HALMATURUS BRACHYURUS. Short-tailed Wallaby. Kangurus brachyurus, Quoy et Gaim. Voy. de l’Astrolabe, Zoologie, tom. i. p. 114. pl. 19 Halmaturus (Thylogale) brevicaudatus, Gray, List of Mamm. in Coll. Brit. Mus. p. 90. Macropus (Halmaturus) brachyurus, Waterh. Nat. Hist. of Mamm. vol. i. p. 162. Ban-gup, Aborigines around Perth in Western Australia. Quak-a, Aborigines of King George’s Sound. BErorE py visit e Australia, this animal was extremely rare in the collections of Europe; indeed the example in the Paris Museum was the only one then known. The specimen alluded to was said to have been icked up dead at King George’s 5 i picked up dead at King George's ound, and there also my specimens were procured. Even now it is still a rare animal, those examples introduced by myself being, so far as I am aware, all that have been trans- mitted to Europe. In his notes respecting this species, Mr. Gilbert states that besides meeting with it at King George’s Sound, he found it abundant in all the swampy tracts which skirt nearly the whole of Western Australia at a short distance from the sea, and that at Augusta, where its native name, Quak-a, is the same as © . : aa S s > Ss = S at King George’s Sound, it inhabits the thickets and is destroyed in great numbers at the close of the season by the natives, who, after firmg the bush, place themselves in a clear space and spear them as they attempt to escape from the fire: it is also caught by the settlers with springes placed in their little covered runs beneath the scrub. Mr. Gilbert adds, that he had not heard of its being killed to the eastward of the Darling range. Mr. Waterhouse has given the relative admeasurements of the Paris specimen, and of an example in the British Museum which had been procured by Mr. Gilbert ; the latter is considerably smaller than the former ; but I have since received a specimen from the same locality which considerably exceeds both in size, its admeasurements being as follows :— Length from the nose to the root of the tail . . 1 foot 10 inches. Me ovthe tall 3°. 393s 10: 3, < , tarsus, toes, andnails... . - - Ze a ao cally 1+ ,, This animal differs from all the other Halmaturi. in its short bluff head, diminutive ears, and extremely short tail; it is also clothed, especially about the face, with thick, stiff, and wiry hairs; which, combined at it resorts to more humid and secluded with the general character of the fur, would lead to the inference th situations than those frequented by the other members of the genus. The short and rounded ears, which are much hidden by the long fur of the head, are well clothed with hairs, those on the inner side being yellow, while externally they are of the reddish-brown tint which pervades the head and back of the neck, but which is somewhat brighter in the region of the ears the hairs of the broadly annulated with yellow towards the point, and black at the extremity ; interspersed, almost entirely black hairs, which, bemg most plentiful in the middle of the back, give that part a deeper hue ; the hairs of the sides of the body are similar, paler and the tips are brownish; on the under surface the hairs are grey next t deep brown ; tail sparingly clothed with small stiff hairs, y perceptible. one representing the entire anim back are grey next the skin, the back is also beset with numerous long, but the yellow portion is the skin, with a pale yellow external tint; fee between which rings of small blackish scales are ver Of this rare species I have given two illustrations ; the other, the head, tail, and foot, of the natural size. al, much reduced, and i Ds d CJ @ wih Ps } a c x <¢ <<) 7 6 ie NENG NY WO