F©H)AI&(GrIU€i MUMElRAlLISt Fuf-kMor-sf:
PODARGUS HUMERALIS , Vig. and Horsf.
Tawny-shouldered Podargus.
Caprimulgus gracilis ? Lath. Ind. Om. Supp., p. 58.
Gracile Goatsucker ? Ib. Gen. Syn. Supp., vol. ii- p. 263.—Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Zool., vol. x. p. 145.—Lath.
Gen. Hist., vol. vh. p. 344.
Podargus ? gracilis ? Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Zool., vol. xiii. p. 93.
Podargus Australis ? Ib., vol. xiii. p. 92.
Podargus cinereus ? Cuv. Rfcgn. Anim., pi. 4, fig l.-^Yieil. Nouv. Diet. d’Hist. Nat., tom. xxyii. p. 151, pi. G. 37,
fig. 3,—Vieill. Ency. M6th., p. 547.
Cold-River Goatsucker, Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. vii. p. 369.
Podargus Humeralis, Vig. and Horsf. in Linn. Trans., vol. xv. p. 198.—r-Jard. and Selb. Ill, Om., vol. ii. pi. 88.
—^Swains. Class, of Birds, vol. ii. p. .338.
So great a similarity reigns throughout the Podargi inhabiting Australia, that it is most difficult to distinguish
them ; and after a minute examination o f a great number o f specimens it appears to me that there
are five species, only two o f which are inhabitants of New South Wales, and to these, in my opinion, the
various names o f the older authors are referrible. But as it must ever remain a matter o f uncertainly as to
which these names have been applied, I have preferred to retain for the present bird that proposed by
Messrs. Vigors and Horsfield.
The Tawny-shouldered Podargus may be distinguished by the greater breadth o f its markings, by
the decided admixture of tawny in its colouring, by the feathers of the head having a small round spot of
white at the tip, and by the more boldly-marked tips o f the coverts. It is plentifully dispersed over New
South Wales, where it is not restricted to any peculiar character o f country, hut inhabits alike the thick
brushes near the coast, the hilly districts, and the thinly-wooded plains o f the interior. I found it breeding
on the low swampy islands studding the mouth o f the Hunter, and on the Apple-tree (Angophora) flats of
Yarrundi, near the Liverpool Range. In their habits and mode of life the Podargi differ very considerably
from the true Nightjars, and also in many particulars from AEgotheles.
Like the rest o f the genus, the Tawny-shouldered Podargus is strictly nocturnal, sleeping throughout the
day on the dead branch o f a tree, in an upright position across, and never parallel to, the branch, and
which it so nearly resembles as scarcely to be distinguishable from it. I have occasionally seen it beneath the
thick foliage of the Casmrince, and I have been informed that it sometimes shelters itself in the hollow trunks
o f the Eucalypti, hut I could never detect one in such a situation; I mostly found them in pairs, perched
near each other on the branches of the gums, in situations not at all sheltered from the beams of the midday
sun. So lethargic are its slumbers, that it is almost impossible to arouse it, and I have frequently shot
•one without disturbing its mate sitting close b y ; it may also be knocked off with sticks or stones, and
sometimes is even taken with the hand: when aroused, it flies lazily off with heavy flapping wings to a
neighbouring tree, and again resumes its slumbers until the approach o f evening, when it becomes as
animated and active as it had been previously dull and stupid. The food consists of insects of various
kinds; but in what way they are obtained is uncertain, though the contents o f the stomach o f one I dissected
induce me to believe that it does not usually capture its prey while on the wing, or subsist upon nocturnal
insects alone, hut that it is in the habit o f creeping among the branches in search of such as are in a state of
repose; and an examination of the tail will, I think, serve to strengthen this supposition, since it in some degree
resembles the form and structure of that organ in many of the climbing birds. The power it possesses of
shifting the position o f the outer toe backwards, as circumstances may require, is a very singular feature,
and may also tend to assist them in their progress among the branches. A bird I shot at Yarrundi, in
the middle of the night, had the stomach filled with fresh-captured mantis and locusts ( Phasmidce and
Cicadce), which never move at night, and the latter of which are generally resting against the upright
boles o f the trees. In other specimens I found the remains o f small Goleoptera, intermingled with the
fibres of the roots of what appeared to be a parasitic plant, such as would be found in decayed and
hollow trees. The whole contour of the bird shows that it is not formed for extensive flight or for performing
those rapid evolutions that are necessary for the capture of its prey in the air, the wing being
short and concave in comparison with those o f the true aerial Nightjars, and particularly with the Australian
form to which I have given the name o f Eurostopodus.
Of its mode o f nidification I can speak with confidence, having seen many pairs breeding during my
rambles in the woods. It makes a slightly-constructed flat nest of sticks carelessly interwoven together,
and placed at the fork o f a horizontal branch o f sufficient size to ensure its safety ; the tree most frequently
chosen is an Eucalyptus, but I have occasionally seen the nest on an Apple-tree (Angophora) or a
Swamp-Oak (Casuannd). In every instance one of the birds was sitting on the eggs and the other perched