THE Sarus Crane [Grus antigone antigone (Linnaeus)] found northern India, is non-migratory and breeds from the Indus River to Assam south to the Bombay Presidency and the Godavari River (Peters, 1934: 152). Colonel Ticknell (Blyth and Tegetmeier, 1881: 50) described seeing the Sarus Crane in various parts of India-on the Nepal frontier, Tirhoot, near Patna, Bhagulpoor, Rajmahal, Malda, Bankoora, Chota Nagpoor, Singbhoom, and near Sumbhulpoor, also Arakan and Tenasserim. An eastern race, the Burmese Sarus Crane (Grus antigone sharpii Blanford) is found eastern Assam, Thailand, Burma and Cochinchina, French Indo-China. All of the breeding records at hand pertain to the typical Sarus Crane from India, the birds having the white neck stripe below the bare portion of the head and neck. The Sarus Crane is generally bluish ash-colored plumage with the tertials and a band below the upper neck white or nearly white. The primaries and secondaries are black or blackish. The iris is orange; bill greenish with darker tip; crown and upper neck bare, the skin on the crown pale ashy green; that on the head and neck orange red; that just above the feathers bright orange. The skin of the head and neck is covered with scanty black hair-like bristles. The auricular region is covered with patches of bluish ash feathers. The legs and feet are flesh-colored. This crane is larger than the Greater Sandhill Crane (Grus canadensis tabida Peters). The measurements of one male from the American Museum of Natural History and four males and one female from the University of Michigan, all taken by Walter Koelz Punjab, are here recorded. One female: Wing, 601 mm.; tarsus, 307 mm.; exposed culmen, 165 mm.; bare tibia, 182 mm.; middle toe, 136 mm. Five males: Wing, 645 mm. (625-675); tarsus, 333 mm. (299-352); exposed culmen, 177 (163-187); bare tibia, 200.2 mm. (185-210); middle toe, 140 mm. (128-152). Evidently the first record of the Sarus Crane nesting and rearing young captivity was made by the Moghul Emperor, Jehangir (1603-1627 A. D.; Journ. Bombay Nat. Hist. Soc., 32: 57-60, 1927) also recorded by Rothschild (1930: 67-68). Rothschild also described the nesting of Sarus Cranes captivity at Tring, where a pair raised young after many failures. The female was about 20 to 25 years of