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KETUPA CEYLOKEN SIS . 
follows concerning the food of this species : — “ I once surprised a pair of them feeding on the carcase of an 
alligator which I had shot a few days previously/' 
Nidification . — In Ceylon the Fish-Owl breeds from February until May. It nests in hollow trees or in 
crevices in rocks near water. The nest is scanty, consisting of a few sticks, and when placed in holes of trees 
of nothing but the bare wood or, perhaps, a few leaves. The eggs are usually two in number, broad ovals in 
shape, tolerably glossy in texture, and pure white. Two that I examined from the Kurunegala district measured 
2-29 by 1-72 and 23 by P78 inch. 
In India this Owl sometimes tenants the deserted nest of a Fishing-Eagle, carefully lining it with grass 
and feathers, and occasionally constructs its own nest in the recess of a large upright fork. 
