YELLOW-CRESTED PENGUIN. ll 
sides of the crown, mixed with black ; throat and sides of face dusky-black ; remainder 
of under-surface white ; flippers white below, more or less blackish on the outer 
margin and tip ; bill red ; iris hazel ; toes and tarsus white. Total length 497 mm. ; 
culmen (exp.) 43, flipper 147, tarsus 30, middle toe and claw 63. 
Adult female —Similar to the adult male. 
Nestling —Head, throat, hind-neck, and upper-parts—that is to say the surface 
that is coloured in the adult—covered with short sooty-black down, and the under 
parts with short white down ; bill whitish-horn colour ; feet pale brown. 
Young.—Differs from the adult in being appreciably smaller in size, and in having 
a whitish-grey throat; the long crests are absent, being represented by a tuft of 
feathers little more than half an inch in length, commencing immediately above the 
eyes and extending back one and half inches towards the occiput, and being pale 
lemon-yellow, with blue tips. Bill black, with reddish-brown tips. 
Immature—Birds have the throat ashy-white and the superciliary line yellowish- 
white, but no pronounced crest. 
Nest.—No nest is built. 
Eggs.—Clutch, one or two; ground-colour pale green, covered with a coating 
of lime; axis 62 mm., diameter 45. 
Breeding-season—November and December. 
Incubation-period.—About six weeks. 
Distribution and forms—Sub-antarctic Islands and mainland of New Zealand. 
No subspecies known. 
6. Eudyptes serresianus.—YELLOW-CRESTED PENGUIN. 
[Eudyptula serresiana Oustalet, Ann. Sci. Nat., Paris, Ser. VI., Zool., Vol. VIII., Art. 4, after 
August 1878: Tierra del Fuego. Extra-limital.] 
Hitherto unfigured in Australian works. 
Eudyptes filholi Hutton, Proc. Linn. Soc., N.S.W., Vol. III., pt. 1v., p. 334, May, 1879: 
Campbell Island, New Zealand, 
DiIsTRIBUTION. al to Tasmania and South Australia ? See Emu, Vol. XVI., pt. 3, 
p- 184, Jan. 1917 
Adult male—As of general Penguin coloration, but differing from the preceding 
in being a smaller bird, with generally paler coloration above, while the throat and 
cheeks are dark slaty or grey-black, showing a great contrast with the black of the 
top of the head. The crest is different being composed of long flowing black and 
yellow feathers mixed, beginning as a thin yellow line on the lores, and apparently 
capable of lateral erection. The bill is shorter and more slender. Bill red; iris 
rich brown; toes and tarsus pinkish-white. Total length unknown (according to 
stuffing in skins); culmen (exp.) 37 mm., flipper 130, tarsus 25, middle toe and 
claw 60. 
Adult female—Similar. 
Immature and Nestling—Undescribed from Neozelanic localities. 
Nest.—None made. 
Hggs.—Clutch, two; bluish-white ; 75-80 mm. by 45. 
Breeding-season.—October. 
Distribution and forms—Round the Sub-antarctic Circle. We are accepting the 
Falkland Islands birds as typical, as the name Z. serresiana was given to an immature 
specimen, and we now name the following subspecies which have been distinguished 
in literature for many years: H. s. moseleyi subsp. nov., from Inaccessible Island, 
Tristan d’Acunha Group, with a longer bill, and a very long crest, very pale ashy 
throat and generally light upper coloration; EH. s. interjectus subsp. nov., from 
Kerguelen Island, with a shorter bill and darker throat and less developed crest 
and apparently smaller size; and #. s. filholi Hutton, from Campbell Island, New 
