PHALACROCORAX HYPOLEUCUS.
Pied Cormorant.
Phalacrocorax pica, Forster’s Drawings in Brit. Mus.
Pelecanus varius, Lath. Ind. Om., vol. ii. p. 890.—Gmel, Linn., vol. i. p. 576.
Pied Shay, Lath. Gen. Syn., vol. vi. p. 6 0 5—Cook’s Voy., vol. i. p. 151.— Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. x. p. 428.
Carlo hypoleueus, Brandt, Bull, de l’Acad. de St. Pet.
Ma-dee, Aborigines of the lowland districts of Western Australia.
Black and White Shag, Colonists .of Western Australia.
I f i r s t observed this fine Cormorant in Nepean Bay, Kangaroo Island, where it was very abundant, and I
have since ascertained that no species of the genus inhabiting Australia possesses a wider range, for it is
almost universally dispersed along the whole line of the southern coast from Swan River on the west to
Moreton Bay on the ea st; I have also received specimens from New Zealand, which present no perceptible
differences.
The Pied Cormorant may be regarded as a gregarious species, many hundreds being sometimes seen in
company, particularly in those bays and inlets of the sea whose shores are flat and sandy, and where the tide
brings in an abundant supply of fish, upon which the bird almost solely subsists, andjin the capture of which
it exhibits the same dexterity as the other members of the genus. Its large size and the contrast o f its pied
plumage render it a most conspicuous bird when seen on the surface of the water, but at no time does it
form so prominent an object in the scene as when observed reposing on the sand-banks and low ledges of
rock, after having satiated itself with fish, whence it seldom moves until compelled by hunger so to do.
I possess specimens of the eggs which are two inches and a half long and of a pale bluish white, and
which were brought from the Three Sisters’ Island, about twenty miles southward o f Swan R iver; I obtained
no other particulars respecting its nidification, but Latham states in his “ General History ” that it breeds in
trees.
The sexes are precisely alike in plumage, and also in the brilliant markings o f the lores and orbits; the
young of the first autumn differ in having all the upper surface brown, each feather having lighter edges;
the sides of the neck and upper part of the breast are also mottled with brown and white.
Crown of the head, back of the neck, lower part of the back, upper tail-coverts, flanks and thighs deep
glossy steel-blue ; all the upper surface and wings deep dull green, each feather with a very narrow margin
of velvety black; primaries and tail deep greenish black ; sides of the face and all the under surface pure
white; irides pale sea-green ; bare space in front o f the eye bright orange; eyelash and naked skin beneath
the eye rich indigo-blue; throat and cheeks light bluish ash; bill dark horn-colour, becoming lighter at the
t ip ; legs and feet black.
The Plate represents a male about two-thirds of the natural size.