JSould/kECiliduerdd/ethik/. CXPSKLTTS IKFUMAITJS, Sclab
Wu/lrr Jmp.
CYPSELUS INFUMATUS, Sclat.
Palm-roof Swift.
Cypselus inf umatus, Sclat. in Proc. Zool. Soc., 1865, p. 602.—Jerd. in Ibis, 1871, p. 355, pi. x.—Swinh. in Proc.
Zool. Soc., 1871, p. 345.—Gray, Hand-list of Birds, part i. p. 64.
— tinus, Swinh. in Ibis, 1870, p. 90.
— tectonm, Jerd. Proc. of Asiat. Soc. Calcutta, 1870, p. 71.—Godwin-Austen, Cat. of Birds in Joum. Asiat.
Soc., 1870, p. 94.
I a m indebted to Mr. Jerdon for the loan of a specimen of this little Swift, which, as will be seen above, has
already received three specific names, that proposed by Mr. Sclater having the priority. When characterizing
it this gentleman remarked :—“ I have as yet seen but a single example of this species, now in Mr. Wallace’s
possession. It formed part of the collection made by the late Mr. Mottley at Banjermassing, in Borneo, for
Mr. L. L. Dillwyn. It is decidedly a Cypselus, allied to C. batassiensis of India. I have searched in vain
for this species among the treasures of the Leyden Museum.”
Besides Borneo, it has also been found in India, where Mr. Jerdon informs us, in ‘ The Ibis ’ for 1871, that
“ Major Godwin-Austen procured this interesting Swift on the Naga hills, and subsequently on the Garo hills,
where it had also been obtained by a native collector employed by Dr. Anderson. The Garo hills are a
direct continuation of the Naga hills—the Khasia and Jynteea hills, however, intervening, where this Swift is
not known. The more highly civilized Khasi race have better houses than their neighbours on each side,
who use huts thatched with palm-leaves; on these roofs this Palm-Swift invariably builds its nest. Mr.
Hume, who saw the specimen I was taking home, subsequently identified it, doubtfully, with Sdater’s C.
infumatus; and on comparison of the unique specimen existing in England of that Swift, they were found to
he identical, and Mr. Hume’s ingenious surmise proved correct.”
Mr. Swinhoe also includes it in his list of the Birds of China, and, speaking of it in ‘The Ibis ’ for 1870
under the name of Cypselas tinus, which, believing it to be a new species, he there assigned to it, says :—“ I
first noticed this little species at Tai-ping-sze (Central Hainan), where a single pair passed over my head,
and I shot one. Among the cocoa-nut trees on the sandbanks of Lingshuy lagoon (S.E. Hainan) they were
common enough, and we procured several. It was the 10th of March; but there did not appear any signs
of nidification. On the 18th of March, at Nychow (S. Hainan), I again saw numbers of them flying
backwards and forwards over a wood near the city.
“ This species is of the same typical form as C. batassiensis, Gray, of India and Burmah, hut is smaller and
more deeply coloured, with a shorter and narrower bill, longer wings, and less forked tail. It appears to be
a good second species of the Palm-Swift type, which connects Cypselus with Collocalia”
In his ‘ Revised Catalogne of the Birds of China and its Islands,’ Mr. Swinhoe remarks:—“ I have compared
my specimens with Dr. Jerdon’s type from Upper Assam, and with Dr. Sclater’s type from Borneo in
Mr. Wallace’s collection, and find them all to be of the same species.”
The courtesy of Major Godwin-Austen having induced him to permit my copying a drawing representing
the bungalows, or native dwelling-places, under which this bird builds, I am enabled to render the opposite
Plate much more interesting than it could otherwise have been. Such sketches are in the highest degree
useful to the ornithologist; and it is to be regretted that similar illustrations of the breeding-habits of birds
are not more frequently made.
The following is Mr. Swinhoe’s description and admeasurements of this little Swift:
“ Above deep sepia-brown, with a slight deep-green iridescence; rump lighter, beneath much brighter;
wings and tail brownish black, the former with pale inner edges; between the hill and the eye a whitish spot;
hill and legs blackish brown, with a pink tinge ; iris deep hazel.
“ Length about 4 5; wing 4 7 5 ; first quill attenuating to the tip, and 25 in. shorter than the second ;
tail 2 *25, middle rectrices -875 shorter than the laterals.
“ The female is a trifle shorter in the wing, but is otherwise similar to the male.”
Dr. Jerdou’s specimen, from which my figures were taken, was darker than those described by Mr.
Swinhoe; but as lie states that he has carefully compared them, I must also consider them identical; probably
the examples were procured at different seasons; or the variation may he due to age.
The Plate represents this bird of the size of life.