SITTELLA ALBATA, Ramsay. 
White-wing’ed White-headed Sittella. 
Sittella leucocephala, Ramsay, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1875, p. 600 (nee Gould). 
albata, Ramsay, Proc. Zool. Soc. 1877, p. 351. — Id. Proc. Linn. Soc. N. S. Wales, ii. p. 192. 
The genus Sittella contains the Australian representatives of the Nuthatches of the northern parts ot the Old 
and New Worlds, and is represented on the continent of Australia by seven species, five of which have been 
described by me ; one species is found in New Guinea. It may readily be believed that a considerable 
number of specimens have passed through my hands ; and it is just possible that I may have handled examples 
of the present new species ; but if so, I never noticed the distinction between it and Sittella leucocephala. It 
would, indeed, require a careful examination of a specimen to notice the dilference between these two species; 
for the white spots on the quills (instead of reddish ones, as in S. leucocephala) are only seen on spreading 
the wing. Mr. Waller, to whom I am indebted for lending me a fine specimen of Sittella albata , tells me 
that he was skinning it, when the white spots on the underside of the quills attracted his attention, as he 
did not remember to have seen them in S. leucocephala , with which species he was well acquainted. On 
pointing out this difference to Mr. Ramsay, that gentleman re-examined his series, and discovered other 
specimens in his possession from Port Denison, which he described in 1877 as Sittella albata. 
The geographical ranges of the two species above mentioned do not seem to me to be exactly understood 
as yet ; for Mr. Ramsay gives the range of S. leucocephala as the Wide-Bay district, New South Wales, and 
the interior province, while the new Sittella albata is said to come from Port Denison and Rockingham Bay. 
I understood Mr. Waller to say that he had procured his specimens near Brisbane ; and it may be possible 
that S. albata ranges as far south as the neighbourhood of that town. 
Mr. Ramsay, in his paper “On the Birds of N.E. Queensland,” first identified the present species with 
S. leucocephala , and observes that it is far from being rare there, being usually met with in open forest 
country over the whole of Northern Queensland as far as Cooktown. Its habits and actions and nidificatiou 
do not differ materially from those of the other members of the genus. The notes of all closely resemble 
each other. 
The following is Mr. Ramsay’s description of the species : — 
“ Head and neck, a small spot at the base of the primaries on the underside of the wing, a band through 
the wing as far as the ninth quill, the upper tail-coverts, and the tips of all the tail-feathers except the centre 
two snow-white; under surface ashy white, with a broad dark brown stripe down the centre of each feather; 
under tail-coverts of a darker brown, tipped and margined anteriorly with white ; back and scapulars brown, 
darker in the centres of the feathers ; wing- and tail-quills blackish brown, the former crossed with a white 
hand as far as the ninth quill ; bill at the base, the legs and feet, and skin round the eye yellow ; remainder 
of the bill black. Length 3 7 inches, wing 3, tail T5, tarsus 1 *7, bill 0'5, bill from gape 07. ” 
The figures in the Plate are drawn from a single specimen lent to me by Mr. Waller, whose kindness in 
showing me many fine species of Australian birds during his recent visit to England I have much pleasure 
in acknowledging. The birds are represented of the size of life ; and I have ventured to introduce into the 
Plate a representation of the nest of a Sittella, which I believe to be that of the present bird, as it was sent 
to me from the part of the country which this species inhabits. I have never before had the opportunity of 
figuring one of the nests belonging to any member of the genus ; but Mr. Ramsay states that the nidificatiou 
of all the Sittellce is of a similar character, “ the nest being placed in an upright and usually dead fork of 
some high branch ; it is made of fine strips of bark with a large quantity of spiders’ webs, with which small 
scales of bark, resembling that of the branch in which it is placed, are felted on so carefully as hardly to be 
detected, even at a comparatively short distance ; the rim is very thin, the nest open above, and very deep.” 
