BIRDS OF THE FOREST BORDERS AND GRASS-LANDS 129 
or blotched with shades of brown, and underlying spots of dull violet-grey; 
the markings usually predominate on the larger end. Breeding-season : 
July or August to December. 
3. Pink Robin Petroica rodinogaster Drapiez — 3 A. Female 
rod-in-o-gas'-ter — Gk. rodinos (rhodinos) , rosy; Gk, gaster, belly. 
Distribution. — Victoria and Tasmania ; accidental to South Australia. 
Notes. — Also called Pink-breasted Robin and Magenta-breasted 
Robin. Usually in pairs, frequenting heavily timbered mountain ranges 
and gullies during the spring and summer, moving to more open country 
in autumn and winter. Its call-note closely resembles “Tick, tick, tick." 
Food: insects of various kinds and their larva:. 
Nest.— A small, cup-shaped structure, composed of green moss bound 
together with cobwebs; lined with fur and down from the fronds of tree- 
ferns; the nest is decorated on the outside with lichen. Generally built 
into a forked horizontal branch. 
Eggs. Three or four, greenish-white, minutely dotted and spotted 
with pale brown, and underlying markings of lavender predominating at 
the larger end. Breeding-season: October to December or January. 
4. Rose Robin Petroica rosea Gould — 4A. Female 
ro'-se-a — L., roseus, rosy. 
Distribution. — Eastern Australia, from northern Queensland to 
Victoria. 
Notes. — Also called Rose-breasted Robin. Usually in pairs, frequent- 
ing coastal rain forests and contiguous mountain ranges, where it breeds. 
During the autumn and winter months it frequents chiefly the more open 
country. Its call-note resembles “Tick, tick, tick;’’ it also has a pretty 
song like “We-we-widi-wre-etle.” Food: insects and their larva:. 
” Nest . — A small, cup-shaped structure, composed of soft fibres and 
moss, bound together with cobwebs ; lined with fur or plant down. Beauti- 
fully decorated on the outside with lichen. Generally built at a consider- 
able height on a horizontal branch. 
Eggs. — Three, bluish-grey, minutely dotted and spotted, especially on 
the larger end, with purplish-brown markings. Breeding-season : October 
to December. 
5. Flame Robin Petroica phcenicea Gould — 5A. Female 
plice-nic'-e-a — Gk, phoiniceos, red. 
Distribution. — New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, the 
islands of Bass Strait, and Tasmania. 
Notes. — Also called Flame-breasted Robin. Usually in pairs, fre- 
quenting cleared areas in the coastal ranges, and during the colder months 
the warmer lowlands. Its song is best expressed by the words “You-may- 
come, if-you-will, to-the-sea.” Food: insects of various kinds and their 
larvae. 
