Audubon Centennial Edition – The Birds of America

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Plate: 143
Golden-crowned Thrush
 
Plate: 137
Yellow-breasted Chat
 
Plate: 119
Yellow-throated Vireo
 
Plate: 133
Black-poll Warbler
 
Plate: 005
Bonaparte's Flycatcher
 
Plate: 088
Autumnal Warbler
 
 
Nashville Warbler
Havell Name
Nashville Warbler

Common Name
Nashville Warbler

Havell Plate No.
089

Paper Size
39" x 28"

Image Size
12" x 10"

Price
$ 600


 


Ornithological Biography

I have shot only three or four birds of this species, and these were all that I ever met with. I found them in Louisiana and Kentucky. A few specimens belonging to Mr. TITIAN PEALE of Philadelphia, and which he, with his usual kindness, lent me for a few days, to compare their colouring with my drawings and notes, were the only others that I have seen. It is probable he had procured them in Pennsylvania, although I cannot now recollect if this was really the case.

The flight of this little bird is short, light, and entirely similar to that of the other species of this genus already described. Its food consists of insects and larvae, which it procures by searching diligently and actively amongst the leaves and buds of low trees. It does not pursue insects on wing. With the exception of a few low, eagerly repeated, creaking notes, I have not heard any sounds from them. While uttering, these notes, which are all the species seem to have in lieu of song, the male stands erect and still. I am not aware of its nest having been discovered or described by any naturalist.

The plant on a twig of which two Nashville Warblers are represented, is usually called the swamp spice. It is a low bush, grows in the water, in swampy and muddy ground, and occurs from Georgia to New York. The berries, which are seldom eaten by birds, have little pulp, and consequently a large seed.

NASHVILLE WARBLER, Sylvia rubricapilla, Wils. Amer. Orn., vol. iii. p. 120.

SYLVIA RUBRICAPILLA, Bonap. Syn., p. 87.

NASHVILLE WARBLER, Sylvia rubricapilla, Nutt. Man., vol. i. p. 412.

NASHVILLE WARBLER, Sylvia rubricapilla, Aud. Orn. Biog., vol. i. p. 450.

Bill rather short, slender, tapering, nearly straight, as deep as broad at the base. Nostrils basal, lateral, elliptical, half-closed by a membrane. Head of ordinary size, neck short, body full. Feet of ordinary length, slender; tarsus longer than the middle toe, anteriorly scutellate; toes free, scutellate above; claws slender, compressed, acute, arched.

Adult Male.

Plumage soft, blended, tufty. Wings short, curved, the first and second quills longest. Tail short, forked, of twelve rounded feathers.

Bill greenish-brown. Iris dark brown. Feet yellowish-green. Head and cheeks brownish-grey, the upper part of the head dark red. A circle of white round the eye. The general colour of the upper parts is brownish-green, of the under greenish-yellow, brighter on the throat and breast. Inner webs of the wing and tail-feathers dusky, the outer brownish-green, and of the primaries bright yellow.

Length 4 1/2 inches, extent of wings 7; bill along the ridge 1/3, along the gap 1/2; tarsus 3/4.

Adult Female.

The female is much duller; the head and hind-neck dark brownish-grey, tinged with green, the former without the red patch, the under parts more mixed with grey, the sides olivaceous, and the yellow of the wings less pure. THE SWAMP SPICE.

ILEX PRINOIDES, Willd. Sp. Pl., vol. i. p. 709. Pursch, Fl. Amer., vol. i.p. 118.--TETRANDRIA TETRAGYNIA, Linn.--RHAMNI, Juss.

Leaves lanceolate, attenuated at the base, slightly serrated; peduncles one-flowered. The leaves of this species are deciduous, the berries bright red.

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