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Overview
Blyth's swift

Blyth's swift

Wikipedia

Blyth's swift is a small species of bird. It is superficially similar to a house martin, but completely unrelated to those passerine species, as swifts are in the order Apodiformes. The resemblances between the groups are due to convergent evolution reflecting similar life styles.

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Distribution

Region

Himalayas and South Asia

Typical Environment

It breeds mainly along the western and central Himalayas from Afghanistan and Pakistan through northern India and Nepal. During the non-breeding season it moves south across the Indian subcontinent, with many wintering in peninsular India and Sri Lanka. It forages widely over valleys, foothills, agricultural plains, and towns while on passage. Nesting is typically on cliffs and occasionally tall buildings, using crevices and ledges near sheer faces.

Altitude Range

500–4000 m

Climate Zone

Highland

Characteristics

Size16–18 cm
Wing Span40–44 cm
Male Weight0.024 kg
Female Weight0.026 kg
Life Expectancy10 years

Ease of Keeping

Beginner friendly: 1/5

Useful to know

Blyth's swift spends most of its life on the wing, feeding, drinking, and even bathing in flight. It resembles swallows and martins in shape and behavior, but is unrelated—this is a classic example of convergent evolution. In the field it is best told from similar Pacific swift species by its broad white rump band and slightly deeper forked tail.

Behaviour

Temperament

social and active

Flight Pattern

fast, agile flier with rapid scything wingbeats interspersed with glides

Social Behavior

Often forms loose to large flocks, especially on migration and over rich feeding areas. Nests in small colonies on cliffs or tall man-made structures, placing nests in cracks and ledges. Both sexes share incubation and feeding of the young.

Migratory Pattern

Seasonal migrant

Song Description

Vocalizations are high-pitched, piercing screams and sharp twittering calls given in flight. Calls intensify around colonies and when birds swirl in tight groups.

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