EOPSALTRIA LEUCOGASTER, Gowia. 
White-bellied Robin. 
Eopsaltria leucogaster, Gould in Proc. of Zool. Soc., February 24, 1846. 
Tur White-bellied Robin is a native of Western Australia, but is only to be met with in the hilly por- 
tions of the country. Mr. Gilbert states that the first specimen he procured was killed on the Darling 
range, near the gorge of the River Murray, at an elevation of about seven or eight hundred feet, and that 
he afterwards met with it on the southern extremity of the same range, between Vasse and Augusta, but 
that he never observed it on the lower grounds between the mountain range and the coast. Like the other 
species of the genus, it was constantly seen clinging to the bark of large upright trees, or straight and small 
stems, in search of its insect food. It is extremely quiet and secluded in its habits, is almost exclusively 
confined to the neighbourhood of small mountain streams, where scarcely any other sound is heard than 
the rippling and gurgling of the water over the rocks, and on the slightest approach it immediately 
secretes itself among the thick scrub or brushwood. Its song very closely resembles that of the Petroice. 
Immediately before the eye a small triangular-shaped spot of black; above the eye a faint line of greyish 
white ; crown of the head, all the upper surface, wings and tail dark slate-grey; the lateral tail-feathers 
largely tipped with white on their inner webs; all the under surface white ; irides dark brown; bill and 
feet black. 
The Plate represents the bird of the natural size, on one of the beautiful and rare plants of Western 
Australia, a species of Anigozanthus, the distinctive appellation of which I have not been able to ascertain, 
