RHIPIDURA RUFIFRONS.
liufous-fronted Fantail.
Muscicapa rufifrons, Lath. Ind. Orn. Suppl., p. 1.—Vieill. 2nde Edit, du Nouv. Diet. d’Hist. Nat., tom. xxi. p. 465-
—Bonn, et Vieill. Ency. Meth. Orn., part ii. p. 809.
Orange-rumped Flycatcher, Lewin, Birds of New Holl., pi. 13.
Ryfous-fronted Flycatcher, Lath. Gen. Syn. Suppl., vol. ii. p. 220.—Shaw, Gen. Zool., vol. x. p. 373.—Lath. Gen.
Hist., vol. vi. p. 213.
Rhipidura rufifrons, Vig. and Horsf. in Linn. Trans., vol. xv. p. 248.—Less. Man. d’Orn., tom. i. p. 199.
Bur-ril, Aborigines of New South Wales.
T h e Rufous-fronted Fantail is one of the most beautiful and one of the oldest known members o f the group
to which it belongs, having been originally described by Latham in his “ Index Ornithologieus,” and included
in the works o f nearly every subsequent writer on Ornithology. In Mr. Caley’s short but valuable
“ Notes on the Birds o f New South Wales,” he says, “ This bird appears to me to be a rare one, at least I do
not recollect having ever seen any other specimen than the present. I met with it on the 15th of October
1807, at Cardunny, a place about ten miles to the north-east of Paramatta. It is a thick brush (or underwood),
and is the resort of the great B a t.” The fact of the colony having at that early date been but
little explored will readily account for Caley’s opinion o f the rarity o f this bird; but had he visited the thick
brushes o f Illawarra, the Liverpool range and the Hunter, he would have found that those situations are
its natural habitat, and that it is there to be met with in considerable numbers.
Although many of its habits closely resemble those of the Rhipidura albiscapa, they are, as the greater
length of its legs would indicate, far more terrestrial; it runs over the ground and the fallen logs of trees
with great facility; while thus engaged, and particularly when approached by an intruder, it constantly
spreads and displays its beautiful tail, and evinces a great degree o f restlessness. It is always found in
the most secluded parts of the forest, no portion of which appears to be too dense for its abode.
I never met with it in Van Diemen’s Land, or on the islands in Bass’s Straits, neither do I recollect
having seen it in South Australia; and it has not been found in Western Australia, or on the north coast,
in which latter locality it is represented by the Rhipidura Dryas.
I had no opportunity of observing it during the breeding-season, but frequently encountered its deserted
little cup-sliaped nests, which bore a general resemblance to that of the R . albiscapa, figured on the preceding
plate.
The sexes are precisely alike in colour; and their only outward difference consists in the somewhat
smaller size of the female.
Forehead rusty red, continiiing over the e y e ; crown of the head, back o f the neck, upper part o f the
back and wings olive-brown ; lower part of the back, tail-coverts, and the basal portions o f the tail rusty
r ed ; remainder of the tail blackish brown, obscurely tipped with light grey ; the shafts o f the tail-feathers
for nearly half their length from the base light rusty red ; throat and centre o f the abdomen white ; ear-
coverts dark brown ; chest black, the feathers o f the lower part edged with white; flanks and under tail-
coverts light fawn-colour ; eyes, bill and feet brown.
The figures are of the natural size.