HIATICULA RUFICAPILLA. 
Red-capped Dottrel. 
Charadrius ruficapillus, Temm. PL CoL, 47. fig. 2. — Wagl. Syst. Avium, Sp. 33. 
marginatus, GeofF. in Mus. Paris. — Less. Traite d’Orn., p. 544. — Ib. Man. d’Orn., tom. ii. p. 318. — - 
Bonn, et Vieill. Ency. Meth. Orn., part i. p. 335. — Vieill. 2nde Edit, du Nouv. Diet. d’Hist. Nat., 
tom. xxvii. p. 138. 
Hiaticula ruficapilla, List of Birds in Brit. Mus. Coll., part iii. p. 71. 
Sand-Lark and Red-necked Plover, Colonists of S^vvan River. 
The Red^capped Dottrel is universally dispersed over every part of the sea-shores of Australia that I have 
visited, and everywhere evinces a greater preference for the shingly beach of the ocean, and especially for 
deep salt-water bays, than for the sides of rivers and inland waters ; it is very numerous in Van Diemen’s 
Land, on Flinders’ Island, on the sand-hanks at the mouth of the Hunter in New South Wales and at Port 
Adelaide in South Australia ; and Mr. Gilbert states that it is equally abundant in Western Australia, where 
it is likewise so strictly a bird of the coast that he never saw it inland. It is usually met with in pairs, 
but may be occasionally observed associating in small companies. 
I found many of its eggs on Flinders’ Island, deposited in pairs in a slight depression of the sand among 
the shingle just above high-water mark ; they were very difficult to detect, in consequence of their colouring 
very closely assimilating to that of the material among which they were placed ; those procured by Mr. 
Gilbert in Western Australia were deposited on a small mound of sand and sea-weed on the sandy beach at 
a distance of from ten to twenty yards above high-water mark. The breeding-season comprises September 
and the three or four following months. 
The stomach is very muscular, and the food consists of small mollusca of various kinds. 
Like the Tringce generally, this bird resorts to every possible device in order to lure an intruder from 
its nest : throwing itself down upon its chest and flapping its wings as if in the last agonies of death, it will 
so continue until he has approached almost near enough to place his hand upon it, when it moves along for 
several yards, dragging one of its legs behind it as if it were broken, and if still followed up attempts to fly, 
and so well imitates the motions of a bird w'ounded in the wing, that the intruder is easily misled, and the 
eggs remain undiscovered. 
The eggs, which are an inch and a quarter in length by seven-eighths of an inch in breadth, are of a pale 
stone-colour, sprinkled all over with small Irregular blotches of brovvnish black. 
The male has the forehead crossed by a broad hand of wLite, which gradually diminishes to a point at 
the posterior angle of the eye ; above this is another band of black, which also diminishes to a point at the 
same place ; from the angle of the mouth to the eye is a line of black, which is continued from the 
posterior angle of the eye in an indistinct form down the sides of the neck ; crown of the head, nape and 
back of the neck rich rusty red ; all the upper surface and wings pale brown, each feather margined 
with a still lighter tint ; primaries blackish brown ; the shafts and extreme edge of the inner webs white ; 
four central tail-feathers dark brown, the remainder white ; all the under surface white ; irides very dark 
brown ; bill dark reddish brown ; naked part of the legs above the tarsi dark greenish grey ; tarsi light 
grey ; feet blackish brown. 
In the female the distribution of colour is precisely the same, hut the hues are all much paler, and the 
marks about the face are light brown instead of black. 
The Plate represents the two sexes of the natural size. 
