverts, and the upper surface is not so blue; the very old bird has the under surface as in the male. Young. The nestling, as described by Mr. Hume from the Andamans, has the lores, cheeks, and ear-coverts pale grey, each feather tipped with fulvous; the head and hind neck greyish white, tipped and margined with pale fulyous ; back and scapulars French grey, tipped fulvous, and with a subterminal dusky spot on the feathers ; the secon- daries, tertiaries, and greater and median wing-coverts greyish brown, very broadly margined on the outer webs with creamy white ; the primaries margined and tipped with fulvous ; chin, throat, and breast greyish white, the feathers tipped and margined with pale, slightly fulvous white ; the lower parts pure white and unbarred. The immature male has the chest and centre of the breast barred on a bluish-grey ground with dark slate-grey bars, which extend to the lower flanks and borders of the abdomen; the throat and fore neck are uniform grey, as in the adult ; lores black. The female has the throat whitish, the ground-colour being pervaded with grey, which changes into white on the chest, and the whole under surface, from the chin to the lower breast and flanks, barred with dark grey: with age the throat and fore neck gradually assume a uniform appearance as the light interspaces darken ; in an example before me in this stage the barring is just perceptible on the throat, and the breast is white crossed with dark grey bars. Obs. The Ceylonese and South-Indian race was separated by Blyth (loc. cit.) as G. layardi, without further diagnosis or description than that it was of the same small size as G. javanensis, and had the anterior surface of the wing underneath strongly barred, and the outer tail-feathers very slightly white-tipped. The first-named feature in the plumage refers to an immature bird, and the latter is a variable character. Ceylon birds certainly, as a rule, are smaller than those from the Andamans, Burmah, North-east India, and many parts of the Peninsula, but in the south of the empire they vary in size. One example from Coorg, tabulated by Lord Tweeddale (‘ Ibis,’ 1873), has the wing 6:0 inches, while another in my own collection from the island of Ramisserum measures 6:5 inches. Mr. Sharpe, moreover, finds that North-west Indian specimens are intermediate in size between Himalayan and Ceylonese ; in fact there is one in the British Museum from Kattiawar measuring only 6-0 inches, another from Kamptee 6:4, and a third from Mahabaleshwar 6-3; while a specimen from Mysore is again as large as a North- Indian one—wing 7:1, bill to gape 1:35. Three Maunbhoom specimens, recorded by Lord T'weeddale, measured 6:37, 6:6, and 6:3 in the wing. An Andaman female in my own collection has a length of 6-9; and one from Dehra Doon is noted at 7°37. These data show, therefore, that there is great variation in size in this species, and that while the largest birds come from the sub-Himalayan districts and the Andamans, those from N.W. India and Ceylon (widely separated regions) are nearly alike in dimensions ; and these latter are, as regards plumage, when compared with the larger examples of the same age, identical with them. Distribution. —This fine bird is generally distributed throughout the northern forest-tract from the country lying to the north-east of Trincomalie to the limit of the dry district a little south of Chilaw, likewise through- out the eastern portion of the island (where it is more particularly found about the dead trees in the newly- restored tanks) and the arid jungles between Haputale and the south-east coast. In the Kandyan Province it inhabits Uva pretty generally and the district round Kandy, including the Knuckles and the valleys of the southern affluents of the Mahawelliganga flowing through Hewahette and Maturata. Mr. Bligh has procured it also in Kotmalie, which is on the other side of the Pusselawa range. Among the above-mentioned districts it is especially numerous in the Wellaway Korale and the wild jungles lying between Anaradjapura and Chilaw. Concerning its general distribution in India, Jerdon writes that it is found over the whole country, from the Himalayas to the extreme south, wherever there is a sufliciency of wood. Its location in the north-west is 3A 362 GRAUCALUS MACII. somewhat peculiar, for Captain Lloyd says it is common in Kattiawar. Captain Butler observes that it is the reverse in the Guzerat district, for he only saw it near Deesa and in one or two other parts of the plains; while Mr. Hume writes that it has not been recorded from Sindh, Cutch, Jodhpore, or Sambhur. In Chota Nagpur it is, says Mr. Ball, pretty generally distributed; in the Khandala district it is found everywhere, but is nowhere abundant. Mr. Fairbank records one specimen as seen in the Palani hills; and Mr. Hume has received it from Anjango, and myself from Ramisserum Island. Turning towards the north-east we have it not uncommon along the bases of the Himalayas, and procured at such places as Dehra, Kumaon, Gurwhal, and Darjiling ; further east still, Mr. Inglis says that it is very common in Cachar during the cold season, being met with there in flocks, but that it is only occasionally seen during the rains. In the Irrawaddy delta Mr. Armstrong met with it in abundance; and Mr. Oates writes that it is common within the limits of Upper Pegu and also in the Arracan hills. In the northern portion of the province of Tenasserim it is also not uncommon, extending thence across the bay to the islands, where it inhabits those of the Andaman group and is a permanent resident in them. Habits —The large Cuckoo-Shrike is decidedly a shy species. In the immature stage chiefly it associates in small flocks or troops, which keep in scattered company among tall trees near forest-lined rivers or surrounding the wild tanks of the Northern Province. Single birds are often met with flymg high in the air and uttering their shrill call, kwr-eéch, sometimes suddenly darting down in their course and alighting on the top of a lofty tree, on which they will continue this harsh and far-sounding note. When in small troops, if disturbed, one bird will leave the tree and is then followed by its mates one after the other, who pursue their companions to a new perch and again settle down in company with them. It is consequently difficult to approach within shot, and is usually only procured when it happens to alight by accident in a tree near the position of the sportsman or collector. Though not loud its note is very harsh and peculiarly far-reaching ; it is in the evenings that it is peculiarly fond of uttering its dis-syllabic ery, and it will remain for some time perched in the same spot, now and then, in the breeding-season, giving out a low chirping song. Its food consists of caterpillars, grasshoppers, and various kinds of coleopterous sects. Hodgson states its food to be “ Mantides, Scarabai, berries, vetches, and seeds.” J have no record, in my field-notes, of having found the diet of any example of so mixed a nature as this ; but, doubtless, the food of this species is as varied as that of many Passerine birds. Nidification.—Mr. Parker, of the Ceylon Public Works Department, who has had much opportunity of observing these birds in the N.E. and N.W. Provinces, says that they breed in June in the forests of that part, but he did not succeed in procuring their eggs. Mr. Blewitt, as quoted by Mr. Hume in his ‘ Nests and Eggs,’ says “ that the nest is built in the most lofty branch of a tree, near the fork of two outlying twigs; it is circular in form, and the body is thickly made of thin twigs and grass-roots, while the outer part of the nest is covered with what appears to be spiders’ webs; the interior is moderately cup-shaped. ‘The breeding-time is in May and June.” Jerdon found the nest in a lofty Casuarina-tree, and it was composed of small twigs and roots. The eggs are three in number and are rather elongated ovals, a good deal pointed towards one end ; the ground-colour is greenish stone-colour, with, as Mr. Hume remarks, a creamy tinge in some. “The markings are very Shrike-like, and consist of brown blotches, streaks, and spots, with numerous clouds and blotches of pale inky purple, which appear to underlie the brown markings.” Average dimensions of eight eggs 1°22 by 0-9 inch. Genus PERICROCOTUS. Bill not so massive as in Graucalus; culmen straighter and more suddenly bent down at the tip, which is plainly notched. Nostrils oval, placed in a depression concealed by the plumes ; rictal bristles feeble. Wings pointed; the 4th and 5th quills subequal and longest; the Ist and 2nd in the same proportion asin the last genus. ‘ail long, much graduated. Legs and feet small. Of brilliant plumage; sexes differing in coloration. PERICROCOTUS FLAMMEUS, (THE ORANGE MINIVET.) Muscicapa flammea, Forster, Indische Zoologie, p. 25, pl. 15 (1781). Phenicornis flammeus, Swainson, Zool. Ill. 2nd ser. pl. 52 (1831); Jerdon, Cat. B. S. India, Madr. Journ, 1839, x. p. 244; id. Ill. Ind. Orn. pl. 11 (1847). Pericrocotus flammeus, Gray, Gen. Birds, i. p. 282 (1845); Blyth, Cat. B. M.A. S. B. p. 192 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 123 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 127; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co.i. p. 142 (1854); Gould, B. of Asia, pt. ix. (1857) ; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 420 ; Holdsw. P. Z.S. 1872, p. 488; Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 182 (1873); Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 288; Sharpe, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 208; Hume, ibid. p. 394, et 1877, p. 197; Sharpe, Cat. Birds, iv. p. 75 (1879). Flammeous Flycatcher, Lath. Gen. Hist.; The Elegant Red Flycatcher, Kelaart ; Sultan-bird, Europeans in Ceylon ; Orange red Bird, Swainson. Phari-Balal-chasm, Hind., Jerdon. Gene-kurula, Sinhalese. Adult male. Length 7-7 to 7:85 inches ; wing 3°5 to 36; tail 3°5 to 3-6; tarsus 0°65; mid toe and claw 0°65 to 0-7; bill to gape 0-9. Tris reddish brown; bill, legs, and feet black. Entire head, throat, hind neck, upper part of back, wings, central rectrices, nearly the whole of the adjacent pair, and the basal half of the others black, highly glossed on the head, throat, and back; under surface from the throat downwards, under tail-coverts, the tip and terminal half of the outer web of the above-mentioned central tail- feathers, the terminal half of the rest, a band across the wing, commencing on the outer web of the 5th primary, the tips of the greater secondary wing-coverts, and an external spot near the tips of the inner secondaries fiery orange-red, most intense on the chest, tail-feathers, and upper tail-coverts ; under wing-coverts and under surface of the scarlet wing-band, as also an inner marginal spot on the 3rd and 4th primaries, pale yellowish red ; thighs dusky black. Temale. Smaller than the male; wing 34 to 3-5 inches. Iris brown ; head, back of neck, scapulars, and lesser wing-coverts dark bluish ashy; the forehead and that portion of the wings and tail which is red in the male, together ‘with the entire under surface, primrose-yellow ; the wing- spot commences on the 5th primary; lores dark grey; the yellow of the forehead produced above the eye ; quills and tail dusky blackish; rump and upper tail-coverts greenish yellow, blending into the hue of the back. Young. Iris brown. Immature males are clothed in the garb of the female. A specimen in my collection assuming the adult plumage has the head, hind neck, back, and wing-coverts bluish grey, intermingled with black feathers ; throat yellow, mixed 3A 2 364 PERICROCOTUS FLAMMEUS. with black; under surface bright yellow, with orange feathers appearing on the chest; rump greenish yellow, with the upper tail-coverts orange-red ; part of the wing-bar is yellow and part orange-red, and the same with the spots on the inner secondaries ; the wings and central tail-feathers are black, and the pale portions of the tail yellow. Obs. Mr. Hume gives the measurements of the wings of a series of males from South India as varying from 3°6 to 3°75 inches, and of females from 3:45 to 3°7. These, it will be seen, exceed the usual size of Ceylonese individuals. Two examples inthe British Museum, from Travancore and Madras respectively, measure in the wing 3°5 and 3°6, and they have the wing-spot extending as far as the 5th primary ; there is another, collected by Captain Elliott, the locality unknown, with the spot extending upon the 4th primary, but it does not reach across the web from the margin quite to the shaft. The northern species (P. speciosus), which inhabits the eastern portion of the slopes of the Himalayas as far as Western Bhotan and also Central India, and the eastern and smaller race of that bird, which inhabits Burmah and Assam (2. elegans), are allied to the present. The former is a larger bird than P. flam- meus (wing, ¢, from 4:0 to 4:3), and has the wing-band extending further out than in the latter—that is to say, the first two primaries only, according to Mr. Hume, in the male, and the first three in the female and young male want the bright patches on the outer webs. The female is of a more orange hue than that of the present species. Mr. Hume speaks of it as follows :—‘* Is a clear full gamboge- or orange-yellow below, the orange of the forehead extending over the anterior half of the crown, and sometimes further.” The wing in P. elegans is similarly marked ; but the outer webs of the central tail-feathers are red, whereas in the larger form they are wholly black, as in P. flammeus. Distribution.—This conspicuously-plumaged bird is found in most of the forests and wild jungles of Ceylon. It is numerous in the coffee-districts of the centre and south of the island and in the main range, including the Horton Plains, in the woods of which it was one of the commonest birds I saw there during the month of January. Among other places in the Kandyan Province where it is frequent is the Knuckles district. It is found pretty generally in the forests between Colombo and Saffragam, in the Pasdun Korale, aud in the wild country on the banks of the Gindurah from Baddegama up to the Singha-Rajah forest. In the jungles of the flat country lying between Haputale and Kattregama, in the Friars-Hood hills, and in the interior of the northern portion of the island it may always be met with where the trees are large and shady. Mr. Parker tells me it is very common at Uswewa, near Puttalam. It is not found in the Jaffna peninsula, as far as 1 am aware—its northernmost limit being fixed by Layard at Vavonia Velankulam; as there is, however, much heavy forest north of that place, I am of opinion that it will be found between it and “* Elephant Pass.” On the mainland this Minivet is confined to the south of India. Mr. Hume thus sketches out its distri- bution (Str. Feath. 1877, p. 198) :— It is essentially a bird of the hills of Southern India. ...... In the Assamboo hills and their continuation, the Andaman hills, the Western Ghats, as far north, at any rate, as Khandala, whence I have specimens, the Pulneys, Anamallis, and Nilghiris, the bird is common, and in the cold season it may even be found, at some little distance from the bases of these, in convenient jungles, and on the Malabar coast to the shores of the sea; but it is in no sense a plains bird, and never occurs in India in the open country at any distance from one of these hill series.” Now it is singular that though it cannot be called a denizen of open country in Ceylon, it should be so plentiful an inhabitant of low-country forest in many parts of the island. The solution of this problem, no doubt, lies in the fact that the flat or low districts of South India are not covered with forest as in Ceylon. Jerdon remarks that it is found in all the lofty jungles from near the level of the sea to 5000 feet on the Nilghiri slopes, and says that it is, perhaps, most abundant at moderate elevations. Habits.—The Orange Minivet affects lofty trees in the up-country forests and in patna-woods, keeping much to the topmost branches, or flying gaily about from limb to limb; in the low country it is partial to fine jungle bordering rivers or surrounding remote or secluded tanks. The male is a very showy bird, enlivening the gloom of the primeval forest as it flies from tree to tree or displays its bright red plumage among the green boughs far overhead. When not breeding, it associates in little flocks, either of several females alone, or one or two males accompanied by a little party of the other sex; and from this habit it has acquired its name of “ Sultan ” in the coffee-districts. It is constantly uttering a weak, though cheerful, little warble, or ; PERICROCOTUS FLAMMEUS. 365 otherwise it would be generally overlooked by the collector while threading his way in the underwood beneath it. Its diet consists of small butterflies and various winged insects, some of which it will occasionally take on the wing as they pass through the branches. In the woods of the Horton Plains I saw it catching insects in the moss with which the trees are entirely covered in that cool region, and its brilliant plumage furnished a striking contrast to the cold grey-looking aspect of the jungle. Jerdon notices that im India “it keeps generally to the tops of high trees, usually in flocks of four or five ; the sexes often apart from one another, all frisking about, picking insects off a branch or leaf, or occasionally catching one in the air.” Nidification—I have never been able to obtain any information concerning the nesting of this species in Ceylon ; but Mr. Hume describes the nest, in his ‘Rough Draft of Nests and Eggs of Indian Birds,’ from information received from Miss Cockburn. He says, “ The nests are comparatively massive little cups placed on or sometimes in the fork of slender boughs. They are usually composed of excessively fine twigs, the size of fir-needles, and they are densely plastered over the whole exterior surface with greenish-grey lichens, so closely put together that the side of the nest looks exactly like a piece of lichen-covered branch ; there appears to be no lining, and the eggs are laid on the fine little twigs which compose the body of the nest.” The season for laying is confined to July, which is probably the same in the damp districts of Ceylon. The egg is described as pale greenish, “ pretty thickly streaked and spotted, mostly so at the large end, with pale yellowish brown and pale rather dingy purple.” PERICROCOTUS PEREGRINUS. (THE LITTLE MINIVET.) Parus peregrinus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 542 (1766). Muscicapa flammea, Forster, Ind. Zool. pl. 15. fig. 2 (1781). Phenicornis peregrina, Gould, Cent. Him. B. pl. 9 (1852); Jerd. Cat. B. S. India, Madr. Journ. 1859, x. p. 244. Pericrocotus peregrinus, Gray, Gen. Birds, i. p. 282 (1845); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 193 (1849) ; Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 123 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 127; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 140 (1854) ; Gould, B. of Asia, pt. ix. (1857); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 425 (1862) ; Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 438; Hume, Nests & Eggs (Rough Draft), p. 184 (1873); id. Str. Feath. 1873, p. 184; id. ibid. 1874, p. 209; Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 284; Sharpe, Str. Feath. 1876, p- 209; Armstrong, ¢.c. p. 318; Hume, ibid. 1877, p. 179; Tweeddale, Ibis, 1877, p. 315 ; Hume and Davison, Str. Feath. 1878 (Birds of Tenass.), p. 212; Sharpe, Cat. B. iv. p. 76 (1879). The Crimson-rumped Flycatcher, The Malabar Titmouse, Latham ; Small Red Flycatcher, Sportsmen in Ceylon. Bulal-chasm, Wind.; also Sath-sayili and Chota sath saki kapi, Bengal. ; Kunkum-pu-zjitta, Telugu (Jerdon); Batu gene kurula or Kos-hurula, Sinhalese. Adult male and female. Length 5-8 to 6°Oinches ; wing 2-6 to 2°75; tail 2°6 to 2:7; tarsus 0°65; mid toe and claw 0:55; bill to gape 0°58 to 0-6. Male. Iris sepia-brown ; bill black ; legs and feet black. Forehead and head above, hind neck, and back dark ashy ; lores, face, ear-coverts, chin and throat, wings, and three central pairs of tail-feathers, with the bases of the remainder, black; upper tail-coverts, a band across the secondaries, and all the primaries but the first four (in all specimens I have seen), breast, and flanks flame-red or scarlet, palest on the wings; two outer rectrices on each side and a terminal spot on the next pair orange-red ; abdomen yellowish red, blending into the scarlet of the breast ; under tail- and under wing-coverts yellowish red ; thighs blackish. Female. Iris and bill as in the male ; legs and feet brownish black. The upper parts, which in the male are ashy, are in the female brownish cinereous; wings and tail brownish black, with the same markings as in the male but of a more yellowish colour; upper tail-coverts scarlet, gradually blending with a greenish hue into the brownish grey of the back; above the lores, which are concolorous with the crown, a whitish stripe extending to the anterior upper edge of the eye; beneath whitish grey, washed with orange-yellowish, which becomes the ground-colour on the lower parts; under tail-coverts pale orange-red, concolorous with the outer tail-feathers ; under wing-coyerts yellowish red. Obs. In India this species varies to an extraordinary extent in the tone of the orange coloration, which is particularly noticeable in the wing-markings. Mr. Hume, in an exhaustive article on the species (‘Stray Feathers,’ 1877, p. 179), gives the result of his elaborate researches into the question, from which it may be gathered that males vary in their colours from the blackish iron-grey mantle and orange-scarlet of the breast, abdomen, under tail- coyerts, rump, and wing-spot observable in specimens from the extreme south of India, to the pale grey mantle, greyish dusky throat, whitish lower parts (tinged with fiery saffron on the breast), and mingled pale yellow and pale scarlet rump and wing-spot existing in specimens from Sindh. Elsewhere, in the same journal for 1873, he remarks that the deepest-coloured specimens are from peninsular India, then those from Lower Bengal and the eastern portions of the Central Provinces are somewhat paler, those from the rest of the Central Proyinees, PERICROCOTUS PEREGRINUS. 367 the North-west Provinces, and the Punjab paler still, and finally those from Sindh much the palest of all. As regards size, examples from different parts of India, Burmah, and the Andamans are shown to vary in the wing, both in males and females, from 2-6 to 2-9 inches. JI observe that three specimens in the British Museum from Kamptee measure 2°6 in the wing, and they have the upper surface precisely as in Ceylonese birds, the breast perhaps a trifle less brilliant, and the wing-bar extending out to the 6th primary. A fourth, from Madras, has the wing 2°5, and the wing-bar reaching to the 5th primary. In Ceylon specimens I have always found this band limited to the 5th quill, the first four being without any orange marking. Mr. Hume notices that from Anjango, Sindh, Dehra, Tenasserim, and Elephant Point males sometimes have the wing-bar extending upon the 5th quill, and from Akyab, Amherst, Port Blair, Moulmein, and Alteran river females exhibit the same character. Distribution —The Little Minivet is generally diffused throughout Ceylon, but it is more numerous in the northern half, from Colombo to Jaffna, than to the south of the former place. It may often be scen in the cinnamon-gardens and in the adjacent cultivated, though woody, country. It is plentiful in the Jaffna peninsula, where it replaces the last species, and is also numerous throughout the dry forest-regions between there and Dambulla, as also in the Seven Korales and corresponding low country on the other side of the island. To the south of the Haputale ranges it is likewise to be found in the forests. In the damper portions of the south-west of the island it is not so frequent. I have observed it in most of the coffee-districts ; and Mr. Holdsworth records it as a winter visitor to Nuwara Elliya, but it is neither so common there nor in the hills of the south as the foregoing species. On the continent this bird enjoys a more extended range than any of its congeners. Mr. Hume writes :-— “T have the species from almost every part of India, Burmah (including Pegu, Arrakan, Tenasserim), and the Andamans ; but it is not known to occur in the Nicobars, and is not found, to the best of my knowledge, in the north-west Punjab (Trans-jhilum, in fact), and it neither ascends the Nilghiris nor the Himalayas.” In the latter assertion, as regards the south of India, the experience of Messrs. Bourdillon and Fairbank bear him out; for the former does not record it from the Travancore hills, and the latter did not find it above 5000 feet in the Palanis. Mr. Armstrong says it is abundant in Rangoon, and Mr. Davison found it to be a permanent resident im the Andamans. From the latter island its range extends still further to the south, as Lord Tweeddale records a specimen in Mr. Buxton’s collection from Lampong, S.E. Sumatra. Mr. Wallace also procured it in Java. Habits.—This pretty little bird frequents a variety of open situations, but does not like the interior of heavy forests. Itis found in the compounds about native villages, among isolated groves, in bushy jungle dotted with large trees, in woods surrounding paddy-fields, and in forest near the edges of tanks and rivers. It usually frequents large trees and keeps mostly to the upper branches. It associates in small parties, which often consist of several females in company with one male, the whole uttering a weak sibilant note resembling the syllables ¢setze, tsetze, and moving on in the pursuit of insects from one tree to another. It may some- times be seen in company with the preceding species, and often launches out into the air to capture a passing insect. Mr. Holdsworth noticed that at Nuwara Elliya it frequented bushes; but in low country it is usually seen seeking for its food in the top branches of umbrageous trees. Jerdon remarks that it is a “restless and active little creature, ever engaged in diligently examining the extreme branches of trees, gleaning among the foliage, and hanging from the slender twigs like a Titmouse. It feeds upon various larvee (which are its favourite food) and small insects.” Nidification.—I have reason to believe that this bird breeds in the Western Province in May and June, but I was never fortunate enough to obtain its nest. In India it nests during the months of June, July, and August. Mr. Hume writes that the nest is small and neat, and done up generally, like a Chaftinch’s, to resemble the bark of the tree on which it is placed. It is sometimes ‘“ composed of very fine needle-like twigs carefully bound together externally with cobwebs and coated with small pieces of bark or dead leaves. . . . . There appears to be rarely any regular lining; a very little down or cobwebs form the only bed for the eggs, and even this is often wanting.” Mr. F. Blewitt writes that in Jhansie and Saugor the tamarind is the favourite tree: nests built in them were composed of “fine petioles of leaves with a thick coating all over 368 PERICROCOTUS PEREGRINUS. 2 of what looked like spiders’ webs ;’’ attached to this were the dry leaves of the tamarind-tree. The nests were fixed in between two delicate forks at the extreme end of a branch near the top of the tree. The eggs, which are usually three in number, are pale delicate greenish white, and they are richly marked with bright, slightly brownish-red specks or blots, “ which, always more numerous at the large end, have a tendency there to form a mottled irregular cap.’”’ They average in size 0°67 inch in length by 0°53 in breadth. Genus LALAGE. Bill more slender and narrower at the base than in Pericrocotus; the culmen gently curved from the base and not suddenly bent at the tip. Nasal bristles short and stiff; rictal bristles scanty. Wings longer than the tail, pointed, and with the 5rd and 4th quills subequal and longest ; the lst longer than in the last genus. Tail moderately long, rounded at the tip. Tarsus about equal to the middle toe and its claw, and shielded with broad scute. ‘Toes slender; the middle toe equal to the inner with its claw. LALAGE SYKESE (THE BLACK-HEADED CUCKOO-SHRIKE.) Ceblepyris canus, Sykes, P. Z. S. 1832, pe 8h: Lalage sykesi, Strickl. Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1844, xiii. p. 36; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i. p. 175 ; Sharpe, Cat. B. iv. p. 89 (1879). Campephaga sykesii, Gray, Gen. B. i. p. 283; Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 191 (1849) ; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 128; Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 368. Volvocivora sykesti, Bp. Consp. i. p. 356; Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 414 (1862); Hume, Nests and Eggs, i. p. 179 (1873); Ball, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 399, et 1875, p. 291; Butler, ibid. 1875, p. 464; Fairbank, ibid. 1876, p. 256, et 1877, p. 400; Butler, ibid. 1877, p- 220. Lesser Caterpillar-catcher of some. Jungli kasya, Hind. ; Chuma akurayi, lit. “ Lesser File-bird,” Telugu. Adult male. Length 7°3 to 7-75 inches ; wing 3-8 to 4:0; tail 3-0; tarsus 0°8; middle toe and claw 0°75 to 0°8 ; bill to gape 0°85. Iris brownish red ; bill black ; legs and feet black, with slaty edges to the scales of the tarsi; claws black. Head, back, and sides of neck, chin, throat, and fore neck glossy black, abruptly divided from the pale grey of the chest and flanks, and blending into the slate-grey of the back, scapulars, wing-coverts, and upper tail-coverts, on which latter this colour is palest ; wings and tail black, the 1st primary wholly so, the remainder with the basal portion of their inner webs white ; secondaries and greater coverts margined with the grey of the back; the three outer pairs of tail-feathers white at the tips; the next pair have their extreme tips slaty white, the two central ones slaty, darkening into blackish near the tips ; lower parts white, blending into the grey of the flanks and chest ; under wing-coverts whitish, washed with slaty ; thighs slaty. Adult female. Shorter in the wing, which usually measures 3°7 inches. Iris brown ; bill blackish, light at the gape and base of lower mandible; legs and feet brownish slate. Above dusky bluish grey, wanting the black head; a light line above the brownish lores; ear-coverts striped with white; rump barred with white; wings brownish black, with the edgings whitish ; the central rectrices without the black patch. Beneath white, barred, except on the belly and lower tail-coverts, with blackish brown; thighs slaty, barred with dark grey, Young. Bill not so black as in the adult female. Upper surface brownish slate, the feathers with a blackish subterminal bar and white tip. Tertials very broadly edged with white, and the quills and tail-feathers all tipped white. Beneath barred as the female. Male in second stage very similar to the adult female. The lores and ear-coverts black, and the head generally mingled with black feathers ; a bluish wash over the throat and chest; the bars on the flanks and lower breast not so bold asin the adult female. The loral spot is blacker than udults of the other sex. An example in this stage before me has also the ground-colour of the throat pervaded with greyish, but nevertheless barred quite up to the chin ; there are a few black feathers on the crown, some of which are new, while others are old and appear to be changing from the grey to the black colour. Obs. Blyth has stated that the adult female has a black head and neck, as in the male. Mr. Holdsworth’s experience of the plumage of this sex accords with my own; and I cannot come to any other conclusion but that Blyth’s specimens from which he drew this inference were wrongly sexed. Mr. Adam, I observe, speaks of an immature female, shot at Sambhur, having some of the head-feathers black, and the under surface, from the throat to the abdomen, crossed with wavy lines ; this is the precise character of the change of plumage in the young male. Ceylonese specimens of this bird compare well with Indian. The latter are, perhaps, a trifle larger. ‘Two examples 9) oB LALAGE SYKESI. (st) =I = (males) in the British Museum, from Mysore, have the wings 3°9 and 4-0, and the tails 3-0 and 3-3; both these are slightly more nigrescent on the interscapular region than Ceylonese birds, and the slate-colour of the breast descends further down the under surface. A young male from Vingorla has the wing 4:1, and is somewhat more cinereous on the back than immature Ceylonese examples. Distribution.—This small Cuckoo-Shrike is found in most lowland districts in the island, and ascends into the Kandyan Province to a general altitude of 3000 feet, although in Uva and Madulsima I have seen it much higher than this. It probably finds its way to the Nuwara-Elliya district from the Uva patnas in the dry season, for I find there are some examples from the Sanatarium in the British Museum. They were collected by Mr. Boate, and, I imagine, must have been stragglers thither during the N.E. monsoon. Neither Mr. Holdsworth nor Mr. Bligh have seen it at Nuwara Elliya; but I observe that Layard says it is found “over the whole island.’ This expression, however, may refer to the low country. As regards the latter region, I may remark that it is a common bird in the maritime districts of the south-east and north, and in the Western district between Puttalam and Galle it is likewise frequent. According to my experience its numbers decrease towards the hills, except perhaps in the Eastern Province, throughout which I found it plentiful; for it evidently prefers the low open jungles of the sea-board to the thick forests of the interior. In the Western Province it is, however, more plentiful in Saffragam and in the Raygam and Pasdun Korales than near Colombo. On the mainland it is found, according to Jerdon, throughout the whole of India; but is neither common nor abundant. It is most plentiful in wooded countries where there are considerable tracts of low jungle, not being found in the forests of Southern India, although it is met with in avenues in that part of the country. Ido not find it recorded from the Travancore hills; but Mr. Fairbank obtained one example at Periur in the Palanis; he also found it rare at Ahmednagar, though common in certain localities in the Belgaum district. Proceeding north we find Mr. Ball recording it as a rare bird in Chota Nagpur, Mr. Levin having shot a single example at -Palamow; further to the north-east it is found, according to Jerdon, at Calcutta ; on the western side of the peninsula it does not appear to be common. Captain Butler obtained a few specimens at Mount Aboo, but none elsewhere; and Mr, Adam records it from the Sambhur-Lake district, though only as a straggler. Habits.—This species frequents tall trees in open forest or in native compounds, low bushes on the borders of waste land on the sea-coast, isolated clumps in partially cleared forest, and low scrub jungle. Out of the breeding-season the males wander about alone, and the females and young birds become gregarious, associating in flocks of 5, 10, or 20, and may be seen at evening time flying from bush to bush on the flats round the salt lagoons in the north. In the south it affects Jack-trees in preference to others, climbing about the small branches and among the leaves, preying on the caterpillars and various insects which abound in them, The note of the male is a melodious whistle, and the females have a monosyllabic chirp. Layard merely remarks of it that it is “ found in pairs, frequenting high trees and avoiding the neighbourhood of habitations ; it feeds on insects.” This observation as to its consorting in pairs is only true of it as regards the breeding- season. Jerdon writes more correctly of it that “it hunts usually in small parties, occasionally singly or in pairs, flying from tree to tree, and slowly and carefully examining the foliage, prying searchingly all round and under the leaves to discover a suitable morsel. It continues its search, hopping and flying from branch to branch, till the tree has been well inspected, when the flock flies off together to another tree. Its favourite food is caterpillars and other soft insects. It is usually a silent bird, but has a harsh call; and on one occasion in June I heard the male giving out a clear whistling call as he was flying from tree to tree.” Nidification—With us this Cuckoo-Shrike breeds in April in the Western Province. Mr. MacVicar writes me of the discovery, by himself, of two nests last year near Colombo, One was built in the topmost branch of a young Jack-tree, about 40 feet high. It was very small and shallow, measuring 2°8 inches in breadth and only 0:8 inch in depth, and the old bird could be seen plainly from beneath sitting across it. The other was situated on the top of a tree about 20 feet from the ground, and was builtin the same manner. The materials are not mentioned; but I conclude they consisted of thin twigs and roots with most likely a coating of LALAGE SYKESI. axial spiders’ webs on the exterior, as has been found to be the case in India. The eggs measured 0:87 inch by 0°62 and 0°85 by 0°62 respectively. Mr. Blewitt found the nest in India in J uly, and describes its construction as above, with the remark that its formation was exactly that of the Large Cuckoo-Shrike, Graucalus macii. The eggs were two in number, deep green, mottled densely with brown towards the large end, and blotched and streaked throughout with pale blue ; they measured 0°85 by 0-65 inch. PASSEREKS. Fam. PRIONOPID2. Bill Shrike-like, with a distinct notch in the tip of the upper mandible. ‘Tail moderate, rounded or even. Legs and feet small. Feathers of the rump not stiff, as in the last family. Subfam. PRIONOPIN A. Bill broader than it is high. (Sharpe, Cat. B. iii. p. 270.) Genus TEPHRODORNIS. Bill stout, wider at the base than high ; culmen keeled and curved rather suddenly near the tip. Nostrils covered by bristly plumes; rictal bristles long. Wings with the 4th quill the longest, the 2nd equal to the secondaries, and the Ist about half the length of the 2nd. ‘Tarsus longer than the middle toe, and feathered slightly below the knee. Outer toe slightly syndactyle and longer than the inner; claws well curved. [S\) lon] bo TEPHRODORNIS PONDICERIANUS. (THE COMMON WOOD-SHRIKE.) Muscicapa pondiceriana, Gm. Syst. Nat. i. p. 939 (1788). Tephrodornis superciliosus, Jerdon, Cat. B. 8, India, Madr. Journ. 1839, x. p. 237. Tephrodornis pondiceriana, Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1840, xv. p. 805; id. Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 153 (1849); Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i. p. 169 (1854) ; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 410 (1862); Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 437; Hume, Nests and Eggs, i. p. 176 (1873) ; id. Str. Feath. 1873, p. 177; Adam, ¢.¢. p. 376; Ball, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 399; Hume, ibid. 1875, p. 92; Legge, ibid. 1876, p. 243; Hume, ¢.c. p. 458. Tephrodornis affinis, Blyth, J.A.S. B. 1847, xvi. p. 473; id. Cat. B.Mus. A. 8. B. p. 153(1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 124 (1852); Layard, Ann.& Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854,xiii.p.151; Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 305; Hume, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 437; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 16. Tephrodornis pondicerianus, Sharpe, Cat. B. iii. p. 275. Gobe-mouche de Pondichéry, Sonnerat ; The Keroula Shrike, Latham ; Butcher-bird, Kelaart ; The Bush-Shrike in India. Keroula, Hind. ; Chudukka, Beng.; Ula pitta, lit. “ Whistling-bird,” Tel. Adult male and female. Length 5:9 to 6-4 inches ; wing 3:2 to 3:5; tail 2-4 to 2°5; tarsus 0°7 to 0°3; mid toe and claw 0°65; bill to gape 0:95 to 1-05, : Tris pale olive or yellowish olive, sometimes with the inner half bright yellow, at others with a green inner ring ; bill with the upper mandible and terminal half of the lower dark brown, base beneath light fleshy ; legs and feet dusky slate-blue or bluish slate, claws blackish. Aboye slaty grey in specimens from the hills and Western Province, duskier or ashy brown in those from the northern parts of the island ; lores, upper part of cheek, and the ear-coverts blackish brown ; a whitish supercilium, variable in size and in length, but always more or less well defined ; beneath the brown cheek-patch a whitish stripe ; wings brown, the tertials pale-edged ; tips of the longer rump-feathers and the shorter upper tail-coverts white, forming a bar across the rump, which is variable in width and usually broadest in birds which are most slaty in hue ; longer upper tail-coverts black, four central pairs of rectrices blackish brown, darkening to black at the base ; two outer pairs white with dark bases, and the tips marked as follows :—a brown stripe near the tip of the external web of the outermost, the same at the tip of the next, with an adjacent spot often across the inner web ; in some specimens, probably not very old, this latter does not exist, the streaks on the outer webs are very small, and the outer web of the 3rd feather has a white streak at the centre. Throat, lower breast, belly, and under tail-coverts white; the sides of the throat more or less washed with brownish, in the form of streaks, and the chest and upper part of the breast pale cinereous ashy ; thighs brownish. Ois. As already remarked, the tints in the plumage of this species vary. I have found that the most slaty-coloured specimens come from the Western Province and the Nuwara-Elliya distri¢t ; a Haputale and a Dumbara specimen are both brownish, nearly as much so as a Trincomalie and an Aripu example. Birds from the Galle district do not seem to be as slaty as those from Colombo. It must be also observed that when newly acquired, the feathers are most bluish; on becoming abraded, they lose the slaty tint and present an ashy appearance. Young. Bill lighter than the adult, as a rule ; iris olive. in nestling plumage pale rufous-brown above, the forehead and head very conspicuously spotted with white, the back less so; greater wing-coverts and tertials fulvous, with a dark crescentie line and white tips; the three outer rectrices are white and more marked at the tips; the dark stripe from the base of the lower mandible is more defined and the supercilium absent, although the white spots sometimes take the form of a stripe. In the next stage the upper surface is darker and less spotted; there is a trace of a supercilium beyond the eye; in some the upper tail-coverts are partially white; the third rectrix from the exterior is now blackish brown, as in the adult, and all are tipped with white. Under surface much as in the adult; the chest, perhaps, a little darker. TEPHRODORNIS PONDICERIANUS. 373 Obs. Concerning few species of Indian birds have opinions differed so much as with reference to the present. ‘The Ceylonese race was separated by Blyth (loc. cit.) on account of “its being greyer, and wanting the conspicuous white supercilium.” Layard followed Blyth; and then Mr. Holdsworth, in his admirable ‘ Catalogue of Ceylon Birds,’ after the examination of a large series of Indian and insular examples, reunited it with the Indian form. Mr. Hume, in a review of some of the Ceylonese species mentioned in Mr. Holdsworth’s paper, expressed his doubts as to the possibility of keeping the Ceylon race distinct, on account of the extremely variable character of the bird throughout its entire range from Burmah across to Sindh, and thence to the south of India and Ceylon. Finally, Mr. Sharpe, in his ‘ Catalogue of Birds,’ vol. iii., adheres to Blyth’s determination, and remarks that he considers it not only distinct, but more nearly allied to the Malaccan 7’. gularis than to the Indian bird. I entered upon the battle-field, I must say, somewhat biassed in favour of Mr. Sharpe’s weighty verdict; but after a most careful examination of all the Ceylonese and Indian examples I could lay my hands on, I find that it is a species which is most unreliable in all those characteristics which are alleged as sufficient to divide it into the two races in question ; and I consider that if the Ceylonese bird is separated from the South-Indian on account of its more slaty tints, so must the N.W.-Himalayan bird be held to be distinct from the Nepal and Pegu race on account of the cmereous hue of the former, as distinguished from the sandy colour of the latter. The colour of the upper surface varies throughout the whole range of the bird; and though the supercilia in the Indian birds are longer and generally broader, and the white rump-band less in extent than in the insular form, yet these characters are not always alike in either one race or the other. The distribution of the facial markings is absolutely the same in the Indian and the Ceylon birds, and the coloration of the outer tail-feathers precisely alike in both. Climate has no doubt much to do with the brownish and the slaty tints in this bird throughout its Indian range: it has in Ceylon; for the northern birds are, as a rule, the brownest, and those from the damp parts the bluesi. Mr. Hume shows the same to be the ease in the south of India, as he finds the birds from the hot arid island of Ramisserum earthy brown, and those from the wet district of Anjango as ashy almost as those from Ceylon. With regard to size the Indian birds are slightly larger; but this is the rule with most species found in both localities. The following are some of the wing-measurements I have taken from a large series examined ;— Pegu, w. 3:4 inches; N.W. Himalayas, w. 3°55; Behar, w. 3-45; N.W. Himalayas, w. 3°5; ditto, w. 3-5; Kamptee, w. 3:55. Birds from Pegu and N.E. Bengal appear to have the largest supercilia. . Distribution —The Bush-Shrike is found throughout all the low country and the hill-regions to about 5000 feet. Large tracts of country may, however, be traversed without seeing it, showing that it confines itself to particular localities. It is generally distributed over the northern and eastern portions of the island, and is resident there during both monsoons. It is likewise numerous in the south-west, and shghtly less so on the west coast; but in the latter part it retires from exposed places on the sea-board to some distance inland during the wet weather of the south-west monsoon. I have, however, found it between Kotte and Colombo in June and July, so that its migration is only partial. Mr. Holdsworth, I believe, observed that it left the Aripu district in May; and this movement would be occasioned by the force of the S.W. monsoon. I did not observe the same inland march in the south-western part of the island, probably on account of the sheltered nature of the country, which is hilly close to the sea-coast. Layard, who speaks of it as being common about Jafina, Colombo, and Kandy, thought it to be migratory. It appears to be a straggler to the upper hills, as there is aspecimen in the national collection from “near Nuwara Illiya,” collected by Mr. Boate. I have never heard of any one else having obtained it there ; and it is possible that the locality may be wrong in this instance, as near Nuwara Elliya might well mean Wilson’s bungalow or other locality down the pass towards the Uva side, where it is no doubt met with. Mr. Bligh has obtained it in Haputale at about 5000 feet elevation. On the continent it is found in the north of India from Tenasserim and Burmah, through Bengal and the sub-Himalayan districts to the N.W. Himalayas and Sindh, and thence through the peninsula to the extreme south and Adam’s Bridge. At Thayetmyo Mr. Oates says it is often seen, and it was obtained as far south as Tonghoo by Lieut. Ramsay. There are specimens from Nepal, N.W. Himalayas, and Behar in the national collection. About the Sambhur Lake Mr. Adam did not find it common ; but in Sindh it is the reverse in cultivated regions, though never seen in barren districts. At Mount Aboo Captain Butler remarks that it is somewhat common, though less often seen in the plains. In Chota Nagpur it is resident, says Mr. Ball; and at Maunbhum Captain Beavan noticed that it bred chiefly. Mr. Fairbank procured it at Ahmednagar, and remarks that it is more common along the Sahyadri hills; he likewise met with it in the Palanis. It is not 374 TEPHRODORNIS PONDICERIANUS. recorded from the Travancore hills, where Mr. Bourdillon procured the allied species 7. sylvicola ; and I observe that he says it is more abundant in the Carnatic than “either on the Malabar coast or on the bare tableland.” Habits —This little Shrike frequents isolated trees standing in low scrub or in young cocoanut- or cinnamon-plantations, the edges of forest, small groves in open land, and compounds surrounding villages and native houses. It usually associates in small troops of four or five, which wander from tree to tree, flying one after the other when they move until the flock are again reunited. They are not very active in their movements, hopping slowly about among the leafy boughs of trees, and peering under the leaves in search of their food, all the while uttermg a melancholy little whistle of several notes, which has the peculiarity of being very easily carried on the wind, and being, consequently, heard at a considerable distance. Moths and small butterflies form a considerable portion of its food. Jerdon says that the Telugus give it the name of “ Whistling-bird” on account of its mellow notes ; and Mr. Oates writes that it occasionally “ seats itself upon the top of a bough and sings a well-conducted and rather pretty song.” Nidification—I have no information concerning the nesting of this Wood-Shrike in Ceylon; but its nest appears to be well known in India; and in ‘Stray Feathers’ we gather that it breeds from the latter part of March until August, aluhough April is the usual month for rearmg its young. I have procured the immature bird in spotted plumage in April, and judge from the appearance of its feathers that it had arrived nearly at the end of its first year, which would make the nesting-season in the west of Ceylon about the middle of the S.W. monsoon. Mr. Hume describes the nest as ‘a broad shallow cup, somewhat oval interiorly, with the materials very compactly and closely put together. The basal portion and framework of the sides consisted of very fine stems of some herbaceous plant about the thickness of an ordinary pin ; it was lined with a little wool and a quantity of silky fibre; exteriorly it was bound round with a good deal of the same fibre and pretty thickly felted with cobwebs. The egg-cavity measured 2°5 inches in diameter one way and only 2:0 the other way, while in depth it was barely 0°86.’ This nest contained three eggs ; but the number varies, as Captain G. Marshall found four and Captain Beavan two in a nest. They are described as very Shrike-like in appearance, of “a pale greenish-white or creamy stone ground-colour, more or less thickly spotted and blotched with different shades of yellowish and reddish brown, many of the markings being almost invariably gathered into a conspicuous, but irregular and ill-defined zone near the large end, which is intermingled with pale and dingy purple clouds. The average of a dozen eggs is 0°75 by 0°61 inch” (Hume). Genus HEMIPUS. Bill wide at the base, triangular ; the culmen keeled, straight at the base, and suddenly curved at the tip, which is distinctly notched. Nostrils protected by a tuft of bristles. Wings long, with the 4th and 5th quills the longest, and the 2nd shorter than the secondaries. ‘Tail rather long, the lateral feathers falling short of the middle pair by about the length of the hind toe and its claw. Legs and feet weak; the tarsus longer than the middle toe and its claw. HEMIPUS PICATUS, (THE LITTLE PIED SHRIKE.) Muscicapa picata, Sykes, P. Z. 8. 1832, p. 85; Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1842, xi. p. 458; Gray, Gen. Birds, i. p. 263 (1845). Hemipus picatus, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. 1846, xv. p. 505; id. Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 154 (1849) ; Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 123 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 126 ; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 418 (1862); Holdsworth, P. Z. S. 1872, p. 437; Hume, Nests and Eggs (Rough Draft), p.178 (1878) ; id. Str. Feath. 1873, p. 435; Ball, ibid. 1874, p. 399; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 16; Hume, Str. F. 1875, p. 93; Bourdillon, ibid. 1876, p. 393; Sharpe, Cat. B. iii. p.507 (1877); Hume, Str. Feath. 1878 (B.of Tenasserim), p- 207. The Black-and-white Flycatcher, The Shrike-like Flycatcher of Indian authors ; The Black- and-white Hemipus, Kelaart. Adult male and female. Length 5:2 to 5-4 inches ; wing 2:2 to 2°4; tail 2-2 to 2°3; tarsus 0°6; mid toe and claw 0°55 ; bill to gape 0°65 to 0°75. Tris reddish brown, with a light mottled outer circle ; bill black; legs and feet blackish, claws paler. Head, hind neck, back, wings, upper tail-coverts, and tail deep black, glossed with green on the head and back ;-an incomplete nuchal collar, a broad band across the rump, a bar on the wing formed by the tips of the greater coverts, the edges of the longer tertials and of several of the secondaries, and the terminal portion of the 4 outer rectrices white ; the white marking extends up most of the outer web of the lateral tail-feather and is confined to a small spot at the tip of the 4th; chin, lower part of cheeks, sides of neck, belly, under tail- and under wing-coyerts whitish, passing into the reddish ashy of the lower throat, breast, and flanks. Obs. The northern form of this little Shrike (ZZ. capitals of M‘Clelland) is united with the present bird by Mr. Hume, but kept distinct by Mr. Sharpe, on account of its brownish back. The former contends (Str. Feath. 1873, p. 475) that the brown birds are females. I have not observed this feature in Ceylon examples, the females being just as black as the males ; and Ceylonese birds are identical with examples which I have examined from South India and Mahabaleshwar, as regards size, colour of upper and under surface, and distribution of white marking. A male from Darjiling, in the British Museum, is similar to the Mahabaleshwar bird, but has the tail more deeply tipped with white ; but several others from the former locality, which may, perhaps, be males, have the upper surface, wings, and wing-coverts brown. The latest testimony, however, with regard to the northern race, and which is contained in Mr. Hume’s admirable paper on the birds of Tenasserim, shows that Assam, Sikkim, and Kumaon specimens of both sexes have brown backs, and that out of ten males from Darjiling, one only has the back black. Others, again, from various localities along the Himalayas have the back black; and this, I think, goes to prove that there are two different races—the southern with black head and back, and the northern with black head and brown back, both of which may occur, as Mr. Hume suggests, in the Himalayan districts. The latter seems to be the larger, measuring in total length from 5-35 to 5-45, and in the wing from 2°3 to 2-4. The Mahabaleshwar example above noticed measures—wing 2°3 inches, tail 2°3, tarsus 0°45, bill to gape 0-7. Hemipus obscurus, Horsf., from Java, is not distantly related to our bird; it has the back and wings green-black, no bar or white marking on the wing; the upper tail-coverts white, without the transverse bar of black in’ the centre of the white patch; tail black, the lateral feathers with an outer and an inner white edge; beneath white ; chest washed with grey. Distribution.—This little Shrike is dispersed throughout the forests and heavy jungles of the island, but is generally more numerous in the Kandyan Province, even at high altitudes, and in the southern coffee- districts than in the low country. Although scarce at Horton Plains, it is a common bird about Nuwara Elliya, Kandapolla, and in the main range, and is likewise met with in all the intermediate coffee-districts. In the timber-forests and also in the cultivated country near the sea-board of the south-west it is tolerably plentiful ; and the same may be said of the jungles in the eastern portion of the island, and of tke forest- 376 HEMIPUS PICATUS. tract of the northern plains, stretching from Puttalam across to the Mahawelliganga, in a part of which (the high jungles between Minery and Kowdella) I found it as plentiful as in the hills. In the Saffragam forests and the wilder districts of the Western Province nearer the sea it is likewise found; and I have procured it as near Colombo as the jungle at Atturugeria, on the Kotte and Bopé road. This little Shrike is common in the south of India and the central portions of the peninsula. Jerdon found it in the Nilghiris and along the crest of the Western Ghats. On the Nilghiris he obtained it as high as 7000 feet. Mr. Bourdillon remarks of it that it is not very abundant im Travancore; and Mr. Fairbank observed but few on the Palanis, Should Mr. Hume be correct in joining the two species, ff. capitalis and H. picatus, the range of this little bird becomes considerably extended, as the northern form is found in Chota Nagpur, Northern India, the Himalayas up to an elevation of 5000 feet, and also in Burmah. In Tenasserim Mr. Davison procured it in the neighbourhood of Pahpoon only ; and I conclude tlis 1s the most southerly point to which it has been traced on the eastern side of the Bay. Habits.—Vhis is a tame but at the same time an interesting little bird; so unobservant is it of human intrusion on its haunts that it may be watched most closely without its being disturbed ; and I know no dimi- nutive denizen of the tall forests of the Ceylou mountains, save perhaps the lively little Grey-headed Flycatcher (Culicicapa ceylonensis), which better repays a cursory glance at its manners and occupations. It is generally found in pairs, frequenting tall trees near the edges of forest and heavy jungle; and it perches high aloft among the branches, sallying out from its seat after the manner of a Flycatcher, and catching a passing insect, which it will frequently convey to its original perch before devouring. It is slower in its movements than the members of the family Muscicapide, but on the whole its habits are more those of a Flyeatcher than a Shrike. It is of stationary habit, frequenting the same spot for hours together; and it usually prefers the company of its own fellows to that of other small birds, though it may at times be seen with Minivets, Bluetits, and Grey-headed Flycathers. It constantly utters its shrill little note, which may be likened to the syllables teheetiti, tchéetiti, tcheetiti-cheee. Jerdon remarks that in India “it is generally seen im small parties of five or six wandering about from tree to tree, and every now and then darting on insects m the air. It has a pleasing little song, not often heard however.”” My experience of it in Ceylon differs from this, for there it constantly utters the above-described note. Mr. Oates, in writing of the Tenasserim bird, ikewise comments on its Flycatcher-like habits as follows :—‘‘ They are rather Flycatchers than Shrikes in their habits, moving about, no doubt, amongst the leaves at the tops of trees like the Wood-Shrike, but continually darting out and seizing insects on the wing, which the Wood-Shrikes, I think, never do. They continually call to each other, uttering a sharp soft note.” Nidification—In the south of India this little Shrike breeds in March. Mr. Davison thus describes a nest he found :— For the size of the bird it was an exceedingly small, shallow nest, and might very easily have passed unnoticed ; the bird sitting on it appeared to be resting only on a small lump of moss and lichen.” It was placed in the fork of an upper branch of a rather tall Berberis leschenaulti, and was composed of grass and fine roots, covered externally with pieces of cobweb, grey lichen, and bits of moss, taken evidently from the same tree on which the nest was built. The eggs were three in number, elongated ovals, and entirely devoid of gloss; the ground-colour pale greenish or greyish white, profusely blotched, blotted, and streaked with darker and lighter shades of umber-brown, more or less confluent, in one case, at the larger, and in the other at the smaller end. Dimensions 0-7 by 0°5 inch, and 0:69 by 0°49 inch. PASSERES. Fam. LANIIDZ. Bill strong, deep, much compressed, with the culmen curved from the base to the tip, which is very deeply notched. Nostrils placed nearer the margin than the culmen; gape armed with stout bristles. Wings shorter or equal to the tail. Legs and feet short. Tarsus covered with stout shields. Outer and middle toes joined at the base; hind toe large. Genus LANIUS. Bill with the characters of the family. Nostrils round, protected by a few well-developed bristles. Wings rather short; the 2nd quill longer than the secondaries, and the 3rd and 4th the longest. ‘Tail long and graduated, exceeding the closed wings by about their own length. Tarsus slightly longer than the middle toe with its claw. LANIUS CRISTATUS. (THE BROWN SHRIKE.) Lanius cristatus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 134. no. 3 (1766); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 406 (1862) ; Walden, Ibis, 1867, p. 212; Swinhoe, P. Z.S. 1871, p. 375 ; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 436; Hume, Nests and Eggs, i. p. 176 (1873) ; Str. Feathers, 1874, p. 198, et 1875, p. 91; Butler, ibid. p. 464; Armstrong, ibid. 1876, p. 316. Lanius phenicurus, Pall. It. iii. p. 698. no. 6 (1776); Prjevalski, B. of Mongolia, Rowley’s Orn. Misc. vol. i. p. 274 (1877). Enneoctonus lucionensis, G. R. Gray, Gen. B. i. p. 291 (1845); Swinhoe, Ibis, 1864, p. 420. Enneoctonus cristatus (Linn.), Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i. p. 167 (1854). Lanius supercitiosus (Lath.), Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 150. Lanius lucionensis (1.), Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 504. Otomela cristata, Schalow, Journ. fiir Orn. p. 150 (1875). The Crested Red or Russet Butcher-bird, Edwards, Nat. Hist. Birds, pl.54; The Crested Red Shrike, The Woodchat Shrike, Rufous-tailed Shrike, Supercilious Shrike (Latham) ; Butcher-bird in India. Batti gadu, Telugu ; Curcutea, Beneal. (on account of its harsh voice). Adult male. Length 7-5 to 7-7 inches ; wing 3:4 to 3°55; tail 3:0 to 3-2; tarsus 1-0; mid toe and claw 0°85 ; bill to gape 0°89. Female. Length 7:4 to 7-6 inches ; wing 3-4 to 3°5. Iris dark brown, sometimes hazel-brown ; bill with the upper mandible and tip blackish, gape and base of lower “ fleshy ;” legs and feet varying from bluish grey to blackish slate ; claws darker than the toes. Adult male (Colombo, Sept. 29, 1876). A broad facial streak from the nostril over the lores, and passing beneath the eye to the ear-coverts, black. Nasal piumes black; a more or less narrow frontal streak, widening as it passes over the eye to aboye the ear-coverts, white ; forehead, crown, and nape brownish rufous, passing on the hind neck, 9 aC 378 LANIUS CRISTATUS. back, scapulars, lesser wing-coverts, and lower back into ashy brown, more or less, according to the individual, tinged with rufous; the change from the colour of the head to that of the hind neck always more or less marked ; the brown of the rump passes on the upper tail-coverts into lighter rufous than the head; tail brownish rufous, the shafts of the feathers blackish and the tips albeseent ; wings brown, the median and greater coyerts and the secondaries edged and tipped with rufescent fulvous; throat and lower face white ; fore neck and under surface whitish, tinged with rufous-buff on the chest, sides of breast, flanks, and vent; under tail-coverts more strongly tinged with this colour than the throat, and the flanks most rufous of all; under wing concolorous with the chest. female. Ditters from the male in having the eye-streak of less size and not so black; this streak is blackish brown, and only partially envelopes the lores, there being merely a small blackish spot in front of the eye. Young. Birds of the year have the wing varying from 3:3 to 3:4 inches. Bill paler than in the adult ; legs and feet bluish grey. In the nestling or first plumage the feathers of the head and upper surface are rufescent fulvous, each with a dark terminal edging and ray across the centre; the wing-coverts are broadly margined with rufous, with an internal dark edge ; the secondaries are similarly marked, the dark line being chiefly conspicuous at the tips of the feathers ; eye-streak narrow, darker in the male than the female ; beneath whitish, tinged with buff on the chest and flanks, and marked, except on the throat and belly, with crescentic rays of blackish brown. In the plumage worn by most of our new arrivals, the nestling-feathers on the upper surface have partly or entirely disappeared, and the new feathers are somewhat of the same hue as in the adult, only the back is just as rufous as the head, and is thus wanting in the brown distinctive character ; the wing-coverts and secondaries are more or less broadly edged with fulvous, with the internal black edge and the under surface in all stages of marking, the crescentic edgings being of course chiefly confined to the chest and flanks (young females seem to be more tinged with buff than males on the chest); the supercilium is crossed with transverse lines. Some birds are much more advanced on the under surface than the upper, and vice versé ; but the last remnant of the immature plumage is always to be seen on the flanks. The young of this species, though very similar to, may, I think, be distinguished from those of L. luctonensis by being rwfous-brown on the head, and by having a certain amount, more or less, of pale edging at the margin of the forehead. I have observed this to hold good in a large series of both species which I have examined. The amount of rufous on the crown as distinguished from the hind neck varies considerably in individuals. Obs. The Ceylonese examples of this species are identical with those from India, as would naturally be the case when we consider that the species is migratory to both countries from beyond the Himalayas. Layard considered it to LANIUS LUCIONENSIS. (THE GREY-HEADED SHRIKE.) Lanius lucionensis, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 135 (1766); Swinhoe, Ibis, 1860, p. 59, et 1863, p. 272; Walden, ibid. 1867, p. 215; Swinhoe, P. Z.S. 1871, p. 376; Hume, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 434, et 1874, p. 199. Adult male and female. Length 6-5 to 7-0 inches ; wing 3°5 to 3:65; tail 3-4 to 3:6; tarsus 0-9; mid toe 0-6, its claw (straight) 0-23; bill to gape 0°8. These measurements are from a series of examples in the Swinhoe collection and a single example in my own from the S. Andamans. Hume gives the length of Andaman examples as attaining 8°25 inches, and the wing 3°75. “Iris brown; upper mandible horny brown, edged whitish near the gape; the terminal line of the lower mandible horny brown, the basal two thirds bluish or fleshy white ; legs and feet dull leaden blue, or dull bluish, or sometimes even greenish horny.” (Hume.) Male. Back, scapulars, and sides of neck earth-brown, passing gradually on the hind neck and crown into the greyish LANIUS CRISTATUS. 379 be a variety of the Indian bird (which he styles LZ. superedliosus, the rufous-backed bird found in Java and Japan), being paler and wanting the rufous crown of that form; but he probably was dealing with immature specimens, which predominate in the island. Blyth (Joc. cit.) referred these specimens of Layard’s to L. lucionensis, the species dealt with below. Schalow and Swinhoe unite the Indian bird with Pallas’s Shrike (Z. phenicurus) from Amoor- land; and I think it is generally admitted now to be the same as the latter species. I have examined specimens of this bird in the Swinhoe collection, now in the possession of Mr. Seebohm, and also examples collected at Krasnoyarsk for this gentleman during June last year, and they are, both as regards young and adult, identical with my own from Ceylon. An immature bird from Lake Baikal (wing 3°3 inches) corresponds with one of my specimens ; and three adults from Krasnoyarsk, in summer plumage, correspond precisely with examples in full winter plumage from Ceylon. They measure in the wing 3:4, 3-42, 3-5 inches; the extent of whitish grey on the forehead varies, as it also does in Ceylonese specimens. Lanius superciliosus, which I take to be the species inhabiting Japan, is apparently nothing but a rufous race of L. eris- tatus with a more conspicuous white forehead and supercilium. It is slightly larger in the wing and tail, and is principally distinguished from the present bird by having the back and hind neck almost as rufous as the head, and the head itself, as also the rump, lighter rufous than in our species. Three specimens (Mus. Seebohm) from Yokohama measure—wings 3°6, 3°65, 3°65, tails 42, 4:2, 3-9 inches respectively. The tails too are crossed by obsolete dark rays. I may remark here that the figure of L. phanicurus (‘ Ibis, 1867, pl. v.) is in reality a repre- sentation of this bird, the hind neck being much too rufous, and the frontal band too broad for the former species. L. isabellinus, which is apparently identical with Z. arenarius, Blyth (Blanford, Zool. Persia, p. 140), is not very distant from the present species, much resembling it in summer plumage, when it becomes rufous on the head and rump. It may, however, as pointed out by Lord Tweeddale, in his excellent paper on the Rufous-tailed Shrike (‘ Ibis, 1867), be distinguished from L. cristatus by its broader and less graduated tail. The old male has a white wing-bar extending from the 4th to the 9th primary. The present species was named cristatus by Linnzus on account of the erroneous delineation of a crest in the figure on Edwards’s plate. Though the coronal feathers in this section of the Shrikes are elongated, I do not think they are ever raised by the birds even when under the influence of emotion. Distribution —This Shrike is a very abundant species in Ceylon during the cool season. It arrives in the north in great numbers, the better part of which are immature birds, during the early part of September, and establishes itself in the islands off the Jaffna peninsula and on the adjacent mainland, considerably outnumbering the resident species, L. caniceps ; thence it spreads over the whole island, inhabiting the east and west coasts in equal numbers; and ascending the hill-zone it takes up its quarters in many of the open valleys.in the coffee-districts, and finds its way up to the Nuwara-Elliya plateau. It is very common on the of the forehead; on the hind neck there is generally a rufous shade, and the hue of the back is always slightly pervaded with grey; upper tail-coverts rufous-brown, passing into brown on the rump; wings liver-brown, the primaries with a faint rufous edging, and the secondaries and tertials rather broadly edged with fulvous; tail light rufous-brown, the margins lighter than the rest of the web; tips of the outer feathers pale. Lores and a broad stripe through the eye and over the ears black, surmounted by a whitish supercilium blending into the brown of the head; chin, throat, and face white, passing into the rufous-buff of the chest and underparts ; the centre of the breast and belly are generally paler than the flanks ; in some examples, fully aged probably, the chest is uniform rufous right across, and the separation between it and the white of the throat plainly indicated ; under wing pale rufous-buff and its edge white. Female has the lore-spot much smaller and, together with the ear-stripe, less black than the male; underparts paler. Young. After leaving the nest the young are brownish rufous above, brightest on the upper tail-coverts; the head concolorous with the back, and the forehead no paler than the crown, except just at the bill, where the bases of the feathers are more buff than further back; the whole upper surface, including the lesser wing-coverts, crossed with wavy bars of blackish ; wings rich brown, the coverts, secondaries, and tertials broadly margined with rufous: primaries narrowly edged and tipped with a paler hue; tail brownish rufous, with a pale tip, which is preceded by a black edging ; upper part of lores and an undefined stripe above the eye buff; lower part of lores 32 380 LANIUS CRISTATUS. west coast, and is one of the best-known birds to ornithological observers in the cinnamon-gardens and similar open bushy grounds in the vicinity of Colombo. Further south it is not so plentiful in the wooded semi- cultivated country west of Tangalla as it is in the south-east of that place. In the low jJungle-covered sea- board around Hambantota, and thence north, it is very common, as it also is in districts of similar character between Batticaloa and Trincomalie. Though not uncommon about Nuwara Elliya and Kandapolla, it does not seem to pass over the Totapella range on to the Horton Plains. In the coffee-districts it prefers the patnas to any other localities, and even frequents bushy situations at the top of such isolated peaks as Allegalla, on the summit of which I have met with it. Its departure from the island takes place at the latter end of April. Ihave seen it about Colombo until quite the end of that month. At Aripu Mr. Holdsworth gives the duration of its visit from October till April. This species is spread throughout India during the cold season, leaving the country in the hot weather, although some are said to remain and breed in the north. Blyth even says that a few are found about Calcutta at all seasons. It is not recorded from the Travancore hills, nor from the Palanis, either by Mr. Bourdillon or Mr. Fairbank, and the latter says it is rare at Ahmednagar. In Chota Nagpur it is, says Mr. Ball, “common throughout.” It extends to the eastward as far as Mount Aboo, where it arrives about the 1st of September, according to Capt. Butler. Mr. Hume remarks that Mount Aboo is quite on the confines of its distribution to the east ; and, in fact, itis not recorded at all from Sindh nor the Sambhur-Lake district. Whether, in its migration northwards, it passes round the western end of the Snowy range seenis to be not quite certain; for though Mr. Hume at first identified Dr. Henderson’s Yarkand birds as this species, Dr. Scully, though he searched well for it, did not meet with it there, and was, moreover, assured by the Yarkandis that only one species, L. arenarius, inhabited that region. ‘To the east of the Peninsula it is numerous. Mr. Hume writes that it is a cold-weather visitant to the Province of Tenasserim, and thence it is a straggler to the Andamans as well, though not found in the Nicobars. In Pegu it is, says Mr. Oates, “common during the greater portion of the year, coming in, however, in great numbers in September.” The influx here spoken of, which affects the whole of the peninsula of India, is caused, doubtless, by a migration over the ranges to the eastward of the Himalayas, from Thibet, Mongolia, and perhaps Eastern Siberia. In these distant regions it chiefly breeds, leaving them in vast flocks to travel many thousand miles southwards and aural stripe dark brown, paler and less of it on the lores in the female; all the under surface buff-white, tinged with rich buff or rufous on the flanks ; vent and under tail-coverts, and the sides of the neck, chest, and flanks crossed with crescentie markings of dark brown. In what is probably the plumage of the second year the upper surface is a ruddy brown with a tinge of grey in it, the rump and upper tail-coverts rufous with blackish-brown bars, and the quills and wing-coverts less conspicuously edged ; the forehead is still concolorous with the head, and the crescentic margins of the lower parts less pro- nounced and faded from off the chest. Some examples (for instance one shot in May) have the forehead pale, the upper surface pervaded with greyish, and yet the under surface well marked with the brown bars, but the sides of the chest and flanks have a rufous adult look about them. In some instances these under-surface markings do not vanish for several years: a specimen before me is fully adult on the upper surface, but has most of the lower surface and even the sides of the neck crossed with brown pencillings; and out of twenty-three, adult as regards the forehead and back, nearly half of them have some few Lars on the flanks. Obs. 1 doubtfully include this species in our lists, not on the evidence of Blyth and Layard (for it appears to me that they were speaking of the race of Z. cristatus as a whole, as exemplified in the birds which migrate to Ceylon), but on the testimony of Mr. Hume, who writes (‘ Stray Feathers,’ 1873, p. 434) of an adult example received by him from Ceylon, of which he speaks as follows :—* An adult bird, with the grey-brown head and back and pale fore- head of lucionensis, either belongs to that species or to a yery closely allied one not yet discriminated.” | know of no other adult bird with the characters of L. ducionensis haying been obtained in Ceylon. I cannot positively assert whether one or two immature specimens in my collection may not belong to this species, for, as I have said in my article on the last, the young of the two species are very similar; and though, as a rule, the head in the young L, cristatus, after getting beyond its nest-plumage, is more rufous than the back, this may not invariably LANIUS CRISTATUS. a8l to its furthest imit, Ceylon. In the solitudes of Thibet it appears to be a resident throughout the year; for Col. Prjevalski writes that it “ was observed throughout our travels, with the exception of Koko-nor, Tsaidam, and Northern Thibet. In those localities which we visited in winter, or early in spring, we found it most numerous in the Hoang-ho valley. In Ala-shan they breed in the sacsaulnics; and in Kan-su_ they generally inhabit the low wooded plains. The first migrants were seen to arrive in the Hoang-ho valley on the 28th of April. It breeds commonly in the woods of Ussuri country, especially in those localities where there are many decayed or felled trees.” Swinhoe merely mentions it being found at Amoy, and that he had frequently received it from Trans-Baikal in full summer plumage. Pére David is of opinion that it migrates from India to the borders of Lake Baikal and into the eastern parts of Siberia, as also into Southern China. It seems not unreasonable to doubt whether it performs such a stupendous journey as would be incurred in crossing the vast territory known as Mongolia, with its lonely deserts and lofty ranges of mountains, and thence through the scarcely less extensive region of Thibet, passing finally over the spurs of the Snowy ranges, and then spreading throughout the plas of India; and I would suggest that there is probably a double migratory stream—the one from hibet and the Hoang-ho valley passing into India and Bwmah, and the other from the Trans-Baikal region into China. As the L. phenicurus of Pallas, it was, remarks Lord Tweeddale, met with first by this traveller in the month of June “amongst the rocks of the mountain of Adon-Scholo, near the river Onon in Dauria.” Habits—TYhis ‘ Butcher-bird” frequents bushy land, uncultivated scrubby ground, hedge-rows, the borders of jungle, and all situations in which there are low trees and shrubs, on the tops of which it perches, flying from one to another, and repeatedly uttering its harsh cry. It is very querulous in its disposition ; and there is no Ceylonese bird that I know of which gives one so much the impression of always being in arage as this! Ona sudden, when scarcely a bird-note is heard during the usual lull after the morning feed is over, one of these Shrikes will suddenly appear on the top of a cinnamon-bush, haying flown up from the ground or from some low shrub, and commence screaming with all its might, whether by way of expressing its appro- bation of the flavour of the last lusty grasshopper that it has put an end to, or for the purpose of scolding its nearest fellow mate must be left to some one better versed in bird-language than I ; but certain it is that the be the case. I have examples with heads almost as brown as those of the Philippine species. Mr. Hume observes, in his account of this species at the Andamans, that the bill is generally slightly longer than in Z. cristatus ; but this rule does not invariably seem to hold good. Distribution.—Should this species visit Ceylon to a limited extent (and there is no reason why it should not, as it is found in the Andamans), it most probably strays over most of the low country. Mr. Hume does not mention from what district his specimen came. It was originally described from Luzon, one of the Philippines, whence it was brought by Poivre. Lord Tweeddale writes that ‘it migrates to North China during the spring, and returns south to the Philippines at the close of summer, many in their passage resting in Formosa, and some, according to Mr. Swinhoe’s latest observations, passing the winter in that island. He also observed it passing over at Hong-Kong in the spring, and found it at Talien Bay, North China, during the end of June, where it, however, became much scarcer towards the middle ot July.” It must breed in China, for Swinhoe remarks (P. Z. 8. 1871) that ‘those collected on the passage through Formosa were all immature, as if they had not strength to make the through voyage to the Philippines without rest.” In the Andamans many immature birds no doubt remain during the cool season, for Mr. Hume says it appears to be a permanent resident in those islands. It was found in this group at Port Blair, and at Camorta in the Nicobars. In Tenasserim it is a “straggler to the southern extremity of the Province,” and must of necessity occur there on its passage westward from the adjacent north-eastern portion of the continent. An example of a Shrike, similar to that sent to Mr. Hume from Ceylon, is recorded by this gentleman as having been obtained in the Travancore hills in February : it was nearly adult; and this, at such a season of the year, is such an extraordinary occurrence that it fosters the belief already expressed of its being perhaps a new and not yet discriminated species. Habits—Mr. Davison remarks that the habits of this Shrike do not differ from Z. erythronotus; it kept to gardens in the Andamans and was very silent. Swinhoe, however, says that it has a sweet song. 382 LANIUS CRISTATUS. said companion very soon appears on a neighbouring bush and vies with him in creating a general disturbance! There is this much to be said, that it is more noisy when it first arrives than after it has settled down in its new quarters ; and is it to be wondered that after swch a journey it should desire to proclaim its safe arrival ? It is a restless bird, continually on the move, and is very difficult to come within range of, as directly it perceives that it is being approached it flies off to another perch. I have often seen it on the ground pur- suing grasshoppers by darting at them as they fly out of the grass, and have noticed it proceeding across a road with prodigious hops and very erect carriage. Although its food is almost entirely insectivorous, it is occasionally guilty of the crime which has acquired for its family the name of “ Butcher-birds,” as Mr. Bligh informs me that he has known it to impale a White-eye (Zosterops ceylonensis) after the manner of the Euro- pean species. It never takes long flights while resident, merely proceeding from the top of one bush to another ; and during the winter season its note consists of nothing but the harsh chattering above mentioned. Blyth says that it warbles very sweetly at the end of the cold season at Calcutta. Nidification.—I am unable to give my readers any further particulars touching the nesting of this bird than those already contained in my extract from Colonel Prjevalski’s notes. That it does not breed in India is evident, although Tickell was led to suppose that it did so. The nest and eggs described by him were evidently those of a Bulbul, LANIUS CANICEPS, (THE RUFOUS-RUMPED SHRIKE.) Lanius caniceps, Blyth, J. A.S. B. 1846, xv. p. 302; id. Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 151 (1849); Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 164 (1854); Fairbank, Str. Feath. 1877, p- 400. Lanius tephronotus (Vig.), Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 124 (1852). Lanius erythronotus (Vig.), Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 130; Jerdon (in pt.), B. of Ind. i. p. 402 (1862); Holdsw. P. Z. S. 1872, p. 436; Legge, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 248. Collyrio caniceps (Bl.), Hume, Nests and Eggs, i. p. 169 (1873). Lanius affinis, Legge, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 243. Pale Rufous-backed Shrike of some ; Butcher-bird, Europeans in north of Ceylon. Adult male. Length 9-0 to 9-2 inches; wing 3°55 to 3°65; tail 4-5; tarsus 1:05; mid toe and claw 0°95; hind toe and claw 0°75; bill to gape 0-9. Adult female. Length 8-7 to 8-9; wing 3°45 to 3:6; tail 4:1 to 4:3. Iris hazel-brown ; bill black; legs and feet blackish brown. A broad facial band encompassing the eye, and passing from below the ear-coverts to the nostril and across the forehead, where it narrows, wings, and three central pairs of tail-feathers black; head, back and sides of neck, back, and scapulars pale bluish grey, with a whitish edging at the frontal band and above the eye; edge of the wing and a band at the base of the primaries from the 5th to the 10th quill, under wing, throat, fore neck, and centre of breast white ; rump, upper tail-coverts, and flanks rufous ; under tail-coverts and terminal portion of the longer scapulars rufescent, or paler than the rump. In abraded plumage the head and edges of the back-feathers become whitish ; and I observe that when the plumage is new the longer scapulars are more rufous than when it is abraded, as this colour is chiefly confined to the external portion of the webs. Female. Has the eye-stripe or band less black than the male, and the frontal bar narrower. Young. (Nestling shot by Mr. Holdsworth, 8th February, 1869.) Above pale sandy fulvous, darkening gradually into rufous on the rump, longer scapular-feathers, and upper tail-coverts; on the hind neck a slight tinge of greyish ; all the feathers barred with wavy marks of dark brown; lesser wing-coverts rufescent, broadly barred with blackish brown; inner webs of the tertials rufous, their external margins and tips of the same colour ; four central tail-feathers brown, the remainder and the tips of the first-named rufous tinged with brown ; eye-band blackish brown, not extending to the forehead ; beneath whitish, tinged with rufescent strongly on the flanks and under tail-coverts. Obs. This fine Shrike is the southern representative of Lanius erythronotus, the Rufous-backed Shrike, found in the Deccan, Central and Northern India. Specimens from Malabar and from the Godaveri-river district haye just as little rufous on the scapulars and lower back as our birds ; in fact a Malabar example in the national collection has less rufous on these parts than some Ceylonese specimens. Two birds from the districts named measure 3°5 and 3°75 inches in the wing, and two from the Palanis, obtained by Mr. Fairbank, 3°3. At the time 1 wrote my note on this species (‘Stray Feathers,’ 1876) I had only specimens of ZL. erythronotus in my collection, and was unacquainted with the true L. caniceps, and hence my remark as to our bird perhaps being a local race of the former. The Rufous-backed Shrike has the back as far up as the interscapulary region, and nearly all the scapular tuft, rufous; and in all specimens I have examined there is an absence of the pale margin at the posterior edge of the frontal band; the secondaries and tertials are more broadly edged with fulvous than in Z. caniceps. Two examples from Behar measure 3°5 and 3:4 inches in the wing, and two from Futteghur 3°5 and 3-55 respectively. 384 LANIUS CANICEPS. As our species was entered as L. tephronotus in Kelaart’s Catalogue, it may not be out of place to mention, for the information of my Ceylon readers, that this Shrike is a very distinct bird from either of those in question. It is a large bird, with the wing varying from 3-9 to 4°3 inches, and the tail about 54; dark grey on the head and back, with the rump and upper tail-coverts dusky rufous; the wings and tail not so black, but the under surface much as in L. caniceps. Distribution —This large Butcher-bird inhabits the Jaffna peninsula, the extreme north of the Vanni, and the whole of the N.W. coast, from Poonerin to the country between Chilaw and Puttalam, including the islands of Manaar and Karativoe. On the Erinativoe Islands I did not observe it. It does not seem to extend far inland, although it is very abundant on the sea-board. It has been procured by Mr. Hart on the Puttalam and Kandy road as far up as Nikerawettiya; westward of that about Kurunegala, in the Seven Korales, and in the region along the base of the west Matale hills I searched diligently for it without success. In the Jaffna peninsula it is chiefly abundant about Poimt Pedro. In the island of Manaar, and on the open bushy plains of the adjacent coast as far south as Pomp-Aripu, it is abundant. Southward of this place its numbers diminish ; and no example has ever, to my knowledge, been procured south of Chilaw, although I observe that Mr. Holdsworth is of opinion that he saw it occasionally in the cimnamon-gardens at Colombo. The foregoing species is very common in that locality, but the present bird has not yet been obtained there up to the date of my latest advices from the Colombo museum. On the continent the Rufous-rumped Shrike is found in the south of India and up the east coast as far north as the Godaveri river. Ido not observe that it has been found either by Messrs. Fairbank or by the authors of the recent contribution to the avifauna of the Deccan, Messrs. Davidson and Wender, in this zegion, Mr. Ball likewise does not record it from the coast region north of the Godaveri. It would appear, however, that it has been found in Cashmere and in Afghanistan—that is, if Blyth’s identification of Captain Hutton’s specimens was correct. As late as 1873 Mr. Hume incorporates the latter gentleman’s notes on its nesting in that region im ‘ Nests and Eggs;’ and I therefore infer that he considers the identification correct. It is also found in the N.W. Himalayas ; but from intermediate localities, such as Sindh, Guzerat, Sambhur, or the neighbourhood of Futteghur, it does not appear ever to have been recorded. Jerdon writes of this species, in his ‘ Hlustrations of Indian Ornithology, 1847, at a time when he considered it distinet from L. erythronotus (for in his ‘ Birds of India’ he unites the two), that though ‘ occasionally found in the more wooded parts of the country in the Carnatic, it is only common m the neighbourhood of the jungles of the west coast, and is very abundant on the top of the Nilghiris.” Myr. Fairbank says that it is resident on the summit of the Palani ranges and breeds there. Habits.—In its mode of living the present species resembles the remainder of this interesting family. It frequents low thorny jungle, scrubby land, and open places near the sea-coast, which are dotted here and there with clumps of low trees and bushes. When not engaged in catching its prey it seems to pass most of its time on the top of a shrub, uttering its harsh cry as if it were on bad terms with all its neighbours. It is very noisy in the mornings and evenings, flying about from bush to bush, and is so restless that it is very difficult to approach. There is in its disposition evidently that dislike for the presence of man that characterizes all its congeners with which I am acquainted ; and it decidedly disapproves of his endeavouring to make acquaintance with its habits by even presuming to watch its movements, for as soon as it observes that it is an object of interest it immediately decamps. It feeds on grasshoppers, which it entraps on the ground, and also preys on Mantide and dragonflies. Nidification.— This bird breeds in the Jaffna district and on the north-west coast from February until May. Mr. Holdsworth found its nest ina thorn-bush about 6 feet high, near the compound of his bungalow, in the beginning of February. He describes it as cup-shaped, made of rather slender twigs, and lined with roots. Unfortunately the young were just fledged at the time he discovered it, and he therefore obtained no information as to the eggs of the species. Layard speaks of the young being fledged in June at Point Pedro, and says that it builds in Luphorbia-trees in that district. Referring to Mr. THume’s ‘ Nest and Eggs,’ I find it recorded that the breeding-season of this Shrike in South India extends from March until July. Concerning its nesting in the Nilghiris, Mr. Wait writes :— LANIUS CANICEPS. 385 “The nest, cup-shaped and neatly built, is placed in low trees, shrubs, and bushes, generally thorny ones; the outside of the nest is chiefly composed of weed (a white downy species is invariably present), fibres, and hay, and it is lined with grass and hair. There is often a good deal of earth built in with roots and fibres in the foundation of this nest. Four appears to be the usual number of eggs laid.” Mr. Davison’s account of its nesting is as follows :—‘‘ This species builds in bushes or trees at about 6 to 20 feet from the ground. A thorny thick bush is generally preferred, Berberis asiatica being a favourite. The nest is a large, deep, cup- shaped structure, rather neatly made of grass mingled with old pieces of rag, paper, &c., and lined with fine grass. The eggs, four or five in number, are white, spotted with blackish brown chiefly at the thicker end, where the spots generally form a zone.’ Mr. Hume remarks that the eggs are undistinguishable, in many instances, from those of its close ally L. erythronotus, though they vary less and average longer. In length they range from 0:93 to 1:0 inch, and in breadth from 0:7 to 0°72 inch; but the average of twenty was 0:95 by 0'7 inch. PASSERES. Fam. DICRURID-. Bill stout, both wide and high at the base, the upper mandible moderately curved, and the tips of both mandibles notched ; gape armed with stout bristles. Wings moderately long. Tail of 10 feathers only, forked, and with the lateral feathers occasionally much lengthened. Legs * short ; feet rather small. Plumage black. Sternum with a tolerably large foramen in each half of the posterior edge (Chibia hottentota and Bhringa remifer). Genus BUCHANGA. Bill stout, broad at the base, the upper mandible high; the culmen keeled and well curved to the tip, which, as well as that of the under mandible, has a distinct notch. Nostrils oval, small, concealed by the impending plumes. Rictal bristles long and stout. Wings pointed ; the 4th quill the longest, the 2nd subequal to the 7th and twice as long as the Ist. Tail long, deeply forked, and expanding at the tip. Tarsus longer than the middle toe, protected with stout transverse scute. Feet rather small and stoutly scaled; hind toe and claw large. BUCHANGA ATRA. (THE BLACK DRONGO.) Muscicapa atra, Hermann, Obs. Zool. p. 208 (1804). Dicrurus macrocercus, Vieill. N. Dict. ix. p. 588 (1817); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 129; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 427 (1862). Buchanga albirictus, Hodgs. Ind. Rey. i. p. 326 (1837); Hume, Nests and Eggs, p. 186 (1873); Butler, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 465. Edolius malabaricus |, Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 124 (1852). Dicrurus minor, Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 22 (1849); id. Ibis, 1867, p. 305. Dicrurus longus (Temm.), Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E, I. Co. i. p. 152 (1854). Buchanga minor (Bl.), Holdsw. P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 438; Legge, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 202. Dicrurus albirictus (Hodgs.), Hume, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 97. Buchanga atra, Sharpe, Cat. B. iii. p. 246 (1877). Le Drongolon, Levaill. Ois. d’ Afr. 11. pl. 174. The Drongo-Shrike of some; King-Crow, ‘ Flycatcher,” Kuropeans in Ceylon. Kolsa, Hind.; Finga, Bengal.; Japal kalchit, Punjab; Kunich in Sindh; Thampal, N.W. Prov. ; Kotwal, Natives in Deccan; Yeti-inta, also Passala-poli-gadu, lit. “ Cattle Tom- bird,” Telugu; Aurri kurumah, Tam., Jerdon. Kari kuruvi, Tamils in Ceylon; Pastro barbeiro, Portuguese in North Ceylon. Adult male and female. Length 10°75 to 11:1 inches ; wing 5:0 to 5°45; tail 5:1 to 5°7, depth of fork 2:1; tarsus 0-8 to 0°85; mid toe and claw 0°82 to 0:9; bill to gape 1:05 to 1°15. Males slightly exceed females in size. Iris dull red, or brownish red in not fully adult birds ; bill black ; legs and feet black. Above and beneath metallic blue-black ; quills brown-black, glossed on the tail with green; lower surface of quills brown; a small white spot at the lower corner of the gape, not perceptible in many specimens until the black feathers round it be lifted up; in some it consists of a single feather. Young. Birds of the year have the wing from 4°8 to 5:0 inches. Iris reddish brown ; bill and feet as in adult. Above glossed as in the adult ; beneath, from the chest, the feathers are fringed with white, coalescing into whitish on the abdomen ; under tail-coverts and primary under wing-coyerts with white terminal bars ; greater under wing- coyerts with a white spot at the tips. This plumage is acquired after dofting the nestling dress, which is brownish beneath, with similar white markings. After the next moult the white tips are present in the longer under tail- covert feathers, and sometimes on the under wing, this latter part losing the spots first, as a rule. Obs. The Ceylon birds form a small race of this widely-spread species, and have been usually separated as B. minor ; I cannot, however, keep our bird distinct as a subspecies even, for I find an example in good plumage in the British Museum from Behar which is no larger than fine specimens from Jaffna. It measures in the wing 5:5, tail 6°3, and has a small rictal spot. The generality of Indian specimens are, however, larger than this. Several from Nepal measure 6:0, 6-1, and 6-2 in the wing, and about 7-0 in the tail. In Burmah they are similar in size to those in the Himalayan subregions. The Black Drongo of China and Formosa (B. catheeca) is united by Mr. Sharpe with B. atra; and, I think, justly so too, for I can see no difference whatever between specimens in the British Museum from either of these localities and those from Nepal and Burmah. An example from Formosa measures—wing 5:7, tail 6-5; one from China—wing 6-2, tail 7-0. I find the white rictal spot present in these, although it is very minute, and it likewise exists in all Indian specimens I haye examined. South-Indian birds BUCHANGA ATRA. 387 are usually about the size of the above noticed Behar example. I notice that in some instances the young of conti- nental birds have a great deal of white near the edge of the under wing; but in this respect Ceylonese examples vary too, though apparently not quite to the same extent as the former. Distribution.—This Drongo has a very singular distribution in Ceylon, which, as in the case of the Red- legged Partridge, leaves the impression that it had found its way, at some remote period, to the island, and, not liking it, had determined not to continue its explorations much beyond the point of its arrival! It is confined to the Jaffna peninsula and the north-west coast, down as far south as Puttalam, perhaps occurring as a straggler about Colombo, though it is certainly not resident there. I never saw it anywhere on the west coast south of the above-mentioned town, though I searched most diligently for it at Chilaw, a locality which I was prepared to find it in, as the conditions of climate and vegetation are those of the more northern parts which it frequents. Layard writes of it :—‘‘ D. minor is common about Colombo, frequenting natives’ gardens.” This is the habit of B. leucopygialis, and there must have therefore been a wrong identification here. Mr. Holds- worth says, “it is also found about Colombo, but by no means commonly within my experience.’”’ No speci- mens were procured by him there as I understand, and it is possible that the above-mentioned bird may have been mistaken for it. Others have been on the look-out for it for years past, but have not yet seen it in the Colombo district ; and this is, therefore, one of the points in the island distribution of this bird which requires settling. There is no reason why it should not stray down the coast to Colombo; and if Mr. Holdsworth’s identification of the bird at large were correct, it was most likely as a wanderer to the district that it made its appearance there. It does not seem to pass down the east coast at all. I have seen it near Elephant’s Pass, but did not meet with it on the sea-board south of that, though it may occur at Mullaitivu. In the island of Manaar, on the open plains near Salavatori and to the north of Mantotte, it is very common, but it does not appear to take to the paddy-lands of the interior. On the continent, the ‘Common King-Crow ” is found, according to Jerdon, throughout the whole of India, extending through Assam and Burmah into China, and is to be met with in every part of the country, except where there is dense and lofty jungle. Commencing at the north-western limit of this wide range, I find that Mr. Ball observed it on the lower parts of the Suliman hills, and Mr. Hume procured it in Sindh; Captain Pinwill collected it inthe N.W. Himalayas ; Dr. Hinde at Kamptee; Messrs. Adam and Butler speak of it as common in the Sambhur-Lake district and in Northern Guzerat, though it is scarce, according to the latter gentleman, in the Mount-Aboo range. It is “very abundant in Chota Nagpur” (Ball), and also, further south, in the Deccan and the Carnatic. Mr. Fairbank found it common at the base of the Palanis and on the plains, but not at any elevation on the hills themselves. It is spread throughout the country to the south of this district as far asthe island of Ramisserum. Turning to the north-east again, we trace it through north-eastern Cachar, where it is “extremely common” (Inglis) to Burmah, in which country Mr. Oates says that for many months of the year it is very abundant, being rare, however, from April to September. He did not see it on the Pegu hills. In Tenasserim Mr. Hume writes that it does not occur east of the Sittang. South of Moulmein it is not rare, and it extends to the Pakchan river. Concerning the country which forms the eastern limit of its range, namely China, Mr. Swinhoe writes (P. Z. 8.1871) that it is found throughout it, including the peninsula of Hainan and the island of Formosa ; southward it extends into Siam, and thence across to Java, where it is the Hdolius longus of Temminck. Habits —In Ceylon this Drongo frequents open lands, tobacco- and pasture-fields, bushy plains, and scattered thorny jungle on the outskirts of the latter. it is, like the rest of its genus, a tame bird, and is frequently to be seen sitting quietly on the backs of cattle or on the tops of fences near the bungalows in Jaffna, until a passing beetle attracts its notice, and it darts suddenly after it ; sometimes a long chase occurs, and when the hapless insect is captured, it is dispatched on the nearest fence or tree, and the watch again commences. It often alights on low eminences on the ground, such as the top of a rut or a similar projection ; and when frightened from this flies along close to the earth with a buoyant flight, and generally alights on a fence or low bush. It is usually solitary, or associates, perhaps, with one or two of its fellows in scattered company ; but in close company I have not noticed it often. Its principal food consists of Coleoptera, grass- hoppers, winged termites, of which it is very fond, and ticks, which latter it takes from cattle. It was the 3D2 88 BUCHANGA ATRA. os species referred to by Layard when, in writing of B. longicaudata, he remarked that it perched on the backs of cattle to seek for ticks, on which it largely fed. Its flight is undulating and buoyant; and when chasing its prey it is capable of performing very rapid evolutions, darting hither and thither, and rising and falling until it has succeeded in its pursuit. Its note is more melodious than that of the rest of its congeners in Ceylon. Dr. Jerdon has the following complete account of its habits in India :—“ It feeds chiefly on grasshoppers and crickets, which, as Sundevall remarks, appear to be the chief insect-food for birds in India; also now and then on wasps or bees (hence the Bengal name), on dragonflies, and occasionally on moths or butterflies. It generally seizes its insect-prey on the ground, or whips one off a stalk of grain, frequently catching one in the air; now and then, when the grasshopper, having flown off, alights im a thick tuft of grass, the King-Crow soars for a few seconds over the spot like a Kestrel. When it has seized an insect, it generally, but not always, returns to the same perch. On an evening, just about sunset, it may often be observed seated on the top of a tree, taking direct upward flights, and catching some small insects that take wing at the time. Like most other birds, when a flight of winged termites takes place, it assembles in numbers to partake of the feast. “‘The King-Crow obtains his familiar name in this country from its habit of pursuing Crows, and also Hawks and Kites, which it does habitually, and at the breeding-season, especially when the female is incubating, with increased vigilance and vigour. If a Crow or Kite approach the tree in which the nest is placed the bold little Drongo flies at them with great spirit and determination, and drives them off to a great distance ; but although it makes a great show of striking them, I must say that I have very rarely seen it do so; and certainly I have never seen it fix on the back of a Hawk with claws and beak for some seconds, as Mr. Phillipps asserts that he has seen. Occasionally others will join the original assailant, and assist in driving off their common enemy.” A correspondent in ‘Stray Feathers,’ Mr. Wender, writing from Sholopoor Deccan, says :—‘On the 8th inst. (Jan.) I saw a King-Crow (B. albirictus) sitting on a telegraph-wire with a lizard about 6 inches long in its claws, pecking away at it, just as you see a Hawk eating a lizard or a mouse. The lizard, one of those fragile light-coloured little fellows which one sees running about in long grass, was not quite dead, though he had ceased to struggle violently. The bird appeared to be pulling the lizard’s intestines out in a most deliberate manner.” Some very interesting details concerning this well-known bird are furnished by Mr. Ball in his excellent paper on the Birds of Chota Nagpur. Referring to Dr. Jerdon’s doubt as to its striking other birds, he says :—‘‘On one occasion, however, I saw one actually carried on the back of a large Owl (Ascalaphia bengalensis) which flew out of a tree where it was bemg tormented by these birds and Pies (Dendrocitia rufa). In illustration of the somewhat miscellaneous character of the food of these birds I may mention that I remember one day in Calcutta opening a verandah chick (curtain) which had not been in use for some time, thus disturbing a colony of Bats that had made the inside coils their home ; out they flew into the daylight, when they were immediately seen and hawked up by some King- Crows, who took them to neighbouring trees, where they quietly devoured them... . Late as they are in going to roost they are generally the first birds to be on the move in the morning. I have frequently heard them calling to one another long before dawn, when I have been travelling in the hot weather.” Nidification.—I was unable while in Ceylon to obtain any information from my correspondents at Jaffna concerning the nesting of this species. A comparison of its eggs with those of the continental form would be extremely interesting, and the matter is one which future workers in the island should pay attention to. In India, May, June, and July are said to be the favourite months for nesting, although eggs are occasionally taken in April and August. Mr. Hume writes that it usually builds pretty high up in tall trees, in some fork not quite at the outside of the foliage, “constructing a broad shallow cup, and lays normally four eggs, although I have found five.” The nests “ are all composed of tiny twigs and fine grass-stems, and the roots of the khus-khus grass, as a rule, neatly and tightly woven together, and exteriorly bound round with a good deal of cobweb, in which a few feathers are sometimes entangled ; the cavity is broad and shallow, and at times lined with horsehair or fine grass, but most commonly only with khus. The bottom of the nest is BUCHANGA ATRA. 389 very thin, but the sides, or rim, rather firm and thick . . . . The variation in this bird’s eggs is remarkable ; out of more than one hundred eggs nearly one third have been pure white; and between the dead glossless pure white egg and a somewhat glossy, warm, pink-grounded one with numerous spots and specks of maroon colour, dull red, and red-brown, or even dusky, every possible gradation is to be found: each set of eggs, however, seems to be invariably of the same type, and we have never yet found a pure white and a well coloured and marked egg in the same nest.”’ These latter “‘ are a pale salmon-colour, spotted with rich brownish red.” The average of 150 eggs was 1:01 by 0°75 inch, the smallest measuring 0°95 by 0°7 inch ; the latter dimensions would be quite equalled, if not exceeded, by those of our Ceylonese birds. BUCHANGA LONGICAUDATA., (THE LONG-TAILED DRONGO.) Dicrurus macrocercus, Jerd. Cat. B. South India, Madr. Journ. 1839, x. p. 240 (nec Vieill.). Dicrurus longicaudatus, “ A. Hay,” Jerd. Madr. Journ. 1845, xiii. pt. 2, p. 121; Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. 8. B. p. 202 (1849); Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. p. 152 (1854); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xi. p. 129; Bourdillon, Str. Feath. 1876, p. 394; Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 450 (1862); Hume, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 97. Buchanga longicaudata, Walden, Ibis, 1868, p. 316; Holdsw. P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 438 ; Hume, Nests and Eggs (Rough Draft), p. 189 (1873); Legge, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 202 ; Sharpe, Cat. B. iii. p. 249. Buchanga waldeni, Beav. Ibis, 1868, p. 497. King-Crow, Europeans in India and Ceylon. Nil finga, Beng. ; Sahim or Sahem Pha, Lepchas ; Chéchum, Bhot. Erratoo valan kuruvi, Tam., lit. “Double-tailed bird ;” Pastro barbeiro, Portuguese in Ceylon. Adult male and female. Length 10°5 inches; wing 5:0 to 5:4, average dimensions of wing in males procured in Ceylon 5-2; tail 5°8 to 6-0, depth of fork about 2-0; tarsus 0°7; mid toe 0°55 to 0°6, claw (straight) 0°3 to 0°33; bill to gape 1:1 to 1:12. The above dimensions are from examples killed in Ceylon; an immature female shot in Ramisserum Island measures only 4°8 in the wing; one procured by Mr. Bourdillon in Travancore 5:4; a second 5-0. The measurement of a third, of which the sex is not stated, is given at 5°55. Iris red, in some almost scarlet ; bill, legs, and feet black. Above metallic bluish black with a grey tinge on the back, increasing towards the upper tail-coverts ; quills and tail with a strong greenish lustre on the outer webs, the inner being brownish black ; beneath dull black pervaded with greyish, which hue is strongest on the breast, flanks, and abdomen; a slight steel-blue gloss on the chest ; under wing-coverts greyish black ; under surface of quills near the base brownish. Young. Iris brownish red. The immature or bird of the year has the lower parts greyer than in the adult; the under tail-coverts have deep white tips in the form of terminal bars ; beneath the carpal joint the feathers are also tipped with white, and the under wing-coverts have terminal spots of the same. The white markings, as in the case of B. atra, leave the under wing-coverts first; they seem to remain on the under tail-coverts until the bird is almost mature, as few specimens which I have seen are entirely without them; immature examples occasionally have one more white spot at the tips of the tail-feathers. Obs. This is a variable species in size. Probably the birds which visit us in the cool season are bred in the south of India, and are consequently smaller than those from the northern parts of the Empire. A male, however, in the national collection from Darjiling has the wing 5°62 inches, tail 6-4, dimensions not much exceeding those which visit Ceylon. Alhed forms inhabit Burmah and the sub-Himalayan district, and were united by Jerdon with the present. B. etneracea, from the former region, is a smaller bird than the present species and much paler, being “ ashy grey” above, and the same, but somewhat duskier, beneath ; wing 49 to 5-2 inches. B. pyrrhops is, according to Mr. Sharpe, a good subspecies of the above, being larger than it. Mr. Hume considers it to be merely a grey form of B. longicaudata. Distribution.—This species arrives in the north of Ceylon about the middle or latter part of October. It is decidedly migratory, as no individuals are seen between April and September, and at the season of its appearance it is always first met with on the seashore. At Trincomalie I noticed it in the Fort when it first arrived; it lingered about the neighbourhood and then betook itself to the jungles, through which it is diffused in tolerable numbers as far south as the Seven Korales. It does not appear to be common in the north. I have seen one or two individuals from the Jaffna district, but I did not meet with it on the north- BUCHANGA LONGICAUDATA. 391 west coast, nor does Mr. Holdsworth appear to have done so. It is therefore singular that it should be a common species on the opposite side of the island. It is an occasional visitant to the west coast: I once noticed an example in October in the Fort at Colombo, but it quickly disappeared into the interior. Mr. Holdsworth likewise met with it in that district, obtaining a specimen about sixteen miles from Colombo. Further south on this side of the island it is unknown. I have seen it in the Wellaway Korale; and Mr. Bligh writes me of a Black Drongo which frequented his estate in Haputale in the month of November, which must have belonged to this species. Other evidence than this of its ascending the hills I have never obtained. This Drongo inhabits the whole of the Indian peninsula. Jerdon writes of it :—‘ The Long-tailed Drongo is found wherever there is lofty forest jungle, from the Himalayas to Travancore .... I have killed it in Malabar, the Wynaad, Coorg, and the Nilghiris; it is found occasionally about Calcutta and all along the Himalayas up to 8000 feet of elevation. It is tolerably common at Darjiling.” Captain Hutton says that it is the only species of Drongo which visits Mussourie, arriving from the Dhoon in the middle of March. Captain C. H. Marshall records it from Murree. In the south of India it appears to be a permanent resident. Mr. Bourdillon remarks that it is common in Travancore, and, as I have remarked, it is probably from there that it visits Ceylon; but why it should arrive so frequently on the east coast is somewhat puzzling. Mr. Fairbank records it from Khandala, and says that it is rarely found in the Ahmednagar district. Jerdon remarks that Adams found it common in Cashmere, which must be its extreme limit to the north and west. Habits—Heavy jungle and forest are the localities principally frequented by this Drongo, the vicinity of open places, banks of rivers, or margins of secluded tanks being usually chosen by it in which to take up its quarters ; and there it subsists on the insectivorous diet so rife in the tropical woods. It perches on the tops of tall trees or on some outstanding branch, from which prominent outlook it sallies forth on the beetles and various winged insects which pass it, and then returns to its post to discuss the prey thus captured. It is an inquisitive and somewhat querulous species, chasing Hawks and Crows, and not unfrequently consorting with Bulbuls and other small birds for the purpose of mobbing an unfortunate Owl which has been discovered abroad during the daylight. I have more than once found it pursuing the Devil-bird. On first arriving in the island it is found in avenues and groves of trees near human habitations, but it soon disappears for its sylvan haunts. It is often noticed on the edges of roads leading through the forest, and may easily be recognized from other Drongos by its long tail and generally slender outline. It is one of the last birds to retire in the evening, and often makes a supper off the beetles, termites, bugs, &c. which are abroad during the short twilight of the tropics. Its notes are varied and shrill in tone, and some of them are cleverly imitated by the Common Green Bulbul, Phyllornis jerdoni. I have usually met with it in pairs, but once or twice have seen a small party together. Jerdon remarks that it now and then makes a considerable circuit, apparently capturing several insects, before returning to its perch, and then reseating itself on some other tree; he likewise states that three or four are sometimes seen together in scattered company, but that each returns independently to its own perch. Layard’s remarks as to this Drongo perching on the backs of cattle apparently apply, as heretofore remarked, to the Black Drongo so common in the open about Jaffna. Nidification—This species breeds in India during the months of March, April, and May, building, according to Captain Hutton, a very neat nest, usually placed on the bifurcation of a horizontal branch of some tall tree. “It is constructed of grey lichens gathered from the trees and fine seed-stalks of grasses firmly and neatly interwoven; with the latter it is also usually lined, although sometimes a black fibrous lichen is used; externally the materials are kept together by being plastered over with spiders’ webs.” There are, says Mr. Hume, two types of this bird’s eggs—the one of a pale pinkish salmon-coloured ground, streaked, blotched, and clouded somewhat openly, except at the large end, with reddish pink ; the other has a pale pinkish-white ground, blotched boldly, almost exclusively, at the larger end in a broad irregular zone with brownish red. They vary from 0°85 to 1:01 in length by from 0:7 to 0°75 inch in breadth. BUCHANGA LEUCOPYGIALIS. (THE CEYLONESE WHITE-BELLIED DRONGO.) (Peculiar to Ceylon.) Dicrurus leucopygialis, Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1846, xv. p. 298; id. Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 203 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 124 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 130; Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 306 ; Legge, ibid. 1874, p. 16. Dicrurus cerulescens (Linn.), Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 129. Buchanga leucopygialis (Bl.), Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 489; Hume, Str. Feath. 1873, p. 436; id. Nests and Eggs, i. p. 192 (1873); Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 288; Sharpe, Cat. B. iii. p. 253 (1877). Buchanga cerulescens (Linn.), Holdsw. P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 439 (in pt.); Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 288; id. Str. Feath. 1875, p. 202 (in pt.). Buchanga insularis, Sharpe, Cat. B. iii. p. 253 (1877). The King-Crow, Europeans in Ceylon. Pastro barbeiro, Portuguese in Ceylon. Kowda or Kawuda Panika, Sinhalese. Ad. niger, chalybeo nitens, abdomine albicante, crisso et subcandalibus albis : rostro et pedibus nigris : iride rubra. Adult male. Length 9:5 to 9°9 inches; wing 4:7 to 4°95; tail 4°7 to 5:1; tarsus 0°75 to 0°8; mid toe 0°7, claw (straight) 0°24 ; bill to gape 1-0 to 1-1. Adult female. Length 9°5 to 9°7 inches ; wing 4°5 to 4°75; tail 4°5 to 4°75. * . Iris varying from reddish brown to brownish red, in some obscure red ; bill, legs, and feet black. Obs. These measurements and the colours of the soft parts are taken from a series of northern and southern examples, the representatives of the two types into which this species apparently divides itself; but in order to the more complete insight into the question, I will in my “ descriptions ” first deal with one type, and then pass through the intermediate form to the other. Dark form: BucwaNGa LEvcoPYGIALIS, Blyth. Adult male (Wellewatta, Colombo). Wing 4°75 inches ; tail 4-0; bill to gape 1-0. Iris dull red. - Head and entire upper surface black, illumined with steel-blue; wings and tail brownish black, with a metallic lustre, slightly greener than that of the back on the outer webs of the feathers ; ear-coverts and face black, without the metallic lustre of the head ; chin, fore neck, and chest dull black, intensifying somewhat on the chest, and slightly elossed in that part; on the breast the centres of the feathers become gradually brown, with the edges iron-grey, the latter paling to greyish white lower down, and thence into white on the abdomen, giving that part, however, only a whitish appearance on account of the dark centres of the feathers ; vent and under tail-coverts white. Adult male (Mapalagama, South Ceylon). Wing 4°85 inches; tail 4-9; bill to gape 1-0. Iris obscure red. Much darker on the lower breast and belly than the above, as it is in abraded plumage, and the whitish edgings are worn off from this cause; the vent is only greyish white, and the under tail-coverts sullied white ; gloss on the upper surface duller, or not so green as in the freshly-moulted specimen. Adult female (Poorie, W. Province). Wing 4°55 inches ; tail 4:4; bill to gape 1-0. [ris dark red-brown. in more abraded plumage than the last ; the entire breast and belly dull brown, the vent greyish, and the under tail- coyerts greyish white. HL a pe I GIAL al = A LEUCO G T BUCHA? BUCHANGA LEUCOPYGIALIS. 393 Adult female (Heneratgoda). Wing 4°7 inches ; tail 4-7; bill to gape 1-0. Tris dull red. In abraded plumage, but not so dark as the above, owing to some of the feathers not being so much worn as others ; the breast is greyish brown ; the vent whitish, and the under tail-coverts slightly less albescent than the vent, being so much worn as to show the brownish bases of the feathers. Female (Colombo). Wing 4°5 inches; tail 4:4. Iris light reddish. An abnormally pale-breasted example. Throat and chest brownish black, the sides of the latter glossed with green, the centre of the breast brownish grey, the edges of the feathers whitish, the feathers at the sides of this part still paler, and the sides of the belly whitish ; vent and under tail-coverts pure white. Intermediate form. Male (Chilaw, 50 miles north of Colombo). Wing 4°8 inches ; tail 4-9 ; bill to gape 1-05. Back with a somewhat greener gloss than in the Colombo specimens; chest and throat black, much glossed with metallic green; the centre of the breast brown, the feathers edged paler, the flanks very dark, and the belly suddenly turning white ; vent and under tail-coverts pure white. Male (Deduru-Oya, N.W. Province). Wing 4:98 inches ; tail 4°7; bill to gape 1-05. Upper surface with a still greener gloss than the above, the entire belly and the under tail-coverts white, this colour extending up the breast in the form of a point, and becoming at the uppermost part sullied, that is to say, whitish. Two adults (British-Museum specimens 6, c, ‘ Uva district ;” but probably from the west of Nuwara Elliya). Wings 4-65 and 4:55 respectively. Resembling the above in plumage both as regards upper surface and lower parts ; the whitish hue of the lower part of the breast passing into dark slate on the upper part of it. Two adults (Kandy district). Wing 4:9 mches. Upper breast very dark ; abdomen turning abruptly to white. Light form: BucHANGA INSULARIS, Sharpe. Adult female (Trincomalie). Wing 4:6 inches; tail 4-4; bill to gape 1:0. Upper surface with a marked greenish gloss; throat blackish brown; chest black, glossed with green; upper breast dark slate, rather abruptly changing into white on the lower part of the breast and rest of under surface. Adult male (British-Museum specimen a, ‘ Ceylon,” from Badulla district). Similar to Trincomalie specimen, except that the white colour takes a pointed form on the breast. Male, not quite adult (Badulla). Wing 4°75 inches ; tail 4-9; bill to gape 1-03. Paler on the chest and tail than any of the foregoing specimens. The upper tail-coverts are tipped with whitish. Foung (dark form on leaving the nest). Blackish brown above, without the black-green gloss of the adult. Chest and throat blackish brown, the breast slaty, the feathers of these parts finely tipped with greyish fulvous; the belly and under tail-coverts sullied whitish, the latter tipped with dusky grey. A young bird about two months old (Ambepussa, June 29, 1875), shot with the hen bird, which was feeding it, is already acquiring the mature plumage; the black-green feathers on the upper surface predominating over the brown “nestling” ones; the chest nearly all moulted to black feathers, and the centre of the breast whitish as high up as birds from the N.W. Provinces. Wing 4:5 inches. The old bird shot with it was of the true leucopy- gialis type, the breast much darker than that of the young bird. A young bird in a similar stage of change (shot at Deltota, May 29, 1876) is much darker on the breast than the Ambepussa specimen. Wing 4°8 inches. Young (pale form: Galoya, Trincomalie Road). Similar to the Ambepussa example on the upper surface, being in a state of change from the brown nest-feathers to the glossy black-green ; the under surface is paler, inasmuch as the whitish immature plumage extends higher up the breast, and instead of running up towards the chest in a point is distributed right across to the flanks. Obs. No bird in Ceylon is so puzzling as the present, and there is none to which I have given so much attention with a view to arriving at a satisfactory determination as to whether there are two species in the island or only one. T cannot come to any other conclusion than that there is but one, the opposite types of which are certainly 35 394 BUCHANGA LEUCOPYGIALIS. somewhat distinct from one another, but which grade into each other in such a manner as to forbid their being rightly considered as distinct species ; and I will leave it to others who like to take the matter up for investigation to prove whether my conclusions are erroneous or not. I see no reason why, in writing of birds from the north of Ceylon, future collectors should not style them B. isularis, inasmuch as these birds form a race of themselves. A perusal of the above-mentioned localities will show that the pale birds inhabit the dry portions of the island, grading into the dark race on a line drawn from Chilaw across the southern part of the N.W. Province, and thence over to the Badulla country and down into the Park districts. Mr. Boate’s specimens in the British Museum came from ‘“ between Kandy and Nuwara Elliya,” which I take to be the Rambodde or Pusselawa districts ; they are neither strictly leucopygtalis nor insularis, but resemble Deltota and N.W.-Province birds, which are interme- diate, whereas examples from the dry district of Uva are the same as those from Trincomalie. The dark form from the South-west and Western Provinces is extremely variable as regards the pale lower parts, the dusky hue of which depends, as I have shown, on abrasion of plumage; and in some instances, as exemplified in the Ambepussa bird, the offspring are paler than the parents. As the plumage becomes abraded, it darkens, and the whole appearance of the pale belly is changed. Moreover it seems probable that the light form in the north sometimes becomes dark ; for I have a specimen shot by Mr. Cotterill, C.E., at Hurullé tank, which is in highly abraded plumage it is true, but which has the lower breast and belly so very dusky that it could scarcely, when in new feather, have been a very light-coloured bird. Mr. Sharpe rightly discriminated the pale Ceylonese form of the present species from B. ca@rulescens, the Indian bird. The latter has a greyer hue on the green gloss of the upper surface, the tail is a rather pale brown, instead of a dark blackish brown, and the throat and chest are dull ashy blackish, without any green gloss on the latter. These distinctions are especially noticeable in northern birds, from Nepal, Kattiawar, and Behar; but from further south I have examples which are darker on the chest, but of course not black, glossed with green, as in Ceylonese. South- Indian birds may perhaps be very close to ours ; but I regret to say 1 have not seen any from that region. It is not improbable that an almost unbroken sequence from the Himalayan to the Ceylonese type could be got together, proving that there is but one species of this Drongo, divisible into local races, the darkest of which would be B. lewopygialis of Blyth from South Ceylon. Examples of B. cerulescens which I have measured vary from 4°9 to 5:1 inches in the wing. Layard’s specimens from Pt. Pedro evidently belonged to the usual pale-bellied bird found in the north of Ceylon, which were not discriminated by Blyth, at the time they were sent to him, as distinct from the Indian birds. Distribution —The dark race of this Drongo inhabits the South-western District, the Western Province, and the adjacent slopes of the Kandyan hills, perhaps as far eastward as the valleys in Pusselawa and Kotmalie ; while, turning to the south again, we find it spreading into the country lying between Badulla and Hamban- tota, and inhabiting the dividing valley which is continuous with the Saffragam division. It is generally diffused through the Western Province, being numerous in the Korales surrounding Colombo and along the sea-board generally. In large forest-tracts like those on the Pasdun and Kukkul Korales it is scarce, but even there it will be found in the open country formed by isolated tracts of cultivation. A short distance inland from Colombo it is a very common bird, and is one of the most familiar species to those who enjoy the usual evening drive round the outskirts of the ‘cinnamon-gardens.” It is equally well known in the Galle and Matara districts. In the Seven Korales, where the country is open in many places, it is tolerably numerous, becoming scarcer (in the light form) in the forests as we proceed north. In this part of the island it is not nearly so plentiful as its dark relative is in the south; but the heavy nature of the jungle probably tends much to its concealment ; and the spots in which I have chiefly observed it were the outskirts of forest, clumps of jungle in grassy wastes, or the borders of village tanks. Layard seems only to have obtained it at Pt. Pedro, and regarded it as a visitor, an opinion which its scarceness on the peninsula naturally occasioned. It extends down the eastern side of the island to the country between Batticaloa and the Uva ranges, in which it is also found to an elevation of about 4500 feet. On the eastern side of the Badulla valley I frequently observed it on the estates between the capital of Uva and Lunugalla; but I did not see it on the Fort-MacDonald patnas, although I believe it is found in that tract of country. Habits —The “ King-Crow,” one of the best-known Ceylonese birds to European residents in the island, frequents native compounds, openly wooded land, the borders of paddy-fields and tanks, the outskirts of jungle, or the vicinity of grassy forest-glades ; and in the coffee-districts it may usually be seen seated on stumps or BUCHANGA LEUCOPYGIALIS. 395 perched on the branches of dead trees left standing among the luxuriant sweeps of Ceylon’s staple plant. To the admirer of bird life it must always be an interesting species, as its lively manners, familiar habits, and bold onslaughts on its winged prey make it an unfailing subject of observation. Its diet is entirely insectivorous, consisting chiefly of beetles, bugs (Hemiptera) , termites, and such like, which it catches on the wing, returning again to its perch, on which I have observed it striking its prey before swallowing it. It is occasionally, when there is an abundance of food about, a sociable species, as many as three or four collecting on one tree and carrying on a vigorous warfare on the surrounding insect-world. It is abroad at daybreak, and retires very late at night to roost, appearing to be busy throughout the whole day, and never to be tired of uttering its cheerful whistle. One or more may often be seen chasing an unoffending Crow to a great height in the air; and though their attacks must be comparatively feeble, I have observed that they have the capability of considerably disconcerting their powerful enemy ; it is from this singular habit that these and other Drongos have acquired the name of King-Crow. The ordinary note of the dark race is a whistling cry, accompanied by a quick jerk of the tail, a movement which the bird is constantly performing ; but in the breeding-season the male has a weak twittering song, somewhat resembling that of the Common Swallow. TI have listened to this in the north- country birds ; but the ordinary note of the latter always seemed to me to be less powerful than that of the Western-Province form. This species and the Long-tailed Drongo have an inveterate hatred of Owls, and never fail to collect all the small birds in the vicinity when they discover one of these nocturnal offenders, chasing it through the woods until it escapes into some thicket which baffles the pursuit of its persecutors. Nidification—The breeding-season of this Drongo is from March until May; and the nest is almost invariably built at the horizontal fork of the branch of a large tree, at a considerable height from the ground, sometimes as much as 40 feet. It is a shallow cup, measuring about 2} inches in diameter by 1 in depth, and is compactly put together, well finished round the top, but sometimes rather loose on the exterior, which is composed of fine grass-stalks and bark-fibres, the lining being of fine grass or tendrils of creepers. The number of eggs varies from two to four, three being the most common. They vary much in shape, and also in the depth of their ground tint ; some are regular ovals, others are stumpy at the small end, while now and then very spherical eggs are laid. They are either reddish white, “ fleshy,” or pure white, in some cases marked with small and large blotches of faded red, confluent at the obtuse end, and openly dispersed over the rest of the surface, overlying blots of faint lilac-grey ; others have a conspicuous zone round the large end, with a few scanty blotches of light red and bluish grey on the remainder ; in others, again, the markings are confined to a few very large roundish blotches of the above colours at one end, or, again, several still larger clouds of brick- red at the obtuse end, with a few blotches of the same at the other. Dimensions from 1:0 to 0°86 inch in length, by 0:72 to 0°68 in breadth. I once observed a pair in the north of Ceylon very cleverly forming their nest on a horizontal fork by first constructing the side furthest from the angle, thus forming an arch, which was then joined to the fork by the formation of the bottom of the structure. The parent birds in this species display great courage, vigorously swooping down on any intruder who may threaten to molest their young, The figure of the southern bird in the Plate (fig. 1) accompanying this article is that of a female from Heneratgoda, that of the northern bird (fig. 2) is of a female shot near Trincomalie. Genus DISSEMURUS. Bill stout, the culmen more acutely keeled than in Buchanga, as also higher at the base ; forehead furnished with a tuft of frontal plumes, the anterior ones projecting forwards, and the posterior more or less curved back over the forehead. Wings with the 4th and 5th quills the longest, and the 3rd shorter than the 6th. ‘Tail with the outer feathers prolonged more or less, in some species with the web complete and slightly upturned, in others with the shaft denuded of the webs to within a short distance of the tip. Of large size. Plumage highly glossed above and below; the feathers of the hind neck “ hackled.” DISSEMURUS LOPHORHINUS. (THE CEYLONESE CRESTED DRONGO.) (Peculiar to Ceylon.) « Dicrurus lophorhinus, Vieill. N. Dict. d’Hist. Nat. ix. p. 587 (1817); Gray, Hand-l. B. i. p. 285 (1869). Dicrurus edolitformis, Blyth, J. A. 8S. B. 1847, xvi. p. 297 (1847) ; id. Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 202 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 124 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 129; Blyth, Ibis, 1867, p. 305; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 17. Dicrurus lophorhinus, Gray, Hand-l. B. i. p. 285. Dissemurus lophorhinus, Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 439. Dissemuroides edoliiformis, Sharpe, Cat. Birds, iii. p. 256 (1877); Tweeddale, Ibis, 1878, p. 78. Le Drongup, Levaill. Ois. d’Afr. pl. 173. Jungle King-Crow, im Ceylon. Kowda, Sinhalese ; Kaputa-baya, Sinhalese in Southern Province. Niger, chalybeo-viridi nitens, cauda valdé forficata, rectricibus nigris chalybeo-viridi marginatis, rectrice extima longiore et ad apicem paullo recurvata: crista frontali densa, setis nasalibus longis anticé directis et plumis criste posticis paullo recurvatis : subtis niger, chalybeo nitens, plumis prepectoralibus chalybeis vix lanceolatis : rostro et pedibus nigris : iride brunnescenti-rubra, Adult male. Wength 13-4 to 141 inches ; wing 5:6 to 6-0; tail—outer feathers 7-2 to 7:6, central feathers 2-3 to 2°5 shorter; tarsus 1:0 to 1°] ; mid toe 0°75, claw (straight) 0°3; hind toe 0°5, claw (straight) 0-4; bill to gape 1:35 to 1-4; limit of the length of frontal feathers about 0-5. Adult female. Somewhat smaller than the male. Length 13-25 inches; wing 5:0 to 5:6; tail 7-0. In this species the tail assumes a constant character, and does not vary at all. It is shaped as in the genus Buchanga ; the web is the same width throughout, broad and flat, the outer portion only slightly upraised, but not sufliciently to be called curved. The anterior frontal plumes are directed forward, and the posterior ones are erect, but haye no tendency to curve back oyer the forehead as in D. paradiseus. Tris dull brownish red or dark yellowish red; bill, legs, and feet black. Plumage black, highly glossed with a metallic lustre, which on the head, hind neck, throat, and chest is of a steel-blue tinge, and on the back, wing-coverts, and outer webs of the tail-feathers dark green ; quills black, the outer webs glossed ; bases of the feathers at the sides of the rump greyish, generally showing on the surface of the plumage ; flanks and abdomen brownish black, scarcely glossed; the under tail-coverts glossed at the tips; the frontal plumes in fine specimens reach to within 0-4 of the tip of the culmen; the feathers of the hind neck are pointed and to some extent elongated. ala JS. KI RHIN HOF! LOP US WIRE fy i, SSEMURUS PARADISEU (Abnormal Form) y i D DISSEMURUS LOPHORHINUS. 397 Young. Iris brown, gradually becoming reddish with age. The nestling is black, with but little of the metallic sheen ; the outer tail-feathers not much elongated. Immature birds have the under tail- and under wing-coverts tipped white; the flanks pervaded with grey, and in some examples the lower parts faintly edged with white; the under wing-coverts retain their white markings after they have disappeared from the under tail-coverts, few specimens being found without a few white terminal spots on the under wing. In this feature the genus Dissemurus is an exact contrast to Buchanga, Obs. I have placed this species in the genus Dissemurus, from which it was removed by Mr. Sharpe, because the crest resembles that of some of the local races of the next bird, and it does not seem advisable to establish a genus for it simply because the outer tail-feathers are different from typical Dissemurus. The bird for which Mr. Hume established his genus Dissemuroides has a “ tuft of hair-like feathers on the forehead, springing from each side of the base of the culmen,” and therefore differs materially from the present species. Concerning the specific name of lophorhinus used by Vieillot, I have perused carefully Levaillant’s description of the Drongup in his ‘ Oiseaux d'Afrique, and likewise Vieillot’s of the species to which he gave the Latin name in question; and I think that the latter was really referring to the Drongup. Levaillant says that his bird “est de la taille de notre draine, vulgairement nommée hautegrive;” and Vieillot uses words of similar meaning when he writes “a la taille de la grive-draine.” The plate of the Drongup is, it is true, as far as the head is concerned, a very grotesque representation of our bird; but it is perhaps as faithful as one could expect of any drawing in the ‘ Oiseaux d'Afrique.’ I may add that Mr. Sharpe now agrees with this view of the question, although he was of opinion, at the time he wrote on this species (Cat. Birds, iii.), that Vieillot’s description was that of a Madagascar bird, D. forficatus. Distribution.—The stronghold of this fine Drongo consists of the Western Province and the south-west corner of the island, including the southern hill-ranges, throughout which it is plentifully diffused. Its northerly limit is the Kurunegala district, extending along the base of the Matale hills and including the southern portion of the Seven Korales. It is found in all the forests and heavy jungles of the Western Province, and is common in the Ikkadde-Barawe forest and in the outlying jungles between there and Kotte. From Ambepussa southwards through Ratnapura to the Pasdun and Kukkul Korales it is everywhere found in heavy forest, and ascends the Ambegamoa Peak and Maskeliya jungles to a considerable altitude. It is located in portions of the interior-of the Kandyan Province, as Dr. Holden, formerly resident in Deltota, has procured it in Hewahette at 3000 feet elevation. It does not appear to extend eastward beyond the slopes of the southern ranges, for I did not meet with it in the forest-tract at the base of the Haputale hills, in which district the racket-tailed species is so common. It is very abundant in the forests on the south bank of the Gindurah, appearing to thrive more prosperously in these excessively humid jungles than in those further up the west coast. I have seen what I am nearly sure to be this species in the Friars-Hood forests; but L cannot speak with certainty, as the specimen I allude to may have been an immature Racket-tailed Drongo. Nowhere else in the Eastern Province have I met with any thing but this latter species, which likewise monopolizes the whole of the northern forests beyond Dambulla. Habits—Damp forests and even their most gloomy recesses are frequented by this fine bird. While tramping through the humid glens of the southern jungles, when not a sound is heard but the soughing of the wind in the lofty trees around him, the naturalist is suddenly startled by the sudden outburst of the lively notes with which the Crested Drongo is wont to indulge in on being disturbed in its native haunts. Its vocal powers are remarkable and are fully brought out in the breeding-season, when the males give out a pleasing warble for the edification of their consorts; this is varied by a number of loud whistlings and calls, the result of the bird’s powers of mimicry, which are quite equal to those of the next species. I have heard it imitate cleverly the ery of the Serpent-Eagle and the call of the Koel, and often listened to what were evidently attempts to mock other smaller inhabitants of the woods. It usually associates in pairs, and perches across the upper branches of lofty trees, whence it makes many a sudden dive upon passing beetles and the many larger members of the insect kingdom which affect the Ceylon forests. Its flight is powerful and swift, and it is capable of darting through thick foliage with great ease: on seizing an insect in the air it returns with it, or carries it to another perch and beats it against the branches before devouring it. I have on several occasions in Saffragam found three or four pairs of these birds in scattered company, and once in 398 DISSEMURUS LOPHORHINUS. the Opaté hills came on a flock which seemed to be moving from one part of the forest to another ; they were making their way along from tree to tree beneath a vast precipice, and uttering a loud whistle, which one bird took up from the other as they disappeared from my gaze through the dense foliage. It has an inveterate dislike of Owls, particularly the ‘ Devil-bird,’ which is a fellow inhabitant of the gloomy wilds ; and wheneyer it espies one of these birds which has neglected to seek a proper place of concealment, it attacks it with loud cries, and is soon joined by a host of small birds (Bulbuls, &e.), which soon drive the luckless Ulama to a distant part of the forest. Nidification.—This species breeds in the south of Ceylon in the beginning of April. I have seen the young just able to fly in the Opaté forests at the end of this month, but I have not succeeded in getting any information concerning its nest or eggs. The figure in the Plate accompanying this article is that of a very large male example shot in the Kottowe forest, haying an exceptionally fine tail. DISSEMURUS PARADISEUS. (THE RACKET-TAILED DRONGO,) Cuculus paradiseus, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 172 (1766). Edolius malabaricus, Layard & Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. Ceylon B. App. p. 58 (1853) ; Jerdon (in pt.), B. of Ind. i. p. 487 (1862). Edolius paradiseus, Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 128. Dissemurus malabaricus, Holdsw. P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 459; Legge, Ibis, 1875, p. 288. Dissemurus ceylonensis, Sharpe, Cat. B. ili. p. 264 (1877); Tweeddale, Ibis, 1878, p. 82. Dissemurus paradiseus, Hume, Str. Feath. 1878, p. 222. Le Coucou vert hupé de Siam, Brisson ; Paradise Cuckoo, Lath.; The Paradise Drongo; The Long-tailed King-Crow, Europeans in Ceylon. bhimraj, Hind., lit. “ King of the Bees.” Maha-kawuda, Sinhalese ; Erattu valem kuruvi, lit. “ Double-tailed bird,” Tamils in North of Ceylon. Adult male. Length 17:0 to 19-0 inches, according to length of tail; wing 5:8 to 6-2; tail 11-0 to 12:5 to tip of outer feather, the penultimate, in one of the latter measurement, 6°8 shorter; racket never exceeding 2°75 ; tarsus 0°9 to 1:0; mid toe 0°8, its claw (straight) 0°35; bill to gape 1°45. Female. Length 15:0 to 16-0 inches; wing 5°6 to 6:1; tail 10-0 to 11-0 to tip of outer tail-feather, which projects not more than 5°5, and in some only 4:0, beyond the penultimate. The above measurements are taken from an extensive series shot, during a period extending over five years, in the north and south of the island; and I have never met with an example with a longer racket tail-feather than 12-5 inches, extending 6-8 beyond the adjacent or penultimate feather, nor ever obtained one in which, when the bird was fully adult and the shaft quite bare, the racket exceeded 2°75 inches in length. In males, the largest of the sexes, the racket-feather seldom reaches 12 inches, and in females seldom exceeds 10°5; the bare portion of the shaft varies from 3-0 to 4°75 inches in length. Tris varying from brownish red to deep red, mature, but not aged, birds having it of the former hue; bill, legs, and feet black. Plumage deep black, highly glossed on the head, back, rump, wing-coverts, throat, and chest with dark metallic green ; on the breast and lower parts the metallic sheen is of a bluer cast than that of the upper surface ; a large frontal crest, the anterior feathers of which are short, very narrow and scantily webbed, and stand erect, while the posterior plumes attain a length, in the finest and oldest specimens, of 1:0 to 1-2 mch and recurve over the forehead touching the crown; feathers of the sides and back of neck ‘ hackled”; bases of the rump and upper tail-coverts and lower flank-feathers greyish ; abdomen and under tail-coverts glossless, a few white terminal spots on the under wing-coverts. The “racket ” turns up perpendicular to the horizontal plane of the tail and curves slightly inwards. Young (nestling). Iris brown; bill black; legs and feet bluish black. Just after quitting the nest (July) the crest is only slightly developed, the posterior feathers scarcely recurved at all and yery short ; the plumes of the head and hind neck are short and rounded at the tips; back and tail glossed with metallic green; the lateral rectrices are usually about 3 inches longer than the adjacent pair and almost fully webbed, there being a slight indentation, or hollow so to speak, opposite the end of the penultimate ; beneath blackish brown ; under tail-coverts fluffy and without any terminal white spots; under wing-coyerts spotted with white. In the next stage (January following), probably acquired by moult in September, the crest is tolerably developed, the posterior feathers lengthened and recurved, but rather open-webbed, the racket-feathers are denuded for about 2 inches of most of the inner web, a border next the shaft of about 0°05 inch remaining, the racket about 3-0 in length, and the whole projecting about 42 to 5-0 inches beyond the penultimate; the feathers of the hind neck 400 DISSEMURUS PARADISEUS. are more lengthened than before and pointed at the tips; under tail-coverts and under wing-coverts both with white terminal spots. At each succeeding stage the shafts of the racket-feathers become more denuded and the crest lengthens; the spots on the lower tail-coverts finally disappear, but one or two always remain on the under wing-coverts. Obs. The Ceylonese Racket-tailed Drongo constitutes a race in which the racket-feathers are almost constantly smaller than those from any of the localities in the wide range of this species. It may, I think, safely be laid down as a rule that the mawvimum length of these feathers in our adult birds is about equal to the minimum in the same from Malabar, Burmah, Tenasserim, and Siam. ‘This, at least, is the result of an examination of all the material at my disposal in England. In adult examples in the British Museum from Travancore, Malabar, Moalmaza, and Shenogah, the length by which the racket-feathers exceed the penultimate varies from 7-0 to 9:0; and I notice that Mr. Hume gives the measurement of the entire feather of a Travancore specimen collected by Mr. Bourdillon at 18°75 inches. The racket in these birds is of different shape from the Ceylonese ; it is of greater length in the first place, and again longer in proportion to the breadth of the web; asa rule, likewise, the basal part of the web slopes off to the shaft beyond the tip of the penultimate. The wings also attain a greater length than in the island forms, 6°3, 6:4, 6°6 inches being some of the measurements recorded by Mr. Hume in his exhaustive article contained in the ‘ Birds of Tenasserim.’ In fully adult specimens from South India, the crest resembles that of our old birds; but in the different stages of immaturity I observe that it bears a different character. The crest in the young bird is less developed: an example in the British Museum with the racket well formed, and a bare shaft of 2 inches in length, has no more crest than a Ceylonese D. lophorhinus ; in another bird from Travancore the anterior portion of the crest is bushy and erect ; in another, still older, from Moalmaza, the whole crest projects forward in a long tuft (this is not from the making-up of the skin), the posterior portion of which stands up toa height of 0°9 inch above the culmen, In all immature birds that I have examined, the prevailing characteristic is that the anterior feathers of the crest are longer than the posterior ones. I find, on examination of the Tenasserim examples in the British Museum, and in the collection lately sent home by Mr. Hume, that the length of the racket-feathers averages the same as in the South-Indian, exceeding the penul- timate from 7:0 to 9°5 inches; the racket is likewise of the same character, recurving more* inwards than in our bird. The Siamese birds vary much in length of the racket-feather. One inthe British Museum exceeds the penultimate by nearly 10 inches ; another, however, in the Swinhoe collection, approaches nearest of all that I have examined to the Ceylonese form. Its measurements are :—wing 6-1 inches ; outer tail-feather 12-75, exceeding the penultimate by 6°9 ; racket 3-0; bill to gape 1°3 (shorter than Ceylonese examples as a rule); crest precisely the same. It is on the evidence of this specimen, coming from the opposite extreme of this bird’s wide range, coupled with the fact of the species being so variable, that I do not keep the Ceylonese form distinct as a sub- species under Mr. Sharpe’s title ceylonensis. More extended observations than I have been able to make, and a greater series of examples, are both necessary in order to prove whether the extreme limit of the length of the racket-feather and the size of the racket itself as given above are correct. [n the north of the island there are sometimes to be found very singular and abnormal examples of this bird with the crest tolerably well developed and recurving over the forehead, but with the outer tail-feather intermediate between that of D. lophorhinus and a mere nestling D. paradiseus. I obtained a specimen in the depths of the forest between Kanthelai and Hurullé tanks, and another in some magnificent timber-jungle at Umeragolla, on the Dambulla and Kurunegala Road ; a third exists in the Layard collection at Poole. The web is entire, recurving quite inwards at the tip, whereas that of a young nestling even, of the ordinary form, has a recess or gap,as shown in the woodeut, p. 402 ; furthermore, one of the specimens is quite adult, having no spots on the under tail-coverts. Having met with but these examples, I feel inclined to look upon them as an abnormal form of D. paradiseus. [f, however, additional specimens come to hand, eventually it may prove to be a distinct species; and for it I would then propose the name of D. intermedius. Distribution.—This showy bird is chiefly an inhabitant of the dry region of Ceylon, from the Vanni to Puttalam on the west side, extending through all the eastern portion of the island and flat jungle-clad country between Haputale and the south-east coast up to the slopes of the Morowak-Korale ranges. In the latter region, particularly in forest on the banks of rivers, and in most of the northern forests, it is very numerous, approaching * This is, of course, when the bare portion of the shaft near the racket is pressed down into a horizontal position, which always gives the racket the normal twist, provided it be not injured. DISSEMURUS PARADISEUS. 401 close to the sea-coast in places where the jungle is heavy. I have found it on the Lunugalla pass up to 2000 fect, and it doubtless ranges to the same elevation on the entire eastern and northern slopes of the central zone. In the Western Province I never met with it; but in 1872 I obtained an example in the forest of Kottowe, near Galle, a remarkably isolated position, some 50 miles distant from the limits of its general range. It is therc- fore possible that it may still be found in some of the lower forests between that pot and Kurunegala, thus extending its range throughout all the low country. I have no certain evidence of its occurrence in the higher jungles of the coffee-districts ; but it may possibly ascend the Haputale ranges to a considerable altitude in the dry season, and in the neighbourhood of Kandy it has been procured by Mr. Whyte’s collectors. Layard procured it first at Anaradjapura, and wrote of it as being confined to the Vanni; it was also in the northern forests that Mr. Holdsworth met with it. On the continent this fine bird ranges through India* into Burmah and Tenasserim, and spreads east- wards through Siam, whence many specimens have found their way into European collections ; on going south through the peninsula of Malacca we lose it in its typical form, and find this region inhabited by the smaller race (D. platyurus). It has a peculiar range as far as the peninsula of India is concerned ; and this is defined by Mr. Hume as the “ whole of Southern India and the Western Ghats as far north as Kandeish ;” beyond this it is replaced by the large crested ally (D. malabaroides), again to appear in most of Burmah and Tenasserim. Jerdon says that it isfound in all jungles of the west coast, from Travancore up to Goa, especially in the Wynaad and other elevated districts. In the Travancore hills themselves, Mr. Bourdillon found it common, both at the foot of the hills and up.to 8000 feet elevation, and Mr. Fairbank observed it in the Palani lulls. In the Deccan it is, of course, wanting ; and in Chota Nagpur we find, in accordance with Mr. Hume’s outline above noticed, the larger crested race, while further west no racket-tailed Drongo is found at all. In Tenasserim, Messrs. Hume and Davison say that it is common alike on hills and plains, frequenting chiefly the forests, but occurring also in gardens and scrub-jungle. With regard to Siam, I am unable to give particulars of its docal distribution in that kingdom ; but I have seen specimens from Bangkok and other localities, and I have no doubt it has been met with in whatever forest-districts Huropeans have been able to collect. Habits —W herever the forest is luxuriant in the north and east of the island, this splendid bird delights to reign; he is a petty monarch among the numerous feathered denizens of the woods—now exercising his varied talents in closely mocking their notes, now dashing at some diligent Woodpecker who has ventured to “fix? himself'for a moment on a trunk too near the swarthy tyrant ; and while he thus amuses himself, he does not miss a chance of capturing a passing beetle or locust by the exercise of a few strokes of his powerful wings. It is consequently on the banks of the romantic forest-lined rivers, or the sylvan borders of the lonely village tanks, which are both features of the wilds of Ceylon, that the Racket-tailed Drongo is met with; or it may, with equal certainty, be found on the sides of the low hills, clothed with tall timber-trees, which every- where intersect the low-country jungles not far from the base of the mountain system. When seen flying about from limb to limb of the lofty monarchs of the forest, it gives one the impression of spending a very happy existence, displaying its long tail-feathers as it launches itself into the air and sweeps down with a graceful flight on its insect prey. When seated, it is constantly jerking up its tail, and jumping to and fro on its perch, while it calls to its companion, who is performing doubtless the like antics in some neighbouring tree. Its notes are wonderfully varied; and at one time or another I have heard it mock almost every bird in the forest. Mr. Parker writes me that its favourite note in the jungles near Uswewa is that of the Crested Kagle (Spizaetus ceylonensis). It has a metallic-sounding call, somewhat similar to that of the last species, which it utters in the early morning, usually from the top of a tall tree; and this is so different from its general notes that it is difficult to identify it with the bird, which is not easily caught sight of at the time. With regard to its antipathy for Woodpeckers, I may remark that I have not unfrequently seen it following about both species of our Red Woodpeckers, and darting at them while they were searching for food on the trunks of the trees. The imitative powers of this species are matter of comment with nearly every writer who has observed it in its native wilds. Mr. Bourdillon writes, ‘I have often been amused to hear it imitate the cry of the Harrier- * Although I consider that ultimately the Ceylon bird will probably stand as a distinct and small-tailed race or subspecies, 1 will here treat of its range as appertaining to the Indian form. 9 oF 402 DISSEMURUS PARADISEUS. “a a. Racket-feather of nestling D. paradiseus. d. Full-crested head of adult Ceylon D. paradiseus. 6. Racket-feather of adult abnormal form of e. Racket-feather of Ceylon D. paradiseus, D. paradiseus. maximum size. c. Head of adult abnormal form. jf. A small racket-feather of Malabar D. paradiseus. DISSEMURUS PARADISEUS. 405 Eagle, and see it make a sudden charge down on some smaller bird, either in sheer mischief, or to secure some insect which the latter has captured. I have also heard one imitate exactly the evening note of the Ground- Thrush (Brachyurus coronata). During the breeding-season they are very bold, and a pair think nothing of attacking and driving off from the neighbourhood of their nest the Harrier- or Black Kite-Eagle. I once had an adult bird brought to me which had been captured with limed twigs. Within a few hours of capture it would take cockroaches and other insect food from the hand, and soon got very tame.’ Mr. Davison, who remarks that its powers~ of imitation are perfectly marvellous, writes, “I have heard it take off Garrulax belangert so that I am sure the birds themselves would not have detected the imposture. ‘These Babbling Thrushes, by the way, always associate with other kindred species in large flocks, and hunt, straight on end, through the forest ; and you will invariably find two or more of the Drongos following or accompanying each such flock.” It is noteworthy that this bird always sweeps down from its perch at its prey; I never saw it fly up at it, although it generally mounts again with the impetus imparted by its first onset. Concerning the nidification of either the Ceylonese or Indian races of this species, I am, I regret to say, unable to give any information. As I have shot the young in nestling plumage in July, it is patent that the breeding-season is at the commencement of the S.W. monsoon rains. ‘he northern form of this Drongo, D. malabaroides, builds, according to Jerdon, who had the nest brought to him at Darjiling, ‘a large structure of twigs and roots.” Doubtless our bird has a similar habit, and its eggs are very probably three in number. The accompanying woodeuts are explanatory of the various points treated of in this article, and are carefully drawn to life-size. On the Plate accompanying the preceding article will be found a figure of the abnormal form of this species referred to above. As the subject is in the background, the full development of the crest, as it appears on the opposite page, cannot be shown in the drawing. PASSERES. Fam. MUSCICAPID. Bill straight, wide, depressed ; tip decurved and distinctly notched; gape furnished with bristles directed forwards. Wings more or less pointed, the Ist quill fairly developed. Tail variable. Legs and feet small and feeble. Tarsus shielded with smooth broad scales. Genus TERPSIPHONE*. Bill large, compressed suddenly near the tip; culmen well keeled; rictal bristles very long. Nostrils protected by a few rather long bristles, Wings pointed, the Ist quill about half the length of the 2nd; the 4th and 5th longest, and the 5rd shorter than the 6th. ‘Tail long, with the two central feathers greatly elongated in the adult males. ‘Tarsus longer than the middle toe, which is nearly equalled by the outer. * The generic term Verpsiphone, Gloger, has precedence of 7'chitrea, Lesson, by four years. ‘The older term Muscivora is restricted by Mr. Sharpe to New-World Flycatcbers—the Crested Tyrants. 1S) R2 TERPSIPHONE PARADISL (THE PARADISE FLYCATCHER.) Muscicapa paradist, Linn. Syst. Nat. i. p. 524 (e@ Briss.) ; Sykes, P. Z. $. 1852, p. 84; Jerdon, Ill. Ind. Orn. pl. 7 (1847); Gould, B. of Asia, pt. 5 (1853). Muscipeta castanea, 'Temm. PI. Col. iii. text to pl. 584. Tchitrea paradisi, Less. Traité, p. 386 (1831); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 203 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 123 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 126; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i. p. 183 (1854); Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p- 445 (1862) ; Holdsw. P. Z.S. 1872, p. 440; Hume, Nests and Eggs, i. p. 196 (1878); Ball, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 403; Hume, ibid. 1875, p. 102; Butler, ¢.¢. p. 466; Ball, ibid. 1877, p. 4109. Terpsiphone paradisi, Cab. Mus. Hein. i. p. 88 (1850); Sharpe, Cat. B. iv. p. 346 (1879). The Pyed Bird of Paradise, Edwards, Nat. Hist. Birds, ii. pl. 113; Paradise Flycatcher, Latham; Bird of Paradise, Europeans in Ceylon. Shah bulbul, Hind. (White Bird) ; Sultana bulbul, Hind. (Red Bird); Taklah, Hind., N.W. Provinces; Tonka pigli pitta, Tel. ; Wal-kondalati, Tam., lit. “* Long-tailed Bulbul.” Ginni hora (Red Bird), lit. “ Fire-thief,” Aadde hora (White Bird), lit. “* Rag- or Cotton-thief,” Sinhalese; Wal-kuruvi, Ceylonese Tamils; Ladram de fogo (Red Bird), Portuguese in Ceylon. Old male (with long tail). Length 17-75 1o 21:0 inches, according to the length of the tail, which, on the average, yaries from 13-0 to 15:0, but sometimes attains a length of 17-0; centre tail-feathers 9-0 to 13-0 longer than the adjacent pair; wing 3°7 to 3°8; tarsus 0°7; mid toe and claw 0-6; bill to gape 1:0 to 1-1. Old male (with short tail). Central tail-feathers, fully grown, exceeding the rest by only 0-5 inch. [ris dark brown ; eyelid cobalt-blue; bill fiue cobalt-blue; legs and feet paler blue than the bill; claws bluish brown. Mntire head and neck, with along coronal crest of lanceolate feathers, shining blue-black, which colour terminates in an abrupt edge round the throat and hind neck; rest of the body above and beneath, with the wing-coverts and tail, white; quills and primary-coverts black, with white edges, increasing in width towards the innermost secondaries, and not reaching to the tips of the outer primaries ; two innermost secondaries all white but a black shaft-streak ; edges of all but the centre tail-feathers, and the shafts of all except the terminal portion of the centre pair, black. In some specimens the shafts of the dorsal and wing-coyert feathers, and those of the plumes at the sides of the breast, are black. Adult male. At an age in which the male breeds, probably in the second year, the back, wings, upper tail-coverts, and tail are cinnamon-red ; the head and throat blue-black, as in the older bird; the chest, just beneath the black boundary, slate-grey, fading off into white on the lower breast and rest of the underparts ; under wing-coverts white, with the bases of the feathers cinnamon. Birds at this stage have, for the most part, long tails, the centre feathers varying from 9 to 11 inches in length beyond ihe remainder ; but some have these feathers only slightly elongated, as in the female noticed below. Adult female. Like the short-tailed males, with the same parts of the plumage red: wing 3:5 to 3°6 inches ; central tail-feathers 4°5 to 5:0. Young. Nestling, scarcely fledged (in National collection). Head and hind neck brownish, tinged with chestnut- reddish ; back, wings, rump, and tail paler chestnut than the adult; inner webs of quills brown ; fore neck and chest greyish, tinged with che-tnut, passing into fulyous on the flanks; remainder of under surface whitish, blending into the above-named colours. TERPSIPHONE PARADISI. 408 When fully fledged the back, wings, and tail are chestnut-red, the inner webs of the quills dusky, the head, crest, and hind neck glossy black, and the chin and throat dark iron-grey, almost black on the chin, and blending into the paler grey of the chest and breast, which changes into greyish white on the lower parts. The female has the throat paler than the male. Change of plumage. At a certain age, and at a season of the year varying in Ceylon from November until May, the male birds change by an alteration in the colour of the feathers from chestnut-red to white. The red colour on the quills, scapulars, and rectrices changes or fades into white, and the shaft-streaks of black simultaneously appear. The scapulars and primaries usually change first, and then the tail-feathers; and of the body-feathers, I have generally noticed that the upper tail-coverts are the first to fade. While this is going on (and, in fact, from what I have been able to gather from all the specimens that I have examined, almost before any of the wpper-surface feathers have changed) the grey breast just beneath the black throat turns white. I have a short-tailed example with a pure white chest and only one white feather (in the scapulars) on the upper surface. There are a series of long-tailed chestnut examples in the national collection with various white feathers among the primaries secondaries, scapulars, and rectrices, and all with chests pure white. Obs. Mr. Sharpe remarks, in his Catalogue, that South-Indian and Ceylonese red birds have the chest greyish, and those from Northern India white. I observe, however, that these white-chested examples are all in a state of change on the upper surface to the white plumage; and at this period the chest is always white in Ceylon birds, inasmuch as it seems to be the first part to change. The nearest ally to this species is 7’. affinis, which inhabits Burmah, Malacca, and portions of the Malayan archipelago. It is distinguished from 7. paradisi by having the feathers of the crest all of the same length, giving it a broad and “bushy” appearance, and also by the white bird having the feathers of the hind neck and back with black shafts, and the adjacent edges of the web grey, which imparts a streaky appearance to the upper surface. Red birds which I have examined in the national collection have nearly all the under surface dark iron-grey, the abdomen and under tail-coverts only being white. Young birds have the back yellowish chestnut, changing into a darker hue on the rump, and the under surface yellowish or fulvous grey. The measurements of a red bird from Burmah are—wing 3°5 inches, tail 13-5 ; a white example (Sumatra)—wing 3°5, tail 10-5 ; another (Flores) — wing 3°55, tail 13-4. Distribution —TVhe Paradise Flycatcher is a partial migrant to Ceylon, and its movements are perhaps the most singular and the most difficult to study of any Ceylonese bird. The adults, in red and white plumage, arrive in the island about the last week in October, spreading over the whole country, and not finally leaving again until the latter end of May. In the damp districts on the western side lying between Negombo and Tangalla it remains no longer than March. An inland movement then takes place north and east, many birds, however, at the same time (according to my observations) quitting the island entirely. Others remain in tlic last-named quarters to breed, and do not leave until the end of May, or even the first week in June. By this time the whole of the white birds have disappeared, and I believe also the adult red ones. I have never seen a long-tailed red bird between the months of May and October, nor can I find any one who is certain of the contrary. Should I be correct, therefore, in this hypothesis, the fact of a total migration of the adults is established. The young birds remain in the island, inhabiting the northern half and the eastern side as far as Hambantota ; and on the arrival of the adults in the following season many of these yearlings follow them into the west. It appears, however, probable that with the general inflow in October many yearling birds arrive from abroad, as the numbers to be met with in all parts of the low country preclude the possibility of their all being recruited from inland-bred birds. Here, then, we have the extraordinary fact of the disappear- ance of all old birds in the island, whereas their progeny are left behind to await their return in the followmg season, and likewise the arrival, with these latter, of many more young from the mainland, who partake in the general stream of migration throughout the country. As regards the mountainous districts of the island, Dumbara and other parts of corresponding altitude in the Kandyan Province, and also portions of the southerm ranges, are visited for the same period as the west coast, the birds quitting the hills in March. Iam not aware of its occurrence anywhere above an altitude of 2000 feet, at which Mr. Bligh has seen it in the Kandy district. It inhabits the northern and eastern portions of the island in greater numbers than the west coast, there appearing to be an appreciable diminution of the species south of the Maha-Oya, north of which, 406 TERPSIPHONE PARADISI. in the Kurunegala district, it is extremely abundant. As regards the young birds during the south-west monsoon, I have found them more abundant in the low-lying forests between Haputale and the sea than anywhere else. I would add here that in my conclusions concerning the migration of the old birds J am supported by my friend and correspondent, Mr. Parker, who has paid particular attention to the subject during his residence at Madewatchiya, where the species was very numerous and bred in April and May. Mr. Holdsworth observed many immature birds at Aripu during the south-west monsoon; but I am not aware that he met with any adult red birds. As regards the earlier migration of the adults, and the arrival with them of many young birds, it can be explained on the assumption that most birds leave the island to breed on the mainland, bringing their young back with them, while a few that have paired as early as April are constrained to remain behind for a period and breed in the island, departing soon afterwards without their young. On the continent the Paradise Flycatcher is found from the extreme south of the peninsula to the Hima- layas. ‘To the westward it extends to the province of Guzerat and the vicinity of Kattiawar; it is, says Capt. Butler, not uncommon at Mount Aboo, and it likewise occurs at Sambhur and Ajmere. Mr. Brooks has observed it in the valley of the Bhagirati, even above Mussoori, but it does not seem to ascend the Himalayas to any considerable altitude. In Travancore, Mr. Bourdillon writes that it ascends the hills in March and \pril when the weather is hot ; but in the Palanis Mr. Fairbank only observed it at the base of the ranges. Messrs. Davidson and Wender say that it is “freely scattered all over the Deccan,” and they believe that it breeds at Satara. Mr. Ball writes that it is a remarkable fact that it does not visit the Chota-Nagpur and Sambalpur jungles until March and April. Tn 1875 he observed no birds until the latter month, and saw them after that daily during the month of May, “ while marching through the Orissa tributary mehals.” It is worthy of remark that this bird has been ealled the Paradise-bird from the earliest times. Edwards, who figured it as the “ Black-and-white crested Bird of Paradise,” says that it had been described formerly by Mr. Petever in Ray’s ‘ Synopsis Methodica Avium,’ published in the 17th century, and he likewise speaks of liaving seen three skins of it im London. Habits. —This remarkable bird is very fond of the neighbourhood of water, and is always found in shady trees surrounding tanks, swamps, and wet paddy-fields, or bordering rivers and streams in the forests. The fine bamboos on the western and southern rivers are a favourite resort. It is, however, not confined to aqueous spots, but is found in jungle of all descriptions and in the densest forests. It is a very tame bird, exhibiting not the slightest fear of man, and often takes up its abode in jack, bread-fruit, and other cultivated trees adjacent to native cottages, about which it darts, whisking its long tail to and fro, and when in the white plumage forms a conspicuous and beautiful object as contrasted to the surrounding dark-green foliage. It is very lively m the evenings before roosting, uttering its harsh note, fehreet, and darting actively on passing insects. It is capable of much longer flights than most Flycatchers, frequently compassing the distance across some wide paddy-field with ease and celerity. Its peculiar appearance when thus flying, with its long tail extended like a piece of rag or cotton, has acquired for it the curious native appellations by which it is known. It does not return to its perch after taking its prey, but darts off to another, and so moves about more than is usual with other Flycatchers. I have once or twice disturbed it from the ground, which proves that its habits a remarkable feature in a Flycatcher. Mr. Ball has seen it alight on the ground, and writes that Captain Gray and Mr. Levin confirm his statement that it does do so; the former are to a shght extent terrestrial mentions three of the chestnut birds hopping round his chair, and the latter saw young birds settling on the ground in his garden and hopping about after insects. Nidification —Mr. Parker writes me that the Paradise Flycatcher breeds about Madewatchiya in April and May. Layard mentions having found a nest at Tangalla, in the fork of a satin-wood tree, and that the “a neat well-built cup-shaped structure, composed externally of mosses and lichens, and lined with hair and wool.” nest was Mr. Hume writes that ‘ the nest is commonly a delicate little cup, never very deep, often rather shallow, composed, according to locality, of moss, moss-roots, vegetable fibres, and fine grass, which latter generally constitutes the greater portion of the framework, bound round exteriorly with cobwebs, in which little silky- TERPSIPHONE PARADISL. 407 white cocoons are often intermixed! The exterior depth is about 2 inches, and the cavity varies in diameter from 2:0 to 2°75, and in depth from 1:0 to 1-6. There is not uncommonly a good deal of horsehair woven in the exterior surface of the cavity, and this, with the fine grass, forms a sort of lining.” ‘The structure is usually placed on a horizontal branch, often where three or four twigs spring from it, which, Captain Hutton remarks, are incorporated into its sides, the materials entirely enveloping them. It is sometimes fixed to the branch by means of grass and spiders’ webs. In Cashmere Dr. Henderson found the nests of these birds im apple- and mulberry-trees, placed high up in small branches, and made of fine hair-like strips of bark. The number of eggs usually laid is four; the ground-colour is pinkish white or salmon-pink, more or less thickly speckled, chiefly at the large end, with rather bright brownish-red spots. They average in size 0°81 by 0°6 inch. Genus HYPOTHYMIS. Bill very broad and not compressed until near the tip; upper mandible fiattened, and the lower inflated beneath ; rictal bristles long and directed forward. Wings with the 5th quill the longest, the 2nd shorter than the secondaries, and the 3rd and 7th subequal. ‘Tail equal to the wing, even at the tip. Legs and feet slender; the tarsus much longer than the middle toe, pro- tected with well-developed scute ; outer toe longer than the inner ; claws well curved. HYPOTHYMIS CEYLONENSIS. (THE CEYLONESE AZURE FLYCATCHER) (Peculiar to Ceylon.) Myiagra caerulea (Vieill.), Layard & Kelaart, Prodromus, App. p. 58 (1853); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 126. Myiagra azurea (Bodd.), Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 450 (1862), in pt.; Legge, J. A. S. (Ceylon B.) 1870-71, p. 36; Holdsworth, P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 440; Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 18, et 1875, p. 275. Hypothymis ceylonensis, Sharpe, Cat. B. iv. p. 277 (1879). The Blue Flycatcher, Europeans in Ceylon. Marawa, Sinhalese (applied to small Flycatchers). Similis H. azure, sed macula nuchali nigra parvissima et fascia nigra jugulari nulla distinguerda. Adult male and female. Length 6:0 to 6-2 inches; wing 2°6 to 2°8; tail 2°75; tarsus 0-6; mid toe and claw 0:5; bill to gape 0°6 to 0°7. Male. Tris dark brown ; bill dull cobalt-blue ; legs and feet dusky blue or bluish plumbeous. llead, neck, back, wing-coverts, throat, and chest azure-blue, the head and throat of a brighter though paler hue than the rest ; a spot above the nostril and a small patch on the nape velvety black ; wings brown, edged with the hue of the back ; tail the same, the lateral feathers tipped pale; breast, abdomen, and under tail-coverts white ; thighs bluish; under wing-coverts bluish, edged and tipped with white. Ivmale. Bill duller blue than male; legs and feet paler. Head, hind neck, and throat carulean blue, less brilliant than the male, and shading on the chest and back into brownish ashy, the feathers margined there with dull blue; wings and tail brown, edged with bluish; lower underparts as in male. The black nuchal patch wanting. Voung. In first plumage the iris is brown; bill blackish, the tip of the under mandible hghtish; tarsi bluish, feet dusky. ‘The male has the head and throat dull blue; chest bluish grey; back and wings glossy brown, the tertials with a fulyous tinge ; tail dark brown, obscurely washed with bluish; thighs dark grey. Nuchal patch and throat- stripe wanting. Obs. Mar. Sharpe has separated the Ceylon Azure Flycatcher from its Indian relative (H. azwrea) on account of the absence of the black throat-bar and its much smaller nape-patch. The specimens he had to assist him in this deter- mination were mine, and, so far as my small series proves, the insular bird certainly differs from the continental. I have minutely examined the chest-feathers of several males, and can find no trace whatever of any black tippings, although, singularly enough, their undersides are blackish brown, and, further, the tips of the feathers, where the black bar should be, form a regular, slightly upturned, transverse line, and contrast in their brighter blue with the slightly duller tint of the underlying ones, so that at first sight it would seem as ifa fine dark line really did exist. Specimens of //. azwrea which I have examined from various parts of India, China, Formosa, Sumatra, Borneo, &c., all exhibit a more or less well-developed jugular streak ; in some it is nearly 3 inch wide. A Formosan specimen measures in the wing 2°8, an “ Indian” 2°75, one from Nepal 2:9, and one from Bintulu 2°75. H. ocetpitalis is a closely allied species from the Philippines, Flores, and other islands, differing in having the abdomen and under tail-coyerts washed with bluish instead of being pure white, as in H. azurea and H. ceylonensis. The throat-bar is present in all examples I haye examined. Distribution.—This pretty blue Flycatcher is generally dispersed throughout the jungles and forests of the interior, not ranging much aboye the lower hill-districts, except, perhaps, in Uva and in the ranges to the HYPOTHYMIS CEYLONENSIS. 409 north-east of Kandy, where I have seen it between 2000 and 3000 feet. It is common enough in its sylvan haunts ; but I doubt if it is a familiar bird to any but those who frequent the jungle. In the low thorny scrubs bounding the sea-board on the dry portions of the island it is not found, nor did I observe it anywhere in the Jaffna peninsula. In the Western Province it may be seen close to the shore, frequenting the woods at the back of the cocoanut-plantations which border the sea, while further inland, as well as in the south-west hill-region, it is tolerably numerous. Habits —This species is found, either singly or in pairs, affecting forest, shady jungle, and bamboo-thickets, and is also met with in small groves or detached woods in cultivated districts. It usually keeps to underwood, or dwells in the lower branches of forest trees, generally selecting those spots which are enlivened with a gleam of sunshine, where it may be seen actively darting on small flies and insects, while it utters its sharp little note, resembling the word ¢chreet. After the breeding-season young birds associate in small troops; and at such times I have noticed them following each other about among the upper branches of tall trees. Nidification—In the Western Province this Flycatcher breeds from April to July, or during the south- west monsoon rains, building a beautiful little nest in the fork of a sapling or shrub at about 4 feet from the ground ; it is constructed of moss and fine strips of bark, very neatly finished off at the edge, decorated with cobwebs on the exterior, and lined with very fine creeper-tendrils, the interior forming a deep cup of about 12 inch in diameter. The eggs are either two or three, round in form, of a buff-white ground-colour, spotted openly, chiefly at the obtuse end, with light sienna-red, mingled with darker specks of red. They measure 0°66 by 0°55 inch. The centre figure in the Plate accompanying my article on Alseonax muttui (p. 417) represents a male bird of the present species from Ackmimina, near Galle. Genus CULICICAPA. Bill more compressed towards the tip and the culmen more raised than in the last; rictal bristles very long. Wings long, the 4th quill the longest, and the 2nd equal to the 8th. Tail even. Legs and feet very small. ‘Tarsus feathered at the top. CULICICAPA CEYLONENSIS. (THE GREY-HEADED FLYCATCHER.) Platyrhynchus ceylonensis, Swains. Zool. Ulust. ser. 1, pl. 13 (1820-21). Cryptolopha cinereocapilla, Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A.S. B. p. 205 (1849); Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 122 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1853, xii. p. 127; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i. p. 147 (1854); Jerd. B. of Ind. i. p. 455 (1862). Culicicapa cinereocapilla, Swinhoe, P. Z. S. 1871, p. 381. Myialestes cinereocapilla, Holdsw. P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 441; Hume, Nests and Eggs, i. p. 205 (1873); Legge, Ibis, 1874, p. 18. Culicicapa ceylonensis, Fairbank, Str. Feath. 1877, p. 401; Hume, B. of Tenass., Str. Feath. 1878, p. 226; Sharpe, Cat. Birds, iv. p. 369 (1879). The Ceylonese Flatbill, Swainson ; Zird phutki, Beng. Adult male and female. Length 4:9 to 5-2 inches; wing 2°4 to 2°6; tail 1:9 to 2-2; tarsus 0-55 to 0:6; mid toe and claw 0°45 to 0:5; bill to gape 0°55. Iris brown ; bill, upper mandible blackish, lower fleshy at base, with the tip dark; legs and feet brownish yellow, yellowish brown, or greyish yellow ; soles yellow, claws pale brownish. Lores, head, hind neck, and cheeks cinereous grey, the centres of the feathers on the head blackish slate-colour ; on the hind neck the grey blends into the greenish yellow of the back, scapulars, wing-coverts, and rump, the latter being more yellow than the back ; wings and tail dark brown, edged with the hue of the rump, except on the two outer primaries and the lateral rectrices ; orbital fringe greyish; throat, chest, and sides of neck pale ashy grey, blending into the grey of the upper parts ; beneath, from the chest, saffron-yellow, shaded with greenish on the sides of the breast and flanks ; under wing-coverts greenish yellow. Young. Immature birds in their first plumage almost resemble adults ; the lores are greyish, and the colouring of the breast more overcast with greenish ; the wing-coverts are tipped with vellowish, and the lower parts not so yellow as in the adult. Obs. Ihave compared an extensive series of this species with Ceylonese examples, with the following results :—A Cashmere, a Pegu, a West-Javan, and a N.W.-Himalayan example are all slightly yellower on the back than the majority of Ceylonese birds, and vary in the wing from 2°25 to 2°5, the latter measurement being that of the Pegu example. Another specimen, from the N.W. Himalayas, is paler than all, and has the rump yellower and the quills more conspicuously edged than in the rest of the series. A Sarawak example is an exact match with those in my collection from Ceylon. It therefore appears that this species is spread over a very large geographical area, with but little variation in the character of its plumage. Distribution.—In Ceylon the present species is essentially a hill-bird, and is, within its own limits, the most abundant of its family in the island. It inhabits the Kandyan Province from the Horton Plains and the tops of the highest ranges down to a general elevation of about 1800 feet ; in the wilderness of the Peak, however, I have met with it at an altitude of only 1000 feet, a little above the pretty elevated plain of Gilly- mally. In the southern coffee-districts it is quite as numerous as in the Central Province, and it is also found im the more elevated parts of the Kukkul Korale, as well as in the great Singha-Rajah forest. In large tracts of mountain-forest, such as those covering much of the Nuwara-Elliya plateau and its great outlying spurs and the upper portion of the Knuckles range, it is more abundant than in the lower-lying coffee-districts which have been denuded of forest. Jerdon writes that the Grey-headed Flycatcher is dispersed throughout all India, from the Himalayas to the Nilghiris, the only locality in the south of India where it is common being the summits of the latter hills. In Central India it is occasionally met with, and is not rare in Lower Bengal. As it is so common in Ceylon CULICICAPA CEYLONENSIS. 411 it is singular that it is not found in all the elevated forests in the south. I observe that it is not recorded from the Travancore hills, though Mr. Fairbank says it is common on the fop of the Palanis and in “ groves lower down.” It does not seem to extend towards the north-west frontier beyond the Sambhur Lake, where Mr. Adam remarks that it is very rare. Turning to the east, however, it is diffused throughout the sub- Himalayan region, breeding up to 7000 feet, and stretches into Assam, Burmah, and Tenasserim, in which latter province Mr. Hume says it is found sparingly, extending the whole way down the Malayan peninsula to Singapore island. Further south than this it is found in Java and Borneo ; and returning again to the continent we find Swinhoe recording it from the Szechuen Province. In common with not a few other widely-distributed species, this little Flycatcher was first made known from Ceylon, the specimen figured by Swainson in his ‘Zoological Illustrations,’ and called by him the Ceylonese Flatbill, having been sent to him by that diligent naturalist Governor Loten. Habits.—This is a charmingly tame and fearless little bird, whose merry little whistle is one of the charac- teristic sounds of the cool up-country forests of Ceylon. It frequents the lower branches of forest trees, the edges of clearings in the jungle, patna-woods, &c., and is particularly fond of trees at the sides of roads and on the borders of mountain-streams. It is exceedingly active, and for the most part-lives in pairs, carrying on its insect-trapping vocation in perfect disregard to any thing going on around it. I have known it swoop at an insect and alight on a fallen log or low stump within a few feet of a bystander. It accompanies its occu- pations by the exercise of its vocal powers, frequently giving vent to its cheerful note, while it snaps up its prey with an audible sound of its mandibles. The whistle of the male is a more than usually loud note for a bird of such small size, and resembles the syllables ¢it-titu-wheee, and in the morning is very frequently repeated. Birds of the year congregate in little troops unaccompanied by adults, and keep up a constant twittering note. Jerdon writes of its habits as follows :—‘It is tolerably active and lively, making frequent sallies after small insects, and not always returning to the same perch, but flitting about a good deal, though it usually remains in the same tree or clump of trees for some time.” Nidification.—I have not had the good fortune to obtain any information concerning the nesting of the present species in Ceylon; but on consulting Mr. Hume’s admirable work on the nests and eggs of Indian birds, we find that in India the Grey-headed Flycatcher lays during the months of April, May, and June, and constructs its nest, according to Indian observers, amidst the growing moss on some perpendicular rock or old trunk of a tree; it is composed of moss, cobwebs, and lichens, sometimes lined with moss-roots or with fine grass-stalks. Thenests resemble little watch-pockets of moss, the interior of which is about | inch in diameter by about 2 inches in depth, and, fixed as they are to the moss-grown trunks, are very difficult to discover. Capt. Hutton speaks of one which had depended beneath it “a long bunch of mosses, fastened to the tree with spiders’ webs, and serving as a support or cushion on which the nest rested.” The number of eggs is usually four; Mr. Hume describes them as moderately broad ovals, scarcely compressed towards the small end; they are dingy yellowish white, and they have a broad conspicuous confluent zone of spots and blotches towards the large end, the colour of which is a mottled combination of dingy yellowish brown and dingy purplish grey ; the rest of the egg is more or less thickly spotted with very pale dingy brown. They are almost glossless, and average 0°62 inch in length by 0°48 inch in breadth. Genus RHIPIDURA. Bill compressed suddenly near the tip, culmen raised; rictal bristles very long ; nasal bristles well developed. Wings with the lst quill about half the length of the 2nd; 4th the longest. Tail exceeding the wing, and expanding towards the tip; lateral feathers graduated. Tarsus longer than the middle toe. RHIPIDURA ALBIFRONTATA. (THE WHITE-FRONTED FANTAIL.) Rhipidura albofrontata, Frankl. P. Z. 8. 1831, p. 116; Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i..p. 145 (1854). Leucocerca albofrontata, Jerd. Madr. Journ. 1840, xi. p. 12; id. Ill. Ind. Orn. pl. 2 (1847) ; Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 206 (1849); Hume, Nests and Eggs, i. p. 201 (1873); Ball, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 404. Leucocerca compressirostris, Blyth, J. A. S. B. 1849, xviii. p. 815; Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 123 (1852); Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 126; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 483 (1862). Leucocerca aureola, Blyth, Ibis, 1866, p. 870; Holdsw. P. Z. S. 1872, p. 440; Hume, Str. Feath. 1873, pp. 178, 456, et 1875, p. 104. Rhipidura albifrontata, Sharpe, Cat. B. iv. p. 338 (1879). The White-browed Fantail, Jerdon ; Fantail, Europeans in Ceylon Shamehiri, Hind. in North- west ; Macharya, lit. ‘“« Mosquito-catcher,” Hind. in South; Manatz, lit. “ Washerman,” Malabar. Marawa, Sinhalese. Adult male and female. Length 6°8 to 7-1 inches; wing 3:0 to 3-25; tail 32 to 3-4; tarsus 0°7 to 0°8; mid toe and claw 0°55 ; bill to gape 0°65 to 0°7. } [ris brown; bill black, pale at base beneath; legs and feet blackish brown or black, in some wood-brown. Crown, nape, lores, throat, and face black, blending on the hind nape into the cinereous blackish brown of the upper surface ; wings and tail brown; forehead and a very broad band over the eye to the nape, under surface from the throat down, and terminal portion of all but the centre tail-feathers pure white ; the white of the lateral rectrices occupies its major portion, varying from 1-4 to 1-6 inch on the inner web, and running up the outer web to the base ; wing-coverts with terminal white spots ; chin and gorge edged white, which varies much in extent, occupying in some individuals the lower part of the cheeks ; quills blackish brown ; wing-lining black, edged or barred with white. The hue of the upper plumage fades with time, and scarcely any two specimens appear to be exactly alike ; in such abraded plumage the head is blackish brown, and the back dark cinereous brown, with the wing-covert tips much reduced in size. In some specimens the white supercilium meets, though imperfectly, round the nape. Foung (India). A specimen in nestling plumage has the eye-stripe narrower than the adult, the feathers, as well as the adjacent blackish ones on the occiput, slightly tipped with rufous; seapulars, back-feathers, tertials, and wing- coverts tipped with rufous ; the white on the tail-feathers reduced; the throat blackish, but not so dark as in the adult, and less tipped with white; under surface white, tinged with buff. Obs. Blyth separated the Ceylonese bird from the Indian, alleging that its bill was more compressed and that it had less white on the tail. I imagine he was led to these conclusions by an examination of immature specimens, for I RHIPIDURA ALBIFRONTATA. 415 have not been able to verify their distinctness on comparing the insular specimens with Indian. Some of the latter have more white, perhaps, on the lateral tail-feathers than the generality of Ceylon birds, but others have less ; and as to the bills, I find that three specimens from N.W. Himalayas, Gondul, and Dehra Doon, in the national collection, are smaller in the bill than ours; they vary from 0°55 to 0-63 from gape to tip. A North-west Province example measures in the wing 3°35 inches, and has the white of the lateral tail-feather extending up it 18 inch; one from Rawul Pindi measures 2-9 in the wing, and two from Dehra Doon 3°15 and 3:2 inches respectively ; and these last three have the greater wing-coverts very deeply tipped with white; but this, I think, is an individual pecu- liarity. Mr. Nevill, of the Ceylon Civil Service, in a communication made to the ‘Journal of the Asiatic Society,’ Ceylon Branch, 1867-70, p. 138, writes of seeing a Fantailed Flycatcher in the Nuwara jungles, which he describes (from seeing the bird on the wing, I conclude) as having the “ breast broadly banded with mingled black and white.” It is possible, as Mr. Holdsworth suggests, that it may have been &. pectoralis, although I consider it more probable that it was the young of the present species. An adult &. pectoralis (Godaveri valley) measures :— Wing 2:7 inches; tail 4:1; tarsus 0°75; bill to gape 0°61. Head and face blackish, paling into brown on the back, and into brown tinged with rusty on the rump ; supercilium white; throat white; fore neck and sides black; centre of the chest, breast, and lower parts buff, darkening into rufescent on the abdomen and under tail-coverts; sides of the chest blackish brown; wings and tail pale brown, the tail-feathers gradually paling towards the tips into dull whitish. Distribution —The “ Fantail” is chiefly an inhabitant of the dry jungle-region between the Haputale mountains and the south-east coast, the eastern portion of the low country as far as the delta of the Maha- welliganga and the district of Uva, including the patna-basin at the foot of the main range. In the first- named tract of country, including the “ Park,” it is more common than elsewhere, frequenting the jungle on the borders of tanks and also detached clumps of wood. From the Bintenne country it ranges up into Dumbara and the valleys in the Hewahette and Maturata districts, where it is by no means rare. In Uva it is found chiefly on tree-dotted patnas, and in the glens intersecting the great basin between Udu Pusselawa and H{aputale. It would appear that it is found occasionally on the plateau, the only evidence to this effect being that of the bird seen near Nuwara Elliya by Mr. Nevill. It is rare to the west of Tangalla, but is occasionally seen during the north-east monsoon in the Galle district, as I have met with it at that season at Baddegama. I have never seen it in the neighbourhood of Trincomalie nor to the north of that place ; but there is no reason to suppose that it does not inhabit this quarter of the island. Jerdon writes, “The White-browed Fantail is found all over India, except Lower Bengal, extending to the foot of the Himalayas, only not towards the south-east. It is most common in Malabar and the Deccan, and is not rare in the North-west Provinces and in Sindh.” Concerning its north-western limit, Mr. Hume says that it is common throughout the whole region, including Sindh, Mount Aboo, and Guzerat. He remarks that it breeds as high up as 4000 feet on the Himalayas. Extending to the east, I find that Mr. Inglis does not record it from Cachar. In Upper Pegu it appears to be not uncommon, and Blyth recorded it from Tonghoo, although Messrs. Hume and Davison have not found it in Tenasserim. Mr. Fairbank met with it up to 4000 feet in the Palanis. Habits.—This showy little bird is one of the most interesting of our Flycatchers ; it frequents little groves of trees, or those standing isolated on patnas and semicultivated ground, jungle on the borders of tanks, and open grassy glades, and in the Eastern Province cocoanut-topes in the vicinity of villages. It is a fearless species, and when not paired for breeding is usually of solitary habit. At this time its manners are most amusing ; for the male, in his endeavours to attract the attention of his consort, displays a nature much akin to that of the Peacock, and seems to delight in displaying his prowess to mankind as well as to his own order. He will sometimes alight on a tree close to a bystander, and proceed with a measured little pace either along a horizontal trunk or up a slanting branch, with an outspreading movement of its wings and a gentle oscillation to and fro of its body, combined with an expanding and contracting of its long tail, the whole reminding one of the balance-step in a hornpipe! Not less singular is its remarkably human-like whistle, uttered in an ascending scale for the edification of its mate; and when this proceeds, as it sometimes does, from a thickly foliaged tree, completely hiding the performer from view, it is difficult to persuade one’s self that it ismade by a bird. It is very active in catching its prey, and, as Jerdon remarks, does not fly far after it, but snaps it up with a sudden dart. I have seen it on the ground, stalking about in the manner above described ; and 414 RHIPIDURA ALBIFRONTATA. Jerdon says that he has seen it alight on the back of a cow ; he states that its chief food consists of “ mosquitos and other small dipterous insects, as also the small Cicadelle”’ which are abundant in India. Nidification.—This Flycatcher breeds in Ceylon during the early part of the year. I have not had the good fortune to see its cleverly-constructed little nest myself; but Mr. Jefferies, of Gangaroowa estate, described to me one, which was constructed in an orange-tree in his compound at Hindugalla, as being a beautiful little cup-shaped structure, placed on a thin branch, which oscillated to and fro with the wind, and which the architect, with wonderful skill, had tied to an adjacent branch with a ‘stay ” consisting of a fine ereeper-tendril. This is so extraordinary, that had not my friend been a well-known observer of bird life and very fond of natural history, I could scarcely have credited the statement. The nest is described by various writers quoted in ‘ Nests and Eggs’ as being a hemispherical or elegant oval little cup, composed of fine grass- stems coated with cobwebs, or fine plant-stalks plastered with “ cotton ” and seed-down, the internal diameter hemg about 2 inches and the depth 1 inch. Mr. Hume speaks of one he found at Bareilly as being a “‘ delicate tumbler-like affair, scarcely + inch thick anywhere, closely woven of fine grass, and thickly coated over its whole exterior with cobwebs.” The eggs are usually three in number, the ground-colour varying from pure white to yellowish brown or dingy cream-colour, spotted and speckled in a broad irregular zone near the large end with greyish brown, ‘‘at times intermingled with spots or tiny clouds of faint inky purple.” Average size 0°66 by 0°51 inch, Genus ALSEONAX. Bill wide at the base, stout, triangular, the under mandible rounded beneath and pale at the base ; rictal bristles long. Wings with the 2nd quill longer than the 6th, and the 3rd and 4th the longest. ‘Tail shorter than the wings and eyen at the tip. Legs and feet small. ALSEONAX LATIROSTRIS, (THE BROWN FLYCATCHER.) Muscicapa latirostris, Raff. Tr. Linn. Soc. xiii. p. 312 (1821). Muscicapa grisola, var. dawurica, Pall. Zoogr. Rosso-Asiat. i. p. 461 (1831). Hemichelidon latirostris, Gray, Gen. B. i. p. 262 (1845); Blyth, Cat. B. Mus. A. S. B. p. 175 (1849); Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. E. I. Co. i. p. 137 (1856). Butalis latirostris, Blyth, J. A. 8. B. 1847, xvi. p. 121; Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p.127; Kelaart, Prodromus, Cat. p. 123 (1852). Alseonax latirostris, Cab. Mus. Hein. i. p. 53 (1850) ; Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 459; Holdsw. P. Z. 8. 1872, p. 441; Hume & Henderson, Lahore to Yark. p. 185, pl. v.; Walden, Ibis, 1873, p. 308; Hume, Str. Feath. 1874, p. 219; Bourdillon, ibid. 1876, p. 396 ; Hume (B. of Tenass.), Str. Feath. 1878, p. 227; Sharpe, Cat. B. iv. p. 127 (1879). Alseonax terricolor, Brooks, Str. Feath. 1877, p. 470. Zukki, Hind, (Jerdon); Shima-modzu, Japan (Blakiston). Adult male and female. Length 5:1 to 5:3 inches ; wing 2°7 to 2:95; tail 2:2; tarsus 0°55; mid toe and claw 0-6; bill to gape 0°6. Iris brown ; bill, upper mandible blackish, lower fleshy with dark tip; legs and feet dark grey or wood-brown. Lores mingled grey and white; an orbital fringe of fulvous; head and upper surface light cinereous brown, slightly darker on the head; wings and tail hair-brown ; wing-coyerts pale-margined, inner secondaries and tertials with broad fulvous-grey edgings; tail tipped pale ; chin albescent, darkening on the fore neck and chest into cinereous grey; breast and lower parts white; flanks cinereous grey. The amount of pale edging on the wing-coverts and secondaries varies considerably. Mr. Hume, too, notices this character in ‘ Stray Feathers.’ Young (nestling: Nepal). Above brown, slightly tinged with rusty on the upper tail-coverts, and each feather of the upper surface with an elongated central spot of greyish near the tip, which becomes fulvous on the rump and upper tail-coverts; wing-coverts with deep terminal edgings of fulvous; inner secondaries the same; quills margined internally with rufescent; ear-coverts tipped with dark brown; under surface whitish, the fore-neck feathers tipped with dusky; flanks dusky. Obs. I have examined a large series of this Flycatcher from Japan, China, India, the Andamans, Java, Sumatra, Borneo, and Saigon, and am of opinion that there is but the one species, with perhaps a local race, which is rusty- coloured on the upper surface, but similar beneath to our bird, in Cochin China and Borneo. Examples from Japan, nine of which I have examined, are identical to all intents with those which visit Ceylon ; they are perhaps greyer on the back and not quite so brown on the chest and flanks; they vary in the wing from 2°6 to 2°85 inches, and in the bill are the same as ours. A Tenasserim example (w. 2°6) is slightly more “ earthy” than Ceylonese examples on the rump, and one from N.W. Himalayas still more so; two from Port Blair are positively identical with specimens killed in Ceylon. A Javan bird is very rusty-coloured on the nape and edges of the wing- coverts, therein approaching a Sarawak bird, which measures in the wing 2°55 inches only, and which is very “rusty ” on the upper surface, the ferruginous tint increasing towards the rump; the wing-coverts are margined and tipped with ferruginous ; and, in fact, were it not for the under surface, which is almost exactly the same as specimens from India and elsewhere, the bird would have the appearance of Hemichelidon ferrugineus. An example from Saigon is much the same as the last. These birds might well form a subspecies, I think; but I see that Mr. Sharpe, in the 4th vol. of his great ‘ Catalogue of Birds,’ unites the races from all parts in one and the same species. Mr. Hodgson’s specimens of A. terricolor in the British Museum are in bad order; but they are clearly nothing but the present species. Distribution—This modest little bird is a cold-weather visitant to Ceylon, coming to us from South 416 ALSEONAX LATIROSTRIS. India in October and departing again in the following April. It spreads over the whole low country, but is nowhere very plentiful, and liable to be passed over, as it is of solitary habits. From the low lands it ascends into the coffee-districts to an altitude of about 3500 feet. About Colombo and on the west coast generally it is fairly common, inhabiting trees in the vicinity of houses or even in the town itself, and it is liable to be met with anywhere in the interior. It was described from Sumatra by Rafiles, but does not appear to have been procured there of late years, although it is not uncommonly met with in Java, Borneo, and Malacca; it is of course a winter visitor to all this region and also to the Andamans, where Lieut. Wardlaw Ramsay procured it in December, January, aud February. According to Swinhoe it summers in China, and does the samein Japan and Eastern Siberia, in which regions it no doubt chiefly breeds, and from which it migrates at the latter end of the year to India, Tenasserim, and Malasia. In Tenasserim, singularly enough, Mr. Hume says that it has only been observed in the southern half of the province. It does not appear to be found in Burmah, and is not recorded by Mr. Inglis from Cachar; it is therefore somewhat difficult to follow its line of migration to India from China and North-eastern Siberia; and it may be that the birds which visit the plains of India, the southern part of the peninsula, and Ceylon breed in the Himalayas. Jerdon writes that A. terricolor of Hodgson inhabits the Himalayas at no great elevation, and visits the plains in the cool season, which implies, of course, that it summers in the mountains ; it will be observed also that the young bird which I have described above is from Nepal. It does not extend into North-western India, keeping quite to the east until it gets to the Deccan, where Messrs. Davidson and Wender obtained it at Sholapoor and Mr. Fairbank at Khandala. In the Travancore hills Mr. Bourdillon says it is common during the winter months. Habits —TYhis Flycatcher resembles in its economy the common species of Europe (Muscicapa grisola) , and reminds one much of this latter species. It takes up its abode in shady trees, often in the middle of towns and villages, or on the borders of streams, in native gardens, and even in the recesses of the dry forests of the north. It chooses in the latter localities a spot which is cheered by the rays of the sun, and quietly perches on the low branch of a tree, every now and then making an active dart on a passing insect and returning with it to its perch. It is very silent aud exceedingly tame, sitting fearlessly in the most public situations, entirely regardless of the busy hum of human life. It now and then utters a weak note after catching an insect, and will then sit perfectly motionless until it espies some other object of pursuit. Dae EES ee eee ALSEONAX MUTTUL (THE RUSTY FLYCATCHER.) (Peculiar to Ceylon.) Butalis muttui, Layard, Ann. & Mag. Nat. Hist. 1854, xiii. p. 127; Le Alseonax Fferrugineus, Jerdon, B. of Ind. i. p. 460, in part (1862). Alseonax terricolor (nec Hodgs.), Holdsw. P.Z.S. 1872, p. 441; Layard, P. Z. S. 1873, p. 204; Legge, Str. Feath. 1875, p. 366. Alseonax flavipes, Legge, Str. Feath. 1875, Alseonax muttui, Sharpe, Cat. B. iv. p. 152 gge, Ibis, 1878, p. 203. oS Supra brunneus, pileo saturatiore, supracaudalibus magis rufescentibus: tectricibus alarum minimis et medianis dorso concoloribus, majoribus brunneis, fulvescenti-rufo marginatis: tectricibus primariorum primariisque brunneis, secundariis fulvescenti-rufo marginatis: rectricibus brunneis, pallidiore brunneo limbatis: loris et annulo oph- thalmico albidis: regione parotica brunnea: gutture albo: genis cum pectore et corporis lateribus pallidé brunneis fulvescenti lavato: pectore medio et abdomine puré albis: subcaudalibus fulvescenti-albidis: subalaribus et axilla- ribus cervinis: remigibus infra brunneis, intus cervino marginatis: rostro nigricanti-brunneo, mandibula flavicante ad apicem brunnea: pedibus pallidé flavis : iride rufescenti-brunned. Adult male and female. Length 5:3 to 5:5 inches; wing 2°7 to 2°9; tail 2:1 to 2-2; tarsus 0°55; mid toe and claw 0°57; bill to gape 0-7 to 0°75. The legs and feet are exceedingly delicate in this species. Tris hazel-brown ; bill, upper mandible dark brown with pale tip, under mandible fleshy yellow; legs and feet pale yellow ; eyelid dark plumbeous. In one female the tip of the upper mandible is pale. Lores, orbital fringe, and a spot beneath the gape whitish; head and upper part of hind neck dark olive-brown, changing into rusty olivaceous on the back, which deepens to ferruginous on the rump and upper tail-coverts ; wings dark brown, the primaries with a fine pale edging, and the coverts. and tertials conspicuously edged with yellowish ferruginous; tail slightly lighter brown than the wings, margined with rufous-brown ; chin and throat white, bounded on each side by a dark cheek-patch ; chest brownish, the feathers margined with fulvous; breast and under tail-coverts white, flanks light yellowish brown; wing-lining brownish, paling off into fulvous. Obs. This Flycatcher was united by Mr. Holdsworth, in his ‘ Catalogue,’ with