STRIX TENEBRICOSUS, Gow. 
Sooty Owl. 
Striv tenebricosus, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., Part XIII. p. 80. 
A FINE specimen of this species is comprised in the collection of the British Museum, and a second example 
graces my own; its habitat is undoubtedly the dense brushes of the east coast of Australia, where, like 
other Owls, it remains secluded during the day, and sallies forth at night in search of its natural prey. It is 
a fine and powerful species, and the rarest of the Australian members of the genus to which it belongs, from 
all of which it is conspicuously distinguished by the dark sooty hue of its plumage, and by the primaries 
being of one colour, or destitute of the bars common to all the other species. 
Facial dise sooty grey, becoming much deeper round the eyes; upper surface brownish black, with 
purplish reflexions, and with a spot of white near the tip of each feather; wings and tail of the same hue 
but paler, the feathers of the wing of a uniform tint, without bars, those of the tail faintly freckled with 
narrow bars of white; under surface brownish black, washed with buff, and with the white marks much less 
decided ; legs mottled brown and white ; irides dark brown ; bill horn-colour ; feet yellowish. 
The figure is of the natural size. 
