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Pacific swallow

Hirundo tahitica

Description:

The Pacific swallow (Hirundo tahitica) is a small passerine bird in the swallow family. It breeds in tropical southern Asia and the islands of the south Pacific. It is resident apart from some local seasonal movements. This bird is associated with coasts, but is increasingly spreading to forested uplands. The hill swallow was formerly considered conspecific. This species is a small swallow at 13 cm. It has a blue back with browner wings and tail, a red face and throat, and dusky underparts. It differs from the barn swallow and the closely related welcome swallow in its shorter and less forked tail. The Pacific swallow builds a neat cup-shaped nest, constructed with mud pellets collected in the beak, under a cliff ledge or on a man-made structures such as a building, bridge or tunnel. The nest is lined with softer material, and the clutch is two to three eggs, up to four in Sri Lanka. It is similar in behaviour to other aerial insectivores, such as other swallows and the unrelated swifts. It is a fast flyer and feeds on insects, especially flies, while airborne.

Habitat:

Thrives in divers habitats from forest , mountains, urban cultivated land.

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2 Comments

M.A. Orendan
M.A. Orendan 9 years ago

awesome spotting!

BrunoMoller
BrunoMoller 9 years ago

Beautiful photos

Roxas City, Capiz, Philippines

Spotted on Apr 10, 2013
Submitted on Jan 23, 2015

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