THE BIRDS
ROUGH-WINGED SWALLOW. Stelgidopteryx serripennis (Audubon)
Field characters.Body
size about that of Linnet or Junco; tail almost square-ended. Whole
upper surface dull brown; throat and chest grayish brown; belly and
feathers below base of tail white. No brilliant or iridescent markings
whatsoever. Voice: Three or four weak notes, zeetle-tzeet,
repeated at irregular intervals.
Occurrence.Sparse summer
visitant in foothills west of Sierra Nevada. Observed by us only at
following points: 2 miles southwest of Lagrange, on Blacks Creek west of
Coulterville, and near Bower Cave. Recorded once in Yosemite Valley, May
22, 1903 (Widmann, 1904, p. 70), when two were seen over Sentinel Meadow
in company with Violet-green Swallows. Frequents vicinity of gulches
having steep earth banks. In pairs or small companies.
The Rough-winged Swallow is the most local in its
manner of occurrence of the several species of swallows found in the
Yosemite section. Previous to 1919 it escaped our attention entirely,
and subsequently was found at only three places in the western
foothills, as noted above. The species differs from all of our other
swallows as regards nesting site. It chooses a steep earth bank and
there digs a horizontal tunnel in which to place its nest. There its
spotless, white eggs and later the young are entirely hidden from
view.
At Blacks Creek, one mile west of Coulterville, eight
Rough-winged Swallows were seen on the morning of May 10, 1919. There
were suitable nesting sites close by but the birds seemed not as yet to
have settled down for the rearing of broods. They were flying about,
sometimes coming to rest on dead weed tips or bare branches of trees; at
times they alighted directly on the dry sandy earth of a cow trail.
From time to time the males were seen in pursuit of
the females and, while so engaged, to make rather striking use of their
seemingly plain garb. They would spread the long white feathers (under
tail coverts) at the lower base of the tail until these curled up along
either side of the otherwise brownish tail. The effect produced was of
white outer tail feathers, such as those of the junco or the pipit.
Males can by means of this trick be distinguished from the females at a
distance of fully 50 yards. An examination of specimens in hand reveals
the fact that the under tail coverts of the males are broader and longer
than those of the females.
A nest of this swallow was found by Mr. Donald D.
McLean on Jordan Creek near Bower Cave on June 20, 1920. It consisted of
a mass of dry grass placed in an excavation in an earth bank and
contained three eggs.
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