70 im)IAN PIGEONS AND DOVES 



to by some writers as pecuUar to this particular species, but this is 

 not so. All the Green Pigeon— some half dozen— weU known to me 

 in life, have this, or a very similar note, though I do not think any of 

 them employ it quite so freely as this bird does. It is an argumen- 

 tative or angry note, I think, and the ordinary conversational notes, 

 though somewhat the same, are much softer and very low, so low indeed, 

 that one must be very close to the utterer to overhear them. The 

 whistUng-notes, to me, seem much the same as those of the other species, 

 but most observers say they are not so sweet and melodious, as well 

 as being less sustained and more jerky. 



It consorts freely with other species when feeding, and though 

 so much smaUer than most of them, aUows no bullying and can hold 

 its own well, even with the bigger birds. Its flight is very strong and 

 swift, and owing to its exceptionally tough skin and very dense feathers 

 it requires a very straight, hard-hitting gun to deal with it effectively. 

 As far as I can remember I have seen no big bag made exclusively of 

 this Green Pigeon, but I have several times seen forty or fifty shot — 

 amongst others — ^in an afternoon, and now and then smaU bags of 

 twenty to forty couple will be found to be made up almost entirely 

 of them. 



They sometimes ascend the hUls to at least as high as 4,000 ft., 

 and are common enough up to 3,000, but they are also equally at home 

 right away in the plains at long distances from any mountains. 



Like all Green Pigeons it is essential that the coimtry they inhabit 

 should be well wooded, but they are by no means exclusively forest- 

 birds, and are frequently seen in more or less open plains and extensive 

 clearings, feeding on the fruit of the few trees which have been left 

 standing. 



Just as they share the family failing of bad temper so, also, they 

 share the family trait of greediness, and these small birds wiU continue 

 to swallow huge plums and other frmt imtil their crops almost burst, 

 and when they are shot and fall to the ground their crops are so fuU 

 that they generally do give way, whilst their breasts, lined with thick 

 yellow fat, also often burst open. Undoubtedly these birds in a wild 

 state eat grain as well as fruit, for though I have never seen them in 

 a grain-field, I have more than once shot birds with rice in their crops, 

 and once one with some tiny miUet in it. In captivity they take to 

 grain freely, but at the same time they prefer soft fruit or boiled rice, 



