THE
SWALLOW-TAILED INDIAN ROLLER.
| SWALLOW-TAILED
Indian Rollers are natives of North-eastern Africa and
Senegambia, and also the interior of the Niger district.
The bird is so called from its way of occasionally
rolling or turning over ill its flight, somewhat after
the fashion of a tumbler pigeon. A traveler in describing
the habits of the Roller family, says: "On the 12th
of April I reached Jericho alone, and remained there in
solitude for several days, during which time I bad many
opportunities of observing the grotesque habits of the
Roller. For several successive evenings, great flocks of
Rollers mustered shortly before sunset on some dona trees
near the fountain, with all the noise but without the
decorum of Rooks. After a volley of discordant screams,
from the sound of which it derives its Arabic name of
"sehurkrak," a few birds would start from their
perches and commence overhead a series of somersaults. In
a moment or two they would be followed by the whole
flock, and these gambols would be repeated for a dozen
times or more. Everywhere it takes its perch on some conspicuous branch or on the top of a rock, where it can see and be seen. The bare tops of the fig trees, before they put forth their leaves, are in the cultivated terraces, a particularly favorite resort. |
In the barren Ghor I have often
watched it perched unconcernedly on a knot of gravel or
marl in the plain, watching apparently for the emergence
of beetles from the sand. Elsewhere I have not seen it settle on the ground. Like Europeans in the East, it can make itself happy without chairs and tables in the desert, but prefers a comfortable easy chair when it is to be found. Its nest I have seen in ruins, in holes in rocks, in burrows, in steep sand cliffs, but far more generally ill hollow trees. The colony in the Wady Kelt used burrows excavated by themselves, and many a hole did they relinquish, owing to the difficulty of working it. So cunningly were the nests placed under a crumbling, treacherous ledge, overhanging a chasm of perhaps one or two hundred feet, that we were completely foiled in our siege. We obtained a nest of six eggs, quite fresh, in a hollow tree in Bashan, near Gadara, on the 6th of May. The total length of the Roller is about twelve inches. The Swallow-tailed Indian Roller, of which we present a specimen, differs from the European Roller only in having the outer tail feathers elongated to an extent of several inches." |