>£ A.pOTa^fotn c^ j ,y THE JOURNAL OF THE Bombay Natural History Society. EDITED BY H, M. PHIPSON, C.M.Z.S.. Honorary Secretary- VOLUME IV. 1889. CONSISTING OF FOUR flUjaBBI^S flflD CONFINING NINE mita^^/iTioNS- Bomb as * PRINTED AT THE EDUCATION SOCIETY'S PRESS, BYCULLA. 1389. CONTENTS OF VOL IV- Nesting in Western India. ( With a Plate.) By Lieut. H. E. Barnes ... ... ... ... ... ... ... >># 1 A Creek op the Konkan. By W. F. Sinclair, C.S. 21 Our Hymenpotera. By Robert C. Wroughton 26 An Address to Students of Botany in Western India. By A. K. Nairne ., 37 Notes on Birds of Quetta. By A. J. H. Newham, Bo.S.C, V X S e;9 Instance of Teratology in the Brinjal or Egg-Plant (Solarium melongena]. By D. M. (With Illustration) ... ... ... 55 Sporting Rambles Round About Simla. By J. C. Anderson ... 56 At Malta to and from India. By Capt. E. F. Becher, R.A., -*- •^ j • ^ - 1 . ■ . . ■ . ■ ■ . . • . . ... ••• ... ••• \J\) Miscellaneous ... G9 English Nomenclature for Indian Butterflies ... ... ... 70 X ROCEEDINGS ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... /o Nesting in Western India ( With a Plate.) By Lieut. H. E. Rough Notes on Travel akd Sport in Kashmir and Little i ill oh L ••• ••• •*• ••> ••• * • * ••• ••• *7 O Short Notes on the Odoriferous Grasses (Andropogons) of India and Ceylon, with a description of a supposed new Species. By Mrs. J. C. Lisboa. (With a Plate) 118- Correspondence Relating to the Protection of Insectivorous Birds in the Interests of Agriculture ... 124 Memorandum on an Outbreak of Surra Fever at the Stables of the Bombay Tramway Company, Limited. By F. C. Riinington ... ... ... .. ... ... ... ... 131 Recorded Instances of Children having been nourished by Wolves and Birds of Prey. By Jivanji Jamshedji Modi ... 142 Miscellanous Notes — Sericulture in India ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 147 A Black Tiger ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 149 Note on a Talking Bulbul ... ... ... ... ... ... 150 The Red Ant.— By EHA 151 Memoranda — By H. Littledale, Baroda , 153 Parasitic Trees ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 154 J\. v^ orrection . . . ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ioo Proposed English Nomenclatune for Indian Butterflies ... ... 155 Correspondence ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 157 ' .#^»_!'*_'/ 3 • II CONTENTS OF VOL. IV. Book Notices— The Geographical Distribution of the Family Chardridae, or the Plovers, Sandpipers, Snipes and their Allies ... ... ... 150 Recent Information about the Great Auk or Garefowl ... ... 160 Proceedings ... ... ... ... ... ... 161 On New and Little-known Butterflies from the Indian Region, with a Revision of tbe Genus PLESIONEURA, Felder, of Authors. By Lionel de Niceville, F.E.S., C.M.Z.S., &c. {With Plates A, B.) 163 l Notes on Man-Eating Tigers. By Reginald Gilbert, Bombay ... 195 The Camel. By J. H. Steel, A.V.D. 207 How to Facilitate the Study of Botany. By G. Carstensen, Grad. Hort. R. D. C. Agr., Copenhagen, ... ... ... ... 213 An Indian Naturalist's Trip to Australia. By Surgeon-Major K. R. Kirtikar 219 Miscellaneous — Two Curious Instances of Mimicry ... ... ... 228 Zoological Note ... ... ... ... . , ... ... 230 Correspondence — Wild Buffalo... .. ... ... ... ... ... 231 Proceedings ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 232 Nesting in Western India. By Lieut. H. E. Barnes {With a plate) 237 The Man-Eating Tigress of Munda'li ... ... 255 Elementary Botany of the Bombay Presidency. By A. K. Nairne ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 264 Notes on a Caterpillar Farm. By Mrs. W. E. Hart ... ... 277 'Down the Coast." By W. F. Sinclair, C.S 289 The Indian Bison, with some Notes on Stalking him. By J. D. Inverarity (With two plates) ... ... ... ... ... 294 Miscellaneous Notes — 1. — Belief in the Bi*-Cobra .. ... ... ... ... 310 2. — -The Water Rail {Rullus aquatic u*)... ... ... ... 311 3. — How a Snake climbs ... ... ... ... ... ... 3 11 4. — Battle between Bees and Wasps ... ... ... ... 312 5. — Man-Eating Tigers ... ... ... ... ... ... 312 6. — A Whistling Bulbul ... ... ... ... ... 313 7.— Tiie Dyal Bird as Imitator 313 8. — A Pet Drongo .. ... ... ... ... ... ... 313 9. — Mimicry for Protection and from Example... ... .. 314 10.— Uses of the Screw Palm (Pandanus od<>i atissimus) Kivada ... ... ... ... ... .., ... 314 11. — Mimicry in Birds .. ... ... ... ... ... 315 12. — Papilio polymnester, P. dissimilis and P. panope ... ... 315 13. — Bears being eaten by Tigers ... ... ... ... 316 14. —Measurement of Indian Elephants ... ... ... ... 316 15. — A Branching Areca Nut Palm ... ... ... ... 3]? 16.— Mimicry in Caterpihars ... ... ... ... ... 317 Proceedings ... ^18 pombai) Itatuijal ||istorg ^oijiife LIST OF OFFICE-BEARERS. |l resident. H. E. the Right Honorable Lord Reay, a.c.i.E., i,t..d., f.e.q.3 $ice-||resibeuts. Dr. D. MacDonald, m.d., b.sc, cm. The Hon'ble Justice liirdwood, M.A., ll.m. (Cantab.) Dr. Gr. A.. Maconachie, m.d., cm. f)on. Secretary. Mr. H. M. Phipson, cm. z.s. $o»t. treasurer. Mr. E. M. Slater. (Sbitor. Mr. H. M. Pbipson, cm. z.s. Managing Committee. Dr. G. A. Maconachie. Dr. D. MacDonalJ. Col. C. Swinhoe. llev. F. Dreckmann , Dr. T. S. Weir. Dr. Kirtikar. Mr. J. H, Steel, a.v.d* Mr. J. D. Inverarity. The Hon. Mr. Justice Birdwood. Mr. G. W. Vidal, cs. Mr. W. F. Sinclair, cs. Mrs. Pechey- Phipson, m.d. Major W. S. Bisset, R. E. Lieut. H. E. Barnes. Mr. J. C. Anderson, Mr. E. L. Barton. Mr. E. M. Slater, ex-ojficio. Mr. H. M. Phipson, ez-officio. 1st Section. — (Mammals and Birds.) President— Mr, R. A. Sterndale, f.r.g.s., f.z.s. Secretary— Lieut. H. E. Barnes. 2nd Section. — (Reptiles and Fishes.) President— Mr. G. W. Vidal, cs. Secretary — Mr. H. M. Phipson, c.m.z.s. 3rd Section. — (Insects,) President—Colonel C. Swinhoe, F.z.s., f.l.s., f.e.s. Secretary — Mr. E. H. Aitkeu. 4th Section. — (Otlter Invertehrata.) President— Dr. G. A. Maconachie, m.d., cm. Secretary — Mr. J. C. Anderson. 5th Section. — (Botany.) President — The Hon'ble Justice Birdwood, m.a., ll.m. (Cantab.) Secretary— Surgeon K. R. Kirtikar, f.s.m. (France), p.r.cs. lombau lateral fetora ^ocietg. Name. LIST OF MEMBER January 1889. S. Abbott, Rev. J. E. ... Adam, Hon. F. Forbes Adams, J. B. D. ... ... ... ... a\1TK011, I J. jZL. ... . ., ... ... Almon, W. ... ... ... ... Ameerndiu Tyabji... Abercrombie, A. ... Anderson, G. A. ... Anderson, J. Anderson, J, C. ... Anderson, W. C. ... Anderson, Capt. W. R. ... Andrewes, H. E. ... Appleton, A. F. (a.v.d.) ... Arnott, Doctor J. ... Artnur, A. ... ... ... ... ... Ashburner, Rustumjee J., Khan Bahadur Ashby, J. S. Aga Khan, H. H. the Babaji Gopal ... ... ... ,., Baddeley, Lieut.-Colonel ... Bagnell, H. W. I. (c.s.) Bainbidge, Doctor G. Bain Donald ... ... Baines, J, A. (c.s.) ... Bagana, H. H. Prince Joravarkhanji Bakar, u. U h. ... ... ... ,. Bankier, "W. A. Banks, Dr. S. O'B, (f.r.c.s.l.) ... Barclay, Capt. ... ... ... ., Barnes, Lieut. H.E. ... Barrow, H. W. ... ... Barton, E. L. Bautnbach, R. ... ... ... Bayley, The Hon'ble Mr. Justice... Beardmore, E. B. ... ... ... Becher, Captain (f.z.a.), R. A, ... ... 43ell, x . iv, l'- .,. ... ... ..i Residence. ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Tanna .., Karwar ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Nagpore, C. P. ... Malum ... Bombay ... Jhansi ... Simla ... Europe ... Kirkee ... Bombay ... Calcutta ... Bombay ... Bhuj (Cutch) ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Cawnpore ... Bombay ... Kurrachee ... Bombay ... Poona ... Bajana ... Europe ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Europe ... Saugor, C. P. ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Kamptee ... Canara LIST OP MEMBERS. 11 Name. Bengallee, S. S. (c.i.E.) ... Bergl, Louis Betham, G. K. Betham, J. A. ... ... Bennett, D. Betham, R. M. Betham, W. G. Beynon, Erasmus .. Bhatavadekar, Bhalchandra K., Dr. Bicknell, H. Biddulph, Col. J. ... ... Bingham, Cap tain C. H. Birdwood, the Hon'ble Mr. Justice Bishop, Capt. Bisset, Major (r.e.) Blackwell, G. F. ... Black well, H. F.... Blood, B. W. Boniface, Lieut. ... Boustead, Doctor R. Bovis, F. de Boyd, Dr. H. W. Branson, R. M. ... Brendon, C. R. ... Bromley, Herbert Brooke, Miss Ada Bristed, John Brown, Dr. E. H. Brown, J. W. Brunton, R. P. ... Bucklaud, H. W. Budgen, Capt. G. Bushby, W. H. ... Butcher, L. H. ... Butler, Capt. J. B. R. Byrne, C. H. Bythell, Lieut. W. J. • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • • •• • • • • • • • • t • • • • * • • •• • • • • • • • • t • • • • • • « • • Calthrop, E. Cameron, W. D. (c.E. Campbell, Lord Colin Campbell, E. W. Campbell, John ... Candy, R. E. (c.s.) Camulsey Pretnji Cane, Rev. A. G. Cappel, E. L. (c.s.) Carroll, E. B. (c.E.) )... •» • • • • • Residence. ... Bombay ... En rope ... Bijapur .... Raipur, C. P. ... Bombay ... Rajkote ... Nasik . . . Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ...Europe ... Rangoon ... Europe ...Europe ... Bombay ... Alou Chindwin, Upper Burmah ... Bombay ... Ajmere ... Goolburgah ... Ahmednagar ... Europe ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Mai van ... Bombay ... Ahmedabad ... Bombay ... Jalna, Deccan ... Bombay -,.. Bombay ... Bombay ... Secunderabad ... Bombay ... Egutpura ... Nusseerabad ... Bombay ... Baluchistan ... Europe . . . London ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Sholapore ... Bombay ... Poona ... Sholapore ... Bombay IV LIST OF MEMBERS. Name. Carstensen, G. Cassels, J. A. Cates, Dr. W. E. ... Chalmers, H. ... ... Channer, Dr. O. H. ... Charles, F. L. (c.s.) Chatfield, K. M Cheetham, J. Chrystal, J. S. ... Clark, Captain A. E. ... Clerke, W. J. B. (c.e.) ... Clifton, C. N. (c.E.) Close, E. P. Cobbold, H. R. ... Collie, Dr. R. Collister, J. G. H. Conder, H. ... Conroy, A. ... ... Cooke, Dr. T. Cooper, C. P. ... ... Cornforth, J. P. ... Cotton, G. ... ... Cowasji Dady Limji Crawford, Leslie ... Crawley -Boevey, A. W. (c.s.) Crawley, C. E. Creagh, Captain R. P. ... Crofts, Dr. ... Cuffe, T. VV Cumberley, N. R. Curjel, H. ... ... Cursetjee, Miss Manockjee Curwen, H. Cutch, H. H. the Rao of Dady Hormusji C. Dadyshett Dalgado, Dr. D. G. Davidson, J. (c.s.) Dempster, F. E... ... ... ... Ditmas, A. R. ... Deoso, Max ... Doig, S. B. (c.E ) Douglas, Mrs. Dreckmann, Rev. F. Dubash, Sorabjee D. Duigati, S. A. ... Dumayne, F. G. ... Dumbell, H. C. ... • •• • • • • • • • •• • • • • • • • •• t « • • • t • •• • • • • •• lit • • ■ Residen ce. ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Europe ... Bombay ... Europe ... Bombay ... Europe ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Kaira ... Kharagora ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Poona ... Bombay ... Europe ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Surat ... Calcutta ... Bombay ... Gwalior ... Bombay ... Akola ... Kurrachee ... Bombay . . . Bombay ... Bhuj ; Cutch ... Bombay ... Sawantwady ... Kanara ...Myingyan, Upper Burmah ... Europe ... Bombay ... Ahmedabad ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay LIST OF MEMBERS. Name. Dimsterville, J, H. C. Dymock, Dr. W.... Ebden, E. J. (c.s.) Ed^elow, F. Ednlji Nassurwauji, Dr. ... Elliott, A. (c.s.) ... Elliott, C. F Eunson, H. J. (c.e., f g.s.) Fairbank, Rev. S. Fenton, Capt. L. L. Ferguson, Dr. A. F. Ferguson, H. S. ... Fernandez, T. R. ... ... Fleming, W, N Fletcher, G. ... Forbes, C. H. B Forrest, L. R. VV. Fox, C rj. ... ... ... Framji Nusserwanji Francis, Capt. J. 0. Fran eke, A. Freeborn, E. Fry» T. . B.... ... ... Furdunji, Jamsetji Gaddura, F. Gatna, Dr. A. da ... Gaye, Dr. A. C. ... vraye, »» . ... ... ... Gay, E. ... ... ... George, D. ... Gilbert, R. Giles, E ... ... ... Gleadow, F. ... ... Goldsmid, F. Gornpertz, Rev. J. F. "W. Gompertz, R. Gonne, H. Goodfellow, Col. G. R. ... Goverdhundas K. Muckunji Graham, W. D. ... Grant, G. F. M. (c.s.) ... Gray, Cecil Gray, Dr. Temperley Gray, Dr. Wellington Greame, Col. R. C. Greany, Dr, J. P.... ... • •• • •9 • • • • •• • • • t • • • • • • • • Residence. ... Kolaba ... Bombay ... Bijapur ... Bombay ... Bombay .. Akola, Berar ... Mooltan ... Morvi, Kathiawar ... Ahmed nugger ... Kathiawar ... Bombay ... Travancore ... Surat ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay . . . Bom bay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Baroda ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Poona ... Bombay ... Europe ... Bombay ... Poona ... Secunderabad ... Calcutta ... Hatnagiri ... Bombay ... Ahmedabad ... Europe ... Alibag ... Dacca ... Madras ... Kurrachee ... Europe ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Na^ik ... Bombay . . . Bombay ... Bombay ... Quetta ... Belgaum VI LIST OF MEMBERS. Name. Gilder, G. C. Greaves, W. Grieves, Rev. A. C. Griffiths, J. Gunthorpe, Lieut. -Colonel Gvvyn, Captain A. ... ... Hull, Rev. E. S. ... ... ... xiaro, -H, \J- ... ... ... Hamilton, Capt. A. R. Cole- Hantelman, Ed. Von Hart, JJiss... ... ... ... Hart, Mrs. W. E. Haslam, A. J. (a.v.d.) Hatch, H. F, ii ate ii, j Jr. ... ... ... i lay, i\ • ... ... ... ... Hemming, H. J. R. ... Henderson, Dr. ... Hexton, W. S. Hervey, H. L. (c.8.) Hibbert, Col. J. ... ... ... Mill, x. J. A.< ... ... ... Hodgkinson, Capt. H. S. B. Holland, W. J. ... Hornidge, S. (c E.) Hussey, Col. C. E. Indore, H. H. the Maharaja Holkar Inverarity, J. D. ... Irving, Dr. L. A Jacob, H. P. ... ... ... Jamsetjee, C. Jamsetjee ... Jamsetji, Pherozshaw Merwanji Jardine, Mrs. John Jeejeebhoy, Sir Jamsetjee, Bart. Jefferson, J. ... ... ... Jenkins, J. L. (b.a.),c. s. James, H. E. M. (c.s.) ... Johnson, J. R. Kirby ... ... Jones, G. Sutton ... ... ... Jones, H. W. Juergens, Rev. Fr. Kabraji, Kaikhushro, N.... Kama, K. R. ... ... ... Kane, C E. ... ... ... Kantak, Dr. Shautaram V. ... Residence. ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Europe ... Bombay ... Amraoti, Berar ... Bombay ...Bombay . . . Hyderabad, Deccan ... Secunderabad ... Europe ... Europe ... Bombay ... Kurrachee ...Thana District ... Bombay ... Europe ... Bombay ... Karwar ... Surat ... Bel gaum ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Ahmedabad ... Sholapore ...Deolali ... Indore ... Bombay ... Bombay ...Kurrachee ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Baroda ... Ahmedabad ... Europe ... Deoli ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay LIST OF MEMBERS. VU Name. Residence. Kay, Dr. W. • * « • • ■ « • t ... Europe Ker, L. B. ... ■ •« • • t • • t ... Bombay Kennedy, Capt. W. P. • • t ■ • • • • • ... Kathiawar King, Alfred • • • t * • • • ft ... Bombay King, H. R. • • • • • • • • • ... Bombay Kirtikar, Doctor K. R. ■ * • i • t • • • ... Bombay Knyvitt, Ross • • t • • • • • • .,. Babugarh, near Meerut Kittredge, G. A. ... • • • • •• » • ■ .. Europe Langley, Dr. • Oft • • • • • • ... Bombay Latham, the Hon'ble F. L. • • • • • • ... Bombay Lathi, H. H. the Thakore Salu :bof • • • ... Lathi LaTouche, Brig.-Generu 1.1.., • • • • • • ... Bombay Leckie, M. C. ■ •« • • • t • • ... Europe Lee- Warner, W. (c.s.) * • • ■ • • . • • ... Europe Leslie, A. ... ... • • • « • * « • • ... Bombay Lester, C. F. G. ... • • * • • • • • ■ ... Panch Mahals Lidbetter, T. • • • • • • • • • ... Bombay Light, Lieut. R. H. • • • • • t • • • ... Mhow Little, T. D. (c. e.) t •• ■ • • • • • ... Bombay Lisboa, Dr. J. C. ... • • • • • • • • • ... Bombay Litchfield, E. * • • • • » • • ■ ... Dhera Dun Little, F. A. • • • • • * • 9 ft ... Bombay Littledale, H. • • • • • • ft • ft ... Baroda Lowell, C. ... • • • • • • • • t ... Europe Luard, E. S. B. • • • • • • • •» ... Bombay Lynch, C. P. • • • • • » • • • ... Bombay Lynch, M. P. • • • • • • ft •• . . . Europe Lyon, Dr. I. B. ■ •• • • • • • » ... Horn bay MacCartie, Dr. * • • • • * • 1 • ... Europe Macaulay, Capt. K... • • • ■ • • ft • ft ... Bombay Macaulay, R. H. • • • • * • ft • ft ... Bombay Macaulay, W. M. ... • • • • • • • • • ... Europe Macdonald, Dr. D.... • • * • • t ■ • • ... Bum bay Macdonald, J. • • • • • • ft ft t ... Bombay Macdonald, W. M. • • • • • • ... Bombay Mackenzie, J. Muir (c.s. ') ••• • • • • • • ... Bel gaum Mackenzie, T. D. (e s.) • • • • • # • ft • ... Broach Mackinnon, P. W. • •• • • • • • • ... Mussoorie Macnaghten, Chester • • • »• • • ft ft ... Rajkote Maconachie, Dr. G. A. • •# • • • • • • ... Bombay Macpherson, Capt. • •■ • • • ft • ft ... Poona Maguire, J.... • • • • • ■ • • • ... Europe Maistry, D. B. • • • • • • ft ft • ... Bombay Major, Col. F, W. ... t • • • •• • ft • ... Bombay Maltby, C. J. t • t • • • • • • ... Travancore Manser, Dr. R. • • • !•• * • • ... "Bombay Ill 1,1 ST OP MEMBER"*. Name. Residence. Manson, G. ... ■ it » * a • © • ... Bombay Mant, R. N.... ■ a • a a a • * » ... Bombay Martin , M aj or G. ... * • • • • • • a a ... Bombay Mason, G. E. • a » ■ • • • * a ... London Maueckskaw, Dhunjishaw Doctor ... a a a ... Bombay McCann, VV. H. ... a e • ■ • a a • * ... Bombay McCorkell, G. (c.s.) • a 4 * 1 a a 9 a ... Karwar McEwen, K. » • a • • • a • ... Europe McKenzie, Alex. * • • * • • a a a ... Bomba}' McMullen, G. C. ... a a • • a a ■ • a ... Kurrachee Meade, Oapt. M. J. »■• • a a a a a a ... Europe Melvin, W. F. a a a • a • . • a ... Bombay Menesse, Ales. • a • a* • ■ a a ... Bombay Merriman, Col. • 4 • • a a a aa ... Bombay Merewether, Col. G. (R.E •) • • a i a » ... Bombay Mercer, F. ... • • • • • • • a a ... Chittagong Messeut, l\ G. • ■ • « • • • a • ... Bombay Metha, l\ R. • • • • • • * a » ... Khandeish Meyer, 0. ... i • • ■ a a • a a ... Bombay Middleton, W. H. ... • • • • • • • •• ... Bombay Millard, VV. 8. * • a a a » • a ... Bombay Miller, E • • ■ a • a • a ... Bombay Miller, N « • • 9 9 9 • 9 9 ... Giridhi, Bengal Minter, Capt. J. S. ... • • • a • a 9 9 • ... Bombay Millett, G. P. • • • • a • • a • ... Thana Mitchell, E. ... • • • a a a a * ... Europe Mitchell, Mrs. • • * * « • • •a ... Deolali Modi, Bomanji Edulji • • • ■ t • a a ... Broach Monks, Dr. ... • • • • a • • • a ... Aden Monte, Dr. A. de ... * 4 * • • a* » • a ... Bundora Morris, A W. (f./.s.) • a • • • • • as ... Yercaud Morris, D. • • • • a a a • a ... Bombay Morrison, A. • • • • 99 a • a . . Europe Moscardi, E. H. (c.s.) • • • a • • • a a ... Ahmedabad Mull, Alfred • •• • a • • a ... Sholapore Mulock, W. B. (c.s.) • • • a • a • • a ... Europe Mure, J S « • ■ a • a a • • ... Bombay Murphy, Dr t * * « a • a* a ... Mahableshwar Murray, "W. ... • • • a a a a a a ... Bombay Nazar, M. H.... S a) a 9 % 9 • a a ... Bombay Nairne, Rev. A. K. (Hon . Corr. Member) ... ... England Newborn, C. ... • • • • a a a • a ... Bombay Newnham, A ... • • • * • % a a a ... Simla Niceville, L. de (Hon. Corr. Men. iber) • a * ... Calcutta Nicholson, C. • • • • • Ml ... Egutpura Nicholson, E. F. a a a a a a »•• ... Bombay Oates, E. W. (lion, Corr. Member).,, ,„ London LIST OF MEMBERS. IX Name. O'Connel, J. Ollivant, E. C. K. (as.) ( Hiver, Gr. ... Oliver, Captain II. D. (r.e ) (f.z.s.) Ommaney, H. T. (c.s.) Opiumwalla, Borah ji E. Ormiston, Gr. (c.E.).,, ( hven, \V. S. Palliser, H. Gr 1 arker, J. 0. Parmenides, J. Parmenides, AC.... Patell, JS T . M. Parsons, the Hon'ble Mr. Justice... Patterson, Dr. Pa wall a, Jamsetji Cursetji ... Pearson, Mrs. Pearson, T. W. Pechey-Phipson, Mrs. (m.d.) Penny, Mrs. L. Pentlaud, Capt. Petei's, Doctor J. 6 tit j T • ±J • • • t ••• ••• ••• Petit, Bomanji Dinshaw ... X G Liu, X • \J 9 %•• •■■ ... ■«■ Peyton, Lieut.- Colonel AY. ... Phipson, H. M. (c m.z.s.) ... Pin hey, A. F. Portman, Lieut.-Col. A. B.... Pottinger, Brig.-Genl. Pilcher, Geo. E. Radcliff, Capt. W. C. A. (r.a.) Rayment, G. J. (a.v.d.) Ready money, N. J. ... Reay, H. E. Lord (c.i.e., ll d.) Reddie, F. ... c .. Reid, G. B. (c s.) Reynolds, P. (c.e.) ... Riddell, R. ... Ritchie, A. M. Rivett-Carnac, L. Robb, Doctor Roberts, R. ... ... Robertson B. (c.s.) ... R-obinson, G. P. Rose, F. Russell, B. B. • • . • • • Residence. ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Calcutta ... Bombay ... Dharwar ... Bombay ... Europe ... Thana ... Ahmedabad ... Calcutta ... Broach ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Jhinjinwara ... Poona ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Mount Abu ... Bijapur ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Kanara ... Bombay ... Banswarra . . . Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Kirkee ... Babugarh ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Europe ... Baroda ... Jubbulpore ... Ahmednugger . . . Bombay . . . Europe ... Secunderabad ... Surat ... Bombay . . . Akola, Berar . . . Europe X LIST OF MEMBERS. Name. Renuick, Col. H. de P. Richardson, Capt, W. St. John Richardson, F. Gr. Rimington, F. G. Russell, L. P.... ... ... ... Ilugoonath Mukund ... Ryrie, J. M. ... Rustomji, H. J. Rutlam, H. H. the Maharaja of Samat Singji, H. II. Prince ... bassoon, Mrs. S. D, ... Sawyer, Major Scott, The Hon'ble Mr. Justice Selby, Major H. 0. (ii.e.) Shipp, W. Silcock, H. F. (c.s.) ... Sirnkins, A. R. M. Simpson, A. F. Sims, Proctor Sinclair, W. F. (c.s. ) Slater, D. McLauchlan Slater, E. M. ... Slater, J. M. (c.E.) ... Smith, Mrs. Yorke ... Soaue, G. de... ... Squire, W. W. (c.e.) ... Squires, Mrs. ... ... ... Starling, M. H. St. Clair, Capt. W. A. E. (r.e.) ... Steel, J. H. (a.v.e.) ... ... ... Sterndale, R. A. (f.z.s.) Steward, A. B. (c.s.)... Stone, S. J. ... ... ... Straw, tv.is.... ... ... ... Street, Capt, ... Street, Dr. A. W. F Stuart, C. A. ... Stuart, M. Scott Sturt, Colonel... ... Sukhtankar, Sittaram Vishnu Surveyor, N. F. Swan, H. H. ... Sway ne, H, G. E. (re) Swinhoe, Colonel C. (f.z.s., f.l.s., f,e.s.) Sykes, C. Symington, J. H. Symons, J, L.... Syuions, H. S Residence. ... Y"eotmal ... Bombay ... N. Travancore ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Kurrachee ... Rutlam ,.. Bombay ... Bombay ... Calcutta ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Lanowli ... Europe ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bhownugger ... Alibag ... Bombay ,.. Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Europe ... Bombay ... Madras ... Jetpur ... Punjab ... Gandevi . . . Europe ... Poona ... Punjab ... Mhow ... Europe ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Europe ... Aden ... Poona ... Cutch Mandvi ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Bombay LIST OP MEMBERS. Name. Symons, N. S. Scarborough, Earl of Scott, M. H. (c.s.) Searle, W. H. W Shopland, Capt. E. R. Sinclair, Dr. ... ►Smyth, R. Baternan (c.E.) ... Spence, L. H. Summers, Thos. Shrimant Hanmantrao Gopalrao Servai, Cursetji N. ... ... Stewart, R. B. (c.s.) ... Spencer, F. A. Tata, Dorab, J. Taylor, A Taylor, Chas.... Taylor, W. Terry, O. W..i Temulji, Dr. B. N Thacker, W. ... Thakur, Shripad Babaji (c.s.) Thomson, Mrs. X O Ll , *J • ... ... ... Turner, Mrs. A. F Thatcher, Capt. J. F. G. C. Turner, Montague C. Thoin, E. Thompson, B. W. 0. Trail, John ... Trail, W. 11 Tytler, Stanley Uloth, H.W Vidal, G. W. (c.s.) ... Walcott, Colonel (c.i;.) Walker, A. C. Walker, T. ... Whyte, Lieut. C. F. ... Willis, R. A Wallace, James Wallace, John (C.E.)... Wallace, L. A. Walton, Rienzi (c.E.) Walton, E. M Ward, Frank Watson, E. Y. Webb ; W. ... Residence. ... Bombay Yorkshire, England ...Dhulia ...Poona ...Bombay ...Kolhapur ...Madras ...Kaira ...Europe ...Kolhapur ...Bombay ...Dharwar ...Bombay ...Bombay ...Bombay ... Horn bay ...Bombay ...Bombay ...Bombay ...Bombay ...Broach ...Bombay . . . Europe ...Bombay ...Bombay ...Bombay ...Europe ...Ahmednucrcrer . . . Europe ...Jhansi ...Bombay ...Bombay ...Thana ...Europe ...Bombay ...Europe ... Mhow ...Bombay ...Europe ... Bombay ...Europe ...Europe ...Bombay ...Europe ...Madras ...Bombay e>o v xu LIST OF MEMBERS. Name. Weir, Dr. T. S. Wenden, H. (c.e. ) Westtnacott, Col. , Wise, Col. Wise, U.S.... Woodward, W. (c.s.) Wroughton, R. C. .. Wylie, R. Westall, J. ... Wkitehonse, Lieut. B Wodehouse, Lieut. F White, T. C. H. Witnb ridge, E. Yerbury, Major Young, G. S. Young, W. E. Yeld, Dr. H.... Younghusband, A. D Yule, Major J. B. .. (r.n W. (c.s.) Residence. ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Poona ... Europe . . . Karwar ... Ahmedabad ... Poona ... Gadecbi ».. Bombay ... Europe ... Kirkee ... Thana ... Bombay ... Europe ... Europe ... Bombay ... Bombay ... Ahmedabad ... Sipri, C. P. 66 90 86 I *-•*. . "^ •"v^A^ £% «'7 n.3 :/■/ gw ; del. M'.ntern Bros. Chromo lifch London. 84. HIRUNDOFILIFERA.Steph 86. HIRUNDO FLUVIC0LA,Jerd.India2i Cliff Swallow. 30.PTYON0PR0GNE CONCOLO Dusty Crag Martin. 107. CAPRI MUL6US lNDlCUS,Lattv Jungle Night Jar. CAPRI MULGUSATR1 PEN N IS, J !ar. 112 CAPRIMULGUS ASiATICUS,Lath Common Indian . 113 CAPRIMULGUS MAHRATTENSUS ,i 114. CAPRIMULGUS MONTICOLUS,?: WinsNigktJ 214. EUDYNAMIS H0N0RA7 A.I.m Indian Koel. J U 11 N A L OP THE BOMBAY (yn?f ♦ t-^v No, j ( ] BOMBAY, JANUARY, 1889. [*>i. iv. 84. NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. By Lieut. II. E. Barnes. {Continued from poge 224.) -THE WIRE-TAILED SWALLOW. Hinindo fib' fern, Stevh. The Wire-tailed Swallow occurs throughout the district, but is nowhere numerically common ; it is a permanent resident, and breeds from the end of January to the end of May and again from tho eud of July to the beginning of October. The nest is deep, half saucer shaped, and is composed of pallets of mud, well lined with s >fb feathers, and is always placed in the vicinity of water, under the cor- nices of bridges, under arches of culverts, against the sides of wells, where there are projections under which they can build, in niches in buildings overhanging water, or under projecting ledges of rock. It is always placed against the side and a little below the roof or projection, only just enough spice being left for the ingress and egress of the bird. The eggs, three in number, are long narrow ovals in shape, a good deal pointed towards one end ; they average - 72 inches in length by about 0'52 in breadth ; in colour they are white, beautifully speckled, spotted and blotched with various shades of reddish-brown. When fresh and unblown the ground colour is a delicate pink owing to the yolk showing through. They will not desert the nest even if the eggs be taken, but will lay a second, and if this be taken, even a third clutch in the same nest. 1 BOMBAY NATUBAL IIISTOllY SOCIETY. 85.— THE MOSQUE SWALLOW. Hirundo eryl/iropyrjia, SyJces. The Mosque Swallow occurs generally throughout Western India, but is more common in hilly districts (such as Mount Aboo), than in the open country. Most of them retire to the hills to breed about April, but a few remain, and nests are not unfrequently found in the plains. The nest, constructed of pellets of mud (which the bird procures from the banks of the nearest pond or river), is of a peculiar shape : it consists of a bulb-like chamber, five or six inches in length at one end, with a tubular passage, sometimes eight or nine inches long at the other, which the male continues to lengthen, even after the eggs are laid and while the female is sitting upon them. It lias, not inaptly, been described as retort or rather half-retort shape. It is usually affixed to the roof of a cave, under a bridge or culvert, or to the under surface of a projecting ledge of rock. The nest is well lined with soft feathers, and the eggs, three in number, are pure unspotted white, of a longish oval shape, and average 0*78 inches in length by 0*55 in breadth. After the birds have once selected a site for their nest, thev are very difficult to drive away. I have often broken open nests to see if any eggs had been laid, and they have always been repaired, and I have eventually obtained eggs from them. To such an extent is the constructive faculty developed in these birds, that they ofen make two or more nests before they are satisfied, and they are known to make a winter residence, in which eggs are never found. They are solitary breeders. 86.— THE INDIAN CLIFF SWALLOW. Hirundo Jluvicula, Jerd. The Indian Cliff Swallow is not uncommon in some parts of the Deccan, but is somewhat locally distributed ; it occurs at Satara and Sholapur in some numbers ; near Aboo and Oeesa it is very rare; but at Ahmedabad there are several colonies ; it is common but local in Nassick and Khandeish, and occurs at Baroda. It has not been reported from Sind. They are generally permanent residents where found ; breeding twice in the year, from February to April, and again in July, August and the early part of September. They build retort-shaped neste of mud, but very different to those of the Mosque Swallow, the bulb or chamber portion being affixed to the under-surface of a shelving rock, or under a bridge, with the NESTING IN WESTERN INDTA. tubes hanffins down, or rather a little outwards, the whole looking not unlike a hu^o honeycomb. These clusters of nests are often of great size, containing from 30 to 200 nests, and are almost always in the immediate vicinity of water. The nests are well lined with feathers; the eggs, throe in number, are longish ovals in shape, and average 0*7(j inches in length by about 0'53 in breadth. They are of two different types. In one they aro pure unspotted white ; in the other, they are more or less speckled, spotted or streaked with yellowish-brown; these markings are not clearly defined. The nests, especially the outer ones of a cluster, are often appropriated by Common Swifts and House Sparrows. 39.-TE1E INDIAN SAND MARTIN. Cofijle sinensis, J. E. Gr. The Indian Rand Martin is common in suitable places in most parts of Western India, but has not as yet been recorded from Ratnagiri. It is a permanent resident, breeding from November to March, or even later. They bore holes in the sandy banks of rivers to a depth of from eighteen to forty or fifty inches, according to the relative hard- ness of the soil ; and at the end of this hole or passage, which is enlarged, they make a slight nest of fiue grass roots lined with sofc feathers. The eggs, three in number, are pure white, quite devoid of gloss; they are oval in shape, and measure 0*03 inches in length by about Q'48 in breadth. The nest holes are not solitary, but they are much more scattered than is usually the case with the British species. 90.— THE DUSKY CRAG MARTIN. Coixjle concolor, Sykvs. The Dusky Crag Martin, with the exception of Sind, occurs more or less abundantly throughout our limits. It is somewhat solitary in its habits, rarely more than a single pair nesting in the same vicinity. They have at least two broods in the year, and lay at, different seasons indifferent parts of the couutry, but from January to March and from July to September are perhaps the best times to search for eggs. The nest is placed under a projection in the face of a rocky cliff, far from the haunts of man, or under ihe eaves of a house in his vei-y midst. It is very like that of the Wire-tailed Swallow, but is BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. smaller, more cup-shaped and pointed at the bottom, but like it is well lined with feathers. The eggs, three in number, are white with numerous spots and specks of various shades of yellowish or reddish- brown, but these markings are neither so bright nor so bold as those of the Wire-tailed Swallow; they average about 0-72 inches in length by nearly 0'52 in breadth. They appear to build in the same place for successive seasons, and do not. desert the nest when robbed, but lay again within a fortnight or even less. 98.— THE ALPINE SWIFT. Cgpselltts rnelba, Lin. The Alpine Swift occurs not uncommonly in mountainous tracts throughout the district, descending to the plains during the day but returning at night to roost. It is possessed of amazing powers of flight, and covers vast distances daily in search of food. Its breeding haunts were long unknown, but it has now been ascer- tained to breed in the mountainous tracts of Nassick,*and will doubt- less prove to do so in most other suitable places ; they breed in deep clefts and fissures of almost inaccessible rocks; the nest is a very solid structure in comparison with that uf the Common Swift ; it is shallow, and is usually fastened to both sides of the fissure, which often stretches upwards into an overhanging cliff, and it is a most difficult nest to take. They do not seem to breed at any particular season, but egg^, have been taken early in February. Mr. Littledale found a colony of about eighteen nests in the face of a smooth overhanging crag in Dutchkut, Cashmere, but they were quite inaccessible. Nassick, February, J. Davidson, C.S. 100.— THE COMMON INDIAN SWIFT. Cypstllus ajjinis, J. E. Gr. The Common Indian Swift is abundant throughout the district, and is a permanent resident; it has several broods iu the year, and eggs and young may be found at all seasons. They are very accommodating iu the choice of nesting sites. Nests may be found in any of the following situations : — [n holes in the faces of old walls, mosques, forts, or other old buildings; in these cases the nests are detached, unless the hole happens to be large enough to contain two or more. * Vide U. N. H. S. Journal, p. 47, No. 1, Vol. III. NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. Under tlio oaves of bouses, tombs, &c, several nests together, with perhaps a few detached ones. In the doorways and under roofs of stables and other outhouses, or between closely-set rafters. Under the roofs of eaves they occur in clusters; often containing" fifty or more nests, with isolated ones, or small clumps of two or three in close proximity to the central mass. Their nests, which take a long time to construct, are composed of agglutinated saliva, mixed with a few feathers and straws; they are of no particular shape, but if in a hole or other confined place, it necessarily takes its shape ; they are at times long and narrow, occasionally almost round, but generally they are of an irregular oblong shape. The entrance is a portion of the upper part of the nest left unfinished. The eggs, three in number, are long narrow ovals, measuring 078 inches in length by 057 in breadth. They are pure glossless white, with a pinkish tinge when fresh and unblown. As previously noted they often appropriate nests of the Cliff Swallows. 102.— THE PALM SWIFT. Cypsellus battassiensis, J. E. Gr. The Palm Swift, is most abundant in those districts in which the toddy palm abounds, but where these trees are absent, the Palm Swifts arc absent also. They breed twice a year, from March to July; the nest is almost always placed in a furrow formed by a plait, in the under-surface of a bent palm leaf towards the centre. It is a tiny watch pocket in shape, composed of vegetable down, often mixed with feathers (parrots' aud doves' especially), and is cemented to the leaf by agglutinated saliva; the nest itself is soft, but the upper edge is haid and cordlike. The eggs, three in number, are perfect miniatures of those of the Common Swift, measuring 07 inches in length by about 0*46 in breadth. Bombay, May. II. E. Barnes. 103.— THE EDIBLE NEST SWIFTLET. Collocalia unicolor, Jerd, The Edible Nest Swiftlet occurs on the Malabar Coast, breeding during the months of March and April. The nests, composed of 6 B0M1UY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. inspissated saliva, are half saucer-shaped, and are affixed to the sides of rocky caves, in sraal i clusters, but detached nests are not nufrequent. The eo'srs, two or three in number, are, as a rule, long narrow ovals CO* ' ' o in shape, measuring - 8<'i inches in length by about 0*54 in breadth ; iu colour they are dull glossless white. Nests of the first make are white, and are very valuble ; those of the second are not so clear, and are mixed with extraneous matter, and do nofc command so high a price iu the Chinese markets as the others. Nests of the third make (which are left for the birds to breed in) are discoloured and are much mixed with feathers, straws, &c., and are of no commercial value. The right to collect the nests is sold annually by Government, but the revenue derived from it is very insignificant. Vingorla, Feb. and, April. G. Vidal, C. S. 104.— THE INDIAN CRESTED SWIFT. Bcndrochelidon coronata, Tick. The Indian Crested or Tree Swift is not uncommon at Ratnagiri, O " and occurs rarely all along the Western ghats. It has been recorded from Mhow and from the hilly jungles of the Panch Mahals. It is not uncommon in the broken hilly laud below the ghats aud along the v O O plain forest south of the Satpooras. It is a permanent resident where found, breeding from April to Juno. The nest, which is small, is a shallow half-saucer iu shape, no larger than a rupee, and is com- posed of thin flakes of bark, glued by the bird's own saliva to the dead branch of a tree. It is about half an inch in depth, and is nowhere more than one-eighth of an inch iu thickness. The egg, there is only one, is oval in shape, measuring 0"9 inches in length by 057 in breadth, and is dull glossless white in colour. The nest is easy to find, as the cock-bird, while the hen is sitting for most of the day, keeps flying within a hundred yards of the neat. lie continually calls and is answered by the female from the nest, which is generally on a thin bare branch, from eight to twenty feet from the ground. Punch Mahals, May. R. Littledalc, Esq. Western Khandcsh, Feb. to April. J. Davidson, C.S. NESTING IN' WESTERN INDIA. 107.— THE JUNGLE NIGHT JAR. Co-prim nig its indicus, Laih. The Jungle Night Jar is not uncommon on the Western ghats, and occurs also on the Aravolli Range. It breads from March to the middle of May, making no nest, but depositing its two eggs i:i a slight depression on the bare ground under the shelter afforded by a low bush. They are oval in shape, measuring 1*2 inches in length by about 88 ia breadth; in colour they are a pale salmon pink, thickly blotched and streaked with purplish and olive brown. Nassick, April and May. J. Davidson, C.S. 10S.-TIIE NILGIRI NIGHT JAR. Caprimulgus kelaarti, Bly. The Nilgiri Night Jar has been recorded from the Konkan ; it is only doubtfully distinct from the Juugle Night Jar, C. indicus, and might with advantage be suppressed. The eggs are exact facsimiles of those of the latter bird. Nilgiri, in Coll. H. E. Barnes. 111.— THE GHAT NIGHT JAR. Caprimulgus atripennis, Jcrd. The Ghat Night Jar has been recorded from the forost tract west of Belgaum, and Jerdon mentions it from the Malabar Coast. As usual with all the Night Jars, it lays two eggs ou the bare ground. They are of a dark salmon colour, spotted and blotched with pur- plish and reddish-brown; they measure l'l iuch iu length by about 0"73 in breadth. S. India, in Coll. H- %> Barnes. 112.— THE COMMON INDIAN NIGHT JAR. Caprimulgus asiaticus, Laih. The Indian Night Jar is common throughout the district, and is a permanent resident, breeding from March to September, but most po-tfs will be found in June and July. It is common in scrub jungle, but is rare in deep forest. The eggs (there is no nest) are two in number, and are laid on the bare ground. They vary from a warm pinkish stone colour to a deep salmon pink, and are clouded, blotched, and streaked with different shades of pale reddish and purplish- brown. They measure 1 -04 inches in length by 0*77 in breadth. Deesa, 8fc , April and May. H. E. Barnes. 8 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 113.— SYKE3' NIGHT JAR. Gaprinntlrjus mahratterisis, Sykes. Sykes' Night Jar is very common in Sinrl, where it is a permanent resident, but becomes much less common towards the South. It breeds from February to August, laying its two eggs in a depression on the ground, occasionally in the open, at other times under a tussock of grass or clod of earth. They are of a light pale stone or clayey colour, with large blotches and clouds of neutral tint. They measure IT 5 inches in length by about - 8 in breadth. Hyderabad (Sind), ]8th April to 5th May. II. E Barnes. Eastern Narra (Sind), Fed;/, to August. S, Doig, Esq.. Ill,- FRANKLIN'S NIGHT* JAR. Caprimidyus monticolus, Frank. Excluding Sind, Frankliu's Night Jar is more or less commonly distributed throughout tho district, breeding in the manner usual with the genus, from April to July. Tlie eggs are of a deep salmon colour, exactly similar to that of the Jungle Night Jar, but the eggs are much larger; they are spotted and blotched with pale purplish and clayey-brown. They average 1*2 inches in length by nearly 0"So in breadth. Mount Aboo, June. II. E. Barnes. Neemuch, June and July. „ Nassick, April to June, J. Davidson, C. S. 117.— THE COMMON INDIAN BEE-EATER. Jlf crops viridis Lin. The Common Indian Bee-eater is most abundant throughout the entire district. They breed in April in holes in sandy banks of nullahs, in the sides of cuttings, and occasionally in almost level ground. They cut a fresh hole each season, using their bills to loosen the earth, and scraping it away with their claws. The holes vary in depth from two to four feet or more, according to the nature of the soil, and are barely two inches in diameter. They are cleanly cut and are quite circular, with two little channels made by the feet of the bird in entering and leaving the passage, NESIING IN WESTERN INDIA. 3 There is no nest. The eggs are laid on the bare ground, in a cavity or enlargement at the cud of the bole- They are usually •four in number, but sometimes six or seven are fouud. Tkcy arc almost spherical in shape, measuring 0*73 inches in length by 0*7 in breadth, In colour they are milk-white, and are brilliantly glossy when fresh. They seem to lay their eggs at intervals, as very often fresh and incubated eggs or nestlings are found in the same nest. 118.— THE BLUE-TAILED BEE-EATER, Merofs philippinus } Lin. The Blue-tailed Bee-eater occurs sparingly throughout tho district, but appears to be more common in Gujarat, where it breeds during the hot weather in holes in the banks of rivers.* They also breed in Khandcsh, making their n st-holes in the face of the Satpooras early in Ma}-. The eirgfs are similar to those of the Common Indian Bee-eater Imt are larger, measuring 0'-8S inches in length by 0*76 in breadth, Baroda, May. It- Littledale, Esq. E. Narra (Sind), July. 8. Boig, Esq. Khaiidesh, May. J. Davidson^ C.S. 123.— THE INDIAN ROLLER. Coracias Tudica, Lin. The Indian Roller, more commonly known as the Blue Jay, is abundant throughout the greater part of the district. It is a per- manent resident as a rule, but in some localities retires to the better wooded tracts to breed. They build in holes in trees, in walls, under caves of houses, &c. The nest is a mere collection of rubbish, such as rags, fibres, tow, &c, thrown together anyhow. The eggs, four in number, are glossy china- white, of a broad oval shape, occasionally almost spherical. They measure 1*3 inches in length by rather more than an inch in breadth. The nesting season extends from April to July, but May and Juno are the months in which most eggs are laid. Mr. Davidson has kindly furnished mo with the following note : In the Satara, Poona, and Nassick ghats they arc apparently absent during the hot weather, but breed abundantly in the Satpooras. *Vide B. N. II. S. Journal, p. 32, No. 2, Vol. I. 10 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 127. -THE BROWN-HEADED KINGFISHER. Pelargopsis gurial, Pears. The Brown-headed or Stork-billed Kingfisher is the least common of all the family, and only occurs as a straggler in most places of the district. It has not been recorded from Sind. Mr. Davidson, C.S., found it breeding in Nassiek and West Khaudesh in April and May in holes in river banks : generally about a foot deep. A female I shot in Ncemuch in March had good sized eggs in her ovaries, and I have also received notes of nesting holes from other places.* The eggs are stated by Mr. Theobald to be four in number, in shape round and pure white. He gives the dimensions as 1*09 inches in length by 1'02 in breadth, but this is less thau egg* of the m?Tch smaller White-breasted Kingfisher measure, and must, I think, be a mistake. 129.— THE WHITE- BREASTED KINGFISHER. Halcyon s-mymensis, Lin. The White-breasted Kingfisher is a common permanent resident throughout the entire region, breeding in holes pierced in the banks of rivers, canals, and tanks, and in the sides of wells, from March to the end of May and again in July and August. There is no nest. The eggs, from four to seven in nntnbtr, are deposited in a cavity at the end of the passage; they are glossy china-white when first laid, but soon become discoloured. In shape they are very broad ovals, some being almost spherical ; they average 1'12 inches in length by 1-03 in breadth. I have never found the least semblance of nest, but Mr. Baker writing from Silchar, North Cachar, tells a very different tale. He says, in eftst. : — "Halcyon smyrnensis a)wa} T s build their nests hero of moss, and generally under an overhanging stone on the bank of some small stream, which is entirely covered in with jungle. The people here declare that it never makes a hole in a bank, and they do not consider it to be a Kingfisher, calling it quite a different name." In another letter he says: — " I was halting on the bank of a river, some eight or ten miles from Guilong, and during the day noticed a pair of these birds constantly visiting a place under an old rotten tree. On my inspecting it I found that thoy had built, or rather nearly built, a nest in a crevice between two roots. It was composed of moss with a few skeleton lcaves> * Vide B. N. H. S. Journal, p. 32, No. 2, Vol. h NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 11 and was in appearance like a Willow Wren's nest, only of course very much larger. I did not touch the nest as I wanted to watch the birds; so I fetched my glasses, and seated myself on a heap of stones about fifty yards away. One of the birds soon came back with a large piece of moss in its beak. This it commenced to jam in between the nest and the tree, hanging on to a root all the time and working most vigorously. There seemed to be no weav- ing or twisting, but the bird seemed to work the nest into shape as it went on. The nest when examined afterwards was found to consist of layers of moss, one on the top of the other. It fell to pieces directly it was pulled out, and T have not seen a single nest which had sufficient consistency to stand handling." Mr. Baker is a careful observer, and I feel certain that he has made no mistake. This total change of habit is curious, and it would be interesting to learn if any other naturalist has met with a similar experience. 134.— THE INDIAN KINGFISHER. Alccdo bengalcnsis, Gm. The Indian Kingfisher is common throughout the district except in Sind, where it is replaced by the closely allied, even if distinct, European Kingfisher, Alcedo ispidet. They breed during the hot weather in holes in the banks of rivers and streams. They make no nest, but a few small fish bones are generally found close to the eggs; but these are ou(y castings, and are evidently not intended for a nest. The eggs, from five to seven in number, are glossy china- white {pinkish- white when fresh). In shape they are broad ovals, occasionally almost spherical. They measure G - 8 inches in length by 0*63 in breadth. lUlis.— THE EUROPEAN KINGFISHER. Alccdo ispida, Lin. The European Kingfisher differs so slightly from the Indian form, that I do not consider the latter entitled to specific distinction, but until the question is definitely settled, it must be retained. The European Kingfisher is very common in Sind, where it is a permanent resident, breeding during the hot weather. The eggs are not distin- guishable from those of the Iudiau bird, {Hyderabad Sind), May and June, 11. K, Barnes. 12 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, 236.— THE PIED KINGFISHER. Cerylc rudis, Lin. The Pied Kingfisher occurs in suitable localities fehroaghorat tbt- presidency. It is a permanent resident, breeding during the summer months in holes in the banks- of streams and rivers. The eargfs, font to six in number, are glossy china-white, and are usually of a broad oval shape, but are liable to variation. They measure 1*15 inches in length by 0'9 in breadth. There are three or four other species of this family mostly confined to the sea coast in the South. They are probably permanent resi- dents-, but I can find no record of their breeding. 140. -THE GREAT HORN BILL. Dichoceros caratns, Shaw. The Great Hornbill is a permanent resident in the forest clad portions of tho Sahyadri range, where it is not uncommon. They feed principally on ripe berries and fruit, leaving their usual haunts during the winter in search of them, They kill and eat snakes when they find them. They breed during the hot weather in holes in rotten trees. The female is a close sitter, closing up the entrance hole with her own ordure, only leaving a long narrow slit through which she obtrudes her bill to receive the berries and other food that her mate brings her. She does not leave the nest hole until the eggs are hatched out. The eggs, three in number, vary in colour from pure white to pale- yellow. They measure 2- 7 inches in length by about 1*8 in breadth. 14] .—THE MALABAR PIED HORNBILL. Hydrocissa coronata, Budd. The Malabar Pied Hornbill is a not uncommon permanent resident in the southern portion of our district, but I cannot find any record of its breeding. 144.— THE COMMON GREY HORNBILL. Ocyceros hirostris } Scojj. The Common Grey Hornbill has not been recorded from Sind, and only doubtfully so from the Deccan. Generally speaking it is not uncommon in all the well-wooded tracts of Rajpootana and Gujerat. In the Gir forest in Katty war it is very common. It is fairly common in the mango groves in the Nassick and Khandesh districts. It NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 13 breed sduring A pril and May in the same manner as others of Hie family. The eggs, three to five in number, arc dull-white, and are usually more or less discoloured. They are oval in shape, and measure 1*7 inches in length by about 1*22 in breadth. Khandesh, April to May. J. Davidson, C.8. 145.— THE JUNGLE GREY HORNBILL. Tockits griseus, Lath. The Jungle Grey Hornbill is more or less common in the forest- clad hills in the south of the district, occurring as far north as Khaudalla. It is a permanent resident, but I can find no record of its breeding within our limits. 147.— THE ALEXANDRINE PAROQUET. Palocornis eupatria, Lin. The Alexandrine Paroquet does not occur in Sind, and appears to be altogether absent from the South. It occurs and breeds on the Satpoora Hills, but is rarely seen on the Satmallis in the south of the district. I met with a large flick on one occasion only at Neemuch, Rajpootana. The greater number if not all of the young birds offered for sale in the Bombay market come from Central India from hills in the Jubbulpur district, where the birds are common. They breed in holes in trees very late in the year, nest- lings being exposed for sale about Christmas. The eggs, four in number, are oval in shape, measuring 1*5 inches in length by about 1*15 in breadth. They are white when first laid but soon become discoloured. W. Khandesh, Nov. to January. J. Davidson, C.S. 148.-THE ROSE-RINGED PAROQUET. Palocornis torauatus, Lin. The Rose-ringed Paroquet is a common permanent resident throughout the entire district, breeding generally in holos in trees, occasionally in holes in old walls and buildings, and under the eaves of outhouses. From the middle of February to about the middle of April is about the best time to search for nests. The eggs, four in number, are pure glossless white ; they arc oval in shape, pointed at one end, and measure 1*2 inches in length by about 0*95 in breadth. 7 4 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. I4D.- THE ROSE-HEADED PAROQUET. Paloeornis purpureas, P.L. Z. Mull. With the exception of Sind the Rose-headed Paroquet occurs generally throughout the district, hut is much less common and is more locally distributed than the Rose-ringed Paroquet. They retire to the hills about the end of March to breed, but on one occasion at Poona I saw nestlings exposed for sale on Christmas Day, which had been taken at Khandalla. They nest iu holes in trees. The eggs, four in number, are exact miniatures of those of P. torquatus, measuring an iuch in length by 08 in breadth. W. Khaudcsh, February. J. Davidson, C. S. Saugor, C. P., March. II. E. Barnes. 151.— THE BLUE-WINGED PAROQUET. Palceornis eolumboides, Yig. Within our district the Blue-winged Paroquet is confined to the Sahyadri range. I can find no account of its nesting, but great numbers of young birds are exposed for sale in the Crawford Market, Bombay, every hot season. The dealers say they come from the ghats. 158.— THE SIND PIED WOODPECKER. Picas sindianus, Gould. This Woodpecker seems to be confined to Sind, where it is very common in suitable places. It is a permanent resident, breeding during March and April, laying its eggs iu holes in trees, which are cut by the birds themselves. The eggs, three in number, are glossy milk-white, and measure 0'85 inches in length by nearly 0*67 in breadth. Hyderabad (Sind), March and April. II. E. Barnes. Eastern Narra [Sind), 2nd April. S.Doig, Esq. 1 GO.— THE YELLOW-FRONTED WOODPECKER. Picus maltraitcnsis, Lath. The Yellow-fronted "Woodpecker is generally distributed through- out the district, but is rare in Sind, where it is replaced to a great extent by P. sindianus. It is a permanent resident, breeding during February, March and April in holes which it cuts in trees. There NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 15 is uo nest. The eggs, three in number, n,rc glossy milk-white oval?, shaded delicate pink when fresh and unblown. They average 0*87 inches in length by nearly O'GS in breadth. Deesa, March. II. E. Barnes. Nassick and Khandesh, Feb. to April. J. Davidson* C. 8. Baroda, Feb. to April. II, Litiledale, Esq. 104.— THE SOUTHERN PIGMY WOODPECKER. Yungipicus nanus, Vig. The Southern Pigmy Woodpecker occurs sparingly all along" the Sahyadri range, where it is a permanent resident, breeding during- February and March. It is exclusively a jurigic bird and rare, except in the broken country b 'low the ghats. In West Khandesh, where it is abundant, in one week in the beginning of March, Mr. Davidson, C.S., took twenty nests. They were almost all in thick branches, about 16 feet up a tree that had been pollarded for rabi cultivation, and with two exceptions all contained callow young on that date. It cuts a tiny hole in the side of a large branch of a tree, which is generally more or less decayed. There is no nest. The eggs, three or four in number, are glossy-white and measure 0'67 inches in length by 0'5 in breadth. W. Khandesh, March, nestlings. J. Davidson, C. S. 166 bis.— THE LARGE GOLDEN-BACKED WOODPECKER. Chrysocolaptes delesserti, Malh. The Woodpecker occurs not uncommonly all along the Sahyadri range and adjacent forests. It is a permanent resident, and of course breeds, but I cannot find any satisfactory account of its nesting. It is said to breed from December to Februry in large holes, which itcutsintruuks of trees, at various heights from the ground, laying but a single egg, which is glossy white and of a broad oval shape. 107.— THE BLACK-BACKED WOODPECKER. Cliri/Jocula'pfes festiuus, Bodd. This very handsome Woodpecker has been recorded from Ratuagiri but is not common. It occurs, but very rarely on Mount Aboo and the adjacent hills. Tt is fairly common throug;hout the ghats, both in Nassick and Khandesh, also on the Satpooras. It cuts a very 16 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. large nest hole and breeds early, young, able to fly, having beeu found in the Satpooras at Christmas. It generally lays but one egg, but Mr. Davidson, C. S., on one occasion obtained a young one and a rotten egg from the samo nest (this was in March). It generally cuts several holes in the tree on whieh it nests, as well as in the adjacent ones. 175.— THE SOUTHERN YELLOW-NECKED WOODPECKER. Chrysocolaptes chlorig aster, Jcrd. Occurs throughout the jungles in the Western Satpooras and iu the northern part of the ghats, but is nowhere abundant. It is a permanent resident, but the eggs do not appear to have been taken. 179.— THE MADRAS RUFOUS WOODPECKER, Micro'pternus gularis, Jercl. The Madras Rufous Woodpecker occurs along the Sahyadri range and adjacent forests as far north at least as Khandalla. It is a permanent resident, but I can find uo account of its nesting habits. Several observers have noticed the fact of its head and tail boin<>- generally smeared with resin, and also its habits of hammering at ants' nests, in which most probably, like its northern congener, M. plucoceps, it lays its eggg. 180.— THE GOLDEN-BACKED WOODPECKER, Brachyplerniis aurantius, Lin. The Golden-backed Woodpecker is very common throughout the northern half of the prcsidensy. It is a permanent resident, breeding from March to July, cutting its nest-hole in the trunk of a tree, generally a mango or other soft-wouded one. The eggs, three in number, are oval in shape, somewhat pointed at one end. They measure I'll inches iu length by 0"8 in breadth, and are glossy milk-white, with a delicate salmon tinge when fresh and unblown. In the Deccan it appears to retire to the hills to breed. Dcesa > S,"c. i April and May. H. E. Barnes. 181.— THE LESSER GOLDEN-BACKED WOODPECKER. Braehypternus punciicollis, Malh, This Woodpecker replaces the last in the south. Its nesting habits are precisely similar. NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 17 182.— THE S1ND -GOLDEN-BACKED WOODPECKER. Brachypiernus dilulus, Bly. This bird does not differ in any respect from B. auranlius, and lias been rightly suppressed in most recent ornithological works. There are several other Woodpeckers, occurring more or less rarely, on the forest-clad hills of Western India, mostly in the south. They are probably permanent residents, but of their nestings I can find no record. 193 bis.— THE WESTERN GREEN 13ARBET. Megalmma inomata, Wald. The Western Green Barbet is not uncommon in the Satpoor and Dang country below the ghats. It is very common at Aboo and in the jungles of the Panch Mahals. Many observers have reported it from the ghats, but there it is certainly less common than M. viridis. It does not occur in Sind. It is a permanent resident, breeding during March and April, drilling its nest-hole in a large branch of some soft-wooded tree. The eggs, three or four in number, are dullish-white in colour, and measure P3 inches in length by about 0*9 in breadth. Aboo, March to April, H, E. Barnes. Satpoor as, March to April. J. Davidson, C. S. 194.— THE SMALL GREEN BARBET. Megaloema viridis, Bodd. The Small Green Barbet within our limits seems to be confined to the Sahyadri range and adjacent forests. It is a permanent resident, breeding from March to May, in the manner usual to all the members of the group. The eggs, three or four in number, are oval in shape, and measure I'l inches in length by 0'86 in breadth. ] 97.— THE CRIMSON-BREASTED BxVRBET. Xantholoema hcemacephala, P. L. Z. Mull. The Cooper Smith is rare in Sind, but is very common in all other parts of the Presidency. It is a permanent resident, breeding from the end of February to about the middle of April. They select a branch which, however sound it may appear externally, is always decayed and hollow within. They cut a circular hole in this, ami al 3 38 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. the bottom of the hollow, often a considerable depth from the opening, they deposit their eggs, making no nest. The eggs, three in number, are long narrow ovals measuring nearly an inch in length by about 0*7 in breadth. They are pure white. 199.— THE CUCKOO. Guculus canorus, Lin. I can find no authentic record of an egg of the Cuckoo having been found within our limits, but I have no doubt of its breeding freely on Mount Aboo and other wooded hills in Western India as I, in common with other observers, have procured young birds that must have been bred in the vicinity. Mr. Davidson, C.S., says that old birds pass through Dhulia in Khandesh in June, at which time they call vigorously, and in the Satpooras in July a dozen may be heard calling in a morning. Again in August and September, numbers, both young and. old, pass through Dhulia southwards, showing that they must have been bred in the Satpooras at that time. 203.— THE INDIAN CUCKOO. Cuculus mieropf.erus, Gould, Is found throughout the ghats from May to August, and its metallic cry can be heard from a considerable distance. It is a shy bird and undoubtedly breeds at this time. 205.— THE COMMON HAWK CUCKOO Hierococcyx varius, Valil. Is a permanent resident in the northern portion of Khandesh, and occurs in Nassick at the end of the hot weather and during the rains. It appears to lay frequently in the nests of the various Babblers, as eggs and young have been taken from them in the month of July by Mr. Davidson, C.S. 212.-THE PIED CRESTED CUCKOO. Goccystes jacobinas, Bodd. The Pied Crested Cockoo is a monsoon visitant, and occurs more or less commonly throughout the district, but is much more abundant towards the north, becoming comparatively rare in the south. It breeds soon after its arrival, placing its egg as a rule in a nest of one of the malacocerci* * Oapt. Sadler look an egg Erom a nest of Iora zci/lonica during the rains at Baroda. NESTING IN. WESTERN INDIA. 19 The eggs, I cannot say how many are laid, are glossy spotless blue in colour, darker or lighter in different specimens, They are roundish ovals in shape, measuring 094 inches in length by 0*73 in breadth. The eggs can be distinguished from those of the Bush Babbler by their spherical shape, and from those of the other Malacocerci by their smaller size, but the only really authentic specimens are those extracted from the oviduct of the female. A single egg, as a rule, is laid in each nest, but Mr. Littledale once found two Cuckoo eggs and one Babbler's in the same nest, but this was an exception, and I am not aware of any other collector meeting with the same luck. The eggs of the rightful owner of the nest are not destroyed by the parent Cuckoo, but as the young Cuckoo is the sole occupant of the nest, he probably makes away with his nest fellows as soon as they are hatched. Mhou; October. H. E. Barnes, Deesa, June to August. Hyderabad (Sind), August. „ 214.— THE KOEL. Eudynamis honor ata, Lin. With the exception of Sind, where it is rare, the Koel is very com- mon. It is usually a seasonal visitant only, but in some districts it appears to be a resident. They lay their eggs in the nests of the Common Crow, usually one in a nest, occasionally two, but I once found three, but as these eggs differ from each other, they were probably the produce of different birds. Mr. Davidson, C. S., on one occasion found four eggs in a crow's nest, evidently from the markings the eggs of two birds, but this was late in the year, after the Koel's eggs had been persistently taken, and the number of crows which had not hatched off was very few. Mr. Littledale also found four eggs in a nest, vide B. N. H. S. Journal, p. 32, No. 2, Vol. I. I have never found the crow eggs broken, but others have ; in these cases, I believe the eggs to have been broken accidentally. The visit of the female Koel to the nest is a hurried one, and when her presence is detected by the crows, her departure is still more so, and eggs are fragile. 20 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. There can be no doubt that the young koel ejects the young crows from the nest, as I once found the latter on the ground, under a tree* in which was a crow's nest, that on examination was found to be occupied by a solitary nestling koel. The eggs vary much both iu colour and size ; pale sea-green, oily-green, dull olive-green, and dingy stone coloured varieties all occur. The markings are olive, reddish-brown, and dull-purple. They average 1*2 inches in length by 0*92 in breadth. 216.-THE SMALL GREEN-BILLED MALKOHA. Rliovodytes viridirostris, Jerd. Within our limits the Small Green-billed Malkoha seems to be confined to the extreme south, where it is said to be a not uncommon permanent resident. Mr. Davidson, C. S., got a nest from Malwa in July containing two eggs, vide Bombay Gazetteer, 1880. 217.— THE COMMON COUCAL. Ceutrococeyx rufipennis, III. The Common Coucal or Crow Pheasant is abundaut throughout the district, with the exception of Sind, where it is replaced by the closely allied C. maximus. It is a permanent resident, breeding from May to August, making a large, irregular, globular-shaped nest, generally domed. The materials used in its construction are sticks, twigs, grass, &c. It is placed in the centre of a thorny thicket or high up in a tree. In the former position it is well hidden, but in the latter it is more conspicuous, but not always easy to get at. The eggs, usually three in number, are broad, white, chalky ovals, rather pointed at both ends, measuring l - 43 inches in length by rather less than T17 in breadth. 217 quints.— THE SIND COUCAL. Ceutrococeyx maximus, Hume. This bird is a common permanent resident near Hyderabad and other parts of Sind, where it takes the place of G. rufipennis, breed- ing about the same time, in the same manner, and laying precisely similar eggs. Hyderabad (Sind), July to Sept. H. E. Barnes. Narra {Sind}, June to July. S. Doig, Esq. A CREEK OF THE KONKAN. 21 219.— THE SOUTHERN SIRKEER. Taccocua Uschenaulti, Less. Within oui- limits the Southern Sirkeer seems restricted to the south-west, extending as far north as Khandalla. It is a permanent resident, and Mr. Vidal, C. S., obtained eggs, but I can obtain no description of them. 220.— THE BENGAL SIRKEER. Taccocua sirliee, J. E. Gr. Excluding that portion of the Presidency south of Bombay, and perhaps the province of Siud in the north, the Bengal Sirkeer is fairly common in the remaining portion of the district. It is a permanent resident, breeding from May to August, making its nest in a fork in some thick bush or densely foliaged tree. It is a large flatfish structure, composed ot twigs, lined with green leaves. The effo-s, two or three in number, are exact miniatures of those of the Crow Pheasant. They measure P39 inches in length by about 1*01 in breadth. W. Khandesh, May. J. Davidson, C. S. 222.— THE CENTRAL INDIAN SIRKEER. Taccocuat affinis, Bly. I must confess to a great amount of scepticism regarding this bird's title to specific distinction, but Captain Butler records it as "not common in Sind," so it ought to find a place in this paper. I met with it at Saugor in the Central Provinces, when I obtained a nest containing a single egg ; this I left undisturbed, expecting to obtain a full clutch, but the bird forsook the nest. This egg does not differ from those of T. sirkee, except that it is a trifle larger. A CREEK OF THE KONKAN. By W. F. Sinclair, C.S. {Read at the Society's Meeting on the 10th Feb. 1889.) I BAVJ2 to describe to you a voyage on a creek of tho Konkan ; that is, on the estuary of one of the numerous rivers rising in the ghats, or between them and Arabian Sea, and flowing westward into that sea. These arc, throughout the Konnkan south of Bombay, the main 22 BOMBAY NATUKAL HISTORY SOCIETY. highways of heavy traffic. The tides, flowing not only np and down the creeks, but up and down the coast, are as good as two slow trains a day each way ; and the usual alternation of land and sea breezes tends still further to facilitate the fine-weather coasting traffic. The waters which I have chosen to illustrate to-day are those of the great Janjira fiord and of its northern branch, the Malati Creek, which is the mouth of a small and nameless stream rising in the Habsan plateau. Suppose that we are standing early on a cold weather morning at the bottom of a saucer-shaped valley in this plateau, perhaps five miles across. All round the hills rise to nearly a thousand feet above us, their summits usually hog-backed or flab, their flanks sloping and thickly timbered. A couple of exceptional crags show the ruins of old-time fortresses against the sky. The bottom of the saucer is cleared and cultivated, and in its very centre is a patch of salt marsh, partly covered with mangrove scrub. Into this projects a little rocky point, on which is our position. The in-coming tide of the creek at its foot, and a couple of coast- ing craft loading up with fuel for Bombay, are the only signs of the neighbourhood of the sea, which is, indeed, nearly twenty miles away by the course. Off the landing place our own boat is lying ready, and the dinghy comes ashore for us. For in these creeks it is good navigation to get over the shallowest water against the last of the flood, and we have less than an hour left of that. Wo draw only three feet ; the coasters, which draw six, are beneaped ; that is, they must wait for a spring tide to get away. That you may understand what follows, I must describe the party. The captain, fully clothed after his fashion, squats in the very stern to steer. Four men are at the oars amidships, and two forward use long bamboo poles, much more efficient things in shallow currents. These are got up like the gentleman in Midshipman Easy, on the principle of duty before decency. A clout, a cap, and a knife (hung round his neck) is the outfit of each ; whereof we shall presently see the reason. For the purpose of destruction wo require a couple of sporting griffins, who are posted one on each bow, with strict injunctions to keep the muzzles of their guns out board ; and the courteous stranger is invited to take his seat aft beside the commander of the expedition, who has now the honour to address you. Lastly, the ever-useful Don Domingo is busy making coffee over three sticks, A CREEK OF THE KONKAN. 23 burning in a little box full of sand. There is no awning, it would be much in the way, and afloat the direct rays of the sun are weakened by tho rising though invisible vapour, and less dangerous than those reflected from tho surface, which seem to burn through the eye into the brain. Against these wo are armed with smoky spectacles, but don't want them so early in the morning, for our voyage is Westward Ho ! As we push slowly down against the flood, we meet a shoal of grey mullet playing and jumping, and the boys quarrel as to whether or no they are salmon-trout, but are told that there are no trout in India, and to keep their eyes open and mouth shut. Presently a crack opens in the edge of our saucer, and we head south-west- ward through a wooded gorge, the bottom of which, not half a mile wide, is chiefly occupied by the creek and its mangrove swamps. The neap-tide has failed to cover a little sandy islet, and on it a dozen grey and white birds, rather larger than snipe, sit still and close together. As we come up, they fidget and rise, and in an instant the gunner on that side lets fly at them. A couple fall nearly ahead of the boat ; we steer for one and pick it up with a landing net, and a man jumps over board and retrieves the other. Tho griffin who has not shot them, rebukes his fellow griff for shooting " snippets," who retorts that they are just as hard to shoot as "snipe" and "A vis sapidissima in patina." He has not much Latin, this boy ; the other has none, but refuses to consider himself shut up, and appeals to the quarterdeck. Wo find that one bird is a red shank and the other a green shank. Both are large sandpipers of the genus Totanus, and have been waiting on the bank for the ebb. Most shore birds, and especially the sandpipers and dwarf plovers, have this habit, feeding alone or in small and scattered flocks on the foreshore, and packing for repose at high water. Both of our birds are good for the pot, as implied in their slayer's Latin tag. As wo pass on, we find on similar banks several small flocks of curlews, and what our men call young curlews, and so they look, but they rise with a single sharp note, often and quickly repeated, w r hich marks them for whimbrel, a smaller bird and more delicate eating. The tide is now with us, and the water has widened and deepened so we get in the oars and hosit the sails to the morning land wind, keeping on the outside curve of the stream, where the water is deepest and we can steer pretty close to the mangroves. 24 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. These, by the way, are true mangroves, very different from the small- leafed, greyish Avicennia of Bombay harbour. Their great stacks of roots are hidden by the flood-tide, but the laurel-like leaf and heavy scent of the flowers filling the air of the creek distinguish them at once. There are lots of small birds flattering indistinguishable in the trees, and on the outer boughs every here and there a blue kingfisher. Our griffins prepare to make war upon these, talking about hats ; but we disapprove of killing pretty little birds to put in hats, and check them, observing that there is fitter game ahead, where the glasses show a snake-bird, which looks almost white in the morning sun, the sign of plumage in good condition. As the boat closes with him, he rises and flies off before her ; the gunners grumble, and are told to hold their tongues and wait a minute ; sure enough, about half a mile ahead the bird turns and comes back almost over the boat. A couple of men have already slipped into the dinghy astern with a landing net, and as they hear the shot, slip the painter, while the sail-trimmers jump to their feet and put the boat under bare poles in an instant, and the stern grapnel goes overboard with a splash. The bird is only winged, and the chase would be a long one, but he has foolishly dived with the ebb tide and comes up near enough to the boat for a second shot to catch him in the head and neck, and in a minute more he is in the landing net, the grapnel coming up and the sails coming down. The shot has put up a flock of teal a mile ahead, which wheel about a little and then settle, as the bowman observes, just where we got a couple two years ago, in a back water behind a little island. As we come down outside, we anchor, man the dinghy, and send a gunner ashore to stock them there, and he gets a couple. Meanwhile Domingo has done skinning the snake-bird, and the handsome scapular plumes are pressed between two old cigar-box boards lashed with twine, the rest going over board to be presently picked up by a brahminy- kite that has been following us. He can hardly lift the carcase, but at last manages to strand it on an island. Here the creek opens into a triangular lake, with sides of about a mile each, and we fall in with a couple of fishing canoes, and chuck a rupee into one of them. Thereupon the fisherman begins to chuck mullet aboard us till it is clear that the supply exceeds the demand, and we call out to '"vast heaving" It is getting near A CREEK OF THE KONKAN. 25 breakfast time, and the mullet come in handy, so the gunners are -called aft and the meal cooked and served — a trifle roughly perhaps. Suddenly, while every one is busy with his plate, there is a tremendous rush in the air and splash in the water not half a cable off. One's first idea is that of a bolt fallen from the blue; but before the spray has well got back to the surface, an osprey emerges from it with a two-pound mullet in his claws and sails off to an islet, where his breakfast-table lias been established for many generations. As the boat rounds it, the scene is extremely beautiful. A new lake, near six miles long and four wide, opens before us, the shore still mountainous and well wooded, the islands covered with mangrove. The wind has now shifted to the westward, and the boat is close-hauled, but makes good way with the help of the ebb. Tbe gunners have not gone forward after breakfast ; but presently there is some stir and muttering in the bows, and the word is passed aft ot " Rohis," that is flamingoes. Sure enough the field glass shows a flock of large, white birds swimming in deep water nearly a mile ahead, and the boat goes about twice to get a good weather-gauge of them —always necessary in sailing to birds. We get out a rifle, for it is likely enough that they will not allow us within small -shot range, and at about eighty yards they close together and rise in a cloud, but one falls to the double shot, and is presently aboard and being admired as he deserves. Not only is he strange in shape and beautiful in colour, but a very good bird for the tabb, being, it must be remembered, simply a great outlandish goose. We have now a head wind and but little left of the ebb tide that has favoured us so far. The canvas dinghy is folded up and hauled aboard and oars got out to windward, and although the noxt islet shows us a group of oyster catchers on its rocky beach, and a family of otters are diving and playing at the edge of the mangrove swamp, the guns are covered and stowed away. As we round the next point leaving the lake behind there comes into sight ahead a great black mass of towers and walls standing sheer out of the creek and beyond it a water horizon, and we run up our tiny flag. It is ten to one if the fortmen can see its colours at all ; but our sail is of a cut unusual in these waters, and presently there is a movement visible on one of the towers, a great flag rises slowly on its halyards, and a puff of smoke hides tower and flag for a moment, to be followed by another and another, until we have got our proper greeting. 4 26 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. It is a voice out of the past, for the guns that spoke it bear the initials and crown of C. R. S., that is Carolus Rex Succire, and the date 1665 ; and the fortress itself is the island of Janjira, and we are here in touch with the ] 7th century. But if I were to tell you of all the other things that are to be seen hero and hereabouts, we should, I think, be in touch with the 20th before the end of the chapter; so for the present I must stop. OUR IIYMENOPTERA. By Robert C. Wroughton. The principal object of this paper is to try to awaken an interest in a group of insects, mostly small and with little in their appear- ance to catch the eye ; but regarding which nevertheless it is the simple truth to say that of the living inhabitants of this earth they rank next to ourselves in point of intelligence. The wonderful instincts of the Honey Bee are common property, and we all know that some kinds of ants keep slaves, while others herd cows ; but many points in the habits of even the common house ants are mysteries still, and of the ways of the countless Wasps, Ichneumons, Mason Bees, Leaf-cutters, and others of the tribe which swarm about our houses, and build their mud huts on the walls, or take possession of key-holes, and rear their families under our very eyes, we know absolutely nothing at all. It is not tint you and I know nothing : nobody does. About the great majority of these insects nothing has ever been recorded. It would be a lasting glory to this Society if we could give the world some account of the habits and life-history of our local species, and it would be a lasting source of delight to every individual member to got once for all thoroughly interested in such a subject ; but at the outset there is a difficulty which deters us all, a barrier which few have the means or the leisure to surmount. It is this, that if wo make a collection, we cannot name our specimens, and if we make observa- tions, we cannot record our facts without names. The classi- fication of the Indian Hymenoptera is a pathless waste, without a book to light us through it, or a museum to which we can go for guidance. In these circumstances there is only one thing to be OUR HYMENOPTERA. 27 done. We must get together a collection of our own, arranged and named, to which each private collector may go to compare and name his specimens, with this object I have been working for some years, and with the help of friends have gathered together about 500 species, which are roughly classified and a few of them named. Alarge number have been sent to England and will soon return, I hope, with their baptismal certificates : the rest are in a cabinet in this room. What I ask for now is help — help in collecting speci- mens and help in collecting facts. Specimens may be pinned, and kept in corked boxes, like butterflies, or popped into spirits, or put into a small bottle with dry sawdust (which typifies the classi- fication). Facts to be of any value, must be accompanied by the' insect to which they refer. What I should like most is to see many of our members making collections for themselves, and I need not say how glad I should be to give them any help in my power. One department of the subject which I specially commend tolady mem*- bers is the keeping and rearing of ants. Ant houses are easily made, and Sir John Lubbock's well known book will give many hints on the management of these pets. I will now ask your attention to a very sketchy account of the classificatiou of the order of insects called Hymenoptera, which may serve as pegs on which to hang a few notes about each principal group. I am afraid yeu will find the subject dry : I cannot make it otherwise ; but even the pegs on which we hang our clothes are dry. Insects, or the ' insecta,' as now recognised, are distinguished by having in the perfect state only 2 antenna), only G legs, and the body divided into 3 parte, viz., head, thorax and abdomen. As a rule the life history of an insect comprises four stages, viz., 1st) the egg, 2nd the larva, 3rd the pupa, 4th the imago. These stages- are sometimes very sharply distinct as in the butterflies, sometimes indistinct, though traceable, as in the Grasshoppers, while sometimes- they are completely lost as in the mysterious parthenogenesis of the Aphidae. As a rule insects in the imago stage are winged, but there are many exceptions to the rule of which the workers among the ants and the domestic flea are familiar examples, the latter too familiar. More than a century ago Linnaeus basing his classification mainly on the character of the wings, divided the insecta into 7 orders, viz.: — 1. Coleoptera, or sheath-winged, i. c, Beetles. 2. Newoptera 3 ov nerve-winged, i. e., Dragon flie3, white ants, &e. 28 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 3. Hymenoptera, or parchment-winged, i. e., Bees, wasps, ants. &c. 4. Lepidoptera, or scaly-winged , i. e., Butterflies and moths. 5. Hemiptera, or half-winged, e. e., Bugs, aphidas, &c. C. Diptera, or two-winged, i. e., Flies. 7. Aptera, or no- winged, i. e., Fleas. Though many changes and additions have since been proposed at various times, yet the generally accepted classification now is the same, in nomenclature at least, as that of Linnaeus, except that the Aptera have been absorbed into the Diptera, and a new order, Orthoptera, or straight-winged, has been added, immediatley follow- ing the Coleoptera, to contain the grasshoppers, locusts, crickets, cockroaches, Mantidce, Phasmldce, &c, which Linuaeus included, along with the bugs, in his Hemiptera. Kirby estimates that out of 222,000 species of insects known as inhabiting the world, the Hymenoptera comprise 31,000, rankingthird on the list after Coleoptera with 97,000 and Lepidoptera with 45,000. The chief distinguishing characters of the Hijmenojytera are: — 1. Four apparently naked wings, with few veins (hence the name from i^v^ parchment). 2. Mouth furnished with both mandibles and a proboscis. 3. Female furnished with an ovipositor often modified into a sting. 4. Larva*, usually footless, pupae inactive. The Hymenoptera are primarily divided into two sub-orders, viz. :— Terebrantia, in which the female is armed with an ovipositor. Aculeata, in which the ovipositor is modified into a sting. The Terebrantia are again sub-divided into two groups, viz : — Pit y topi tag a, or vegetable eaters, Entomophaga, or insect eaters. The word " eaters," however, does not refer to the imago or perfect insect, but to the larva or grub form. We may dismiss briefly the Terebrantia plujtophaga, which comprise only two families, the Tcnthridinidce and Siricidce. In the former the larvae feed exposed on the leaves of trees like the cater- pillars of butterflies, while in the latter they bore in the wood. We have no specimens of either in our collection. The Siricidai are chiefly confined to Pine foi*ests, so we may well have none in Bombay, but as regards the Tenthfidinidcv, though none have been found, it does not follow that there are none. OUR HYMENOPTERA. 29 The first family of the Terebrantia entomophaga is the Cynipidce. They are for the most part microscopic insects, and the very large majorit}' of those described are gall producers. " Apples of Sodom" and " Robin's pincushion " at home are the work of cynips, while the ink gall of commerce is the handiwork of au exotic species. No one has worked the Bombay, or indeed to any extent the Indian Cynipidce, so that for any of our members with leisui'e and a turn for microscopic research there is a grand field. It is a most interesting family, many of the species being dimorphous, and their reproduc- tion nearly, if not quite, as complex as that of the Aphides. The galls of the Cynipidce are said to be often much infested by insects of the next family, viz., the Chalcididw. We have speci- mens of a few species, but as in the Cynipidce, very many are extremely minute. Of the specimens in the Society's collection, No.l (Leucospis atra) Avas brod from pupae of the commom Bombay but- terfly, Delias eucharis. Another is parasitic on a small Mason Bee, which may be found during the rains in the Dekhan busy constructing its nest in the holes and cracks of every wall, and lately I have reared a large species from the nest of a wasp (R. litidulum). The next family, the Ichneumonidce, is a very large one, no less than 1,200 species having been described by one European writer. A very large proportion are probably parasitic on the larvae of various Lepidoptvra, but no observations as to the life history of Indian species have been recorded : indeed few, if any, seem to have been named. At any rate some of the commonest in the Society's collection when sent home to the British Museum were said to be undescribed. The Braconidce are a small family which has lately been separated from the last, the differential character being chiefly the comparative length of the various antennal joints, and the soldering together of the 2nd and 3rd fragments of the abdomen in the Braconidce. Some of the Braconidce are very minute, and are parasitic on the Aphidce- The Evaniidce, or at any rate the commoner species of the family, are parasitic on the cockroach. E. Iceuigate in our collection is a very common Bombay insect, haunting our bathrooms, and a most extraordinary looking insect it is; the abdomen is very small and attached by a pedicle, or stalk, appareutly to the nape of the neck. The last family of the Terebrantia is the Chrysididce. By some it has been proposed to form it into a distinct group under the nam© 30 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. of Tuhuliferec , but this view has not been generally accepted. The Chrysididee are known as Ruby-tailed Flies, Emerald Wasps, &c. Some of the European species are a lovely rose or flame colour. We have a great number of specimens in our collection, but their classification, even into genera, is very obscure. The Chrysididee are all parasitio, ordinarily on other hymenoptera, the solitary Mason Wasps being specially victimized. In order to provide for their young they resort to "lurking-house trespass." The ichneumons by means of their ovipositors pierce the skin of the victimized larvse in whose body the eggs are laid and on whom the ichneumon larvae, wheu hatched, prey. The Chrysididee act quite differently. The female hunts about until she finds, say, a wasp building its mud nest, and there she sits down to wait. I have watched the manoeuvres of a chrysis during nearly an hoar. Each time the wasp quitted the nest to seek more building material, chrysis advancad rapidly to take stock of progress made, retiring each time to her lurking place about six inches off. At last the wasp had completed her nest and put the finishing touches, and started off to search for the larvas with which it was to be provisioned. This time chrysis, after enter- ing and surveying the nest, came out, but instead of returning to her lurking place, she backed into the newly-made nest, and no doubt, laid her egg after which she came out and flew away. When a chrysis has thus laid her egg' in a newly-finished nest, it is unsus- piciously provisioned by the builder who also lays her eggs therein. The larva of chrysis, however, hatches first and consumes all the provision, and the rightful occupant thus dies of starvation, and the cell which should have produced a wasp produces a chrysis. The second sub-order, viz., the Aculeeda (or Stingers) is divided into four groups or main divisions, viz.: — 1. Heterogyna containing the ants. 2. Fossores (Diggers), containing all the rest, except 3. Diploptera, i. e., the Wasps. 4. Anthophila, i. e., the Bees. The Heterogyna comprise only the Formicidce or ants, and are divided into the following three families : — 1. Formicinw, which are ants proper and have no sting, but many of which bite severely, as, for example, the common red, 2Fco-~ -phila smaragdina, who sews up mango leaves for a habitation, and seem* to be able intuitively to select for attack the softest part of any person invading his haunts. The common big black ant of OUR IIYMENOTTERA. 31 our bungalows (Camponotus ardeus) (with liis country cousins sylvaticiis and callidus), as well as his deadly enemy the small black ant, whose name I do not know, but who seems to spring in hun- dreds from nowhere when sugar has been left about, are all Formicina. To which, also belong the ants which at Mabaleshwar, Matheran, &c, trace out white paths on the ground. 2. Ponerince, which like the Formicince, have only one node, or knot, on the abdominal stalk, but they sting most severely. There do not seem to be very many species of Ponerince. The common species is a large insect living under stones in comparatively small communities. Its sting is quite as severe as that of a bee. 3. Myrmecince, which are very numerous. They have two nodes on the abdominal stalk. To the Myrmecince belong all the various kinds which harvest grass seed ; also the ant which, living under ground, raises concentric mud rings round the mouth of its nest' In another species of the Myrmecince, common enough in the Konkan, the workers are very miuute, but the queen is a compara- tively gigantic insect, being f in. long. This species has at least two classes of "soldiers" of different sizes, the smallest of which would make half a dozen of the miuute workers. As far as I have been able to discover, this species is stone-blind ; in fact, as far as the worker is concerned, has no eyes. I have seen a column of these ants in course of migration. A number of workers went ahead and budt a covered way or tunnel in which the main body travelled, dragging with them dead earth- worms, beetles, &c. It was curious to notice that in this commis- sariat-transport work a willing hand was lent by the smaller-sized soldiers. When, however, I broke down the tunnel, a halt was called, and parties of workers set to work to repair the damage, but as this manual labour, though fussing about a great deal, the soldiers were too proud to assist. The larger soldiers were evidently purely fighters, for they did not help even in the transport of provisions. I believe this ant to be a species of the genus Pheidolor. There is another insect very common in Bombay, and which in its female or queen form swarms about the lamps at certain seasons. It is a palish brown ant, with a large unwieldy body. It belongs to the J)orylidce, as to whose place among the hj/menoptera there does not seem to be unanimity of opinion. While some place it as a distinct sub-division of the Heterogyna, some go to the other extreme and class it with the Ponerince. 82 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. It is not necessary to tell the members of this learned Society thrvt the ants are social, living together in large communities. Each community consists of females or queens, males, and workers (which are undeveloped females). In some species there is a fourth class, viz., the soldiers, which, like the workers, are modified females. The female ants have got the name of queens, I imagine, from the analogy of the bees. In an ants' nest, however, there are a number of queens, and from the researches of Sir J. Lubbock and others, it appears that ants have not acquired the art of " manufacturing ; * queens at pleasure, as the bees are known to do. An ant community consists principally of workers with, in some species, a proportion of soldiers. Certainly in some species, and probably in all, however, there are seasons of the year when there are queens, while, as far as 1 know, in all species the males are found in the nest only just before the nuptial flight, from which they do not return. The queens and males are at first winged, but at the conclusion of the nuptial flight the queens lose their wings. I have seen it stated that the queen having lost her wings wanders about until she is found by workers of her species, who take charge of her and com- mence the building up of a new community. It may be so with some species, but Sir. J. Lubbock's experiments give little support to this theory, and I have more than once found a queen of Camponotus callidus unattended by workers and brooding over a small number of pupa?, no doubt the product of eggs laid by her and the germ of h new community. We commence the next group of the Acidoata with the Mutillidce. They are often called "solitary ants," from supposed resemblance in the shape of the female to a huge ant. The female mutilla is wingless, ordinarily covered with down, and usually gorgeously coloured with rings and spots of gold, silver, or crimson on a brown or black ground. The male on the other hand is usually dull coloured, and is winged. A very great number of species have been described and named, but in a very great majority of cases only the male or the female of each species is known, aud there is no doubt that with further investigation nearly half these species must be merged iu the other half. Very little seems to be known of the life history of mutilla. The general opinion seems to he that the female makes burrows in sandy soil, provisioning her nest with flies. I feel certain and hope shortly to have convincing proof that some at least of our Mutillidce are parasitic, nut by ineaus of lurking house-tres- OUR HYMENOPTERA. 33 pass, like the Chrysididce. but by burglary on the mud nests of other ■enoptera. The next family, the Scoliidca, is represented by specimens of a good many species in our collection, but my attempts to investigate their life history have all failed. The closely allied Thymidce are almost exclusively American. The BembecidcB comprise very few species. At first sight they may be mistaken for wasps, which they much resemble in their colouring, the illusion being increased by the fact that they are gregarious. They are not however social. Each female digs her own burrow, and a very pretty sight it is. She works exactly like a terrier dog, loosening the soil with her fore feet and mandibles, dragging it backwards to the entry, and then kicking it out with her hind legs in showers to a distance of some inches. The com- monest of our BenibecidcBi B. sulphurescens, stores her nest with Dipt era, and probably others do the same. I have never seen the capture of the prey by Bambex, but as her flight is most powerful it cannot be a very difficut task. The Pompilidos comprise a good many species, but their habits are not well known, I have seen the smaller ones carrying spiders, dragging them backwards, but have no idea what the larger kinds employ to provision their nests. Some of the species of Mygnirrda are the largest among the Ilyrneiiopterce. In the family of the Sphegidee are included genera of widely divergent shapes. Pelopocns, commonly known as the Sand Wasp, is a very common form. Two species [Bengahnsis, dark blue, and Madraspatanus , banded black and yellow,) are familiar to every Indian resident. They build mud cells in all sorts of odd positions in our rooms, which they ordinarily stock with spiders, though sometimes with cater pi liars • Madraspatanus takes great precau- tions against parasites, closing the entry to her completed cell with a mud disc made for the purpose, but shows want of intelligence in not using the disc a second time. Several discarded discs may always be found below her nest. I speak from a man's point of view: possibly she could give a satisfactory explanation of her proceedings, and unfortunately we cannot get her opinion of the operations of our P. W, D. It is noteworthy that I have never suceeded in breeding chrysis from a nest of Pehpceus, and I thought that they were proof against all but microscopic parasites ( ? Chalcididce) until quite lately I caught a species of mutilla on a nest of Pelo- 5 34 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 'pceus, and on removing the nesb found each cell had been brokeD into, by mutilla no doubt, in order to lay her eggs, for about the same time from a nest of Pelopmus received from Madras I reared a mutilla of a closely allied species. Ammcpliila may often be seen carrying large green caterpillars, twice her own size, and Chlorion huge crickets. All the 8phegidm bury the insects alive in their nests, having first paralysed them by stinging them, and in this way provide a supply of fresh meat for their offspring. Some stress has been laid on the high development of instinct involed in the practice, for it is stated that to be effectual the sting must penetrate a nerve centre. I confess I should like more evidence to show that a sting in any part of the body would not be equally effectual. The remaining families of the Fossores, viz., Larridcc, N'yssonidwt Crabronidcv, and Philcmthidce, contain mostly small insects. Some of them make their own burrows, while some I believe utilize any suitable hole or cervice. Very little or nothing however is recorded of our Indian species. Flies, gnats, aphides are recorded as stored by English species, and some of the larger Philanthidce are said to destroy great numbers of bees. The next group of the Aculeutce is the Diplopfera or Wasps, the most striking character of which, as shown by the name, is the longitudinal folding of the wings in repose. A very large proportion of the solitary wasps are included in the family of the Eumenulce. The genus Eumenes seems to me to be more persecuted by parasites than any other of the Hymenoptera. In the local vernacular they are known as " Kumbharin/' from their habit of building mud nests. These they store with caterpillars, as far as I know always green, and always of the Geouiit )■/ dee , common]y known as "stick cater- pillars.*' Eit/menes seems to be rather muddle-headed in her architec- ture. She usually commences by building a shapely enough cell, like the common native earthen pot, but usually proceeds to surround this with others sloping at all angles, and if not disturbed, renders the whole building as shapeless as possible by an irregular layer of mud put on at random. The idea of thus assimilating her nest to a handful of mud thrown against a wall is a good one, but to an ordinary mortal it would seem simpler to build roughly and irregularly from the first. When the nest is built on a white background it is almost invariably ornamented (?), as a finishing touch, with streaks of chunaui. Is this meant to make the mud ball less visible ? If so, why not completely white-.vash it? Are these precautionary OUR HYMENOPTER.V. 35 measures adopted against mortals or against insect parasites ? It is a curious fact that nests built on glass are always streaked with white, hence glass is apparently white to the eyes of Ewmenes. I have said that Eumenes is much parasited. Here is a by no means abnormal instance. I took a nest of eleven cells. Three cells yielded each, a beetle, three yielded each a chrysis, two yielded each, a swarm of flies and three only yielded Eumenes. The beetle I mentioned above has been identified for me by the authorities of the Indian Museum at Calcutta as belono-mo- to the Mordellidce and as allied to a European species which is a parasite on one of the European Diploptera. Whence this race antagonism ? Another genus of EumenidcB is Mhynchinm, of which a brown species is very common about our rooms and makes mud cells, not building like Jiumenes, but adapting holes and crevices of wood work, &c. A black species, Nilididum, frequents cur verandahs and builds her nest like Eumenes. The cells remind one of the old nursery pictures of Ali Baba's oil jars, and are built in clusters of 20 or 30 or jnore, the material is mud, and the whole is covered with a dark- coloured sticky varnish, possibly intended to keep off parasites. If so it is a failure. The Social Wasps, or Vesjndce, are represented chiefly by three genera, viz., Icaria, Polities and Vespa. Icaria best represents what we naturally picture to ourselves as a" wasp," except that they have not the striped look of our English vespa. There are a •good many species which all build ' brown paper" nests. Usually these are of small sizes and are supported on a stalk, but one species arranges the cells so as to form a long tapering nest a foot and more -in length. The principal representatives of Polistes is MehraiXs, which is not unlike our English hornet in shape, and is pale yellow with black stripes. Hebrceus lives in immense communities, and when in possession of a bungalow rapidly becomes a nuisance. Of .Vespa we have two forms, viz., the common, Vespa cinta, and Yespa indica, who gradually takes his place as we move north to the Punjab. Cincta is the big dark brown wasp with a bread yellow band, which may be seen in numbers about sweetmeat-sellers' shops. Cincta is said to loot the pupas from the nest of other Vesvidce, but I confess in my mind he is always connected with a tray of " dudh- pendis," "jelebis,," &c, in the hands of a very dirty retail sweetmeat- seller. Among tho Vespidce as with the ants there are three orders or estates, the queens, the males and the workers, but among the Vespidcc all classes arc winged. 36 BOMBAY' NATUBAL HISTORY SOCIETY. I feel that I can drop tbe apologetic tone at length ay hen I ask your attention to the last group of the Aculeata, viz., the Antliophila or Bees. The Andrenidtc are solitary species of small size and dull colouring. Many of them nest in crevices of walls, hut some burrow in the ground. Unless looked for most of the species are likely to pass unnoticed. The Apiclcc, in addition to the social honey bees of the genus Apis, contain a number of solitary genera. Megachile comprises a great number of species, some of which are very common. M. lanata may be heard humming about the room at almost any time of the year. She builds a tube of mud, which is divided off into cells, each containing an egg and a supply of " bread." This tubular nest is put in the most extraordinary places, inside a boot left unworn for a couple of days, among clothes exposed on a shelf, in a gun barrel, in a shell, between books on shelf, &c, &c. Some of the Megachile lino their mud tubes with a membrane evolved out of themselves, but many use cuttings of leaves which are made neatly into cigarettes, and fitted into burrows in the ground. Though solitary, Megachile is said to be sometimes gregarious. Be that as it may, Xylocapa, the Carpenter Bee, is almosl always gregarious. The large holes so often seen in old dead trees, looking as if bored with an augur, are the work of Xylo- ca-jpa. Though a hundred and more species have been made in this genus, to the ordinary observer the greater number are indistin- guishable. A largo blue-black Bumble-bee, making a very loud buzzing in its flight, is a description which will cover very many species. There are however brown species which are crepuscular if not nocturnal. CcrU'oxys, another genus, is said to be parasitic in the nests of Xylocapa. It has been bred from nests of Xylocapa, but that it is parasitic seems to me to need furthur proof. Finally, of the Api'lcs with which the classification of our Hymenoptera closes, we have three common species, viz., Floralis, the maker of what is known as "fly honey,'' is the smallest. Nigro-cincta, much larger in size, is common in our gardens, and in places is said to have been successfully domesticated, while the giant Indica is for the most part an inhabitant of the jungles. Building huge combs on big -ti*ees, or on the face of precipices, this bee constitutes himself the Raja of the whole region. Woe to him who disturbs Apis Indica by daylight. ITe will be lucky if he escapes with his life. Like the wasps, the Social Bees have winged workers, but unlike the wasps BOTANY : ADDRESS TO STUDENTS*. 37 and ants, they are said to have only one queen, and to be able in ease of need to evolve a queen from a larva, which in the ordinary course, would have produced a worker by special feeding and education. I hope I have given you some idea of the variety of curious points on which information is wanted. I will refrain from quoting a familiar hymn to which my subject might have tempted me ; but I will apply the moral of the honey bee so far as to point out that if each member of this Society would contribute something, just an interesting fact which had come under his own notice, a specimen or a nest which he had found in his house, we should soon have a respectable store of information on the manners and customs of this most interesting order of insects. AN ADDRESS TO STUDENTS OF BOTANY IN WESTERN INDIA. By A. K. Nairne. It may be assumed that in our days mauy of the young English men and English women who go out to India would like to know something about the floral beauties which meet their eyes wherever they turn. Many of them have known all the common flowers of the woods and the roadsides at home, and have very likely learnt enough of the elements of Botany to know the orders to which the commonest or the most beautiful belong. And it seems unnatural to them to be set down in a country full of beautiful flowers and to get no knowledge of them. In the same way there must be many intelligent young natives, whose education has taught them that every plant has its name and its place in classification, and who would therefore like to learn a little practically about Botany and its treasures. Now ( at home the number of small books intended to heljD beginners in the study of Botany is very great ; the number of those which give lists of all the wild plants in England, more or less scientific, but all simple, is very considerable, so that it is very easy for any Englishman to get up the Flora of his native land, if only he chooses to give the time to it. But it is very different in India. None of these small hooks of Botany have yet appeared here. The enquirer may, indeed, find the names, both native and 38 BOMBAY STATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. scientific, of tlie trees of any district lie may be in, in of one or other volume of the Bombay Gazetteer, but he knows not where to turn for information as to the many b eautiful shrubs, creepers and herbs, which in most Indian districts call forth constant admiration, and are many times more numerous than the trees. A list of the botanical books available for Western India will show how very badly off the unscientific or half-scientific enquirer is. There are two books relating exclusively to the Bombay Presidency, one of which, Dalzell and Gibson's, aspires to be a Flora. But five minutes' examination of this has been sufficient for very many men, who would not be afraid of studying something even much deeper, if there were any chance of mastering it. But the first thing that makes itself manifest with regard to Palzell's book is that it requires half-a-dozen other books to make it intelligible. There is not a word of explanation as to the plan of the book, no description of orders, and, what is worse, no description of genera. And the genera were (as was probably inevitable), taken from one author or another just as it happened. The book is, in fact, a collection of specific descriptions of plants, arranged according to the natural orders certainly, but with (apparently) no other system running through it. The language of the descriptions is unneces- sarily difficult, the native names of plants are given very rarely, and some of the commonest trees in the country are not named at all except by their Latin botanical denomination. The other local work is Graham's " Plants of Bombay," a mere sketch unfortunately, though easily recognizable as the work ofa great master. Butjudging by the difficulty of getting this work ten or fifteen years ago, I should fear that by this time it is almost unattainable.* When we turn to the Botany of India generally, we naturally begin with Hooker's Indian Flora. And, indeed, there is no other single work from which we could hope to get information as to ail, or nearly all, the plants to be found in Western India. But apart from the fact that the work will probably not be completed for some years, its very great range • The author soems to be unaware of the publication, in 1S8G, of the 25th volume of the Bombay d'a^etteer, containing — "Useful Plants of the Bombay Presidency," by T. C. Lisboa ;" Botany of the Bombay Presidency," by Surgeon-Major W. Gray, L.M.L.Ch.; " List of Gujarat Trees " from Mate ials supplied by G.H.D. Wilson, Esq., G. C. S., and Lieut.-Colouel T. G. McRae, which articles to a great extent, though not fully, supply the want the author complains of. 1'he Hou. Mr. Justice Iiirdwood's "I.i-t of Plants of Mathcran and Mahableshwar,'' published in this Journal, iflso affords great assistance to students of Botany for these particular localities. — G. C. BOTANY : ADDRESS TO STUDENTS. 39 renders it almost useless for any but a professional botanist. Pago after page is taken up with descriptions of plants found only in the Himalayas, or Ceylon, or Java, or the Straits, so that those which belong to what we may call India proper, are in a way crowded out. But this is not the only objection. The great expeuse of the work is a fatal one as regards ordinary students. Then also as to the grouping of orders. Many will have noticod that the old division of exogens into Thalamlfiorce, Cahjclfiorm and Oorolliflorcv does not appear, and where one is always wanting more light to take away even a little of what there was before is a distinct hardship. But the absence ©f these divisions does not mean that they have been abandoned, but that they are assumed to be known, for I was told at Kew that the Indian Flora, like all others prepared there, is based on Bentham and Hooker's " Genera Plantarutn," and in this not only are these three great divisions of orders given, but a fourth is in- troduced, Discifloree, and the orders are also arranged in groups subordirate to those great divisions. Added to this the similarities and differences of each order from its immediate neighbours is there given, and this every one will acknowledge to be most valuable. But the" Genera Plantarum" is quite out of the reach of the ordinary botanical students, for, besides being a large and very expensive work, it is written in Latin. * Thus thei'e is practically nothing systematic as to India generally which the unscientific botanist can turn to to help him in identifying the plants of the Bombay Presi- dency. I ought perhaps to mention Professor Oliver's little book C First Book of Indian Botany ") which is intended to teach the begin- ner the orders common in India, and which might therefore, to some extent, make up for the deficiencies of Dalzell and Gibson. But I never found it of much use, the descriptions, I think, are too diffi- cult, the examples given far too few ; it is, in fact, too much the ■work of a professional botanist, and it smells of the Herbarium rather than of the open contry. If it had gone entirely on the lines of Lindley's " School Botany " (for England), an old and valued * I feet bound to add, to prevent any one takiug trouble to get the inform- ation, that neither the division Discifloree, nor the subordinate groupings of orders, will be found of any use to the ordinary student. For there are almost as many orders without conspicuous discs as with them in Discifloree and some orders with conspicuous discs (e. g, Myrtaeees, Uiiilellif rm and Aralincra',) are left in Ohlyei- Jtortc. And the subordinate groupings of orders I found useless, becau&e in the first place the definitions are full of alternatives, and in the second place the distinctions depend mainly on such obscure po'nts as the number of cells in the ovary, position of the ovules, nature of the albumen, and so on. 40 BOMBAY NATUBAL HISTORY SOCIETY. friend, I suppose, of many besides myself, it would have been most useful, and would have given any young student a good start; but it is quite different. I have not set down this list of difficulties merely for the sake of making a wail, or to induce young botanists to give up their hopes and their studies till better days come. But I lately came upon some thing which I thought might help some of those who are painfully struggling (as I did for many years) to identify the plants they meet with one of Dalzell and Gibson, with the help of other books, like the invaluable work of Roxburgh, which contains just a few Bombay plants. The work I mean is Rousseau's (i Lettres Elemen- tairessurla Botaniqne." (Vol. 4 of Rousseau's Works, Lahure's edn., Paris, 1857.) He began by simply showing the difference between a monopetalous and a polypetalous corolla, and then chose six of the largest orders to explain and illustrate. He took, of course, those of the large orders which are most fully represented in France, three monopetelous and three polypetalous. Thejr were (in his order) Liliaccce, Cruciferce, L zguminosce, Labiatce, Umbclliferce and Composite. The fourth is what I shall have chiefly to speak about, so I will here only say that it was not the order Lahiatce, but a group ; the name of 'Fleurs en gueule' being given by Rousseau to all flowers having a two-lipped corolla and didynamous stamens. Now, of the other orders described by Rousseau and mentioned above, Nos. ], 2 and 5 are not sufficiently common in Westernlndia to serve our purpose, Lcgumiuosa 1 and Composite are, and it would be easy to take, three other orders (or groups of orders) common here, and thus to describe generally within a very reasonable compass and in a simple classifica- tion a very considerable portion of all the plants of the Presidency. Rousseau's idea was that if the student learnt up these great orders to begin with, so as to know the species common in his own coun- try, and to be able to recognise other species of the same orders when found elsewhere, this would give him such a start that he would have no difficulty in going on, and would little by little learn to distinguish most of the orders. It will be easily seen that such a system as this is quite opposed to the ordinary modes of teaching scientific botany, and may be objected to accordingly. But the answer to that is that the ordinary modes of teaching imply that the student will be able either to study the science in a systematic way more or less at his leisure, or else to have a good supply of scientific books to refer to. That this last condition cannot be fulfilled in BOTANY : ADDRESS TO STUDENTS. 41 W. India I have shown j and as most of the students whom I am thinking of in writing this paper are scattered about the Presidency often in out-of-the-way districts, it is not at all likely that they will be able to supplement their scanty scientific education by attend- ance at lectures or resort to libraries. Now one of the chief reasons wby botanical books are repulsive and botanical classification diffi- cult, is from the chief distinctions of orders and genera bciug taken from the smaller parts of the organs of generation of the plants, and so almost always involviug microscopical details. If plants could be classified by such prominent parts as the petals or tbe leaves, a great part of the difficulty to beginners would be avoided, and a great many barbarous looking words gob rid of. I do nob of course mean that this can be done; but the classification of Liuna3us depending on the number and arrangement of the stamens and pistils, is far easier for beginners than what is called the natural system; but it has, unfortunately I think for people situated as tbose for whom I am writing are, been almost entirely abandoned. I propose in this paper to work a little on Rousseau's lines with the view of helping students not far advanced in the identification of the common plants aroud them. I shall in this paper bring together all the orders containing flowers with bilabiate corolla : aud didyuamous stamens, showing where they agree and where they differ, and shill then describe, as shortly and simply as is possible for identification, a certain number of the commonest and most remarkable species found in W. India. I put it this way, because it is clear that plants attract the attention of ordinary observers either by being very common without reference to there being anythiug attractive in them, or by being very conspicuous, though they may not be common. The following are the characteristics in very simple language of the whole group of plants of which I am writing. Corolla niono- petalous, i.e., all in one piece, the lower part (and generally the larger part) being a tube, whether broad or narrow, the edge of the flower (at the top of the tube), which vary very much in size, being variously cut, not symmetrically, but more or less into an upper and lower lip.* I should mention that Rousseau made a * Take as examples of a very narrow aud a vory broad tube tb.3 corolla of Achimenes aud Gloxinia, respectively; and as examples of a very strongly and a very obscurely two-lipped corolla, that of Salvia aud Lantana, respectively, remem- bering that between these extromes there are any number of variations. 6 42 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. further distinction of labiate and personate corollas, the iirst term signifying (with him) those with the lips well separated as in the Ocimums ftulsi); the second, those with the mouth closed, as in the English snapdragon (Linaria). But I think it better not to make this a distinguishing mark, though, of course, this difference must be noticed. The orders respresented in W. India, which have, partially or entirely, flowers of this sort, are the following: — Scrophidarinea, Orobanchacea, Gesneracccc, Bignoniacece, Peda- UnccB, Acanthacece, Verbenacece, Labiatce. When these orders are described, it will be seen that they all have special characteristics of their own though agreeing in the common characteristics already mentioned. 1. Scrophidarincce contains a large number of genera. All these known in W. India (except one shrub found only in Sind) are herbs, the greater part rather inconspicuous. The leaves are either opposite or alternate, the stems generally round, the fruit generally a many-seeded capsule. 2. Orobanchacece is a small order of leafless parasiticplants that can scarcely be mistaken for anything else. The whole plant is generally of a uniform hue, most often brown or purplish, the stem has a few scales on it which could scarcely be mistaken for leaves. There are only six species in ~W. India. 8. GesneracecB is also a very small order, the five species known in W. India being all rare. They are herbs or undershrubs with characteristics very similar to those of Scrophidarinece. 4. Bignoniacece. Trees, mostly large ones, and conspicuous generally by the large size of leaves, flowers, and fruit, the latter being pod-like. None of these trees can be called common, but all are remarkable. There are some well known climbing Bignonias in gardens. 5. Fedalinecc. A very small order of herbs, of which only two are found in W. India, both described below. 6. Acanthaceos. Mostly shrubs, very many of them very strong smelling and viscid, like the well-known Karvi. The flowers in this very large order are most often crowded together in spikes or racemes, surrounded with very many bracts. The leaves are always opposite. 7. Vcrbcnacm. Mostly trees or shrubs, the subordinate charac- teristics not very clearly delincd. BOTANY: ADDRESS TO STUDENTS. 43 8. Labiates, Aromatic herbs (rarely shrubs), with square stems, opposite leaves, and an ovary composed of four deeply-separated lobes, which can always be seen at the bottom, of the calyx tube by. pulling off the corolla. These develope into a fruit of four one- seeded nuts (very small) remaining at the bottom of the calyx tube. This peculiarity of ovary and fruit distinguishes the order from all others (except some genera of Boraginece, which in other respects are quite different), aud there is no order more easily recognised. To it belong all the mints, lavender, rosemary, sage, salvias, &c. Now of these orders what has been said above of Nos. 2, 3, and 5 will be sufficient for the beginner. As to the rest, if he finds a tree with this peculiar form of corolla and arrangement of stamens he will know that it belongs to order 4. If a shrub with flowers closed in with many large bracts it probably belongs to No. 6.. Any other shrub probably to No. 7. If a square stemmed aromatic herb, with the peculiar ovary mentioned above, it certainly belongs to No. 8. Any other herb probably to No. 1, though each of the other orders, except No. 4, has some herbs. Thus the field for identification is very much narrowed. It only remains to give a list of the common or very conspicuous species found in W. India belonging to these orders, and possessing the peculiar form of corolla and arangement of stamens we are concerned with; for it must be remembered that in the large orders here given there are a good many plants which have either a regular corolla or else five or two stamens, or in some cases four equal ones. With these we have no concern in the present arrange- ment, but in two genera of Acanthaceoe here given the upper lip is wanting. [Note.— In these descriptions, D. signifies Dalzell and Gibson's Bombay Flora ; II. Hooker's Indian Flora ; Native names in Italics.] Bilabiate flowers with didynamous stamens. I. — Order Scropholarine^. 1. Linaria, — Corolla with mouth quite closed, and a spur below the lower lip. L. ramosissima,—A smooth delicate plant much branched and prostrate ; flowers yellow, solitary, long-stalked ; leaves triangular, more or less lobed. Deccan and elsewhere. Throughout India, H. Any one would recognise this from its likeness to the English snapdragons, both of garden and hedge. 44 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 2. Lindenxergia, — Calyx bell-shaped ; corolla with upper lip broad, lower 3-lobed. L. urticcvfulia, — A very downy plant, growing generally on walls ; flowers yellow, solitary, or in pairs, the throat spotted ; leaves small, ovate, serrate. Throughout India H. 3. Stemodia, — Clayx more divided than the last ; corolla as in the last, but the throat nearly closed. S. vlscosa, — An erect, hairy, sticky, strong-smelling plant with square stems; flowers dark blue; leaves stern clasping, ovate or fiddle-shaped. Common in Deccan, Konkan and Gnzerat, especially on rice fields in cold weather. [Note. — In some respects this looks like one of the Labirtrc, but a glance at the ovary and fruit will show that it cannot belong to that order.] 4. Torenia, — Calyx tubular, winged or keeled ; mouth of corolla dilated, lips far apart. T. asiatica, — Plant with dark blue or violet flowers, the lips of different shades ; leaves triangular, crenate. This is the plant often called " Belgaum Violet " — not common, I believe, except in gardens. There are two other species still less common and smaller. 5. Vandellia, — Yery small herbs ; upper lip of corolla broad ; con- cave, lower 3-lobed, spreading ; upper pair of stamens arched, and the anthers joining. V. Crustacea, — A diffuse smooth plant, with square stem ; flowers light purple ; leaves oval, coarsely crenated. Common , but inconspi- cuous. Throughout India H. 6. Striga, — Small rough herbs, usually with square stems ; calyx much ribbed ; corolla tube bent. S. euphrasioides, — Flowers mostly axillary and solitar} 7 , sometimes spiked, white, with a superficial resemblance to the English Euphra- sia (Eyebright); leaves linear, rather long ; bracts lanceolate, longer than the calyx. Common. Throughout India, and sometimes grow- ing two feet high. H. Another species, S. orobanchuides, very com- mon in the S. Konkan, is parasitic on roots of other plants, and is of a reddish hue all over. 7. llamphicarpa, — Corolla tube long and slender; lobes nearly equal ; lips obscure; capsule beaked. It. long [flora, — A small pretty plant, with pure white flowers, very large for the size of the plant, generally solitary ; leaves divided into many linear or thread-like segments. Very common in S. Konkan, growing in grass, and apparently all over the Peninsula of India. H. BOTANY : ADDRESS TO STUDENTS. 45 8. Sopiubia, — Corolla short tubed, broad mouthed ; lobes much as in the last. S. delp/iinifulia, — A handsome plant with pinnatifid leaves and filiform segments ; flowers axillary, solitary, or iu pairs, large rose- coloured, the throat darker. Konkan and Guzerat. Throughout the peninsula. EI. He makes it otow as high as three or four feet. I have not seen it more than half that. [Note, — In the two last the much divided leaves, very uncommon in these orders.] II. — Order Orobanchace^e. 1. Mginetia,— Calyx spathaceous, deeply split in front; corolla tube broad; lobes nearly equal and very small. 2Et. Indica, — Dull purple all over, like a tobacco pipe standing on end, the large curved flower forming the bowl. Konkan, Khandalla, &c. Throughout India. H. 2. Orobanche , — Flowers in spikes or racemes ; upper lip of corolla erect ; flower o-lobed. 0. Indica (Phelipcea I., D.) — Dull purple or blue, growing on tobacco and mustard plants. III. — Order Gesnerace.e. Gloxinias and Achimenes, in gardens. IV.— Order Bignoniace^e. As these are all trees which can be easily recognised by their native names, it seems unnecessary to give descriptions of them here. 1. Oroxi/lum Indicum (Calosant hes I., D.) — Taitu. Konkans and Ghauts. Throughout India. H. 2. Dolichandroiie falcata (Spaihodea /., D.) Netasing, Marsingi, Guzerat, Konkan and S. M. Country. 3. Heterophragma Roxburghil, Waras. Common on the Ghats and elsewhere. 4. Stereos per mum chelonoides. {Heterophragma ch., D.) — Padel, pddri. Ghauts and S. Konkan. Through moister India. H. 5. S. xylocarpum (Blgnonia x., D.) — Kharsing, bersingi. Ghauts, Konkans, &c. 6. Milling Ionia hortensis, — Native of Burma, but planted about the roads in Poona. A grand tree. 46 BOMBAY NATlTtAL HISTORY SOCIETY. V; — Oiieer Pedaline^:. 1. Pedaliiun, — Capsule hard, spinous, indehiscent. P. murex, — A low thick-stemmed succulent herb ; flowers small, yellow, solitary ; leaves oval, obtuse, sometimes slightly lobed ; fruit ovoid, with 4 conical spines from the base. Gohru. Sandy shores of Guzerat, Kattywar, and N". Kofikan. 2. Sesamum, — Capsule without spines, 2 to 4-valved. S. Indicum, — Erect, slightly hairy, flower very like foxglove, varying in colour from purple to rose and white, with an offensive smell; capsule oblong, erect. Commonly cultivated. "Til tilli, jinjali." (" Open Sesame" — Arabian Nights.) 3. Martynia diandra } — An American weed with large cordate glu- tinous leaves and handsome flowers, much like the last ; is pretty well naturalized. Vinchu dhara. VI.— Order Acantrace^e. 1. Thunbergia, — Climbers ; * calyx very small, covered by 2 bracts; lobes of corolla nearly equal; capsule round below, beaked above. T. fragrant, — A pretty climber with rather large pure white flowers, and large ovate bracts ; leaves oblong, acute, slightly lobed. The minute calyx has 12 teeth, which is an easy distinction. Kou* kans pretty common. Eri-vel. T. grandijiora and T. alata are two garden species, the first one of the largest climbers, with very large and beautiful pale blue flowers ; calyx a mere ring ; the latter much smaller, has bright buff flowers, with a dark throat, often called " Black-eyed Susan." 2. Kygrophila, — Herbs ; calyx segments narrow, one pair of sta- mens, sometimes imperfect or obsolete. H. serpylhtm (Physichihiss., D.), — A small creeping plant, covered with stiff grey hairs ; flowers rather large for the size of the plant, bright blue, the lower lip blistered and spotted with white ; leaves nearly round. Konkans, he. At Lanowlee, in the cold weather, the rice-fields are covered and coloured with this. Rcin-te-ivan. II. svinosa {Asieracautha lovgifolia, D.), — A stout rough plant, with blue flowers ; sessile, in whorls of lanceolate leaves and thorns. Lower lip of corolla with a yellow spot. Very common in swamps. Throughout India. H. H. salicifolia is very like this, but smaller every way. Grows in the same situations. * Several species of erect shrubby growth ate cultivated in gardeus._G. C. BOTANY : ADDRESS TO STUDENTS. 47 3. Ruellia, — Herbs or underslirubs ; bracts larger than the calyx ; corolla lobes about equal ; capsule solid below, bearing large thin seeds in the upper part. R. prostrata (Dipter acanthus dejectus, D.) — Prostrate or strag- gling and climbing in hedges; flower solitary or nearly so, purple or blue bell-shaped ; leaves long, petioled, ovate, often acute ; bracts like the young leaves. Very common in Guzerat and the Konkau. (Query, Deccan ?) 4. Strobilanthes, — Shrubs or herbs ; calyx deeply 5-cleft ; corolla tube bulged out. Note. — H. has no less than 14f> species of this genus, and it ia exceedingly difficult to make which our Bombay species ought to be. But I have very strong authority for identifying the only very well known species as 8. callosus, — which includes D.'s 8. Grahamianus, the late shrub so common at Mahableshwar and known as karvi, very strong- smelling and viscid; flowers in large thick spikes, large and hand- some, deep blue, hairy within.* 5. Blepharis, — Rough creeping or prostrate plants, with leaves in whorls and crowded bracts ; corolla with short fleshly tube, upper lip wanting, lower 3-cleft. B, asperrima 9 — Straggling along the ground with weak straw- coloured stem, every part covered with bristly hairs; flowers blue or white, sessile; bracts whitish with green veins; sepals four in two unequal pairs. Very common on the Ghats, less so in the Konkan, Pahadiatgan. B. hoerhavifoUa, — Flowers white, pale blue or pink, with yellow spot on the lip; bracts edged with bristles; leaves in fours, lanceolate. Common in Guzerat and elsewhere. 6. Acanthus, — Sepals and corolla as in the last. A. ilicifolius (Dilivariai., D.), — Small, handsome, thorny shrub, with leaves like holly, prickly, and large bright blue flowers; corolla lip nearly entire ; bracts small, ovate. Nigur. Very common in salt marshes; sometimes called Sea holly, but not to be confound- ed with the English plants of that name. (Eryngo.) * This is the early flowering showy species common on the Ghats flowering in October. S. pcrfoliatus, with thin spikes glandular bristly narrow bracts, and dark blue or purplish flowers: flowering in January, and 8. iwiocephalus, with thick heads, broad bracts and dull white flowers, flowering iu January, are both ve'-y common in the ravinea at Khandalla. Botli are very viscid and strong smelling. — G. C. 48 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 7. Barleria, — Shrubs or large herbs with showy flowers; sepals in opposite pairs, the outer pair much the largest ; corolla lobes 5, often divided 4 and 1, two of the stamens often imperfect. B. prionitis, — Shrubby and thorny; flowers spiked or wliorled, rather large, buff, soon falling off; larger calyx segments ovate, spinous, pointed ; bracts subulate; leaves narrow at both ends. Kholeta. Very common. B. montana,- — -Large smooth plant ; flowers large and beautiful, solitary, sessile rose-coloured, mauve or blue : smaller calyx seg- ments and bracts very small, linear. Bombay, Konkan, and Grhats. Not uncommon. There are several other species, one with blue another with white flowers, botli very large ; but none are at all common but the two given above. 8. Asystasia, — Underslirubs ; sepals narrow ; corolla lobes five, about equal. A. coromandelliana, — Erect or procumbent, much branched; flowers in long, loose, one-sided racemes, yellow, blue or pale purple ; bracts linear ; leaves ovate, acute. Common. A. violacea, — All softly hairy, with large violet flowers, the lower lip dark purple and spotted, is very doubtfully distinct from the last. Dr. T. Cooke calls it very common at Matheran, less so at Mahableshwar. 9. Lepidagathis, — Calyx of two large and two or three small seg- ments; corolla tube swelling in the middle; limp decidedly 2-lipped. L. cristata, — Prostrate hairy leaves; calyx segments and bracts all bristle pointed; flowers in dense round heads near the root, pale, streaked darker. Guzerat, Deccan, &c. Note. — There are many common members^ of this order which have only two stamens, and are therefore not mentioned here. VII. — Order Verbenace.*:. 1. Laniana, — Straggling shrubs; with small flowers in heads; calyx small, entire or slightly lobed ; bracts large. L. camara, — An American plant, now very common everywhere, straggling and climbing, with square prickly stems and pretty flowers in roundish heads, pink, orange or lilac, and of many shades in the same plant. The whole smells very strongly of black currants. * The pink and white varieties doubtless belong to an indigenous species. — L, indica, Roab, {I. alba D.).—G. C. BOTANY : ADDRESS TO STUDENTS. 49 2. Lippia, — Like the last, but fruit a capsule instead of a drupe. L. nodifiora, — A small creeping plant, tough and hairy ; flowers in ovoid heads, very small, pale, arranged so closely as to look as if on a common receptacle {Composite) ; bracts many, overlapping. Common in grassy places. Abundant throughout India. 3. Premna, — Trees or shrubs ; flowers small, often polygamous, calyx cup-shaped, surrounding the drupe. P. coriacea, — (P. scandens, D.) — A large strong smelling climber; flowers greenish white, in large panicles ; one of the lobes of the corolla much larger than the rest ; leaves very large, pointed, shin- ing. Chdmbdri, Bhansar. Konkan and Ghats. P. latifolia, — Is an erect shrub, with flowers and leaves very much like the last. Common near the sea, and called by the same name as the last. 4-. Gmelina, — Flowers large ; corolla tube short ; calyx bell- shaped. G. arborea, — A tree hairy in most parts ; flowers brown and yellow, in racemes ; lobes of corolla broad, roundish, curled back, the lower are much larger and protruding. Shewan, Kumar, Gumbd, Kon- kan. Less common in Deccan. 5. Vitese, — Flowers small ; calyx as in the last, but more or less enlarged in fruit ; corolla decidedly 2-lipped. V. Negundo (V. bicolor, D.) — Tall shrub, leaves 3 or 5-ffoliate, grey, leaflets lanceolate, the underside with the branches white and downy ; flowers in terminal panicles, lilac or light blue. Nirgund. I should call this the commonest shrub in the Konkan : very com- mon also on the Ghats. VIII. — Order Labiate. I. Ocimum, — Flowers in whorls of 6 to 10, racemed or spiked; calyx with upper tooth very large, running down into the pedicel ; corolla tube short, upper lip equally 4-lobed. 0. basilic-urn, — Erect, nearly smooth ; spikes long ; flowers white, pink, or purplish. Sabza. " Sweet basil." Commonly cultivated 0. sanctum, — Softly hairy, the whole plant often purplish ; corolla very small, pale purple, hardly longer than the calyx. Kula tulsi. Bam tulsi is 0. gratissimum* 7 50 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 2. Lavandula, — Leaves much divided;* flowers in spikes ; upper lip of corolla bifid, lower trifid. L. Burmanni, — A tall plant ; leaves bi-pinnatifid ; segments linear ; flowers dark blue or white, in dense spikes. Gorea. Common in the Deccan. L. Gibsoni (L. Perottetii, D.) is like this but more hairy, and the leaves pinnatifid. It is found only in the hills above Sattara, and one or two similar places. Both these are so like the English garden lavender, both in appearance and smell, as to be at once identified, f 3. Pogostemon, — Flowers very small, many together in whorls, spiked ; corolla lobes 4, lower usually the largest ; filaments bearded and exserted. P. parvifiorus, — Strong, coarse, half-shrubby plant, mostly smooth, with purple stem and branches ; flowers whitish, in close pj^ramidal heads. Has a strong smell of black currants. Pangli. S. Konkan. Very common. There are several species so much alike as to be not easily identified. Park, commouly cultivated, is P. patchouli . 4. Bysopltylla, — Small plants with generally whorled leaves • flowers dense, in spikes ; corolla equally 4-lobed. D. stcllata, — Slightly hairy ; leaves linear, 5 to 7 in a whorl ; flowers red or purple. Marvel. 5. Konkan, Belgaum, &c. Very abundant on rice fields in the cold weather. H. gives eight species of these, but there is a great similarity between them all. One, D- my osur oleics, found at Mahableshwar, Sheival, has the leaves not whorled. 5. Colebroohia, — A densely woolly shrub ; corolla lobes 4 j about equal. 0. oppositifolia, — Leaves in threes, elliptic, narrow at both ends ; flowers minute, dirty white, in very small dense spikes, suggestive of Indian squirrels' tails. Bdhmani,dasai,dasari, kaj/tar. Very com- mon on the Ghauts and Konkan hills. 6. Anisomeles, — Tall, coarse herbs ; upper lip of corolla erect, entire, lower broad, spreading, A. Ueyneana, — More or less hairy all over, stem and branches acutely 4-angled ; leaves ovate, crenate ; flowers of no beauty, white * In Indian species. — G. C. t The leaves, however, are very different.— Or. C. BOTANY : ADDRESS TO STUDENTS. 51 or greenish, partly tinged with pink, in one-sided cymes. Very com- mon in Salsette and the Konkau generally. Chaiullidra. A. ovnta,*— A large handsome plant, with soft-downy leaves, ovate, crenate; flowers in dense whorls, spiked light 'with deep purple lower lip. Common in Guzerafc, Deccan and Konkau, 7. Leucas, — Generally hairy or woolly plants of no beauty ; flowers white ; upper lip of corolla erect, hooded, lower spreading, with very large middle lobe; calyx with 6 to 10 teeth. L. sfclligera, — A tall plant with flowers in large dense whorls ; calyx with 10 soft and spreading teeth. Ghaut, Konkan, &c. Very common at Matheran. Burumbi, Guma. L.aspera, — About 6 inches high, rough andhairy; whorls of flowers small aud dense ; calyx curved, with oblique mouth and short teeth. Ttimba. Common on the seashore, phiins of India. H. L. linifolia, — Very like the last, but larger and nearly smooth; leaves linear or oblong. This is the common species of cultivated fields in Guzerat, Deccan and Konkan. There are several other species less common, one only. L. biflora, — With flowers not dense. The genus is very easily known. 8. Leonotis, — Flowers in dense axillary and whorls, with many slender bracts; upper lip of corolla long hooded, lower very small, spreading, concave ; calyx 8 to 10 toothed. L. nepetifolia, — A strong annual 6 to 8 feet high ; flowers orange coloured, hairy; calyx teeth bristly; leaves ovate, crenate. Matisul, ckri. A doubtful native, but tolerably common and very con- spicuous. In conclusion, I ought perhaps to say that I assume that any one wishing to identify a plant by the aid of these notes will first set to work to make out the order to which it belongs, then the genus : will, in fact, work downwards from the greater divisions to the lesser. This method teaches one much more than merely running through all the species in the hope of hitting on the identification by some one or two marked features. And speaking more generally, I should say that I hold to the natural orders most faithfully, only wishing that other descriptive helps should be added to aid the student in what must always be to the beginner the very difficult 52 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. . . — . — ' — ■ ■ ■ rrf work of identification. I should also add that those who are acquainted with the botany of the whole Presidency may very possibly think that the species chosen for description are not in all cases the commonest or most conspicuous. On this point opinions will mo doubt vary, but it must be remembered that this is a mere sketch, and that I claim nothing but a very fallible degree of accuracy. NOTES ON BIRDS OF QUETTA. By A. T. H. Newnham, Bo. S.C., F.Z.S. It is with some reluctance, seeing how little I have to say, that I have commenced to put to paper the few observations I was enabled to make during a short residence of three or four winter months in Quetta ; but as it is by an accumulation of such scraps that we arrive at definite results, I shall endeavour to comply with the request of our Honorary Secretary to write something for our Journal. This last winter in Afghanistan was comparatively a mild one, and in consequence the duck weTe somewhat late in putting in an appearance, so that it was not until the end of January that one heard of anything like decent bags being made. A wonderful shot was made by a sporting Colonel in the garrison, which, I think, deserves recording. He came suddenly upon a bunch of six duck round the bend of a stream, and firing as they rose brought down the whole lot. Presumably they must have all risen in one straight line with their beards in a row, but it was a singularly lucky shot. Teal and gadwall are not unfrequently met with in the river beds, but the other species of duck seemed to keep more to tanks and larger sheets of water. I had sent to me no less than three specimens, all drakes, of that uncommon and beautiful little duck, the Smew (Mergelhis albellus), and a very tedious job 1 found it skinning them, as they were mere balls of fat. Sand Grouse were not so plentiful as they should have been, and were exceedingly shy: the commonest sort was the Imperial (P. arenaries). Of the Pin-tailed Sand Grouse (P. alchata) I only saw one flock, and that was quite close to the Fort. They were the first that I had ever seen, and I could not make them out at all at first, but took thein for plover of some sort. They flew at a NOTES ON BIRDS OF QUETTA. 53 tremendous pace, faster even than the Imperial, and during their wheels in the air showed a clear white expanse of underwing. They were endeavoUriug to settle to feed, hut were persistently bullied by the ravens, and obliged to move on. I was thus enabled to get a couple of good specimens as they came over me. I could not find out that the Sand Grouse up there had any fixed drinking place, as in Cutch and Sind : probably there was too much water about, and they drank wherever the fancy seized them. I saw part of the skin of a Sand Grouse shot by a Warrant Officer of the Garrison, which, I think, must have belonged to P. UcJifen- steinii, which does not seem to have been recorded from S. Afghan- istan before. A fair number of Woodcock [3. rusticola) were shot in or about Quetta this last winter. The first fell to my lot on November 11 (rather an early date for them), and the same day I saw two others. The exact number that were shot in the season I have no account of, but I should say between twenty or thirty. I heard of one man shooting as mauy as sis in one day, but accounts of shikar must be received with caution. They invariably come in about the beginning of December, that is, the main body of them, and either move on or get exterminated ; anyhow, they are not often seen after January. There were one or two favourite spots for them, but as often as not they were put up out of small gardens, and I even heard of one having been knocked over wirh a stone by a Tommy in the cemetery a year or two before. There were three Solitary Snipe (G. soliinria) shot this last season, all in the Surkab, Pisheen, a broad strip of marsh and tama- risk bushes, between two ranges of hills. Unfortunately I could not succeed in getting hold of a skin for preserving before they had been plucked. In the same place was procured a single specimen of the English Water Kail (B. aquaHcus), which I do not see recorded in Col. Swinhoe's list of the birds of S. Afghanistan. Chukor (0. chvhar) and See-see {Ammojperdix Bonhami) are the other items which help to make up the scanty bags, generally made within a radius of fifteen miles of Quetta. By all accounts the last severe winter killed off a great number of these birds, so that now they are comparatively scarce. The See-see is extraordinarily fond of his own particular spot of ground, and you may rely upon finding him there time after time. As the winter advances, however, they disappear somewhere, where, I could never satisfactorily make out, but probably into lower lying country. About the migration I 54 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, shall say nothing, as I did not arrive in time for the autumn departure and left before their return, but the following is a list of some of the migrants, which remained the wiuter through in Quetta : — Wagtails (IT. alha personata), Redstart (R. enjthronota), Black- throated Thrush (T. atrogularis), Wheatears (S. Morio, deserts), Bunting {E. leucocephala, huitoni). Accentor atrogularis, Starling (S, vulgaris), Larks (A. cristata and M. bimaculata, Pipit (A, trivial is) . One of the features of an Afghan landscape is the enormous number of ravens (C. Lawrenci). They sit everywhere uttering their peculiar notes, one a deep guttural bell-like note, and the other much more musical, resembling the noise made by pouring wine out of a bottle. They come into Quetta to roost in enormous numbers, as there are no trees worthy of the name to be found outside, but before roosting they sit about on the ground in flocks, perfectly blackening the ground where they are. In the early morning before sunrise they may be seen quitting their roosting-place to disperse themselves all over the country in quest of food. In company with the latter, or sometimes associating with pigeons, fly flocks of the Hymalayan Chough (Fregillus graculus) with their peculiar cry and wild eccentric flight. The familiar English magpie too (P. rus'ica) is exceedingly plentiful at Pisheen, though I never saw one at Quetta, and may be seen in the Surkhab by sixes and sevens at a time, flitting from rock to rock. I was rather surprised to see one day, so late as December, a common green parrot (P. torqnatus) flyiug overhead. I had never heard ot them being fouud so far north before, so concluded it must have been an escaped bird. However, a few days later, I saw a pair flying together, apparently enjoying the severe weather, and these had not the appearance of recently caged birds at all. It would b9 difficult to say what they could have found to eat, as the trees were perfectly bare at the time, unless they subsisted on what grain they could pick up in the bazaars. One small bird which I saw up there particularly attracted my attention, and though I tried very hard to procure a specimen for identification, I was unable to do so, chiefly owing to its restless habits, and to the fact that it went over tha worst ground on the side of the hills which it could have possibly picked out. Perhaps some of our readers may be able to recognize it from my descrip- (/^ L((>, S* Instance of Teratology in the Brinjal or Egg Plant (Solatium Melongena)- (Triple fruit from a Single flower.) BRINJAL OR EGG-PLANT. 55 tion, viz., about the size of a Stone Chat, and possessing the same habits, of a uniform greyish mud oolour, with black-tipped tail and a little white about the head. The thing, however, which attracted my notice most of all was its power of imitation. I heard it myself imitating most loudly and distinctly the common grey partridge. In fact, the first time it completely took me in. A man in the Engineer Department there informed me that he had also heard it imitate a puppy squealing so truthfully, that his dogs became quite excited and began hunting about for tho supposed puppy in distress. It then commenced crying like a peewit. It should come from some country where the grey partridge is found, as it could not very well have picked up the cry of the latter in Afghanistan, where the grey partridge does not, as far as I know, occur; but at the same time I do not remember ever reading about powers of mimicry in any bird answering to the description of this one, which is found in the same localities with the grey partridge (0. pondicerianus) . Another beautiful little bird, not uncommon in the rivers in Afghanistan, is the Red-winged Wall-creeper (Teichodroma muraria), an Alpine bird. It has wings of a lovely crimson and black, the first three primaries being strikingly spotted with white. It is very confiding and will run up a bank in its quick jerking way within a few feet of you, uttering its shrill pipe. I will now conclude these few observations with the hope thab I may be able at some future period to contribute something of greater interest than the bleak hills of Afghanistan can afford. INSTANCE OF TERATOLOGY IN THE BRINJAL OR EGG-PLANT {SOL ANUM MELON GEN A). (See illustration.) Triple Fruit from a Single Flower. This form of teratology is not common. The pistil — the part of the flower which develops into fruit— is more subject to suppression than to multiplication. This is believed to be due to the position of the pistil in the centre of the flower (where it is subjected to pressure) and also to the fact that it is the last developed of the parts of the flower. Instances, however, do occur in which the carpels are increased. In tho present instance there seems to be a 56 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. simple multiplication, so that the calyx, instead of holding in its cup one fruit, has three distinct ovaries which are developing into fruits. Curiously enough, Sir J. D. Hooker says that the Solarium Melongena, when it escapes from cultivation, often becomes intensely prickly, and the fruits on the single flower stalk may vary from one to five ! This looks as if a multiplication of fruits was, in the case of the Brinjal, a result of degeneration. India, with its exuberance of vegetation, is probably teeming with instances of teratology. Some of the readers of the N. H. S. Magazine might send specimens, or descriptions of specimens, which may occur in their own experience. The double cocoanut is known to occur, and whether there is simply an increase or a diminution of the ordinary structures of the plant, or a change into some other structure, we are assured that many instances of teratology might be sent to our Honorary Secretary during the next few months, which would show how common are the various instances of teratology which are to be found in this country. D. M. SPORTING RAMBLES ROUND ABOUT SIMLA. By J. C. Anderson. (Bead at the Society's Meeting on 16th January 1889.) I will suppose that you have a short holiday in October or November and find yourself at Simla. The first want you will feel — at least I always did — was to get out of it without unnecessary delay : those distant snows and forests are too alluring. Some preparations must, however, first be made. In the first place, you must have dogs. Any dog with a nose will do, and it is strange how many dogs have noses, though few of them know it. A fox- terrier, or bull-terrier, trained to use his nose and thoroughly well in hand, is as good for this work as a spaniel or setter, — better I think in many respects, — as he is lighter and not so easily fatigued on those steep rocky hillsides; on the other hand, it must be admitted, he has usually a way of helping himself to pheasant that has to be guarded against. The best dog out of a regular pack of all sorts that it fell to my lot to see was a tiny, mean-looking, yellow fai — the most veritable cur you ever set eyes upon — and yet with a nose that was 8P0RTINQ RAMBLES ROUND ABOUT SIMLA, 57 truly marvellous, combined with a judgment that would have adorned the bench. A shikaree, too, yon will want — a man who can work the dogs, and who has some knowledge of the country and the sport to be found there. Tents, of course, if you are going to leave the road and the bungalow. They must be small and light, and, like all the rest of your luggage, capable of being carried on mules or on men's backs. If you are going for a short holiday only, with no definite plans made for you by some friend on the spot, I should advise you to stick to the Thibet and Hindoostan high road (a pathway from 3 to 12 feet in width), on which for over 100 miles there are good bungalows, distant some ten or twelve miles from each other. Shooting all that you can reach from these bungalows on either side of the road, you may, if you are keen and in good trim, cover a great quantity of very fairly good ground, and you will be incomparably more comfortable than you could be in tents, with the thermometer at nights well below freezing-point. A servant, too, you must have who can cook, and has some experience of marching in those districts and knows the language of the people. And, lastlv a man who can skin birds. Such a man can almost always, I believe, be got in Simla for a salary of Rs. 15 or Rs. 20 a mouth, and it adds enormously to the pleasure of a ramble in a new country to be able to collect specimens as you go along. Here before you are some of the birds which I collected on my first visit; to Simla, and many more might have been collected. It is scarcely worth while in October or November taking a rod with you, but there is no harm in taking a small trout rod, a few flies, and one or two small flying spoons, which you can get at Luscombe's, of Allah- abad, better than anywhere else that I know of. I have not fished myself, being told that at that time of the year it was useless; but a forest officer, whom I met last November, told me he had just caught several smallish fish in the Giri in the direction of the Chor (a big hill not very far from Simla), — I think he said with a fly. If your visit should be in May or June, certainly take your fishing tackle. Both in the Giri to the east and the Sutlej to the west the Indian trout [Barilius bola) and mahseer (though not of any great weight) are to be caught and give good sport. So at least I am informed on the very best local authority. At that time of the year, when the upper rivers are full with the melting snow water, the rish ascend the smaller, tributary streams, and descend when the water begins to run line again at the end of the rains, say in 8 88 fiOtfBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. September and October, after wliicli the fish must be looked for in the bigger waters in the plains below. I Would advice you to take a rifle, though it is quite possible you may find little' or no use for it. It depends, of course, a good deal on the direction in which yon go, and how far. If you are simply rambling round about Simla, which is all that I am now supposing you to intend to do, and nearly all that I can myself pretend to have done, you may not possibly see a four-footed creature bigger than a jackal or a fox. By the way, a Simla fox (Vutpes mototarms) in autumn (and even more so in winter, I believe) is a beautiful creature. It has, as you see here, a lovely coat and a noble brush : it makes a very handsome tug when properly mounted. There are, however, bears there, and in some places a good many. I have heard of as many as five being shot in one day close to the road. I mean the Himalayan black bear (Ursus tibetanus) ; the brown bear of Cashmere (Ursus isahellinus) is very rarely, if ever now, met within this neighbour- hood, though I believe there was a time not so very long ago when it was not so scarce. The Barra-singh of Cashmere {Cervus cash- Trtirianus) too is another animal which used occasionally to be seen in this district, but has been crowded out by the multiplication of guns. Goral, however (Nemorhcpdus gorai), a small species of mountain goat you will find in some places, and those not far from Simla, pretty plentifully, I believe. I have heard local sportsmen speak disparagingly of goral shooting a3 very tame work, and, to judge by some accounts of it I have heard, it must often be so. My own experience was as small as it well could be, but the one I saw and shot, on the only occasion I ever went after goral, gave me as pretty an afternoon's walking and climbing on a steep hillside among oaks and ferns aud rhododendrons and grand grey crao-s as one could well wish to have. If your larder is low, you will not despise goral ; a laddie of goral is by no means to be contemned, even if you do not strictly follow the advice a serjeant pensioner gave me, to be " sure and hang it three weeks, Sorr." Tahr and burrehl and even ibex you may meet if you go far enough ; but I will not say how far that may be. I never saw any of them though I have come across pugs (on a retired part of Hattoo, I think), which doubtless belonged to one or other of them. I could not make out from my shikaree to which. It is not your rifle then you must depend upon for your sport, but your gun. For this you may always find some occupation pretty well anywhere in SPORTING RAMBLES ROUND ABOUT SIMLA. 59 that neighbourhood. If you must havo big bags, you will almost certainly bo disappointed ; if you are content with a grand day's walk and a moderate bag, hardly and honestly won, you need scarcely ever be so ; and, of course, it is to the pheasants that you will chiefly look to provide you with your amusement and fill your larder. Wherever there are trees or even bushes, though it be on the very roadside, you feel you are not quite safe from one or other of that game and handsome family. The pheasants that you may expect to meet at this season of the year are practically four only, unless, indeed, you go somewhat further afield than I am now contemplating your doing. These are the monal (Laphophorus impegamus), the kokiass or pukras (Pucrasia macrolopha), the cheer (Phasianus wallichi), and the white-crested kalij (Euphocanus albocristatits). The handsome jewar or so-called " Argus Pheasant" of that region (Ceriornis melanoscep/tala) , one of the tragopans (we had a live specimen in these rooms lately), is still, I believe, to bo met with in the higher regions of forest, somewhat more remote from Simla, but not except quite as an exception within the regions I am now considering. It is a shy bird apparently, of somewhat meditative, if not gloomy disposition, favouring the darkest depths of the remotest forests. Yet curiously, as pointed out by more than one writer on the subject, it seems to be the most easily tamed of all the Hymalayan pheasants ; while the kalij, which in its wild state seems scarcely happy far away from the sound of the human voice, is the most difficult. The moonal and the kokiass, and specially the former, are dis- tinctly forest birds, loving the dark dense forests of deodar, juniper, and yew, while the oheer and the kalij prefer somewhat more open ground interspersed with woods of pine oak and rhododendron, with a thick undergrowth of bushes, ferns and grasses. The moonal I have not found at a much lower elevation than 7,000 feet; tho kokiass seldom below 6,000 feet ; from 5,000 or lower to 7,000 seems to be the favourite regio?! of the cheer and the kalij. Though all four birds are now, I believe, universally regarded as pheasants, you will see from the specimens I have before me that they differ from one another very considerably in character. There is no mistaking the cheer with his typically long tail for anything else than a pheasant. A cock cheer in form and feature, though not iu colour, differs very slightly from the cock pheasant of our English covers, and is about the same weight, say 3^ lbs. The kokiass is 60 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. evidently a near relation, being a typical pheasant in all respects, save that he is wanting in the long tail feathers. But the mooual, with his gorgeous blue, green, copper, and bronze tints, his peculiar upright crest, and his compact thickset body, and strong, short legs, evidently adapted for digging, is obviously as nearly related to the peacocks as he is to the pheasants; while you have only to look at the tail of the kalij to see his relationship to the next sub-family at the other end of the scale, viz., the gallinrc— comprising the jungle fowls, tirebacks, &c. All four birds seem distinctly to prefer shade to sun and clamp to dryness. The neighbourhood of running water seems almost an essential with all of them. In short, such as the fern is in its choice of locality, so is the pheasant ; the two aro evidently firm friends. As with trout and many other fish you are pretty sure to take day after day behind the same stone or in the same eddy, so it was I found, not always for any apparent reason with these pheasants. There w r ere certain spots, for instance, on the road from Narcanda to Bhagi (which, by the way, passes through one of the grandest pieces of forest scenery I suppose to be seen on any roadside in the world, where the deodars must some of them be quite 200 ft. high, with their dark sombre green veiled in many cases from top to bottom in the flame-coloured leaves of the Virginia creeper). There were certain spots on this road, where in my visit of three years ago I was sure day after day to find a bird or two in spite of the fate that had overtaken their predecessors at the same spot it might be only the previous day. On visiting the same locality last November, there, in the very same spots, I nearly always found birds. The mooual, the koklass, and the kalij seem to spread themselves pretty indiscriminately over the area where the conditions they require aro to be found. It seems curiously otherwise with the cheer. One little valley may hold cheer, and a dozen all round, where apparently the conditions are precisely the same, may not hold a single one. I have heard of residents of Simla shooting regularly for years together all round the neighbourhood, and never so much as seeing a single cheer, and then subsequently coming on them by chance one day in some place not previously shot over though perhaps quite close to Simla and always thereafter finding them in the same place year after year. I was fortunate enough on this last visit to Simla to be shown one of these haunts of the cheer, from which these three specimens I have here were secured. The ground corresponded very accurately SPORTING RAMBLES ROUND ABOUT SIMLA. Gl with the description of the favourite locality of the cheer given by Messrs. Hume and Marshal in their well-known work. The hillside on which they were found was composed of a Dumber of little cliffs one above the other, each perhaps from 20 to 30 feet high, broken up by ledges on which one could barely walk, thickly set with grass and bushes, aud dotted sparingly with more or less stunted trees, with curious roots hanging down the little cliffs and long trailing arms of scarlet creeper. I had a red setter aud three spaniels with me. The setter was put to rauge over the whole hillside ; men were stationed at various points to mark down the birds while we sat on a knoll opposite and looked on, a deep ravine lying between. It was a pretty sight to see the dog working half-way up the hill. Soon there might be seen, scuttling up hill at an amazing pace, across the little open glades between one clump of brushwood and another, a family party of some five or sis cheer, their heads down and long tails drooping: r J 'he dog soon overtook and flushed them, and then all eyes were wanted to mark down each bird. The birds have pitched in various places only a little lower than where they were flushed, having wheeled round to the right and left soon afcer they had got on way. You cross the ravine and ascend the hill on the other side. You find it is much stifFer work than it looked, requiring a good head and a careful use of your feet. At last you get to the destined spot below bird number one, and as close as you can convenient I v get thereto, it may be 20 yards or it may a 100 or more. You have a most insecure footing, and you are not quite sure that your gun going off will not remove you from it ; but you mean to have a shot at that cheer, though you perish in the attempt. The shikaree climbs up still higher to flush the bird with the spaniels at his heels. After a good deal of beating of bushes and inciting of the dogs, a great fluttering is heard overhead, but it may be out of sight. The next moment a mighty rush as of some archangel, in a hurry ; you spin round, let off your gun, and upset yourself, all in the twinkling of an eye ; and if you get that bird, it is probably, as Mr. Hume remarks, not the first time you have shot cheer. If you do not get him, he is again marked down, probably on some lower slope of the same hill, where you may with perfect confidence leave him till you have looked up / by a similar process to that first described, the other birds originally flushed. It is curious how close these birds will sit when put up once or twice. You may 62 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. leave them half ail hour and fiud them under the very bush you saw them pitch in j and you may beat that bush, or cause it to be beaten, till you are on the point of being convinced the bird must have gone, when up it gets almost under your very nose, and shoots with tremendous velocity down hill. This grand bird is, as I have already stated, even now very scarce in the neighbourhood of Simla, and I very much fear it will soon disappear altogether ; its ways and habits laying it open to complete extinguishment more than do those of other pheasants. The rest, I think, will always be sufficiently able to take care of themselves, a wise Government now protecting them in the breeding season, in common, I believe, with all game birds of that z'egiou, I must not detain you long on the subject of the three other species of pheasants I have mentioned. As to the moonal, it is more easy for me to be brief, inasmuch as the bird is now comparatively scarce in any easily accessible part of the neighbourhood of Simla, and it is certainly by no means true now, and of that locality, whatever may have been the case when (i Mountaineer" wrote (so often quoted by Mr. Hume and by Mr. Barucs), ' ■ that the most indifferent sportsman will fiudlittle diffi- culty in gettiug the moonal."" This is because it has been and is so much shot for its gorgeous plumage, a small piece of which, a lady tells me, costs as much as a guinea or more at a fashionable West End bonnet shop. The man I had with me this year to skin what I shot told me he had himself skinned some 2,000 last season for one firm of exporters in Calcutta, the majority of which, I believe, came from the neighbourhood of the Char — -a hill some twenty miles (as the crow flies from Simla, but somewhat rugged and inacessible and removed from any good road. From what little I have seen of this bird I can quite imagine that the best sport with it would begot by shooting it, as sug- gested by "Mountaineer/' with a small rifle. Such a rifle as the '320 or *o80 bore, Winchester, which Mr. Fhipson is exhibiting here, aud which I have lately had opportunity of proving to be a wonderfully accurate and reliable little weapon. The bird has a habit, when first flushed by dogs, of getting into a bare branch of some lofty tree, and thence abusing with great loquacity the disturbers of its peace. "While so engaged, yon may approach to within some £0 or 100 yards of it by utiug the cover of intermediate trees, aud at that distance it affords a good mark for such a weapon. It is difficult to approach near enough for an effective shot with a shot gun, and the bird is so very wideawake (though " Mountaineer" somewhat SPORTING RAMBLES ROUND ABOUT SIMLA. 6*3 quaintly assures us that there is nothing of guile in its nature) that, when once ou the wing, it seems to have a very good notion of •where the guns are and how they are to be avoided. I once saw the sight that seems to have impressed '* Mountaineer" so, and small wonder — a cock moonal, his peacock-erect sailing across a valley, with all his gorgeous plumage shivering and shimmering in the sun with a curious vibratory movement, A very living glittering rain- bow it was : a sight that almost took your breath away. I Was with a companion who did not shoot himself and would rather discourage shooting in others. 1 am happy to say, though, that he could play as good a knife and fork game as any of our party when a pheasant was on the table. " What on earth is that ? " he said. " Why, that is a cock moonal," said I, somewhat testily, a bird he knew I very much wanted to get a specimen of. " And do you mean to say you would be brute enough to shoot that glorious thing?" he asked ; and for once I almost doubted whether there might not be something in what he said. The kalij and the koklass I will dismiss with but a few words, not because there is not much to be said about them, or that they are unimportant to the Simla visitor. Quite the contrary is the case. They will form the mainstay of your larder and give you most of your sport. Both birds, if not old roosters and properly kept (you can hang them well nigh a week at that time of the year), are most excellent eating, every bit as good as an English pheasaut in my opinion. And both give excellent aport. The two are found in somewhat different ground, as I have before stated, but the mode of shooting them is much the same. The guns are below and the dogs and one or two men above. The ever welcome short bark, followed by a hurried "clinking" of the frightened bird, is heard above, " Ata, Sahib," " Ata, Sahib/' rings down through the trees, followed almost instantaneously by a rushing thunderbolt to your right or left, or coming straight for you out of the trees in your front ; then somehow your gun goes off, and, if you are on the spot that morning, a crash is heard through the tops of the trees below you, and your faithful retriever is soon seen proudly wagging his tail with the bird in his mouth. You do not very often come across either of these birds collected together in more than twos or threes. Sometimes, however, you will be fortunate enough to light on a regular " hot corner," and have five or six down on you more rapidly than you can well load. Those are moments to live for. The joy of battle is yours. Every nerve is braced, every sense strung at 64 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. its highest pitch. You feel you are being stormed, and that you must rely solely on the keenness of your own eye and the steadiness of your pulso. Perhaps, when all is over, you smile at your own excitement : yet many things you may forget before you forget those few moments. Both these birds are amazingly quick on the wing, and almost invariably fly straight downwards ; sometimes indeed a bit too straight. It is as much as you can do sometimes to avoid being knocked down by a bird you have just shot. I have had the shikaree at my side bowled over like a ninepin and rendered considerably foolish in this way. When flushed by dogs alone, both these birds will often at first, especially iu the afternoons, perch on some tree, whence they will keep up their excited cackling for a considerable time. This is the moment of your shikaree's reward ; you give him your gun and he stalks ventre- d-terre (the favourite attitude of the Duke of Wellington, according to the French books of my } r outh) through the trees, and pots the bird on the bough. It is wonderful what eyes these men have for a bird in a tree ; they will often see them in passing without anythiug having occurred to cause them to expect to see a bird there, and it is almost certain that their efforts to make you also see the bird will be altogether unavailing. Many and many a long day spent on their own account with just one cunning little dog and some old "shooting iron' 1 is, I fancy, the secret of it. On this topic, however, you will not find your shikaree prepared to be over-confidential. Nearly related to the pheasant is the red-jungle fowl {Qallus ferruginew). If you keep to the higher ground, 5,000 ft. and over, you will not come across this bird; but down in some of the valleys, especially near the rivers (if you are fishing), this bird, I am told, in many places gives good sport. We come now to the partridges. In this family there is one bird at least that deserves most honorable notice. This is the chuker or red-legged partridge (Caccabis chukor), a very near relation of, if not identical with, our friend the " Frenchman " ( Caccabis c/rceca). This bird will test all your powers of walking.all your boasted acciu^acy of shooting, all your endurance, and all your patience. Open, broken ground in the neighbourhood of cultivation is their favourite resort, on which, while still, they are exceedingly hard to see. If they were not such arrant chatterers, they might perhaps have a comparatively great life of it. There must be an awful struggle for "the last word" amongst chukors. I fancy they must sometimes quite welcome the gun as an occasion SPOUTING RAMBLES ROUND ABOUT SIMLA. 65 for changing the subject. Your shikaree takes base advantage of this little weakness of the chulcor (which, however, they only indulge in early and late in the day while feeding). He sends men out to mark them down very early in the morning-, while the grey snows are still asleep, and the stars are flashing their last and brightest in the clear black sky. Poor fellows, wrapped ,in their blankets, how cold they seem when you come up with them some hour or two later, when the sun is just touching the hill top ! Then, directed by your watchmen, you begin to look up one of the coveys they have marked down for you, working round and below the birds, and then very quietly walking them up. These birds are very strong and take a good deal of shot. They get up wonderfully smartly and are off in every direction. If yon secure a right or left, you are to be congratulated. Your men all over the ground are on the look-out to mark down the birds which almost invariably separate, and often go some considerable distance before they pitch in some bush clump of grass or scrub. You must lose no time in looking up each group one by one ; if yon hive more than one gun, the guns should separate and divide the walk, as success in making a bag of chukor depends on leaving the birds no time to regain their composure. Constant and rapid disturbance seems to make the birds a bit '* mazed," as they say in Devonshire, and increases your chance. But shoot as you will, and walk as you will, probably you will not be too pleased with your performance when all is over and done, not at least while you are still a novice at chukor shooting. A chukor, I may add, is excellent eating. The only other partridge I recollect seeing on these hills is this very handsome little bird you see here — one of the wood or hill partridges (Arboricola iorqueolas). It is essentially a forest bird. You may expect to find it where you would find the (arboricola or torqusolas) pheasant. This specimen I shot in the Bhagi forest: ii was dusk, the bird was alone, aud it flitted through the trees and pitched on a bare bough, some fifty yards off, in such a way that I almost thought it must be some species of owl. My shikaree told me these birds were pretty numerous in that neighbourhood, but I cannot remember having seen more than that one. Other partridges as well as quail are to be got in the lower regions of the valleys. The last game bird I will mention is our old friend the woodcock {Seohpax rusticola). This bird is occasionally met with near Simla as early as the end of October or beginning of November, when working for the kalij 66 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. pheasant; but it is then, at any rate, decidedly scarce. I do not doubt that a few weeks later there must be a good number of them scattered about in the neighburhood, but the forest in most places is so extensive, that the birds are hard to find. In the not very distant Knlu Valley, I have been told on the best authority that the woodcock shooting; in the winter is first-rate. Such then is the sport you may expect to find in a ramble round about Simla. If time had allowed, I should like to have said something as to the delights there prepared for the artist and the botanist. Without being exactly either, your daily ramble is a continual feast to the eye. You are gladdened by the red and golden autumn tints of the chestnut, the walnut, the wild pear, and wild cherry; the deep dark green of the deodar is here and there aflame with the scarlet virgiuia creeper; the soft grey of the steep crags, ever and anon breaking the monotony of the dark foi-est, is a perfect marvel of mosaic in purple and madder, carmine and orange — scarlet, green, and ochre. Underfoot it is well nigh in some places all fern, the maiden hair and the exquisite parsley fern being the most con- spicuous ; on the open hill sides you recognise your old friend the silver-stemmed raspberry and the bright yellow and scarlet clumps of the barberry ; you sloop to pick a lingering wild strawberry beautifully powdered with white crystals of frost, or a modest white violet, or mauve marguerite ; and when the day's delights are at last all over, and the last lingering flush has left the snows, you are back at your bungalow, where a roaring wood-fire awaits you, j^ou have a good dinner of Welsh mutton (it is nearly as good) and roast pheasant, smoke the pipe of peace, muse or talk a bit over the cheerful flame, pile on the logs and tumble into bed. AT MALTA TO AND FROM INDIA. By Capt. E. F. Becher, R. A., F. Z. S. The homeward and outward traveller has generally a longer or shorter stay at Malta ; the popular attractions, as held out by the native tout, are the Palace, St. John's Church, Dried Monks and San Antonio Orange Gardens ; but there are other attractions to any one with a leaning to Natural History. Of course, the market should be visited. Six a. m. is none too early, because many of AT MALTA TO AND FROM INDIA, G rj the birds brought in aro at once plucked; every bird that flies is slaughtered, when possible, and brought to the market ; and, of course, during the spring and autumn migrations these are in great variety. Any small bird is a Bnccafico, aud though I have spent some years in the Mediterranean, off and on, I yet have not a clear idea what a Bcccafico proper is, but I believe that it is the Garden Warbler (8. salicariu). A curious ornithological dainty, which the Maltese are especially fond of, is a portion of the back of a hen, with the adherent well-developed ovaries. I obtained once in the market a specimen of a Stone Curlew, and on dissection the whole of the stomach cavity was filled with one large snail (Helix vermiadata). This bird's gullet must have been most distensible to have got it down. Many birds are brought to market alive. Amongst others, the Yellow Wagtail (M'.flava). This bird is easier tamed than any other bird I know. The Maltese clip their wings and keep them in their shops and kitchens iu order to catch flies. One I had within five days of capture would come to me and feed out of my hand, and whenever I was skinning a bird, he would always come on to the table and catch the flies, which always, of course, were present in numbers. On one occasion he got a little tow entangled in his claws; so I had to hunt him down, catch him and disentangle it, which would have frigliteued any other bird, but when I put this wagtail down, he just shook himself and went on pursuing flies on my table as usual. There is a fair collection of birds in the Museum of. the University. To view this all you have got to do is to walk inside the University building, which is close to the market, and ask permission from the Professor of Natural Science or any one else. There is a MS. catalogue, but some of the birds, notably a Lark or two, are incorrectly labelled. The Isabelline Nightjar (0. wgyptius) should not be overlooked, as only few European killed specimens are in existence. There is also a collection of land shells there, but I forget whether the Maltese shells are separated, but I think so. The land and fresh water molluscs of the Maltese Group though small (not much above forty) are most interesting, six, viz., II. melitensis, Fev., E.Sfraiti, Pfeiffer, Clausilia scalaris, Pfeiffer, C. mamotica, Gulia, Physa melitensis, Ben., Paludina melitensis, Ben., being peculiar to the Group. The characteristic fossils of the ?vJalta formations are Echino- derms, and probably a collection can be seen here. Another object C8 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. to be looked for is a specimen of the black variety of the Common Green Lizard. The latter is common all over Malta, but on the islet of Fifla, which is a mere rock, it is replaced by a black variety. The raison d'etre of this black variety is not, I believe, properly ascer- tained ; but Professor Giglioli, of Florence, writes that he has invariably found that our Common Lizard (P. muralis) constantly presents dark varieties in islets adjoining small islands. This islet of Fifla is also a breeding place of the Manx Shear water (P. anglorum) and also, I believe, of P. griseus. When I visited it in April I only took eggs of the former, though I captured and let go again one or two of the latter. But as Fifla is not likely to be visited by the voyager, I ■will sav no more about it. A walk round Manoel Island is interesting, poking about at the edge of the sea. After rain some fresh water pools are left amongst the rocks; in some of them may be seen a large Entomostracan, at first sight like some bivalve swimming about: this is Estheria melitensis, and any observations concerning it are worth noting. Another interesting stroll is on the rocks beyond Ricasoli. Many fossil shells and echinoderms, &c, will be seen in situ, and perhaps a shark's tooth or so, the Malta formation being a great repository of the latter. The Malta rocks can be divided into 4, the upper being a coral limestone and below this sand. No. 2, marl. No. 3, sand- stone. No. 4, semi-crystalline limestone, but for more detail I would refer to Ltith Adam's book on Malta and Spratt's Geology of Malta, which can be seen in either the Garrison or the Public Library. The great geological feature is the large fault across the island, forming the Benjemma height. A good way of occupying spare time, better than by loafing about Valetta, is to take train to Notabile and then drive to St. Paul's Bay. A very good idea of the island can thus be got. At St. Paul's Bay, just opposite the little island of Salmone is the restricted area for Clausilia scalaris before mentioned. This Bay is — '* When it was dny they knew not the land but they discovered a certain creek with a shore into which thay were minded if it were possible, to thrust the ship * * * and falling into a place where iwo seas meet they ran the ship aground. * * * " This place is said to be the strait between Salmone and the maiuland. Books to read on a voyage are often inquired for. If before reaching Malta the History of the Knights of Malta can be read, it will add much to the interest of the place, especially to those who can picture the past in the present. Just inside the Gate of St. Elmo is a small MISCELLANEOUS. ^9 chapel, in this chapel the Knights being driven to the last extremity and nearly all wounded, received the last Sacrament, and then went out to die. the wounded being propped up in their places. A hand-to-hand fight in the grand harbour, the combatants swimming, is an episode not likely to be repeated in modern days. MISCELLANEOUS. EOMBAY BUTTERFLIES. To the Editor of the Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. Sir,— The following note of captures made last year may interest your ento- mological readers. I find on reference to my diary that between 1 2th August and 23rd September I had secured on Malahar and Cumballa Hills alone 50 different species of butterflies and 34 different species of moths. On 26th August I caught in the compound of the house in which I live on Cuniballa Hill, two specimens of Danais dorippus, of which Mr. Aitk en writes at page 127 of the first volume of the Society's Journal, that there is only one specimen in the Society's collection, and that he has never met with it in Bom- bay, but believes it to be an occasional variety of Chrysippus; and of which Mr. Newnhain writes at page 220 of the same volume that he ha.d seen two speci- mens in Cutch and heard of a few more at Mandvie. I have never seen any other specimens than the two I c.iught, and believe with Mr. Aitken that they are merely an unusual variety of a very common species, Danais Chrysippus. On 23rd September I caught, about half mile beyond the upper end of the Vehar Lake, a beautiful specimen of Myrina Atymnus, the only one I have ever seen, of which the Society appear to have no specimen, and which Drury notes as " rare " among Indian butterflies. It may also interest some of your readers to know that during the last week in July the shy white-browned bulbul, Ixos Luteolus, built in a hanging basket of ferns under my porch, and laid two eggs, of which I took one. The hen continued to sit on the other, but laid no more, till unfortunately a careless passer- by struck the basket, upset the nest, and broke the egg, when the hen deserted I never saw the cock bird abuut the nest after the eggs were laid. — Yours, &c, W. E. HART. Cumballa Hill, Bombay, 2Clh March 1889. A BIRD-CATCHING SPIDER. When Madame Merian mentioned in her " Insects of Surinam " the existence of a bird-catching spider in the Settlement, her account, though believed at the time, was discredited shortly afterwards, and her statement set down as untrust- worthy and exaggerated. No spider, it was believed, either caught or preyed on birds, and experiments were tried with the arachnoid in question {My gale avxcu- laria) by Langsdrof, MacLeay and others to test the truth of her assertion and, 70 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. resulting in failure, the whole account was rather summarily set down as a fabri- cation, pure and simple. Later on, however, M. Moreau de Jounes, who spent many years of an observant life in Martinique, and was consequently well quali- fied to speak on the habits of these huge spiders, bears out Madame Merian's account, and distinctly states that " it climbs on the branches of trees to surprise the Colibris (humming birds) and the Certhicu flaveola." M. Palisot de Beauvais also asserts that M. Blundii is known to kill and devour birds, and Percivalin his account of Ceylon says the same of M. fasciata. That spiders of the genus Myyale do catch and eat birds is, I think, now pretty well acknowledged, and the following account given to me by a lady, in whom I can repose the utmost con- fidence, will serve as another case in point to establish tliis fact : — A few years ago, a pair of martins* built their nest in the verandah of this lady's house on the Shevaroy HiHs, and, as she always takes a lively interest in animate nature, she allowed the birds to remain undisturbed, and watched with keen interest the process of building and incubation. On coming out one morning, however, she was surprised to find the parent bird missing from the nest, and on looking about the verandah her eyes fell on a huge spider with the bird iu its clutches. Summoning her husband to her assistance she bade him despatch it, but bird and spider were so mixed up that this was no easy matter, and the arachnoid escaped into its den in the wall. On examining the bird it was found that the skin only was left, the breast and other portions having been completely eaten up. The spider had evidently caught the bird at night (the usual hunting hours of the Mygalida?), and had carried it along the rafters, a distance 2§ yards, to the entrance to its abode and there eaten it. The spider in question, from the des- cription given of it, must have been M. fascia ta, a species not unknown on the Shevaroys. A. W. MORRIS. ENGLISH NOMENCLATURE FOR INDIAN BUTTERFLIES. To the Editor of the Journal of the Bombay Natural History Society. Sir, — It must have struck many people, besides myself, as very strange that we have as yet no English name for our Indian butterflies, except, perhaps, a very few for insects resembling English ones. In England the majority of common butterflies have one, if not more popular names, more or less appropriate, and some even poetical and beautiful. These names are principally derived from some strik- ing feature in their appearance or peculiarity of habit. Surely our Indian butter- flies are not so devoid of peculiarities that ouringenuity cannot snpply them with some simpler, more expressive names than long, double barrel Latin ones, which convey nothing of the insect's appearance or habits. I think, if anything, our Indian butterflies possess a much more varied life history and distinguishing peculiarities. Another useful point to be gained also would be that we should learn * Judging from the birds that have now built in the same spot these must have been C. concolor. PROCEEDINGS. 71 a gTeat deal more about the life history of butterflies, as many keen observers of nature would send notes and observations, who now omit to do so, as, not knowing the scientific name, they are at a loss to distinguish the butterfly of which they wish to speak. What I would suggest then, is that various well known lepid'pterists should be written to with a request to send a list of suggested names to be laid before a Committee of our Society, who would accept the ones which seemed to them the most appropriate. A list of names so selected might then ba printed and circu- lated for information to various Natural History Societies. Of course, I do not for an instant suppose that these names 'will be accepted generally at onoe, or that it is an easy matter to name such a mass of butterflies ; but at any rate it would be a beginning, and I think our Society might fairly claim to have done good service in the cause of Indian entomology if we caused a stand- ard list of English names to be published. A. NEWNHAM, Bombay S. C Toona, 23rd March 1889. PROCEEDINGS OF THE SOCIETY. Pkoceedings of the Meeting hexd on 16th January 1838, The usual monthly meeting of the members of this Society was held on Wednesday the lfith January, Dr. D. MacDonald presiding : — The following new members were elected :— Mr. Srimant Hanmantrao Gopalrao (Sai Lashkar Saheb Bahadur), Dr. Eduljee Nusserwanjee, Captain J. F. C. Thatcher, Mr. E. 0. S. Baker, Mr. C. F. Elliott, Mr. Ed. Wimbridge, Mr. Cursetjee N. Servai, Mr. H. L. Harvey, C.S., Lord Colin Campbell, Mr. P. R. Wilson, Mr. R. N. Mant, and Colonel Merriman. Mr. H. M. Phipson, the Honorary Secretary, then acknowledged the following contributions to the Society's collections : — Contributions during December. Contribution. Description. Contributor. 1 Lizard ... • •• Hemidactylus sykesii Mr. E. H. Aitkea. A Porcupine's Skull • ■• Hy8trix lencura ... Mrs. Scott. 1 Snake t •• Passerita mycterizans General LaTouche. 1 Snake • • . Typhlops porrectus... Mr. B. F. Farnhain. An Elephant's Skull • • * Elephas indicus Mr. T. Drewett. A Lion Monkey • • Macacus silenus ... Mr. Cowasji D. Limji. A purple-capped Lory (alive) • ■ • Psittacus domicella .. Mrs. M. C. Turner. 1 Starred Tortoise (alive) . Testndo elegans ... Mr.iH. E.James, C.S. 1 Mongoose (alive) ... • • • Berpestesgriseus ... Mr. H. R. Cobbold. Several Birds' Skulls .. From Khandalla Mr. F, Prideaux. Minor Contributions. — From Captain Shopland, Mr. M. P. Misquita, Mr. E. Beynon, and Mr. W, R. Hamilton. 72 BOMBAY NATURAL BISTORT SOCIETY. Contributions to the Library. Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, in exchange. Prooeedinga of the Royal Society of Victoria, Vol. I.. Part I., in exchange. Prooeedinga of the Linnsean Society of the New South Wales, Vol. III., Parts II. and III., in exchange. Mr. J. D. Inverarity exhibited three very fine heads which he had lately received from Nova Scotia, viz. : — A moose (Alces malckis), a wapiti (Cervus canadensis), and a Rocky Mountain sheep (Ovis montana). Mr. Tytler exhibited a picture of " a tiger's head '' (life size), replicas of which were to be had for Rs. 100 each. The Honorary Secretary also drew attention of the members to the " Shikari Bed.'» This bed, which weighs only 20 lbs. complete, was exhibited by Mr. John Wallace, C. E. Similar ones to be obtained at Rs. 25 each, on application to the Clerk at the Booms of the Society. Mr. J. C. Anderson exhibited a collection of birds from Simla, which were greatly admired and afforded valuable illustration to his interest- ing paper on " Sporting Rambles round about Simla." Proceedings ov the MfeTing held on 19th February 1889. The usual monthly meeting of the members of this Society took place on Tuesday, the 19th February, Dr. G. A. Maconaohie presiding. The following new members were elected: — Mr. F. A. Spencer, Mr. Stanley Tyler» Mr. G. C. Gilder, Mr. Max Dcnso, Mr. A. Taylor, Mr. A. Abercrombie, Mr. Douglas Bennett, and Mr. T. D. Little. Mr. H. M. Phipson, the Honorary Secretary, then acknowledged the following contributions to the Society's collections: — Contributions during January. Contribution. Description. Contributor. 1 Jungle Fowl Gallus sonnerati Mr. A. Taylor. A quantity of specimens ol Quartz Crystals from Mr. H. W. Barrow. Parol. 1 Indian Barn Owl .. Strix javanioa ... Mr. J. Spinner. A quantity of Shells From Karwar Mr. Leokie. 1 Young Jackal (alive) Canis aureus Mr. Louis P. Eussell. 2 pairs Jungle Fowl (alive) Gallus sonnerati ... Mr N. S. Symons. 1 Snake Lycodon aulicus Mr. F. Kirby. 1 Victoria Crown Pigeon ... Goura victorias Victoria Ga.dens. 1 Pelican Pelecanus crispus ... Do. A number of Insects From Smbulpore ... Mr. Mitchell. 6fi Birds' Skins From the Punjab ... Mr. E. V. Buck. 1 Snake ... ... Passerita mycterizans Mr. Alex. McKenzie. 1 Snake (alive) Tropidonotus plunibioolor ... Mr. H. Littledale. 1 Indian Barn Owl (alive) . Strix javanica Mr. E. Wimbridge. 1 Jungle Fowl ... Gallus sonnerati Lieut. A. F. Pinhey. 1 Avocet Recurvirostra avocetta Mr. J. V. Inveraiity. A Porpoise (alive) ... Neomeris karaelriensis Mr. W. V. Sinclair, C.S. 2 Greenshanks Tottamus glottis Mr. F. Otto. 1 Scaley Ant Eater (alive). Manis pentadactyla Purchased. Minor Contributions. McMullen. -From Mr. G. C. Gilder, Mr. F. Southwell Piper, Mr. G. PROCEEDINGS. 73 The Honorary Secretary drew tUo attention of the members present, to an offer v hich had been made to tho Society by Mr. Prevoct of five Jive tiger cubs, but which it was impossible to accept. Contributions to the Library. «' British Museum Catalogue of Birds," Vols. I. to XII., Captain Becher, R.A. " Sagacity and Morality of Plants" (Taylor), Captain Becher, B.A. u Eecords of the Geological Survey of India," Vol. XXL, Part 4, in exchange. •* The Indian Forester," Vol. XV., Parts 1 and 2. in exchange. Exhibits. Mr. E. L. Barton and Mr. S. Tytler exhibited a number of heads of sambur, wild boar, cheetah, and jackal mounted by .them. The Honorary Sec etary stated that the staff of taxidermists had been increased, so that the Society was now in a position to undertake more work of this character than hitherto. Captain E. F. Becher, R. A , exhibited a photograph of a black buck, with curiously deformed horns, the result of emasculation. The Society's Prizf. The Honorary Secretary stated that the piiza of Rs. 100 offered by the Natural History Society for the best animal rainting at the Art Society's Exhibition had been eagerly competed for, and had produced a number of interesting pictures. The prize had been awarded by the Judges to Mrs. Scott, for an excellent study of camels. It was proposed and carried unanimonsly, that the congratulations of the So.icty be conveyed to Mrs. Scott for her success in winning the Society's prize. The Accounts for 1S88. Mr. A. Leslie, the Honorary Treasurer, then read a statement of the Sooicty's fiuanoes f'Feb. to March, and June and July. J. Davidson, C.S. Khandesh, J Veesa, Neemuch, fyc. s Feb. to July. H. E. Barnes. Hyderabad* Sindh, March to May. „ Baroda, April to July. H. Littledale, Esa. 257.— THE RUFOUS-BACKED SHRIKE. Lanius erythronotus, Vig. The Rufous-backed Shrike is a common permanent resident throughout the greater portion of the district, breeding from March NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 89 to August, or even earlier. The nest is very similar to that of the Grey Shrike, but is smaller ; the eggs, five or six in number, are broad ovals in shape, pinched iu at one end ; they average 0*92 inches in length by 07 in breadth ; the ground colour is a very pale pinkish stone, but is subject to much variation. They are spotted and blotched with purplish and pale-brown. Mr. Davidson informs me that this bird does not breed in the Sholapur district, though it is a common breeder in Satara, Nassick, and Khandesh. Hyderabad, Sind, May to Jul//. II. E. Barnes. Neomuch, fyc, ) Water. The water used in the stables and everywhere on our lines is all from the Municipal Reservoirs at Vehar and Tuisi ; Colaba stable is supplied with Tuisi water, and Parel stable with Vehar water. We had the water used at the latter stable and at the watering stations on the line near there analysed by the Government analyst, Dr. Lyon. The following is his report upon it: — "Statement showing the results obtained on examination of four samples of water forwarded December \Sth, 1838, by the Superintendent, Parel Stables, Bombay Tramway Co. "Samples labelled — No. 1. Parel Terminus. No. 2. Parel Stable, No. 3. Byculla Rridge, N. Side. No. 4. Byculla Bridge, S. Side. 1 2 3 4 Grains per gallon. 7-70 •91 8-40 •91 6-30 4-20 •84 Parts per million. •04 •02 •02 •02 • 1Q 1 - 18 •21 •17 "Sediments.— In all scanty, chiefly vegetable debris. A few " paramonia in No. 1. "From these results all four appear to be samples of water very '* similar in quality to the ordinary Vehar supply of Bombay. '* The Albumenoid ammonia results are perhaps very slightly higher " indicating slightly more organic contamination. Were the case " one of an outbreak of fever among human beings, I should say 134 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. '* that it was very improbable that any connection existed between "the outbreak and the water supply." Climatic Conditions last Year. — The monsoon last year was an unusually light one, the aggregate rainfall being 59 inches against an average of 75 inches. In September scarcely any rain fell, the total fall registered that month amounting to 3h inches only. There was no rain in October, and the temperature which through- out the month was unusually high, touched a maximum of 93° in the shade. Early in October portions of the city were visited with a mosquito plague. The innumerable quantity of these insects in the air indicated something unusual in the climatic conditions, or in the condition of the marshes which skirt Bombay. The weather commenced to get cooler in November, and in the middle of December cold N.-E. and N.-W. winds set in and have since continued, the former blowing during the night and the latter during the day. Breed of the Horses attacked. —The Company had last October a stud of 739 horses ; of these 570 were Australians, and 169 hordes of Asiatic breeds. Of the 14 horses attacked with "surra" in November and December, 13 were Australians, and 1 was a Persian. The majority were young horses, well bred, and in excellent condition. The Symptoms and Course of the Disease. — As a rule the pre- sence of the disease was first detected by the horse going off feed, and looking dejected and weak. An eruption of Urticaria was found on the skin in a few cases. On examining the animal the pulse was found high, generally 50° to 60°, the temperature 102° to 104°, and the lungs, usually, and heart sometimes, affected. If a gelding there was often some slight swelling of the sheath. The membrane was invariably a pale yellowish grey colour, and the anus in some cases extremely relaxed. In a few cases, but not in all, a few blood spots were observable on the membrane of the eye. As a rule when treated with fever medicines and antiseptics, the horse quickly improved, the temperature falling to 100°, to 101°, and the appetite returning. The swelling of the sheath did not, however, in any case entirely subside, and the pulse continued high. The horse would remain in this improved condition for a few days, eating well and looking well. A relapse would then set in, the temperature again rising to 106°, to 104°, or occasionally higher, dropsical swell- OUTBREAK OF SURRA FEVER. 135 ings would appear along the abdomen, and especially between the forelegs. The horse, although feeding well, would now commence to lose condition. In many cases renewed trouble would be observed at the lungs and heart. The majority of the horses attacked exhibited these alternate improvements and relapses, the animals wasting gradually away, until utterly worn out. In two cases, however, death ensued four days after the disease had declar- ed itself. In these cases the affection of the lungs was extremely severe, the horse would hardly feed at all, and the whole appearance of the animal was very distressed. One horse attacked with the disease, a rather coarse -bred Waler, in very fine condition, lost flesh but slightly before death. The specific" surra " microbe was found in the blood of this animal by Mr. Pottinger, A, V. D. The same gentleman examined microscopically the blood of some of the other cases, and was generally successful in finding the microbe, but not invariably so. The results of the post-mortem examination are given in the Veterinary record of the cases hereto attached. In all these post-mortems the black colour of the blood was a very noticeable feature. The Treatment adopted. — The system of treatment adpoted in the majority of cases was that recommended by Mr. Pottinger, and consisted of ^ii Hyposulphite of Soda and 3i Nitrate of Potash given in the drinking water ; 30 drops of Carbolic Acid in Ji Rectified Spirits given three time daily as a draught. We also tried Arsenic, Aconite, and Sulphate of Quinine in large doses. We cannot claim for any of these medicines that they seemed to exercise any control k over the disease. Certainly they did not arrest its course. Every horse attacked with " surra" has either died or had to be destroyed. As a precautionary measure we isolated the horses suffering from it. Preventive Measures adopted. — As soon as we were satisfied that "surra" had appeared amongst our horses, and that the causes producing it seemed in especial force at our Parel stables, we carried out a most careful and thorough examination of the watering and drainage arrangements at that stable. The results of the examination of the water have been given above. The stable drainage was found in good order, no stoppage anywhere; all drains clean and free from smell. A drain in the neighbouring property to the north was, we found, not working well, and we had it attended to. We disinfected the stables throughout ou more than 136 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. one occasion with phenyle and water, 1 part to 50, sending showers of it through tbe air in every direction from a manual fire engine, and thoroughly drenching the roof and stable fittings. Carbolic powder was also sprinkled in all the stalls, and sulphur and tar burnt in braziers in the passage ways. "We noticed that the majority of the horses attacked had been standing in portions of tbe stable most exposed to the N.-W. and N.-E. winds, and tbat it was since tbose winds had turned cold in the evening and at night that the outbreak of " surra " had occurred. With a view to obtaining thorough ventilation in the hot weather our stables at Parel are very open in their construction, and although the Venetians, with which the sides are fitted, are closed at night, it occurred to us that at certain places the horses were more exposed than they should be to the night winds. To provide against this, we effectually protected the horses from all apertures whence these winds could enter and blow upon tbem, and considerably increased the warmth of the stables at night by the erection of bamboo and matting screens across the principal entrances. We also gave all the horses standing at Parel a light course of antiseptic medicine. For three days each horse had daily 5ii Hyposulphite of Soda and 5i Nitrate of Potash mixed with his evening grain feed. These preventive measures were carried out the latter part of December. It was during the last week of that month tbat we set up the screens, &c, which effectually pro- tected the horses at Parel from cold winds. Simultaneously we introduced stringent regulations at Colaba for the complete protec- tion of the horses there, and maintenance of a more even temper- ature in the stables at night. Since the 1st January we have so far had no fresh case of " surra." Possible Causes of the Outbreak. — The professional opinioin as to the source of " surra" expressed by the Government Veterinary officers, Mr. Burke, Mr. Evans, and Mr. Steel, in their treatises on this disease is that the parasites which give rise to it enter the horse's system either with his food or his water. In the Company's stables, the water-supply, pronounced a pure and wholesome one by the Government analyst, is the same as has been in use for several years past, and no alteration has been introduced into the character of the grain and hay feed. The drainage of the Parel stable, where two-thirds of the "surra" cases occurred, is exceptionally good, much better than the drainage at Colaba stable. Immediately to the rear of stables OUTBREAK OF StTKRA FEVER. 137 at Parel there is a depot for manure. The dung both from Colaba and Parel is transported there. Thence it is daily removed by carts. A portion of it remains there throughout the night, but none of it remains there longer than the morning subsequent to the day of its receipt. At our old stables at Byculla a similar depot existed, but the manure remained there for three days before removal. At neither stable has the existence of this depot hereto- fore been a cause of unhealthiness. The fever record of the Parel stables for the two years of their existence prior to last autumn has been an extremely satisfactory one, very much more favourable than the record at Colaba. We cannot therefore find anything in the feed- ing of the horses, their watering, or the drainage of their stables, which would account for the outbreak. All these conditions, in so far as they affect the horses' health, have been, to the best of our belief, precisely the same these last four months as during the many past years when "surra" was unknown to us. We therefore seem directed to seek in some special climatic and atmospheric conditions for the explanation of the outbreak, October and November last were notoriously exceptionally unhealthy months in Bombay. Malarial and typhoid fevers were prevalent, and many cases ended fatally. Unusually unhealthy months for human beings, they would appear to have been usually unhealthy for horses also. The outbreak of " surra " fever was not confined to the Company's stables. Several horses attacked with it were sent to the Governmen Veterinary Hospital, and others to the private Veterinary establish- ments in the city. Probably, a far larger number died in their owner's stables. Amongst the cases observed we have not heard of a single recovery. Taking all the above facts into consideration, the opinion we have been led to form is that there was some specially unhealthy influence in the atmospheric conditions this last autumn, which predii-posed horses to this particular blood-poison- ing fever, and that the specific cause which developed the disease into activity in the horses attacked with it was getting chilled from exposure to the cold northerly winds which during the latter half of November and the month of December blew in the evening and at night. This is the conclusion to which we have been led as the result of our own experience of the disease. In support of this opinion we have the following facts : — (1) that the horses attacked were found to have been especially exposed to cold night winds by 138 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY' SOCIETY. their position in the stables, or nature of their work. At Parel stables, where the majority of cases occurred, alterations in the buildings were in progress. The south wall of the stable had been taken down in order to increase the number of stalls in that direction. This open condition of the premises on that side, while it did not expose the horses to any unwholesome wind (the south wind only blowing in the monsoon time, and being a warm one) tended no doubt to increase the draught through the stables from the north, and to lower their temperature at night. (2) That since the time when we introduced measures for protecting the stables from the northerly winds (a period of five weeks), no fresh case of "surra" has occurred. The last case at Parel stables appeared on the 29th December. It was on the 30th of that month that we completed the arrangements for excluding cold winds. (3) That the Parel stables, where nearly three-fourths of the cases occurred, were, until recently, in conse- quence of their system of construction, more open and considerably colder than the stables at Colaba. (4) That there is nothing ascertainable in the feeding or watering of the horses, differing from the feeding or watering during previous years when " surra " was unknown to us, which can, in our opinion, in any way account for the outbreak. In connection with the exposure of the horses to cold winds and our opinion that chill to the system therefrom resulting was the immediate factor producing activity in the disease, we may mention that out of 8 horses working as "helping" horses on the Byculla Bridge, no less than 3 were attacked with " surra, " and of these 2 were attacked upon the same day. Compared with the work most of our horses do, the work of these particular horses was light, and they were in specially good condition and of exceptionally fine physique. These horses are attached as additional horses to help in pulling cars up the inclines on the Bridge. After pulling up a car they return to the little waiting-sheds provided for them at either end of the Bridge, and stand, usually about 5 minutes, until another car approaches. On examining these sheds, we found them a good deal exposed to the north wind. We have now protected them ; but it is easy to understand how in the early morning, or between 7 p. m. and 11 p. m. at night, these horses, after getting warm at their work, would be specially liable to chill when standing waitiug in sheds, until recently not very well protected from cold winds. OUTBREAK OF SURRA FEVER. 139 In the plains of A.merica it has been noticed that in certain thinly populated districts where fever was prevalent, the intro- duction of railway tracks and the passage of trains has modified the sanitary conditions. The theory in explanation of this fact is that the displacement of air caused by the rapid passage of the train creates a vacuum and consequent draught, and that a rush of fresh air is in this way introduced. In other words, the train produces a sort of artificial wind. The track of the G. I. P. Railway passes immediately behind our Pauel premises, distant only 75 feet from the stables. About 2,000 feet further to the north the Flats commence, and are crossed by the trains. In this memorandum we are anxious to enumerate ail possible influences which may have shared in the production of the recent outbreak of " surra." It is perhaps worthy of consideration whether the Gr. I. P. Railway track, which very shortly after leaving the marshy land of the Flats, passes our Parel stables on their N.-W. side, does not act as an air-channel from the one to the other. The line of horses standing next to the railway was the line in which the " surra" was by far the most prevalent. A conjecture has been put forward by some Veterinary authorities in India that there is a connection between "surra" and rats. A parasite has been found in the intestines of rats which is similar to the parasite noticed in the blood of horses suffering from " surra.' ' It is suggested that where rats have access to grain, it becomes contaminated with their excreta, and that when used for horses' feed the parasite may in that way be conveyed into the horses" stomachs. In view of this theory we think it right to mention that although the greater portion of our grain is kept in paved godowns, and we do our best to exclude rats, yet we know that both before and after the grain is received by us rats do frequently get at it. But before our grain is used for horses' feed it is carefully cleaned, both by hand and through a machine. We ourselves cannot, from our own observation, favour the rat-infection theory, If the source of the disease is due to grain getting mixed with the exxreta of rats, why is the appearance of the fever limited to certain seasons, and why should it appear only in certain years ? For the past 14 years it has been unknown in our stables, and during those 19 140 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. years our stocks of grain and hay have been less well protected from the incursions of rats than they have been the past 12 months. We have now we think exhausted all we are in a position to state with regard to our own experience of "surra" fever. We submit these few remarks on a veterinary subject as proceeding of course from a non-professional pen, and while we trust to be pardoned any mistakes into which we may in consequence have fallen, we hope that our experience may be of value to those who are making this disease a subject of special study. As a large owner of horses, this Company is deeply interested in researches which have for their object the discovery of a remedy for this most fatal form of equine fever# Bombay, 7th February 1889. OUTBREAK OF SURRA FEVER. 141 Veterinary Report on 14 Cases of Surra Fever in the Bombay Tramway Company. a w in PQ xt r, 3 S"o^ M M -S^ 11 Australian, Da ... 11 8 11 11 11 11 Do. .., Do. ... Do. ... Do. ... Persian .. Australian. Do. ... Do. ... Do. ... Gelding. Mare Gelding. Do. 1888. Oct. IS 21 31 1G 12 Do. ... Do. .. Do. ... Mare ... Gelding Do. ... Do. ... Mare .. Do. .. Nov. 12 18 19 Fever draughts and Sulph. Magnesia and fever balls. Fever draughts, fever balls Also 1 oz. Hyposulph. Soda, \ oz. Pot. Nitras. water, 30 drops Carbolic Acid. (3 times daily in 1 o«. Spts, of Wine), Sulph. Quinine. Fever balls, fever draughts, and alt. balls. Sulph. Quinine. Fever draughts, fever balls Also 1 oz. Hyposulph. Soda, \ oz. Pot. Nitras, water, 30 drops Carbolic Acid. ( 3 times daily in 1 oz. Spts. of Wine). Sulph. Quinine. Fever balls (§ dram), Digi- ' talis, fever draughts. Fever draughts & Aconite. Fever balls and draughts, alt. and ton. balls Hy- posulph. Soda, Pot. Nit., and Carb. Acid as above. Died 3-11-88. Died 4-12-88, Dec. 1 1 „ 16 Gelding. Mare Do. Geldim 10 17 17 23 29 Died 26-11-88 Died 2-12-88. Fever draughts. Fever balls and draughts, alt. and ton. balls. Hy- posulph. Soda, Pot. Nit, Carb. Acid and 3 grs. Arsenic (twice daily). Fever balls, 1 oz. Hypo- sulph. Soda and \ oz. Pot. Nit., 30 drops Garb. Acid (3 times daily). Fever and stimulating draughts fever and ton. balls. Fever balls, 1 oz. Hypo sulph. Soda and % oz. Pot. Nit., 80 drops Carb. Acid. (3 times daily). Fever balls and 3 g. Arsenio (twice daily). Fever balls and draughts, alt. and ton. balls, Hypo sulph. Soda, Pot. Nit. Carb. Acid and 3 grs Arsenic (twice daily). Died 25-11-88 Died 21-11-88 Died 10-1-89. Died 15-12-88 Died U-l-89. Died 4-12-88, De- stroyed 16-1-89. De- st royed 22-12-88 Died 13-1-89. De- stroyed, 16-1-89. Lungs found diseased. Lungs found diseased ; blood impure. Lungs and heart found diseased ; blood impure. Lungs found diseased ; blood impure. Lungs found diseased. Lungs heart, and kid- neys found diseased. Lungs found very much diseased ; kidneys slight, all other organs all right ; all mem- branes pale. Lungs found diseased. Lungs very much dis- eased ; blood very im- pure. Heart, lungs, and liver found dit eased ; blood impure. Lungs shrunk and tuber- cled ; stomach and large intestines very much inflamed ; liver enlarged and sodden ; heart very much dis- eased ; blood impure. Lungs, liver, and heart found diseased ; blood impure. Lungs very much dis- eased ; liver hard and congested ; stomach a little inflamed ; mus- cles all wasted, and blood impure. Blood dirty and dark ; stomach a little inflam- ed and large ; intes- tines very much ; lungs slightly diseased. J. T. KODGERS/V. S., in Veterinary charge. 142 UOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. RECORDED INSTANCES OF CHILDREN HAVING BEEN NOURISHED BY WOLVES AND BIRDS OF PREY. By Jivanji Jamshedji Modi. (Road at the Society's Meeting on 7th May 1889.) The wolf is, as its very name shows, a ferocious and blood-thirsty animal. The word is the same as the Sanscrit Vrka (Z. Veherka Pe and P gurg and Lat. Vulpes), and comes from an old Aryan root, vraec, ( 5^3" ), to tear off. Though by nature a ferocious animal as implied by the root of the word, it is susceptible of entertaining towards mankind maternal or human feelings. This paper is intended to describe a case of this tender feeling as recorded in India, and to state a few similar cases, as narrated in old classical literature, of wolves and birds of prey. I was travelling in Northern India in the early part of 1887, and when I was at Agra at the end of March, I was attracted to a place known as the Secundra, which contained a tomb of Mariam, a Christian wife of the great Akbar, who had, in accordance with his views, of tolerating different religions, taken to his harem wives of different nationalities. I went there to see if there was anything specially Christian in the tomb of that queen, as there was something specially Hindoo in the royal chambers of his Hindoo wife at Fatehpur Sikri. Though I saw nothing there specially Christian, I was delighted with my visit to that place, as 1 saw there a man who was generally known as the wolf-boy. A boy of the Secundra Church Mission Orphanage, which is located there, drew my attention to this man, whose history reminded me of what I had read in classical literature of ferocious and blood-thirsty animals turning at times tender and kind-hearted. 1 will describe the history of this boy in the words of the Rev. Mr. Lewis, who published a short history of the Secundra Orphanage in 1885. He says of this boy: — " On February 4th, 18o7, he was sent to the Superin- tendent of the Orphanage by the Magistrate of Bulandshahr, with the statement that he had been taken out of a wolf's hole or den. Some natives, it turned out on further enquiry, had been travelling by some unfrequented part of the jungle in the Bulandshahr districtand had been surprised to see a small boy, of five or six years of age, walk- ing about on his hands and feet. On drawing near to see this strange sight, they were amazed to see the boy disappear quickly within the interior of a largo hole, which, on close inspection, turned out to be WOLVES AND BIRDS OF PREY. 143 the dwelling-place of some wild beast. Finding that all efforts to unearth the boy were fruitless, and fearing to venture in after him, they eet off to report the unusual occurrence to the Magistrate Saheb of Bulandshahr. This gentleman on hearing the story des- patched messengers to the spot, with instructions to light a fire at the mouth of the cave, so as to force out the occupant of the hole by means of the smoke. This was done, and on the blinding and choking fumes making their way into the furthest corner of the hole, a fine snarling she-wolf sprang forth with a bound, and after scattering the bystanders in considerable terror, rushed away for safety and dear life. A moment later the boy too came forth, when he fell an easy prey to those intent on securing him. On conveying him to the Magistrate, the boy was found to be speechless, imbecile, and as near an approach to an animal as a human creature can pos- sibly be. Vegetable food was offered to him ; but this he refused. And it was only when meat was placed before him that he would eat. Finding it impossible to ever make the boy rational and useful, the Magistrate forwarded him to Secundra, with the request that he might be allowed an asylum there. " This is the short history of the boy as given in the book referred to. Though wanting in the most ordinary intelligence, he seemed to be sensible of many things. He is reported, in the book in question, to be sociable and unselfish, and "always willing to share his numerous gifts with any one caring to have them. " Owing to the lateness of age at which he was brought to the Orphanage he could not be taught to speak, though the attempts of the authorities o£ the Orphanage in other respects have been successful. At the time when I saw him he was asked by a boy of the Orphanage, by means of signs, to walk like a wolf. He did so on his hands and feet. Then he made me some signs which were interpreted to me as a desire to have some money for smoking cheroots, of which 1 was told he was very fond. At the time when he was first brought to the Orphanage he walked like an animal on his hands and feet,' but he was soon taught to walk erect. At first he did not allow clothes to be put on him. He tore and threw them away ; however, he was soon brought round to the use of these. His desire for raw meat only as food was gradually subdued for that of vegetables and ordinary cooked food. He is very ugly in appearance. It is supposed that the boy musf have come across the path of a she- wolf, and that she, having lost her young ones, treated him with motherly kindness 144 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. and care in place of her little ones ; or that she must have stolen the boy from the side of his mother, as is very frequently the case in the poor cottages of many villages in the North- Western Provinces, and then, instead of devouring him, must have entertained some attachment for him. The Rev. Mr. Lewis says that the Secundra Orphanage has been the home of two other wolf-boys and one wolf-girl. My attention was kindly drawn by a friend to the proceedings of 1875 of the Bengal Asiatic Society, before whom a paper was read on a similar subject by the geologist, Mr. V. Ball. This paper contains a short account of one of the two boys referred to, supplied to Mr. Ball by the Rev. Mr. Erhardt, the then Superintendent of the Secundra Orphanage. The account says of one of the boys that "he was brought to us on March 5th, 1872. He was found by Hindus who had gone hunting- wolves in the neighbourhood of Mynpuri, had been burnt out of the den, and was brought here with the scars and wounds still on him. In his habits he was a perfect wild animal in every point of view. He drank like a dog, and liked a bone and raw meat better than any thing else. He would never remain with the other boys, but hide away in any dark corner. Clothes he never would wear, but tore them up into fine shreds. He was only a few months among us, as he got fever and gave up eating. We kept him for a time by artificial means, but eventually he died." Mr. Erhardt says further on : "Neither of the above are new cases however. At the Lucknow mad-house there was an elderly fellow only four years ago, and may be there now, who had been dug out of a wolves' den by a European doctor, when I forget, but it must be a good number of years ago." Ancient classical literature holds before us several cases of such miraculous escapes of children at the hands of ferocious animals and birds, like the wolf and the eagle. The case of Romulus and Remus is well known to many of us. A.mulius, a king of Alba Longa, who had deprived his elder brother, Numitor, of his rightful claim to the throne, being fearful lest the heirs of Numitor might rise against him, caused his son to be murdered and his daughter Silvia to be made a Vestal virgin. Silvia, being violated by Mars, gave birth to two sons, Romulus and Remus, who, together with their mother, were ordered to be drowned in a stream of the Tiber, whence they were carried by a she-wolf, who had come there to satiate her thirst, and who, feeling an attachment for them, suckled WOLVES AND BIRDS OF PREY. 145 and nourished them. Their discovery at the wolf-den by Faustulus, the king's shepherd, led to their ultimate return to their grandfather Numitor and to the foundation of Rome. Tradition has attributed to Zoroaster a miraculous protection at the hand of she-wolves. When a child he was stolen from his house by some evil-minded persons, who predicted a great blow to their evil cause at the hand of the child when it came to age. They took the child to a den of wolves at a time when the ferocious beasts were absent from their home, killed* their young ones, and placed the child there, with a view that the wolves on their return, finding their young ones thus killed, might wreck their vengeance upon the child. The wolves on their return seeing what had taken place at first grew furious, but soon after took the deserted child under their protection, until it was discovered and taken home by the mother, who was wandering in search of the child. Old classical literature gives us other instances where young children were nourished and brought up, not by wolves, but by ferocious birds. Firdousi, the great Homer of the East, in his well-known Persian epic, the Shah-nameh, says of the father of Rustom, the great national hero of Iran, the Hercules of Persia, that he was brought up by a ferocious bird, called Simorg, which, according to the great Persian historian, Sir John Malcolm, is the same as the bird Rokh, and which according to some authors is the same as the Griffin, and according to others the same as the Phoenix. It was called Simorg (i. e., 30 birds), because it was thought to be as strong singly as 30 other large birds combined. According to Firdousi, in the time of king Minocheher, the wife of Sam, the Persian General, gave birth to a son, whose body was all covered with gray hairs like that of an old man. Just as William II. was surnamed Rufus, from the redness of his hair, just as Pyrrhus was so called from the yellowness of his curls, and just as the family of Julius Cassar derived its surname of Csesar from the fact of its founder having a thick curl of hair (Lat. caes-ar-ies, Sans. if.^, kesa), so this child of Sam was called Zal-i-zar, i. e., golden-haired old man. The great Persian General Sam disliked this ugly-looking child, and thought that it brought shame and disgrace upon the family, so he sent the child away to the Caucasus to be exposed on Mount Elburz. "While there the bird Simorg came to prey upon it, but instead of devouring the child, had compassion on it, and took it to its own 146 BOMBAY NATURAL HTSTORY SOCIETY. abode and nourished it with drops of blood from other young animals that it killed. The child was nourished by the bird till it grew up to be a boy, and was taken away by the father, who was always labouring under the stings of conscience for his cruelty towards the child. Firdousi thus describes the interview between the child and the ferocious bird : — " Chu Simorg ra bache shud gursne, Beparvaz bar shud buland az bane Bebordash daman ta be Elbourz kuh Ke budash dar anja kanam-i-garuh Suye bachegan bord ta beshkarand Bedan nale-i-zar-i-u benegarand Bebakhshud Yazdan-i-niki dehash Yaki budani dasht andar bavesh Khodavand meheri be simorg dad Nekard u bekliurdan as an bache yad Negeh kard Simorg ba bachegan Bar an khurd khun az du dideh chegan Shesfaft in he bar-u fekand and meher Bemandand khireh badan khubcheher Shekari ke nazuktaranbar guzid Ke bishir mehman hami khun mazid, " i. e., "When the young ones of the Simorg got hungry, the bird went flying from its nest into the air. It carried it (i.e., the child) rapidly to the Elburz mountain, where there was the nest of its family. It carried it to its young ones, so that they may devour it, and see the excessive weeping of the child. God the bestower of goodness favoured the child, because there was a long life in store for it. God gave tenderness of heart to the Simorg and therefore it did not think of devouring the child. Simorg and its young ones looked to the child which was shedding tears from both its eyes. It was marvellous that they showed kindness to the child, and were struck with astonishment at the good-featured child. It (Simorg) selected for the child, delicate and young animals so that the host may taste their blood instead of: milk." Again, the Greek writers also speak of a Persian prince Achas- mines being nourished by an eagle. So was Zanymedes, a beanti" iul boy of Phrygia, nourished bv an eagle. Semiramis, the founder of the Assyrian empire of Ninevah, was MISCELLANEOUS. 117 miraculously preserved and fed by doves. Her mother, Derceto, of Ascalon, in Syria, being ashamed of her frailty with a Syrian youth, exposed this infant child in an open piano, where she was preserved and nourished by doves till she was discovered by some wan- dering shepherds, who took her to Simmas, the chief shepherd of the royal herds. It was from this Simmas that she derived her name of Semiramis. Her surpassing beauty first made her the wife of Onnes, one of the king's generals, and then that of the king himself. MISCELLANEOUS NOTES. SERICULTURE IN INDIA. THii foil wing interesting letter has been addressed by Mr. S. Cimliffe Lister of the Manuingham Silk Mills, Bradford, and the Lister Grant, Dehra Dun, to Mr. Wardle, of Leek: — Bradford, January 2nd, 1889. I have read with great interest Mr. Makerji's letter to you, published in the Report of the Silk Association. You are already aware that it was not niy inten- tion to have said or done anything with regard to my sericultttral experiments inDehraDuu andthePunjah, until the coming crop had been ascertained; but we have nowgot an official appointed by the Indian Government, and as time is of importance, I have thought it might be of use if I shortly and roughly sketched out what has already been done, and also what I think might bedone to maintain and develope sericulture in India. It is evident that Mr. Mukerji has much to learn when lie says "again it is an industry which must necessarily be in the hands of native peasant, " &c, and further says, f course, but others came on in scores, panting for the same glorious death, and I had to "give up my idea of dislodging them by kerosine. T determined then to try tobacco, for I had always supposed that man was the only animal which could endure the smell of that weed. I lighted a cheroot, and steadily blew the smoke where they were thickest. Never in my life have I seen anything like the frenzy of passion which followed the first few puffs. To be attacked by an enemy of which they could not lay hold seems to be really too much for them. In their rage they laid hold of each other, and as a red ant never lets go, they were soon linked together by headj legs, and antennae into one horrible, red, quivering mass I left these, and going to another place, offered the end of my cheroot, with about an inch of ash on it. Several seized it instantly The heat killed them, but others laid hold of their charred limbs, and by their united strength they positively wrenched off the ash which remained hanging from the tent rope, by their jaws, while scores hurried from both sides, with fiendish fury, to help in worrying it. I then presented the hot end. The foremost ant offered battle without a moment's hesitation, and perished with a fizz, but another and another followed and I saw plainly that I was beaten again, for the cheroot was going out, while their fury only burned the more MISCELLANEOUS. lo3 fiercely. I retired, and after taking counsel with the captain of my, guard, made a torch of straw and patiently smoked them to death all along the rope. Tlien I attacked the root of the tree where they were thickest, and left nothing but a black waste. Half an hour later fresh myriads were carrying off the charred remains of their comrades. They took them up the tree towards their nest, whether for food or burial rites I cannot say. It was now getting dark, so I gave up my enterprise; but before going to bed I brought out a lantern and found them calmly passing up and down my tent ropes as before. I had done everything I could short of burning down my tent, and they remained masters of the field. It. may interest members of the Anthropological Society to know that the jungle people in the Canara District eat the red ant. They take down the whole nest, and pounding ants and larvae together, make them into curry. The blood, or juice, of the red ant is, as might be expected, intensely acrid, and it is said that the fumes which rise from them as they are being pounded make the eyes of the operator smart, so what the sensation of eating them must be is scarcely think- able. It must be like a torchlight procession going down one's throat. MEMORANDA. By IT. Littledale, Baroda. Malformed Sambur Horn- — I am sendingfor exhibition at the next meeting of the Society a sambur-horn — or perhaps a pair of horns joined together — that I have picked up in the jungles east of Surat. These horns seem to have dropped naturally from the head. They are the strangest looking pair I have ever seen, and seen different from any yet figured in the Journal. The Ami or Arm {Wild Buffalo).— The Arna or Wild Buffalo and the Gaur, or Indian Bison, do not inhabit the same jungles as a rule, and to the minds of the natives there can be no difference worth considering between them. Hence I ask is the name Arna or Ami the same word as Rani, the Bheel name for the bison being Rana paro or Rani Bhains, that is, Forest Buffalo ? For Rani of Matheran. Then Ami Bhainsa and Rani Bhains would be the same name applied to different animals {Bos ami and Bos gavaeus). Such instances of confusion are common in Indian nomenclature. The metathesis ar and ra is common too. One instance occurs to me : in Kash- mir the natives call a tree darkhat, whereas the correct form is darakht I believe. The derivation of Arna from the Skt. Array ak seems less probable than this conjecture. The Great Indian Flying Squirrel. — I find that this animal is nocturnal in its flights. Last full moon, I was sitting up in the jungle, and one of these squirrels glided from tree to tree near me. It mounted with curious loopings of its body (as some caterpillars climb) from the very foot to the highest spray of a Kadai tree, then launched itself in a curving glide towards the next tree, rising a little when about three yards from it, and taking the trunk about three feet from the ground : the length of flight from GO to 80 feet, I should say. Bear killed by Tiger. — I was after a bear for some day r s in May, but it was missing from its accustomed haunts. At last we found it, or rather its claws, and a few bones, in a tiger's cave. It was a big bear, with claws qtute 3 inches outside curve, but the tiger had certainly shikarred it, and eaten every bit of it! Ic4 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. The Wild Dog and the Tiger. — I found that the old story of wild doss killing tigers existed in the following form in the Surat jungles. We were talking of a pack of eleven wild dogs that had been killing a sambur close by, and I said to my shikarri, " Shoot them if you can." " No," said the Yasava Patel of the village, "these dogs are my gods : they kill tigers for me." I asked him further, and he said that the dogs— a large pack of them— tree a tiger, then two dogs mount guard, and the rest go away hunting;; then two more come and relieve guard, and so on, till the tiger dies of hunger in the tree. ( It is in Rice's Indian Game from Quail to Tiger that a similar account is given, and a still more wonderful yarn of the tiger dying in the tree, afraid to come down because one wild dog had got spiked on a piece of wood below, and months afterwards the two skeletons were found — the tiger's in the tree, and the dog's sticking on the spike at the foot on the ti'ee !) Carbolized Arsenical Soap. — Instead of putting camphor in arsenical soap, let me recommend that one ounce of pure carbolic acid be added to every pound of the mixture. This carbolised stuff if applied fresh to the lips, &c, of a skin, will prevent all decomposition. This is much better than the old arsenical soap, and I beg to present the suggestion to all shikarries. PARASITIC TREES. On the south side of Chakdara, an outlying Dnng village, some 20 to 30 miles east of Bardoli, in the Surat District, is to be found a rather curious case of parasitism. The parasite is a Sterculia urens (Karaia kangdoli), and the victim is a Schlei- cheria trijuga (Kosim). The Kosim is a large bifurcated tree, old and hollow. A branch on one of these forks was cut off. On the stump of the branch a young Karaia established itself, and at the present time has attained about the size of the original branch, with the appearance of being a regular graft. It flowers profusely, and did so when first found three seasons ago. Its present thickness is considerably greater than the head of the thickest headed man, with his pagri on. The pagri itself is about the diameter of the parasite, which is seated at a height of twelve feet or more. The Ficus family of course are, without exception, so far as I know them, the lowest of greedy parasites, but though the Sterculia has a suspicious viscid and plastic appearance in its manner of flowing over inconvenient stones, in its throwing out of large knobs, and in covering up wounds, yet it is not often found parasite at least in the Dangs, and the present instance is perhaps worth recording. It would be interesting to know where the roots are now, how the Sterculia will manage, as its trunk grows inconveniently large; and whether it gets blown down along with the Kosim, or succeeds in establishing itself in the ground down the interior of its supporter. The tree is just on the west side of the road, at the point where it begins to descend from the plateau to the river bed. E.G. Madias, Eundall's Road, 17th April 1889, Miscellaneous. 155 A CORRECTION. To the Editor of the Journal of the Bunbuy Natural History Society. Dkar Sir, — In your Journal No. I., Vol. III., for 1888, you kindly inserted a list of Burmese Butterflies caught by me. As it was not practicable to submit the proof to me, I regret to say that a good many errors crept in, and I should feel much obliged if you could tind room to insert the following corrections and additions : — No. 3. D. aglcea, Cramer, this should be D. nielanoides, Moore. E. midamus, Linnajus, should be E. linmei, Moore. E. subdita, Moore, should be E. binghatni, Moore. 42(a) M. duryodana, Felder, Beeling. Curetts bulis, Doubleday. Allotinus alkamah, Distant. A unicolor, should be Paragerydus horsfiehlr, Moore. Tarucus pliniws, Fabricius. Varieties of N. ardates. No. 16. No. 19. No. 42(o No. 97. No. 100. No. 101. No. 109. No. No. 121 ; 122 S No. 123. No. 124. No. \-2ti. No. 133. No. 134. No. 137. No. 141. No. 151. No. 157. N. prominens, Moore. N. macrophthalma, Pelder. Catochrysops enejus Fabricius. Megisba malaya Horsfield. Lycamesthes bengalensis, Moore. Drupadia boisduvam, Moore. Spindasis syama, Horsfield. Nilasera subfasciata, Moore. Rapala sphinx, Fabricius. No. l(»8(ct). Catopsilia gnoma. Fabricius, Reeling. No. 172. Terias rubella, AVallace. No. 175. Terias Hecabeoides, Mene'tries. No. 185. Pierids soracta. I cannot account for this name occurring in the list ; it has never been, met with in Burmah to my knowledge. No. 200. P. onpape, Moore. No. 252. Suastus swerga, de Niceville. Hoping the above will not be found too trivial for insertion, Yours faithfully, Madras, Ylth April 1889. E. Y. WATSON. PROPOSED ENGLISH NOMENCLATURE FOR INDIAN BUTTERFLIES. The following letter appeared in the Asian on 11th June 1889 : — Sir, — You publish in your issue of May 28th a note on a paper read before the Bombay Natural History Society by Mr. A. Newnham, B. C. S., on the abovenamed subject. With due deference to that gentleman, I think he has somewhat underrated the difficulties arising from such a proposal, and has rather exaggerated the benefits that would accrue from its adoption. 21 ]5G BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. But he is wrong, however, in disparaging the use of the " long double-barrelled Latin'' names which at present distinguish our Indian butterflies. From a scientific point of view, such a nomenclature, though, no doubt, somewhat " heavy," is a necessity as much in the study of butterflies as in any other branch of Natural History. At home, where we have only some sixty odd specimens to deal with, it has been easy enough to affix appropriate popular names to the several species, but I would remind Mr. Newnham that the 'double-barrelled Latin" names are in no way extinct, and were the original ones. They are, of course, the only ones used by naturalists when discussing the subject. In my opinion it would be a much harder tax on the memory to be able to recall some hundred popular nicknames, than to remember the specimens by their generic and specific names, for the use of the generic name supplies a cue to the specific name. Mr. Newnham has apparently a prejudice against these long-sounding Latin strains, and has passed them by rather too casually, for he has failed to observe any indications of appearance or habits in them. I select a few out of the many to support my argument. P. leucocera, Castalius interruptus, Telicota bumbusa, E. unclular's, Abisara svffusa, Zizera pigmea, Junonia asterie — all denote either appearance or habits. There are hundreds of others named on the same principle. Many have been named from the locality in which they appear to frequent, some from the original discoverer, and others have been named " poetically and beautifully," and it is precisely these latter which are of little use to the investigator and collector- Provided poetry and beauty are combined in a name, with some indication of the habits or appearance of the insects, it is all right; but mere nicknames, such as the " Leaf" butterfly or the " Camberwell Beauty," are useless and undesirable. With regard to the former nicknames, I shall have something to add later on. One specimen, Bedamia cxclamatiotris, appears to have been so called from the many ineffectual attempts (accompanied by strong language) to capture it ! Our Indian butterflies possess, no doubt, as many peculiarities as their English relations, but these peculiarities have yet to be noticed and recorded in the majority of cases before any suitable and expressive names can be permanently chosen. Some of the more well-known species have received popular names, either from amateur collectors (? I refer to those who purchase boxes of butterflies to send home or decorate rooms with), or from the soldiers and school-boys up-country, such as the Rose butterfly, the Leaf, &c, &c. This latter, I believe, is really Kallima inachis, but there are several others to be found in India" exactly alike" (except to the eye of an expert)," only a little different," as Pat would say. Does Mr. Newnham propose that all such butterflies should be called " Leaf" butterflies ? For, if not, a man would still require to be a naturalist to be able to distinguish them, and, if so, then we should get very puzzled in identifying the exact insect caught unless wc saw it, whereas if he uses the scientific name there is at once an end to all doubt as to its identity. I do not see (and should like to see the matter thoroughly investigated! how such an introduction would in any way further the work of naturalists in this country ; and it is to them we must look to complete in time a branch of Natural History which receives h very scant attention or interest at the MISCELLANEOUS. 157 hands of the general public The hitter would, I have no doubt, learn the names of a few more specimens by the introduction of a popular English nomencla- ture, but whether fcbey would take any further practical interest in the subject is extremely doubtful. If I have missed any points which Mr. Newnham suggested I hope he will enlighten me further on the subject, which is oneof great interest to all who wish to see the " Indian butterflies " occupying the place which they deserve from their beauty and variety. W. II. T. CORRESPONDENCE. PAPILJO POLYMNESTOfi IN BOMBAY. To the Editor of the Journal of the Natural History Society. Sir, — At page 3/ of Vol. II. of the Journal, Mr. Aitken says the Papilio polym- neslor is absolutely unknown in Bombay, and he imagines throughout the Konkan. It may be interesting to hirn and others to kno.v that one day this month, a friend and I saw two in the woods of Sivildi, and within an hour, possibly the same pair in the cemetery. They were a little ragged, but strong in flight, and were feeding on the flowers of a large convolvulus. In a small spot near the quarry we came upon fifty or sixty of the Danai genutia resting on the grass and trees, and a sweep of the net at a passing Ixias landed one and two of the former. W. E. MELVIN. Bombay, 4th March, 1889. BOOK NOTICES. The Geographicil Distribution of the Family Charadrido?, or the Plovers, Sand- pipers, Snipes and their Allies. By Heney Seeboiim. Published by H. Tottenham and Co., Strand. The name of H. Seebohm is well known as a practical ornithologist of the first rank. A perusal of his work, " Siberia in Europe, " an 1 " Siberia in Asia, " will show that no one man can push practical work further than he has done, and every ornithologist should read the two works referred to above. Apart from their zoological value they are most interesting reading ; but to proceed : In the Preface he explains difficulties which had to be overcome in the determination of species, and the definition and limitation of genera. The concluding words of the Preface are (referring to the book): — "It possesses at least the merit of originality and (if the author may be permitted to pass sentence on his own work) it does not quite deserve the critical remarks made once to a writer, ' Your book is both good and new, but the part which is good is not new and that which is new is not good.' " After the Preface comes a systematic index and diagnoses in Latin, followed by a list of plates, of which there are 21, the plates being limited to those birds which have previously not been figured, or only figured badly. 158 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. The first nine chapters are taken up respectively with dissertations on the Classification of Birds, the Evolution of Birds, the Differentiation of Species, the Glacial Epoch, Migration, the Paradise of the Charadridse, Zoological Regions, on Subspecific Forms, and the Charadridse. Chapter X. commences the body of the work. The contemplation of Nature is supposed to exercise a soothing influence, they say, on the mind of man, but when the contemplators write books, it is nearly always the case that they are no more sparing of their criticisms of those who happen to differ from them, than are politicians, and Mr. Seebohm is no excep- tion to the rule. Commencing with the Stone Curlews, the Stone Cnrlew we meet in India as a resident is separated from the European bird by the trinomial (Edicnemus crepitans indicus, but there does not appear to be very much difference between the two. He says the Indian Stone Curlew and the European one are connected by a series of intermediate forms. The latter vary in length of wing from 10''' to 9", the former from 9" to 8". In European examples the white patches on the primaries are rarely seen on the bird, whilst in Indian examples they are rarely if ever absent from it. The white on the outer web of the seventh primary is also much greater in Indian than in European examples. (Edicnemus crepitans doubtless- winters in India. Charadrius pluvialis (the European Golden Plover) is not mentioned as an Indian visitor, but the Siberian birds appear to pass through Turkestan on migration, a few remaining to winter in Baluchistan, but the greater number probably migrate as far as Africa. The Asiatic bird, C. fulvus, may easily be distinguished by its barred tail and great axillaries. We have the C. minor (the Little Ringed Plover) and C. minor Jerdon (Jerdon's Ringed Plover) ; it is said to differ from the former in beiug smaller (wings 3'9 to 425 instead of 4*3 to 4" 7 in.), in having the edges of the eyelids swollen and protuberant, and in having the basal half of the lower mandible yellow. L 2*4 ; $, 2 - 6 inches. Description : Male. Upperside, both wings rich brown with a shining vinous tinge, the spots translucent rich ochreous. Forewing with three conjugated subapical spots, the first a mere dot, the next NEW AND LITTLE-KNOWN INDTAN BUTTERFLIES. ] 73 twice as large, the lowest four times as large as the middle spot ; two well- separated spots towards the end of the cell placed inwardly obliquely ; a spot about twice the size of these in the middle of the second median interspace, another much larger one completely filling the first median interspace below the innermost spot in the cell, another spot below this at about the middle of the submedian interspace and touching that nervure. Cilia concolorous with the wing. Hmdwing with a small round spot near the end of the cell, three equal-sized spots in a straight line on the disc separated by the second and third median ncrvules ; the base of the wing and the abdominal margin clothed with long yellowish-brown setse. Cilia pale yellow. Underside, both wings as above, but the coloration duller. Forewing with the spot in the submedian inter- space much larger, its edges diffused, pale yellow. Hindwing as on the upperside. Antennae and legs black throughout; top of head, thorax, and top of abdomen decreasingly clothed with long iridescent bronze-green hairs, thorax below duller. Female, larger than the male. Forewing with the lowest subapical spot larger than in the male, the two spots in the cell conjoined. Otherwise as in the male- Described from a male obtained by Mrs. Wylly, and a female by the native collectors of Mr. Otto Moller, near Buxa, Bhutan, in August. I know of no near ally to this fine species, the largest in the genus hitherto described. 12. PARNARA SAEALA, n. sp., PI. B., Fig. 6, 9. Habitat : Khasi Hills. Expanse : £ , 1*8 ; ? , 2*0 inches. Description : ■ Female. Upperside, both icings dark bronzy- fuscous. Forewing with a large medially constricted spot at the end of the cell ; an elongated spot at the base of the second median interspace ; a much larger one towards the base of the first median interspace, its outer end concave, its inner end convex, anteriorly and posteriorly touching the second and first median nervules ; a comma- shaped spot in the submedian interspace, touching the middle of the submedian nervure — all these spots semi-transparent lustrous white ; cilia fuscous. Hindwing with a large oval pale yellow patch on the middle of the disc ; and a small patch on the abdominal margin near the base of the wing; cilia rich chrome- yellow at the anal angle, gradually shading off into fuscous anteriorly. Underside, both wings distinctly glossed with rich purple. 174 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. Forewing with the three discal spots as above, the one in the submedian interspace on the upperside developed into a large outwardly- diffused white patch occupying the middle of the inner margin ; a large chrome-yellow quadrate patch above the spot in the cell extending from the subcostal nervure to the costa. Hindicing with the oval pale yellow discal patch of the upper-side developed into a broad anteriorly-increasing discal chrome-yellow band extending from the abdominal margin to the costa, but with a break between the submedian and internal nervures. Palpi, thorax, and abdomen- above and below clothed with bronzy-green iridescent hairs ; antennae with shaft black, club broken off. The Rev. Walter A. Hamilton, who obtained the two specimens above described, possesses the wings only of a third specimen placed between talc of what appears to be the male of this species captured in the same locality. In the forewing there are two small well- separated spots in the cell instead of one large one, the two spots below are smaller, the spot in the submedian inter- space entirely wanting ; otherwise as in the female. This specimen does not apparently possess any secondary sexual characters. I do not know any near ally to P. sarala. The shape of the wings agrees with that of the species of the genus Parnara, the probable male having the forewing less broad, the apex more acute and the outer margin more straight and inwardly oblique than in the female. 13. PARNARA PARCA, n. sp., PL B, Fig. 10, ? . Habitat : Sikkim, Khasi Hills. Expanse: $, 1*9 inches. Description : Female. Upperside, both icings deep vinous-brown. Foreiving with three small subapical spots forming half a circle ; two elongated well- separated spots at the end of the discoidal cell ; a rhomboidal spot near the middle of the second median interspace ; another occupying a similar position in the first median interspace, anteriorly and posteriorly bounded by the second and first median nervules, its inner end well rounded, its outer end convex and the lower corner produced ; a rounded spot in the submedian interspace touching that nervure a little boyond its middle — all these spots semi-transparent lustrous white ; cilia from the inner angle to the second median nervule dull ochreous, anteriorly of the colour of the wing. Hindicing with five nearly equal-sized spots forming a rough NEW AND LITTLE-KNOWN INDIAN RUTTERFLIES. 175 oval on the disc, the two lowest spots nearer together than the rest ; these spots are translucent white in some lights, metallic pale brassy- greenish in others ; cilia broadly rich chrome-yellow from the anal angle to the termination of the third median nervule, thence to the apex of the wing vinous-brown. Underside, both wings of the colour of the npperside. Foremng with the spots as on the npperside ; the dull ochreous cilia of the upperside pale clear yellow, that colour extending a little distance on to the wing. Hindmng also with the spots as above ; the chrome-yellow cilia of the npperside is pale clear yellow on the underside, that colour extending irregu- larly on to the wing membrane beyond. Antenna) with the shaft black, becoming ochreous just before the black club ; abdomen tipped with long chrome-yellow hairs ; rest of body, head and palpi more or less concolorous with the wings ; femur and tibia of legs black and clothed with very long thick and closely-set black hairs, tarsus anteriorly black, posteriorly deep chrome-yellow, naked. I place this species but doubtfully in the genus Pamara, all the legs being strongly setose, being a character not found in any species of that genus known to me. A somewhat similar character is found in the males only of Abaratha syrichthus, Felder, A. ransonnetii, Felder, and A. taylorii, mini, all of which possess a tuft of black hairs over a quarter of an inch in length attached to the coxae of the front legs, and ordinarily lying along the pectus of the butterfly between the middle and hindlegs. These bunches of hairs are probably scent- fans, and are, moreover, probably susceptible of erection and expansion, but accurate observations on the subject on live specimens are desir- able. In describing the genus Abaratha ,* Mr. Moore stated that the legs are naked, this is certainly not the case with the front legs of the males of the type species. Mr. Distantf is also incorrect in saying that the hindlegs of the type species of the genus are strongly pilose, f-his applies to the forelegs of the male only. It is also quite certain that the species Mr. Distant places in the genus Abaratha (sura, Moore, and pygela, Hewitson), possess a setose clothing quite different ^.0 that found in the true Abarathas : these species, I think, should be placed in another genus. In the genus Casyajxc, Kirby, the males have the tibia of the hindlegs extremely hairy. P. parca is described from a single specimen in my collection obtained by the Rev. Walter A. Hamilton in the Khasi Hills, who * Lep. Ceylon, vol. i, p. 181 (1881). t Rhop. Malay., p. 390 (1886). 176 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. possesses the wings of a second example placed between talc from the same region, I also possess another female from Sikkim. I do not know any species at all similarly marked to P. parca. 14. CHAPRA MATHTAS, Fabricius, PL B, Fig. 7, 6 . Hesperta mathias, Fabricius, Ent. Syst., SuppL, p. 433, n. 289-90 (179$). I have figured what I believe to be a very unusual variety of this species captured at Pilibhit, Kumaon, by Colonel A. M. Lang, R. E., on 16th December, 1887. It is a male, and has a very prominent spot in the lower subcostal interspace of the hindwing ; this spot is semi-transparent, and shews on both sides of the wing. Mr. Elwes refers to this rare varietal form in his paper on the "Lepidoptera of Sikkim."* My specimen has also a pale diffused band on the under- side of the forewing just within the dark anteciliary thread extending from the apex of the wing to the first median nervule ; also a large similarly-coloured discal patch on the hindwing, and a marginal band. 15. HALPE AINA, n. sp., PL B,[Fig. 8, g . Habitat: Sikkim. Expanse : £ , 1*36 to l - 44 inches. Description : Nearest to H. kumara, mihi,f of which Mr. Otto Moller possesses eighteen specimens and I six, all from Sikkim. Male. Upperside, both wings of a more tawny-ferruginous colour, due to the entire forewing and the basal two-thirds of the hindwing being clothed with a thick coating of long hair-like ferruginous scales placed upon a deep brown ground. Forewing with two conjoined spots in the discoidal cell, the upper spot answering to the single spot of II. kumara, the lower spot twice as large as the upper ; three instead of two increasing conjoined subapical spots; the two discal spots much the same : the " male-mark," however, instead of being a long continuous black streak of modified scales as in H. kumara presents the appearance of two obliquely-placed yellow spots exactly as in H. gupta, mihi,J which can be teazed out by a pin-point into a quantity of fluffy material like down. Underside, both wings coloured much as in H. kumara. Forewing with the translucent yellow spots as on the upperside. Hindwing unmarked in eight specimens, in one specimen with two opaque pale yellow discal spots. Described from five male specimens in the collection of Mr. Otto Moller, and four in my own. * Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., 1888, p 444, n. 462. f Journ. A. S. B., vol. liv, pt. 2, p. 121, pi. ii, fig. 10, male (1885), % Journ. A. S. B., vol. lv, pt. 2, p. 254, n. 8, pi. xi, fig. 1, male (1886.) NEW AND LITTLE-KNOWN INDIAN BUTTERFLIES. 177 16. HESPERIA HELLAS, n. sp., PI. B, Fig. 9, £ . Habitat: Campbcllpur (Punjab). Expanse: 1-05 inches. Description : Very close to II. galba, Fabricius (superna, Moore, enniidus, Butler, and evanidus, var. adenensis, Butler), from which it differs on the uppers] de oiboth icings in the white spots being smaller and fewer in number, the discal macular band on the hind/wing narrower, and notably the underside of the hindwing unspotted, but bearing three equi-distant white bands, the first subbasal, somewhat obscure ; the second discal, with nearly regular edges, of nearly equal breadth throughout, unbroken, extending from the costa to the white abdominal streak ; the third obscure, marginal. I possess two specimens of this species collected by Major J. ~W. Yerbury. They can at once be distinguished from the very numerous specimens of H. galba before me from Aden, Sind, and indeed from almost all parts of India (the type was from Tran- quebar), and from Ceylon, by the prominence and regularity of the bands of the hindwing on the underside, especially the medial one. In H. galba the medial band is usually continuous, but it always has very irregular edges, it is often broken up into groups of spots, particularly in some specimens from Aden, and is described as characteristic of H. evanidus ; this does not, however, appear to be a constant feature, as I find from an examination of specimens from the Hubb river in Colonel Swinhoe's collection, which were captured with the types of that species. Colonel Swinhoe, in his two papers on the Lepidoptera of Karachi, records both II. galba and H. evanidus from that city, but on a careful examination of his series of both species I am unable to say by what character he separated them, every gradation, as far as I can see, occurring between typical H. galba with the medial band on the underside of the hindwing unbroken and typical H. evanidus with the band divided into three well- separated spots. I find the same variation also in specimens from Aden. Genus CELJENOERHINUS, Hubner. Cel&norrMnus, Hubner, Verz. bek. Schmett,, p, 106 (1816); id., Plotz, Berl. Ent. Zeitsch., vol. xxvi, p. 253 (1882) ; Gehlota, Doherty, Journ. A. S. B. vol. lviii, pt. 2, p. 131 (18S9); Plesioneura (preoc), part, auctorum. Forewing, costa slightly arched, apex rather acute, outer margin convex, inner margin straight ; costal nervure terminating opposite 178 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. the apex of the discoidal cell, first, second, and third subcostal nermles with their bases almost equi-distant, ,/bw^A subcostal with its base half as near to the base of the third subcostal as that vein is to the second, terminating at the apex of the wing, terminal portion of subcostal nervure or fifth subcostal nervule with its base almost touching that of the fourth, terminating on the outer margin far below the apex of the wing; discoidal cell long, narrow; upper disco-cellular nervule straight, strongly outwardly oblique, very short; middle and lower disco- cellular nervules almost in the same straight line (the lower a little concave), the lower a little longer than the upper, both veins taken together strongly inwardly oblique; second median nervule arising some little distance before the lower end of the cell, first median nervule arising much nearer to the base of the wing than to the point where the second median is given off; submedian nervure slightly recurved; internal nervure short and quickly running into the submedian nervure, with which it entirely anastomoses. Hindwing, costa strongly arched at base then straight to apex, which latter is somewhat acute in the male, rounded in the female, outer margin rounded, inner margin convex ; costal nervure almost straight, terminating just before the apex of the wing; first subcostal nervule originating some distance before the apex of the cell; upper disco-cellular nervule straight, very slightly outwardly oblique ; lower disco-cellular also slightly outwardly oblique, at first concave, then straight, a little longer than the upper disco - cellular ; discoidal nervule very fine, straight, arising at the point of junction of the disco-cellular nervules ; second median nervule arising just before the lower end of the cell, first median arising much nearer the lower end of the cell, than the base of the wing ; submedian and internal nervures straight. Type,* the Papilio eligius of Cramer. This diagnosis has been made from bleached wings of both sexes of the " Hesperia" leucocera, of Kollar, from Simla, and of the " Papilio " eligius of Cramer from the Amazons, for the specimens of which latter I am indebted to Dr. 0. Staudinger. All the species of the genus settle with wide outsjaread wings, which at once dis- tinguishes them in life from the genus Notocrijpta, mini, the species of which rest with wings folded upright over the back. C. leucocera *Vide Mr. Samuel H. Scndder's "Historical Sketch of the Generic Names pro- posed for Butterflies," in Proc. Am. Acad. Arts and Sciences, vol. x, p. 137 (1875). NEW AND LITTLE-KNOWN INDIAN BUTTERFLIES. 179 in the Western Himalayas is markedly crepuscular, I have seen specimens over and over again flying up and down a short distance of the bed of the Simla river with immense rapidity, so fast that the eye can hardly follow them, settling on a leaf for a second and then flying off again, long after the sun has set. All that are known to me have the hindwing more or less spotted. C. eligius, Cramer, was described, from Surinam in South America, and Felder states that he has received a specimen from Venezuela. The similarity in the markings of the forewing of this species to those of C. maculosa, Felder, from Shanghai, is not a little remarkable. The transformations of only one species are known, those of C. spilothyrus, Felder. (1) Cel-enorrhinus eligius, Cramer. Papilio eligius, Cramer, Pap. Ex., vol. iv, p. 123, pi. cccliv, fig. H (1781); Cehftiorrhinus eligius, Hiibner, Verz. bek. Schmetfc., p. 106, n. 1142 (1810) ; Eudamus eligius, Felder, Wien. Ent. Monatsch., vol. vi, p. 182, n. 1(35 (18G2) ; Tagiades eligius, Plotz, Jahr. des Nass. Ver. Natur., vol. xxxvii, p. 50, n. 45 (1881) ; Plesioneura eligius, Staudinger, Ex. Schmett., p. 300, pi. c, male (1883). Habitat : Surinam (Cramer) ; Venezuela (Felder) ; Brazil (Plotz); South Brazil, Chanchamayo, Venezuela, Columbia, and Chiriqui (Staudinger). (2) Cel-enorrhinus vulturnus, Felder. Eudamus vulturnus, Felder, Wien. Ent. Monatsch., vol. vi, p. 182, n. 165 (1862). Habitat: River Negro, South Brazil (Felder). (3) ? Cel^norrhinus compressa, Moschler. Plesioneura compressa, Moschler, Verh. zool.-bot. Gesellsch. Wien, vol xxvi, p. 336, pi. iv, fig. 22 (1876). Habitat : Surinam. Note — From the figure and description this species appears to me to belong but doubtfully to this genus. ( i) Cel^norrhinus ochrogutta, Moschler. Plesioneura ochrogutta, Moschler, Verh. zool.-bot. Gesellsch. Wien, vol. xxxii, p. 330, pi. xvii, fig. 22 (1883). Habitat : Surinam (Moschler). (5) Cel^enorrhinus eritz-g^rtneri, Bailey. Plesioneura fritz-gcertneri, Bailey, Bull. Brooklyn Soc, vol. iii, p. 'J2 (1881). Habitat : Salvador (?), Central America (Bailey). Note — I have not seen the description of this species. It is referred to in the Zoological Record for 1881, Insects, p. 169. 24 180 BOMBAY NATUEAL HISTORY SOCIETY. (6) Cel^norrhinus mokeezi, Wallengren. Pterygospidea moTceeei, Wallengren, Kongliga Svensha vet.-atad. Hand., Lep. Rhop. Caff., p. 54, n. 3 (1857) ; Nisoniades mokeezi, Trimen, Rhop. Afr. Anstr., p. 316, n. 210, pi. vi, fig. 5, female (1860) ; Hesperia amaponda, Trimen, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., third series, vol. i, p. 405 (1862). Habitat: Caffraria (Wallengren) ; South Africa (Trimen). (7) Celjenorrhinus bumbloti, Mabille. Plesioneura hwnibloti, Mabille, Ann. Soc Ent. Belg., vol. xxviii, p. clxxxvii (1884). Habitat: Madagascar (Mabille). (8) Celjenorrhinus proxima, Mabille. Plesioneura proxima, Mabille, Bull. Soc. Zool, France, 1877, p. 231. Habitat: Congo (Mabille). (9) Cel^norrhinus shema, Hewitson. Pterygospidea shema, Hewitson, Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., fourth series, vol. xx, p. 322 (1877). Haeitat : Cayenne and Calabar (Hewitson) , (10) Cel.enorrhinus maculosa, Felder. Pterygospidea maculosa, Felder, Reise Novara, Lep., vol. iii, p. 528, n. 934, pi. Ixxiii, fig. 7, male (1867) ; id., Elwes, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1881, p. 911. Habitat: Shanghai, South China (Felder) ; China (Elwes). Note — Plotz considered this species to be the same as the next. Elwes says they differ considerably in the markings of the hind- wing on the underside. (11) Cel^norrhinus pulomaya, Moore. Plesionetira pulomaya, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1865, p. 787 j idem, id., op. cit., 882, p. 263 ; id., Elwes, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., 1888, p. 463, n.532 ; ? P. pulomaya, Doherty, Joum. A. S. B., vol. lv, pt. 2, p. 139, n. 258 (1886) ; Hesperia pulomaya, Horsfield and Moore, Cat. Lep. Mus. E. I. C, vol. i, p. 252, n. 573 (1857); Tagiades pulomaya, Plotz, Jahr. des Nass. Ver. Natur., vol. xxxvii, p. 50, n.'47 (1884). Habitat: Darjiling and N.-W. Himalayas (Moore); Pindari valley, Kurnaon, 7 — 9,000 feet (Doherty) • Sikkim (Ehves); Darjiling (Horsfield and Moore); South Asia (Plotz) ; Kulu ; Masuri ; Bhutan. Note. — This species appears to differ from the preceding in having tbe spot one-third from the base and the lower of the two spots beyond iu the submedian interspace of the forewing on the upperside yellow instead of white, and the cilia of the hindwing very prominently alternately orange and dark brown instead of dark brown intersected with white. NEW AND LITTLE -KNOWN INDIAN BUTTERFLIES. 181 (12) Celjenorrhinus flavocincta, de Niceville. Plesioneura flavocincta., do Niceville, Proc. Zool. Soc. Loud., 1887, p. 464, pi. xl, fig- 9> female. Habitat: Buxa, Bhutan [de Niceville). 17. (13) CELuENORRHINUS PYRRHA, n. sp., PI. B, Fig. 11, 9. Habitat : Bhutan, Assam. Expanse: 5,1-9; ?, 2"0 to 2'2 inches. Description : Male. Upperside, forewing dark brown, the basal half of the wing clothed with ochreous-yellow scales; a large square spot at the end of the discoidal cell, a rather smaller one below it iu the first median interspace, a small one placed outwardly between these two spots in the second median interspace, two still smaller spots placed inwardly obliquely in the submedian interspace below the outer angle of the second spot, the lower one sometimes want- ing, five small subapical spots arranged three and two — all these spots semi-transparent diaphanous white ; cilia dark brown through- out. Hindwing dark brown, the basal two-thirds thickly clothed with long ochreous-yellow seta), some bright yellow spots on the disc ; cilia alternately dark brown and pale yellow. Underside, Jurewing spotted as above, but the anterior spot in the cell continued almost to the costa by two small white spots divided by the costal nervure, two diffused whitish spots placed in the submedian interspace beyond the two diaphanous spots of the upperside. Hindwing with all the spots more prominent and paler yellow than on the upperside. Antennce black below throughout, above with a small portion just before the club shining silvery white, the shaft dotted with white. Female : Upperside, forewing as in the male, but in some specimens there is a third white spot in the submedian interspace one-third from the base, and in some specimens also the spot in the cell has two small whitish dots above it almost reaching the costa. Hindwing as in the male, but the yellow spots more prominent. Underside, -forewing as in the male, but with the pair of diffused whitish spots placed beyond the two oblique spots in the submedian interspace more prominent ; cilia in this interspace often pale yellow. Hindwing as in the male. Antenna; as in the male. The male differs from G. mmilra, Moore, from N.-E, Bengal (which is known to me by the description only), in having the shaft 182 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. of the antennae black anteriorly dotted with white, not anteriorly wholly silvery-white. The male differs from G. pulomaya, Moore, fromKuln, Sikkiin, and Bhutan in having the lower of the two spots placed obliquely in the submedian interspace of the forewinginboth sexes white, in C. fulomaya it is yellow. C. putra, Moore, from Bengal, is unknown to me; the description agrees, however, with some examples of C. leucocera, Kollar. Described from a single male from Bhutan (I have examined the prehensores, so am certain that the specimen is a male), and six females also from Bhutan, one female from Chenrapunji, and one male and three females from the Khasi Hills. 18. (14) CEL^ENORRHINUS PLAGIFERA, n. sp., VI. B, Fig. 13, ?. Habitat : Sikkim, Bhutan. Expanse : £ , $ , 2'0 to 2*3 inches. Description : Male and female. Upperside, forewing differs from C. pyrrha, mihi, in never having a spot one-tbird from the base in the submedian interspace. Hindwing with the spots larger, and of a richer (more orange) yellow colour ; the alternate yellow portions of the cilia also of a deeper orange. Underside, forewing lacking the two diffused whitish spots in the submedian interspace beyond the two obliquely-placed transparent spots which are found in C.pyrrh a; otherwise as in that species. Ant entice as in C. pyrrha, I have described this species from nineteen specimens in the collections of Mr. A. V. Kny vett and myself. It appears to be very constant. The sexes are very difficult to discriminate ; I have been able to distinguish them only by an examination of the organs of generation. 19. (15) CEL^ENORRHINUS PATULA, n. sp., PI. B, Fig. 4, $ . Habitat : Sikkim. Expanse : 6,2-2; 9,2-5 inches. Description : Male. Upperside, forewing with the white spots forming the discal band smaller than in C. pyrrha and C. plagifera, mihi, no spot at the base of the second median interspace, the lower of the two spots in the submedian interspace minute. Cilia anteriorly dark brown, posteriorly pale yellow. Hindwing with the yellow spots on the disc larger and clearer than in either the above-mentioned species. Cilia almost entirely yellow, instead of being prominently KEW AND LITTLE-KNOWN INDIAN BUTTERFLIES. 183 marked with black at the ends of the veins. Antennae with the shaft anteriorly entirely pure silvery-white, in which respect it agrees with G. sumitra, Moore, and G. pcro, mihi. Female, Upperside, forewing with the lower spot in the subtnedian interspace larger than in the male, as also are the five subapical spots; a minute spot at the base of the second median interspace. Cilia posteriorly barely marked with pale yellow. Antennae, as in the male. G, patula differs from the descriptiou of G. sumitra in having two spots in the submedian interspace of the forewing in both sexes instead of one only, the cilia are not alternately broadly brown and orange-yellow, and the female of 0. patula lacks the yellow costal spot above the oblique discal series of white spots on the upperside of the forewing described in C. sumitra. Described from a single pair from Sikkim. The female of C. patula is unique as far as I know amongst this group of the genus in possessing antennas that are anteriorly white, this being usually a male character. I am certain of the sex of my type specimens, as I have examined the primary sexual organs. 20. (16) CELiENORRHINUS PERO, n. sp., PL B, Fig. 12, J . Habitat : India. Expanse : 5 , 2*2 inches. Description : Male. Upperside, both wings differ from those of C. pyrrha, mihi, in being paler in colour. Forewing marked as in that species, but the yellow spot one-third from the base of the wing in the submedian interspace more prominent ; cilia broadly pale yellow and brown. Hind wing as in G. pyrrha, but the yellow spots on the disc smaller, and the cilia almost entirely pale yellow, only just touched with brown at the ends of the veins, as in G. patula and C. jlavocincta. Underside, both tvings as in C. pyrrha, but the spot one-third from the base of the submedian interspace of the forewing much larger than on the upperside and white. Antennas shining silvery white anteriorly throughout, posteriorly black. Palpi white below instead of pale yellow as in G. pyrrha. C. pero agrees with G. sumitra in having the antennas anteriorly white, but differs from the description of that species in having the palpi and front of the thorax beneath white not pale yellow, and in possessing the additional yellow spot one-third from the base and the white spot one-third from the outer margin in the submedian interspace of the forewing on the upperside. 184 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. Described from two male examples from Colonel G. F. L. Marshall's collection. They are not ticketed, but I believe they are from the Western Himalayas. (17) Celenorrhinus sumitra, Moore. Plesioneura sumitra, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Loud., 1865, p. 787 ; ? P. sumitra, Doherty, Journ. A. S. B., vol. Iv, pt. 2, p. 139, n. 257 (1880) ; P. sumitra, Elwes, Trans. Enfc. Soc. Lond., 1888, p. 4b'3, n. 533 ; Tagiades sumitra, Plotz, Jahr. des Nass. Ver. Natur., vol. xxxvii, p. 51, n. 51 (1884). Habitat: N.-E. Bengal {Moore); Pindari valley, 7— 9,000 feet; Chaudans, 7,000 feet, both in Kumaon {Doherty) ; Rikisum, British Bhutan, 5 — 7,000 feet {Ehves) ; Bengal, Sumatra {Plotz). (18) Cel.enorrh.inus editus, Plotz. Tagiades editus, Plotz, Berl. Ent. Zeitsch., vol. xxix, p. 231, n. 32 (1885). Habitat: Aru {I'lutz). (19) Cel.enorrhinus area, Plotz. Tagiades area, Plotz, Berl. Ent. Zeitsch., vol. xxix, p. 231, n. 33 (1885). Habitat: Bengal, Celebes {Plotz). Note — This species is quite unknown to me. (20) Cel.enorrhinus putra, Moore. Plesioneura putra, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 18G5, p. 788; Hesperia putra, Horsfield and Moore, Cat. Lep. Mils. E. I. 0., vol.i, p, 253, n. 575 (1857). Habitat: Bengal {Moore) ; Java {Horsfield aud Moore). Note— I do not know how to distinguish this species from the following. Herr Plotz considered them the same. (21) Cel^norrhinus legcocera, Kollar. Hesperia leucocera, Kollar, in Hiigel's Kaschmir, vol. iv, pt. 2, p. 454, n. 2, pi. xviii, figs. 3, 4 (1844) ; id., Westwood, Gen. Diurn. Lep., vol. ii, p. 526, n. 18 (1852) ; id., Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 18(35, p. 509, n. 119; Plesioneura leucocera, id., op. cit., 1882, p. 263 ; id., Wood-Mason and de Nieeville, Journ. A. S. B, vol. 1, pt. 2, p. 257, n. 119 (1881) ; id., de Nieeville, op. cit., vol. lii, pt. 2, p. 100, (1883) ; id., Elwes and de Nieeville, op. cit., vol. Iv, pt. 2, p. 411, n. 162 (1886) ; id., Hampson, op. cit., vol. lvii, pt. 2, p. 367, n. 260 (1888) ; id., Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1885, p. 146, n. 151; ? P. leucocera, Doherty, Journ. A. S. B., vol. Iv, pt. 2, p. 139, n. 259 (1886) ; Tagiades leucocera, Plotz, Jahr. des Nass. Ver. Natur., vol. xxxvii, p. 51, n. 49 (1884) ; Hesperia leucocerca, Horsfield and Moore, Cat. Lep. Mus. E. I. C, vol. i, p. 252, n. 574 (1857) ; Plesioneura leucocirca, Elwes, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., 18S8, p. 462, n. 529. NEW AND LITTLE-KNOWN INDIAN BUTTERFLIES. 185 Habitat : Himalayas (Kollar and Wcstioood) ; Lower Kunawur, N.-W. Himalayas (Moore) ; Audamaus (Wood-Mason and de Nice- ville) ; Sikkim (de Niceville); 'Bombay (Siviuhoe) ; Tavoy and Pon- sekai (Elwes and de Niceville) ; Sarju and Kali valleys, Kumaon, 2 — 5,000 feet (Doherty) ; Bhutan (Horsfield and Moore) ; Sikkim (Elwes); Nilgiri Hills, 2,000 — 5,000 feet, common (Hampson) ; Bengal (Plotz) ; Assam, Burma, Orissa, Travancore. (22) Cel^noerhinus Simula, Hewitson. Pterygospidea Simula, Hewitson, Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., fourth series, vol. xx, p. 321 (1877). Habitat: Sumatra (Hewitson). (23) Cel^enorrhinus munda, Moore. Plesioneura munda, Moore, Journ. A. S. B., vol. liii, pt. 2, p. 48 (1884). Habitat: Simla (Moore), Kulu, Kashmir. Note — Mr. Elwes places this species with a query as a synonym of C. leucocera, Kollar, but I think it may be kept distinct ; it is altogether a much paler insect, with fewer markings on the hiudwing (uone at all on the upperside) than in that species. (24) Cel^norrhinus chamunda, Moore. Plesioneura chamunda, Moore, Proc. Zool Soc. Loncl., 1865, p. 788 ; id., de Niceville, Journ. A. S. B., vol. lii, pt. 2, p. 100, n. 280 (1883) ; id., Elwes, Trans. Ent. Soc. Loud., 1888, p. 462, n. 530. Habitat : Bengal (Moore) ; Sikkim (de Niceville and Elwes) , Khasi Hills. (25) Cel.enorrhinus ambareesa, Moore. Plesioneura ambareesa, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1865, p. 788; id., de Niceville, Journ. A. S. B., vol. lii, pt. 2, p. 87, n. 33, pi. x, fig. 9, female (1883) ; id., Swinhoe, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1S85, p. 146, n. 152 ; id., Hampson, Journ. A. S. B., vol. lvii, pt. '2, p. 367, n. 263 (1888) ; Tagiades ambareesa, Plotz, Jahr. des Nass. Ver. Natur., vol. xxsvii, p. 52, n. 52 (1881). Habitat: Maungbhoom in Bengal (Moore) ; Akrain in the Sat- puras, Coonoor in the Nilgiri Hills (de Niceville); Mahableshwur (Susinhoe) ; India (Plotz) ; Nilgiri Hills, 2,000—6,000 feet, not uncommon on the southern slopes, rare on the northern (Hampson) ; Khandalla, North Kanara, Trichinopoly, Eutnagherry. (26) Cel^enorrhinus spilothyrus, Felder. TSudamus spilothyrus, Felder, Verb. zool. -hot- Gesellsch. Wien, vol. xviii, p. 283 (1868) ; Plesioneura spilothyrus, Moore, Lep. Cey., vol. i, p. 179, pi. Ixvii, figs. 4, male ; 4a, female (1881) ; vol. iii, p. 534, pi. ccxi, fig. 3, larva and pupa (1887) ; id., Hampson, Journ. A. S. B., vol, lvii, pt. 2, p. 367, n- 262 (1888). 186 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. Habitat: Metopallium and Kunur in the Nilgiris (Felder) ; Ceylon (Moore) ; Nilgiri Hills, western slopes, September (Hampson) . (27) Oel^norrhinus pusca, Hampson. Flesioneura fusca, Hampson, Journ. A. S. B., vol. lvii, pt. 2, p. 367, n. 261 (1888). Habitat : Nilgiris, 2,000 to 4,000 feet, not uncommon, and Ske- varoy Hills (Hampson). Note — This species differs from the preceding in having the cilia of the hindwing alternately brown and whitish, and from the following species in having the white macular discal band of the forewing broken up into spots instead of being continuous, and ending anteriorly in two small dots on the costa; in C. nigricans the band extends uninterruptedly to the costa. (28) Cel^enorrhinus nigricans, de Niceville. Plesioneura nigricans, de Niceville, Journ. A. S. B., vol. liv, pt. 2, p. 123, pi. ii, fig. 6, female (1885); id., Elwesandde Niceville, op. cit., vol. lv, pt. 2, p. 441, n. 161 (1886); id., Elwes, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., 1888, p. 461, n. 527. Habitat : Sikkim, Buxa {de Niceville) ; Tavoy (Elwes and de Niceville)', Sikkim (Elwes) ; Khasi Hills. (29) Cel.enorrfinlts tibetana, Mabille. Pterygospidea tibetana, Mabille, Ann. Soc. Ent. France, fifth series, vol. vi, p. liv, n. 24 (1876). Habitat: Thibet (Mabille). (30) Cel&norrhinus davieii, Mabille. Pterygospidea davidii, Mabille, Ann. Soc. Ent. France, fifth series, vol. vi, p. liv, n. 25 (1876). Habitat: Moupin, Thibet (Mabille). (31) Cel^norrhinus aqni, de Niceville. Plesioneura agni, de Niceville, Journ. A. S. B., vol. Hi, pt. 2, p. 87, n. 32, pi. x, fig. 4, female (1883) ; id., Elwes, Trans. Ent. Soc. Lond., 1888, p. 462, n. 531. Habitat : Sikkim (de Niceville and Elwes). (32) Cel^norrhinus laxmi, de Niceville. Plesioneura laxmi, de Niceville, Journ. A. S. B., vol. lvii, pt. 2, p. 290, n. 21, pi. xiii, fig. 5, male (1888). Habitat: Burma (de Niceville). NEW AND LITTLE-KNOWN INDIAN BUTTERFLIES. 187 21. (33) CEL^ENORRHINUS BUCHANANII, n. sp., PL B, Fig. 2, $ . Habitat: Upper Burma. Expanse : $ , 2-1 inches. Description : Female. Very closely allied to Q. laxmi, inihi, from which it differs in its considerably larger size. JJ ppeuswe, forewing with the white discal band fully twice as wide, not divided into spots, extending uninterruptedly from the costa to the submedian nervure, its edges very irregular, its lower portion posterior to the first median nervule much narrower than the rest of the band j it lacks the two small obliquely-placed black dots found towards the base of the submedian interspace in C. laxmi. Hindwing instead of possessing two parallel discal macular black bands has a rounded black spot towards the end of the discoidal cell, and a discal series of six black spots, of which the anterior one is round and well- separated from the spot which follows it, the second spot is round, the next pair are the largest and elongated, and the last pair smaller but also elongated; cilia of hindwing anteriorly white posteriorly dark brown. Underside, both wings with the same differences as above, but all the spots of the hindwing more prominent, I believe this to be a species distinct from G. laxmi, though a single male of the latter only is known, and the former is described from a single female. The difference in size is very con- siderable, and is greater than is usually found in the opposite sexes of the Hesperiidte, and the markings also shew marked differences. I have named it after its capturer, Mr. A. M. Buchanan, who obtained it in the Ruby Mine district, Upper Burma. (34) Cel^inorrhinus goto, Mabille. Plesioneura goto, Mabille, Ann Soc. Eat. Belg., vol. xxvii, p. lvi (1883). Habitat : Japan (Mabille). (35) Cel^norrhinus tabrica, Hewitson. Pterygospidea tabrica, Hewitson, Ex. Butt., vol. v, pi. Ptenjgospidea, fig. 8 (1873), Tagiadea tabrica, Plotz, Jahr. des Nass. Ver. Natur., vol. xxxvii, p. 53, a. 58 (1884). Habitat : Darjiling (Hewitson and Plotz). (3G) Cel^norrhinus pinwilli, Butler. Plesioneura pinwilli, Butler, Trans. Linu. Soc. Load., Zoology, secoud series vol. i, p. 55G, n. 5, pi. lxviii, fig. 4, male (1877) ; id., Distant, Rhop. Malay., p. 400, n. 3, pi. xxxv, fig. 29, male (1880); Gehlota pinwilli, Doherty, Journ. A. S. 13., vol. Iviii pt. 2, p. 131 (1889). 25 188 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. Habitat ; Malacca (Butler and Distant) ; Margherita, Assam (Doherty). Genus NOTOCEYPTA, nov. Plesioneura, Felder , Wien. Ent. Monatschr., vol. vi, p. 29 (1862), preoc. ; PlesiO' iieura, part, auctoram. Differs from CelcenorrJiimis, Hubner, in the forewing being more triangular, the middle disco-cellular nervule being distinctly longer instead of shorter than the lower disco-cellular, concave instead of almost straight, the middle and lower disco-cellular nervules taken together less strongly inwardly oblique; the hiNdwing is also shorter and more produced posteriorly, the casta is more arched, the discoidal cell is distinctly shorter, thus causing all the veins which spring from it (the first and second subcostal, the discoidal, and the three median nervules) to be distinctly longer. There is a marked difference in the length of the haustellum or tongue, which in C. leucocera, Kollar, measures 1*8 inches, Id JV. alysos, Moore, only *9 of an inch, or exactly half. Type, the Plesioneura curvifascia- of Felder. This diagnosis has been drawn up from bleached wings of both sexes of N. alysos, Moore ; from Sikkim. All the species of this genus settle with closed wings ; through an unfortunate and stupid mistake I once stated that they rest with wide outspread wings. This marked characteristic in life, which at once distinguishes Noto- crypta from CelcenorrJiinus, has led me to discriminate these two genera ; there is also considerable difference in the outline of the wings, and I believe Notocrypta never has the hindwing spotted, except in N. paralyses, W.-M. and de N., this being always a feature in Gelaznorrhinus. The type species, N. curvifascia, was described from China, and has been identified by Messrs. Plotz, Doherty and Leech as synonymous with N. alysos, Moore, but an actual com- parison of specimens is desirable. The transformations of N, alysos, Moore, only are known. (1 ) Notocrypta curvifascia, Felder. Plesioneura curvifascia, Felder, Wien. Enfc. Monatsch., vol. vi, p- 29, n. 29 (1862) ; id., Elwes, Proc. Zool. Soc. Lond., 1881, p. 910 ; id., Plotz, Berl. Ent. Zeits., vol. xxvi, p. 2G3, n. 5.(1882); id., Doherty, Journ. A. S. B., vol. lv, pt. 2, p. 139, n. 260 (188G) ; id., Leech, Proc. Zool. Soc. Loud., 1887, p. 427, n. 133. Habitat: Ning-po, China (Felder and Elwes); China, India (Plotz) ; Bagheswar, 3,500 feet, Kuuiaon (Doherty) ; Japan (Leech). NEW AND LITTLE -KNOWN INDIAN BUTTERFLIES. 189 Note — Messrs. Plotz, Doherty and Leecli identify tlie following species with. this. (2) Notocrypta alysos, Moore. Plesioneuraalysos, Moore, Proc. Zool. Soc. LoncL, 1865, p. 789 ;idem,id., op. cit.,1877, p. 593 ; idem, id., Lep. Cey., vol. i, p. 178, pl.lxvii, figs. 3, male ; 3 Plate B. Fig. 1. Hasora anura, n. sp., 9 , p. 170. 2. Celcenorrhinus huchananii, n. sp., ?, p. 186. 3. Parnara pholus, n. sp., $ , p. 172. 4. Celcenorrhinus patula,n. sp., $, p. 182. 5. Hasora anura, n. sp., £ , p. 170. 6. Parnara sarala, n. sp., 9 , p. 173. 7. Chapra matkias, Fabricius, $ , p. 176. 8. Halpe aina, n. sp., <$ , p. 176. 9. Hesperia hellas, n. sp., $ , p. 1 77. 10. Parnara parca, n. sp., $ , p. 174. 11. Celcenorrhinus pyrrha, n. sp., $, p. 181. „ 12. „ pero, n. sp., £, p. 183. M 13. „ plagifera, n. sp., $ , p. 182. » L.LF,KICEVTL.LE,,Journ.Bomb Nat Hist.Soc.l889.,Vol IV. PI. A. B.LDos del. West.N ewrnan chv. lith. INDIAN BUTTERFLIES LDeNIi.' Jourii.Bomb.Na1 ffi8t.Soc.1889.Vol.IV B. B.LDos' ;,- del We ; . t. Newman d] 111 bl Ail BUTTERFLIES NOTES ON MAN-EATING TIGERS. 195 NOTES ON MAN-EATING TIGERS. By Reginald Gilbert, Bombay. (Read at the Society's Meeting on 4:fh September 1889.) I have selected this title, not because I have had particular experience on the subject, or because I am an expert, but because I wish to place on the records of our Society a few facts relating to man-eaters which can be considered as reliable, several of them being cases of man-eaters lulled by my friend, Mr. W. B. Mulock, Bombay Civil Service, of our Society, now at home on furlough, and who has most successfully devoted a great deal of his time to the des- truction of man-eaters ; another being the case which is known as the Nagpore man-eater, another the "Jaunsar" man-cater, well known in the N.-W. Provinces, and lastly, the case of an alleged man-eater, which I killed this year in Bansda. You must not expect me to give you any thrilling account of some personal adven- ture where I risked my life to rid the district of a brute long the terror of the inhabitants, because I may say at once that the only man-eater I have killed, exposed me to no more danger than I should incur in any ordinary day's shooting after small game. In- deed, it would scarcely be in accordance with the object of our Society to read a paper relating to personal adventure of this kind. I only wish to touch on various points which I think may chiefly be of interest to our members from a Natural History point of view, and in the hope that other members may be able to supply us with information on this very interesting subject which they can personally vouch as correct. Now the general impression prevailing about man-eaters is, that the man-eater is an old brute, more often decrepit than otherwise, perhaps lamed from some former wound, with his teeth broken and his skin always mangy, unable from his infirmities to kill game, his natural food, but obliged to conceal himself near a village path and then to pounce on some solitary human being and devour him, never attacking when there are more than two or three human beings together and always displaying very great cunning, so that his destruction becomes almost impossible. It is difficult to read books of Indian sport without coming to that conclusion. No reliance, however, can be placed, I fear, on books of sport, with one or two bright exceptions, one of which is Mr. Saunderson's book. Books 26 196 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. of sport are ■written to be read by the masses, and the first idea of the author is to romance and to write something of an exciting land to please his readers, and not a strictly accurate account of what the author has himself witnessed or known. These books of sport have therefore little value from a Natural History point of view. I only mention this, because my own opinion is that the general impression about man-eaters is altogether wrong, except as to his display of cunning. I am aware that one swallow does not make a summer, and that many of my hearers may rightly think my opinion on this subject is of little value. Man-eaters are happily so few and far between that the most experienced shikary can in a lifetime only come across a very few. I start then by saying that I believe man-eaters are not different in any way from the ordinary game or bullock-eating tiger, and that age, deformity, injury or otherwise, have nothing whatever to do with the question. Why a tiger turns man-eater I can offer no opinion, and why a tiger never kills a goat, but nevertheless kills such small fry as peacocks, porcupine, or monkeys I also can- not reply to. The universal fear that all animals have to man is no doubt the reason why the tiger seldom happily does turn man- eater. There are some large districts in India infested with tigers where a man-eater is never heard of, whilst there are other smaller districts, one of which I intend hereafter to refer to, where man- eaters are constantly appearing. I wrote to a friend of mine, a Forest Officer in the Berars, who is a very successful and keen tiger- slayer, and who, I thought, could give me some very important information. He however tells me that he has not known a single case of a man-eating tiger, although however he has known of a man-eating panther in his districts in the Berars. The first man-eater I wish to introduce you to is the tiger we have often read of in our local newspapers as the Nagpore man-eater. As regards this, one, I have obtained my information from Messrs. George Anderson and George Moule, Engineers on the Bengal-Nagpur Railway, who have been out on several occasions after the beast, and have reliable means of obtaining accurate information. This man-eater is a tigress, and has the following peculiarities of character, viz., her love of feasting on the employes of the Bengal-Nagpur Railway, of frequenting only a small tract of country, about nine square miles in area, and her great cunning and audacity. She has been killing for three successive years ; as far as my informants know, she has killed from twenty-eight to thirty- NOTES ON MAN-EATING TIGERS. l!)7 eight human beings, but these must be taken as much less than the correct actual number, because my informants only return what the railway officials hear of and confirm, and these returns are mostly of peorjle connected with the railway. In 1880, up to June, she has killed seven people besides wounding others. The district she works in is as I have said about nine square miles only, and is near the Darckasa Railway Station. She appears to live in a rocky and precipitous spur, through which a tunnel has been cut. This spur carries heavy bamboo and other jungle. Several springs of water rise from out of the spur. In many places at the foot of the scarps there are delightfully cool places for her to lie up in, where the ground is always moist. There is also a cave in a detached mass of the spur, which shows many signs of being used by the tigress and the family. A big stone just outside the entrance is scored deep and long with many scratches of their claws. The jungle around the cave is very thick, and the cave is very awkward to get at. "The whole area hunted by the tigress," writes Mr. Anderson, "is hard to determine, but for weeks together it is believed she has hunted within this area of nine square miles or even less." A great number of sportsmen (in fact too many) have been after her without success. She will not return to a kill ; if she cannot carry off a carcase to a safe place, she will abandon it altogether. About the middle of January last she began to frequent the railway, being seen at all hours in broad daylight. On 24th February 1889, at 2-20 p.m., she jumped from the top of the slope of a cutting about twelve feet on to the line, where a gang of permanent-way men was at work, snatched up one of them and vanished up the opposite slope in a second. She carried the body to a pool of water about 300 yards off and there ate it. On the 25th February a beat was organised, and three tigers were found at home, in the cave, of which two were shot by Mr. Cleveland and Captain Silver, Adjutant of the B.-N. Railway Volunteers, both of which tigers were young ones, not fully grown, the cubs of the old sinner. On the 29th February, she killed a boy near the same place and carried his body a long way. Mr. Anderson has seen the pugs of a young cub with her, apparently one of her last litter. The cubs that were killed are probably of another former litter. On the 4th March, the tigress attacked a woodcutter near the railway, but was driven off pluckily by his companion, who attacked her with an axe. All April she appears to have kept to the same ground, and in the middle of May she killed another man 198 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. near the railway. It appears there have been previous man-eaters in this neighbourhood, so that this tigress may have been educated in this vice by a wicked ancestor or companion of hers. In the year 1883, this particular spur was infested with tigers, and seems to have long been a regular house of call for tigers. In May last Mr. Moule, whilst seated on a machm at night, had a shot at this tigress, but he was unable to sec her properly, and she got off scatheless. It is hoped she will be bagged before long, I will next take you to the neighbourhood of Sardardevi, Bansda State, where the Dangs Baroda territory and Bansda territory lie contiguous. Near here a tigress in 1884 and 1885 killed a very large number of people, and in 1888 and 1880, in the same neigh- bourhood, another man-eater sprang up, which became the terror of that district, and killed a large number of people. Mr. Mulock killed the former in May 1885, and I killed that which is supposed to be the latter on 2nd April 1889, so that after an interval of only four years the inhabitants of this district were so unfortunate as to have a second man-eater' spring up to take the place of the first. Mr. Mulock has written a very graphic account of how he killed this tigress and two three-quarter grown cubs with her, which he printed, and a copy is in our library. This district is hilly, well watered, and covered with jungle. There is scarcely any cultivation, but villages inhabited by various jungle tribes arc scattered about here and there. There are plenty of chctul, sambhur, pig, &c, about, and also plenty of cattle grazing in the jungle, so that the man-eater has little excuse for taking to his. evil ways. Mr. Mulock mortally wounded this tigress on the 4th May 1885, and it was only on the loth May that he actually got it. It was wounded in the jaw, and was unable to eat from the 4th to 13th May. Maggots got into the wound, so that when she was killed "she was exceedingly finely drawn from hunger and emaciation. " Mr. Mulock describes her as having a beautifully marked skin. This is apparent from a photo- graph I have of her in my book. There is no appearance of mange in her skin, nor does Mr. Mulock describe her as appearing injured, so as to prevent her from finding her food in a legitimate feline man- ner. Mr. Mulock found the same difficulty as I did in getting exact information of the number of people killed, but the evidence he collected showed that a large number of people were eaten by this tigress, and there can be no doubt, as he says, this was the culprit, as, writing six months afterwards, he states not a single person had NOTES ON MAN-EATING TIGERS. 199 been killed by tigers, and so far as I can discover not till 1 888 did another human being fall a prey to a tiger in this district. I received an invitation from Mr. A. "VV. Crawley-Boevey, who was then Collector of Surat, to shoot with him in April 1889 in the Native State of Bansda. I was informed of the ravages of a man- eater in these same Sardardevi jungles, and Mr. Boevey suggested we should go after it if the kubber was reliable. I arrived at Bansda on 30th March, when Mr. Boevey at once informed me that the tiger had killed a woman near Sardardevi during the Holi holidays, about fifteen days back, and we agreed it would be well to go over there some ten miles distant, and spend a few days after the man-eater or some bears said to be in that neighbourhood. The Rajah of Bansda showed us every kindness and facility, had a camp pitched for us at Sardardevi, and placed a number of sowars, sepoys, shikaris, &c, at our disposal. He is an enlightened Rajah, but not so enlightened as is the English ruler of a neighbouring province, who with one hand doles out a reward to those who kill a tiger, whilst with the other he from time to time pens rules placing needlessly heavy restrictions on those who spend time and money in killing tigers in his province ! No rules or restrictions were placed in our way and no permit was required, but a hearty welcome was given us by the Rajah and his Dewan, Mr. Jhaverbhai Nathabai. Whilst riding out to Sardardevi in the early morning, a sowar met us bearing a message from the shikari Hubib, who had for years been Mr. Mulock's shikari, telling us that the man- eater had killed three bullocks belonging to some Brinjarees on the previous afternoon and two bullocks the day before. We hurried on to Sardardevi, where we met Jemadar Abdulla, head of the Dharam- pore State Police, and a noted shikari who had come to assist us. Ho informed us that there were two tigers, one they had marked down, the smaller one having eaten and gone off some distance. We found the beaters ready, and at once went off to the jungle, where we found everything ready, passing on the road the Brinjari camp from whence came the bullocks which had been killed. Mr. Boevey was placed up a tree near one of the kills which had not been eaten at all. Soon after the beat commenced, the tiger roared. The beat came on almost up to us when the tiger broke back with a roar through the beaters without damaging any one of them. In fact, Hubib told me he turned out of the way of a beater standing on his direct path, instead of knocking him down and giving him a 200 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. W ' ■— ■— — ^^— i .11 — ■■ — - i i !■■ ■■■ i — ■ ■ — ■■ ■ ■ — ■ ■ ■ ■ pat, as often does occur when an unwounded tiger breaks back. I attributed his breaking- back to his being driven over his kill. I have noticed tigers always break back when an attempt is made to drive them over the kill. I should like to know if the experience of others is the same. The second time the beat commenced in the same way, and the tiger was driven into some high grass near Mr. Boevey's tree. He came out with a bound under Mr. Boevey's " niahla." Mr. Boevey saw that he was going straight towards my tree in an open space, and generously sacrificed his shot so as to enable me to get an easy one. I killed him without any trouble, and I have here some photos, of him taken where he fell. He was not a large tiger, nor a mangy one, nor did he appear to be different in any way to an ordinary tiger. He was nine feet long. All the beaters, shikaries, &c, declared that he was the identical man-eater, but could bring me no other evidence than their oft -repeated assertion and the fact that many people had been killed lately in the jungles in the neighbourhood. There was still the tigress to be accounted for ; which had been pugged to a distant jungle that morning, and this tigress probably was a man-eater too. In the night I heard the tigress roar several times within a mile from my tent. The next morning and the morning after that we found her pugs at the water where she had drunk close to our camp. These were carried into some likely jungle which we beat on both days without seeing any- thing of her. On the third day she drank at the same water, passed close to our camp along the same path, and the shikaries declared her to be lying down on the side of a hill. No one had seen her, but they pointed out some vultures sitting in a tree up the hill, and said that she had killed a pig or a chetul, and they stated most positively she was lying down in a certain spot pointed out to us. In this they were correct. She had killed a pig, and she was lying down in the place indicated. It is difficult to account for the cer- tainty and accuracy of these jungle men in placing the exact where- abouts of a tiger which no one has seen. How we ought to proceed was a question of woodcraft, and our Bheels held a council of war. After considerable discussion they took us up hill, saying they would beat up hill to the guns, but after taking us part of the way they concluded it was too hot for her to go up the hill and it woidd be better to drive her through some shady jungle at the bottom. We offered no opinion, but simply left it to them to decide. Our knowledge of woodcraft was as nothing compared to theirs. This NOTES ON MAN-EATING TIGERS. 201 tigress also roared when the beat commenced, and came up to some high grass opposite to Mr. Boevey. When the beaters came quite up she went at a rush past Mr. Boevey, who fired twice with a Magnum express. She rapidly made off, and as we could find no blood we had another beat. Whilst walking on ahead we heard a bekri deer bark and saw a peacock fly, which made us sure she was there. To make a long story short, she did not come up to the guns, but started off directly the beat began, passed out at the side under a tree upon which sat a sepoy who saw she had a bullet in her stomach. We found lots of blood, and pugged her up a bit, and then stopped as the sun was sinking, and the shikaris said we should find her dead next day, and if we went on some one would get mauled. Each of us being a paterfamilias, under solemn promises to our wives to do nothing rash, we fell in with this view. Next day we found she had drunk at the same place and pugged her into a jungle a mile off. Drops of blood were found on her path. However, although we beat for her all day we could not find her, and after that all trace of her disappeared. All said she was dead somewhere, but we could not find her, and there is no doubt that with an Express bullet in her stomach she must have died. Next day, which was a cruelly hot one, I went out at noon alone to look for her, and also to get information about the depredations of the man-eater. It is impossible to place much reliance on the various statements made to me by the various jungle men I spoke to, because it was very evident they grossly exaggerated. I was told the tiger had killed various people, from forty to 500 in number, and that last rains he had been particularly vicious in killing people engaged in cultivating their small strips of land in the jungle, and even taking people out of bullock carts carrying timber from the forests. I went to see two or three places where people were actually seized. One of these was close to a jungle road to the Dangs, over which a large timber traffic passes. I have here a photo. of one of the jungle roads over which the beast used to pass, and also of a temple to the tiger god which the Bheels erect all over these districts. On the next day Mr. Boevey had to break up camp, and leave for Surat hurriedly, as fast as we could march, in consequence of the Surat fires. I tried unsuccessfully to reason with him, that it was more important to bag man-eating tigers than inspect a fire which would be put out long before he could reach it. However my arguing did not convince Mr. Boevey, and we had to put an end 202 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. to a very pleasant trip and march rapidly for the line of rails. The only real accurate information I was able to get was from Mr. Jhaverbhai Nathabai, the Dewan of Bansda, who obtained for me the names of persons killed in the Bansda State ; only the villages, dates of death, age, sex, &c, which was embodied in an official document I have. This was made up from the police records of the inquests on the persons killed, and from the reports of the cattle killed in the various villages reported by patels. This only applies to the villages in the Bansda State and not to the adjoining villages in the Bangs, Baroda, and British territory. During 1888, out of thirteen jungle villages in the State he killed in six villages altogether eight people, of which seven were males, the dates of killing 28th June, 3rd July, 22nd October, 2nd November, 4th November, 12th November, 15th December, and 18th December. Of these all were adults except one boy, named Ganda Kalia, aged 13 years. In the same villages during the same period thirty-five cattle were returned as killed. I am sorry I am not able to get any record of those killed in the Dangs or Baroda territory during the same period. I have written to enquire at Bansda if there have been any more cases reported of persons killed by tigers, and I am informed by the Dewan there have been no more cases, so that this strongly supports the view that the tiger I killed was the man-eater. Some eight years ago or so, Mr. Mulock killed an undoubted man-eater near Toongar, some thirty-five miles from where we are now sitting. I say an undoubted man-eater, because Mr. Mulock was close by when the man was carried off, and went after it at once, and found the half-devoured corpse. Whilst waiting by the corpse the tiger or tigress (I forget which) returned, and Mr. Mulock lulled it and made a 2 )0S t mortem examination of it, finding parts of the deceased man inside the tiger, so I think we may safely assume this was a man-eater. Mr. Mulock published an account of it at the time, and gave me a copy which I have unfortunately mislaid, but I think I may trust my memory so far as to say there was nothing peculiar about this tiger in any way, and that his skin was not mangy. I have no doubt you read in the papers a short time ago of a man- eater being killed, called the Jaunsar man-eater. An account was published, in which it appeared that Mr. B. B. Osmaston, of the Forest Department, was out near Chakrata after her with a companion, when Mr. Osmaston shot her whilst she was worrying his friend. NOTES ON MAN-EATING TIGERS. 203 The papers further published an account by an anonymous corre- spondent of the career of this tigress, and an extraordinary story of the tigress allowing her cubs to play with a man she had taken out of a house in the Himalayas. This story I have not been able to verify, so that I am not able to give you particulars. I wrote, however, to Mr. Osmastou for certain particulars about this tigress, and he has very kindly given me some interesting information about her, which I will give to you almost in his very words. Man-eaters have been numerous in the Jaunsar district for many years. The district which this tigress frequented was a very large one. She used to make long journeys in a very short time. Having killed a man in one place, she would appear the next night at a place twenty miles off. She frequented a somewhat high belt of the Himalayas, mostly from 5,000 to 10,000 feet high. The spot where Mr. Osmaston killed her at is about 8,000 feet above the sea. No old wounds were visible, but she was very old. Report makes her out to be a man-killer of at least ten years' standing. Her skin was not mangy but a very fair one. The cold climate might, of course, give her a good skin. Her teeth were exceptionally bad. Of her four canines none were sound, and the two upper ones were worn and broken down to about half their original length. They also had two slight cavities in their centres, which were found by probing to extend to a depth of three-quarters of an inch. Mr. Osmaston has sent the drawings of the ca?iines, which can be sketched in our magazine if thought of sufficient interest About seven or eight porcupine quills, mostly broken off to about three inches in leugth, were found in the tigress's body. Two were actually embedded n her tongue. There is not very much game suitable for tigers in the district. Buffaloes and men are easily obtainable, and excellent opportunities afforded of seizing them on the march on the mountain sides. This tigress appears undoubtedly to have been the man-eater, because she actually attacked Mr. Osmaston's companion without provocation, except in so far as was due to the fact that these two gentlemen went up in broad daylight to a buffalo killed by her. The papers stated Government offered a reward of Rs. 500 for her. I once had another adventure with an alleged man-eater. I have, however, no evidence to offer that it was a man-eater, except the fact that all the shikaris and villagers of the neighbourhood declared that this was the particular miscreant that had eaten a number of 27 204 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. people in the neighbourhood, and that every villager for miles round, in number nearly 500, turned out to assist as beaters. This was in the State of Rewa, a few years back one of the best tiger countries in India, where tig'ers are always ready for visitors of dis- tinction in a State preserve specially kept for tigers and other large game. Through the kindness of Major Barr, the then Political Agent, I was asked to form one of the usual hot weather party who made an annual campaign against the tigers. We shot in royal style : we had State elephants, shikaris, sowars and all the assistance we required. All we had to do was to go to the places fixed for us by the head shikari when we got Icubber, and if we did wound a beast, we had only to get on two of the best elephants in India and follow up. Following up a wounded, tiger on an elephant I must say is a royal form of sport. It is a grand thing to see a wounded and irate tiger absolutely at your mercy and without incurring any risk to yourself. You have all the fun and none of the danger one experiences in going after a beast on foot. I was once so excited in watching a wounded tiger charging from a long distance at my elephant, that I invoked the anger of the mahout for not firing soon enough. I forgot for the moment that if any one was in danger it was him and. not me in the howdah. To return to the man-eater. Soon after the beat commenced I heard the tiger coming up towards my tree, and it remained within about sixty yards of me for some time, giving low growls. I could not, however, manage to see him. However, a few minutes afterwards, I saw him lying prone on the open side of a hill opposite. I would not fire at first, thinking he might go to another gun ; but after some time I very wrongly determined to fire at him, believing he was bound to go out at the side of the beat and not in sight of the other guns. 1 afterwards learnt there were stops everywhere, and the tiger was bound to come close to one of the guns. I computed he was 200 yards off, and sighted my rifle accordingly. I missed him. We afterwards all agreed he was only 100 yards off, which gave me a good and valid excuse for the miss. The tiger then bolted into a patch of jungle, and the beaters all got up trees terribly frightened. Two of our party got on elephants, and he passed within twenty yards of them, giving each of them a right and left easy shot. All the shots missed him, and the tiger went away in sight of every one up another hill. The beaters said he was a regular " shaitau," and no bullet could hurt him. I NOTES ON MAN-EATING TIGERS. 205 suppose this was said to let us down easy, but the State head shikari, Moti Singh, was terribly downcast about it, and I was horridly depressed in spirits also. However, two days afterwards we killed two tigers in one beat, and we got our good spirits back. A common theory appears prevalent that a wounded tiger often turns man-eater, and lately in the columns of the Pioneer, I think, reference has been made to certain cases of wounded tigers having turned man-eaters in the Central Provinces. Wounded tiafers often turn man-killers, but I have not obtained any evidence of their turning man-eaters. The difference is very great, except, perhaps, to the victim. A wounded tiger no doubt, until its wounds are healed, attacks every person who comes near to it. It does this not for the purpose of obtaining food, but because it is smarting under a painful wound, and it believes that the person approaching it is going to inflict another wound. Many instances can be quoted of wounded tigers killing persons approaching them after they have been wounded, and I need only mention the case of my friend the late Mr. G. L. Gibson, a member of our Society, who died here from wounds inflicted by a wounded tiger he was seeking foi*, and whilst he was examining the body of a native boy which he found killed by this wounded tiger. This is the chief danger of leaving a wounded tiger, as one knows that the first person who unfortunately comes near the place where the tiger may be lying down will undoubtedly be killed, and many sportsmen therefore very properly prefer to run considerable risk in killing a tiger they have wounded, rather than allow it to live and kill the first innocent person who may be so unfortunate as to come near it, Mr. Mulock writes me as follows, viz., " My theory is that if one member of a tiger family takes to "the man quarry tbey all lose their fear of the biped and kill him " when hungry. I have found this in one or two instances. " I observe also that Mr. Saunderson in his book scouts the idea of man-eaters being mangy, and wonders how this idea became prevalent. To sum up then, I have no particular theories, with one exception, to put before you as to man-eaters. The one theory I can advance is that the man-eater inherits this vice from its parents, or that the parent having previously learnt this vice from a parent or com- panion, teaches the cub to kill human beings, and such cubs, when grown up, teach the vice either to their own cubs or to their mates, and so the practice never dies out amongst the tigers of that district. In short I contend that, unlike the case of the poet, the 20G BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. tiger is sometimes born a man-eater and sometimes made one. This theory will account for some districts never being entirely free from man-eaters. In all cases it appears the man-eater shows greater cunning than usual. I have no evidence to show that the tiger turns man-eater for any particular reason, and I can offer no theory. There is abun- dant evidence to show that the man-eater is physically not different from the ordinary tiger, that age has nothing to do with the ques- tion, and that the theory about the manginess of his skin is mere fiction. There is evidence to show that districts in which the tiger has plenty of his natural food are just as much infested by man- eaters as in those districts where the natural food is less abundant. I am afraid my paper is of a mere negative character, and I leave it to some other members to evolve some theory for us on the subject. Statement showing the number of persons and animals hilled }>y a man-eating tiger during the year 1888, in the territory of Bansda. Name of Name of person killed. 6 -1: < Sex. Caste. Date of death. Ani- mals killed. Remarks. Village. -i. o w M o a - Ambabari . . . Badad Devi .. Wati Ardid Bapudia Ganda Kalia ... 1 Kesu Punio 2 Tolia Bablia 1 Jivla Kasa 2 Radio Bhil Buclhia Natha 30 13 BO 45 37 50 Male Do Do Do Male Do. , Female ... Kukna Koli. Kathis Kukna- Warli. Koli. Kukna Kathia 15-12-88 18-12-88 31-7-88 22-10-88 2-11 88 28-1-88 4-11-88 12-11-88 5 4 1 1 3 1 16 (i 1 2 2 5 1 2 19 8 2 7 17 r. R. Gilbert, y the locality rror. Charanwada . Godhbari ... tiger was killed by M itor, Bombay, whereb been relieved of the te 7 Males. 1 Female. 8 The Solic has 30/7i April 1889. Jhaverbhai Nathoobhai, Devan of Bansda. THE CAMEL. 207 THE CAMEL. By J. H. Steel, A.V.D. (Read at the Society's Meeting on 10 th July 1889.) In dealing Avith a subject so large and so interesting as the camel, one hardly knows where to begin and where to leave off. It is extraordinary how various estimates have been formed of his value. Mahomed says of him that he is the greatest of all the blessings given by Allah to mankind ; recent writers have represented him as ugly, spiteful, unreliable at work, stupidly phlegmatic, malodorous, and endowed with all the bad qualities under the sun; his very virtues, especially steady endurance of excessive toil, being attributed to want of sensibility and of even the faintest gleams of intelligence. The songs of the Arab of the desert are about the camel, as one of the most beautiful of created beings ; the remarks of the British soldier and transport regimental officer about his bag'gao-e camels are not suited to ears polite ! Who is right and who is wroug ? We can have no hesitation in taking the side of the Arab. Still there is some excuse for the recent military opinion on this subject, because undoubtedly in the Soudan, along the Nile, and in Afghanistan camel transport has not been a success, and the poor beasts have died wholesale as a rule. The Russians in Central Asia, the French in Algeria, and, recently, the Italians in Massowah, have been quite as unsuccessful as we in our various campaigns as to keeping their camels in health and efficiency. Individual officers have solved the problem of how to keep camels at work, and prove them valuable on a campaign; but our troops have most certainly not been successful; however, surely, if overladen animals have not their saddles removed for a fortnight, we cannot wonder to find horrible sores on their backs; if animals remain ungroomed and tied up in lines or on the march for months together, we cannot wonder if they get mange in an aggravated form; and if animals get no food nor water for a week, we cannot wonder that they at last fall and die under their heavy burdens. To sum the matter up in a few words. If men have iu war emergency suddenly to deal with an animal about which they know nothing whatsoever, the animal must not be blamed that the results are not altogether satisfactory. The knowledge of the camel possessed by the untravelled Briton is easily summed up. Firstly, he is certain that the animal is the "ship of the desert." 208 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Secondly, that it lias something to do with the eye of a needle. Thirdly (and most positively) it is a sort of travelling reservoir, consisting of inexhaustible water tanks and never needs to drink. Fourthly, it has a hump and long legs aud neck. Finally, it is an uncanny brute of strange habits, suited only to the wandering Bedouin of the desert and the inimitable Barnum. When called on in the emergencies of service to take charge of camels, the principle an Englishman works on is to treat them as much as possible like the beast of burden, with which he is most familiar, the horse. Where this has been carried out thoroughly the results have been not unsatisfactory, for when groomed regularly the camel does not get mange, when properly saddled and loaded he does not get sore back, and when properly fed and watered he remains serviceable and does good work. It is when our soldier is given several camels to take care of, and is aided only by a lot of lazy, cowardly coolies, who know as little about a camel as he does, and have no intention of trying to do anything whatsoever for their pay, that the poor brute fails. The water- tank theory is an unfortunate one. Certaiuly a camel can go for seven days without water when properly cared for but he ought to be watered once a day whenever possible, and stinted in this respect only in extreme emergency. There are pouches in his stomach, and they are frequently, after death, found to contain fluid; but that they are reservoirs pure and simple is doubtful ; and it is very certain that the parched traveller who has to cut open his dying camel and obtain its accumulated stores of water, will obtain only a very little fluid, of a temperature of about 90° Fahr., a mawkish sub-acid flavour, and an unpleasant odour. It is evident that the time-honoured water-tank theory needs much modification, and is a dangerous one to insist on as a guide to practice during campaigns. As a matter of fact, the active and special services of camels in war and peace have been most extensive and valuable. That they have been associated with enormous losses is due to our ignorance and mismanagement, and is decidedly not the camel's fault. In Afghan- istan, the Punjab, Sind, and Beluchistan, in Abyssinia, Egypt, and the Soudan, the camel has been essential to success of the operations; and it is certain that when we need to fight in China, Central Asia, Western Asia, Arabia, and North Africa the services of this extremely valuable baggage animal will be again called for. The camel is, I believe, under a cloud now in official estimation, but, like the Royal Marines, he has done good service on many an occasion, and is always THE CAMEL. 209 ready to do it again and sure to turn up when there is hard work going. Although the camel spits and grumbles when being loaded, though he makes unpleasant noises in the camp at night, and though he is generally considered unlovely in the extreme — and certainly no European nose can appreciate his odour — these unpleasant habits and conditions are to my mind more than redeemed by the undaunted and plucky manner in which he plods on with his load until he actually falls dead, by the stolid manner is which he remains quiet after a mortal wound until he rolls over on his side to die, and by the way in which he steadily plods on mile after mile under his heavy load until the halt is called, even for a march of considerably more than regulation length. The peace services of the camel are not less meritorious than his war services. His function as ship of the desert is gradually being taken away from him by the spread of railways, as in Rajputana, Sind, Central Asia, and Egypt, and we have historical evidence that his range has been limited to an extent since when the westward and eastward waves of the Mussulman invasion extended from Spain in the West to Southern India in the East. A few representatives remain in Spain, very few in Mysore, and in Europe practically the only camels are the stunted race of Pisa, which seems to have been introduced somewhat recently from Tripoli. I believe there are camels in Constantinople and European Turkey ; I observe that General Gordon writes of them in Turkey. I noticed recently in the Royal Dublin Society's Museum a sowari camel on a real and antique Irish harp as its prominent decoration: how it came there I cannot surmise! I have somehow arrived at the impression that in Asiatic Russia, in the Caspian region, and Crimea, especially of European Russia, the range of the two-humped camel is becoming restricted by railway development. Expansion of range is taking place in the Southern States of America, where imported camels have done well and are multiplying rapidly, and in Australia, whither they have been imported from India, and where have been established breeding stations. It is considered that the camel will prove specially valuable in opening up Central Australia. In Mongolia, Western China, the Central Asian Desert, the Khanates, Afghanistan, Beluchistau, Persia, Asia Minor, Arabia, and the whole desert area of Northern and Central Africa the camel reigns supreme as a means of transport for goods and travellers. Tradition has it that the camel invaded Africa by way of the Isthmus of Suez; he has invaded America and Australia 210 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. by sea. It is reasonably surmised tbat the camel is decreasing in numbers; one of the Caliphs, for example, is credited with assem- bling 120,000 camels for a journey to Mecca. Here we are face to face with one of those difficulties constantly appearing before naturalists. Some allowance must be made for oriental exaggeration in the actual statement of numbers, and for unintentional multiplication in quality and quantity by laudatoris temporis acti, people who systematically run down the pi-esent in comparison with the past. The two-humped or Bactrian camel is much less frequent than the true dromedary or one-humped species. Palgrave, the celebrated traveller, is responsible for introducing serious confusion between the terms dromedary and camel. He has tried to restrict the former to the hygeen or running camel, known to us as sowari, and to make it out to be a distinct breed. This is not correct. The fact of the case is, that wheresoever camels are freely used and bred there are found well-bred light animals suited for sowari, and heavier, coarser bred individuals suited for baggage duties. According to the requirements of the locality the former or the latter predominate. There are very many local varieties of the camel, but only two species (a) the Southern, Arabian, one-humped camel, or true dromedary, and (b) the Northern, Bactrian, two-humped, or " true" camel. Where the two meet is the line of the Euphrates and Tigris; a few Bactrians have passed into Arabia, and I believe the two-humped camel is the one which has been imported into North America by the United States Government. In Northern Persia and Afghan- Turkestan the two species are found, and sometimes they cross and produce a hybrid. It is the one-humped camel which has invaded Australia, that of Bikanir in Rajputana, which shares with Jessalmir the honour of being the best places in India for camels. The Bactrian camel is very tolerant of cold, he works across snow on the Steppes, and is said to eat snow when he becomes thirsty; the dromedaiy is intolerant of cold, but will stand a remarkable amount of heat. Moisture in the air is probably the condition of climate of which the camel is least tolerant. No animal will travel better over sand, for which the peculiar structure of the foot, the deliberate action and the length of limb well suit him • mountainous passes are trying only to plain camels; even deep rivers with sandy bottoms can be forded by this animal, but a clay bottom and slippery soil proves very trying to him, especially under a heavy load, and deep ditches or cracks in the soil prove serious impedimenta, because camels THE CAMEL. 211 cannot do much iu the way of jumping, except occasionally perfo rul- ing some awkward and grotesque gambols. One great desideratum in a transport animal is that he is capable of use in various ways. The camel can hardly be considered inferior in this respect. Besides sowari and pack work lie carries small guns or will drag larger ones; he is used in high, peculiar, double-storey carriages (in the Punjab for example). General Gordon writes that they are used for ploughing in Turkey, and that they make excellent tramway animals ! The products of camels are most useful — fuel, milk, excellent hair for shawls, cloths, and various fabrics, both coarse and fine, are obtained from the living animal ; flesh-food, leather, bones, and various other useful substances from the dead. No part of the dead camel should go to waste. In camel countries these animals are used to afford amusement by combats, running races, or are trained to special performances, such as dancing. The adaptations of the camel to the desert which is its home are numerous and evident. Among others they are his height giving wide range of vision ; his length of neck enabling him to reach far to the shrubs on either side of the track suited as food ; ears very small, and nostrils capable of closure to keep out the sand; eyes prominent and protected by an overhanging upper lid, limiting vision upwards and guarding from too powerful rays of the sun ; his horny pads to rest on when he lies in the hot sand ; his peculiarly cushioned feet ; his hump or reserve store of nutriment ; his water reservoirs in connection with the stomach ; his patient, plodding habits. It is a great mistake to consider the camel ugly. "Handsome is who handsome does" applies well in this case ; but it is universally admitted that though a mangy dromedary in a show or transport lines is not handsome, a well kept camel in his native place is not ugly but quite the reverse ! In the loneliness of the desert travellers recognise the camel and his movements not only as suitable, but sometimes as graceful, and even grand. We have this opinion in many well-known works of travel. It is well worth the while of any of my hearers who has not looked into the eye of a camel, to do so on the earliest possible occasion. I particularly admire its rich colour, its large size and clearness, and the stern aspect produced by the overhanging brow. Camels are much blamed for objecting to their packs being put on, but they are a sa rule fully justified in doing so, for the loads are (as they have almost invariably been found in the past) uncomfortable 28 212 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. in the extreme, not unfrequently absolutely cruel. The peculiar arrangement of the camel's teeth makes his bite very formidable, and gives him a specially ferocious expression. He alone of rumi- nants has incisor teeth in the upper jaw, but in many other respects he is an aberrant ruminant, many of his anatomical details more resembling those of the horse than of the ox. Here I am in a posi- tion through the kindness of Mr. W. Home, of Jodhpore, and Mr. Phipson, to exhibit a most remarkable specimen — a horn taken from the forehead of an Indian camel. This may be a simple keratoid tumour accidentally occurring in this situation, but it gives scope for the general conclusion that the camel may, very occasionally, be found with a horn indicating his zoological affinities with other ruminants. This will not seem so far-fetched if we remember the undoubted fact that horses occasionally have frontal horns. The shape of skull of both horse and camel is such as would lead the zoologist at once to conclude that the animal was hornless. Even in cattle and sheep, when the temporal fossa? become very large, the horns are shed by a species of natural amputation. Charles Steel records having observed in Afghanistan that the Bactrian camels sometimes have an extra rudimentary toe, and so are specially sure-footed. The hump of the camel resembles that of the ox in structure but is much less muscular. The one-humped camel has a rudimentary second hump, so that this distinction is not so very considerable after all. In camels low in condition the hump almost disappears, the animals are described as " living on their humps. " Finally, I trust I have succeeded in establishing to the satisfaction of my hearers that the camel has been much and undeservedly maligned by Europeans, and that the Arab's estimate of him is more just and in accordance with the services he has rendered to mankind in the past and continues to render in the present. I can honestly say that my personal and professional contact with the camel in the course of journeys, on the line of march, in camp, and in cantonments, has impressed me with a high sense of the value of these long- suffering and most useful animals. HOW TO FACILITATE THE STUDY OP BOTANY. 213 HOW TO FACILITATE THE STUDY OF BOTANY. By G. Caestensen, Gead. Hoet. R. D. C. Age. (Copenhagen), Superintendent op the Victoeia Gaedens, Bombay. In his '« Address to Students of Botany," lately published in the Society's Journal, Mr. A. K. Nairne has attempted to indicate a way by which the study of Botany, or at least the knowledge of common Indian plants might be facilitated. Though the originator of the proposed system is no less a person than the celebrated philosopher, Jean Jacques Rousseau, the system as explained by the author of the address is very deficient, and a closer examination of its details will easily convince the botanist that such a limited defini- tion of characteristic features, peculiar to species, genera and even Natural Orders, as those mentioned in the address, are likely to do much more harm than good, and give rise to serious mistakes. Thus the author remarks, that if a plant with this kind of flower (didy- namous, or two-powered) is a tree, it most probably belongs to Bignoniacece, which very characteristic and distinct order he defines as often being large trees with ample leaves and large flowers, and often pod-like fruits, easily recognised by their verna- cular names, but he omits to mention the frequent presence of pinnate (finned) leaves ; the constant presence of the peculiar bilamellate (two-plated) stigma (scar), and frequently winged seeds, by which any plant belonging to this Order may be easily recog- nised. Following the author, at least one tree, which is very common in the Konkan, Gmelina arhorea, except for its vernacular name, ought to belong to Bignoniacece, whereas it does not require more than ordinary botanical knowledge to recognise it as belonging to Verbenacece, of which Order the author simply says that it is not clearly defined, often trees and shrubs. Similar examples might be cited of other misleading statements too evident to avoid being noticed by the botanist. I have, however, no intention of criticising a paper attempting the praiseworthy object of facilitating the study of Botany, an object to which I hope by the present paper to contribute my humble share. Regarding Botany as a science, and not only as a knowledge of names, a pleasant entertainment, or a feeble kind of sport, it may be said, as of all sciences, that a little kuowledge is worse than no knowledge at all ; and I cannot help considering it wrong to attempt to popularise it by considerably curtailing its general principles 214 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. and omitting important significant facts. Only the thoroughly instructed student will arrive to that climax of wisdom, where he with the Greek philosopher admits that he knows comparatively nothing, the only true inducement to an irresistible craving for further knowledge. Now Botany is not a popular science, though it certainly deserves to be so. Only by the aid of this very interesting branch of Natural History do we learn to know the source of most of our articles of food, the raw materials of most industries, and the remedies for our diseases, &c, &c. ; while a closer study of the details will show us the most wonderful organizations, the most perfect designs, and the most ingenious structures and contrivances, and nowhere, perhaps, is the greatness of creation more apparent and deeper impressed. The first great branch of Botany, is Descriptive Botany, or the knowledge of the exterior features of plants, which is the only branch of Botany that ever can be popular as a study, while the more intricate branches, known as anatomy and physiology, require the aid of the microscope, and a considerable knowledge of natural philosophy and chemistry to enable the student to comprehend their details ; and must therefore necessarily for ever remain the property of a selected few. Descriptive or systematic Botany is doubtless the most important for all practical purposes, and no attempt should be left untried to facilitate the study of this knowledge. Among the numerous attempts which have been made with this object in view, none are more important than the arrangement or grouping of plants in definite orders or families, specified by peculiar features of the plant or parts of the plant. Here we must distinguish between artificial and natural systems, the first relating to a single peculiarity only, the last to the general features of plants. Among artificial systems, the only one which is important and has ever been popular is the Linneean arrangement, in which the classes and orders are defined by the number and character of the sexual organs. It has the great advantage of being easily comprehended, and of being very useful for all practical purposes, but of late its popularity has greatly decreased, because it has the great drawback of leading to a super- fluous knowledge of plants, without furthering science, and easily causing serious mistakes and leading to wrong conclusions. The Natural systems require a great deal more of study, and cannot be mastered without an almost perfect knowledge of Descriptive Botany. HOW TO FACILITATE THE STUDY OF BOTANY. 215 The founder of the Natural arrangement of plants was a French- man, A. de Jussieu, and so clear and excellent was his system that the alterations made by De Candolle, Endlicher, Liudley, Bentham and Hooker, Baillon, &c, are merely a consequence of the enormously increased number of species now known to science as compared with Jussieu 1 ' s period of life, or they are attempts at sub-division into more comprehensive groups, of which several, for instance that proposed by the great botanist, Professor Lindley, have proved too artificial, or to be founded on such minute details that they are unserviceable for practical purposes. The system now generally accepted, at least in the British possessions, is that laid down in Bentham and Hooker's Genera Rusitorum, but even yet at this period of advanced science, plants still exist which cannot easily be referred to any of the Natural Orders, without being sufficiently characteristic to justify the establishment of a new separate order, and it is probable that owing to the origin of the different forms of plants, by gradual alterations, as indicated by Darwin, there will always be found intermediate links and doubtful forms that will baffle any attempt at a complete classification. Even in such a large and well-defined, class as Dicotyledons (two-seed-leaved), we find exceptions in the peculiar features, as the one-seed-leaved Cylamen, and in Cuscuta, without any seed-leaves at all. All these attempts at facilitating the study of Botany are very useful for anybody acquainted with a preliminary knowledge of Botany, but do not give any assistance to the layman who intends pursuing the study, but to his or her disgust finds that before finding out the name of a plant or the order to which it belongs, he must work through a number of more or less unintelligible terms, which are too often a stumbling-block for the would-be student of Botany. My experience has also taught me that the study of Botany is far more popular in the northern countries of the Continent than in the far-stretching British possessions, and I can- not help thinking that this fact must be chiefly attributed to the difference in the botanical terminology. While the terms used in English works on Botany are too frequently quite unintelligible for the layman, because they are in most cases Anglicised Latin words, the terms used by German and Danish authors are generally easily comprehended, because they are translated into the mother- language, refer to objects of daily life, or are derived from the language itself. Though I am not an Englishman, I think I 216 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. have a sufficient knowledge of the language to rest assured of the possibility of substituting English, or at least English-sounding words, for the modern botanical terms, and in many cases I find that such terms really do exist, but are sparsely used. Convinced as I am that a reform of the more unintelligible terms would serve the purpose of facilitating and popularising the study of Botany more than anything else, I venture to propose that the Botanical Committee of this Society be requested to revise the existing terminology and to substitute English and intelligible terms for the more unintelligible ones. In order, however, to show that my project need not meet with serious obstacles, I shall take a few examples of commonly used terms and suggest English substitutes for them. The Natural arrangement of plants consists of two large divisions — Phanerogams, or " Flower-plants." Crytogamous plants, or " Spore-plants." " Flower-plants " are again divided into — Dicotyledons, or " Two-seed-leaved." Monocotyledons, or " One-seed leaved." The " Two-seed-leaved" in — Angiosperms, or " Seed-vessel-plants." Gynosperms, or iC Naked-seeded plants." The " Two-seed-leaved" are sub-divided into — ■ (a) Polypetalae, Eleutheropetahe, or t{ Free-crown leaved/' with the groups — Thalainiflorae, " Top-flowered." Discifloree Ci Disc-flowered." CalyciflorEe i( Cup-flowered." (b) Gamopetake, " Entire crowned." (c) Apetake, " Crownless." These groups are again divided into Natural orders, too numerous to enumerate here, the Latin names of which in many cases might advantageously be substituted by existing or new English ones, as— Eanunculaceae by the " Crowfoot order." Menispermaceae „ " Moonseed order." Anonaceee „ " Custard apple order." Crucifer® „ " Cross-flowered." Malvaceae „ " Hollyhock order." Sterculiacese „ " Flame-tree order." Tiliaceee „ " Lindenbloom order." HOW TO FACILITATE THE STUDY OF BOTANY. 2J7 Sapindaceae by the t( Soap-tree order." Leguininoscc i> ee Pod-fruited." Rosaceae >* it Rose order." Myrtaceae )> ee Myrtle order." Rubiacese »j a Coffee-tree order.' ' Cornpositce i} (i Head-flowered." Apocynaceas >5 te Twisted-flowered." Asclepiaceas )> te Silk-seeded." Boragineae )5 tC Rough-leaved." Bignoniaceae )) et Gaping-flowered." Scrophularineae *> > ee Cockscomb order." Polygonaceaa )) ee Buckwheat order." Euphorbiaceae }) ee Milkwort order." Urticaceae )) (C Nettle order." Amentaceae }) ee Catkin-flowered." Coniferaa )) e* Fir order." Cycadeas t> ee Cone-palms." Aroideae if te Spindle-flowered." Cyperaceas J) (t Half-grasses." Gramineaa )) ee Grasses." &c. &c. &c. The Natural orders consist of genera, for which word I should substitute " forms," and these again of species or " kinds." Regarding the details of the plants, the following short sketch may serve as an illustration of a revised terminology. The complete flower consists of four different kinds of transformed leaves. The outer series or " ring " is the calyx, " the cup," formed of free or united sepals, iC cup-leaves'' ; next comes the corolla, "crown," formed of free or united petals, "crown leaves"; the "cup" and "crown" together are called perianth, "floral cover/' which is termed double when both cup and crown are present, single when one of either is absent, in which case it is either calycine "cup- like" or corolline, " crown-like." When the floral cover is entire, the lower part is called the tube, the upper part the limb, collar, which may be campanulate, "bell-shaped"'; rotate, " wheel-shaped" ; hypocrateriform, f< saucer-shaped," &c, &c. Next comes the andrascium, the male organs, consisting of stamens, "dust bearers " 218 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. which are generally composed of filaments, " dust-threads" and anthers, "dust-buds," containing one or two (rarely more) anther cells, "dust bags/' filled with pollen, "dust." The innermost part of the flower contains the gynfecium, the female organs, consisting of pistils, " dust-channels," generally composed of an ovary, "fruit-bud," and a style ending in a stigma, " scar." The " fruit-bud" is formed of one or more carpels, " fruit-leaves," furnished with placentas, w egg-stools/' to which the ovules, "eggs," are attached either directly or by a funicle, " egg-string," the point of attachment being termed hilura, umbilicus, "navel." The " fruit-bud" develops into fruit, of which a great many forms are known ; a few of the more important are the legumen or " pod" ; the lomentum, "jointed pod"; the follicle, " podling" ; the siliqua, "double-pod"; the silicula, "short-pod"; the capsule, c 'burst-fruit"; the achene, "nutlet"; the samara, " wing fruit" ; the carcerule, "split fruit"; the pyxis, "lid-fruit"; the nut; the berry; the pepo, ''gourd fruit"; the pome, "pip-fruit"; the cone; the strobilus, a scale-cone" ; the serosis, " fruit mass" ; the sycomus, "cup-fruit," &c, &c. The fruit contains seed, consisting of a testa, " skin" ; a perisperm, s from the Orissa Coast. 10 Young Crocodiles (alive) A number of Crocodiles' Eggs. 1 Snake 1 Kingfisher 1 Pied Cuckoo 1 Y^oung Crocodile 3 Bird-Eating Spiders .. 1 Tree Snake (alive) .... 1 Panther Cub (alive).... 1 Young Crocodile I Chameleon (alive) A quantity of Insects .... 1 Coppersmith's Nest .... 1 Chameleon (alive) .... Description. 1 Sea Snake (alive) 1 Snake Chameleo vulgaris Macropus major Osphranter ruf us Ornithorbynchus para doxurus. Ptetopus poliocephalus Phalangista viverina Macropus fuliginosus Phascolomys platyrhinus .. Echidna hy strix Australian Australian Embrezia paradisea From Mozambique Birgus latro Chelonia virgata Carteris-spongia lammelosa, Chameleo vulgaris From Car war Ursus labiatus Made of Telegraph Wire .. Hippa asiatica Crocodilus palustris Dipsas ceylonensis Alcedo bengalensis Coccystes jacobinus Crocodilus palustris Mygale sp. Passerita mycterizans Felis pardus From Asirgurh From Aden • From Raipore, C. P Xantholoema hoemacephala Chameleo vulgaris Pelamis bicolor Ptyas mucosus Contributor. Mrs. Aston. 1 > By exchange, thro' Dr. Kirtikar, with the Mel- borne Museum. J Mrs. Skinner. Do. Mr. H. W. Searle. Do. Capt. Carpenter, R.N. Capt. G. E. Briggs. Mr. E. H. Aitken. Capt. Coleridge. Mr. E. H. Elsworthy. Dr. Alcock. Mr. E. C. K. Ollivant, C.S. Do. Col. F. W. Major. Mrs. Middletou. Do. Mr. Rustomjee normarjee. Rev. J. Mayr, S.J. Rev. F. Dreckmann, S.J. Mr. J. D. Inverarity. Mr, R. H. Light. Dr. Monks. Mr. J. A. Betham. Mr. Charles Douglas. Shrivlal Motiram, Khan Sabeb. Mr. A. Abercrombie. Mr. J. Warden. PROCEEDINGS. 233 Contributions. Description. Contributor. 1 Toddy Cat (alive) 1 Japanese Spider-Crab ... 1 Snow Panther's Skull Paradoxurus musanga Mr. H. E. James, C S. Purchased. Do and Skin. A quantity of Corals, Fish, and Mai'ino Animals. 1 Panther's Skull Mr. W. F. Sinclair, C.S. Do. 1 Bullfinch (alive) Capt. Nantes. Minor Contributions from Mr. A. Abercrombie, Mr. W. E.^Hart, Miss Keller, Captain J. F. C. Thatcher, Mr. J. W. Brown, Mr. H. W. Uloth, Mr. W. W. Squire, and Mr. A. McLaren. Exhibits. A curiously deformed sambhur horn, picked up near Baroda, by Mr. H. Littledale. A cutaneous horn grown on a camel's head, by Mr. W. Home, of Jodhpore. A water-coloured drawing of camels (the Society's Prize Picture at the late Art Exhibition), by Mrs. Scott. Contributions to the Library. Name. Presented by Zoology of Victoria, Decades I. to XVII Dr. Kirtikar, Geological Survey of Victoria Reports Do. Manual of New Zealand : Coleoptera. Parts II. to IV Do. Manual of the New Zealand Mollusca Do. Manual of the Birds of New Zealand Do. Manual of the Fishes of New Zealand Do. Catalogue of the Moths of India (Swinhoe and Cotes) From Government. Report of the Geological Survey of India, No. XX1L, Part 2 Catalogue of Manthodea Mr. J. Wood-Mason. The Society's Journal. The Honorary Secretary said that the first two numbers of tire Society's Journal were in the Press, but that their publication had been delayed owing to the non- receipt of the coloured lithographed plates from Messrs. Mintern Bros., London. Mango Weevils. The Honorary Secretary stated that if any of the members wished for further in- formation respecting the small beetles (Cryptorhynchus mangiferce) found in mango stones, regarding which several letters had appeared in the newspapers, they would find a full account of the insect in Mr. Simmons' pamphlet in the Society's Library. Proposed Zoological Garden. Mr. H. M. Phipson reminded those present that twelve months had now elapsed since the Bombay Natural History Society had offered to start a zoological garden, provided a suitable site could be obtained. The sum of Rs. 55,000 had been sub- scribed in a very short time amongst the members and their friends, but the scheme fell through, owing to the refusal of Government to give the Society the use of the required site. The only satisfaction now left to the Society was that their action had drawn public attention to the importance of the subject, and the result was that the Bombay Municipality had sanctioned the Commissioner's proposal to improve 234 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. and enlarge the existing collection of animals at the Victoria Gardens. Mr. E. C. K. Ollivant, the Municipal Commissioner, was taking a keen interest in the subject, and had asked the Bombay Natural History Society to assist him by appointing a sub- committee to visit the Gardens once a week, and to consult with him as to the best means of forming a zoological collection which would be a credit to the city. Mr. Phipson hoped the gentlemen who had offered donations a year ago towards the cost of cages, houses, &c, (to be named after them) would renew those offers, now that the Society had determined to help the Commissioner to carry through his scheme. Tho following Papers were then read : — Note on a Talking Bulbul. (By Mr. A. W. Morris, F.Z.S.) Which appeared in No. 2 (Vol. IV.) of this Society's Journal. " Our Hymenopteka." (By Mr. Robert C. Wroughton.) The Honorary Secretary read extracts from this very interesting paper, which he stated would appear in the course of a few days, in the Society's Journal, when it could be studied and enjoyed by the members at leisure. A vote of thanks was passed to Mr. Wroughton for his paper and for the collection of ants, bees, and wasps he had made for the Society. Mr. J. H. Steel, A.V.D., then read a valuable paper on " The Camel," which will be found on page 207 of this volume. Proceedings of the Society's Meeting on 10th August 1SS9. The usual monthly meeting of the Members of this Society took place on Wednes- day, the 7th August 1889, Dr. D. MacDonald presiding. The following new members were elected : — Mr. T. E. Sansom (of Batavia), Mr. E. H. Elsworthy, Mr. James Jardine, Rev. Goldwyer Lewis, Mr. H. Couldrey, Mr. S. Carleton, Mr. A. Murray, Mr. Wm. Tudball, B. C. S., Mr. Chas. Tudball, C. E., and Mr. G. R. Lynn. Mr. H. M. Phipson, the Honorary Secretary, then acknowledged the following contributions to the Society's Museum : — contributions during JULY. Contribution. Description. Contributor. 1 Toddy cat (alive) 1 Snake (alive) 2 Snakes Nest and Eggs of ... 3 Floricans' Eggs ... 1 Purple Coot (alive) 1 Tailor Bird's nest 1 Snake (alive) 1 Lizard (alive) Paradoxurus musanga. Tropidonotus quincunctiatus Python molurus, dendrophis picta. Common Wren Warbler. Sypheotides aurita Porphyris poliocephalus ... Ortnotomus sutorius Dipsas gokool Gymnodactylus Sp Mr. E. J. Ebden, C. S. Mr. X. Casteli. Mr. H. E. M. James, C. S. Mr. E. P. Close. Do. By exchange. Mr. S. Luard. Do. Mr. G. K. Wasey. CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE LIBRARY. The Moths of India (Swinhoe and Cotes) ; from the authors. Reports of the Geological Explorations in New Zealand ; in exchange. Proceedings of the Linnrean Society of N. S. Wales ; in exchange. Proceedings of the New Zealand Institute ; in exchango. PROCEEDINGS. 235 Annali del Musco Civico do Genova ; in exchange. Verhandlungcn dor zoologiych botanischon Gesellschaft (Vienna) ; in exchange. The Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bengal, Part II., No. 1; in exchange. A VALUABLE ADDITION. The Honorary Secretary drew attention to the magnificent pair of bison's horns which the Society ha 1 been able to secure through the kind assistance of Mr. 0. J. Malt by, of Peermaad, N. Travancore. The horns, which were greatly admired by every one present, measure no less than 43 inches across (utmost span). A cordial vote of thanks was passed to Mr. Maltby for his services rendered to the Society. exhibits. Mr. J. Lyons exhibited a live specimen of the Thick-tailed Galago (Galago craas audatus) from the East Coast of Africa. The power which this curious little animal posesses of folding up its membranous ears excited much interest amongst those present who examined it. Mr. S. Lua-d exhibited a curious monstrosity of the Poinciana pidcherrima, in which the peduncle and rhachis were excessively developed and flattened, being about If inches broad. On the two flattened surfaces the flowers were crowded together, producing a very gorgeous effect. It was decided to give a sketch of this abnormality in the Society's Journal. Mr. J. H. Steel, A.V.D., made some interesting remarks on a guinea-worm which had been received from Dr. C. Mallins of Hingoli, which appeared to differ in some important respects from the true dracunculus. A BEAK EATEN BY A TXGEE. Some interesting sporting notes by Professor Littledale, of Baroda, were read, amongst which was a singular account of a bear having been killed and eaten by a tiger. NEW RILES. The new rules which had been drawn up by the Committee were adopted, and it was farther decided that a copy of the same should be sent to every member of the Soch'ty. THE SOCIETY'S PRIZE AT TIIE BOMBAY ART EXHIBITION. Mr. Phipson reminded the members that last year the Bombay Natural History Society differed a prize of Rs. 10) for the best painting of animals at the Bombay Art Society's Exhibition. The prize was eagerly competed for, and produced a large number of interesting pictures at the Exhibition which was held in February last. The Honorary Secretary proposed that the Bombay Natural History Society should repeat their offer of this pri/.e at the Exhibition next cold weather — a suggestion which was unanimously agreed to. The Honorary Secretary read an amusing paper by Mr. E. H. Aitken, entitled " The Red Ant,'' which appeared in No. 2, Vol. IV. of the Society's Journal. Mmt.ern Bros. Chromo lith . London. 4-52. IXUS LUTEOLUS, Less. White, -"browed Bush Bulbul. JOURNAL OF THE BOMBAY atttpt pHtflitJi Ko. 4] BOMBAY, 1889- [Vol. IV. NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. {Continued from p. 98.) 342. -THE MALABAR WHISTLING THRUSH. Myioplwneus horsfieldi, Vig. The Malabar Whistling Thrush, or Idle Schoolboy, is not uncom- mon on the Ghats, confining itself to the wooded ravines and nullahs on the hill sides. It occurs but very rarely at Aboo. It is a permanent resident, commencing to breed about June ; the nest, which is a very large one, is generally found close to water ; * it is composed of fine sticks, roots, grass, moss, &c, having a good deal of earth mixed with it, especially at the bottom. The eggs, four in number, are broad ovals, slightly pinched in at one end, measuring 122 inches in length, by about 0'95 in breadth. In colour they are pinkish- or greyish-white, thickly speckled and spotted with pinkish-brown. They breed very commonly at Poorundhur, near Poona, where they are known as Hill Blue Birds. Khandalla, hth June. H. E. Barnes. Saptashring Nassick, July. J. Davidson, C. S. 345.— THE YELLOW-BREASTED GROUND THRUSH, Pitta brachyura, Linn. The Indian or Yellow -breasted Ground Thrush has not been recorded from Sind; it occurs sparingly at and around Deesa, but * Air. Davidson ,C.S., has often found them in the faces of tremendous cliffs. 32 238 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. becomes more common further south and east. In most of these places it occurs merely as a passing visitor, but some few remain to breed at suitable places on the Ghats ; the nest is a clumsy-look- ing structure, with an entrance on one side, composed of dead leaves, grass, and fine twigs, lined with finer grass aud leaves. It is usually placed in a bush or low tree, occasionally on the ground; the eggs, four or five in number, are broad oval in shape, measuring an inch in length by rather more than 0*£5 in breadth . in colour they are a beautiful glossy chin a- white, with deep maroon and purplish spots, streaks, and hair lines, denser towards the larger end, where they often form a zone or cap ; occasionally the lines are absent, and the egg is merely speckled finely at the larger end with maroon and pale lilac. Khondabhari Ghat, Khandish, July. J. Davidson, C.S. Bangs, Nassich, June, Do. Coast, Kanara, June. Do. Khandalla, June {nest only), II. E. Barnes. Saugor, C. P., July. Do. 354.— THE WHITE- WINGED GROUND THRUSH. Geociehla cyanotis, Jard. The White-winged Ground Thrush is a permanent resident all along the Sahyadri Eange, common in the south, but becoming much less so further north. It breeds early in the rains, making a cup-shaped nest of grass-roots and twigs, with which a great deal of earth is incorporated ; it is usually placed in a fork in a tree, at no great height from the ground. The eggs, three or four in number, vary a good deal both in size and colour. The usual type has a very pale green ground colour, spotted and speckled with various shades of reddish-brown ; occasionally the ground colour is pale olive-green and sometimes of a pale fawn. They measure one inch in length by nearly 072 in breadth. Khandalla, June, B. E. Barnes. Khondabhari Ghat, Khandesh, July 8f August. J. Davidson, C.S. Dangs, Nassick, June. D°- 359.— THE BLACK-CAPPED BLACKBIRD. Merula nigropilea Lafr. The Blackbird does not occur in Sind, is rare at Mount Aboo, and in Khandesh occurs only as a straggler, but in the Ghat parts NESTING IN WESTERN IND1V. 239 of Nassick, (elsewhere unknown) during the rains, itis very common. Mr, Davidson is of opinion that they arrive in the latter district about the beginning- of May, and leave at the end of the rains, after breeding, some few birds remaining later. In Ratnagiri it appears to be a fairly common permanent resident. They breed during the ruins, on trees and bushes, at all beiglit3 from the ground, from four to twenty feet. The nests, composed of green moss and twigs, are of the usual blackbird type, and are large and rather clumsy. The eggs, three or four in number, (generally three), are oval in shape, pinched in at one end, measuring 1*1 inches in length by about 0*9 in breadth ; in colour they are greenish-white, boldly blotched with various shades of bright reddish-brown, with an occassional underlying cloud of faint inky -purple. The markings are usually most dense at the larger end, where they often form an irregular cap. Some of them resemble eggs of the Missel Thrush. Mr. Davidson, C.S., obtained a great number of eggs from Sap- tashring, Nassick. I found a half- finished nest at A boo in June, but had to leave the hill before the eggs were laid, and a nest con- taining three slightly incubated eggs at Khandalla in July. I have received the eggs from the Pachmari Hills, in the Central Provinces. Saptashring 8f GJidts, Nassiek, June 8f July. J. Davidson, C.S. Khandalla, July. H. E. Barnes. Aboo (nest only) June. Do. 385.- THE YELLOW-EYED BABBLER. Pyctoris sinensis, Gm. The Yellow-eyed Babbler occurs more or less commonly through- out Western India, breeding during the rains, making typically a solid, compact, cone-shaped nest (often broadly truncated), with the apex downwards. It is composed of broad blades of grass, neatly lined with fine grass roots and stems, coated on the exterior with spider webs. Itis usually placed in a slender fork in a small tree or bush, sometimes between the upright stems of reeds, &c. I have never found the nest on a Banyan tree, as stated by Jerdon, on the autho- rity of Mr. Phillips. The eggs, four or five in number, vary much in colour ; one type (the commonest) has the ground colour a delicate pinkish-white, thickly freckled with specks of brick-red; another, the same 240 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. colour, but with the ground markings consisting of blotches and streaks of bright blood- and brick-red boldly defined, and having an occasional underlying cloud of pale inky-purple. Sometimes the ground colour is nearly wbite ; between these extremes every possible combination occurs. It may have been a mere coincidence, but all the eggs I took in Sind (and I took a great number) were of the first mentioned type. The eggs are broad oval in shape, and average 73 inches in length by about 0'59 in breadth. They have a high gloss. 3S6fer.— THE GREY-THROATED BABBLER. Pyctoris griseogularis, Hume. The Grey-throated Babbler is said to be a permanent resident in Sind, but I am not aware of the nest having been taken. 389.— THE NILGIRI QUAKER THRUSH, Alcippe poiocephala Jerd. Mr. Davidson, who has afforded me much valuable assistance in compiling this paper, has furnished me with this and the following note : — " This bird is very common at Matheran, and all through the Ghats, from the south of Kanara to the extreme north, where they end in Khandesh. It builds a neat nest, somewhat of the bulbul type, and generally conceals it among some thick branches, a favourite place being among some climbiug plant which has twisted itself among the branches of a thick tree. The nest is generally about ten to fifteen feet from the ground, but is sometimes within reach. The eggs, three in number, are very beautiful." In shape they are moderately broad ovals, somewhat compressed at one end, and have a fine and rather glossy shell. The ground colour is a delicate pink. There are a few pretty large and con- spicuous spots and hair lines of deep brownish-red, almost black, and there are a few large pinkish-brown smears and clouds, generally lying around or about the dark spots ; and theu towards the large end, there are several small clouds and patches of faint inky purple which appear to underlie the other markings. — (Nests and Eggs of Indian Birds, r>. 241.) As is usually the case with highly- coloured eggs, they subject to much variation in colour and markings NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 241 some taken by Mr. ~W. Davison are described as being of a beautiful reddish-pink, blotched and streaked with reddish carmine. 390.—THE BLACK-HEADED QUAKEE THRUSH. Alcippe atriceps, Jerd. Si This brisk little bird is very common in the jungles of Kanara from the sea-level to the full height of the Ghats and also in the jungles above, wherever there is any bamboo jungle. They go about in small parties or pairs, and seem in a chronic state of building nests. Indeed, I have watched the birds building frequently during the hot weather and early rains. I do not think the nests are for incubation as a rule, but that after the nesting season is over, the family always roost in a nest. For some reason or another they soon get tired of their nest, and six or seven are generally to be found close to one another. They are large masses of bamboo leaves with (in the cases of new ones) a hollow inside lined with fine grass ; generally (but not always) opening from the top. Cl The only nest I have taken with eggs was in the middle of June at Karwar, but an egg undoubtedly of this bird was brought me in April from, the crest of the Ghats. The eggs are large for so small a bird, and are of a pale pinkish-white colour, boldly spotted at the larger end with deep brick- red. There were two fresh eggs in the nest I found." 397.— THE RUFOUS-BELLIED BABBLER. Diimetia hi/perytltra, Franld. This little Bubbler has been recorded from the Konkan and Khan- desh, and from the Yindhian Hills, near Mhow. Mr. Wenden found them breeding at Tanna and at Khandalla during the rains ; the nest is globular in shape, composed of coarse grass blades, sparingly lined with fine grass. It is frequently placed on the ground amongst coarse grass, or dead leaves, with which it is not infrequently incorporated ; occasionally it is found in low scrub bushes only a foot or so from the ground. The eggs, four in number, are broad oval in shape, white in colour, spotted, speckled, streaked, and blotched with brownish-red and reddish-purple ; the markings are sometimes clearly defined, at others they are smudgy, in others again they are speckly. They measure 0*67 inches in length by about 0*53 in breadth. The birds are very commen at Saugor, breeding during July and August. 2?42 BOMBAY NATURAL HI9T011Y SOCIETY. 398.— THE WHITE-THROATED WREN BABBLER, Dumetia albogularis, Blyth. The White-throated Wren Babbler is much more generally dis- tributed in Western India than I once thou o-ht. It occurs all alono- the Sahyadri range, is not uncommon at Mount A boo, is fairly com- mon at and in the vicinity of Baroda, and I myself have found it breeding on the slopes under the cliffs, at Sion, near Bombay. It is a permanent resident at all these places, and breeds at the end of the hot weather and during the early part of the monsoon. The nest is globular in shape, having the entrance near the top, and is composed of broad-leaved grasses and sedges, and is placed on the ground, occasionally in low bushes. The eggs, usually four in number, are oval in shape, pinched in a little at one end, and measure 73 inches iu length \>y about 0'51 in breadth. The ground colour is china-white (sometimes pinkish- white), freckled and spotted with bright red; the markings are usually much denser at the larger end, where they often form a cap or zone, and having an occasional spot of lilac or clayey-brown inter- mingled. Mr. Davidson, C.S., took a nest towards the end of May, contain- ing seven eggs, but as they belonged to two distinct types, and as he, after waiting a short time, saw three birds flitting towards the nest ; they were possibly the joint produce of two females. Sion, mar Bombay, 10th May. II E. Barnes. Baroda, July and August. II. Litthdale, B A. Bangs 8f Hills in Nassieli, June and July. J. Davidson, C.S. Khondabhari Ghat, Khandesh, July &f August. Do. Dhulia, Khandesh, April. Vo. 3'JD.THE SPOTTED WREN BABBLER. Pellorneum rujiceps, Su-s. I have never met with this bird in the flesh, and I am indebted to Mr. J. Davidson for the following note : — li This bird is common in the Kanara jungles, and I have noticed it through all the hill-parts of Nassick. It is, however, about the shyest bird in the jungle, and is often overlooked. It breeds in April and May in Kanara, making its nest on the ground, in thick evergreen jungle, where there is no grass. The nest is a large ball of leaves with the entrance at the side. The number of eggs I have found have always been NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 243 either two or three, and I have found two eggs, hard set. They are in some respects not unlike a common type of Thamnobia fulicata, being greyish-white, thickly mottled with numerous very fine spots of various shades of brownish-purple. 404.-THE SOUTHERN SCIMITAR ^BABBLER. Pomqtorhinus horsfieldi, Sykcs. As its trivial name implies, this Babbler only occurs in the southern portion of the Presidency on the slopes and at the foot of the Sah}^adri Range, where it is stated to be a permanent resident. I can find no authentic record of its nest having been taken within our limits,* but elsewhere they breed from April to May, making a large globular nest of roots, grass, and moss, the moss being prin- cipally used as a lining ; it is placed on or near the ground, under the shelter afforded by a clump of grass or bush. The eggs, three or five in number, are somewhat elongated ovals in shape, and are smooth spotless white in colour ; they measure 1'08 inches in length by about 077 in breadth. 404fer.— HUME'S SCIMITAR BABBLER. Pomatorhinus ohscurns, Hume. The differences between this bird and the Southern Scimitar Bab- bler are slight, and it requires a cai'ef ul examination to distin- guish them from one another. It is very common on Mount Aboo and on the hills in the neighbourhood, and specimens sent to Mr. Hume, from the borders of Khandesh and Nassick, as horsfideli, by Mr. Davidson, were identified by the former as this bird. Person- ally he doubts their distinctness, as also do I. He has taken nests on 'the Ghats bordering between Khandesh and Nassick in April. The number of eggs in all cases was two, and the nests seemed to him to be slighter built than the rough nest he has seen of horsfieldi. No Scimitar Babbler of any kind has as yet been recorded from Sind. I found a nest at Mt. Aboo in the middle of June, nearly com- pleted, but had unfortunately to leave before the eggs were laid. It was a loose ball of coarse grass, and was placed under a clump of ferns. * Since the above was written, Mr. Davidson has informed me that he took a nest in the Varna valley, Satara, in April, containing two fresh eggs. 244 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY S0CIET7. 432.— THE BENGAL BABBLER. Malacocercus terricolor, Hoclgs. The Bengal Babbler is very common in Sind, and occurs not uncommonly in Guzerat, but becomes rarer further south, where it is replaced by the closely allied Jungle Babbler {Malacocercus malabaricus) . They are permanent residents where found, breeding from March to July, but occasionally nests are found at other seasons (I took a nest containing four eggs in January) ; the nests are cup-shaped, and are, as a rule, loosely constructed, but now and then a more carefully-made nest is met with. They are often found in gardens, placed in forks in fruit trees, bushes, thick hedges, vine- ries, &c. They are composed of ■ grass-roots and stems ; the eggs, three or four in number, are broadish oval in shape, but are subject to considerable variation ; they measure about an inch in length by 0* 78 in breadth; they are of a beautiful greenish-blue color, and are generally highly glossy. 433.— THE WHITE-HEADED [BABBLER. Malacocercus griseus, Lath. The White-headed Babbler occurs not uncommonly at and near Belgaum, and is common all along the Kanara Coast, and above the Ghats wherever the country is at all open, but does not appear to come much further north. They breed twice a year, from April to June, and again in October and November ; the nest, cup shaped, is composed of fine twigs, grass stems and roots, and is loosely made; it is usually placed in the centre of some small tree or bush; the eggs, three or four in number, are of a deep glossy greenish- blue, quite unspotted. Those in my collection are much deeper in colour than any other Babbler's egg that I am acquainted with, and, although taken many years ago, are still as bright and glossy as at first ; they have not, of course, been exposed to the light. Mr. Davidson says : ( 'Eggs of this Babbler I took in Mysore where the palest Babblers I have ever taken, and others I have taken in Kanara are as deep as malabaricus." They measure 0'98 inches in length by about 0"7 in breadth. Kanara, March 8f April. J. Davidson, C.S. 434.— THE JUNGLE BABBLER. Malacocercus malabaricus, Jerd. The Jungle Babbler takes the place of the Bengal Babbler in the southern portion of the Western Presidency. NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 245 It is very irregular in its breeding habits (but this trait seems common to the genus) ; nests have been taken from April to October and occasionally earlier. Both eggs and nests are absolutely iden- tical with those of the Bengal Babbler, Malacocercus terricolor. Mr. Davidson says : " I have taken nests in all the jungle parts of Khandesh (Satpooras and Ghats) in all jungle parts of Nassick, and in Kanara." 435.— THE RUFOUS-TAILED BABBLER. Malacocercus somervittei, Sykes. The Rufous-tailed Babbler is much more extensively distributed than is usually thought ; Mr. Hume says it is confined to a narrow- strip of country, sixty miles north and south of Bombay, but it occurs very much further south than this, and is the common Babbler of the Ratnagiri district. They breed from June to August, much in the same way as the other Babblers. The eggs, three or four in number, are uniform deep greenish-blue, and in size and shape resemble those of th,e Bengal Babbler. Dadur 8f Sion, near Bombay, June Sf July. H. E. Barnes. 436.— THE LARGE GREY BABBLER. Argya malcolmU Syhcs. The Large Grey Babbler is common in the Deccan, fairly com- mon in Rajputana and Guzerat, is very rare in Sind, and appears to be altogether absent from Ratnagiri and the more southern portions of Western India. They breed more or less the whole year through, but May to July is the season when most nests will be found. The nest, which is a loose cup-shaped structure, composed of fine twigs and grass roots, is generally placed in a fork in a small tree, a babool by preference, at no very great height from the ground. The eggs, three or four in number, are not distinguishable from those of the Bengal Babbler ; nests are often found in the trees that border the sides of the roads. 436.— THE RUFOUS BABBLER. Layardia subrufa, Jerd. This is another bird concerning the breeding of which little or nothing seems to be known. Mr. Davidson found it to be a per- manent resident in the Kanara forests, not at all common and very local, He has never seen its nest. 33 246 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 438.— THE STRIATED BUSH BABBLER. ChatarrJicea caudata, Dum. Except in Ratnagiri and the more southern portion of the Presi- dency, the Striated Bush Babbler is extremely common, breeding more or less the whole year round, making a deep, cup -shaped nest, much more neatly and compactly built than that of any other Babbler I am acquainted with. It is composed of grass roots and stems, occasionally unlined, but usually well lined with fine grass and hair. The nest is placed in the centre of some low thorny bush, such as a stunted babool. In Sind, the wild caper bushes that are so common on the hillocks and ridges of wind-blown sand, are generally selected, but even here the babool bushes have their share of nests. The eggs, three or four in number, are longish ovals in shape, and in colour are bright spotless blue or greenish blue. They measure 0'84 inches in length by about 0*63 in breadth. 439.— THE STRIATED REED BABBLER. ChatarrJicea earlii, Blyth. Within our limits the Striated Reed Babbler only occurs in suit- able places in kind, where it is a permanent resident, breeding from March to September, and having at least two broods in the year. The nest, which is rather massive and cup-shaped, is composed of broad grass leaves and roots, and is placed in close-growing reeds or low bushes. The eggs three or four in number, are bright bluish green in colour, and in shape are longish ovals, somewhat piuched in at one end. They measure '96 inches in length by about 0*73 breadth. Hyderabad, Sind, March to September. H. E. Barnes. Eastern Narra, Sind, March to October. S. B. Doig, Esq. 440.-THE STRIATED MARSH BABBLER. Megalurus jpalustris, Hors. Mr, Davidson found this bird in the islands in the Taptee in Khandesh, from November to May, and is certain it bred there. Whether it stayed or not during the rains he does not know ; he never found a nest. Elsewhere they breed during May and June, making a somewhat globular nest with the entrance near the top ; it is composed entirely of coarse grass, and is placed in a dense cluster of reeds or grass. NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 247 An egg hi my collection measures 0'9 inches in length by 0'63 in breadth. The ground is a dull dead white, thickly speckled and spotted with purplish and blackish-brown. 441.— THE GRASS BABBLER. Chcetornis striatus, Jerd. The Grass Babbler is not uncommon in Nothern Gujerat and in some purts of Central India. It breeds during the rains, making a i-ouudish nest having the entrance hole near the top. It is com- posed of dry grass, and is placed on the ground in the centre of a low bush. The eggs, four in number, are white in colour, speckled all over with reddish-brown and pale lavender. These spots are much more dense at the larger end, where they form a cap. They much resemble eggs of Franklinia huchanani, but are much larger, equalling those of the Striated Bush Babbler. Deesa, 18th August. Cap . Butler. Deesa, 4th September (nestlings) . H. E. Barnes. 442.— THE BROAD-TAILED REED-BIRD. Schamicola platyuras, Jerd. The Broad-tailed Reed-Bird is very rare. Capt. Butler found it breeding in September at Belgaum. The nests were in long grass by the side of rice fields, but unfortunately he does not describe either the nests or eggs. 443. -THE LONG-TAILED REED-BIRD. Laticilla buniesi, Blyth. The Long-tailed Reed-Bird is very numerous in the Eastern Narra District and some other suitable places in Sind, but has not been recorded from any other part of the Western Presidency. Mr. Doig appears to be the only oologist who has as yet taken the eggs. He found them breeding in March, June, and September, and describes the nest as being composed of coarse grass lined with fine grass and roots, and measuring four to five inches in diameter externally and two and a half internally, the egg cavity being one and a half inches deep. The nest is placed in the centre of a tussock of grass. The usual number of eggs is three, aud they average 0'72 248 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY., inches in length by about 0*54 in breadth. In colour the eggs vary a great deal, there being two distinct types, one resembling some eggs of the Yellow-throated Sparrow {Gymnoris fiavicollis), having the ground colour of a pale green covered with large irregular blotches of purplish-brown, and the other having the ground colour very pale cream, with large rusty blotches, which are moBt numerous at the large end. They desert the nest on the slightest provocation, even after the eggs are laid. The eggs in my collection, which I owe to the kindness of Mr. Doig, belong to the first-mentioned type. 446.— THE GHAT BLACK BULBUL. Ilypsipetes ganesa, Sykes. The Ghat Black Bulbul is stated to occur sparingly on tho Sahyadri Range, only as far north as Mahableshwar, but I have received the nest and eggs from Matheran, taken in June, and am almost certain that I saw a bird at Khandalla in July. The nest was placed against the side of a stout branch, just where a few thin twigs jutted out, and these formed a support to the nest, some of them being incorporated with it. The nest appears small for the size of the bird, the egg cavity measuring about two and three quarters inches in diameter by about one and a half deep. The nest is composed principally of moss, well lined with fine grass and moss roots. The eggs are oval in shape, pinched in a little at one end, and measure rather more than an inch in length by about three-quar- ters in breadth ; they are of a pale pinkish-white stone colour, profusely spotted and speckled with claret and purplish-red, and having a few underlying spots of pale inky-purple. Mr. Davidson found it common in the Kanara jungles, princi- pally on and above the Ghats. Kanara, April and May. J. Davidson, C. 8. 450.—THE YELLOW-BROWED BULBUL. Criniger ictericus, Sw. Mr. Davidson has kindly furnished me with the following in- teresting note : — "This is a very common bird in all the Kanara jungles wherever the jungle is evergreen. It builds a slight nest on a thin branch of a low sapling. This is fastened by the sides to a fork like an oriole's, and is composed outwardly of rope-like fibre, with a dead NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 249 leaf or two laid on it, and lined internally with fine grass cut into short pieces. The edge has a slight coating of spider and red ant webs . " All the nests I have seen have been from eight to fifteen feet from the ground, and none have contained more than three eggs or young (generally two). The eggs are long shaped, of a pinkish- white, faintly blotched at the large end with close blotches of a pink slightly deeper than the ground colour. Some are exactly similar in colour to those of (Myagra azurea), the Black-naped Blue Fly-catcher." 452.— THE WHITE-BROWED BULBUL. Ixus luteolus, Less. The White -browed Bush Bulbul is common about Bombay, but appeal's to avoid the Ghat. They are permanent residents, breed- ing daring the rains. Mr. Davidson found them common along the Kanara Coast, breeding like most of the Bulbuls occasionally at almost all seasons. The nest, composed of thin twigs, is lined with fine grass stems, and is suspended between the twigs forming a fork, in a low bush or tree, and is generally overshadowed by another bough. The eggs, three in number, are oval in shape, measuring 0*94 inches in length by 0*62 in breadth. In colour they are pinkish-white, thickly spotted and blotched with claret and purplish-red. These markings are much more profuse at the larger end. Mt. Sion {near Bombay), July 8$ August. H. E. Barnes. 455. -THE RUBY-THROATED BULBUL. Rubigula gularis, Gould. Mr. Davidson informs me that the Ruby-throated Bulbul is rather a common bird in Kanara forests both on the coast and above the ghats. Neat nests of the bulbul type in low bushes have been pointed out to him as belonging to this bird, but though a permanent resident he has never taken the eggs. 457.— THE GREY-HEADED BCLBUL. Brachypodius poiocephalus, Jerd. Mr. Davidson found the Grey-headed Bulbul to be not uncommon in the Kanara forests above the ghats, where he has no doubt it is a permanent resident, but he kuowa nothing of its breeding habits. 250 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 459— THE WHITE-EARED CRESTED BULBUL. Otocompsa leucotis, Gould. The White-eared Crested Bulbul is the common bulbul of Sind and occurs not uncommonly in Northern Guzerat. They breed from April to August ; the nests are usually placed in dense tamarisk bushes occasionally in small babool trees), at heights varying from three to six feet from the ground ; they are cup-shaped, slenderly but firmly built, and bear handling well; they are composed of fine twigs of tamarisk, &c, grass roots and vegetable fibre, and are unlined. The eggs, three in number, very rarely four, are longish ovals in shape, pointed at one end, and are reddish white in colour, spotted, streaked, and blotched with brownish and purplish red. They measure 0'82 inches in length by 0*64 in breadth. Hyderabad, Sind, April to August. H. E. Barnes. 4606/s.— THE SOUTHERN RED-WHISKERED BULBUL. Otocompsa fuscicaudata, Gould. The Southern Red-whiskered Bulbul is common all along the Sahyadri range and forests adjacent ; it is also very common at Mount Aboo. It is equally common in the vicinity of Bombay. They breed from March to June, making a deep cup-shaped nest composed of grass roots, with a quantity of dead leaves or dried ferns worked into the bottom, and lined with fine grass and the hair-like roots and stems of ferns. They are often bound on the exterior with spider webs. The eggs, two or three in number, are reddish-white in colour, thickly streaked, spotted, and speckled with rich blood and brick- red, with a few scarcely visible spots of pale inky-purple. They measure 0*9 inches in length by about 0*66 in breadth. Mt. 8 ion (near Bombay), March to May. M. E. Barnes. Khandalla, June and July. Bo. Aboo, May and June. Bo. Nassick Ghdts, Feb. to July. J. Bavidson, C. S. Kanara forests, Feb. to May. Bo. 462.--THE COMMON MADRAS BULBUL. Pycnonotus hcemorrhous, Gm. The Common Madras Bulbul is very abundant throughout the Western Presidency, except in Upper Sind, where it is very rare. NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 251 They breed from April to October, rearing at least two broods in the year. The nest is generally built on a low bush or fruit tree rarely at any great height from the ground. It is neatly but lightly made, cup-shaped, and is composed of grass stems, lined with finer grass, and occasionally with hair. The eggs, three or four in number, are rather longish ovals in shape, pinkish- white in colour, speckled, blotched, streaked and clouded with claret and purplished-red. The markings are liable to excessive variation. They measure 0"9 inches in length by 0*68 in breadth. Lately at Saugor, C. P., I have found many nests, rather high up in forks of medium- sized babool trees. 4G3.— THE COMMON GREEN BULBTJL. Phyllom is jerdoni, Blyth . I have never found a nest of the Common Green Bulbul, although it occurs more or less commonly (with the exception of Sind) through- out the Presidency. Mr. Davidson, who has been more successful, has kindly furnished me with the following note : — " This bird is very common on the Nassick ghats, about Egutpura and is found in all the wooded districts of this Presidency. It con- ceals its nest in a thick tree, such as a mango or mowa, so that it is in many cases quite impossible to discover it by merely examining the tree from below. The nest, a neat cup, is suspended from the side of a fork or succession of twigs. I have found it only at heights from twelve to twenty feet from the ground. The eggs are very long shaped, and all white, with small blotches of very dark purple spar- ing scattered over them. I have always found either two or three eggs." Khondabhari Ghdt, Khandesh, Aug. J. Davidson, C.8 Nassick districts, Feb. Do. 464.— THE MALABAR GREEN BULBUL. Phyllornis malabaricus, Gm. I can find nothing on record regarding the breeding of this bird, although it appears to be a permanent resident where it occurs. 252 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 463.— WHITE-WINGED GREEN BULBUL OR THE WHITE WINGED IORA. Iora tiphia, Lin, The White-winged Iora is altogether absent from Sind, and is replaced in Northern Gujerat by the next species. It appears to be common in the Southern and Eastern portions of Western India, and occurs not uncommonly on Mount Aboo. It is of course a permanent resident, breeding from the com- mencement of the rains until near the end. The nest, a deepish cup, is usually placed on a horizontal bough, generally at a place where a few upright twigs spring out from the bough, helping to keep it securely in position ; occasionally the nest is placed in an upright fork, composed of three or four twigs, and in this case the nest is generally deeper. It is composed of vegetable fibres, lined with fine grass and hairs, and is thickly coated on the outside with spider webs. It is firmly and compactly made, but the walls are thin, often not more than three-sixteenths of an inch in thickness ; the bottom too, when the nest is placed on a horizontal bough, is very thin, often not more than one-eight of an inch, but when it is placed in an upright fork, the bottom is continued to a blunt point, and is then often an inch or even more in thickness. The nest a good deal resembles that of the White-browed Fantail Flycatcher, but is rather more loosely made and is not quite so compact. The eggs, two or three in number, are moderately broad ovals in shape, a little pointed at one end ; the ground colour is greyish-, yellowish-, or creamy -white, having longitudinal streak of purplish- reddish or yellowish-brown. These streaks start from the larger end, where they often form an imperfect cap or belt, often leaving the smaller end comparatively clear. They average about 0*G9 inches in length by rather more than 0-54 in breadth. Neemuch, July and August. H. E. Barnes. Baroda, June to October, H. Littledale. 4686w.— THE WESTERN IORA. Iora nigrolutea, Mar. This the is common Iora of Guzerat, and occurs most abundantly NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 253 in the vicinity of Deesa, where alone I have had an opportunity of observing; it is equally abundant with tiphiain West Khandesh, and appears to straggle a good deal ; it breeds about the same time and in the same manner as the Common Iora, but the only eggs I have seen had the ground colour almost pure white, and the markings were two shades of purplish-brown ; but I have no doubt, if a sufficiently large series were examined, no constant difference would be detected. Deesa, June and July, H. E. Barnes. Dhulia, Khandesh, July. J, Davidson, C.S. 469.— THE FAIRY BLUE BIRD. Irene puella, Lath. I have never had an opportunity of examining this bird in life, and am indebted to Mr. Dividson, C.S., for the following interesting note, which I reproduce in extenso : — " This, about the loveliest bird in the Bombay Presidency, is a fairly common bird through the forests of Kanara, and I have often seen five or six pairs in a morning's walk. The nests are, however, very difficult to find. The first I obtained was in the end of March, and contained two half-grown young. It was close to a river and a road. The nest was about twenty feet from the ground, in a thin tree, and was visible from any distance; it was a clumsy structure of twigs, liued with fine roots, very much like the lining on Volvo- civora sykesi, and there was a little moss round the outside. Another nest taken in the end of April was on a pollarded tree, about fifteen feet from the ground ; it contained two fresh eggs, and the nest was more neatly made, the twigs being bound round outwardly with green moss. The egg or eggs (for one was broken before it reached my hands) was of an olive-green colour, blotched with brownish-olive. It somewhat resembled the egg of {Eudyna- mis honor ata) the Common Koel, but was a good deal narrower. 470.— THE INDIAN ORIOLE. Oriolus kundoo, Sykes. The Indian Oriole occurs pretty generally throughout Western India, but is decidedly uncommon in Sind, and appears to be replaced on the higher ranges of hills by the Black-headed Oriole. They are permanent* residents, breeding during May and June. * Mr. Davidson, C. S., says : — " A migrant, as far as I can judge, in Kanara, all leaving the district isa May. 34 254 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. The nest is a deep purse-like cup, carefully suspended between two twigs forming a fork, to which it is firmly attached by strips of bark, grass, and, occasionally, even bits of cloth. It is strongly and compactly made, and is well lined with fine grass. From below the nest looks very small, and is usually partially hidden by foliage, above it must be invisible, although placed rather high up, and almost at the extremity of a bough. The eggs, three in number, occasionally four, are moderately long- ish ovals in shape, pinched in a good deal at one end, but other forms are not uncommon; they are of a glossy china-white colour* thinly sprinkled at the larger end with spots and specks of blackish- brown, mostly confined to the larger end ; these markings are some- times almost entirely black, but occasionally they are reddish, or even yellowish-brown, but this last type is very uncommon. They vary a great deal in size, but the average is rather more than l'l inch in length by about 0'8 in breadth. The eggs forming a clutch often differ conisderably both iu size and shape. As soon as the eggs are laid, the birds seem to lay aside their usual timorous disposition, and boldly attack any bird that ventures near the nest ; this habit often leads to its discovery. If nestlings are found within a reasonable distance, say a mile or so, and are placed in a cage, in a position accessible to the parent birds, they will attend and feed them, until long after they are able to fly and feed themselves; but as a rule, when the old birds cease to visit them, they refuse food, pine away and die. 471.— THE BLACK-NAPED INDIAN ORIOLE. Oriolus indicus, Jcrd. Occurs very rarely in Kanara ; I kuow nothing of its breeding. 472.— THE BLACK-HEADED ORIOLE. Oriolus melanocephalus, Lin. I have never met with a nest of the Black-headed Oriole. Mr. Davidson, C.S., has kiudly furnished the following note : — "This bird is common throughout the ghats from Khandesh down to Egutpoora, inhabiting all the warm valleys. " It is also very common all the year in the Kanara jungles below the ghats, but leaves the part above the ghats, at all events, to a great extent in May, NESTING IN WESTERN INDIA. 255 " It builds a very compact nest of bamboo leaves and grass, lined with fine roots, and is suspended between two twigs forming a fork, generally about fifteen feet from the ground. The number of eggs is three, and they vary a good deal. They are generally of a light salmon colour, with bold blotches of dark lilac-brown scattered over the broader end. They are fairly glossy, many resemble much some types of (BucJianga atra) the Common King Crow, but are larger and more glossy." They average 1*14 inches in length by about 0"82 in breadth. Nassick Ghdts, May to July. J. Davidson, C. 8. Khanbari Ghdts, Khandesh, July. Bo. THE MAN-EATING TIGRESS OF MUNDA.LI. Since Mr. Reginald Gilbert read a paper on Man-Eating Tigers, before the Members of the Society, on 4th September 1889, the subject has been freely discussed, and we are consequently glad to reprint the followiug account of the destruction of a veritable Man- Eating Tigress, which appeared in the Indian Forester for July 1889 (Vol. XV., No. 7):— " Our readers will forgive us for being so late in the day with our account of this brute, which had been for more than 12 years the scourge of the hills immediately north of Chakrata. The present paper was, however, already in print before our June Number issued from the press, and it was only want of space that prevented its publication in that Number. " According to the information we have been able to collect, our tigress seems to have been first heard of in 187G. Throughout her career as a man-eater, .she confined herself to a narrow beat hardly 24 miles from end to end, ranging from the Hama Sarai group of villages in the Jumna Valley to the spur immediately overlooking Chakrata. "After leaving the Jumna Valley she came up to Lokhiir at the top of the spur just above Rama Sarai. From Lokhar she followed up to the other end of her beat, the main ridge which forms the water- parting between the Jumna and Tons rivers. She never left this ridge or its vicinity to go down to the numerous villages which skirt the valleys of the several mountain streams that run down into the 256 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. Tons. This ridge, being from 8,000 to 10,000 feet above the sea, is covered with snow from December to the end of March, so that durin°- the winter she remained at the lower elevations round Kama Sarai. Bat so soon as the snows were melted, she would come np ao-ain, although daring April-May and October-November the tem- perature on the ridge after sundown stands constantly in the vicinity of freezing, and is often low enough for the ground to remain frozen hard for hours after the sun is up. " There can be no doubt that she took to man-eating under stress of long starvation, due to the difficulty of securing game in the steep mountainous country in which she had established herself- Previous to her appearance tigers were unknown so far north in Jaunsar. "About that time, however, professional graziers (Gujars), gradually forced to move eastwards from Kashmere owing to scarcity of grazing for their increasing herds, reached the Dehra Dun. The custom of these men is to remain in the hills until driven down to the Sub-Himalayan forests by the severe winter there. Our tigress thus no doubt followed the herds from the Dun forests, and got left behind when these went down again at the beginning- of winter. " She appears from the very first to have had cubs with her, which fact probably accounts for her great destmctiveness and boldness soon after her arrival in the hills. In September 1880 she took up her quarters, with three nearly full-grown cubs, in the neighbourhood of Deoban, o| miles above Ckakrata, and killed three men within a fortnight. One of these cubs was shot on September 15th by Mr. Smythies almost at the upper end of Chakrata ; another was killed by Mr. Lowrie eight days later; while the third, put up with the mother in a beat only five days after, got away wounded. Through all the vigorous hunt after her and her cubs during a whole fortnight the tigress escaped scatheless. "It has been already said above that she took toman-eating owing to the precipitous nature of her haunts, which prevented her from obtaining a sufficient supply of the usual food of tigers, viz., deer, pigs, &c ,and, when opportunity offers, cattle. The same circumstance drove her to attacking flocks of sheep and goats, which are very numerous in those rich high-level pastures during the period from the m3lting of the snows to the approach of winter. She would make one or more rushes through a flock, killing several animals, only a few of which she could eat. Thus her appetites were not MAN-EATING TIGRESS OF MUNDAET. 257 purely anthropophagous, although she no doubt preferred the flavour of the better nourished flesh of mau. She often apparently disap- peared for weeks and months at a time when she chanced to get in amongst a sufficiency of game. When this supply ran short, she would suddenly appear and attack men with increased persistence, killing several within a few days. As she grew older, her taste for human flesh increased, and her fear of man proportionately diminished. " If near a herd of cattle, she took no notice of the cattle, but went straight for the herdsmen. On one occasion, in June 1883, she walked at night into an out-office of the Lokhar rest-house, where some men were sleeping at the further end, a cow and her calf being tied up in the door-way. She passed these animals without taking any notice of them, and carried off one of the caen. " Mention of this last-mentioned event leads us to a necessary digres- sion in order to recall to the reader's mind the hio-hlv imaginative account of the same, which appeared in June last in the Civil and Mili- tary Gazette, Lahore, and was subsequently reprinted by almost every newspaper in India, and even those in England. The wag who wrote that article put into his picture a bright moon, the invariable cubs, and the usual play with her victim which the fond mother goes in for in order to teach her offspring how to kill. The picture was still further embellished by several human figures perched up in surrounding trees, watching this spectacle of horror. What actually took place was simply this: — The movements of the affrighted cow and calf, and no doubt also the noise made by the tigress as she darted off with her victim, woke the other men, who began to interrogate one another as to the cause of the commotion. Some of them even went to the door to investigate. Everything was, however, still now, and the men rolled themselves up again in their bedding, not recognising in the dark that one of their number was missing. What happened in the meantime outside was that the tigress, alarmed by the sudden exclamations of the awkened sleepers, dropped her man and made off to one side. When all was quiet again, she came back and picked up the unfortunate man, who just then became conscious and groaned aloud with pain. Realizing at last the position of affairs, the men inside the room rushed out with loud cries only to see, in thedimlioht from the clouded sky, the tigress disappear with their comrade down the slope on to the road below. Mr. G.P. Chill, from whom we had the preceding details a few days after their occurrence, and who was sleeping in the rest-house, came out with his rifle on hearing the cries 25S BOMBAY NATURAL TIISTORY SOCIETY. of the men, but the tigress had already disappeared, and he merely fired off his weapon in the direction in which she had gone, in order to calm the fears of the men. We ourselves were on that eventful nio-ht in camp at Mundali, only 5 miles from Lokhali, and the account wo have given above accords in every particular not only with the infor- mation given by Mr. Chill, but also with that given to us directly by eye-witnesses, and by Dhan Singh, the headman of Lokhar, whom we met last only a few days after the death of the tigress, ft There was a strange fatality which always brought the tigress to Mundali while we were there. In 1833 we spent two months at Mundali, during the whole of which time she kept within the immediate neighbourhood. For several nights running she patrolled the road running along the main bridge above Muudali, and also the bridle-path connectng Mundali with that road. She often prowled round our camp at night, on two occasions coming right inside it. The first time she came, it was past midnight, and every one was asleep. Our orderly was however, fortunately sleeping lightly, and was suddenly awakened by the dull thuds of some heavy animal, like a buffalo (to use his own words), galloping down the soft slope just above his shuldari- Apresentiment of the tigress' approach made him snatch up a brand from a large fire that was burning immediately outside the opening of the tent, and at the same time to shout away at the top of his voice. He had hardly begun doing this, when the flaps of the tent were suddenly fluug open, and he found the brute glaring at him with only the log fire between them. His shouting awoke the half-dozen fellow- occupants of his tent, and between them they made such an infernal hullaballoo, while he kept flourishing the fire-brand across the open- ing of the tent in the face of. the tigress, that the beast could do nothing more than continue standing there and glare at the men. This went on for about two minutes, by which time the whole camp was astir, and a number of men, armed with bludgeons, fire-brands, and anything else they could pick up, rushed on the scene. Such an accession of force was of course rather more than the tigress had bai'gained for ; she sprang back a few paces, tore up in her rage great clods of earth, and sulkily walked away, by the same route by which she came, into some cover not far off. The orderly's tent, which had been pitched about 30 yards in advance of the rest of the camp, was of course forthwith abandoned, and its occupants were only too glad to pass the rest of the night within the body of the camp. "The next visit the tigress paid us was about ]0 p.m., before any one MAN-EATING TIGRESS OF MUNDALI. 259 had turned in for tbe night. The moon, just passed her full, was concealed by clouds, but enough of her light passed through to en- able objects up to 20 yards off to be discerned clearly. A party of the servants were sitting gossiping round a fire on the edge of a terrace. Suddenly one of the party, who was facing the edge of the terrace, caught sight of a crouching animal about 8 yards off. Instantly a hue and cry was raised, and the tigress sprang away and disappeared down the slope. "A few days before our arrival atMundali the tigress had entered a cabin built of large hewn slabs, in which about 18 men were alseep, and walked off with one of the sleepers without awaking the rest. This incident and the attack on our orderly's tent combined to render us circumspect, and before retiring for the night we invariably bolted the doors and windows of the rest-house occupied by us. We are reminded of this circumstance by the remembrance of some raillery, of which we were the butt atadinner party, and the purpose of which was to bring our courage into question. The scoffer, who will recog- nise himself when he reads this, laughed at the mere idea of the most daring man-eating tiger going near a house or tent, much less entering it. The evidence of the orderly and his companions who had seen the tigress by the light of their fire, the evidence of our own eyes, which had seen her well-marked foot-prints before the orderly's tent and in the soft soil of the slope beyond, went for nothing. In our terror a leopard had assumed the proportions of a tiger ! Against the direct evidence of the eyes of several individuals, who were by no means griffs in the matter of tigers and leopards, the mere opinion of one individual, who said that only a leopard could display the boldness this supposed tiger had been reported to have shown, was accept ed as sufficient disproof. The supposed leopard has now been shot, after repeating all its previous perfor- mances, which it was so absolutely certain no tiger could have been guilty of; but unfortunately for our scoffer, this leopard has had {he bad grace to turn out to be a tiger, not the mythical tiger seen by the dim light of the camp fire through the spectacles of terror but a real unmitigated tiger. " For those who are still incapable of believing that a tiger can enter a tent or house, we will cite another instance which occurred last March. Sawing operations were going on just above the Tons, about 24 miles further in the interior of the Himalayas than Mundali, and the sawyers were located in several huts huddled together by the side of the Tons-llama Sarai bridle-path. One night a tigress, who 260 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. had previously killed and eaten two people, and was accompanied by two young cubs, went up to one of the huts in the middle of the group, pushed open the door, entered the hut, stepped over the first sleeper, and seized the next one by the throat, causing instantaneous death. "But to return to the Mundali tigress. We have said before that by a strange fatality her visits and ours to Mundali always coincided. On the 7th of May, 1889, we reached Mundali in company with the Forest School students, who were on their hill tour. On our way we had been informed that she had just been killing two women in Rama Sarai, and so we congratulated ourselves that she was well out of our way. Nevertheless we warned the students and their servants to be careful. One party of four European students pitched their tents on a spur about 80 yards above the place where our orderly's tent had been attacked six years ago. Towards 10 o'clock that night, the moon being up, one of the students happened to come out of his tent, when only eight paces off he observed a large animal standing: at the same distance from their kitchen tent. He at once called to the others. The tigress, for she it was, finding herself observed before she was ready to do any damage, fled down the hill and disappeared. The students could hear the thuds of her footsteps as she sprang down the slope. "The next night the same students, expecting another visit, sat up for the brute ; but instead of turning up again at our camp, she killed some sheep belonging to shepherds, whom only four days previously she had follwed up from Rama Sarai to a high-level graz- ing- ground about 1^ miles above Mundali. One of these shepherds she had attempted to carry off two days previously, but missing her spring she only clawed his back and was driven off by the father of the young man striking her on the head with a stick, while a plucky large Bhutia dog seized her by the neck. This sudden double attack was too much for her, and she made off as fast as she came. Two of our students sat up the following night over the dead sheep, but although she prowled about the place and gave chase to several buffaloes, she did not come to the kills. " The night of the 11th was dark and rainy, and we were sure the tigress would take advantage of this circumstance. And so she did. There was a herd of buffaloes just above our camp. Here towards morning, as one of the hordsmeu came out alone from the hut in which about ten of them were living together, the tigress suddenly MAN-EATING TIGRESS OF MUNDA'LI. 261 Pushed at him. Luckily he dodged her and ran back into the hut. Foiled of her prey, she gave chase to a small but full-grown buffalo, which, taking fright, had separated from the herd and was running down the hill. She soon overtook the buffalo, and killed her just below the road immediately above the head of a deep and steep ravine. As soon as it was light, the herdsmen promptly moved off to another grazing ground about 2 miles nearer Chakrata. The tigress evidently followed them, for she was met just above that locality by our dak man aud syce, who saved themselves by shouting and howling at her like mad. "■ On the news of the buffalo being killed reaching our camp, Mr. Osmaston, one of our latest recruits from Cooper's Hill, and Mr. W. Hearsey, one of our students, got a murium tied up near the kill, intending to sit up for the tigress towards evening. To prevent birds from interfering with the kill, Mr. Hearsey set a servant to watch it. About 2 p. si. this man came running back to say that he heard some heavy animal, most probably the tigress, coming up the ravine, above the head of which, as said before, the buffalo had been killed. Upon this Mr. Hansard, another student, came to ask us for the loan of our 12-bore Ileilly, and to see whether Mr. Osmaston would accompany him. Fortunately, as the sequel proved, we had previously forced Mr. Osmaston to take the rifle as his own had been left behind at Chakrata for repairs. Both young men started oft for the scene of the kill f intending to sit up on the machan for the tigress. But after having arrived there, Mr Hansard, who from the very beginning*, not being able to realize what a terrible animal a tiger is, had thought of going after the brute on foot, proposed that they should go and look for her, arguing that if they sat on the machan they would never get her. Mr. Osmaston, who had arrived in this country only in January last, gaily closed in with this proposal. He, as said above, had our 12-bore Reilly, containing cartridges loaded with explosive conical bullets, nine of which, go to the pound ; Mr. Hansard, on the other hand, had only a smooth-bore, loaded with, slugs. Armed thus, the two young shikaris moved down the hillside, each taking one side of the ravine. The sides of the ravine were so steep and rough (gradient in places exceeding 45°), that walking was extremely difficult, and Mr. Osmaston came down several times in spite of good screws in his boots. It was a good thing that the ground prevented them from moving at anything faster than a snail's pace, for, as events showed, there was ample cover in the shape of rocks and 35 262 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. bushes for a tiger to lie concealed within a few feet of the shikari, without being noticed by an inexperienced eye. When they had gone down about 1 80 yards, Mr. Osmaston's side of the ravine became too precipitous for him to walk along it, and he accordingly descended to the bottom with considerable difficulty over rocks, bushes and fallen trees. Meanwhile Mr. Hansard was walking parallel to him about .0 yards off on the steep slope immediately above. ' Suddenly,' to use Mr. Osmaston's own words, * I heard a thud followed by a series of short, snappish, angry growls and at the same moment I heard the groans and cries for help of Hansard crushed to the ground by the tigress and struggling, face downwards, to get free. The tigress appeared to be tearing his neck and face with her claws. As quickly as I could, I levelled the double 12-bore at the brute, and although I was very much afraid of hitting Hansard, I knew it was the poor fellow's last chance. So I pulled'the trigger, and to my relief saw the brute relax her hold and come rolling down the precipitous slope which ended in a 15-foot drop, nearly sheer. The tigress never ceased her hideous growlingeven to the moment when she fell into the ravine and lay there in the water within a couple of yards of me. I was hemmed in on both sides, so I knew that if she was still capable of doing damage, it was all up with me. In sheer desperation, as my last chance, I fired the second barrel into her, and springing down the precipitous ravine — a feat which I don't think I could possibly perform a second time— T rushed up the side of the ravine and made or the place where 1 had seen Hansard lying, his face all gory and apparently dying. I could not, however, find him, and I rushed back to camp, the direction of which I more or less knew, across several spurs and ravines.' '' What happened to Mr. Hansard was this : — As he walked down the slope, the tigress must have perceived him and allowed him to pass on, probably then stalking him. At any rate she sprang upon him from behind, bearing him down at once. Fortunately all but one of her canines had been reduced to mere stumps, and it was probably because she knew this, and also because the slope was so steep, that she attempted to do little more than claw him. Even with her worn- down teeth, if she had seized his head between her jaws, she must have crunched his skull into fragments. Actually she clawed his face and back, dislocating the jaw, but the only dangerous wound she inflicted was with her solitary effective canine, making a hole just behind the ear and penetrating to the back of the mouth. It was a MAN-EATING TIGRESS OV MUNDA'Ll. 263 fortunate thing that before the brute could inflict farther damage Mr. Osmaston's first shot did for her. The bullet entered in the region of the loins a few iuches below the spine. But as the shot was fired from below, the bullet went up against the spine, which it practically broke, and then worked along under it raking it, and blowing up everything in its way until it reached the lungs, where it stopped. This first shot thus completely disabled the animal and rendered her perfectly harmless. The second bullet hit her in the shoulder. A minute after the second shot was fired, Mr. Osmaston's chaprassi, who was at the machan, hearing his master's cries for help, rushed down the ravine, and found the tigress stone-dead and Mr. Hansard lying insensible in the water at the bottom of the ravine. After the tigress had let go her hold and rolled down the slope, Mr. Hansard, thiuking she would come back for him, had crawled down into the ravine, only to find himself within 10 yards of his enemy, who was of course already dead. It was lucky for him that the shot against her spine had made the tigress at ones relax her hold of him, otherwise he would have rolled down with her and been certainly killed in the fall. Measured soon after death the length of the tigress was found to be 8 feet 8 inches. Her canines, as said before, had been worn down all but one, to mere stumps. Some of them were cracked and chipping off, and two were quite decayed with a hole running through the centre. The buffalo killed by her had not a single tooth-mark on it, and hardly any portion of it had been eaten ; its neck had been broken. The tigress was in miserable condition, hardly any fat being found even round her kidneys. Although she killed a good deal, her broken teeth must have prevented her from eating anything like a full meal. Mr. Hansard was attended to immediately by the Native Doctor attached to the School, and oa the third day was carried into Chakrata, where, under Dr. Butterworth's skilful treatment, he made such rapid progress towards recovery at the Military Hospital, that before the end of June he could be removed to Mussoorie, a distance of 40 miles. At Mussoorie, however, the results of blood-poisoning manifested themselves in feverish symptoms of a very severe type, and a series of abscesses formed at the end of the wound behind the ear, which, pressing up against the brain, rendered him delirious for weeks. He has now, however, got through the worst, and it is to be hoped that plenty of rest and 264 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. a good climate, combined with his youth, will soou enable him to recover his health and strength completely. ELEMENTARY BOTANY OF THE BOMBAY PRESIDENCY. By A. K. Nairne. In the paper which appeared in the Society's Journal for January, 1889,1 described a number of common plants of Western India belonging to several different orders but all agreeing in having tubu- lar and more or less two-lipped corolla, and four stamens on the corolla arranged in a longer and a shorter pair (didynamous). In this paper I shall confine myself to the plants of one great order — the largest but one of all the natural orders— Leguminosce. This has an immense number of species spread all over the globe, and derives its name from its fruit, a legume or pod. A legume is described as a two-valved fruit opening length-ways, and having the seeds attached along the inner edge of the valves, that is, along the side of the pod which does not open. This may be called the constant feature of the order, but it is not sufficient for the unlearned ; because there are many plants in the order in which the fruit is so modified as not to be easily recognised as a pod, and there are also some plants belonging to other orders with fruit not easily distinguishable from pods. It is therefore necessary to look for a second feature common to the Leguminosce, and this as regards a great majority of its plants is found in the corolla. In my first paper I mentioned the great distinctions of monopeta- lous and polypetalous corollas. The corollas in Leguminosce is of the latter sort, that is, of separate petals. There is however a great dis- tinction between different flowers, which is more easily recognisable even than that already named, i. e., the distinction of regular and irregular corollas. Those are called regular in which the petals, if the flower is polypetalous (or the divisions of the corolla if it is rnonope- talous), are equal and symmetrical, so that no difference can be seen between the upper, lower, right or left side of the corolla. But the first glance at an irregular flower shows that it has no such uniform symmetry, the centre of the flower being unequal, surrounded by the ELEMENTARY BOTANY OF THE BOMBAY PRESIDENCY. 265 parts, and the petals often varying as much in shape as in size. There are few flowers whieh have corollas more absolutely irregular than those of Leguminosce, as regards the great majority of its plants. The corollas have a name given to plants of this order alone, papilionaceous (from papilio, a butterfly), or pea-shaped, having five separate petals, one at the top, generally large and broad, and called the standard, a pair opposite to the standard, joined together and enclosing the stamens and pistil, called the keel, and a smaller lateral pair, distinct and standing forward, called the wings. It may be added that the ten stamens are generally united into one cluster (monadelphous), or into two clusters (diadelphous), and that the calyx generally adheres to the pod. The typical Leguminosce then have pea-shaped flowers and pods ; but as there are some genera and species in which the fruit is not pod-like, so there are some which have flowers not pea-shaped, and among these exceptions we find a number in which the flowers are absolutely regular. The order is, therefore, divided into three sub-orders, which really might as well have been three separate orders. 1. Papilionacece. Flowers strictly as above, but the pod in some cases much modified. 2. Ccemlpincce. Flowers not truly papilionaceous, but approach- ing it and irregular ; stamens as above, but free from the petals ; pod unmodified. 3. Mimosece. Flowers very small and regular, but petals usually united above the base ; stamens often indefinite ; pod unmodified. It may be added that the plants of the first sub-order (which is by far the largest of the three), are mostly herbs, and are found all over the world ; while those of the other two sub-orders are mostly trees or shrubs confined to warm climates. SUB-ORDER I.—PAriLIONACEJjJ. The sub-order is represented in W. India by 54 genera, some of which contain a very large number of species. They are distributed over eio-ht tribes, some of which have very distinct features, usually connected with the divisions of the leaves and the shape of the pods. As, however, I am only giving a selection from the species known, it will, I think, be simpler to omit these distinctions of tribes, and to mention instead any feature that may L common to three or 266 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. . four genera as they come, my great object, of course, being to make identification as easy as possible. Note. — As before, D. stands for D.ilzell and Gibson's Bombay Flora, H. for Hooker's Indian Flora; native names are in italics, and should mention with regard to this part of it, that I have now the advantage of referring to Dr. Dymook's "Marathi Names of Plants," which I was unable to do when I wrote my lust paper. 1. Crotalaria. Leaves (in species here given) simple ; flowers yellow (except No. 5 below) ; standard with a short claw ; pod straight, turgid or inflated. (1) C. jilipes. A small, prostrate, slender-stemmed plant with, long hairs ; leaves oblique, cordate, oblong ; peduncles very slender- bearing one or two flowers ; pod oblong, much inflated, 8 to 10 -seed, ed. Deccan and Konkan common. Note. — There is another small and common prostrate plant very like this, and growing in similar situations; Heylandia latebrosa. The most obvious difference is that that has solitary and subsessile flowers in the axils, and an ovate pod with one or two seeds. (2) 0. retusa. A stout undershrub, branched, nearly smooth • leaves oblong, broader above ; flowers large and handsome, veined red, in long racemes; pod linear, oblong; seeds 15 to 20. Gkdgri* Konkan, Guzerat and Gfhauts, common. Note. — This and the next two have a general resemblance to the English broom. (8) C. sericea. Much like the last, but with angled stem and large leafy stipules and bracts. Common about Bombay. (4) C. Leschenaultil. A tall and very handsome shrub; leaves narrow, obovate, silky beneath ; racemes and flowers large ; pod like the two last. Dingala. Common at Matheran and on the Ghauts. (5) C. verrucosa. Stout herbaceous, stems and branches 4-sided and winged ; leaves broad, ovate, narrow at the base ; stipules half- moon shape ; flowers pale blue ; pods nearly cylindric, pale brown . Tirat. Very common on the sandy sea shore. (6) C. juncea. A tall ei'ect shrub; leaves linear or oblong, silky; racemes very long; calyx covered with rusty hairs; pod sessile oblong, broader upwards. Santag, Commonly cultivated for the fibre, and sometimes called sun-hemp. Note. — There are altogether 21 species of this genus in W. India, three of which have 3-foliate and one 5-foliate leaves. ELEMENTARY BOTANY OY THE BOMBAY PRESIDENCY. 267 2. Trigonella. Leaves trifoliate ; leaflets toothed ; standard and wings narrow ; keel shorter ; pod many-seeded. T. faenugrecnm. Erect, robust; leaflets lanceolate, oval or obovate ; flowers yellow, pretty, long, thin and pointed. Meethi. Usually cultivated for baji. 3. Medicago. Leaves as the last ; pod spirally twisted, indehi- scent. M . saliva. Stem usually erect ; leaflets oblong ; flowers some- what racemed, usually purple ; pods downy and loosely spiral. Purple medick, lucerne (loosan). Cultivated everywhere. 4. Indigofera. Indigo. Flowers generally in racemes, red or purple ; keel spurred on each side near the base, generally linear or cylindrical. Note. — There is not much beauty in this large genus ; most of the species are a good deal covered with close-pressed hairs. (1) /. linifulia. A small grey plant, much branched ; leaves lanceolate or linear, sometimes obovate; flowers in very short racemes ; pod round, one-seeded. Burburra, bhangra, torki. Throughout India. H. Note. — The seed vessel in this is not the least, like a pod outwardly. (2) i". cordlfolii. Small and diffuse; leaves broad, ovate cordate; flowers very small, in sessile heads ; pod oval, 2-seeded. Oodadi, hodngo, bo'saka. Deccan and Konkan. Plains of India generally. H. (3) I. glandulo8f(. Also a small diffuse species ; leaflets 3, deeply pitted with glands underneath ; pod brown or reddish, very short angled and with toothed wings. Vekhdri l baraghadam. The Deccan. Very common everywhere. (Lisboa.) On black soil it becomes woody and much branched. (4) I. trita. Much like the last, but more of a shrub and more rigid, the leaves red, pitted ; pod long, straight, horizontal, slightly 4-sided. Common. (5) I. hirsuta. A coarse, hairy, erect herb; leaflets 5 to 11, large, obovate; racemes dense; flowers pink ; pods crowded, straight, bent down. South Konkan, Gkizerat, &c. Graham called it parti- cularly common on Malabar Hill. (6) I. tinctoria. The cultivated indigo ; leaflets 9 to 13 ; flowers greenish or yellowish red ; pod turgid, straight, sharp-pointed. Nil. D. thinks that it is found wild in many parts of the Konkan. H. doubts it being wild in India at all. 268 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. (7) /. pulchella. A tall shrub, with long erect racemes of pink or light purple flowers ; leaflets 13 to 21 ; pod straight, cylindrical or turgid, sharp-pointed. Chimnati, nirda. Mahableshwar and other high Ghauts. This is the only handsome species found in AV. India, and is very ornamental. 7. Psoralea. Leaves simple, dotted with glands, petals all clawed ; pod ovoid or oblong, one-seeded, indehiscent. P. corylifolia. A tall stragging plant ; leaves ovate or roundish ; irregularly toothed ; flowers small, violet coloured, tipped darker, in close long stalked spikes ; pod included in the granular calyx. Bawarchi. A common weed in the Deccan and elsewhere, especially in cultivated fields. H. calls the corolla yellow. 8. Tephrosia. Petals clawed ; pod linear, flat, many-seeded. T. purpurea. Half shrubby, more or less hairy, with a most offensive smell ; leaflets 6 to 10 pair, oblong or obovate ; flowers red or purple, in long racemes ; legumes slightly curved. Sirpaka, unhula. A common rank weed springing up in the rains along with Cassia Occident alls. There are varieties of this in Sind, Cutch and elsewhere. 9. Sesbania. Herbs or soft wooded shrubs ; leaves with very numerous deciduous leaflets ; petals long, clawed ; pods very long and narrow. (1) S. aculeata. Tall and weak, with stem and petioles covered with soft prickles ; leaflets 20 to 40 pair, very small, obtuse; flowers in racemes, yellow clotted with purple ; calyx nearly entire ; pod nearly cylindrical, sharp-pointed. Ran shewani,chinchani. Known (in the Ivonkan) by its wonderfully rapid growth, springing up to the height of 7 or 8 feet in a very few weeks of the rains. II. calls it cosmopolitan in the tropics of the Old World. (2) S. grandljiora. A tree with very large white flowers and curved pods, a foot or more long. Both flowers and pods are eaten. Commonly cultivated but a doubtful native. Agashi, hadgi. The next 5 genera have pods composed of joints, which when rijte easily separate from one another. 10. Geissapsis. Leaflets 2 pairs ; flowers with conspicuous mem- branous bracts. G. cristata. A trailing plant among grass; leaflets small, obovate; flowers small, orange and brown, each with a large roundish bract edged with stiff brown hairs ; pod of 2 round joints. Barhi. It is a remarkable looking plant, but common. ELEMENTARY BOTANY OF THE BOMBAY PRESIDENCY. 269 Zomia angustifolia, also called barki, is a little plant of much the same character as this, the 2 pair of leaflets longer and narrow, the bracts sagittate and almost hiding the flowers, the joints of the pods prickly, and sometimes as many as 5* 11. Alhagi. Leaves simple ; joints of pod several* A. maurorum, Camel-thorn. A low shrub with green branches and strong hard thorns, one to each leaf; leaves sessile, obloug or obovate, rather fleshy; flowers small, red or purple, in short racemes, which end in a bristly point. JaiOas, Kas. Very common in G uzerat and Sind, where it is the usual material for tatties. 12. Smithia. Herbs; leaflets many, small; corolla yellow, generally with red spots at the base of the petals ; joints of the pod flattened and folded together within the calyx. Note. — Of 12 Indian species 9 are found in this Presidency, and all within a very limited range, viz., the S. Konkan and the Ghauts bounding it ; one or two species also about Belgaura. None of the species can be called common, though some are abundant locally ; they are all remarkable for their beauty, and at Dapoli, 8. sensitiva } S. bigemina, and S. pycnantha all appear together in the rains. One only, S. purpurea, has purple flowers with white spots at the base. 13. Alysicarpus. Diffuse plants; leaves generally simple; keel obtuse, adhering to the wings ; pod of several joints flattened, nob twisted. (1) A. vaginalis. Rather hairy; leaves from oval to lanceolate, cordate at base; stipules large; flowers in racemes, red, whitish beneath ; pod thickened at the joints, which are not much divided ; calyx in fruit large and chaffy. Cliai, dhdmpta. Common in the Deccan, Konkan and Guzerat. H. makes (2) A. tiummularifolius, which has roundish leaves, and pods almost cylindrical only, a variety of this. It also is common. 14. Desmodium. Leaves simple or trifoliate ; pod of several joints, often straight on one side and divided on the other. (1) D.triquetrum. A shrubby rather hairy plant, with triangular branches ; leaves ovate, with winged petioles; stipules large, lanceolate ; flowers small, in long erect racemes, purple or violet ; pod of about 6 irregular joints, beaked. Kdkgdnja. Common and easily recognizable. (2) D. gangeticum is sufficiently like this to be recognised as a relation. Stems irregularly angled; leaves broad, ovate, rather cordate. Sal wan Bombay and S. Konkan. 36 270 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. The next two genera are of the Vetch tribe, distinguished by pinnate leaves ending in a tendril. 15. Abrus. Climbers, with only 9 stamens united id a tube split above ; style short, incuryed. A. precatoriud. A small climber; stem woody; leaflets numerous, oblong, blunt ; pod linear, flat beaked ; seeds like a small pea, scarlet, with black spot. Gunj, chanoti. Very common in hedges but not very attractive. The very pretty seeds are used as weights by goldsmiths. There is a variety with white seeds, spotted black. 16. Cicer. Leaflets toothed; flowers solitary; pod sessile, turgid, tipped with the style. C. arietinum. Gram. Has generally a terminal leaflet instead of a tendril. Harbara, channa. The next 9 geuera (belonging to tribe Phaseolece) are either clim- bers or trees, with trifoliate leaves (except Clitoria) and linear pods. 17. Mucuna. Flowers large ; keel larger than the standard and wings ; pod covered with stinging hairs. M. 'priiriens. A hairy twiner ; leaflets ovate, unequal-sided ; flowers lurid purple, in drooping racemes; pod large, curved, more or less S-shaped. Hawaj, Knhili, Kuyeri. Common in hedges (from the Himalayas to Ceylon.) H. The pods are awkward to touch, owing to the stinging hairs. 18. Erythrina. Trees with prickly branches and red flowers; pod turgid. E. Indica. Indian coral tree. Bark light and greenish ; petioles very long ; flowers large, in racemes ; pod several inches long ; very protuberant at the seeds, which are dark red. Pdngara, m&uddr. One of the commonest and showiest trees in the Konkan. A white- flowered variety is said to grow in Salsette. 19. Butea. Trees or climbing shrubs; flowers large and showy ; keel much curved ; pod linear, with one seed at the point. B.frondosa. Petioles long ; leaflets large, roundish ; flowers many together in long racemes, orange red and silky ; calyx and pedicels deep bottle green ; pod thin and downy. Pallas, Kdkria. This is even a more striking tree than the last when in flower, which is before the leaves appear. It is common in most parts, but not in S. Konkan, and is called dhah in Bengal, &c. 20. Canavalia. Flowers showy ; standard large, roundish ; pod thick, three keeled. ELEMENTARY BOTANY OF THE BOMBAY PRESIDENCY. 271 0. ensiformes. A large smooth twiner ; leaflets ovate, pointed ; Hewers rather large, of a beautiful pink; sometimes purplish, in long-sfcalked i*acemes ; pod large, plautain-shaped. Oaora. Pretty common in hedges. A variety is commonly cultivated for food. 21. Phaseolus. Bracts usually conspicuous ; keel much twisted ; pod more or less cylindrical. P. trilobus. A straggling plant ; leaflets ovate, usually 3-lobed ; flowers small, yellow, in long- stalked racemes or heads, Arkmath, jangli math. Common and unattractive. It varies greatly in hairi- ness. P. mungo, urid, mung ; P. aconitifolius, math ; P. rostratus, haldhonda ; and P. vulgaris, French bean, are all cultivated. 22. Vigna. Like the last, but the keel much less twisted. V. vexillata. Twining, with broad ovate acute leaflets ; flowers rather large, pink, few together at the end of a long stalk, fragrant; pod 3 or 4 inches long, many-seeded, hairy. Birambol, halula Pretty common in the Konkan and found at Mahableshwar. The haadsome flowers remind one strongly of the sweet-pea, but without its delicacy. Cosmopolitan in the tropics. H. V. catiang is the cultivated chaoli. 23. Clitoria. Flowers very showy; leaflets up to 7; standard spoon-shaped, very large. C. ternatea. A beautiful climber; leaflets ovate ; flowers solitary, deep blue and white, with 4 long bracts ; pod straight and thin. Bhovera, Kdjali. Common in hedges in many parts, and atonce noticeable by the size and shape of the standard. 24. Dolichos. Petals usually equal in length ; pod flat, recurved. D. lablab, pauti. Cultivated in the Konkan as a cold- weather crop, and D. biflorus, hulti, cultivated in the Deccan. 25. Cylista. Corolla enclosed in a large scarious calyx, and petals equal in length ; pod small, oblique, enclosed in the calyx. C. scariosa. Leaflets ovate, wrinkled, downy; flowers in racemes; corolla yellow, red streaked, hidden in the large, withered-looking calyx ; a bract of the same shape soon falls off. Bdngdora. The Konkan and Ghauts. Very common in Salsette. 26. Cajanus. An erect shrub ; petals equal in length ; pod straight, tipped with the style. 0. indicus. Pigeon pea. Silky, leaves trifoliate ; leaflets oblong, lanceolate ; flowers yellow, often veined with red, 2 or 3 inches loug. Tur, Ddl. Cultivated all over India for the grain, and the stalks used in making gunpfNrder. 272 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. The remaining species of Papilionacece here given are either trees or climbing shrubs, with odd-pinnate leaves and indehiscent pods. 27. Dalbergia. Leaflets alternate ; flowers small, white or pale jmly half opening ; pod thin and flat, 1 to 5-seeded. (1) D. latifolia. The blackwood tree. Leaflets 3 to 7, roundish, either with a small point or notched ; flowers yellowish-white, in small close panicles; pod lanceolate. Sissa, Kalruka, tdli. Common in S. Konkan and S. M. Country, also on the Ghauts. The Sissu or Shisham of N. India is a different tree, D. Sism : it is thought by Dr. Brandis to be indigenous in Guzerat. (2) D. paniculata. Bark light grey, smooth; leaflets 5 to 6 pair, ovate or obovate; flowers in large panicles, tinged with blue ; calyx greenish- white ; pod lanceolate, pointed. Pasi, pddri. Mawal districts and Matheran, N. Konkan. In the Panch Mahals it is a common and pretty tree, rather resembling the Karanj. 28. Pongamia. Leaflets opposite; pod woody, oblong, flattened. P. glabra. Leaflets 5 to 7, ovate, smooth, rather large ; flowers in axillary racemes, pale, deciduous ; the standard large ; calyx entire, brown; pod more or less oval, with short beak, 1 or 2-seeded. Karanj, Sukhchain. One of the commonest and handsomest trees in the Konkan : not seen much at any great distance from the sea. 29. Derris. Climbers ; leaflets opposite ; calyx often coloured ; pod thin and flat, more or less winged. D. uliginosa. Smooth ; leaflets 3 to 5, oval, rather blunt and fleshy ; flowers small, pretty, pale rose-colour, in erect panicles ; calyx reddish brown, with shallow teeth ; pod neai-ly round, veined, winged at the upper edge and with a hooked point. Common near the sea, but also found in other parts. SUB-ORDER 11.— C2ES ALPINE j®. The species of this sub-order are mostly trees or shrubs, very often of great beauty ; but there are only 8 genera represented in' Western India, and these vary a good deal, so that it is not easy to mention any species as typical of the whole sub-order. 1. Ccesalpinia. Prickly shrubs with showy yellow flowers ; calyx deeply cleft, the lowest lobe largest and hooded ; petals spreading. (1) G. bouducella. A large climber; pinna3 4 to 8 pair; leaflets about 4 pair, smooth, oblong, obtuse ; flowers in racemes, each with a lanceolate bract ; cajyx rusty ; pod ovate, swelling ; very prickly ELEMENTARY BOTANY OP THE BOMBAY PRESIDENCY. 273 seeds 2, large. Sagargota, Kachhi, Karbat. Common in hedges ; most so in Guzerat, I think. (2) C. sepiaria. Spreading, smooth ; pinnae 6 to 10 pairs ; leaflets 8 to 12 pairs, linear, oblong, obtuse; racemes large, erect; calyx coloured ; pod linear, oblong, smooth, with a long abrupt point, 4 to 8-seeded. Chillar. Common in the Deccan. It makes an impenetrable fence. C. coriaria is the libi, or dividivi tree. 2. Poinciana. Erect, unarmed trees, differing from the last in having a valvate calyx of 5 equal segments. P. pidcherrima, the common gulmohar (gold-mohur tree) ; P. regia, the royal gold-mohur : both well known. P. elata, sandesrd, is a much less ornamental species with white flowers changing to yellow, and long dark filaments, H. calls it truly wild in the W. Peninsula, but D. and Graham knew it only in gardens. 3. Cassia. Sometimes herbs ; flowers rather large, yellow ; some of the stamens often imperfect or obsolete ; the petiole or midrib often with one or two conspicuous glands. C. fistula. Tree; leaflets 4 to 8 pairs, large, ovate, pointed, smooth ; flowers in long drooping racemes ; pod quite cylindrical, brown, smooth, one or two feet long. Bdtva, garmdla, chimkani. The Ghauts and Konkan. Common throughout the forest tracts of India. (Brandis.) This beautiful jungle tree is well known and easily recognised by the likeness of its flowers to laburnum. (2) C. occidentalis. A large, smooth annual ; leaflets 3 to 5 pairs, ovate, lanceolate, acute ; flowers long-stalked ; pod long, thin, nearly cylindric. Thorala tdkla, Kdsoda, Kasundro. Abundant in waste places nearly everywhere, springing up very quickly in the rains, generally with Tephrosia purpuria. It has a strong offensive smell. (3) C. sophora. "i Closely allied to the last and with the same (4) C. tora. /native names, but shrubby; the pod in the first more swollen, particularly towards the top, in the second very long and slender, 4-sided, sharp-pointed. Very common, and both found generally throughout India. H. (5) C. absits. A hairy plant, above a foot high ; leaflets 2 pairs, unequal-sided ; flowers solitary or in a short raceme ; pod nearly straight, strap -shaped, bristly. Chimar, chaksu. This is very common both at Bandora and Dapoli, and I believe elsewhere, 274 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. but is not given by D. Everywhere in the tropics of the Old World. H. (6) C. pumila. A low or procumbent plant, with 10 to 30 pairs of leaflets, very small and unequal- sided ; flowers above the axils ; pod flat, linear. Sarmal. Common generally. C. glauca. A tree with a heavy sme]l, karud, is commonly cultivated. 4. Saraca. Corolla none ; calyx coloured, long-tubed, with 4 unequal segments ; stamens 3 to 8, long, exserted. 8. Indica. A small tree ; leaflets 3 to 6 pairs ; flowers in large round heads, orange-coloured, changing to red bracts, &c, coloured; pod broad, flat, leathery. Ashoka, jaso7idi. Konkan and Ghauts, not very common. This was the tree formerly and appropriately called Jonesia ashoka, the name of the illustrious Sir William Jones being thus joined to the Sanscrit name. No one would from the flower guess that it belonged to the Leguminosce. 5. Tamarindus. Petals 3, the upper hooded ; stamens 3, mona- delphous ; pod pulpy within. T. Indica. Tamarind tree. Leaflets very numerous, obtuse ; flowers few together, in lax racemes ; pod thick, more or less curved. Chinch, amli. H. calls it a doubtful native. The flowers of this also are unlike the order. 6. Bauhinia. Flowers showy ; petals generally clawed ; stamens sometimes imperfect ; leaves simple, deeply 2-lobed. B. racemosa. A small crooked tree ; flowers in racemes, yellow or white ; calyx spathulate, split on one side ; pod woody, thick. Apta, dsandra. Common in most parts. There are two or three other species, either wild or planted, and they are all easily recognised by, the leaves, which are almost unique in shape, being almost round, but divided into two lobes from the top, the division extending sometimes nearly to the petiole, sometimes only a short way down. SUB-ORDER III.— MIMOSE^J. Leaves (in all here given) bi-pinnate ; flowers very small but many together ; petals equal. Note. — There is a great resemblance in the flowers of the many species of this sub-order, so that any one who knows any of the acacias would probably recognize any of the species here given as belongiug to the same family ; but it should be mentioned that the tree commonly called the acacia in England, Bobenia pseudo-acacia, ELEMENTARY BOTANY OF THE BOMBAY PRESIDENCY. 275 belongs to the Papilionacece. There are only 7 genera of the sub-order represented in W. India. 1, Entada. Woody climbers with tendrils ; flowers in spikes ; calyx minute ; stamens 10 ; pod joined outwardly. E. scandens. An immense climber, the main stem often with a spiral wing ; spikes about 6 inches long, white, becoming yellow ; pod a yard long ; flowers hard and woody, reddish brown. Garbi, Gardal, Khairi. The Ghauts and Konkan hills. The immense pods of this must be known to many who have never handled either the flowers or the leaves, for these often grow so high above the ground as to be quite inaccessible. 2. Mimosa. Leaves sensitive ; flowers in dense round heads, stamens 8 or 10 ; pod flat-jointed. M. hamata, A thorny shrub ; heads of flowers pink, long-stalked; pod curved, with a border on each edge and large hooked prickles. Arhar. Pretty common in the Deccan and Guzerat. M. rubricaulis. Very like this, but the flowers reddish, becoming white, and the pod longer and thinner ; is attributed by D. and Graham to Malabar Hill, and by H. called common through India. I have seen it only in the E. Deccan. 3. Acacia. Prickly shrubs or trees, with yellow or white flowers, in round heads or cylindrical spikes; stamens indefinite, free, much exserted. Note. — Most or all of the species have glands on the petiole or between the pinnae or both, and the leaflets are small. (1) A. arabica. Thorns straight, white ; flowers in round heads, yellow, fragrant. This is the well-known babul tree, and, like most of the genus, is an inhabitant of dry regions. (2) A. sum a. A small tree with white bark and hooked thorns, in pairs ; flowers white, in spikes ; pod strap-shaped, straight. Khair, Khaderi. This delicate looking and pretty tree takes the place of the babul in the Konkan. (3) A. concinna. A large climbing shrub; prickles hooked flowers yellow or white, fragrant, the round heads in panicles ; pod thick and succulent, contracted between the seeds. Chikahai. Com- mon in the Konkan and Ghauts ; the pods are used for soap. (4) A. pennata. A large climbing shrub ; thorns straight or nearly so ; flower as in the last ; pod straight, thin, often reddish. Shembi. Common in the Konkan: the bark is used for dyeing nets. 276 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 4. Albizzia. Large unarmed trees ; flowers in round heads ; stamens indefinite, very long, united at the base ; pod long, thin, strap-shaped. (1) A. lebhck. Flowers white, very fragrant ; heads long, stalked or irregularly racemed ; pod nearly a foot long, smooth, straw- coloured. Siras, farari. Common in the Konkan and elsewdiere. (2) A. stipulata. Stipules large, acute, reddish ; heads of flowers in panicles, the long brush-like stamens pink in the upper half ; pod reddish brown, smooth. Lallai, shembar. This very beautiful flat-topped tree of the Ghauts and S. Konkan grows in perfection at Matheran. It is as well to mention here the only tree belonging to another order, which is likely to be taken for one of the Legu- minosce. The order is Moringece, which contains only one genus and 3 species, but botanists have found the greatest difficulty in fixing the position it should occupy. Outwardly, however, it much resembles Leguminosce. Moringa. Trees with soft wood ; leaves alternate ; petals 5, unequal ; stamens 5 perfect and 5 imperfect ; capsule pod-like. 31. pterygosperma. The horse-radish tree. Leaves verj^ large, twice or thrice pinnate ; leaflets very small ; calyx as well as petals white ; capsule a foot long, slender, 3-augled. Sheogd, shehla. Generally cultivated. M. concanensis is very like this, but the leaves and panicles larger ; the flowers yellowish, red-streaked and fragrant. Sainjita, mun. Wild in the Konkan. The above list will be found, I think, to include all the leguminous plants that are common or very noticeable iu the Bombay Presi- dency, and a large proportion of them are very common. And if all orders of plants could be as easily identified as the Leg nminosce t we might expect Botany to become a much more popular study. But I must repeat what I said in my first paper, that if any one begins by getting up the common plants of a few of the larg*est orders, he will by the time he knows them have got his eye so well in, and know so much of botanical terms and principles, and probably also will be so much interested in the work of identification, that he will find no great difficulty in proceeding to the less easy orders. NOTES ON A CATERPILLAR FARM. 277 NOTES ON A CATERPILLAR FARM. By Mrs. W. E. Hart. During the last rains in Bombay we started a small caterpillar farm, noting whatever seemed to us worthy of remark in the life his- tory of the insects. Some of these notes we venture to offer in the hope they may interest some of your entomologist readers. Our stock from first to last consisted of eighty- six head of insects, belonging to forty-one species. Being new to the work, we unfortu- nately kept all our specimens in the same enclosure. The result was that, like the twins in Mr. Locker's famous song, they " got com- pletely mixed," and we were unable to say with certainty, in some instances, which imago resulted from which pupa, or, indeed, in the case of some of the buried pupa), to identify beyond a doubt the pupa with its larva. The following notes on twenty-seven cases give the results only of such observations as we are sure are correct throughout. But first, as much by way of warning as example to other begin- ners in the same interesting pursuit, we will describe our system. We need not say we shall be very thankful for such suggestions of improvement as any of your readers may kindly trouble themselves to offer. Across a window in a well -lighted room we set a table about four feet long by two wide by two and a half high, with an upright rim of thin wood, about two inches high, running all round its top. Its feet stood in saucers of water to prevent the approach of ants and other noxious visitants. But this precaution was not wholly success- ful, as we forgot to clear of other insects all the plants and earth in- troduced for the caterpillars. The result, in one instance, was that the ants so imported devoured alive a caterpillar half turned into a chrysalis, as he was trying to bury himself in a box of earth.* * A somewhat similar catastrophe befel a very large caterpillar we had at Matheran in May. He buried himself apparently in good health on 20th W ay. On 3rd June about thirty flies were found in the cage. As no imago appeared from the caterpillar, we exhumed him, and discovered that he had very literally been " eaten of worms," which, after making their way out of his abdomen, immediately con structed little cells of the earth round their victim, in which to pass their pupahood, and from which they emerged in the shape of the flies we found in the oage. The caterpillar's carcase, when we found it, consisted of the empty desicoated skin with a mass of earthen cells protruding from its abdominal region in such a manner as to suggest that its late proprietor had burst himself in trying to swallow a mud honey - comb« He must have been " fly-blown " before he buried himself, and carried the eggs with him underground, where the larva) of the flies were hatched inside him and requited his hospitality by devouring him. 278 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY. A companion was saved from a like Herodian end by being removed from the earth before he was attacked, and then suspended from the roof of the cage in a twisted cone of brown paper, where lie developed into a " death's-head " moth. The cage was a light movable frame of wood, just fitting inside the rim round the table, and about two feet high. Over this was stretched mosquito net for the sides, ends, and top. The table thus formed the floor of the cage, but to allow of its being more easily- kept clean, it was carpeted with large sheets of coarse brown paper. The dimensions of the cage gave ample space for the butterflies and moths to stretch and dry their wings on emerging from their chry- salises. But to avoid the confusion mentioned above, it would have been better had the cage been divided into compartments. In the middle of one of the long sides was the door, the frame of which, made of the same wood as that of the cage, was about ten inches wide, and of the same height as the cage. It was closed by a loose curtain of mos- quito net tacked to the bottom of the cage, folding over the top, and wide enough to well overlap the doorway on each side. This was fastened by loose strips of thin bamboo sprung in against the uprights and across the top of the doorway. It was wide enough to allow a hand and arm to pass in to manipulate the contents of the cage, or a head to observe its inmates, without moving the cage at the risk of disturbing such caterpillars and cocoons as might be clinging to the sides or top. It would, however, be convenient, and for a cage divided into compartments necessary, instead of one small door in the centre of the side, to have the whole side constructed on the same principle. In the cage we put some vases, standing steadily on wide heavy bot- toms, for water, in which to immerse the stalks of sprigs from the food-plants of our caterpillars. The tops of such vases should be cover- ed with cards pierced with holes, through which to pass the stalks into the water, for we found that to leave them uncovered resulted in the death by drowning of some caterpillars, who crawled down the stalks into the water, and were too fat or too stupid to turn round and crawl up again. Besides these vases, we put into the cage some boxes of earth for the accommodation of those insects who pass their pupahood underground, and a few chunks of soft rotten wood for those who prefer that element. Some twisted cones of brown paper in the corners offered quiet seclusion for such caterpillars as seek retirement from the world, without digging their own graves, making their own coffins, or weaving their own shrouds. NOTES ON A CATERPILLAR FARM. 279 In regard to the management of stock, experience taught us four great canons : 1, Never handle a specimen ; 2, keep the species distinct ; 3, diet each specimen only on the plant on which it was found ; and 4, when a caterpillar leaves its food-plant, leave it alone. 1 . Even the gentlest handling of a caterpillar or chrysalis, result- ing in no apparent injury at the time, we found was often followed, especially in the larger sorts, by a malformation or imperfect deve- lopment of the imago. Sometimes the ill-consequences declared themselves sooner or more disastrously, and the caterpillar, though showing no external marks of ill-treatment, sickened and died. la one notable instance, a very fine specimen, tenderly picked off a plant by a servant with his finger and thumb, and carefully brought upstairs in his closed fist, so resented the liberty, that, as graphi- cally described by a lady friend, " it fermented and burst" within twenty-four hours. A specimen should be collected by carefully pick- ing the twig on which it is found and transferring both together to the box. Where this is impossible, and in the rare instances in which it is necessary to move a caterpillar or chrysalis in the cage, it should be lifted by means of a leaf, very gently pushed under it, and mot raised until the insect is wholly on it. When the food and water are changed, which should be daily if possible, the caterpillars must not be forcibly transferred to the new leaves. If any leaf on which a caterpillar is engaged be picked off the old sprig and gently placed on the new, the caterpillar will soon of its own accord leave the stale leaf for the fresh. 2. Provided they get food enough, any number of individuals of the same species apparently will dwell together in harmony on the same sprig. But with individuals of different species the case is otherwise. In confinement, the members of some species seem to resent the mere neighbourhood of those of another in a manner almost human. We had the caterpillar of the " death's-head " moth above- mentioned on a Caladium leaf, and two caterpillars of Banais chry- sippus on a sprig of Caloiropis gigantea in the same vase. The "death's-head," wishing to change his skin, left his food plant, as the manner of many caterpillars is at such times, and tried to make his way through his neighbour's territory. But the Danaides, holding views as pronounced as those of any English game-preserving squire on the rights of property and the iniquity of trespass, set on the intruder, and so belaboured him that we were obliged to put hi> 280 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. Caladium leaf in a separate vase. Even then he was not safe, far the two vases being one day unhappily set so close together that one ©f the Calotropis leaves hung over so as to touch the Caladium leaf, the Danaides crossed into their enemy's country and renewed their attack. We could not see whether they actually bit him. If they did, they did not seem to penetrate his skin. But they butted and hustled him on both sides in a way that must have been painful to so soft-bodied a creature, till at last he fell off the plant on to the floor of the cage, where he lay stunned and apparently exhausted for nearly half an hour. It may have been this treatment that drove him to seek, sooner than he would have done, shelter in the pupa form in the box of earth whence we afterwards had to rescue him from the ants. For as an imago, though perfectly developed and well coloured, he was under-seized. 3. A change of leaf seems as bad for a caterpillar as a change of milk for a baby : silkworms, no doubt, " as every school-boy knows/ 7 can be fed indiscriminately on mulberry, lettuce, or dandelion leaves without worse effect than a difference in the colour of the silk. J5u4 this omnivoracity seems to be a peculiarity in the constitution of the silkworm, induced, perhaps, by its Chinese education. With the wild caterpillar of the Indian jungle, it is not so. To thrive, he must have only that plant to which he has been accustomed from his earliest in- fancy. Though caterpillars of the same species aie found on plants of quite different species, and each will thrive equally well on its own food-plant, yet the same individual should not be fed on a different variety of plant, however closely allied to that which is its natural food. Thus we found a caterpillar taken on a sweet lime* (Citrus limetta) could not be fed with the leaves of a sour limef (Citrus acida), nor even one found on a jungle mangcj: (Mangifera indica) with leaves from a garden fruit tree. The new food will either be entirely rejected, and the caterpillar die of starvation, or it will so internally disagree that death will result from fermentation and explosion, in the manner above described as the effect of handling. 4. A caterpillar leaving its food-plant to wander about the cage,, generally does so only in search of a quiet place to change its skin or turn into a chrysalis. To be disturbed at such times, even by benevolent attentions, is likely to result in disaster. The best way is to leave it quite alone, only placing the food-plant near it in such a * Native name, Mita nimha. f Native name, Nimbu. % Native uaine, Ata. NOTES ON A CATERPILLAR FARM. 281 position that it can easily return to it when, like Mrs. Gamp, "so dispoged." In a few species, however, this roving tendency seeuis to be the result of a constitutional impatience of restraint, such as gipsies and Highlanders are said to feel under the artificial condi- tions of life in civilized cities. Such caterpillars we never succeeded in rearing. They were principally of two sorts, a small black hairy one found in great numbers on pipal trees during July and August, and a larger lighter-coloured one, also hairy, found in equal numbers about the same time on the mango trees at the foot of Chinchpoogly Hill in and around the Sewri Cemetery. Though plentifully sup- plied with their proper food, they refused all sustenance and wandering about the floor, walls, and roof of their prison, died at last of broken hearts — or empty stomachs. Generally speaking, however, caterpillars do not seem to suffer from nostalgia, but accommodate themselves to their altered circumstances, provided they are properly fed and not injudiciously handled. Now for our results. Of the twenty-seven cases here noted, sixteen resulted in butterflies, and eleven iu moths. Of the sixteen butterflies ten belonged to the sub-family Papilionince, and six to Danaince. Of the Papilionince, six were Papilio agamemnon, a handsome green and black butterfly, common in Bombay, but a good specimen of which it is hard to catch, owing to its quick high flight and rest- less habits ; three were Papilio pammon, also a common butterfly in Bombay, the males of which, also restless and quick fliers, are black with a row of cream-coloured spots round the posterior margin of the hind wings, which are also shortly " swallow-tailed, ''and the females of which are commonly black and red, in imitation of two other species, Diphilm and Rector as described in a paper on il Mimicry'' at page 228 of the 4th volume of this Journal; one was Papilio panope, a rare butterfly in Bombay, of which there is only one specimen in the Society's collection. It is dark-brown, with a double row of cream-coloured arrow-head shaped marks round the margins of both wings, and an orange spot on the bottom of the hind wing. Of the Danaince, four were Euplcva core, one of the commonest butterflies in Bombay, moderately large, but a weak flier, of a purplish-brown colour, with a double row of white spots round the edges of the wings; two were Vanais chrysippus, also one of the com- monest butterflies in Bombay, and a weak flier of moderately large size, in colour bright terra-cotta, the forewings tipped with black and white, and the hindwings bordered with a narrow black band. 282 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. ._ - — ■ — Papilio agamemnon. — Nos. I, 2, and 3 were found on the upper side of leaves of Guatteria longifolia* at the Ladies' Gymkhana on 28th July. They were then barely f inch long, and of a smoky gray colour, slender at the tail end, but thickening so rapidly to- wards the head as to have a bulbous appearance. The body was smooth, but furnished with eight short tentacles, two by the eyes, our at the thickest part of the body, and two at the tail. Besides these, were two retractile tentacles of a paler yellowish colour in the front of the head, generally invisible, but shot out whenever the caterpillar was annoyed or alarmed, as, for instance, when blown upon. The use of these seems to be to startle birds and other enemies, and deter them from an intended attack, by the appearance of a sting. But in reality these tentacles are as soft and innocuous as the others. f On 29th July these caterpillarB changed their skins, and immediately ate their cast skins. This perfection of can- nibalism seems not uncommon among caterpillars till the second or third change of skin, after which they abandon their carnivorous, or rather cutivorous habits, and adhere to a strictly vegetable diet. The subjects of this memoir grew rapidly till they were about H inch long, their colour changing gradually meanwhile to that of the leaves on which they fed. % By 3rd August all three were com- pletely clad in bright green. No. 1 assumed the chrysalis form on 5th August, No. 2 on 6th, and No. 3 on 10th. The chrysalises were of the same green colour as the caterpillars, and attached in a nearly upright position by the tail end to the stalks or undersides of the leaves. The imago appeared of No. 1 on 18th August, of No. 2 on 19th, and of No. 3 on 20th. The last was therefore three days less in statu pujpillari than the others, but the imago seemed as well developed in all respects. * Native name, Asok. f WeiBmann, in his Studies in the Theory of Descent, has noticed the "terrifying nttitudea" assumed by certain caterpillars as a protection from the attacks of inscc tivorons enemies. The retractile tentacles of the larva of P. agamemnon can hardly bo intended for use as antennae, or they would be permanently protruded, like the front pair of tentacles of the larva of Euplce core described below. J For a very interesting account of the colours of caterpillars, and their relations to the food plant and surroundings of the insects, see Weismann's Studies, cited above, translated by Meldola, and the translator's notes. The subject has been excellently investigated by Mr. Poulton in a series of papers of great interest contributed to the Tra,nsactiotis of the Entomological Society in 1885-6-7, The British Association Reports, 1867, and the Proceedings of the Zoological Society, 1887- notes on a caterpillar farm. 283 Nos. 4, 5, and 6 were found on 4th September on a " Soursop "* (Anona muricata) in our garden at Cumballa Hill. Two of them were rather larger than the specimens just described when first found. The third was so much smaller he could hardly have be- longed to the same brood. He was soon lost, being probably thrown away with the old leaves when the food was changed, an accident which should be guarded against by careful examination of both sides of the leaves and the stalks. Of the remaining two, one came to his end by drowning in the manner already described. The third entered on his pupahood on 19th September, and the imago appeared on 30th, taking two days less than Nos. 1 and 2 and one day more than No. 3. On 21st September we observed a female of Papilio agamemnon laying eggs singly on the bark of twigs of Guatteria longifolia on the Pedder Road. We secured a few, but they were unfortunately lost before they were hatched. From the dates above given, however, it would appear that P. agamemnon in Bombay continues to breed at least through July, August, and September. In early infancy the larvae of this species resemble the droppings of small birds, but not so strongly as do those of the species next described. Papilio pammon. — We retain the name by which the specimens in the Society's collection are named, and under which certain habits of mimicry in the larva? and pupa were described at page 229 of the 4th volume of the Society's Journal, but Mr. de Niceville prefers the name P. polytes for this species. Nos. 1 and 2 were found, apparently just hatched, on the upper- side of the leaves of a sweet lime ( Citrus limetta) in our garden on 1st August. Their remarkable resemblance at first to bird-droppings f and afterwards to the leaves of the food-plant, as well in shape and position as in colour, has already been described in the paper above mentioned. The protective imitation by the larvae of this species is much closer than by those of P. agamemnon, possibly because they are not furnished with the same forbidding tentacles. Our specimens attained to the length of about l\ inches before assuming the pupa form. This No. 1 did on 9th August and emerged a perfet male imago on 20th. No. 2 was "found drowned" on 10th August, when apparently on the point of turning into a * Native name, Bilaiti nana. 284 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. chrysalis. No. 3 was taken on the same tree as the others, but some weeks later, and belonged probably to another brood. She assumed the pupa form on 27th August, and a female imago of the diphilus* type resulted therefrom on 7th September. These dates again would seem to show that this species breeds in Bombay all through the months of July, August and September at least. For a day before assuming the pupa form, the larva remains motionless, closely hugging the stalk of the leaf on which it is resting. But the pupa is attached only by the tail end, with its head upwards, inclined at an angle of about 30° from the stem, and steadied by two guy ropes of almost invisible gossamer. We did not succeed iD witnessing the exact moment and manner of this change of position, as in both instances it took place during the night. Papilio panose. — The very handsome caterpillar of this species, rare in Bombay, was found on the upper side of a leaf of a Cinnamon treef (Cinnamomum zeylonicum) in our garden on 14th August. It was then upwards of 2 in. long, and on the point of assuming the chrysalis form, which it did on the 16th. The imago emerged on 31st August with the tip of its right forewing damaged, owing pro- bably to careless handling of the larva by the servant wbo brought it in. The larva, which was somewhat deeply jointed, was of an olive-green colour, with small black dots, and larger crimson spots on the joints, and broad irregular markings of cream colour on the sides and back. On the back and head were short black tentacles. The chrysalis, attached by short black silky hairs at the tail end to one of the uprights of the cage, head upwards, in the nearly vertical position characteristic of the Papilionidoe, and of a light brownish gray, marked with deeper brown and black, very closely resembled the rough bark or a piece of dead wood. The imago seems to imitate Evplcea core, which is also imitated by the female of Hypolimnas bolina. .Ettploea core. — These curious caterpillars were found on Anoden- dron paniculatiim,'l in the Ladies' Gymkhana, on 31st July. They were smooth, slender, and of a general reddish brown colour, but * Here again we preserve the name given to this species in the Society's Collection and in the paper above mentioned, but Mr. de Niceville prefers the name Ariitolochice. t Native name, Dalchini. % Native name, lamtani. NOTES ON A CATERPILLAR FARM. 285 on the back a very pale mauve, and closely marked with narrow dark brown transverse rings. They were furnished with eight dark brown tentacles arranged in pairs ; one, long and pointing forward, used as antenna;, above the second pair of legs from the head ; another, shorter, above the third ; another, yet shorter, between the third and fourth ; and another, about the same length as the second, at the taih In assuming the pupa form, which they did when about 2 inches Jong, they underwent a remarkable change. Leaving the food plant, they attached themselves to the undersides of other leaves, where, losing all likeness to caterpillars, and indeed to any living creature, they appeared to turn into unpleasant looking lumps of muddy slime or gum. These gradually assumed shape, hardening and brightening, till on the third day they were unmistakable chrysalises of bur- nished gold, hanging by the ends of their tails, with their heads downwards. The imago appeared in from seven to eight days after the chrysalis had assumed its bright metallic appearance, Danais chrysippus. — These were found on Calotropis gigantea* in. our compound, on loth September. In general appearance as to size, shape, tentacles, and dark ring markings of the body, they were not unlike the caterpillars last described, but differed from them in colour, being of a pale blue gray on the back, with yellow sides, and having ten pairs of oval yellow spots edged with black along the back. They assumed the chrysalis form on 17th September in the same position as those last described, and leaving the food plant to do so, but passing through no intermediate slimy stage. Of the chrysalises, one, which was suspended from the brown wood- work of the cage was green, the other, suspended from the white mos- quito net, was pale pink. Both opened on 24th September. We could detect no difference in the butterflies, except that in the one from the green chrysalis the rings round the underside of the abdomen were narrow, black, and continuously linear, while in the other they were broader, brown, and so deflected towards the centre from the sides as to have a somewhat crenate appearance. These butter- flies are imitated by the female of Hypolimnas mussipus. The dichroic character of the pupa is noticed by Messrs. Marshall and de Niceville in their very valuable work on the Butterflies of India, Burma and Ceylon (Vol. I., p. 51), where Mr. Wood-Mason is cited to the effect that the difference in colour is not sexual but a pro tec - * Native name, Uudar. 38 286 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. tive resemblance, in the one instance to the leaf, in the other to the flower-bud of the food plant. Our specimens, it will be observed, chose positions in which such protective resemblance could have no value. We thought the difference in colour might possibly be due to a difference in the light, as the chrysalis in the darker position, attached to the brown opaque body, was the darker in colour, while that in the lighter position, attached to the white transparent curtain, was itself almost white.* The point would seem to be worth further careful investigation. That light has an effect on animal coloration as well as vegetable is beyond a question. This effect in insect life would appear to be illustrated by a gradual change from pale cream colour to orange of the lighter-coloured portions of the wing of Papilio erithonius. Of the eleven months, one, the " death's-head " already mentioned, belonged to the family Splringidce, and four tussore moths (Satumia mylitta to Bombycidoe. The remaining six belonged to two species, one to the first and five to the second, which we have been unable to determine. Death' s-Head. — We have not named this specimen, as it differs so much in size, and in some respects in appearance, from others in our collection. The caterpillar was found on a Caladium leaf in our garden on 17th September. It was then about three inches long, smooth, of a grass green colour, with seven whitish diagonal lines each side. At the head end it had two peacock blue eyes in yellow spectacles, at the tail end a fulvous tentacle. It had its first encounter with the caterpillars of Danais chrt/sippus on 19th September, and its second on the 24th. On the 25th we found it trying to bury itself, and suspended it from the roof of the cage as already described. There we left it when we started for Mahableshwar on 11th October, but found on the 27th that the moth had emerged in the interval. In general appearance it resembled the largest specimen of the family {Acheroniix sti/x) in our collection, that is to say, its forewings were of a dark mottled brown, paling to yellowish, faintly clouded with white at the tips, and its hind wings were yellow, marked with brown, while its body was dark purple with a narrow longitudinal streak of yellow on each side, an six black transverse rings. But it was far inferior in size, * This theory would seem to derive some support from a beautiful experiment by Mr. Poulton in 1887, showing that the bright surroundings of larvce kept in a gilt- lined box fav-ur the production of golden pupa;. NOTES ON A CATERPILLAR FARM. 287 measuring barely four inches across the outspread wings, while the other was nearly six, and the skull mark was brown instead of white. Saturnia mylitta. — These were found on Zizyphus jujuba* in our compound on 4th September. When brought in, one had already completed, and another was just completing, its cocoon. The third had just begun to spin, and finished on the same day. The fourth, which was still in its larva stage and feeding heartily, was rather more than three inches long, sparsely haired in tufts, some- what deeply jointed, and very thick in proportion to its length. It was bright green in colour, with a triangular dark brown mark near the tail, its apex pointing forward, and a yellowish line running from it to near the head. On this line, at the head end, were two bright gold spots, and below it, between each pair of legs, a small oval orange spot with brown edges. About the head were a few small orange spots, and one rather larger dark brown. It cocooned on 5th September. The cocoons were a pale whity brown colour, egg-shaped, about two inches in length, and suspended from the twigs of the leaf plant, two or three leaves of which were drawn down on to the sides of the cocoon. They opened, at the upper end, the first on 21st September, the second on the 22nd. The moths from both of these were males. The two other cocoons opened on the 25th September, and the moths from them were females. All through the night of the 25th September we suffered from a regu- lar plague of tussore moths attracted into the house by our speci- mens. We caught twelve of them, all males, some with their wings in so tattered a condition that the wonder was they could fly at all. During the next day one of the females laid a number of eggs in clusters on the twigs of the food plant in the cage. The other laid none. Whether it would have done so had we waited we cannot say, for to avoid a repetition of the previous night's invasion we got rid of all our specimens before dark, and were left in peace. As we were shortly leaving Bombay, we did not try to raise any caterpillars from the eggs, but put them out on a Bear tree in the compound to shift for themselves. The caterpillars seemed to be earlier this year than last, for a single caterpillar that we secured in 1888 did not cocoon till 4th October. The cocoon did not open till 5th November, but this may possibly have been because we took it up to Mahableshwar with us. * Native name Bear. 288 BOMBAY NATBRAL HISTORY SOCIETY, Of the unnamed moths No. 1 was found on 13th August in ©ur com- pound, on a wild brown-speckled arum that comes up in profusion in the rains all through the jungle on Cumballa HilL It was smooth,, pale green, with a long black tentacle at the tail, and near the head two grass green eyes edged with bright yellow, below which were two yellow spots. When found it was about 2^ inches long. It ehrysalised in earth, but scarcely going beneath the |su;rface r on ]6th August. The imago appeared on 4th September, a largo female moth of a general pale ashy brown colour, with broad bands of darker brown across the wings. The forewings were deeply scooped along the inner margin, and both fore and hind wings were scalloped along the posterior margin. The body, which: was very thick, was ringed with five fine transverse white lines,. The pectinated antenna? were deeply hooked at the ends. Two Kiales, attracted into the house from outside, were also secured! on 5th September. The female laid a large number of eggs singly about the roof and walls of the cage on 6th; and 7th September, almost all of which were hatched on 1 3th. The larvae were palo yellow with a tentacle of the same colour, very long in proportion to the length of the body, at the tail end. We were unable to rear any of them, as the' food plant had unfortunately withered after tho rains. Nos. 2 — 6, small hairy caterpillars, dark brown, slightly marked with yellow and red, and so thick-bodied towards the head end as to present a somewhat " hump-back" appearance', were found ow 14th August on Ficus heterophyUa* on Cumballa Hill. They assumed the pupa form in loose cocoons of yellow fluff in cones of brown paper on 22nd August. The imago of one appeared on 3rd September, and of the others on- the 4th. The moth, thick -bodied, and with pectinated antennae, was about an inch across the wings, very downy, yellow, with two black spots near the tip of the fore- wing, and one near its posterior margin. It is a very common one in the house during the rains in Bombay. In concluding these notes, we could warn the reader to be cau- tious in using the native nomenclature', which is apt to be a little ^discriminative, at least among those ignorant persons of the lower orders who are most likely to be employed to assist in the work of a «aterpillar farm. For instance, we found the name Asok freely be- * Native name Karowt t* NOTES ON A CATERPILLAR FARM. 289 stowed on several sorts of trees besides the Guatteria. So, too, Karunja seems to be used indifferently for a thorny bush with a blue berry and a thornless tree with a flat round pod. While Zizyphus jujuba is called by some a hear, and by others a boar. But the strangest difficulty we had with names was in regard to the cater- pillars themselves. Native opinion seems to be divided as to whether a caterpillar is a centipide, scorpion, spider^ devil, worm or something else. Hence on enquiry in different quarters, we were differently informed that the name of these janwars is saturi, bichu, makra, bhoot, kiri, or kushrun. On the whole the worms had it. So our pets were generally known as kiri. "DOWN THE COAST." By. W. F. Sinclair, C.S. (Read at the Society's Meeting on 12th November 1889.) On a former occasion I described to you a voyage to the Isle- fort of Janjira by the creeks. It is a good terminus ; and I propose, to-day, to re-visit it by another route, indicated by the title of this discourse, and starting from Alibag. We must on this occasion suppose an early spring tide and start, as for our last trip, a little before high water, say, at 9 A.M. Our place of embarkation is a long sand-bank, so low that the highest monsoon tides sometimes wash over it, and covered with innumerable shells, all dead and worn, but many still entire, and often much more beautiful in decay than they were in life. Behind this is a little lagoon, filled by the rising tide, and then a few hundred yards of sand, green here and there with wiry shore grass, and backed by a long line of palm orchards, like Mahim Woods. Like these, too, they contain a population of some thousand souls ; and my reason for bringing them particularly to your notice is, that they cover what was, within recent history, exactly such a bank as that from which we sail. Their lagoon is now a salt-marsh in course of transformation into rice-fields, and if, as we suppose, the thing that has been is that which shall be, the sand-bank of to-day will be the town and garden of another generation. I wonder if it will read this prophecy there. On our left, or landward, side, as we face south, we see the line of the palm trees stretching some seven miles, till it seems to 290 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. 1 ii i iii ■ -—...,, ■ ■■■■ i n stop at the foot of a range of wooded hills, some 800 feet high, ending to the seaward in a low fortified peak, whereof we shall have a better view later in the day. Due west, upon our right hand, the Isle-fort ot Kolaba, at this state of tide, rises apparently sheer from the water, a range of crumbling fortifications, about twenty feet high in most parts, topped by abundant foliage, including that of a few palm trees, and varied by a couple of temples. Over the highest northern tower a tall white flag-staff, with a square yard, shines in the morning sun like a silver cross. This marks the warning-signal station, where watch is kept day and night in favour of the traffic of Bombay. It has saved many vessels and many lives • and I seldom see that cross in the sky without a mental quotation of the " In hoc signo vinces" But it is not always victorious ; and on one very recent occasion its warning was not attended to in time to prevent a serious accident. All round the fort, and beyond it for miles, the reefs lie hidden under the flood-tide. Only to the southward, and almost on our course, a black tower, rising straight from the water, marks one of the worst — the Chaul Kadu reef. Just by its foot an occasional wave breaks on the almost forgotten wreck of the P. & O. steam -ship " Jeddo." Close before us the breach of the sea marks a sand bar forming the other side of the creek, and we being by this timo embarked, steer to cross it, where a cocoanut stem marks the passage over the bar. This, just at present, is in use as the perch of a sea-eagle (Ralicetus leucog aster), who is so well aware that we will not hurt him, that he lets the boat come close enough for us to see his eye, and admire his snow-white head and breast, contrasted, sea-gull-like, with a slate-grey back and wings. Then, rather as despising than fearing our neighbourhood, he lazily flaps away upon over a fathom of wing # Half-a-dozen handsome black and white birds head across the bow and the men look to the stern sheets as if they expected the shot to be taken ; but it is not well to spend time in shooting on this trip, for we want all our daylight. These are Oyster-catchers,* or • I have in a former number noted the apparent error in Jerdon's Birds o India, where the truncated beak, so common in European Oyster-oatohers is noted a a generic distinction. I have examined many specimens in the British Museum and here, and now believe it to be only the result of wear, having nerer found it in my Indian specimens. None of these have the completely red bill of many European birds, the coloration is that described by JerdoD) orange with black tip. Furtue 1 * Indian observations are required. "down thb coast." 291 " sea-pies," which abound here. Some remain all the year round, and probably breed on the sandhills of the shore to our left. Further out, a flock of ducks are wheeling over the water as if looking where to alight, and they pass near enough to be recog- nised by the white wing-mark as " White-eyed Pochards," the commonest sea-duck hereabouts. By this time we have poled out of the creek against the tide, and set our sail to a light land breeze, which wants the help of oars to move the boat, and will presently die away in " cat's paws." But by this time we are well clear of bank and reef, and have already found the ebb tide running down the coast at the rate of nearly three knots an hour; and this, with our oars, carries us down some six miles, till we pass within half a mile of the fortified point mentioned before. This is Korlai, or " Castle Curlew," once known as the " Morro of Chaui" to the Portuguese, who took it by storm from the kings of Ahmednagar, pulled it down, and rebuilt it. Inside and north of it we can see the opening of a great creek, full of native shipping, and flanked on the otber (north) side by an extensive European fortification. This is the Agarkot, or "garden fort" of Rewadanda, once a walled town crowded with palaces, convents, and the other incidents of Portuguese colonization. It now contains little beyond nuts and trees, mostly cocoanut palms, which hang over the ruinous ramparts. Only one tall Franciscan tower shows itself above the palms, a mere shell, and covered with vegetation, but still erect. A fishing boat running for the port answers our hail with a yell of " Waghade"= a Tigerlings," which is rather good news, as these are not named from their vice, but from their stripes, and are, in fact, Mackerel (Scomber microlepidotns) . They are not so large as the English ones, but quite equal in quality, if properly cooked while fresh, and we can have more than enough for our whole ship's company for a rupee. By way of variety, we take the change in sardines, which are commonly in season here along with the mackerel, and much better than the tinned article. Our cooks mostly know how to treat them a Vhuile, which is the classic method ; but at present they may go on to the gridiron along with the mackerel, and, just in time, the forenoon calm of the tropic coast gives way to the sea-breeze and the oars can be got in, which leaves space for getting breakfast ready, as we run down the shore of Little Ethiopia ( Habsau ). 292 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. This would naturally have begun at Korlai, the southern point of the mouth of the Kundalika, as that river is the '*■ March burn." But the powers that have in succession held Chaul harbour (which we now commonly call Rewadanda) have always made a point of having both sides of it, and we, like the Marathas before us, and the Portuguese before them (and so on backward), hold both banks at the mouth. The coast, however, seems rather to protest against this political arrangement. As we pass clear of Korlai it changes in character. The hills, which on the Alibag coast were several miles inland, now close upon the sea in solid rank ; the yellow sands are only in patches along the black basaltic shore, and but few palm trees adorn the first port we pass in Janjira. This is Borlai, quaintly named after the dwarf-ringed-plovers (JEgialitis) of the shore, as its neighbour Korlai, after the curlew. It is a tolerable fine-weather port, but beyond it, the wooded hills come down to the sea, ending in low cliffs running out to the point of Dandi. All this while we are deepening our water, for the bottom of the sea has changed as much as the beach, and so we find ourselves amongst neighbours who at Alibag were in the offing, and only occasionally close with that shore. The sardines have come up from the south in force, and the scene is lively enough. Every here and there we can see gulls and terns fishing, though this form of bird-life is not so abundant here as at home. Occasion- ally, a little crowd of them marks the presence of a shoal of sardines, on which they are working, or a rough rippling patch, the play of a school of mackerel. Scabbard-fish and garfish, like little silver arrows, frequently leap close to the boat, or scramble out of her way along the surface, and one or two actually jump into her and slip through the kit stowed amidships into the bottom. The large Dolphins (gadha) are alive all round, rolling, plunging, and cutting somersaults amongst the sardines and mackerel J and just as we are watching one very lively group to leeward, there is a strange snoring sound behind us, and a cry of " Deo Masa" among the crew, one or two of whom raise their hands in salute. We turn just in time to see the last of a great black object half a mile away, but the whale — for whale he is — must rise again pre- sently, and if he keeps his course under water, will rise quite as near as we care to see him; and" there he blows'' again, sure enough/ " DOWN THE COAST." 293 at little more than a cable's length. He is apparently a small Fin- back, or Rorqual, perhaps 40 feet long. You notice that he does not " spout" as whales do in pictures and poems. The fact is that no whale habitually spouts water. But in northern seas the hot-water-laden air from his lungs is condeused by the colder atmosphere iuto a cloud of steam, or even drops of water. Here and now the air is as warm outside the whale as inside him. Wounded whales do certainly sometimes spout blood, and I suppose that a sick one might throw up other things besides ambergris and Jonah ; but colds in the head and bloody noses are no more normal to whales than to ourselves, though probably plentier than prophets or perfumes. Again our whale rises, and still nearer; but as he disap- pears we see for an instant his tail in the air. He has seen more of the boat than he likes, and will change his course, of which I am not sorry, liking his room better than his company, since we are not in the way of boiling him down. He has accompanied us past a mile or more of very inviting looking sand; but we know that it is frino-ed all along with reefs dangerous even to our small craft. Behind it the wooded hills rise steep, and it ends in a head land, bolder and more picturesque than Dandi, with high detached crags — Adi Point. A little beyond this, however, the hill recedes in a great crescent, and Nandgaum Bay shows again the familiar long line of palm-trees with their edging of almost white sand. Yitir (or Vihur) Point, beyond it, is bluff and wild again ; but rounding it, we come in sight of a great bay, evidently leading far inland. In fact we know of old where it goes, for right in the mid- dle of the narrow waist of it stands our old acquaintance, the sea- castle of Jaujira; and we have just been signalled as rounding the point by the nearer aud smaller isle fort of Kansa, a sort of calf to the great fortress, which we pass under the salute. The tide has turned these two hours, and the boat is going up the bay at a speed of probably five knots an hour, heading for the far end of a line of cocoa palms on the north side, faced with many white buildino-s. This is Murud, the working metropolis of the State under its present ruler, who has given up living on a rock in the water like a garefowl on an " All-aloue-stone," as his ancestors did. The apparently unbroken line of white foam before us is on the bar, and it makes a man hold his breath as the boat rushes before flood tide and sea-breeze into an opening that seems scarce wider than herself. Instantly the helm goes down, and she comes up 39 294 BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. almost into the wind, and as quickly falls away again into the nexfe bend of the channel. Seven times mnst the helm be shifted in a cable's length of that pass; but with the seventh turn we float out of the foam into a deep, calm, little harbour, where the palma hang almost over the water, and our trip down the coast is over. THE INDIAN BISON, WITH SOME NOTES ON STALKING HIM. BY J. D. IXVERAEITY. (Read at the Society's Meeting on 1st October 1839.) My first introduction to the Indian Bison was in the pages of " The Old Forest Ranger/' when I was a very small boy. My youth- ful imagination was so excited by the account of the bull, who is there described as coming" on at headlong speed, his tail on end, his bloodshot eye rolling in the frenzy of madness, his tongue lolling far out of his mouth, and the white foam flyiug from his distended jaws, that I there and then determined that when I grew up I should do little else than shoot bison, and though circumstances have prevented my carrying out that intention to its fullest extent,, I have spent several hot weather vacations in the pursuit of that animal; and I propose in this paper to give a brief outline of its habits, supplemented by some observations as to the mode of bringing him to bag. Sportsmen in the early part of this century do not seem to have known much about bison. No mention what- ever is made of him in Captain Williamsons " Field Sports/' the second edition of which was published in 1819. In Dr. Johnson's Sketches of Indian Field Sports, he says " there is also another species of animal in Ramghur called Gour, a kind of wild bullock of a prodigious size, not well known to Europeans. I have never obtained a sight of them, but have often seen the prints of their feet, the impression of one of them covering as large a space as a common china plate! " In the Oriental Sporting Magazine of July 1829, there is an account of what was evidently Biscn shooting under the title of " Bffalo Hunt," and the quarry are alluded to throughout as THE INDIAN BISON. 295 '''buffalo." Ill tlie Mav number of the same Magazine for 1831 a correspondent gives an account of bison, and remarks "I allude to Bison, which some maintain to be a wild buffalo and others the common cow in its natural state, from both of which animals it is quite distinct." The first sporting works which, as far as I know, dealt with bison shooting, are the " Old Forest Ranger " and ff My Indian Journal," both by Campbell of Skipness. Since then numerous sportsmen have described their experiences of bison in print. The best and most reliable accounts to my mind are to be found in the " Hio-h lands of Central India" and Mr. Sanderson's book. None of the illustrations of bison in any of the published books give even an approximately good representation of what a bison is like. The best I think, is the one in " My Indian Journal," but it errs in exaggerating the thicknes ef the withers. The legs also are wrongly coloured. They are shown as being white from below the knee, whereas in truth the white stockings on the legs begin from the top of the knee, an in the hind legs from the point of the hock. The same mistake is made in the picture of the Bull Bison in Mr. Sanderson's book. The white legs are correctly shown hi the illustrations in the "Highlands of Central India" and in "Seonee." I have several photos here of bison which prove what I say as to this. The only other ruminants that I know of with white legs are the wild buffalo and the old buck of the Sinde ibex (Caof any description. The jungle man with subtle flattery will account for this by telling you that having heard your Honour's name they have fled. On other days you will see stags that have shed their horns or small parcels of hinds, or get on the tracks From the Himalayas. J 115 Hymenopterous In- sects. 2^8 Lepidopterous do. ... 67 Orthopterous do. ... 20 Coleopterous do. ... Mr. H. M. Hewett. 2 Pair of Chital Horns (interlocked) Mr. II. A. Heath. PROCEEDINGS. 321 Contribution. Description. Contributor. Paboia elegans Mr. Mr. M is Mr. Mr. Mr. Mr. Dr. Mr. Mr. Mr. H. W. Barrow. 4H Birds' Eggs 2 Malabar Whistling Thrushes (alive). 1 Cobra (alive) 1 Snake (alive) From Kh:iragho,-a Myiophonus horsfiehli Naga tripudiana Eve'/ard. s A. Dickinson. 0. Vidal, C.S. Bulvantrao Jayaram, Bulvautrao Jayaram. Mever. Cynophioa malabaricus ... Cynophis malabatiuus ... Naga tripudians Kilkelly. P. R. Mehta 1 Cobra (alive) A quantity of Butterflies... From Karwar T. R. Be!]. 1 Mauura (alive) Paradoxurus musanga ... Ramchuudra Trimbuck Minor Contributions from Mr. J. W. Mayer, Mr. J. A. Bethnm. Miss F. Bapty, Mr. E. A. Corke, Mr. IT. M. Hewett, Miss Bessie Rean, Mr. Dattatraya Bhau and Mr. J. Janni. CONTltlBUTIONS TO THE LIBRARY. Fauna of British India— Fishes ; by E. T. Blardford, Vol. II. (Day' 1 , presented by the author. Report on the Kolar Goldfield ; by P. Bosworth Smith, F.G.S., presented by the author. The Indian Forester, July 1889, in exchange. Proceedings of the Linnaean Society of New South "Wales, Vol. IV., part 2, in exchange. Memoires de la Societe Zoologiqne de France, Vol. II., part 1, in exchange. Bulletin and Annual Eepoit of the American Museum of Natural History in exchange. Annual Report of the Secretary for Mines, Victoria, in exchange. Report of the Mining Registrars on the Gold Fields of Victoria, in exchange. A special vote of thanks was passed to Mr. Frank Eailey of London and Mr. A. Gilmour of Melbourne for their valuable contributions to the Society's Museum. The Honorary Secretary drew attention to the learned paper which Mr. L. de Niceville, of Calcutta, had written for the Society's Journal, describing a number of new and rare Indian butterflies. The paper would, he said, very shortly be published in part 3 of the Journal. The coloured lithographed plates (containing illustrations of twenty-one butterflies), which had been received from West, Newman & Co., of London, for the above paper, were greatly admired. Amongst the contributions above acknowledged was a pair of chetul's horns, received from Mr. H. A. Heath, of Bassim, Berars, which excited much interest. The stags, while fighting, had in some extraordinary manner so interlocked their antlers that they had found it impossible to separate them, and consequently must have died from starvation, or have been eaten by wild beasts. Mr. W. F. Sinclair, C.S., then read a short paper, entitled "Down the Coast," describing, in a very clear and interesting manner, the character of the scenery on the sea coast, south of Bombay, between Alibag and Janjira. The lecturer gave a lively account of the principal objects of Natural History likely to be met with during the trip, and illustrated his remarks with various specimens of birds, fish, &c., from the Society's collections. 43 REPRINT. I :> m..- THE JOURNAL OF THR Bombay Natural History Society. EDITED BY THE HON. SECRETARY No. 1— VOL. IV. Bombaij: miNTED AT THE EDUCATION SOCIETY'S PRESS, BTCULLA CONTENTS OF THIS NUMBER. • Nesting in "Western India {With a Plate). (By Lieut. H. E. Barnes) ■* A Creek of the Konkan. (By W. F. Sinclair, C. S.) 21 Our. Htmenoptera. (By Robert C. Wroughton) 26 An Address to Students of Botany in Western India. (By A. K. Nairne) 37 Notes on Birds of Quetta. (By A, J. H. Newnham, Bo. S. C, F. Z. S.) 52 Instance of Teratology in the Brinjal or Egg-Plant (Solarium melongena), (By 1>. M.) (With Illustration) 55 Sporting Rambles Round About Simla. (By J. C. Anderson) 56 Ax Malta to and from India. (By Capt. E. F. Becher, R. A., F. Z.S.) 66 Miscellaneous 69 English Nomenclature for Indian Butterflies 70 Proceedings 71 pmkg $tafaipil ||istai|g ^oci^ir. LIST OF OFFICE-BEARERS. 11. E. the Right Honorable Lord Rlay, q.ci.k., ll.d,, f.r.g.s, Ditc-picsibcnt. Dr. D. MacDonald, m.d., 13. SC, CM. The Hou'ble Justice Birdwood, m.a., ll.m. (Cantab). Dr. G. A. Maconachie, m.d., cm. $cw. Secretary. Mr. H. M. Phipson, cm. z.s. V1011. (Lrnisnnr. Mr. E. M. Slater. CLrbitor. Mr. II. M. Phipson, cm. z.s. £H;w;iginci (Committee. Dr. G. A. Maconachie. Dr. D. MacDonald. Col. C. Swiuhoe. Rev. F. Dreckmann, s.j. Dr. T. S. Weir. Dr. Kirtikar. Mr. J, H. Steel, a.v.d. Mr. J. D. Inverarity. The Hon. Mr. Justice Birdwood. Mr. G. W. Vidal,,cs. Mr. AY. F. Sinclair, c.s. Mrs. Pechey-Phipson, m.d. Major W. S. Bisset, R;E. Lieut. H. E. Barnes. Mr. J. C Anderson. Mr. E. L. Barton. Mr. E. M. Slater, ex-officio. Mr. H. M. Phipson, ex-officio. 1st Section. — {Mammals and Birds.) President — Mr. R. A. Sterndale, f.r.g.s., f.z.s. Secretary — Lieut. H. E. Barnes. 2nd Section. — (Reptiles and Fishes.) President— Mr. G. W. Vidal, c.s. Secretary — Mr. H. M. Phipson, cm. z.s. 3rd Section.— (Insects.) President— Colonel C. Swinhoe, f.z.s., f.l.s., f.e.s. Secretary— Mr. E. II. Aitken. 4th Section. — (Other hivertelrata.) President— Dr. G. A. Maconachie, m.d., cm. Secretary— Mr, J. C, Anderson. 5th Section. — (Botany.) President— The Hou'ble Justice Birdwood, m.a., ll.m. (Cantab.) Secretary — Surgeon K. R, Kirtikar, f,s.m. (France), f.k.c.s. ADVERTISEMENTS- ARTIFICIAL EYES For Mounting BIRDS AND ANIMALS. ARSEWIuAL SOAP AND OTHER PRESERVATIVES. Scalpels, Skinning Knives, AND SPECIMEN JARS^ KEMP & Co., Ld., Ghemivts, Bombay. BOTANICAL DRYING PAPER, Especially Prepared POE PRESSING PLANTS 20" x 1(5 ' Apply to HON. SEC, Nat. Hist. See, Bombay. THE BIRDS OF BOMBAY- BY L1EDT. H. E. BARNES Price Rs. 7. Apply to HON. SEC, Nat. Hist. Soe., Bombay, WINCHESTER REPEATING RIFLES AND SPORTING CARBINES, From Es. 90. PHIPSON * CO., BOMBAY. CYMKHANA AND SPORTING KIT, PISH'NC TACKLE IN EVERY DETAIL. TREACHER & CO-, LD- BOMBAY &POONA. ARSENICAL SOAP, NAPTHALINE, CAMPHOR- ENTOMOLOGICAL CORK, Bird Stuffinc Instruments, SPORTING KNIVES- THOMSON* TAYLOR Chemists, 35, Esplanade Road, BOMBAY, FOR SALE. MALABAR WHISTLING THRUSHES, OK HILL BLUEBIRDS- The property of Soldiers at Purandhar. CZLWKE* KIT AND STOKES. NATURALISTS' COLLECTING APPARATUS. PRESERVING AND SETTING-UP ITEMS- PHILLIPS & CO.,LD., BOMBAY & POONA. Good whistlers, Rs. 10 each Apply to Rev. A. G. Cane, Poona. All Requisites FOR TAXIDERMY AND ENTOMOLOGY. Furnished by Treacher & Co., Ld„ Chemists, Bombay. Reprint* THE JOURNAL OF THE Bombay Natural History Society. EDITED BY ». M PHIPSON, NO. 2-VOL. IY. ISonriag : PRINTED AT THE EDUCATION SOCIETY'S PRESS, BYCULLA. 1899. CONTENTS OF THIS NUMBER. PAGE Nesting in Western India {With a Plate.) By Lieut. H. E. jjiirnes ... ... ... ... ... ... ... ... 8t) Rough Notes on Travel and Sport in Kashmir and Little Shoet Notes on the Odoriferous Grasses (Andropogons) of India and Ceylon, with a description of a supposed new Species. By Mrs. J. C. Lisboa. {With a Plate.) 118 Correspondence relating to the Protection of Insectivorous Birds in the Interests Of Agriculture ... ... ... 124 Memorandum on an Outbreak of Surra Fever at the Stables of the Bombay Tramway Company, Limited. By F. C. Rimington 131 Recorded Instances of Children having been nourished by Wolves and Birds of Prev. By Jivanji Jamsheclji Modi. 142 Miscellaneous Notes— Agriculture in India 147 A Black Tiger 149 Note on a Talking Bulbul 150 The Red Ant— By EH A 151 Memoranda— By H. Littledale, Baroda 153 Parasitic Trees 154 A Correction ... .. ... ... • ... ... ... 155 Proposed English Nomenclature for Indian Butterflies ... ... 155 Correspondence 157 Book Notices — The Geographical Distribution of the Family Chardridse, or the Plovers, Sandpipers, Snipes and their Allies ... 157 Recent Information about the Great Auk or Garefowl 160 X ROCEEDINGS ... .•• ... ••« ... ... »•• ... -101 gombag Uatoqal §mio^ £u\$% LIST OF OFFICE-BEARERS. |.1resib£ttf. H. E. the Right Honorable Lord Reay, q.c.i.e., ll.d,, p.r.g.s, i)icc-|j«sibeitfs. Dr. D. MacDonald, M.n., b. sc, cm. The Hon'ble Justice Birdwood, m.a., ll.m. (Cantab.) Br. G. A. Maconachie, m.d., car. Hofficio. 1st Section. — (Mammals and Birds.) President — Mr. R. A. Sterndale, p.r.g.s., p.z.s. Secretary — Lieut. H. E. Barnes. 2nd Section. — (Reptiles and Fishes.) President — Mr. G. W. Vidal, c.s. Secretary — Mr. H. M, Phipson, c. m. z. s. 3rd Section.— (Insects. ) President— Colonel C. Swinhoe, P.z.s., p.l.s., f.e.s. Secretary — Mr. E. H. Aitken. 4th Section. — (Other Invertebrata.) President— Dr. G. A. Maconachie, m.d., cm. Secretary— Mr. J. C. Anderson. 5th Section. — (Botany.) President— Hon'ble Mr. Justice Birdwood, m.a., ll.m. (Cantab.) Secretary — Surgeon K. R. Kirtikar, f.s.m. (France), f.r.cs. WITfl IW0 IIrIra^¥^^'FieN^. No. 3— VOL. IV. 33amfcag: PRINTED AT THE EDUCATION SOCIETY'S PRESS, BYCULLA. CONTENTS OF THIS NUMBER. • PAGE On New and Little -known Butterflies from the Indian Regioh, with a Revision of the Genus PLE8I0NEUBA of Felder and of Authors. (By Lionel de Niceville, F.E.S., C.M.Z.S., &c.) (With Plates A, B.) 163 Notes on Man-Eating Tigers. (By Reginald Gilbert, Bombay) ... 195 The Camel. (By J. H. Steel, A.V.D.) 207 How to Facilitate the Study of Botany. (By G. Carstensen, Grad. Horfc. R. D. C. Agr., Copenhagen.) 213 An Indian Naturalist's Trip to Australia. (By Surgeon-Major K. R. Kirtikar) 219 Miscellaneous — Two Curious Instances of Mimicry 228 Zoological Note 230 Correspondence — Wild Buffalo „ 231 Proceedings „ 232 Uroibag Natural gistorji $sm% LIST OF OFFICE-BEARERS. |1 rrsibt ixt. H. E. the Right Honorable Lord Reay, g.c.i.e., ll.d., f.r.cs. Dr. D. MacDonald, m.d., b.s.c, cm. The Hon'ble Justice Birdwood, m.a., ll.m. (Cantab.) Dr. G. A. Maconachie, m.d., cm. Pott. SSrnxfsrg. Mr. H. M. Phipson, cm.z.s. poit. ^Treasurer. Mr. B. M. Slater. debitor. Mr. H. M. Phipson, cm. z.s. Ulauaghtg Committer. The Hon. Mr. Justice Birdwood. Dr. G. A. Maconachie. Dr. D. MacDonald. Col. C. Swinhoe. Rev. P. Dreckmann, s.J. Dr. T. S. Weir. Dr. Kirtikar. Mr. J. H. Steel, a.v.d. Mr. J. D. Inverarity. Mr. E. M. Slater, ex-offieio. Mr. H. M. Phipson, ex-ofjicio. Mr. G. W. Yidal, as. Mr. W. F. Sinclair, as. Mrs. W. E. Hart. Major W. S. Bisset, R.E. Lieut. H. E. Barnes. Mr. J. C. Anderson. Mr. E. L. Barton. Mr. Reginald Gilbert. ]st Section. — {Mammals and Birds.) President — Mr. R. A. Sterndale, f.k.g.s., f.z.s. Secretary — Lieut. H. E. Barnes. 2nd Section. — (Reptiles and Fishes.) President— Mr. G. W. Vidal, as. Secretary — Mr. H. M. Phipson, cm.z.s. 3rd Section. — (Insects.) President — Colonel C. Swinhoe, f.z.s., f.l.s., f.e.s. Secretary — Mr. E. H. Aitken. 4th Section. — (Other Invertebrata.) President — Dr. G. A. Maconachie, m.d., cm. Secretary — Mr. J. C. Anderson. 5th Section. — (Botany.) President — The Hon'ble Justice Birdwood, m.a., ll.m. (Cantab.; ADVERTISEMENTS. ARTIFICIAL EYES BOTANICAL GYMKHANA Fob Mounting BIRDS AND ANIMALS. ARSENICAL SOAP AND DRYING PAPER, Especially Prepared FOE AND SPORTINC KIT, FISHING TACKLE OTHER PRESERVATIVES. PRESSING PLANTS. IN Scalpels, Skinning Knives, 20* X 16' EVERY DETAIL. SPECIMEN JARS. ■ KEMP & Co., Ld-, Chemists, Bombay. Apply to HON. SEC, Nat. Hist. Soc-, Bombay. TREACHER & CO., LD., BOMBAY & POONA. THE BIRDS OF BOMBAY, WINCHESTER REPEATING RIFLES BOMBAY NATURAL HISTORY SOCIETY. BY LIEUT. H. E. BARNES. AND SPORTING CARBINES. Back numbers of the Journal can be obtained Price Rs. 7. From Rs. 90. from the Honorary Secretary either in sin- gle copies or in bound Apply to HON. SEC, Nafc. Hist. Soc, Bombay PHI PSON & CO., BOMBAY. Volumes : — Price to Members. Rs. 1-4 ARSENICAL SOAP, CAMP KIT All Requisites NAPTHALINE, CAMPHOR. AND STORES. FOB ENTOMOLOGICAL CORK, Bird Stuffinc Instruments, SPORTING KNIVES. NATURALISTS' COLLECTINQ APPARATUS. PRESERVING TAXIDERMY AND ENTOMOLOGY. THOMSON & TAYLOR, Chemists, AND SETTINC-UP ITEMS. Furnished by 35, Esplanade Road, PHILLIPS & CO., LD., TREACHER L Co, Ld. BOMBAY. BOMBAY & POONA. Chemists, Bombay. Reprint, THE JOURNAL OF THE Bombay Natural History Society EDITED BY H. M. P,H IPSON. No, 4— VOL. IY. Bombay : PRINTED AT THE EDUCATION SOCIETY'S PRESS, BYCULLA. 1389. GONTENTS OF THIS NUMBER. ♦ PAGE Nesting in Western India. By Lieut. H. E. Barnes 237 The Man-Eating Tigress op Mundali 255 Elementary Botany of the Bombay Presidency. By A. K. Nairne 264 Notes on a Caterpillar Farm. By Mrs. W. E. Hart 277 "Down the Coast." By W. F. Sinclair, C.S 289 The Indian Bison, with some Notes on Stalking him. By J. D. Inverarity 2 94 Miscellaneous Notes — 1.— Belief in the Bis-Cobra 310 2. — The Water Rail {Rallus aquaticus) 311 3. — How a Snake climbs 311 4. — Battle between Bees and Wasps 312 5.— Man-Eating Tigers 312 6.—A Whistling Bulbul 313 7.— The Dyal Bird as Imitator 313 8.— A Pet Drongo 313 9. — Mimicry for Protection and from Example 313 10 — Uses of the Screw Palm (Pandanus odoratissimus), Kevada. 314 11. — Mimicry in Birds 315 12 — Papilio polymnester, P. dissimilis and P. jmnope 815 13. — Bears being eaten by Tigers 316 14. — Measurements of Indian Elephants 316 15. — A Branching Areca Nut Palm 317 16. — Mimicry in Caterpillars 317 Proceedings .» ... 318 drag IMral §|istorg $aiktv. LIST OF OFFICE-BEARERS. H. E. the Right Honorable Lord Reay, g.c.i.e., ll.d., f.r.g.s. $tce-|htsibcnts. Dr D. MacDonald, m.d., b.sc, cm. The Bon'ble Justice Birdwood, m.a, ll.m. (Cantab.) Dr. G. A. Maconachie, m.d., cm. %an. Jeccrdanr. Mr. II. M. Phipson, cm.z.s. |)otT. fyxtVtBVXZIC. Mir. E. M. Slater. dbiior. Mr. H. M. Phipson, c.M.z s. Utan&giirg <£cmmittce. Dr. G. A. Maconachie. Dr. D. MacDonald. Col. C. Swinhoe. Rev. F. Dreckmann, s.j. Dr. T. S. Weir. Dr. Kirtikar. Mr. J. H. Steel, a.v.d. Mr. J. D. Inverarity. The Hon. Mr, Justice Birdwood, Mr. G. W. Vidal, cs. Mr. W. F. Sinclair, cs. Mrs. W. E. Hart. Major W. S. Bisset, R.E. Lieut. H. E. Barnes. Mr. J. C. Anderson. Mr. E. L. Barton. Mr. Reginald Gilbert. Mr. E. M. Slater, ex-offitio. Mr. H. M. Phipson, ex-officio. President- Secretary- President' Secretary- President- Secretary- President- Seci-etary- President- Secretary 1st Section. — (Mammals and Birds.) -Mr. R. A. Sterndale, f.r g.s., f.z.s. -Lieut. H. E. Barnes. 2nd Section.— (Reptiles and Fishes.) -Mr-. G. W. Yidal, cs. -Mr. H. M. Phipson, cm.z.s. 3rd Section. — {Insects.) -Colonel C. Swinhoe, f.z.s., f.l.s., f.b.s. -Mr. E. H. Aitken. 4th Section. — (Other Inrcrtehrata.) -Dr. G. A. Maconachie, m.d., cm. —Mr. J. C. Anderson. 5th Section. — (Botany.) -The Hon'ble Justice Birdwood, m.a., ll.m. (Cantab.) -Surgeon K. R. Kirtikar, f.s. m. (France), f.ii.cs. ME Y