NUMENIUS AUSTRALIS, Gould. 
Australian Curlew. 
Numenius Australis, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., Part V. p. 155. 
Wid-joo-on-ong, Aborigines of the Murray River, Western Australia. 
Mdn-do-weidt, Aborigines of Port Essington. 
Curlew, of the Colonists. 
In investigating the ornithology of any part of the world we find many Instances of species so closely 
resembling others, known to be inhabitants of distant countries, that they at first sight appear to be identical, 
but on a more careful comparison and examination they prove to he merely representatives ; in no case 
however is this law of representation, for such it must be called, so decidedly marked as in Australia, 
where not a few, but numerous, instances occur of birds so closely resembling others peculiar to Europe 
and Northern India, that they appear to be the same ; and the present bird may be cited as a case in point, 
for a casual observer would at once pronounce it to be the Common Curlew of Europe ; on comparison, 
however, it is found to differ from that species in having a longer bill, in the rump and upper tail-coverts 
being barred with brovvn instead of white, and in the under surface being washed with buff. 
The range of this species over Australia appears to be universal, for I have received specimens from 
Port Essington, Swan River, South Australia, New South Wales, Van Diemen’s Land, and ail the islands 
in Bass’s Straits ; but in no one of these countries is it more abundant than in Van Diemen’s Land, where 
it is to be met with in flocks in the neighbourhood of rivers and marshy situations, uttering a very similar 
call, and exhibiting the same actions and manners as the Common Curlew of Europe : like that bird, 
it is also especially fond of running over the flats left bare by the receding tide, to feed upon the various 
molluscous animals abounding in such situations. 
The weight of this bird is about two pounds ; the stomachs of those dissected were found to be extremely 
muscular, and contained the remains of shelled mollusks, crabs, &c. 
The breeding ground has not yet been discovered ; the bird probably retires to the high lands of Van 
Diemen’s Land or Australia Felix for that purpose. 
A similarity of colouring pervades both sexes. 
Crown of the head and back of the neck blackish brown, each feather margined with buff ; back blackish 
brown, each feather irregularly blotched with reddish buff on the margins ; wing-coverts blackish brown, 
margined with greyish white ; tertiaries brown, irregularly blotched on the margins with lighter brown ; 
rump and upper tail-coverts dark brown, barred across the margins with greyish buff ; tail light brown, 
crossed with bars of dark brown; greater coverts blackish brown, slightly tipped with white ; first five 
primaries dark brown with white stems, the remainder and the secondaries crossed by irregular interrupted 
bars of white ; sides of the face, throat, and all the under surface pale buff, with a fine line of blackish 
brown down the centre of each feather ; basal half of the bill flesh-colour tinged with olive ; apical portion 
deep blackish brown; legs bluish lead-colour; irides dark brown. 
The figure is of the natural size. 
