
HHH
S T R I X IN D I C A , myth:
In d ian Screech-Owl.
Strix flammea, Blyth, Cat. of Birds in Mus. Asiat. Soc. Calcutta, p. 41.—Gould, in Proc. of Zool. Soc., 1859,
p. 151.
javanica, Jerd. Madras Journ. of Lit. and Sci., vol. x. p. 85.—Sykes, in Proc. of Comm, of Sci. and Corr.
of Zool. Soc., p art ii. p. 81.—Jerd. Birds of Ind., vol. i. p. 117.
indica, Blyth, in Ibis, 1866, p. 250.—Gray, Hand-list of Birds, part i. p. 52.—Holdsw. Proc. of Zool. Soc.,
1872, p.
Karaya and Karail, H in d .; also Buri-churi, i. e. the bad bird.—J e r d o n .
Chaao pitta, Telugu, and Chaao-Kuravi, Tamul, both meaning death-bird.—J e r d o n .
H owever far to the eastward from Europe the Common Owl (Stri&flammea) may range, it does not appear
to extend to India, as was formerly supposed, its place in that country being occupied by the present species,
which may be easily distinguished by its larger size, longer tarsi, much larger feet, by the more buffy hue of
its plumage, and the smaller size of the spots with which it is ornamented. To what extent this bird ranges
over the islands of the Eastern archipelago, or if it is found there at all, is not known with certainty. Mr.
Swinhoe does not notice it as a species found in China; neither is it, I believe, identical with the *Stria
javanica of Dr. Horsfield—that is, if the figure given of the latter by Gray and Mitchell, in their ‘ Genera of
Birds,’ be a correct representation of the Java bird. Mr. Jerdon is the principal writer on this species; and
he, I regret to say, has furnished but little respecting it; what he has said, together with a brief note by
Col. Sykes, will be found below—as also a short paragraph kindly furnished to me by Mr. E. W. H. Holds-
wortb, who has recently returned from Ceylon, respecting its range and habits as observed by him in
that island, and which forms a part of his “ Catalogue of the Birds of Ceylon,” to be published in the
‘ Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London’ for 1872.
“ The Indian Screech-Owl,’ says Dr. Jerdon, “ isfound throughout India and Ceylon, ascending through
Burmah to Malayana. Sometimes it takes up its quarters in a grove of old trees, in the holes of which it
roosts during the day; at others it lives in deserted buildings, tombs, pagodas, mosques, &c.; and I have
often found them in the solitary cells and powder-magazines which are generally situate at a little distance
from the lower part of a cantonment. It hunts entirely by night, not coming forth until it is quite dark, and
lives on rats, mice, shrews, &c. More than once, one has flown into a room in which I was sitting with open
doors and windows, after a rat that had entered. It breeds both in holes in trees and buildings.”
Col. Sykes remarks :—“ One of my specimens was captured alive while lying on its back on the ground,
defeuding itself against the attacks of a body of Crows.”
“Strix indica,” says Mr. Holdsworth, “ is very local in Ceylon, and is entirely confined to the north of the
island. Layard gave the Fort of Jaffna as the only locality for i t ; but I have since obtained it at Aripo,
where a pair of these Owls were resident. They frequented a Government storehouse in my compound,
each bird regularly perching in a dark corner under the roof at opposite ends of the long building, and
apparently living in harmony with the hundreds of Bats which hung from the roof and walls around. I
have never observed these birds out of doors until some time after sunset.”
Upper surface buff, minutely freckled with grey and with one or two small spots of brown and white
near the tip of each feather; quills and tail darker or richer buff, freckled with grey on the outer
margins, passing into white on the inner, and crossed with distinct bands of brown; facial disk white,
with a rufous patch at the inner corner of the eye; ruff mingled yellow and rufous; undersurface, including
the under wing-coverts white in some, and pale yellowish buff in others; the feathers of the
breast and abdomen ornamented with a small brown spot at the tip of each; bill horny yellow; ¡rides
black; legs and feet yellowish brown.
I remark that in specimens of the European Strix flammea the presence of bands on the primaries
is only indicated on their undersurfaces by small spots near the shaft, while in Strix indica these marks are
much larger, and extend across somewhat more than half the breadth of the web.
The principal figure represents the bird, of the size of life.