LO. 
HIRUNDINIDA: SWALLOWS. ant 
A hundred species of swallows are recorded; probably about three-fourths of them are 
genuine. They are distributed all over the world; the most generalized types, like Hirwndo 
itself, are more or less cosmopolitan, but each of the great divisions of the globe has its peculiar 
subgenera or particular sets of species. Thus, all the American groups except Hirundo and 
Cotile are peculiar to this continent. 
Swallows are iusectivorous, and therefore migratory in cold and temperate latitudes ; 
unsurpassed in powers of flight, they are enabled to pass with ease and swiftness from one 
country to another, as the state of the weather may require. With us a few warm days in 
February and March often allure them northward, only to be driven back again by the cold, 
giving rise to the well-known adage. No birds are better known to all classes than these, and 
none so welcome to man’s abode, — cherished witnesses of peace and plenty in the homestead, 
dashing ornaments of the busy thoroughfare. 
The habits of swallows best illustrate the modifying influences of civilization on indigenous 
birds. Formerly, they all bred on cliffs, in banks, in hollows of trees, and similar places, and 
many do so still. But most of our species have forsaken these primitive haunts to avail them- 
selves of the convenient artificial nesting-places that man, intentionally or otherwise, provides. 
Some are just now in a transition state ; thus the purple martin, in settled parts of the country, 
chooses the boxes everywhere provided for its accommodation, while in the West it retains its 
old custom of breeding in hollow trees. The nesting of our swallows now presents the follow- 
ing categories of method : — 
1. Holes in the ground, dug by the bird itself, slightly furnished with soft material : Cotzle 
riparia, Stelgidopteryx serripennis. 
2. Holes in trees or rocks not made by the birds, fairly furnished with soft material : 
Progne subis, Iridoprocne bicolor, Tachycineta thalassina. 
3. Holes, or their equivalents, not made by the birds, but secured through human agency, 
and more or less fully furnished with soft material, according to the shallowness or depth of the 
retreat. (Formerly, no species ; now, all the species excepting Cotile riparia.) 
4. Holes constructed by the birds, of mud, plastered to surfaces, whether artificial or natural, 
and loosely furnished with soft material. This is seen in perfection in the nesting of Petro- 
chelidon lunifrons, and is imperfectly illustrated by the nidification of Hirwndo horreorum. 
5. Eggs pure white, unmarked: Iridoprocne bicolor, Tachycineta thalassina, Cotile ripa- 
ria, Stelgidopteryx serripennis, Progne subis. 
6. Eggs thickly speckled: Hirundo horreorum, Petrochelidon lunifrons. 
The seven established North American species, referable to as many modern genera, may 
readily be determined by the following 
Analysis of Genera and Species. 
1. Tail deeply forficate, with linear lateral feathers ; lustrous steel-blue above, rufous below 
Hirundo erythrogastra horreorum 159 
2. Tail simply emarginate ; lustrous green; beneath white. . ... .. . . . Iridoprocne bicolor 160 
3. Tail simply emarginate; opaque velvety-green; beneath white . . .. . Tuachycineta thalassina 161 
4. Tail nearly even; lustrous steel-blue; rumprufous .. . » . + « « Petrochetidon lunifrons 162 
5. Tarsus with tuft of feathers below; lustreless gray; below white ose tet silane 4) (Cottle mpariaeies 
6. Outer edge of first primary serrate; lustreless brownish ; paler below. . . Stelgidopteryx serripennis 164 
7. Bill very stout, curved ; male entirely lustrous blue-black . . ... ... =. . . . Progne subis 165 
HIRUN’DO. (Lat. hirwndo, a swallow. Figs. 179, 181.) Barn Swatiows. Tail deeply 
forficate, nearly or about as long as the wings; lateral feather linear-attenuate, about twice as 
long as the middle feather. Tarsi shorter than middle toe and claw, above feathered for a little 
distance: basal joint of middle toe partly adherent to both lateral toes. Bill of moderate size 
for this family, of the usual shape, with straight commissure ; nostrils lateral, overarched by a 
membranous scale. Upper parts glossy, dark-colored; a dark pectoral collar; forehead and 
under parts rufous; tail spotted with white. Eggs colored. Sexes similar. 
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