PTILOTIS COCKERELLI, Gowa. 
Cockerell’s Honey-eater. 
Ptilotis Cockerelh, Gould in Ann, and Mag. Nat. Hist., 4th ser., vol. iv, p. 109. 
Ir is but an act of justice that at least one of the birds of Australia should be named after Mr. James 
Cockerell, inasmuch as he is a native-born Australian, has collected very largely in the northern parts of that 
great country, and discovered more than one new species, among which must be enumerated the present very 
interesting bird. Mr. Cockerell informs me that it frequents the forests of the little-explored parts of the 
Cape-York peninsula, often in company with the Blue Mountain-Lory and the Yellow-spotted Honey-eater 
(Ptilotis notata), to which latter bird it assimilates in its actions and habits ; it appears to be most numerous 
in the neighbourhood of Somerset in October, November, and December, when the trees are in blossom, and 
is tolerably common in the districts above mentioned. When chacterizing it in the volume of the ‘Annals and 
Magazine of Natural History’ above referred to, I remarked that “ although I have placed this beautiful new 
species in the genus P#i/otis, 1 am by no means certain that I am correct in so doing ; for the bird possesses 
characters which ally it to at least three genera, namely Stigmatops, Meliphaga, and Ptilotis, while it also 
possesses characters peculiar to itself of almost sufficient importance to demand a distinct generic appellation. 
It somewhat resembles in its colouring the P¢ilotis polygramma of Mr. G. R. Gray (vide Proc. Zool. Soc., 1861, 
pp. 429, 434).” 
The male has the fore part of the head grey, merging into the brown of the upper surface, which has a 
mottled appearance, owing to each feather being of a darker hue in the centre; lesser wing-coverts dark 
brown, with a spot of dull white at the tip of each, forming a spotted band across the shoulder; greater 
coverts and primaries dark brown margined with wax-yellow ; tail brown, the lateral feathers margined ex- 
ternally at the base with wax-yellow; ear-coverts silvery, with a few of the anterior feathers pale yellow, and 
a posterior tuft of rich gamboge-yellow ; throat and breast clothed with narrow lanceolate white feathers, a 
few on the sides of the chest tinged with deep yellow; abdomen dull greyish white, changing to a creamy 
tint towards the vent ; bill black ; feet horn-colour. 
The female in colouring differs only in the spots at the tips of the lesser wing-coverts being nearly ob- 
solete, but, as is the case with many other species of the family, is much smaller than the male, as will be 
seen by the following admeasurements :— 
Male.—Total length 5 inches, bill 1, wing 33, tail 24, tarsi 4. 
Female.—Total length 4 inches, bill ¢, wing 23, tail 22, tarsi ¢. 
The figures are of the natural size. 
