LAGENOPLASTES FLU VICOLA. Indian Cliff-Swallow. Hirundo fluvicola, Jerd. Birds of Ind., vol. i. p. 161.—Blyth, Journ. Asiat. Soc. Beng., 1855, p. 470.—Blanf. in Ibis, 1867, p. 462. Cotyle —— ? Adams in Proc. of Zool. Soc., 1859, p. 176. no. 58*. Lagenoplastes empusa, Gould, MS.—Blyth in Ibis, 1866, p. 337. As not one in twenty of the collections of birds made in India contains an example of this pretty little Swallow, we may reasonably infer that it is extremely rare or very local in its habitat. It appears to have been unknown to Colonel Sykes and Captain Burgess, and even to Mr. Blyth. Of the three specimens now before me, one was obtained by Captain Julian at Kangra in the Punjab, another was kindly sent to me by Dr. Jerdon, and the third was procured by Mr. W. T. Blanford at Nagpoor. It is doubtless the bird described by Dr. Leith Adams as inhabiting Cashmere. In size, and in many of its habits, particularly its mode of nidification, it so closely resembles the Lagenoplastes Ariel of Australia, that I have no hesitation in regarding it as a second species of that genus. Both these Swallows live in societies, and the individuals of each breed in close contiguity. The bottle-shaped nests, represented in the plate, have been figured from description, and not from real nests; but, having had ample opportunities of observing the nidification of the antipodean species, I believe that they are not very far wrong. 7 Some little diversity occurs in the three Indian examples above mentioned,—one having an obscure greyish white spot on the inner web of the external feather, and a still fainter one on the next; two have the red crown striated, while in the third the striae are obsolete: these may be sexual differences only. “T first met with this species,” says Mr. Jerdon, “ near the rivers Sonar and Ken in Bundelkund, breeding in company on the rocky cliffs overhanging the water; I afterwards found it in one or two localities not very far from Saugor,—on the Nerbudda, near Jubbulpore,—and also on the Wurdu river, not far from Chanda. It had not, I believe, been previously noticed by any observer, is both rare and local in its haunts, and occurs only in small numbers. In several of their breeding-places, probably as many as fifty or sixty of their retort-shaped nests were crowded close together. When I first discovered them (towards the end of April or the beginning of May), the birds were busily engaged in breeding ; but I could not get at the nests to procure any of their eggs.” ‘I thrice saw colonies of Airundo fluvicola, Jerdon,” writes Mr. W. T. Blanford in the ‘ Ibis’ for 1867 ; “but it is a rare bird. The nests were in every case massed together, as described by Dr. Jerdon in his ‘Birds of India,’ beneath an overhanging bank, below which was deep water. My friend Mr. Fedden, who was with me in the same district, told me that he met with a colony beneath a waterfall on the Pem Gunga — river, and the birds flew in and out of their nests through the spray. In every case the nests were in places which would be covered by the river during the wet season. I was told by the natives that the birds keep about the same spot, and return again to their former nesting-place after the rains. This is highly probable; for one of the localities was on the Wurdu river, west of Chanda, mentioned by Dr. Jerdon. The birds appear never to go very far from their nests, and generally keep close to the river, beating for about half a mile or so up and down, not, however, keeping to the river-bed itself. The eggs are white, sparingly spotted with claret-colour or nearly pure white. I suspect the birds have two broods in a year— one in February, the other in April. I found many young birds in the nests at the beginning of March ; while in April there were eggs in the nests, and the young of the first brood, differing very little from their parents, were flying about.” ‘A small striated Swallow,” says Dr. Leith Adams, “is common on the ates and streams in the Vale of Cashmere during the summer months, and likewise in the Punjab at certain — Crown rufous, speckled with narrow black lines; back glossy black ; wings bluish black ; rump inclining to white ; tail black, slightly forked ; throat and breast white, with numerous black lines ; belly and eae white, with the black lines more sparingly dispersed ; tarsus naked ; inner surface of wing brownish black. Crown of the head rufous; back and scapularies deep steely black, some of the feathers of the former edged with white; wings and tail brown; feathers of the lower part of the back and upper tail-coverts brown, becoming paler at the tips; under surface white; chin, throat, breast, and flanks streaked with brown ; under surface of the wing pale brown ; bill black ; feet blackish brown. The figures on the opposite Plate are of the size of life.