n.
Any of about 75 species (family Apodidae) of birds found almost worldwide.
The fastest of small birds, swifts can fly at 70 mph (110 kph). They are 49 in. (923 cm) long and have long wings, a chunky dark body, a broad head, and a short, wide, slightly curved bill. The tail may be short or long and deeply forked. Swifts capture insects, drink, bathe, and sometimes mate on the wing. The feet, incapable of perching, are used to cling to vertical surfaces. Swifts use their sticky saliva to glue the nest to a cave wall, the inside of a chimney, or a tree hollow.