POMATORHINUS SUPERCILIOSUS, n g . and H o rtf.
White-eyebrowed Pomatorhinus.
Pomatorhinus superciliosus, Vig. and Horsf. in Linn. Trans., vol. xv. p. 330.—Capt. Sturt’s Expeditions to South
Australia, vol. ii. p. 219.
Gnow-un, Aborigines of the mountain districts of Western Australia.
T h is species ranges over the whole of the southern portion of the continent o f Australia, where it must be
regarded as a bird peculiar to the interior, rather than as an inhabitant of the districts near the coast. It
is common on the Liverpool Plains in New South Wales, and it was particularly noticed by my friend
Captain Sturt during his expedition to the Darling. I myself encountered it near the bend o f the river
Murray, and it has also been found in the York district of Western Australia, but I have never heard of
its having been seen either in the north or north-western parts of the country. It usually moves about in
small troops of from six to ten in number, and is without exception the most restless, noisy, querulous
bird I ever encountered. Its mode of progression among the branches of the trees is no less singular
than is its voice different from that o f other birds; it runs up and down the branches of the smaller trees
with great rapidity and with the tail very much spread and raised above the level of the back. It usually
feeds upon the ground under the Banksias and other low trees, but upon the least intrusion flits on to the
lowest branch, and by a running or leaping motion quickly ascends to the highest, when it flies off to the
next tree, uttering at the same time a jarring, chattering and discordant jumble o f notes, which are sometimes
preceded by a rapidly repeated, shrill, piping whistle.
When a troop are engaged in ascending the branches, which they usually do in line, they have a singular
habit o f suddenly assembling in a cluster, spreading their tails and wings, and puffing out their plumage
until they resemble a complete ball of feathers.
The breeding-season commences in September and continues during the three following months. The
nest is a large domed structure of dried sticks, with an entrance in the side, which is hidden from view by
the sticks o f the upper part of the nest being made to project over it for four or five inches like the thatch
of a shed; the inside is generally lined with the soft parts of flowers and the dust of rotten wood, but
occasionally with feathers. In Western Australia the nest is usually constructed in a dead jam-tree, the
branches of which are drawn together at the top like a broom. It often happens that three or four pairs of
birds build their nests in the same small clump of trees. The eggs are very like those o f P . temporalis, the
ground colour being olive-grey clouded with purplish brown, and streaked with similar hair-like lines of
black; they are usually four in number, eleven and a half lines long by eight lines broad.
The sexes as well as the young so closely resemble each other, that they can only be distinguished by the
aid of dissection.
Lores, space surrounding the eye and the ear-coverts dark silky brown ; a broad line of white, bounded
above and beneath with a narrow one o f dark brown, commences at the base of the upper mandible, passes
over the eye and continues to the occiput; crown of the head and all the upper surface, flanks and under
tail-coverts olive-brown, passing into a purer and deeper brown on the primaries; tail dark brown, crossed
by very indistinct bars of a darker colour, the five lateral feathers on each side tipped with white • chin
throat and chest white; bill blackish brown, the lower part of the under mandible greyish white; irides
in the adult straw-yellow, in the young brown; feet blackish brown.
The figures are of the natural size.