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THE BIRDS OF AUSTRALIA 
Notes. —Also called Yellow Warbler. Usually in pairs, inhabiting 
brushes and scrubs bordering creeks; rather a shy bird, with a very 
pleasing song somewhat like that of the Mangrove-warbler. Food: in¬ 
sects and their larvae. 
Nest .—A rounded structure with an entrance near the top protected 
with a large hood, and having a small thin tail-piece; composed of thin 
strips of bark held together with spiders’ webs and decorated with a few 
spiders’ egg-bags. Usually attached to a thin horizontal branch of a tree 
at a height of 5 feet or more from the ground. The nest of this species is 
usually built near a wasps’ nest. 
Eggs . —Two or three, pale pinkish-white, rather well spotted and 
speckled, particularly at the larger end, with pale to dark reddish-brown 
markings. Breeding-season: September to December. 
6. Northern Warbler Gerygone mouki Mathews 
mouki —said to be from an Australian aboriginal name. 
Distribution . — Cairns district (northern Queensland). 
Notes .—Also^ called Queensland Fly-eater. Inhabits the brushes and 
dense scrubs ; similar in habits to the Brown Warbler. 
Nest. — A bulky, dome-shaped structure with a side entrance, sus¬ 
pended from near the end of a thin branch, often overhanging water. 
Eggs. — Three, pinkish-white, marked all over with small freckles 
of reddish-brown, chiefly at the larger end. Breeding-season: November 
(Mackay). 
7. Buff-breasted Warbler Gerygone levigaster Gould 
lev-i-gas-ter — L., levis, smooth (probably light-coloured); Gk, gaster, 
belly. 
Distribution . — Northern Australia, from Derby to northern Queens¬ 
land. 
Notes.- Inhabits open forest and scrub-lands, mainly keeping to the 
leafy blanches of the trees and thickets; it is a very’ tame bird, with a weak 
piping call-note, occasionally uttering a number of other notes in slow 
succession. Food: insects and their lame. 
Nest. A dome-shaped structure with a hooded entrance, composed 
of fine long gi ass-stalks and coarser materials; lined with very fine grass 
and a soft white material. Generally suspended from the thin branch of a 
tree. Fastened on the outside with cobwebs are numerous round white 
scale larvae, cocoons, pieces of lichen, and excreta of caterpillars. 
Eggs. Two, white, speckled over with small reddish-brown mark¬ 
ings, moie numerous on the larger end, where they generally form a zone. 
Breeding-season: January to March. 
8. Black-thioated Warbler Gerygone palpebrosa Wallace— 8A. Female 
pal-pe-bro-sa — L., palpebrosus , marked round the eye. 
Distribution.— Northern Queensland, from Cape York to Cairns; also 
occurs m the Aru Islands and New Guinea. 
