A B T A M T f fS P i m § ©MA T 1 IT S:
ARTAMUS PERSONATUS, Gould.
Masked Wood Swallow.
Ocypterus personatus, Gould, in Proc. of Zool. Soc., Part V III. p. 149.
Jil-bmg, Aborigines of the mountain districts of Western Australia.
I h a v e much pleasure in adding this new and highly interesting species o i Artamus to the Wood Swallows of
Australia, a country peculiarly adapted for this tribe of birds, and of which the fauna comprises a greater
number of species of this group than that of any other. My knowledge of the range o f this species is very
limited; a single specimen was sent me from South Australia, while the fine examples from which my figures
were taken were killed by Mr. Gilbert in the colony o f Swan River. Its richly coloured black face and
throat, separated from the delicate grey of the breast by a narrow line of snowy white, at once distinguishes
it from every other species, while the strong contrast of these colours renders it a conspicuous object
among the trees.
In size and structure it more nearly resembles the Artamus supei'ciliosus than any other, and the two
species form beautiful analogues of each other, one being in all probability confined to the eastern portion
o f the country, and the other to the western.
“ I have only met,” says Mr. Gilbert, “ with this species in the York and Zoodyay districts. It is very
like Artamus sordidus in its habits, but is more shy and retired, never being seen but in the most secluded
parts o f the bush. It is merely a summer visitant here, generally making its appearance in the latter part
o f October, and immediately commencing the task of incubation. Its voice very much resembles the
chirping of the English Sparrow.
“ Its nest is placed in the upright fork of a dead tree, or in the hollow part of the stump o f a grass-tree;
it is neither so well nor so neatly formed as those o f the other species of the group, being a frail structure
externally composed of a very few extremely small twigs, above which is a layer o f fine dried grasses.
The eggs also differ as remarkably as the nest, their ground colour being light greenish grey, dashed and
speckled with hair-brown principally at the larger end, and slightly spotted with grey, appearing as if
beneath the surface of the shell; they are ten and a half lines long by eight and a half lines broad. I found
two nests in a York Gum Forest, about five miles to the east of the Avon River: each o f these contained
two eggs, which I believe is the usual number.
“ Its food consists of insects generally and their larvae.”
The male has the face, ear-coverts and throat jet-black, bounded below with a narrow line of white;
crown of the head sooty black, gradually passing into the deep grey, which covers the whole o f the upper
surface, wings and tail; the latter tipped with white ; all the under surface very delicate grey; thighs dark
grey; irides blackish brown ; bill blue at the base, becoming black at the tip ; legs and feet mealy bluish
grey.
The female differs in having the colouring of the bill and the black mask on the face much paler.
The figures are those of a male and a female of the natural size.