XCJUchlo- ¿UZ cl luk,
S B R I C D L D S i G |H l Y S O £ £ P H A L U S .
SERICULUS CHRYSOCEPHALUS.
Regent Bird.
Meliphaga chrysocephala, Lewin, Birds of New Holl., pl. 1.
Qolden-crowned Honey-eater, Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. iv. p. 184.
Wipim regms, Temm. Pl. Col., 320,-Quoy et Gate. Zool. de TUrame, pi. 22—Less. Zool. de Coqmlle, pi. 20,
Sm cvb , Swains, in Zool. Journ., vol. i. HHS| and Hpfsf. to l im . l t a * , H D * £
-J a rd and Selb. 111. Om., vol. i. pis. 18,19, 20.—G. R. Gray, List of Gen. of Birds, 2nd edit., p. 38.
Swains. Class., of Birds, vol. ii. p. 237— Less. Traité d'Om, p. 340,-Steph. Cent. of Shaw’s Gen.
Zool., vol. xiv. p. 266.
Sericulus regens, Less. Man. d’Om., tom. i. p. 256.
T h is beautiful sjM e s, one of the finest birds of the Australian Fauna, is, I believe, exclusively confined:.
to the eastern portion of the country ; it is occasionally seen in the neighbourhood of Sydney, which appears
to be the extent of its range to the southward and westward. I met with it in the brushes at Maitland m
company and feeding on the same trees with the Satin and Cat Birds and the g Q H B g | >*¡11
more abundant on the Manning, at Port Manquante, and at' Moreton Bay ; I sought for and made every
inquiry respecting it at Illawarra, hut did not encounter it, and was informed that it is never seen there, yet
the district is precisely similar in character to those in which it is abundant about two degrees to the?
eastward: while encamped on Mosquito Island, near the moiith o f the river Hunter, I shot several, and
observed it to be numerous on the neighbouring islands, particularly Baker’s Island, where there is a line
garden and where it is one of the greatest pests the proprietor has to contend with, for during the
summer months, when the peaches and other fruits are ripening, it commits serious injury to the crops and
their owner. D | _
Although I have spoken of this bird as abundant in the various localities referred to, I must mention that
at least fifty out of colour may be observed to one fully-plumaged male, which when adorned in its gorgeous
livery of golden yellow and deep velvety black exhibits an extreme shyness of disposition, as if conscious
that its beauty, rendering it a conspicuous object, might lead to its destruction ; it is usually therefore very
quiet in its actions, and mostly resorts to the topmost branches of the trees ; > t when two gay-coloured
males encounter each other, frequent conflicts take place. To obtain specimens in their full dress, considerable
caution is necessary, on the other hand, females and immature males are very tame, and when feeding
among the foliage, appear to he so intent upon their Occupation as not to heed thé approach of an intruder
• and I have occasionally stood beneath a low tree, not more than fifteen feet high, with at least
ten feeding voraciously above me. The stomachs of those dissected contained the remains o f wild figs,
berries and seeds, but no trace of insects. '
I did not succeed in discovering the nest, or in obtaining any information respecting it.
I believe that the fine plumage represented in the Plate is not assumed until the second or third year,
and when once acquired is not afterwards thrown off ; it may be thus described
Head and back of the neck, running in a rounded point towards the breast, rich-bright gamboge-yellow
tinged with orange, particularly on the centre of the forehead ; the remainder of the plumage, with the
exception of the secondaries and inner webs of all but the first primary, deep velvety black ; the secondaries
bright gamboge-yellow, with a narrow edging of black along, the inner webs ; the first primary is entirely
black the next have the tips and outer webs black—the half of the inner web and that part of the shaft not
running through the black tip are yellow ; as the primaries approach the secondaries the yellow of the inner
web extends across the shaft, leaving only a black edge on the outer web, which gradually narrows until
the tips only of both webs, remain black; bill yelloW; hides pale yellow; legs and feet black.
The female has the head and throat dull brownish white, with a large patch of deep black on the crown ;
all the upper surface, wings and tail pale olive-brown, the feathers of the hack with a triangular-shaped
mark of brownish white near the tip; the under surface is. similar, but here, except on the breast, the
white markings increase so much in sire’as to become the predominant hue ; irides brown ; bill and feet
W The young males at first resemble the females, hut their hues are continually changing, until they gain
the livery of the adult.
The Plate represents a male and a female on a branch of one of the wild figs of the brushes of New
South Wales, all the size of life.