on a collection trip (1976) On his return to India in 1930, he discovered that the guide lecturer position had been eliminated due to lack of funds. Unable to find a suitable job, Salim Ali and Tehmina moved to
Kihim, a coastal village near Mumbai. Here he had the opportunity to study at close hand, the breeding of the
baya weaver and discovered their
mating system of sequential polygamy. Later commentators have suggested that this study was in the tradition of the Mughal naturalists that Salim Ali admired and wrote about in three-part series on the Moghul emperors as naturalists. A few months were then spent in Kotagiri where he had been invited by K.M. Anantan, a retired army doctor who had served in Mesopotamia during World War I. He also came in contact with Mrs Kinloch, widow of BNHS member Angus Kinloch who lived at Donnington near Longwood Shola, and later her son-in-law
R C Morris, who lived in the
Biligirirangan Hills. Around the same time he discovered an opportunity to conduct systematic bird surveys in the
princely states of
Hyderabad,
Cochin,
Travancore,
Gwalior,
Indore and
Bhopal with the sponsorship of their rulers. He was aided and supported in these surveys by
Hugh Whistler who had surveyed many parts of India and had kept very careful notes. Whistler published a note on
The study of Indian birds in 1929 where he mentioned that the racquets at the end of the long tail feathers of the
greater racket-tailed drongo lacked webbing on the inner vane. Salim Ali wrote a response pointing out that this was in error and that such inaccuracies had been carried on from early literature and pointed out that it was incorrect observation that did not take into account a twist in the rachis. Whistler was initially resentful of an unknown Indian finding fault and wrote "snooty" letters to the editors of the journal
S H Prater and Sir
Reginald Spence. Subsequently, Whistler re-examined his specimens and not only admitted his error but became a close friend. Whistler wrote to Ali on 24 October 1938: Whistler also introduced Salim to
Richard Meinertzhagen and the two made an expedition into
Afghanistan. Although Meinertzhagen had very critical views of him they became good friends. Salim Ali found nothing amiss in Meinertzhagen's bird works but later studies have shown many of his studies to be fraudulent. Meinertzhagen made his diary entries from their days in the field available and Salim Ali reproduces them in his autobiography: He was accompanied and supported on his early surveys by his wife, Tehmina, and was shattered when she died in 1939 following a minor surgery. After Tehmina's death in 1939, Salim Ali stayed with his sister Kamoo and brother-in-law. In the course of his later travels, Ali rediscovered the
Kumaon Terai population of the
Finn's baya but was unsuccessful in his expedition to find the
mountain quail (
Ophrysia superciliosa), the status of which continues to remain unknown. Ali was not very interested in the details of bird systematics and taxonomy and was more interested in studying birds in the field.
Ernst Mayr wrote to Ripley complaining that Ali failed to collect sufficient specimens: "as far as collecting is concerned I don't think he ever understood the necessity for collecting series. Maybe you can convince him of that." Salim Ali's associations with
Sidney Dillon Ripley led to many bureaucratic problems. Ripley's past as an
OSS agent led to allegations that the
CIA had a hand in the bird-ringing operations in India. Salim Ali took some interest in bird photography along with his friend
Loke Wan Tho. Loke had been introduced to Ali by
J.T.M. Gibson, a BNHS member and Lieutenant Commander of the
Royal Indian Navy, who had taught English to Loke at a school in Switzerland. A wealthy Singapore businessman with a keen interest in birds, Loke helped Ali and the BNHS with financial support. Ali was also interested in the historical aspects of ornithology in India. In a series of articles, among his first publications, he examined the contributions to natural-history of the
Mughal emperors. In the 1971 Sunder Lal Hora memorial lecture and the 1978 Azad Memorial Lecture he spoke of the history and importance of bird study in India. Towards the end of his life, he began to document the lives of people in the history of the Bombay Natural History Society but did not complete the series with only four parts published. ==Other contributions==