MALACORHYNCHUS MEMBRANACEUS, Swains.
Membranaceous Duck.
A tm mrnlramcea, hath. Ind. O m .,,& p !.,'p . bdx.—Vieill. SMiieEdit. du Nouv. Diet. d’H is t.N a t.,tom .v .p . 108.
—lb . Ency. Méth., P a rt I. p. 358.
—— fa s data, Shaw, N a t. Misc., pi. 697.
New Holland Duck, Lath. Gen. Syn. Supp., vol. ii. p. 359.
Membranaceous Duck, Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. x. p. 331.
Rhynchaspis fasciata, Less. Tra ité d’Om., p. 632.
------------------membranacea, Steph. Cont. of Shaw’s Gen. Zool., vol. xii. p. 124.
Malacorhynchus membranaceus, Swains.—lb . Class, o f Birds, vol. ii. p. 366. Eyton s A nat., p. 136. G. R. Gray,
L ist o f Gen. of B irds, 2nd E dit., p . 94.—L ist of Brit. Mus. Coll., P a r t I I I . p. 139.
------------- fasdatus, Wagl.
Wrongi, Aborigines o f New South Wales.
Wym-bin, Aborigines of P erth , Western Australia.
Pink-eyed Duck, Colonists of Swan River.
Although this is by no means a common bird in any part of Australia that I have visited, it is very generally
distributed over the southern latitudes of that country, and it also occasionally visits Van Diemen’s Land;
its occurrence however is very irregular, the shortness or duration of the intervals being evidently induenced,
by some peculiarity of the satson. Shallow freshwater lagoons seem to be its favourite places of resort;
hence in New South Wales during the rainy season, when the flats and hollows are temporarily filled with
water, giving life to myriads of the lower animals upon which this Duck feeds, its presence may almost at
all times be looked for, while on the other hand it is seldom to be met with during the opposite periods, or
the seasons of drought, * As this bird has never yet been seen out of Australia, or even on the northern
shores of that country, we may reasonably suppose that toward the interior it finds situations suited to its
existence, and where it doubtless breeds; but respecting this portion of its economy no particulars whatever
have yet been ascertained. No one of the tribe that I have observed in a state of nature presents a more
elegant' or graceful appearance than this little Duck, which is generally seen ip small companies o f from
six to twenty in number, swimming over the placid lagoons, and betraying so little fear and shyness on the
approach o f man, as to present a singular contrast in this respect to the Other members of the family. Its
peculiarly light plumage renders it very buoyant on the water; its flight is very powerfid, and it passes
through the air with great quickness, like the Green-necked Duck and Shoveller, with both of which species
it is frequently found in.company.
The sexes are so perfectly similar in plumage that they are not to be distinguished with certainty; the
male, however, is generally the larger of the two.
Sides of the face-arid chin white; crown greyish brown.becoming paler on the forehead; space round
the eye, and a line from either eye uniting at the occiput and passing down the back of the neck brownish
black; immediately beneath this line and behind the dark patch surrounding the eye an oblong mark of
rose-pink ; back and wings brown, very minutely freckled with black ; rump dark brown ; upper tail-coverts
buffy white, with a broad stripe o f dark brown across the tip o f each ; tail dark brown, slightly tipped with
white ; sides of the head and.neck, back of the neck and all the under surface brownish white, crossed by
numerous dark brown fascist, which are narrow on the sides of the head and neck, broad and distinct on
the back of the neck, the breast and flanks, and nearly obliterated'.® the centre of the abdomen ; uuder
tail-coverts deep buff; ¡rides dark reddish brown i bill varidS from greenish grey to bluish oliv e; tip of
the lower mandible white'; tarsi and toes emeraldfgreen in some specimens and yellow-brown in others ;
webs dark brown.
The Plate represents the two sexes of the natural size.