A Bird Calendar for Northern India eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 149 pages of information about A Bird Calendar for Northern India.

A Bird Calendar for Northern India eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 149 pages of information about A Bird Calendar for Northern India.

The former species brings up two broods in the year.  One, as has been mentioned, in March and the other in the “rains.”

The nest of the Indian wren-warbler (Prinia inornata) is, except for its shape and its smaller size, very like that of a weaver-bird.  It is an elongated purse or pocket, closely and compactly woven with fine strips of grass from 1/40 to 1/20 inch in breadth.  The nest is entered by a hole near the top.  Both birds work at the nest, clinging first to the neighbouring stems of grass or twigs, and later to the nest itself when this has attained sufficient dimensions to afford them foothold.  They push the ends of the grass in and out just as weaver-birds do.  Like the baya, the Indian wren-warbler does not line its nest.  The eggs are pale greenish-blue, richly marked by various shades of deep chocolate and reddish-brown.  As Hume remarks:  “nothing can exceed the beauty or variety of markings, which are a combination of bold blotches, clouds and spots, with delicate, intricately woven lines, recalling somewhat ... those of our early favourite—­the yellow-hammer.”

The ashy wren-warbler (Prinia socialis) builds two distinct kinds of nest.  One is just like that of the tailor-bird, being formed by sewing or cobbling together two, three, four or five leaves, and lining the cup thus formed with down, wool, cotton or other soft material.  The second kind of nest is a woven one.  This is a hollow ball with a hole in the side.  The weaving is not so neat as that of the baya and the Indian wren-warbler.  Moreover, several kinds of material are usually worked into the nest, which is invariably lined.

The building of two totally different types of nest is an interesting phenomenon, and seems to indicate that under the name Prinia socialis are classed two different species, which anatomically are so like one another that systematists are unable to separate them.  Both kinds of nests are found in the same locality and at the same time of the year.  Against the theory that there are two species of ashy wren-warbler is the fact that there is no difference in appearance between the eggs found in the two kinds of nest.  All eggs are brick-red or mahogany colour, without any spots or markings.

Many of the Indian cliff-swallows, of which the nests are described in the calendar for March, bring up a second brood in the “rains.”

Needless to state that in the monsoon the tank and the jhil are the happy hunting grounds of the ornithologist.

In July and August not less than thirty species of waterfowl nidificate.  Floating nests are constructed by sarus cranes, purple coots and the jacanas.  The various species of egrets breed in colonies in trees in some village not far from a tank; in company with them spoonbills, cormorants, snake-birds, night-herons and other birds often nest.  The white-breasted waterhen constructs its nursery in a thicket at the margin of some village pond.  The resident ducks are also busy with their nests.  These are in branches of trees, in holes in trees or old buildings, or on the ground.

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A Bird Calendar for Northern India from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.