Melithreptus
Seven species, all of which are represented in the Zoochat galleries.
There is no difference in plumage between the sexes in the members of this genus.
Black-headed Honeyeater Melithreptus affinis
Monotypic.
Endemic to Tasmania and the Bass Strait islands.
Photo by
@Hix in the wild, Australia.
Black-headed Honeyeater - ZooChat
White-throated Honeyeater Melithreptus albogularis
Two subspecies:
albogularis and
inopinatus
Found in southern New Guinea and eastern Australia, with
albogularis in New Guinea, and in northern Australia from northeast Western Australia to Queensland's Cape York Peninsula; and
inopinatus down the east coast from central Queensland to northeast NSW.
Photo by
@WhistlingKite24 in the wild, Australia (subspecies
inopinatus).
White-throated Honeyeater - ZooChat
Photo by
@Hix in the wild, Australia (I'm not sure of where the subspecies change in Queensland, so I'm not sure if this photo is
albogularis or
inopinatus but it shows the dorsal colouration at least).
White-throated Honeyeater - ZooChat
Brown-headed Honeyeater Melithreptus brevirostris
Five subspecies:
brevirostris, leucogenys, magnirostris, pallidiceps, wombeyi
Found across southern and eastern Australia:
brevirostris from coastal southeast South Australia to northeastern NSW;
leucogenys from west-central Western Australia to south-central South Australia;
magnirostris on Kangaroo Island;
pallidiceps from east-central South Australia to south-central Queensland; and
wombeyi in far south Victoria.
Photo by
@Hix in the wild, Australia (subspecies
brevirostris).
Brown-headed Honeyeater - ZooChat
Gilbert's or Western Honeyeater Melithreptus chloropsis
Monotypic.
An older scientific name seen in some books is
Melithreptus whitlocki.
Formerly treated as a subspecies of the White-naped Honeyeater
M. lunatus due to its similarity (the main difference in physical appearance is that this species has white orbital skin and
M. lunatus has red orbital skin). However genetically the two are more closely related to other species than to each other.
Endemic to southwest Western Australia.
Photo by
@LaughingDove in the wild, Australia (adult bird, although not much can be seen in this photo. As noted above, they are extremely similar in appearance to
M. lunatus except with white orbital skin).
Western White-naped Honeyeater - ZooChat
Photo by
@AWP in the wild, Australia (juvenile bird - note the blue-green supraorbital skin and the brown head).
Honeyeater - ZooChat
Black-chinned Honeyeater Melithreptus gularis
Two subspecies:
gularis and
laetior
The subspecies also have indivudal common names, with
gularis being called the Olive-backed Honeyeater and
laetior the Golden-backed Honeyeater.
Found in Australia from east-central Queensland to southeast South Australia (
gularis), and west-central Western Australia to east-central Queensland (
laetior).
Photo by
@Hix at Alice Springs Desert Park, Australia (subspecies
laetior, the Golden-backed Honeyeater).
Black-chinned Honeyeater - ZooChat
White-naped Honeyeater Melithreptus lunatus
Monotypic.
Found in eastern Australia, from east-central Queensland to southeast South Australia.
Photo by
@Hix at Featherdale Wildlife Park, Australia.
White-naped Honeyeaters - ZooChat
Strong-billed Honeyeater Melithreptus validirostris
Monotypic.
Endemic to Tasmania and the Bass Strait islands.
Photo by
@Hix in the wild, Australia (adult bird - note the black bill and green supraorbital skin).
Strong-billed Honeyeater - ZooChat
Photo by
@Hix in the wild, Australia (immature bird - note the bill has not turned completely black yet and the eye-ring is orange).
Strong-billed Honeyeater - ZooChat
Photo by
@Hix in the wild, Australia (juvenile bird - note the fully yellow bill and eye-ring).
Strong-billed Honeyeater juvenile - ZooChat