MELIPHAGA NOVAl=HOLLANDIA, Vig. and Horsf. 
New Holland Honey-eater. 
Certhia Nove-Hollandia, Lath, Ind. Orn., p. 296.—Turton’s Edit. of Linn. Syst. Nat., vol. i. p, 292, 
New Holland Creeper, White's Journ., pl. in p. 186.—Lath. Gen. Hist., vol. iy, p, 171.—Shaw’s Gen. Zool., 
vol, yul, p, 225. 
L Heéorotaire tacheté, Vieill. Ois, dor,, tom. ii. p. 91. pl. 57. 
Meliphaga Nove-Hollandie, Vig, aud Horsf. in Linn. Trans., vol. xv. p. 311. 
Melitreptus Nove-Hollandia, VieilL 2nde Edit. du Nouv, Dict. d’Hist. Nat., tom. xiv. p. 328; and Ency. Méth. 
Orn., Part I], p. 606, 
Meliphaga Balgonera, Steph. Cont. of Shaw's Gen. Zool., vol. xiv. p. 261. 
Meliphayga barbata, Swains. Class. of Birds, vol. iL. p. 326. 
Meliornis Nove-Hollandie G. R. Gray, List of Gen, of Birds, 2nd Edit., p. 19. 
I gurre agree with Messrs. Vigors and Horsfield in making the bird forming the subject of the present Plate 
the type of the restricted genus Meliphaga, (Yndependently of its claim to this distinction from the cireum- 
stance of its being the oldest known, it is the species to which the generic term is especially applicable, 
since, | conceive, it feeds less upon insects and more upon nectarine juices than any other of the family. 
The Meliphaga Nove-Hollandi@ is one of the most abundant and familiar birds inhabiting the saloniea of 
New South Wales, Van Diemen’s Land, and South Australia: all the gardens of the settlers are visited by 
it, and among their shrubs and flowering plants it annually breeds, It is not a migratory species, but 
occasionally deserts some districts for others whose flowering plants offer it a more tempting (scale, and 
furnish it with a more abundant supply of food: the belts of Banksias, growing on sterile, sandy soils, 
afford it so congenial an asylum, that Tam certainly not wrong in stating that they are never deserted by 
it, or that the one is a certain accompaniment of the other, The range enjoyed by this species appears 
to be confined to the south-eastern portions of Australia: it is abundant on the sandy districts of South 
Australia wherever the Banksias abound; but to the westward of this part of the country I have not traced 
it. At the Swan, and the other parts of the western coast, it certainly is never found, In Van Diemen’s 
Land it is much more numerous on the northern than on the southern portion of the island; it is also 
most abundantly dispersed over all the islands in Bass’s Straits, whose sandy, sterile soil favours the growth 
of the Banksias ; it is equally common over every part of the colony of New South Wales, which may, in 
fact, be regarded as the great stronghold of the species; at the same time I must not fail to observe, that 
the districts bordering the sea-coast are most favourable to the growth of its favourite tree; hence while it 
is there most numerous, in the interior of the country it is seldom to be seen. It evinces a more decided 
preference for shrubs and low trees than for those of a larger growth; consequently itis a species particularly 
subject to the notice of man while it flits from bush to bush. Nor is it the least attractive of the Austra- 
lian Fauna; the strikingly-contrasted markings of its plumage, and the beantiful appearance of its golden- 
edged wings, when passing with its quick, devious and jumping flight from shrub to shrub, rendering it a 
conspicuous and pleasing object. 
It has a loud, shrill, liquid, although monotonous note. Its food, which consists of the pollen and juices 
of flowers, is procured while clinging and creeping among them in every variety of position; it also feeds 
on fruits and msects. 
It usually rears two or three broods during the course of the season, which lasts from August to January : 
the nest is very easily found, being placed, in the forest, in any low open bush, and in the gardens among the 
shrubs and flowers: one of the nests in my collection was taken from a row of peas in the kitchen-garden 
of the Government House at Sydney. It is usually placed at about eighteen inches or two feet from the 
ground, and is a somewhat compact structure, composed of small wiry sticks, coarse grasses, and broad and 
narrow strips of bark; the inside is lined with the soft woolly portion of the blossoms of small ground plants ; 
it usually lays two, but occasionally three eggs, which are of a pale buff, thinly spotted and freckled with deep 
chestnut-brown, particularly at the larger end, where they not unfrequently assume the form of a zone; 
their medium length is nine lines and a half, and breadth nearly seven lines, 
The sexes are alike in colour and may be thus described :— 
Top of the head and cheeks black, with minute white feathers on the forchead round the base of the 
‘iliary stripe, a moustache at the base of the upper mandible, and a small tuft of 
upper mandible; a super 
ar-coverts white; feathers on the throat white and bristle-like ; upper 
feathers immediately behind the e 
surface brownish black, becoming browner on the rump; wings brownish black, the outer edges of the 
at the base with beautiful wax-yellow, and faintly margined with white towards the 
quills margined 
at the base with wax-yellow, and all but the two 
extremities; tail brownish black, margined externally 
ithers with a large oval spot of white on the timer web at the tip; under surface white, broadly 
k, the black predominating on the breast and the white on the abdomen ; 
centre fe: 
striped longitudinally with blac 
irides white; bill and feet black. 
The figures are those of a male and female of the natural size, on a Banksia of Van Diemen’s Land, 
