GLYCIPHILA OCULARIS, Gould. 
Brown Honey-eater. 
Glyciphila ? ocularis, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., Part V. p. 154 ; and in Syn. Birds of Australia, Part IV. 
? subocularis, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., Part Y. p. 154 ; and in Syn. Birds of Australia, Part IV., 
female or young male. 
Jih-jo-gour, Aborigines of the mountain districts of Western Australia. • 
Brown Honey -sucker of the Colonists. 
No one of the numerous species of Honey-eaters inhabiting Australia appears to enjoy a more universal 
range than the Glyciphila ocularis ; I have received specimens from every portion of the country yet visited ; 
and if it does not also inhabit New Guinea and Timor, its place is there supplied by species so very nearly 
allied to it, that they are not readily distinguishable from each other. 
It inhabits every variety of situation : I met with it in abundance on Baker’s Island at the mouth of the 
Hunter, and on the banks of the Namoi in the interior of New South Wales ; and Mr. Gilbert records that 
he found it to be equally numerous at Swan River and at Port Essington : in each and all of these various 
localities it was observed feeding alike on the topmost branches of the tallest gums, as well as in the low 
trees. 
In its actions and manners it displays tile usual activity of the Honey-eaters generally, creeping and 
clinging among the branches with the greatest ease, and particularly affecting those most laden with 
blossoms, into which it inserts its brush-like tongue to procure the sweet pollen : like the other species of 
the group, it also feeds with avidity upon all kinds of small insects. 
Its powers of song are very great, the most frequently repeated note being remarkably shrill, rich, clear 
and distinct in tone, and the others forming an agreeable melody. While the female is sitting upon her 
eggs, the male sings all day long with scarcely any intermission. 
Its flight merely consists of short flits from tree to tree. 
The situations chosen for the site of the nest are various, hut in nearly every instance contiguous to 
water and frequently overhanging it ; the most favourite position appears to he the side of a tea-tree, the 
hark of which is hanging down in tatters ; it is also often seen suspended in the most conspicuous manner 
from the drooping branches of the stink-wood ; and in one instance Mr. Gilbert found it attached to two 
slender fibrous roots, hanging from beneath a bank over a pool of water. The nest is generally formed of 
soft strips of paper bark or dried grasses, matted together with small spiders’ cocoons or vegetable fibres, 
and so closely resembles the branch upon which it is placed, as to render it very difficult of detection ; 
it is usually lined with fine grasses, zamia wool, the soft part of the cones of the Banksics , delicate white 
buds of flowers, or sheep’s wool collected from the bushes of the sheep-runs. 
September, October and November constitute the breeding-season. The eggs, which are two in number, 
vary considerably in their colouring, some being pure white without a trace of spots or markings, others 
having a zone round the larger end formed of freckled markings of light reddish brown ; others again are 
thinly sprinkled with this colour over the whole of their surface, and one or two procured at Swan River 
were bespeckled with numerous fine freckles of bluish grey ; the average length of a number of eggs was 
eight lines by six lines in breadth. 
Crown of the head, all the upper surface, wings and tail dark olive-brown, passing into yellowish brown 
on the rump and bases of the tail-feathers; primaries and secondaries margined with wax-yellow; imme- 
diately behind the eye a very small patch of glossy brownish yellow feathers, the anterior portion of which 
is silvery ; throat and chest greyish brown ; abdomen and under tail-coverts olive-grey ; irides light red ; 
hill dark brown ; legs and feet bluish grey ; tarsi tinged with green. 
The Plate represents a male and a female of the natural size. 
