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The Birds of Australia, Vol. 2 of 7 cover

The Birds of Australia, Vol. 2 of 7

Chapter 68: PACHYCEPHALA MELANURA, Gould. Black-tailed Pachycephala.
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About This Book

A richly illustrated natural-history volume presenting systematic accounts of Australian birds, pairing hand-colored plates with detailed descriptions of plumage, variation, behavior, habitats, distribution, and eggs. Entries cover nightjars, podarguses, swifts, swallows, kingfishers, pardalotes, shrike-thrushes and numerous other passerine and non-passerine groups, noting diagnostic features, synonymy, and range. The text discusses variation within species, field observations, and comparisons to related taxa, and provides locality records and brief natural-history notes to assist identification and study.

PACHYCEPHALA MELANURA, Gould.
Black-tailed Pachycephala.

Pachycephala melanura, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., Part X. p. 134.

The Pachycephala melanura is a native of the northern coasts of Australia, where it was procured by B. Bynoe, Esq., during the surveying voyage of H.M.S. the Beagle. It may be readily distinguished from the P. gutturalis and P. glaucura by the jet-black colouring of the tail, which organ is also shorter and more square than that of any other species, by its much longer bill, and by the colouring of the back of the neck and the under surface being richer than that of either of those above-named. I have not yet seen a female of this fine species, wanting which I have figured two males in different positions.

It may be thus described:—

Head, crescent commencing behind the eye and crossing the chest and the tail black; throat pure white; collar round the back and sides of the neck, and all the under surface very rich gamboge-yellow; upper surface rich yellowish olive; wings black, the coverts margined with yellowish olive; the primaries narrowly and the secondaries broadly margined with yellowish grey; bill and feet black; irides brown.

The figures are of the natural size.