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CALLIOPE PECTORALIS, Gould. 



Himalayan Ruby-throat. 





Calliope pectoralis, Gould, Icones Avium, pi. 4 (1837).— Gray, Cat. Mamm. &c. Nepal, coll Hodgs. p. 69 

 (1846).— Blyth, Journ. As. Soc. Beng. xii. p. 934 (1843); xvi. p. 135 (1847).— Id. Cat. B. Mus. As. 

 Soc. Beng. p. 169 (1849).— Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av. p. 295 (1850),— Horsf. & Moore, Cat. B. Mus. 

 E.I. Co. i. p. 313 (1854).— Adams, P. Z. S. 1858, p. 492; 1859, p. 180— Blyth, Ibis, 1862, p. 303.— 

 Jerd. Birds of India, ii. p. 151 (1863).— Beavan, Ibis, 1867, p. 453.— Pelzeln, Ibis, 1868, p. 310 — 

 Hume, Nests & Eggs Ind. B. p. 325 (1875).— Brooks, Stray Feathers, 1875, p. 241.— Dresser, Ibis, 

 1876, p. 78.— Godw. -Austen, J. As. Soc. B. 1876, p. 79.— David & Oustalet, Ois. de la Chine, p. 236 

 (1877). 



Br adybates pectoralis, Gray, Gen. of Birds, i. p. 181 (1846). 



Cyanecula pectoralis, Gray, Hand-list of Birds, i. p. 224, no. 3203 (1869). 



Calliope baillonii, Severtzoff, Turkest. Jevotn. pp. 65, 122 (1872). — Id. in Stray Feathers, 1875, p. 429. 





More than forty years have elapsed since I first described this pretty Ruby-throat ; and at that time the type 

 specimen in my collection was the only one known in Europe. During those past forty years, however, a 

 complete revolution has taken place in the science of zoology ; and in no branch of that science has progress 

 been more complete than in ornithology. Thus we are now enabled to give full details of the life-history of 

 many Indian birds, thanks to the labours of the excellent field-naturalists in India, whereas at the time that 

 I described the first Himalayan birds they were looked upon as some of the rarest species procurable. 



Dr. Jerdon states that the White-tailed Ruby-throat is "found throughout the Himalayas, from Cashmere 

 to Sikhim. He adds : — " I saw it at Darjiling, where not common, frequenting thick brushwood, and 

 coming to the road to feed on insects. Adams found it at high elevations, among rocks and precipices in 

 the N.W. Himalayas. I quite recently procured one specimen, and saw others, frequenting long grass 

 jungle, not far from the banks of the Ganges at Caragola Ghat. It came to the small footpaths, especially 

 near the edge of the water, to feed. It is only a cold-winter visitor at Darjeeling, but may probably breed 

 in the interior." Since the above was written by Dr. Jerdon, the range of the species has been considerably 

 increased, Dr. Severtzoff having found it breeding in Turkestan, and Colonel Godwin-Austen records it from 

 the Dana hills in Assam, while Pere David met with it further to the eastward in Moupin. 



Mr. Hume, in his ' Nests and Eggs of Indian Birds,' writes as follows : — " Of the nidification of the White- 

 tailed Ruby-throat nothing very authentic is known. A nest, said to belong to this species, was sent me 

 from native Sikhim, where it was found in June in a deep crevice in a rock, at an elevation of about 12,000 

 feet. The nest is only a warm saucer-shaped pad of very fine moss and fern-roots closely felted together. 

 The eggs, of which it contained two, are regular ovals, slightly compressed towards the small end. The shell 

 is fine, but exhibits scarcely any gloss. In colour the eggs are a uniform pale salmon-buff. As these were 

 brought in by native collectors, much reliance cannot be placed on them. At the same time all the 

 eggs brought in by the same men with which we were previously acquainted were correct ; and it is 

 quite as likely as not that these may be so also, though Pallas says that those of the nearer-allied 

 C. camtschatkemis are greenish. The eggs measure 0*9 and 0*91 inch in length, and 067 and 066 in 

 breadth, respectively." 



There is perhaps nb genus of insessorial birds where beauty of markings and elegance of structure 

 are more completely combined than in the present group of terrestrial warblers. The Robins, Blue- 

 throats, and the present appropriately called Ruby-throats are all birds where the bill, wings, and tail 



are fairly balanced. 



The Plate represents a male, a female, and three young, ail of the natural size. The two latter stages 

 of plumage were figured from specimens in Mr. Seebohm's collection. 



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