xxii INTRODUCTION. 
exposed situations in which the nests were found, I should rather judge it to be of the Eagle kind; and that its 
powers are such as to render it heedless of any attempts of the natives upon its young.’’—Flinders’ Voyage, vol. i. 
pp. 64 and 81. oils 
The accumulation of so large a mass of materials is readily accounted for when we remember that the bird is in 
the habit of resorting to the same eyry for a long succession of years, and of annually carrying additional materials 
to reconstruct the nest. | 
I myself found and took young birds of this species from similar nests placed on the points of rocks and 
promontories of the islands in Bass’s Straits. 
Genus Haniastrur, Selby. 
The range of the members of this genus extends over Australia and all the islands to India. 
4. Haliastur leucosternus, Gould : . f ; : ; : : . ; Vol. I. Pi. 4. 
Falco Ponticerianus, Shaw, Nat. Misc., pl. 389. 
Haliaétus (Ictinoaétus) leucosternon, Kaup, Isis, 1847, p. 277. 
Confined, so far as I am aware, to Australia, and forming a beautiful representative of the Haliastur 
Ponticerianus of India. 
5. Haliastursphenurus  . .  . yo os: : » ale Pies. 
Milvus sphenurus, Swains. Class. of Birds, vol. ii. p. 211, 
Haliaétus (Ietinoaétus) canorus, Kaup, Isis, 1847, p. 277. 
Inhabits all parts of Australia yet visited by travellers, even the Depot in the interior. 
Genus Panpton, Sar. 
Of the genus Pandion four species are now known: one inhabiting America, another Europe and Asia, a third 
the Indian Islands, and the fourth Australia. 
6. Pandion leucocephalus, Gould . . : : Vol. I. PL. 6. 
Pandion Gouldit, Kaup, Isis, 1847, p. 270.—List of Birds in Brit. Mus. Coll., Part I. 2nd edit. p. 22. 
This species of Pandion performs precisely the same office in Australia that the P. haliaétus does in Europe and 
the P Carolinensis in America ; to both of which species it is very nearly allied. 
Genus Fatco, Linn. 
As they are the most typical of all the Hawks, so are the members of the genus Falco the most universally 
dispersed over the face of the globe ; and I question whether the law of representation is in any case more beautifully 
and clearly shown than by the members of the present group. 
7. Falco hypoleucus, Gould ’ Slee 5 : ! Vol. I. Pl. 7. 
Up to the present time only four examples of this fine Falcon have been procured ; it is a species admirably 
adapted for the sport of Falconry, and is a beautiful representative of the Falco Gyrfalco of Europe. Its native 
habitat is the interior of the southern and western portions of Australia, 
8. Falco melanogenys, Gould : : , , i y ’ Vol. I. Pl. 8, 
Faleo macropus, Swains, Anim. in Menag., p. 341. 
—— melanogenys, Kaup, Isis, 1847, p. 75. 
India, Europe, and North America on the one hand, and Cape Horn, the Cape of Good Hope and Australia on 
the other, are all inhabited by Falcons so nearly allied to each other as to favour the opinion that they are merely 
varieties of each other; but I agree with the Prince of Canino and Professor Kaup in considering them to be distinct 
and representatives of each other in the respective countries they inhabit, It will doubtless be found that the habits 
