CINCLORAMPHUS RUFESCENS. 
Rufous-tinted Cincloramphus. 
Anthus rufescens, Vig. and Horsf. in Linn. Trans., vol. xv. p. 280. 
E-role-del, Aborigines of the Mountain districts of Western Australia. 
Singing Lark of the Colonists. 
Ir Australia be not celebrated for its singing-birds, it has still some few whose voices serve to enliven the 
monotony of its scenery; and of these no one deserves greater attention than the bird here represented, 
which is a very sweet songster, and whose note somewhat resembles, but is much inferior to that of our own 
Skylark. With the exception of Van Diemen’s Land, where I believe it is never seen, it appears to be 
distributed over all parts of Australia, as evidenced by my collection, containing specimens from every 
locality yet visited by Europeans. In New South Wales and Western Australia it is strictly migratory, and 
only a summer visitor, arriving in August and departing in February; on the other hand, I met with it on 
the sand hills at Holdfast Bay in South Australia in the month of July, the period of winter: although 
not exclusively a terrestrial bird, it spends much of its time on the ground, from which it makes per- 
pendicular ascents to a great height in the air, and then descending to the tops of the highest trees, flies 
horizontally from one tree to another, singing all the time with the greatest volubility ; the female, which is 
not more than half the size of the male, remaining all the while on the ground, from which she is not easily 
aroused, and consequently not so often seen. It evimces a great partiality to open grassy plains here and 
there studded with trees. It breeds in October, November and December, aud sometimes rears two 
broods during the season. ‘he nest is placed ma depression of the earth, most frequently at the foot 
of aslightly raised tuft of grass, and is externally composed of strong grasses and lined with very fine 
grasses, and sometimes with hairs. The eggs are four in number, ten lines long by seven and a half lines 
broad, and are of a purplish white, very boldly marked with freckles and small blotches of deep chestnut- 
brown, so much so as frequently to render the blotches more conspicuous than the ground colour. 
The female frequently utters a monotonous shriek or call at might. . 
The male has all the upper surface dark brown, each feather margined with olive-brown ; upper tail- 
coverts rufous; lores black; stripe above the eye and throat whitish; all the under surface pale brown- 
ish grey, deepening into buff on the under tail-coverts, and with a series of minute spots of brown on the 
breast; irides hazel; bill dark lead-colour in summer, fleshy brown in winter ; tarsi yellowish grey; feet 
bluish ashy grey. 
The female is smaller and is destitute of the black lores ; in other respects she is so like the male that a 
separate description is imnecessary. 
The figures represent the two sexe 
(Kvocarpus Cupressiformis). 
s of the natural size, on a branch of the cherry-tree of the colonists 
