Tennent's Natural History of Ceylon - 1861
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CONTENTS.
MAMMALIA.
- Neglect of zoology in Ceylon
3
- Labours of Dr. Davy
3
- Followed by Dr. Templeton and others
4
- Dr. Kelaart and Mr. E.L. Layard
4
- Monkeys
5
- The Rilawa, Macacus pileatus
5
- Wanderoos
5
- Knox's account of them
5
- Error regarding the Silenus Veter (note)
6
- Presbytes Cephalopterus
7
- Fond of eating flowers
7
- A white monkey
8
- Method of the flight of monkeys
9
- P. Ursinus in the Hills
9
- P. Thersites in the Wanny
10
- P. Priamus, Jaffna and Trincomalie
10
- No dead monkey ever found
11
- Loris
12
- Bats
13
- Flying Fox, Pteropus Edwardsii
14
- Their numbers at Peradenia
16
- Singularity of their attitudes
17
- Food and mode of eating
18
- Horse-shoe bat, Rhinolophus
19
- Faculty of smell in bat
19
- A tiny bat, Scotophilus foromandelicus
20
- Extraordinary parasite of the bat, the Nycteribia
20
- Carnivora.—Bears
22
- Singhalese belief in the efficacy of charms (note)
24
- Leopards
25
- Erroneously confounded with the Indian cheetah
25
- Curious belief
26
- Anecdotes of leopards
27
- Their attraction by the smallpox
28
- Native superstition
28
- Encounter with a leopard
29
- Monkeys killed by leopards
31
- Alleged peculiarity of the claws
32
- Palm-cat
32
- Civet
32
- Dogs
33
- Cruel mode of destroying dogs
33
- Their republican instincts
34
- Jackal
34
- Cunning, anecdotes of
35
- The horn of the jackal
36
- Mungoos
37
- Its fights with serpents
38
- Theory of its antidote
40
- Squirrels
41
- Tree-rat
42
- Story of a rat and a snake
43
- Coffee-rat
43
- Bandicoot
44
- Porcupine
45
- Pengolin
46
- Its habits and gentleness
47
- Its skeleton
48
- Ruminantia.—The Gaur
49
- Oxen
50
- Humped cattle
51
- Encounter of a cow and a leopard
51
- Draft oxen
52
- Their treatment
53
- A Tavalam
53
- Attempt to introduce the camel (note)
53
- Buffaloes
54
- Sporting buffaloes
55
- Peculiar structure of the foot
56
- Deer
57
- Meminna
57
- Elk
59
- Wild-boar
59
- Elephants
60
- Recent discovery of a new species
60
- Geological speculations as to the island of Ceylon
61
- Ancient tradition
61
- Opinion of Professor Ansted
61
- Peculiarities in Ceylon mammalia
63
- The same in Ceylon birds and insects
63
- Temminck's discovery of a new species of elephant in Sumatra
64
- Points of distinction between it and the elephant of India
65
- Professor Schlegel's description
66
- Cetacea
68
- Whales
68
- The Dugong
69
- Origin of the fable of the mermaid
70
- Credulity of the Portuguese
70
- Belief of the Dutch
70
- Testimony of Valentyn
71
- List of Ceylon mammalia
73
THE ELEPHANT
Its Structure.
- Vast numbers in Ceylon
75
- Derivation of the word "elephant" (note)
76
- Antiquity of the trade in elephants
77
- Numbers now diminishing
77
- Mischief done by them to crops
77
- Ivory scarce in Ceylon
78
- Conjectures as to the absence of tusks
79
- Elephant a harmless animal
81
- Alleged antipathies to other animals
82
- Fights with each other
86
- The foot its chief weapon
87
- Use of the tusks in a wild state doubtful
88
- Anecdote of sagacity in an elephant at Kandy
89
- Difference between African and Indian species
90
- Native ideas of perfection in an elephant
91
- Blotches on the skin
92
- White elephants not unknown in Ceylon
93
THE ELEPHANT
Its Habits.
- Water, but not heat, essential to elephants
94
- Sight limited
95
- Smell acute
96
- Caution
96
- Hearing, good
96
- Cries of the elephant
97
- Trumpeting
97
- Booming noise
98
- Height, exaggerated
99
- Facility of stealthy motion
100
- Ancient delusion as to the joints of the leg
100
- Its exposure by Sir Thos. Browne
100
- Its perpetuation by poets and others
102
- Position of the elephant in sleep
105
- An elephant killed on its feet
107
- Mode of lying down
107
- Its gait a shuffle
108
- Power of climbing mountains
109
- Facilitated by the joint of the knee
110
- Mode of descending declivities
111
- A "herd" is a family
112
- Attachment to their young
113
- Suckled indifferently by the females
113
- A "rogue" elephant
114
- Their cunning and vice
115
- Injuries done by them
115
- The leader of a herd a tusker
117
- Bathing and nocturnal gambols, description of a scene by Major
Skinner
118
- Method of swimming
121
- Internal anatomy imperfectly known
122
- Faculty of storing water
124
- Peculiarity of the stomach
125
- The food of the elephant
129
- Sagacity in search of it
130
- Unexplained dread of fences
131
- Its spirit of inquisitiveness
132
- Anecdotes illustrative of its curiosity
132
- Estimate of sagacity
133
- Singular conduct of a herd during thunder
134
- An elephant feigning death
135
- Appendix.—Narratives of natives, as to encounters
with rogue elephants
136
THE ELEPHANT
Elephant Shooting.
- Vast numbers shot in Ceylon
142
- Revolting details of elephant killing in Africa
142
- Fatal spots at which to aim
143
- Structure of the bones of the head
144
- Wounds which are certain to kill
145
- Attitudes when surprised
148
- Peculiar movements when reposing
148
- Habits when attacked
150
- Sagacity of native trackers
150
- Courage and agility of the elephants in escape
151
- Worthlessness of the carcass
153
- Singular recovery from a wound (note)
154
THE ELEPHANT.
An Elephant Corral.
- Early method of catching elephants
156
- Capture in pit-falls
156
- By means of decoys
157
- Panickeas—their courage and address
158
- Their sagacity in following the elephant
159
- Mode of capture by the noose
160
- Mode of taming
161
- Method of leading the elephants to the coast
162
- Process of embarking them at Manaar
162
- Method of capturing a whole herd
163
- The "keddah" in Bengal described
164
- Process of enclosing a herd
165
- Process of capture in Ceylon
165
- An elephant corral and its construction
166
- An elephant hunt in Ceylon, 1847
167
- The town and district of Kornegalle
167
- The rock of Ætagalla
168
- Forced labour of the corral in former times
170
- Now given voluntarily
171
- Form of the enclosure
172
- Method of securing a wild herd
173
- Scene when driving them into the corral
174
- A failure
176
- An elephant drove by night
177
- Singular scene in the corral
178
- Excitement of the tame elephants (note)
178
THE ELEPHANT.
The Captives.
- A night scene
180
- Morning in the corral
181
- Preparations for securing the captives
181
- The "cooroowe," or noosers
181
- The tame decoys
182
- First captive tied up
183
- Singular conduct of the wild elephants
184
- Furious attempts of the herd to escape
186
- Courageous conduct of the natives
187
- Variety of disposition exhibited by the herd
189
- Extraordinary contortions of the captives
190
- Water withdrawn from the stomach
191
- Instinct of the decoys
191
- Conduct of the noosers
194
- The young ones and their actions
194
- Noosing a "rogue." and his death
196
- Instinct of flies in search of carrion (note)
196
- Strange scene
197
- A second herd captured
199
- Their treatment of a solitary elephant
200
- A magnificent female elephant
201
- Her extraordinary attitudes
201
- Wonderful contortions
203
- Taking the captives out of the corral
204
- Their subsequent treatment and training
205
- Grandeur of the scene
205
- Story of young pet elephant
206
THE ELEPHANT.
Conduct in Captivity.
- Alleged superiority of the Indian to the African
elephant—not true
207
- Ditto of Ceylon elephant to Indian
209
- Process of training in Ceylon
211
- Allowed to bathe
213
- Difference of disposition
214
- Sudden death of "broken heart"
216
- First employment treading clay
217
- Drawing a waggon
217
- Dragging timber
218
- Sagacity in labour
218
- Mode of raising stones
218
- Strength in throwing down trees exaggerated
219
- Piling timber
219
- Not uniform in habits of work
220
- Lazy if not watched
220
- Obedience to keeper from affection, not fear
221
- Change of keeper—story of child
222
- Ear for sounds and music
223
- Hurra! (note)
223
- Endurance of pain
224
- Docility
225
- Working elephants, delicate
225
- Deaths in government stud
226
- Diseases
227
- Subject to tooth-ache
227
- Question of the value of labour of an elephant
229
- Food in captivity, and cost
230
- Breed in captivity
231
- Age
232
- Theory of M. Fleurens
232
- No dead elephants found
234
- Sindbad's story
236
- Passage from Ælian
237
BIRDS.
- Their numbers
241
- Songsters
241
- Hornbills, the "bird with two heads"
242
- Pea fowl
244
- Sea birds, their number
245
- I. Accipitres.—Eagles
245
- Falcons and hawks
246
- Owls—the devil bird
247
- II. Passeres.—Swallows
248
- Kingfishers—sunbirds
249
- The cotton-thief
250
- Bul-bul—tailor bird—and weaver
251
- The mountain jay
253
- Crows, anecdotes of
253
- III. Scansores.—Parroquets
256
- IV. Columbidæ.—Pigeons
257
- V. Gallinæ.—Jungle-fowl
259
- VI. Grallæ.—Ibis, stork, &c.
260
- VII. Anseres.—Flamingoes
261
- Pelicans
262
- Strange scene
263
- Game—Partridges, &c.
265
- List of Ceylon birds
265
- List of birds peculiar to Ceylon
269
REPTILES.
- Lizards.—Iguana
271
- Kabara-goya, barbarous custom in preparing the kabara-tel
poison
272
- Blood-suckers
275
- The green calotes
276
- The lyre-headed lizard
277
- Chameleon
278
- Ceratophora
279
- Geckoes,—their power of reproducing limbs
281
- Crocodiles
282
- Their sensitiveness to tickling
285
- Anecdotes of crocodiles
286
- Their power of burying themselves in the mud
286
- Tortoises.—Curious parasite
289
x
- Terrapins
290
- Edible turtle
291
- Cruel mode of cutting it up alive
291
- Huge Indian tortoises (note)
293
- Hawk's-bill turtle, barbarous mode of stripping it of the
tortoise-shell
293
- Serpents.—Venomous species rare
294
- Tic polonga and carawala
296
- Cobra de capello
297
- Tame snakes (note)
298
- Anecdotes of the cobra de capello
298
- Legends concerning it
299
- Instance of land snakes found at sea
300
- Singular tradition regarding the robra de capello
300
- Uropeltidæ.—New species discovered in Ceylon
302
- Buddhist veneration for the cobra de capello
303
- The Python
303
- Tree snakes
305
- Water snakes
306
- Sea snakes
306
- Snake stones
312
- Analysis of one
315
- Cæcilia
317
- Frogs
317
- Tree frogs
320
- List of Ceylon reptiles
321
FISHES.
- Ichthyology of Ceylon, little known
323
- Fish for table, seir fish
324
- Sardines, poisonous?
324
- Sharks
325
- Saw-fish
325
- Fish of brilliant colours
326
- The ray
326
- The sword-fish
328
- Curious fish described by Ælian
330
- Salarias alticus
332
- Beautifully coloured fishes
332
- Fresh-water fish, little known,—not much eaten
335
- Fresh-water fish in Colombo Lake
336
- Perches
336
- Eels
337
- Immense profusion of fish in the rivers and lakes
339
- Their re-appearance after rain
340
- Mode of fishing in the ponds
340
- Showers of fish
341
- Conjecture that the ova are preserved, not tenable
342
- Fish moving on dry land
344
- Ancient authorities, Greek and Roman
345
- Aristotle and Theophrastus
346
- Athenæus and Polybius
346
- Livy, Pompomus, Mela, and Juvenal
346
- Seneca and Pliny
346
- Georgius Agricola, Gesner, &c.
347
- Instances in Guiana (note)
347
- Perca Scandens, ascends trees
348
- Doubts as to the story of Daldorf
350
- Fishes burying themselves daring the dry season
351
- The protopterus of the Gambia
352
- Instances in the fish of the Nile
352
- Instances in the fish of South America
353
- Living fish dug out of the ground in the dry tanks in Ceylon
354
- Molluscs that bury themselves
355
- The animals that so bury themselves in India
357
- Analogous case of
8
- Theory of æstivation and hybernation
358
- Fish in hot water in Ceylon
358
- List of Ceylon fishes
359
- Instances of fishes falling from the clouds
362
- Note on Ceylon fishes by Professor Huxley
364
- Comparative note by Dr. Gray, Brit. Mus.
366
- Note on the Bora-chung
367
MOLLUSCA, RADIATA, AND ACALEPHÆ.
- I. Conchology.—General character of Ceylon shells
369
- Confusion regarding them in scientific works and collections
369
- Ancient export of shells from Ceylon
370
- Special forms confined to particular localities
372
- The pearl fishery of Aripo
373
- Frequent suspensions of
374
- Experiment to create beds of the pearl oyster
375
- Process of diving for pearls
377
- Danger from sharks
379
- The transparent pearl oyster (Placuna placenta)
380
- The "musical fish" at Ballicaloa
381
- A similar phenomenon at other places
383
- Faculty of uttering sounds in fishes
384
- Instance in the Tritonia arborescens
385
- Difficulty in forming a list of Ceylon shells
386
- List of Ceylon shells
388
- II. Radiata.—Star fish
395
- Sea slugs
396
- Parasitic worms
396
- Planaria
398
- III. Acalephæ, abundant
398
- The Portuguese man-of-war
400
- Red infusoria
400
- Note on the Tritonia arborescens
401
INSECTS.
- Profusion of insects in Ceylon
403
- Imperfect knowledge of
404
- I. Coleoptera.—Beetles
405
- Scavenger beetles
405
- Coco-nut beetles
407
- Tortoise beetles
408
- II. Orthoptera.—Mantis and leaf-insects
408
- III. Neuroptera.—Dragon flies
411
- Ant-lion
411
- White ants
411
- Anecdotes of their instinct and ravages
412
- IV. Hymenoptera.—Mason wasps
416
- V. Lepidoptera.—Butterflies
424
- The spectre
426
- Lycænidæ
426
- Moths
427
- Silk worms
428
- Stinging caterpillars
429
- Wood-carrying moths
430
- Pterophorus
432
- VI. Homoptera
432
- VII. Hemiptera
433
- VIII. Aphaniptera
433
- IX. Diptera.—Mosquitoes
434
- Mosquitoes the "plague of flies"
434
- The coffee bug
436
- General character of Ceylon insects
442
- List of insects in Ceylon
442
ARACHNIDÆ, MYRIOPODA, CRUSTACÆ, ETC.
- Spiders
464
- Strange nets of the wood spiders
464
- The mygale
465
- Birds killed by it
467
- Olios Taprobanius
469
- The galeodes
470
- Gregarious spiders
471
- Ticks
471
- Mites.—Trombidium tinctorum
472
- Myriapods.—Centipedes
472
- Cermatia
473
- Scolopendra crassa
474
- S. pollippes
474
- The fish insect
474
- Millipeds.—Julus
476
- Crustacæ
477
- Calling crabs
477
- Sand crabs
478
- Painted crabs
478
- Paddling crabs
478
- Annelidæ, Leeches.—The land leech
479
- Medicinal leech
483
- Cattle leech
484
- List of Articulata, &c.
485
- Note.—On the revivification of the Rotifera and
Paste-eels
486
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