ANTHOCHARA CARUNCULATA. 
Wattled Honey-eater. 
Merops carunculatus, Lath. Ind, Orn., yol. i. p. 276. 
Corvus paradoxus, Lath, Ind. Orn, Supp., p. 26. 
——— earunculatus, Shaw, Gen. Zool., vol. vii. p. 378. 
Pie a pendeloques, Daud. Orn., tom. ii, p, 246. pl. 16. 
Wattled Crow, Lath, Gen. Syn, Supp., vol. ii. p. 119. 
Wattled Bee-eater, Lath. Gen. Syn. Supp., vol. ii. p, 150.—Phil, Bot. Bay, pl. in p. 164,—White’s Journ., pl. in 
p. 144.—Shaw, Gen. Zool., vol. viii. p, 173.—Lath, Gen. Hist., vol. iv, p. 158. 
Anthochera Lewinii, Vig. and Horsf. in Linn, Trans., vol. xv. p. 322, note—Gould in Syn. Birds of Australia, 
Part 1.—Swains, Class. of Birds, vol. ii. p. 326.—G. R. Gray, List of Gen, of Birds, 2nd edit., p. 20, 
Djung-gung, Aborigines of Western Australia. 
Wattle Bird of the Colonists. 
Tus, the true Werops earunculatus of the older writers, enjoys an unusually wide range of habitat, extending 
as it does over the whole of the southern portion of the continent, being equally as abundant in Southern 
aud Western Australia as in New South Wales; how far it may extend to the northward has not yet been 
ascertained ; it does not inhabit Van Diemen’s Land. I observed it to be very numerous in all the high 
xum-trees around Adelaide, in most parts of the mterior, and in all the apple-tree flats and forests 
of Eucalypti of New South Wales. Mr. Gilbert's notes inform me that he met with it in all parts of 
Western Australia, but that it was most abundant among the Banksias in the York district. It is a showy 
active bird, constantly engaged in flying from tree to tree and searching among the flowers for its food, 
which consists of honey, insects, and occasionally berries, In disposition it is generally shy and wary, but 
at times is confident and bold: it is usually seen in pairs, and the males are yery pugnacious. Its habits 
and manners, in fact, closely resemble those of the 4. inauris, and like that bird, it utters with distended 
throat a harsh disagreeable note. 
Its flight is slow and uneven, and rarely extends to any great distance. 
It breeds in September and October. The nests observed by myself in the Upper Hunter district were 
placed on the horizontal branches of the Angophore, and were of a large rounded form, composed of small 
sticks and lined with fine grasses; those found by Mr. Gilbert in Western Australia were formed of dried 
sticks, without any kind of lining, and were placed in the open bushes. The eggs are two or three in 
number, one inch and three lines long by ten lines and a half broad; their ground colour is reddish bull, 
very thickly dotted with distinct markings of deep chestnut and umber aud reddish brown, interspersed 
with zt mataber of indistinct marks of blackish grey, which appear as if beneath the surface of the shell: egys 
taken in New South Wales are somewhat larger than those from Western Australia, and have markings 
of a blotched rather than of a dotted form, and principally at the larger end. 
The sexes are only distinguishable by the smaller size of the female. 
Crown of the head, a line running from the base of the bill beneath the eye and the ear-coyerts blackish 
brown; space under the eye silvery white, bounded behind by an oblong naked flesh-coloured spot, below 
which is a short pendulous wattle of a pinky blood-red colour ; back of the neck and all the upper surface 
greyish brown, each feather having a stripe of white down the centres upper tail-coverts greyish brown, 
broadly margined with grey ; primaries and secondaries deep blackish brown, the former slightly and the 
latter broadly edged with grey ; all the primaries tipped with white s two. middle tail-feathers greyish 
brown, the remainder deep blackish brown, the whole largely tipped with white ; throat, breast and flanks 
yrey, the centre of each feather being lighter ; middle of the abdomen yellow; irides bright hazel-red ; 
legs brownish flesh-colour; inside of the mouth yellow. 
‘The figure is of the natural size. 
