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Chapter 3 THE INDIAN SNAKE-BIRD

Word Count: 1099    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

ess cormorant, sew on the head and neck of a heron, and you will have produced a very fair imitation of the Indian snake-bird. If during the operation you happen to have dislocated one of

the snake-bird is probably without peer. This is not surprising, since it possesses the swimming and diving apparatus of the cormorant, the

body submerged, showing only the upper neck above the surface. Every now and again it completely disappears from view. After remaining submerged for several seconds the head reappears with a small fish projecting from the bill. The fish is forthwith thrown a little way into the air, and then caught and sw

rom a perch like a kingfisher. I have not observed the bird behav

a water-snake when the bird swims, as it often does, with the body submerged. If danger threatens the bird usually sinks in the water un

under water for thirteen or fourteen seconds at a time, it is

during flight. When resting from its piscatorial labours it betakes itself to the edge of the jhil or to an islet and squats there to dry its plumage in the approved cormorant fashion, with wings partially, and tail fully, expanded. In this

mind salt water, for it may be found in tidal estuaries and creeks. I have seen it on the Cooum at Madras. It is, however, essentially a bird of the jhil. Needless to state

ur singly or in pairs, but according to Jerdon hundre

its nesting operations so that the young will be hatched out after the monsoon has brought into existence numbers of amphibia and crustacea on which to feed them. Accordingly, it nidificates in J

placed in low trees, babools for preference, a

land in midstream, where they had built their untidy nests on small trees about twenty feet high, and there were fresh and hard-set eggs in them in all stages of incubation, while half-fledged birds scrambled about the branches or flopped into the water at our appro

s, a race of gipsies who travel about the Eastern Bengal districts in boats, are very fond of

spicuous silvery shaft, which renders it a thing of unusual beauty. According to Jerdon these feathers constitute t

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Contents

Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 1 BIRDS IN A GROVE
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 2 THE MAGPIE-ROBIN
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 3 THE INDIAN SNAKE-BIRD
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 4 MINIVETS
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 5 THE POWER OF ANIMALS TO EXPRESS THOUGHT
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 6 PIED WOODPECKERS
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 7 A JHIL OUT OF SEASON
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 8 BIRDS IN WHITE
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 9 THE PIED CRESTED CUCKOO
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 10 VULTURES
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 11 THE INDIAN ROBIN
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 12 THE SHIKRA
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 13 A FINCH OF ROSEATE HUE
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 14 BIRDS ON THE LAWN
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 15 THE GREY HORNBILL
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 16 THE FLAMINGO
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 17 SUMMER VISITORS TO THE PUNJAB PLAINS
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 18 A BIRD OF MANY ALIASES
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 19 PADDY BIRDS AT BEDTIME
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 20 MERLINS
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 21 THE COMMON WRYNECK
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 22 GREEN PIGEONS
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 23 BULBULS' NESTS-I
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 24 NIGHTINGALES IN INDIA
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 25 THE WIRE-TAILED SWALLOW
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 26 WINTER VISITORS TO THE PUNJAB PLAINS
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 27 A KINGFISHER AND A TERN
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 28 THE RED TURTLE DOVE
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 29 BIRDS IN THE MILLET FIELDS
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 30 HOOPOES AT THE NESTING SEASON
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 31 THE LARGEST BIRD IN INDIA
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 32 THE SWALLOW-PLOVER
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 33 THE BIRDS OF A MADRAS GARDEN
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 34 SUNBIRDS
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 35 THE BANK MYNA
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 36 THE JACKDAW
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 37 FIGHTING IN NATURE
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 38 BIRDS AND BUTTERFLIES
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 39 VOICES OF THE NIGHT
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 40 No.40
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 41 No.41
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Glimpses of Indian Birds
Chapter 42 No.42
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