A R T A M T S ¡LiElI 'COFTGlATLTSs Gou/d,
ARTAMUS LEUCOPYGIALIS, Gould.
White-rumped Wood Swallow.
Artanvus leucopygialis, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., February 8, 1842.
On a careful comparison of specimens of the White-rumped Artami from India and the Indian Archipelago
with those killed in Australia, I cannot but consider that at least two, if not three, species have been confounded
under one name, and that the Australian bird had remained undescribed until characterized by me
at the Meeting o f the Zoological Society above quoted. The present species is most nearly allied to the
Artamus leucorhynchus, but is readily distinguished from it by the blue colour o f the b ill; and I may here
remark, that all the Australian birds have the bill fine pale blue, and are also considerably smaller in all
their admeasurements than those of the islands to the northwards.
Van Diemen’s Land and Western Australia are the only colonies in which this bird has not been observed;
its range, therefore, over the continent may be considered as very general: in South Australia and New
South Wales it would appear to be migratory, visiting those parts in summer for the purpose of breeding.
Among other places where I observed it in considerable abundance was Mosquito, and the other small
islands near the mouth of the Hunter, and on the borders of the rivers Mokai and Namoi, situated to the
northward of Liverpool Plains ; in these last-mentioned localities it was breeding among the large flooded
gum-trees bordering the rivers.
The breeding-season commences in September and continues until January, during which period at least
two broods are reared. In the Christmas week of 1839, at which time I was on the plains o f the interior, in
the direction o f the Namoi, the young progeny o f the second brood were perched in pairs or threes together,
on a dead twig near their nest, as represented in the Plate. They were constantly visited and fed by the
adults, who were hawking about for insects in great numbers, some performing their evolutions above the tops
and among the branches of the trees, while others were sweeping over the open plain with great rapidity of
flight, making in their progress through the air the most rapid and abrupt turns; at one moment rising to a
considerable altitude and the next descending to within a few feet of the ground, as the insects o f which they
were in pursuit arrested their attention. In the brushes, on the contrary, the flight o f this bird is more
soaring and of a much shorter duration, particularly when hawking in the open glades, which frequently
teem with insect life. When flying near the ground the white mark on the rump shows very conspicuously,
and strikingly reminds one of the House Marten o f our own country.
Two nests, taken in November on a small island in Coral Bay, near the entrance of the harbour at Port
Essington, were compactly formed of dried wiry grass and the fine plants growing on the beach; they
were placed in a fork o f a slender mangrove-tree within fifteen feet of the water, in which they were
growing; but like several other Australian birds, the Artamus leucopygialis often avails itself o f the deserted
nests o f other species instead of building one o f its own. Most o f those I found breeding on the Mokai
had possessed themselves of the forsaken nest of the Grallina Melanoleuca, which they had rendered warm
and o f the proper size by slightly lining it with grasses, fibrous roots, and the narrow leaves of the Eucalypti.
The eggs are generally three in number, are much lighter in colour, and more minutely spotted than those
of any other species of the genus I have seen ; their ground-colour is flesh-white, finely freckled and spotted
with faint markings o f reddish brown and grey, in some instances forming a zone at the larger end : their
medium length is ten lines, and breadth seven lines and a half.
The sexes are only to be distinguished by dissection, and may be described thus: head, throat and back
sooty grey; primaries and tail brownish black washed with g rey; chest, all the under surface and rump
pure white; irides brown ; bill light bluish grey at the base, black at the tip ; legs and feet mealy greenish
grey.
The Plate repi'esents a male, a female, two young ones and a nest of the natural size.