State
Bird of New Hampshire
By John James Audubon,
F. R. SS. L. & E.
VOLUME
III.
THE PURPLE FINCH.
[Purple Finch.]
ERYTHROSPIZA PURPUREA,
Gmel.
[Carpodacus purpureus.]
PLATE
CXCVI.--MALE AND FEMALE.
From the beginning of November until April, flocks
of the Purple Finch, consisting of from six to twenty
individuals, are seen throughout the whole of Louisiana
and the adjoining States. They fly compactly, with
an undulating motion, similar to that of the Common
Greenfinch of Europe. They alight all at once, and
after a moment of rest, and as if frightened, all
take to wing again, make a circuit of no great extent,
and return to the tree from which they had thus started,
or settle upon one near it. Immediately after this,
every individual is seen making its way toward the
extremities of the branches, husking the buds with
great tact, and eating their internal portion. In
doing this, they hang like so many Titmice, or stretch
out their necks to reach the buds below. Although
they are quite friendly among themselves during their
flight, or while sitting without looking after food,
yet, when they are feeding, the moment one goes near
another, it is strenuously warned to keep off by
certain unequivocal marks of displeasure, such as
the erection of the feathers of the head and the
opening of the mouth. Should this intimation be disregarded,
the stronger or more daring, of the two drives off
the other to a different part of the tree. They feed
in this manner principally in the morning, and afterwards
retire to the interior of the woods. Towards sunset
they reappear, fly about the skirts of the fields
and along the woods, until, having made choice of
a tree, they alight, and, as soon as each bird has
chosen a situation, stand still, look about them,
plume themselves, and make short sallies after flies
and other insects, but without interfering with each
other. They frequently utter a single rather mellow
clink, and are seen occupied in this manner until
near sunset, when they again fly off to the interior
of the forest. I one night surprised a party of them
roosting in a small holly tree, as I happened to
be brushing by it. In their consternation they suddenly
started all together, and in the same direction,
when, not knowing what birds they were, I shot at
them and brought down two.
It is remarkable that, at this season, males in
full beauty of plumage are as numerous as during
the summer months in far more northern parts, where
they breed; and you may see different gradations
of plumage, from the dingy greenish-brown of the
female and young to the richest tints of the oldest
and handsomest male; while along with these there
are others which, by my habit of examining birds,
I knew to be old, and which are of a yellowish-green,
neither the colour of the young males, nor that of
the females, but a mixture of all.
The song of the Purple Finch is sweet and continued,
and I have enjoyed it much during the spring and
summer months, in the mountainous parts of Pennsylvania,
where it occasionally breeds, particularly about
the Great Pine Forest, where, although I did not
find any nests, I saw pairs of these birds flying
about and feeding their young, which could not have
been many days out, and were not fully fledged. The
food which they carried to their young consisted
of insects, small berries, and the juicy part of
the cones of the spruce pine.
They frequently associate with the Common Cross-bills,
feeding on the same trees, and like them are at times
fond of alighting against the mud used for closing
the log-houses. They are seldom seen on the ground,
although their motions there are by no means embarrassed.
They are considered as destructive birds by some
farmers, who accuse them of committing great depredations
on the blossoms of their fruit-trees. I never observed
this in Louisiana, where they remain long after the
peach and pear trees are in full bloom. I have eaten
many of them, and consider their flesh equal to that
of any other small bird, excepting the Rice Bunting.
This species was seen by
Dr. RICHARDSON on the banks of the Saskatchewan
river only, where it feeds on willow-buds. It arrives
there in May, and resides during the summer. The
eggs have been procured in the State of Massachusetts
by my friend Dr. T. M. BREWER. They measure seven-eighths
and a quarter in length, four-eighths and a half
in breadth, and are thus of an elongated form,
rather pointed. Their ground-colour is a bright
emerald-green, sparingly marked with dots and a
few streaks of black, accumulated near the apex,
and some large marks of dull purple here and there
over the whole surface. The following, note is
from the same gentleman:--"The passage of
the Purple Finch through this State on its way north,
is so rapid, and the number of those that stop to
breed here so small, that I can furnish nothing respecting
its habits, except that there is good reason to believe
the accusation which has been brought against it,
of injuring the blossoms of fruit trees. Last year,
the trees were in full bloom at the time this bird
was migrating, and I saw them plainly clinging to
the branches, and at work upon the blossoms; so that
under some trees the ground was literally strewed
with the result of their destructiveness, although
they did not appear to feed on the blossoms. I have
had the good fortune to meet with its nest and eggs
this season. Mr. CABOT found another, and is probably
the first naturalist who has done so. The nest which
I found was built in a cedar tree, at the distance
of five feet from the ground. The tree stood by itself
in a small sandy pasture, which was sparingly covered
with half-grown cedars. The nest itself was rudely
constructed: it was composed externally of coarse
grass and weeds, lined with fine roots of the same,
and little care seemed to have been bestowed on its
completion. The diameter of the exterior was 9 inches,
the brim 3 inches, the depth 1 inch, the external
depth 2 inches, giving it thus a shallow or flattish
appearance. The eggs, four in number, were of a bright
emerald-green."
I have found this species from Labrador to the Texas.
Mr. NUTTALL and Mr. TOWNSEND met with it on the Columbia
river, and all the way to St. Louis. In South Carolina,
where it appears only during severe winters, it feeds
on the berries of the Virginian juniper, commonly
called the red cedar; and when the berries fall to
the ground, it alights to secure them. Dr. BACHMAN
has kept it in aviaries, where it became very fat,
silent, and only uttered its usual simple feeble
note. After moulting, the males assumed the plumage
of the females. The next spring a very slight appearance
of red was seen, but they never recovered their original
brilliancy, and it was difficult to distinguish the
sexes. It breeds sparingly in the northern parts
of the State of New York. In June 1837, I met with
three pairs, within a few miles of Waterford, that
evidently had nests in the neighbourhood.
Palate gently ascending; upper mandible considerably
concave, with three prominent lines, of which the
two lateral are much larger; mandibles nearly equal
in breadth, the lower deeply concave. Width of mouth
5 twelfths. Tongue 5 twelfths long, sagittate and
papillate at the base, much compressed, being higher
than broad, channelled above, the channel becoming
somewhat dilated toward the end, and approaching
to that of the Pine Grosbeak and the Crossbills.
OEsophagus 2 inches 2 twelfths in length, its greatest
width 4 twelfths. Stomach 5 1/2 twelfths long, 4
1/2 twelfths broad; its lateral muscles of moderate
size, the epithelium tough and longitudinally rugous.
Contents of stomach, seeds of various sorts. Intestine
8 3/4 inches long, its width from 1 1/2 twelfths
to 3/4 twelfth; coeca 1/2 twelfth long, 1/4 twelfth
broad 9 twelfths distant from the extremity.
Trachea 1 inch 7 1/2 twelfths long, flattened, nearly
1 twelfth in breadth; the rings 66 and 2 additional;
bronchial rings 12; muscles as usual in this family;
as are the salivary glands.
Male, 6, 9.
During winter, from Texas to the Carolinas, and
northward to Kentucky. In summer, from St. Louis
to the Columbia, and in the Fur Countries. Abundant.
PURPLE FINCH, Fringilla purpurea, Wils. Amer. Orn.,
vol., i. p. 119.
PURPLE FINCH, Bonap. Syn., p. 114.
FRINGILLA PURPUREA WILSON, Crested Purple Finch,
Swains. and Rich. F. Bor. Amer., vol. ii. p. 264.
PURPLE FINCH, Fringilla purpurea, Aud. Orn. Biog.,
vol. i. p. 24;vol. v. p. 500.
Adult Male
Bill Shortish, robust, bulging, conical, acute;
upper mandible with its dorsal outline a little convex,
under mandible with its outline also slightly convex,
both broadly convex transversely, the edges straight
to near the base, where they are a little deflected.
Nostrils basal, roundish, open, partially concealed
by the feathers. Head rather large. Neck short and
thick. Body full. Legs of moderate size; tarsus of
the same length as the middle toe, covered anteriorly
with a longitudinal plate above and a few transverse
scutella below, posteriorly with an acutely angular
longitudinal plate; toes scutellate above, free,
the lateral ones nearly equal; claws slender, arched,
compressed, acute, that of the hind toe not much
larger.
Plumage compact above, blended beneath, wings of
moderate length, third and fourth primaries longest,
second and first very little shorter. Tail forked.
The lateral feathers curved outwards toward the tip.
Bill deep brown above, paler and tined with blue
beneath. Iris blackish-brown. Feet and claws brown.
Head, neck, breast, back, and upper tail-coverts
of a rich deep lake, approaching to crimson on the
head and neck, and fading into rose-colour on the
belly. Fore part of the back streaked with brown.
Quills and larger coverts deep brown, margined externally
and tipped with red. Tail feathers deep brown, similarly
margined. A narrow band of cream-colour across the
forehead, margining the base of the upper mandible.
Length 6 inches, extent of wings 9, beak along the
ridge 5/12, along the gap 7/12, tarsus 2/3.
Female
The young
bird so closely resembles the adult female, that
the same description will answer for both. The general
colour of the upper parts is brownish-olive, streaked
with dark brown. There is a broadish white line over
the eye, and another from the commissure of the gap
backwards. The under parts are greyish-white, the
sides streaked with brown. The quills and tail-feathers
are dark brown, margined with olive. THE RED LARCH.
LARIX AMERICANA, Pursch, Fl. Amer., vol. ii. p.
645. Mich., Arbr. Forest. de l'amer. Sept., vol.
iii. p. 137, pl. 4.--MONOECIA POLYANDRIA, Linn. --CONIFERAE,
Juss.
This species of larch, which is distinguished by
its short, deciduous, fasciculate leaves, and short
ovate cones, occurs in the more northern parts of
the United States, and in the mountainous regions
of the middle states. It attains a height of sixty
feet, and a diameter sometimes of two feet. The wood
is highly esteemed on account of its excellent qualities.
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