Meliphaga albonotata

General description: 

White-marked Scrub Honeyeater

Other common names: (Scrub/Southern) White-eared/(Scrub) White-marked  Honeyeater/Meliphaga, Scrub Whiteeyed/ Southern/Diamond Honeyeater, Scrub Mountain- honeyeater/- meliphaga

Has top and side of head and neck and entire upperbody greyish-olive, with blackish lores, white lower ear-coverts forming small rounded ear-patch, and bright yellow or orange-yellow gape merging with narrow and contrastingly paler (pale yellow or cream) rictal streak (which does not meet pale ear-patch); upperwing-coverts and alula dark brown with yellowish-olive fringes, remiges dark brown with yellowish olive outer edges and pale yellowish-buff inner edges; tail fothers dark brown with yellowish-olive outer edges and pale yellowish-buff inner edges;

Conservation status: 

Not Threatened

Diagnostic description: 

Has top and side of head and neck and entire upperbody greyish-olive, with blackish lores,  white lower ear-coverts forming small rounded ear-patch, and bright yellow or orange-yellow gape merging with narrow and contrastingly paler (pale yellow or cream) rictal streak (which does not meet pale ear-patch); upperwing-coverts and alula dark brown with yellowish-olive fringes, remiges dark brown with yellowish olive outer edges and pale yellowish-buff inner edges; tail fothers dark brown with yellowish-olive outer edges and pale yellowish-buff inner edges; tail feathers dark brown with yellowish-olive outer edges; rather uniform light olive-grey below, pale yellow tinge or diffuse streaking on breast and belly; underwing-coverts olive- yellowish or buff; iris grey to grey-brown or dark brown; bill black to brownish-black (descriptions as grayish may represent juvenile character); ligs grey to grey-brown of dark olive-grey. Diggers from similar M. montana mainly in brighter green crown and upperparts, yellowish or creamy (not white) rictal streak, yellowish or yellowish-olive fringes and edges on upperwing and tail, plainer underparts, and richer yellow gape. Sexes alike in plumage, male on average larger than female. Juvenile differs from adult in having yellow tinge in ear-patch, dark  olive-brown upperparts, and irregular darker olive-brown band across breast.

Behaviour: 

VOICE: Song of 10+12 rapidly uttered thin notes (c. 5 per second), often rising in pitch and then becoming lower towards end; described also as slow trilling “whee”. Call a brief, fairly loud and  misical cheery “chip, tup, chop” or “chirrup” with sucked-in quality, similar to that of several   congeners (but “chop” said to be more musical), and similar l

Size: 

17-19cm; male 27-34 g, female 20-29 g

Phylogeny: 

Taxonomy: Ptilotis albonotata Salvadori, 1876, Naiabui, Hall Sound, south-east New Guinea. On basis of molecular evidence, genus consists of two clades; present species is part of group which contains also M. orientalis, M. analoga, M. vicina, M. gracilis, M. cinereifrons, M. mimikae, M. montana, M. flavirictus, M. albilineata, M. fordiana and M. reticulata. Formerly treated as conspecific with M. montana. Proposed races setekwa (from upper Setekwa R, in Nassau Range), auga (Mafulu, in Central Division) and gretae (Nondugl, on Wahgi R, in Central Highlands).

Distribution: 

Mainly hills and lower mountains, less often lowlands, of Vogelkop, Weyland,  Nassau and Oranje Mts, Huon Peninsula, and SC & SE New Guinea.

Habitat: 

Typically in disturbed habitats, including secondary growth and forest edge, forest remnants  along creeks, marginal primary forest, mid-montane scrub, anthropogenic grasslands,   plantations, and town and village gardens; apparently absent from interior of forest. Mainly  foothills and lower mountains, less often in lowlands; sea-level to c. 1950 m, with possible records at 2900 m (between Laiagam and Kanep). 

Trophic strategy: 

Diet includes insects, nectar and some fruit. Usually forages in understory (e.g. frequently up to 5 m above ground), but visits flowering and fruiting trees. Forages by gleaning, including hover-gleaning; seen to forage at flowers of Ficus taitenses, and to hover at papayas partly eaten by fruit-bats to feed on pulp. Usually singly or in twos (probably pairs); seen to feed in flowering tree with other species, including three species of Myzomela.

Reproduction: 

Recorded in dry season and middle of wet season; eggs in early Mar and Sept, nestlings late  Jul, late Sept and late Oct, and fledglings late Aug, Sept, Feb and May. Nest a neat cup of fine  fibres, moss grasses, bark and much animal silk, lined with thread-like woody fibres, plant  down and fluffy cotton-like seed material, external diameter c. 8 cm, depth 6.4-8 cm, internal diameter 5-7 cm, depth c. 3.5 cm, suspended 1-5 (sometimes higher, to 11 m) above ground from horizontal fork in small tree, in shrub or in bamboo thicket. Clutch 1-2 eggs; no information on incubation and nestling periods; chicks are fed by both parents.

Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith