these birds which had built their nèsts on them, probably to the number o f fifty. The trees inside the walls
were as thickly covered with nests as those outside ; and the birds, which appeared docile and tame, did not
mind the noise of the people passing beneath them. When I visited the village, the young birds were all
well fledged, and most of them able to fly. The villagers informed me that the old birds move off to the
river in the very early dawn, and, having caught a sufficient supply for their young, return about eight or
nine o’clock ; a second expedition is made during the afternoon. Some idea of the quantity of fish caught
by these birds may.be gathered from what the people told me, that quantities of fine fish were dropped by
the old birds when feeding their young, and were eaten by them. A young bird of this species, which I
shot in Scinde, disgorged a large quantity of small eels. This Ibis breeds during the month of February.
The nest is composed of small sticks, and is placed a t the top of the trees ; if there are many on the same
tree, they are placed pretty close together. They lay three or four eggs, of a dull opaque white, nearly
2 -^ inches in length, by rather more than 1-^- inch in width. The young birds are able to fly by the month
o f May. I kept a young bird, which had dropped from the nest arid broken its wing, in' my garden for three
or four months. It was most gentle and quiet, occasionally snapping its strong beak at any person it did
not like. In a short time it recognized the person who fed it ; and whenever he made his appearance, it
would walk towards him, uttering a piteous cry, flapping its long wings, and bowing its head towards him.
It was a most ludicrous sight, which many came to see. It was fed on fresh fish, and would not touch any
that were at all tainted. Another young bird which I also kept would devour the bodies of birds brought
in for stuffing, and did not appear a t all particular as to the quality of its food. The stomach of an old
bird contained a grassy substance, the remains of fish, and what appeared to be the claw of a small crab.”
Colonel Sykes states that the stomachs of three specimens dissected by him were distended with fibrous
vegetable matters in a comminuted state. A fourth contained the same kind of vegetable matters and the
half o f a carp, nine inches long.
Latham informs us that this bird is very common on th eR iv e r Ganges, and that in some parts of India it
is called the Smaller Adjutant ; and he adds th a t the pink feathers are not unfrequently used as ornaments
by the ladies, like those of the Ostrich.
Feathers clothing the neck, breast, and back silky white ; upper tail-coverts silky white, suffused with pale
rose-colour, deepening into a. crescentic form, near the tip of each feather-; lesser wing-coverts deep olivé-1
green, broadly tipped with dull white; greater coverts dull white; upper portion of the scapularies silky
white, suffused in the céntre with delicate rose-pink; primaries and secondaries deep green; tertiaries
lengthened, and of a lovely rose-pink, which deepens into carmine near the end of eàch feather, the tip
being .occupied by a broad, decided, crescent of silky white ; tail very deep green ; across the abdomen a
broad band o f olive-brown, barred with white; each feather being; broadly tipped with that hue ; the under
wing-coverts are also olive, largely tipped with silky white; lower p art o f the abdomen, thighs,’ and under
tail-coverts white, slightly suffused with pink ; irides yellowish brown ; bill, naked- part of the face and
crown,, and thé chin-pouch yellowish orange; legs palé dirty pink. ' Golônel Sykes states that there is
“ a large diaphanous:spot on each side of the base o f the upper mandible before the eyes;” this, however,
is not.perceptible in the dried skin,, and hence it has not been noticed.
In the immature state the general colouring is very similar, but the white tips of the abdominal-band
feathers and those of the under surface o f the wing are more conspicuous, and the neck is clothed with down.
T h e following is Lieut. Burgess’s “ Description, of a young bird taken on the 20th of April:—Beak dark
leaden brown, becoming still darker at the base; skin of the face and forehead o f the same h u e ; feathers
of the head brownish grey ; those on the neck of an ashy brown, mixed with down ; shoulders ashy, with
light-brown ed g es; scapularies similar, but edged with a much lighter ashy hue, the centre of the feathers
being the darkest ; lesser wing-coverts brownish black, tinged with ashy, and with light ashy edges; greater
wing-coverts dark-greyish black, their outer webs tipped with whitish ash-colour, and inner webs tinged
with the same colour on their edges ; tertiaries similar, but tinged'with rose-colour ; primaries and secondaries
black, with green reflexions ; back beautiful pale rose-colour ; upper tail-coverts dusky grey ; tail black, with
bright-green reflexions ; breast, belly, and sides covered with beautiful white down, interspersed on the breast
with some dark and grey feathers, and on the sides with white, tinged with delicate rose-colour; the whole
of the back is also covered with beautiful down. This bird was evidently a nestling, the first feathers having
scarcely grown enough to cover the body.”
The. figure is about half the natural size.