TADORNA RADJAH, Ej/ton.
Radjah Shieldrake.
Anas Radjah, Duperrey, Voy. de la Coquille, p. 602.—Atlas to ditto, pi. 49.
Tadoma Radjah, Eyton, Mon. of th e Anat., p. 106.
White Duck, Residents a t P o rt Essington.
Go-m'èr-do, Aborigines o f P o rt Essington.
T h i s beautiful Shieldrake is found in numerous flocks on all the lakes and swamps of the northern and
eastern portions o f Australia; like the other members of the genus, it frequently perches on trees and
resorts to the hollow branches and boles for the purpose of breeding, the young being removed to the
water by their parents immediately after they are hatched. When the rainy season has set in, and the
water o f the lakes has become too deep for them to reach the roots of a species o f rush upon which they
feed, they become much more scattered over the face o f the country, and are then to be seen wading
through the mangrove bushes and over the soft mud left by the receding tide, the surface of which affords
the bird an abundant supply o f food, consisting of crabs, mollusks, and other marine animals. The sexes
present no visible difference in their colour or markings, nor is there a sufficient difference in size to
distinguish the male from the female.
Head, neck, breast, abdomen, flanks, wing-coverts, inner webs and tips o f the outer webs o f the secondaries
white; band across the breast and upper part of the back rich deep chestnut, which colour gradually
passes into the deep dull black of the scapularies, tertiaries, back, rump and tail; feathers of the centre of
the back finely freckled with chestnut; outer edges of tertiaries rich reddish chestnut; wing-coverts crossed
near the tip of each feather with a narrow, irregular line of black; speculum, or base o f the outer webs of
the secondaries, rich, shining, bronzy green, between which and the white tip is a broad line of dull black;
primaries and spurious wing black; lower part of the flanks and under tail-coverts dull black freckled with
white; irides yellowish white; bill and legs reddish flesh-colour, with in some specimens-a bluish tinge.
The Plate represents a male and female about the natural size.