CENTROPUS PH ASI ANUS. 
Pheasant Cuckoo. 
Cuculus Phasianus, Lath. Ind. Orn. Supp., p. xxx. 
Centropus Phasianus, Temm. Man. d’Orn., tom. i. p. Ixxiv. — Vig. and Horsf. in Linn. Trans., vol. xv. p. 306. 
Polophilus Phasianus , Leach, Zool. Misc., pi. 46. — Shaw, Gen. Zool., vol. ix. p. 48. pi. 11. 
Pheasant Cuckoo, Lath. Gen. Syn. Supp., vol. ii. p. 137. — lb. Gen. Hist., vol. iii. p. 240. 
Polophilus leucogaster, Leach, Zool. Misc., vol. i. p. 177. pi. 52. — Shaw, Gen. Zool., vol. ix. p. 49. pi. 12. 
New Holland Coucal, Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. iii. p. 250. 
Polophilus variegatus, Leach, Zool. Misc., vol. i. pp. 116, 117. pi. 51. — Shaw, Gen. Zool., vol. ix. p. 47. pi. 10. 
Variegated Coucal, Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. iii. p. 250. 
Centropus variegatus, Yig. and Horsf. in Linn. Trans., vol. xv. p. 306. 
Mun-je-ree-woo, Aborigines of Port Essington. 
Perhaps there is no one group of the Australian Birds less understood than the members of the genus 
Centropus. The numerous examples in my collection I consider to he referable to two, if not to three 
distinct species, presenting, however, but slight differences from each other. The Centropus inhabiting 
New South Wales differs from that found at Port Essington in having a much shorter and more arched hill, 
and in being somewhat smaller in size ; specimens from the western coast again differ in being smaller than 
the bird of New South Wales, in having a more attenuated bill and a more uniform colouring of the tail : 
having thus pointed out the particulars in which the birds differ from each other, it will only be necessary 
to figure one of them. The old term of Phasianus should be retained for the New South Wales bird, while 
that of macrourus might be applied to the one from Port Essington, and melanurus to that from North- 
Western Australia, should they ultimately prove to be distinct. The greater part then of the coast-line of 
New South Wales, the eastern, northern and north-western portions of Australia generally are tenanted by 
Centropi, but only in such situations as are favourable to their habits, namely swampy places among the brushes 
abounding with tall grasses and dense herbage, among which they run with facility, and when necessity 
prompts, fly to the lower branches of the trees, from which they ascend in a succession of leaps from branch 
to branch until they nearly reach the top, and then they fly off to a neighbouring tree. The most westerly 
part of New South Wales in which I have heard of their existence is Illawarra, where they are rather rare, 
and from whence to Moreton Bay they gradually increase in numbers. 
The nest, which is placed in the midst of a tuft of grass, is of a large size, composed of dried grasses, and 
is of a domed form with two openings, through one of which the head of the female protrudes while sitting, 
and her tail through the other. At Port Essington the nest is sometimes placed among the lower leaves of 
the Pandanus, but this occurrence seems to be rare ; a large tuft of long grass being most frequently selected, 
as affording a better shelter. The eggs are from three to five in number, nearly round, and of a dirty 
white, in some instances stained with brown, and with a rather rough surface, somewhat like that of 
the eggs of the Cormorant ; they are about one inch and four lines long by one inch and two lines broad. 
By dissection I learn that the males are always smaller than the females ; it also appears that when fully 
adult both sexes are alike in plumage, and have the bill, head, neck and abdomen black, whereas the young 
has the hill horn-colour, and the same parts which are black in the adult, of a deep brown with a tawny 
stripe down the centre of each feather. 
The adults have all the feathers of the upper and under surface dull black with glossy black shafts ; 
wing-coverts mottled tawny brown and black, each feather with a conspicuous tawny shaft ; remainder of 
the wing rich reddish chestnut crossed with irregular double bars of black, the interstices between which 
fade into tawny on the outer webs of the primaries ; lower part of the back and upper tail-coverts deep 
green freckled with black ; tail dark brown glossed with green, and minutely freckled with rufous and pale 
tawny, the latter hue assuming the form of irregular and interrupted bars, all but the tw 7 o centre feathers 
tipped with white ; hill black ; feet leaden black, the scales lighter. 
The young have all the upper surface reddish brown with glossy conspicuous tawny shafts ; the throat 
and breast tawny with lighter-coloured shafts ; in other respects the colouring is similar to the adult, except 
that the markings of the tail are more distinct. 
The eyes of the birds in New South Wales are said to be black, while those of Port Essington are red. 
The Plate represents an adult and an immature bird about two-thirds of the natural size. 
