CINCLOSOMA CASTANOT US, Gould. 
Chestnut-backed Ground-Thrush. 
Cinclosoma castanotus, Gould, Proc. of Zool. Soc., September 8, 1840. 
Boone- Yung, Aborigines of the mountain districts of Western Australia. 
Tus new species of Cinclosoma appears to be as much confined to the southern and western portions of 
Australia as the preceding species is to the eastern. It inhabits various parts of the great scrub bordering 
the Murray aboye Lake Alexandrina, and I have ascertained that it is also found in the neighbourhood of 
Swan River, 
The economy of the present bird closely resembles that of the Spotted Ground-Thrush, as the similarity 
of their form would naturally lead us to expect; but the more level plains, particularly those that are studded 
with clumps of dwarf trees and scrubs, would appear to be the situations for which it is more peculiarly 
adapted, at least such was the character of the country in the Belts of the Murray where I discovered it. 
On the other hand, it is stated in the notes accompanying specimens received from Swan River, that “ it is 
rarely seen in any but the most barren and rocky places. The white gum forests, here and there studded 
with small patches of scrub, are its favourite haunts. It is only found in the interior; the part nearest to 
the coast, where it has been observed, beg Bank’s Hutts on the York Road about fifty-three miles from 
Fremantle.” 
Its disposition is naturally shy and wary, a circumstance which cannot be attributed to any dread of man 
as an enemy, since it inhabits parts scareely ever yisited either by the natives or Europeans. Few persons, 
I may safely say, had ever discharged a gun in that rich arboretum, the Belts of the Murray, before the 
period of my being there; still the bird was so difficult of approach, that it required the utmost exertion to 
procure any number of specimens. They were generally observed in small troops of four or six in number, 
runing through the scrub one after another in a line, and resorting to a short low flight, when crossing 
the small intervening plains. The facility with which it runs over the surface of the ground is even greater 
than in its near ally, and on examination the toes will be found shorter than in that species, and admirably 
suited to its terrestrial habits: although it doubtless possesses the power of perching, I do not recollect 
having ever seen it on a tree. 
In its mode of flight and nidification it assimilates so closely to the Spotted Ground-Thrush, as to render 
a separate description superfluous. 
The stomach is extremely muscular, and the food consists of seeds and the smaller kind of Coleoptera. 
The male has the crown of the head, car-coverts, back of the neck, upper part of the back, upper tail- 
coverts and two central tail-feathers brown; stripe over the eye, and another from the base of the lower 
mandible down the side of the neck white; scapularies and lower part of the back rich chestnut; shoulders 
and wing-coverts black, each feather having a spot of white at the tip; primaries and secondaries dark 
brown, margined with lighter brown ; lateral tail-feathers black, largely tipped with white ; chin, throat and 
centre of the breast steel black ; sides of the chest and flanks brownish grey, the latter blotched with black ; 
centre of the abdomen and under tail-coyerts white; bill black; base of the under mandible lead colour ; 
irides reddish hazel; legs blackish brown. The female differs in having the whole of the plumage much 
lighter, and with only a slight tinge of chestnut on the rump; the stripes of white over the eye and down 
the sides of the neck less distinctly marked; the chin, throat and breast grey instead of black; the irides 
hazel, and the feet leaden brown. 
The figures are of the natural size. 
