LEPIDOGENYS SUBCRISTATUS, Goud. 
Crested Hawk. 
Lepidogenys subcristatus, Gould, in Proc. of Zool. Soc. part v. p. 140; and in Syn. Birds of Australia, part iii. 
I REGRET to say that I am not sufficiently acquainted with this singular species to give any account of its 
habits and economy, but, judging from the feebleness of its bill and talons and the shortness of its tarsi, 
I conceive that it principally preys upon insects and their larye ; and it is not improbable that honey and 
the larvae of bees and ants, which abound in Australia, may form a portion of its food. Any information on 
this head that may have been ascertained by residents in Australia would, if made known, be of the highest 
interest to ornithologists, as an addition to the history of this singular form among the Falconide. Its 
extreme rarity, however, will, I fear, tend much to prevent the acquirement of this desirable information. 
I saw it soaring high in the air over the plains in the neighbourhood of the Namoi, but never sufficiently 
near to admit of a successful shot. All the specimens I have seen were collected either at Moreton Bay 
or on the banks of the Clarence. 
As little or no difference exists in the plumage of the specimens I have examined, I presume that the 
sexes are very similar, 
Crown of the head, sides of the face, ear-coverts, and upper part of the back brownish grey; occiput and 
lengthened occipital plumes blackish brown; back and scapulars brown; wings uniform dark brownish grey 
above, beneath silvery grey ; primaries and secondaries crossed by several bands, and largely terminated with 
black ; rump and upper tail-coverts chocolate-brown ; tail brownish grey above, lighter beneath, crossed by 
three narrow bands of black near the base, and deeply terminated with the same colour; throat, chest, part 
of the shoulder, and under tail-coverts greyish white, tinged with rufous ; abdomen, flanks, and thighs buffy 
white, crossed with conspicuous narrow bands of reddish chestnut ; bill bluish horn-colour ; tarsi yellowish. 
The Plate portrays the bird of the natural size. 
