PODARGUS PH ALiENOIDES, Gould.
Moth-ptumag-ed Podargus.
Podargus PUltmmies, Gould in Proc. of Zool Hoc, Part VII. p. 142.
Ny-me ? and In-mr-jin-ert, Aborigines of, the neighbourhood of Port Essington.
T h e present bird, which is from Port Essington, may be readily distinguished from every other Australian
species of Podargm by its small size, by the beautiful, delicate, and moth-like painting of its plumage, and
by thjf ¿louring of the thighs, which are light brown instead of black; its. tail also is rather more lengthened
than that o f the common species. Like the members of the genus inhabiting Van Diemen's Land and New
South Wales, it exhibits considerable variation in size and colouring; in some a rusty red tint pervades
the whole plumage, while in others no trace of this hue occurs. I am inclined to consider that age has
much to do with this variation in colour : but whether the red-tinted birds are immature or adult I have
had no means of ascertaining; further observation is necessary to determine this point; and I consequently
hope the subject will not be neglected by those who may h a v e air opportunity o f observing the bird alive :
the red-tinted birds occur less frequently than the others.
I have several specimens from the north-west coast of Australia, and Mr. Gilbert states that it is abundant
in every part of the Coburg Peninsula.
Like the rest o f the genus it is strictly nocturnal in its habits; becoming animated at the approach ol
evening, it ¿allies forth from the favourite branch where it has rested during the day in search of insects,
which, I believe, constitute almost exclusively its food; its whole economy in fact, so far as known, so
closely resembles that of the Podargm humeralis, that one description would serve for both.
Forehead, sides of the face and all the under surface brownish grey, minutely freckled with black;
the feathers of the under surface with a stripe of blackish brown down the centre, these stripes being
broadest and most conspicuous on the sides of the ch e st; all the upper surface brown, minutely freckled
- ’|i t h grey, each feather with a broad stripe o f black down the centre; shoulders dark brown ; coverts
freckled with greyish white and with a spot of white, the centre of which is fawn-colour a t the t ip ;
primaries dark brown, crossed on their outer webs with an irregular bar of white, the interspaces on the
Outer primaries rufous ; inner webs of the primaries crossed by irregular bands of freckled brown and fawn-
colour; tail brown, crossed by numerous broad bands of freckled grey, bounded on either side by irregular
blotchings of b lack; irides orange or reddish hazel; bill horn-colour.
In the other state, to which I have alluded, the whole of the upper surface is o f a dark rust-red, freckled
on the forehead, wing-coverts and scapularies with white; the bands on the tail less apparent; a rufous
tint pervades the grey of the under surface, and the striffi are much narrower than in the specimen above
described.
The Plate represents a male and a female, in tbe differently tinted plumage, of the natural size.