200 INDIAN PIGEONS AND DOVES 
Young birds differ from the adult in the same way that the young of 
orientalis differ from the full-grown birds. 
Distribution. Western Central Asia, Turkestan, Persia, Afghanistan 
and the Himalayas as far east as Sikhim, migrating in the cold weather 
over practically the whole continent of India and Ceylon. 
It is not very uncommon in the Deccan and occurs as a straggler into 
Gujerat, near Sambhur, but does not appear to be ever found in Sind. To 
the south, Hume gives about lat. 15° as its usual limit ; Davidson obtained it 
in western Khandesh, and Davison in Mysore, and it probably occurs prac- 
tically over the whole of southern as well as northern India, for it has twice 
been recorded from Ceylon. So far, however, it seems to have escaped 
observation in the Nilgherries, Palnis, Shevaroys, and many other places in 
southern India where it must occur occasionally. North of the Madras 
Presidency it is very common in the cold weather, and is numerous through- 
out Orissa, west Bengal, and thence less common in east Bengal and Assam, 
but not in the extreme east of the latter province. I have not met with 
it in Dibrugarh, Sibsagar, or Tezpur, but it is said to occur in Goalpara, 
and is certainly an occasional straggler into Dhubri. 
Nidification. Hume thus sums up the breeding-range of this bird : 
“Our Indian Turtle-Dove breeds throughout the lower ranges of the 
Himalayas, from Afghanistan to Sikhim at any rate, at elevations of 
from 4,000 to 8,000 ft. It is for the most part only a summer visitant to 
these hills. 
“Turtur pulchrala”’ (= ferrago) “lays throughout the summer. I 
have found eggs early in May and late in August, but the majority lay in 
June. It makes a loose, but rather more substantial, twig nest than many 
of its congeners, placed on some horizontal branch of a large tree, usually 
not far from the extremity.” 
In and about Murree, Mussoorie, and Kashmir it breeds in great 
numbers, and its nests and eggs have been taken by many collectors. It 
appears to build at all heights, as Hutton says “that it makes its nest on 
tall forest trees,’ whilst Captain Cock recorded it as building “‘ on trees and 
bushes at no great height from the ground in May and June.” 
Normally this bird is a resident of the hills and the hills alone during 
the breeding-season, but in 1901 Inglis found it breeding in the plains of 
Behar, and in the Bombay Natural History Journal thus records his find : 
“This year I was successful in securing this bird’s eggs for the first time. 
I shot a male in March, which was evidently breeding, and so had a good 
look-out kept wherever any of these birds frequented ; it was not, however, 
until the 25th of May that the first nest was secured at Jainagar ; it contained 
a single egg. On the 20th June, near Baghownie, a second nest was found 
containing two eggs. Both nests were on mango trees.” 
This is an extraordinary extension of this Dove’s breeding-range, and 
looks as if the subspecies ferrago was gradually also becoming a non- 
migratory bird, in which case we should eventually have those settling in 
the plains merging into meena and those settling in the hills reverting to 
orientalis, or differentiating themselves yet again. 
A very curious instance of this bird’s nesting, or rather non-nesting, 
has been observed by Mr. C. S. R. Pitman, who writes to me that he “ took 
a fresh egg at Nathea Gali, on 10/5/12, but the bird had not troubled to make 
a nest, the egg being laid on some dry earth which had accumulated in an 
open hollow in the side of a trunk of a large tree. Altitude about 8,500 ft.” 
