A Manual of Philippine Birds. Richard C. McGregor
Porter); Negros (Meyer, Steere, Everett, Keay); Palawan (Lempriere, Whitehead, Platen, Steere Exp., Bourns & Worcester); Romblon (McGregor); Sibutu (Everett); Sibuyan (McGregor); Sulu (Burbidge); Tawi Tawi (Bourns & Worcester).
Adult male.—Head, sides of neck and breast, and lower parts bright cinnamon-rufous, much lighter on throat and chin, darker on flanks, under tail-coverts, and rectrices; above including wings and tail dark brown; most of the feathers except remiges and rectrices, edged with fine rufous dots; feathers of neck covered with irregular vermiculations of rufous and blackish brown; sides of neck and of body and crop marked with a few black cross-lines; neck and its sides glossed with amethystine changing to green; metallic colors extending faintly onto back and rump; rectrices from above dark brown, except two outermost pairs which are cinnamon-rufous, each crossed by a diagonal black bar; next pair similar but more obscurely colored; inner webs of primaries edged with cinnamon. Iris of three rings, outermost reddish or crimson, middle ring black, innermost pale straw; skin around eye dirty brown; eyelids and basal half of bill crimson; distal end of bill brown; legs and feet bright crimson; nails brown. Length, about 394; three males average, wing, 189; tail, 200; exposed culmen, 16; tarsus, 23.
Adult female.—Nearly like the male but with very little if any metallic gloss; neck and its sides black, barred with light cinnamon; crop and lower throat more or less barred and vermiculated with black.
Young.—A young bird from Sibuyan with tail less than half grown differs from the adult female in the throat- and breast-feathers being blackish brown, edged with rufous, and in having bars of upper parts more sharply cut, being produced by solid colors rather than by dots; the rectrices seen from above have narrow rufous tips and from below, each is crossed by a narrow, subterminal gray line.
The adult plumage is here described from a pair of birds taken at Irisan, Benguet Province, on May 1, 1903. That these were breeding birds was shown by dissection and was noted on the tags. If the rusty edges are absent from the wing-coverts of fully adult birds then it must require two or possibly three years for them to attain that plumage.
“Exceedingly common in some localities. Frequents open ground surrounded by patches of second growth. When flushed it frequently alights in trees. Eyes yellow; legs and feet red. Length, 370; culmen, 19; wing, 165; tail, 184; tarsus, 22; middle toe with claw, 33.” (Bourns and Worcester MS.)
“Common among the mountains of north Luzon, and found nesting on the summit of Monte Data, where the large tracts of dead bracken ferns afford it good protection. I saw a young one nearly ready to fly on 28th of January on this mountain. This dove is also plentiful in the lowland forests, and is distributed throughout the Archipelago.” (Whitehead.)
45. MACROPYGIA PHÆA McGregor.
DARK CUCKOO DOVE.
Macropygia phæa McGregor, Bull. Philippine Mus. (1904), 4, 9; Phil. Jour. Sci. (1907), 2, sec. A, 338; McGregor and Worcester, Hand-List (1906), 13.
A-la-gá-dang, Calayan.
Batan (McGregor); Calayan (McGregor).
Adult.—Similar to Macropygia tenuirostris but larger and darker; cinnamon edgings on inner primary webs and rufous edging of wing-coverts narrower or obsolete. The sexes differ as in the preceding species.
Male (type).—Bill brown with reddish base; legs dark reddish brown; nails brown; iris of three rings, outer crimson, middle black, inner straw. Length, 413; wing, 198; tail, 198; exposed culmen, 18; tarsus, 24.
Female (type).—Colors of bill, legs, and eyes as in the male. Length, 406; wing, 196; tail, 195; exposed culmen, 18; tarsus, 22.
This species is rather abundant in Calayan; in habits it does not differ from Macropygia tenuirostris. The species is rare in Batan, Batanes, where a nest containing one egg was taken, June 12. The egg is pure white and measures 37 by 27.
Family PERISTERIDÆ.
Tarsus slender and unfeathered; bill slender and weak, gape small, nostril covering swollen; tail slightly graduated; colors plain or brilliant; size moderate.
Subfamilies.
a1. Plumage mostly brown, gray, and vinous; very little if any metallic color.b1. First primary not greatly attenuated; no narrow cross-bars on neck and back; tail square or slightly graduated. Turturinæ (p. 54)b2. First primary abruptly attenuated; neck and back barred with narrow lines; tail graduated, longest rectrix exceeding shortest by more than twice the tarsus. Geopeliinæ (p. 57)
a2. Plumage largely metallic green or purple.b1. Feathers of hind neck not elongated; tail not white.c1. A gray band across rump and another across back; breast uniform. Phabinæ (p. 58)c2. No band across back nor rump; a large smear of orange or blood-red on middle of breast. Geotrygoninæ (p. 60)b2. Feathers of neck long, narrow, and soft; tail pure white. Calœnadinæ (p. 64)
Subfamily TURTURINÆ.
Genera.
a1. Feathers of neck normal, not bifurcated; wing-coverts without shaft-stripes.b1. Larger, length, 300 mm. or more; outermost rectrices with narrow white tips. Streptopelia (p. 54)b2. Smaller, length, 240 mm. or less; outermost rectrices with wide white ends. Œnopopelia (p. 56)
a2. Feathers of neck bifurcated; wing-coverts with dark shaft-stripes; edge of wing pale pearl-gray. Spilopelia (p. 56)
Genus STREPTOPELIA Bonaparte, 1854.
This genus is characterized by having a long, nearly square tail, but the outermost rectrix on each side is about 10 mm. shorter than the next feather.
46. STREPTOPELIA DUSSUMIERI (Temminck).
DUSSUMIER’S TURTLE DOVE.
Columba dussumieri Temminck, Pl. Col. (1823), 188.
Turtur dussumieri Salvadori, Cat. Birds Brit. Mus. (1893), 21, 423.
Streptopelia dussumieri Sharpe, Hand-List (1899), 1, 79; Oates, Cat. Birds’ Eggs (1901), 1, 96; McGregor and Worcester, Hand-List (1906), 13.
Bá-to ba-tó de col-lar, Manila; pa-gao, Calayan; tuc-mó, Ticao, Bohol, Cagayancillo.
Agutaya (McGregor); Bantayan (McGregor); Banton (Celestino); Basilan (Bourns & Worcester, McGregor); Bohol (Everett, Steere Exp., McGregor); Cagayancillo (McGregor); Calayan (McGregor); Calamianes (Bourns & Worcester, McGregor); Caluya (Porter); Catanduanes (Whitehead); Cebu (Everett, Steere Exp., McGregor); Cuyo (McGregor); Fuga (McGregor); Guimaras (Steere Exp.); Leyte (Everett); Libagao (Porter); Lubang (McGregor); Luzon (Meyer, Everett, Bourns & Worcester, Whitehead, McGregor); Maestre de Campo (McGregor & Worcester); Marinduque (Steere Exp.); Masbate (Steere Exp., Bourns & Worcester); Mindanao (Everett,