CYPSELUS MELBA.
Alpine Swift.
Hirundo melba, Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 345.
Cypselus melba, 111. Prod. Syst. Mamm. et Av., p. 230.
Apus melba, Cuv. Rfeg. Anim. (1817), tom. i. p. 373.
Micropus melba, Boie, Isis, 1844, p. 165.
Hirundo alpina, Scop. Ann. Hist. Nat., tom. i. p. 166.
Cypselus alpinus, Temm. Man. d’Orn., 1815, p. 270.
Micropus alpinus, Mey. et Wolf, Taschenb. Deutscbl. Vög., tom. i. p. 282.
Cypselus gutturalis, Vieill. Nouv. Diet. d’Hist. Nat., tom. xix. p. 422.
• melbus, Vieill. Gal. des Ois., tom. i. p. 192, pl. 121.
Hirundo gularis, Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Gen. Zool., vol. x. p. 99.
T h is fine Swift is a summer visitant to the central and southern portions of Europe. As its trivial
name implies, it is also a denizen of the Alps, and, I believe, of the Apennine ranges also—rocky regions appearing
to Be peculiarly attractive to it, although it is said also to frequent plains. In Berne and
Fribourg, besides many other places, it is known to breed in the steeples of the cathedrals and churches
o f those fine old towns. Like the Common Swift it is a migrant, and in the early part o f autumn leaves
all the parts of Europe it frequents, and passes into Africa; how far its range extends southward
in the latter country is not known, the bird from the Cape Colony formerly supposed to be the same having
been ascertained to be a distinct species. Besides being dispersed over Central aud Southern Europe, the
Alpine Swift is abundant in the Holy Land, Asia Minor, Persia, and, doubtless, all the intervening countries to
Afghanistan and W estern India, where, as will be seen by Mr. Jerdon’s notes given below, it is very numerous.
Almost every person who has had an opportunity of observing this bird speaks iu terms of admiration o f its
vast powers of flig h t: it is not surprising, therefore, that an individual should now and then wing its way
across the Channel to the British Islands, and course over our meads and fields until it is shot. Its occurrence
here is almost exclusively confined to England; for I find no record of its having been seen in Scotland, and
only two instances o f its being killed in Ireland. The first specimen known as British was shot early
in Ju u e 1820, by the bailiff of the late R. Holford, Esq., a t Kingsgate, in the Isle of Thanet, and is now, I
believe, in the possession of R. B. Hale, Esq., of Alderley P ark, Gloucestershire. Since that date a few more
examples have been killed in this country—one in Norfolk, another in Essex, a third in Kent, a fourth in
Cambridgeshire, a fifth in Berkshire, and a sixth in Lancashire ; aud there may have been others unknown
to me. Having had no opportunities of studying the habits o f the bird myself, I must refer to the writings
o f those who have been more fortunately placed.
“ During the past summer,” says Mr. Hewitson, in a note to myself, “ I noticed the Great Swift wherever
I went in Switzerland, on the mountain-passes on both sides and a t the top o f the Gemmi, in the Canton
Vaiais, and on the Righi. In former visits I saw it about the cathedral a t Berne only. There I have many
a time watched its glorious flight, and witnessed how superior it is in speed to the common species : whilst
the C. apus sweeps round you and below the promenade on which you stand, this bird pursues his wonderful
flight high in the air.”
Bailly states that it is quite as common in the rocky portions of Savoy during the months o f summer as
it is in Switzerland aud the Tyrol, that it arrives there from the 15th to the 20th o f April, and that it feeds
exclusively upon insects, which it captures as it skims along, with astonishing rapidity over bushes, trees,
ditches, and the surface of the water, into which it occasionally dips to secure its prey. It commences the
duty of incubation about the end o f May, or beginning of June. Both sexes engage in the construction of
the nest, which is usually placed in a nearly always inaccessible cleft of a rock, but occasionally among ruins
or in a building situated on some mountainous ridge, and also under the stones on the roofs of the chalets.
It is externally composed of small sticks and roots, intermingled with which are pieces o f straw, which they
seize with such address while skimming over the ground that the action is scarcely perceptible ; the interior
is lined with the catkins of poplars, the down o f flowers, &e., which they seize in a similar manner or
when blown about in the air, the whole being cemented together with the bird’s glutinous saliva. The eggs
are two or three in number, and of a pure white.
“ Cypselus melba,” says the Rev. H. Tristram, “ though very abundant, is rather a local bird in the Holy
Land, and only a summer migrant. The first time we noticed it was at daybreak, on February 12th, when,
camped outside the walls of Jerusalem, we saw large flocks passing with amazing rapidity, at a great