454 BIRDS OF AUSTRALIA, 



the body and wings are of a large size, accordant in fact with 

 the increased size of the feathers ; the spots on the tips of the 

 wing-feathers are not so round as those on the back ; the 

 primaries are very pale brown, fading into white on the basal 

 portion of their inner webs, which is yellow on their under 

 surface; their shafts straw-yellow; these feathers are much 

 worn, and are doubtless tipped with white in fresh moulted 

 specimens ; tail-feathers pale brown, with buff shafts and 

 Avhite tips ; throat-feathers brown at the base, with an arrow- 

 head-shaped mark of pale buff at the tip of each, the buff tips 

 becoming much larger on the chest ; centre of the abdomen 

 pale buff; flanks, thighs, and under tail-coverts buff, barred 

 with light brown ; bill black ; gape rich yellow ; feet appa- 

 rently very dark olive. 



Total length 11^ inches ; bill IJ ; wing 6 ; tail 4 J ; tarsi If. 



Sp.281. CHLAMYDODERA CERVINIVENTRIS, 6'o/^/^. 

 Fawn-beeasted Bowek-bird. 



Chlamydera cerviniventris^ Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc, part xviii. p. 201 • 



Chlamydera cerviniventris, Gould, Birds of Australia, fol., Supple- 

 ment, pi. 



The discovery of the present species is due Mr. Macgillivray, 

 who procured a specimen at Cape York, which with its curious 

 bower he transmitted to the British Museum. Other ex- 

 amples have since been procured, but none are adorned with 

 the lovely frill of liliaceous feathers at the nape of the neck 

 although I believe some of them are very old birds. In size 

 this species is rather larger than C. maculata, or almost inter- 

 mediate between that species and C. nuchalis ; its distinguish- 

 ing feature is its rich, uniformly-coloured, buff under surface. 

 Its bower differs from those of the other species; its walls, 

 which are very thick, being nearly upright, or but little 

 inclining towards each other at the top, so that the passage 

 through is very narrow ; it is formed of line twigs, is placed 



