LONG-TAILED PIGEONS. 
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Long-Tailed The second subfamily, Macropygiince, or long-tailed pigeons, of 
pigeons. South-Eastern Asia and the islands of the Pacific, may be distin¬ 
guished by having the tail longer than the wings, in which respect they Lesemble 
the migratory pigeon, the type of the third section of this family, while they 
differ from it in having the feathers of the tail broad and round at the tip. Four 
genera, including thirty species, are recognised, although little has been recorded of 
their habits. Of the first genus, Turacoena, the two species have the bill fairly 
strong, and the tail moderately rounded, the outer feathers being much more than 
half the length of the middle pair. The Celebean species (T. menaclensis ) has the 
plumage slate-black, with the face and throat white, while in the one from Timor 
(T. modesta ) it is uniform slate-colour; both being ornamented with shades of 
metallic green, lilac, and blue. 
Cuckoo Pigeons Oie great majority of the long-tailed pigeons belong to the 
genus Mcicropygia, commonly known as cuckoo-pigeons. All have 
the tail much graduated and wedge-shaped, the outer feathers being less than half 
the length of the middle pair, and the general colour of their plumage is rufous, 
chestnut, or cinnamon. In the Indian cuckoo-pigeon (M. tusalia) the male has 
the plumage of the forehead, chin, and throat vinaceous buff, the top of the head 
and rest of the upper-parts shining metallic green with purple and bronze reflec¬ 
tions, the latter being also irregularly barred with black and purple chestnut; the 
under-parts are vinous grey shading into buff on the abdomen, and glossed on the 
chest with golden-green and bronze; the quills are brown, and the middle pair of 
tail-feathers barred with black and vinous chestnut, while the outer pairs are 
mostly grey. The female is not so brightly coloured, and has most of the under¬ 
parts barred with brownish black. This bird is of a shy disposition, keeping to 
thick forest, and associating in small flocks which feed chiefly on trees and seldom 
descend to the ground. In Nipal the two white or sometimes creamy eggs are 
laid in May and June, and the nest, which is the usual loose platform of sticks, is 
placed on some horizontal branch, at no great height from the ground. 
In the other two genera the bill is strong and thick, and the tail 
wedge-shaped, as in Macropygia. The first of these, Reimvardtcen as. 
distinguished by having no crest, contains three species, ranging from Celebes to 
the Duke of York Island. In Reinwardt’s long-tailed pigeon (R. reinwardti ) both 
sexes have the head, neck, and mantle pale lavender, the back, wings, and middle 
tail-feathers chestnut; and the front of the neck and breast white shading into 
lavender on the abdomen. The last genus, Coryphcenas, contains one crested 
species (0. crassirostris) from the Solomon Group. The whole plumage of this 
bird is slate-colour, darker on the upper surface, and the head is dusky brown, the 
feathers on the back of the head being lengthened into a greyish brown crest. 
Passenger- The last group of the subfamily, like the other long-tailed pigeons, 
Pigeon. } ias the tail longer than the wings, but it is also narrower, and the 
feathers are pointed at the extremity. Only one species, the passenger-pigeon 
(Ectopistes migraiorius) ; of North America is known. In the male the head and 
upper-parts of the body are bluish grey, spotted with black on the wings; the 
quills brownish black with grey edges, the chin whitish grey, and the breast 
cinnamon-rufous shading into pale vinous on the rest of the under-parts, and 
