n.
Any of 74 species (family Hirundinidae) of songbirds found nearly worldwide.
Swallows are 49 in. (1023 cm) long, with long, pointed, narrow wings; a short bill; small, weak feet; and sometimes a forked tail. The dark upper plumage may have a metallic blue or green sheen. Swallows capture insects on the wing. They nest in tree holes, burrow into sandbank, or plaster mud nests to walls. Some species (e.g., the common swallow, Hirundo rustica ) are long-distance migrants; all have a strong homing instinct. The swallows of California's San Juan Capistrano Mission are cliff swallows ( Petrochelidon pyrrhonota ). See also martin .
Common swallow ( Hirundo rustica )
Stephen Dalton
Natural History Photographic Agency/EB Inc.