ARTAMUS MINOR, n d ii.
Little Wood Swallow.
Ariamus minor, Yieill. Noiit. Diet. d’Hist. Nat., tom. xvii. p. 298.—Ib. Ency. MSth., Part II. p. 759.
Ocypterus fuscalus, Valenc. Mem. du Mus. d’Hist. Nat., tom. vi. p. 24. t.. 9. fig. 1.
Leptopteryx minor, Wagl. Syst. Av., sp. 6.
Ocypterus minor, Gould, Syn. Birds of Australia, Part I. fig. 1.
In its structure and in the disposition o f the markings of its plumage, this species offers a greater resemblance
to the Artamus sordidus than to any other member of the group; the habits of the two species are also very
similar; if any difference exists, it is that the present bird is still more aerial, a circumstance indicated
by the more feeble form o f the foot, and the equal, if not greater, development o f the wing. During
fine weather, and even in the hottest part of the day, it floats about in the air in the most easy and graceful
manner, performing in the course of its evolutions many beautiful curves and circles, without the least
apparent motion o f the wings, whose silvery whiteness as seen from beneath, together with the snowy tips of
its wide-spread tail, offer a strong contrast to the dark colouring of the other parts of its plumage.
I found it abundant on the Lower Namoi, particularly on the plains thinly studded with the Acacia pendula
and other low trees in the neighbourhood o f Gummel-Gummel, where it had evidently been breeding, as I
observed numerous young ones, whose primaries were not sufficiently developed to admit of their performing
a migration of any distance ; besides wbich, they were constantly being fed by the parents, who
were hawking about in the air over and around the trees, while the young were quietly perched on some
dead twig, as represented in the accompanying Plate, where two adults and three young are figured, in the
manner in which they are seen huddled together in a state of nature.
I have not yet heard of this species having been seen within the prescribed limits of the colony of New
South Wales, neither is it a native of Southern or Western Australia.
I have received two specimens from Port Essington, and I believe the examples in the Paris Museum
were from Timor, which proves that it has a wide range northwards o f the Namoi; and I shall not be surprised
if future research should ascertain it to be very generally distributed over the interior of the Australian
continent, not as a summer visitant only, but as a permanent resident.
The sexes are alike in plumage, but the young differ considerably, as shown in the Plate, a reference to
which will give a more correct idea o f their appearance and markings than any description.
The whole of the head, back, and abdomen chocolate-brown ; wings, rump, and under tail-coverts bluish
black; tail deep bluish black, all the feathers except the two outer and two middle ones tipped with white;
bill beautiful violet-blue at the base, darker at the tip ; irides and feet nearly black.
The figures are of the natural size.