DACELO GIGANTEA, Leach. 
Great Brown Kingfisher. 
Alcedo gigantea, Lath. Ind. Om., vol. i. p. 245. 
— — fusca, Gmel. edit, of Linn. Syst. Nat., yoI. i. p. 454. 
Grand Martin-pecheur de la Nouvelle Guinee, Son. Voy., p. 171. pi. 106. — Buff. Hist, des Ois., torn. vii. p. 181. — 
PI. Enl. 663. ? 
Martin Chasseur, Temm. Man. d'Orn., 2nd edit. p. lxxxviii. 
Giant Kingfisher, Shaw, Gen. Zool., vol. viii. p. 53. 
Great Brown Kingfisher, Lath. Gen. Syn., vol. ii. p. 609. — Ibid. Supp., vol. ii. p. 143. — White's Journ., pi. in p. 
137— Phill. Voy., pi. in p. 287.— Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. iv. p. 9. 
Dacelo gigantea, Leach, Zool. Misc., vol. ii. p. 126. pi. cvi. — Vig. and Horsf. in Linn. Trans., vol. xv. p. 204. — 
Swains. Class, of Birds, vol. ii. p. 335. 
Choucalcyon australe, Less. Traite d'Orn., p. 248. 
Paralcyon gigas, Gloger. 
Alcedo gigas, Bodd. 
Dacelo gigas, G. R. Gray, Gen. of Birds, 2nd edit. p. 14. 
Gogo-bera, Aborigines of New South Wales. 
Laughing Jackass of the Colonists. 
The Dacelo gigantea is a bird with which every resident and traveller in New South Wales is more or less 
familiar, for independently of its large size, which in itself would tend to attract attention, its voice is so 
extraordinary as to be unlike that of any other living creature. In its disposition it is by no means shy, and 
when any new objects are presented to its notice, such as a party traversing the bush or pitching their tent 
in the vicinity of its retreat, it becomes very prying and inquisitive, often perching on the dead branch of 
some neighbouring tree, and watching with the greatest curiosity the kindling of the fire and the preparation 
of the meal ; its presence, however, owing to the quietude with which it passes through the forest, and the 
almost noiseless manner in which it settles, is seldom detected until it emits its extraordinary gurgling, 
laughing note, which generally calls forth some exclamation according with the temper of the hearer, such as 
" There is our old friend the Laughing Jackass," or an epithet of a less friendly character : not unfre- 
quently does its life pay the penalty of its temerity ; for if, as is often the case, the traveller's larder be 
ill-provided and his appetite keen, but a few minutes elapse before it is roasting over the fire it was lately 
surveying with so much curiosity. So remai-kable are the sounds emitted by the bird that they have been 
noted by nearly every writer on New South Wales and its productions. Mr. Caley states that its "loud 
noise, somewhat like laughing, may be heard at a considerable distance, from which circumstance, and its 
uncouth appearance, it probably received the extraordinary appellation given to it by the settlers on their 
first arrival in the colony." Captain Sturt says, " Its cry, which resembles a chorus of wild spirits, is apt to 
startle the traveller who may be in jeopardy, as if laughing and mocking at his misfortune;" and Mr. 
Bennett, in his ' Wanderings,' says, " Its peculiar gurgling laugh, commencing in a low and gradually rising 
to a high and loud tone, is often heard in all parts of the colony ; the deafening noise being poured forth 
while the bird remains perched upon a neighbouring tree ; it rises with the dawn, when the woods re-echo 
with its gurgling laugh ; at sunset it is again heard ; and as that glorious orb sinks in the west, a last ' good 
night' is given in its peculiar tones to all within hearing." 
The Great Brown Kingfisher does not inhabit Van Diemen's Land, nor has it yet been met with in 
Western Australia ; it may be said to be almost solely confined to that portion of Australia lying between 
Spencer's Gulf and Moreton Bay, the south-eastern corner, as it were, of the continent. The plate in 
the PI. Enl., quoted above, has been considered by all previous writers to have reference to this bird, and 
while I coincide in this opinion, I think that some mistake must have arisen as to the locality, and that it 
never visits New Guinea nor even the northern coast of Australia, where its place is supplied by the Dacelo 
cervina and D. Leaclui. Unlike most other species, it frequents every variety of situation ; the luxuriant 
brushes stretching along the coast, the more thinly-timbered forest, the belts of trees studding the parched 
plains and the brushes of the higher ranges being alike favoured with its presence ; over all these localities 
it is rather thinly dispersed being nowhere very numerous. 
I believe that this bird seldom, if ever, drinks : consequently the most arid plains are as suitable to its 
habits as the shrouded river sides and the flat brushes near the coast. 
Its food, which is of a mixed character, consists exclusively of animal substances ; reptiles, insects 
and crabs, however, appear to be its favourite diet, upon which it is destined by nature to subsist : it 
devours lizards with avidity, and it is not an unfrequent sight to see it bearing off a snake in its bill to be 
eaten at leisure ; it also preys on small mammalia. I recollect shooting a Great Brown Kingfisher in 
South Australia in order to secure a fine rat I saw hanging from its bill, and which proved to be a rare 
species inhabiting the plains of that part of the country. It breeds during the months of August and 
