Family XV. FRINGILLINAE. FINCHES. GENUS IX. FRINGILLA, Linn. FINCH. |
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Family |
THE WHITE-CROWNED FINCH. [White-crowned Sparrow.] |
Genus | FRINGILLA LEUCOPHRYS, Gmel. [Zonotrichia leucophrys.] |
It is to the wild regions of Labrador that you must go, kind reader, if you
wish to form a personal acquaintance with the White-crowned Sparrow. There in
every secluded glen opening upon the boisterous Gulf of St. Lawrence, while
amazed you glance over the wilderness that extends around you, so dreary and
desolate that the blood almost conceals in your veins, you meet with this
interesting bird. Your body is sinking under the fatigue occasioned by your
wading through beds of moss as extraordinary for their depth, as for the
brilliancy of their tints, and by the difficulties which you have encountered in
forcing your way through the tangled creeping pines, so dwarfish and so
stubborn, that you often find it easier to trample down their branches than to
separate them so as to allow you a passage. In such a place, when you are far
away from all that is dear to you, how cheering is it to hear the mellow notes
of a bird, that seems as if it had been sent expressly for the purpose of
relieving your mind from the heavy melancholy that bears it down! The sounds
are so sweet, so refreshing, so soothing, so hope inspiring, that as they come
upon the soul in all their gentleness and joy, the tears begin to flow from your
eyes, the burden on your mind becomes lighter, your heart expands, and you
exprience a pure delight, produced by the invitation thus made to offer your
humblest and most sincere thanks to that all-wondrous Being, who has caused you
to be there no doubt for the purpose of becoming better acquainted with the
operations of his mighty power.
Thus it was with me, when, some tune after I had been landed on the dreary
coast of Labrador, I for the first time heard the song of the White-crowned
Sparrow. I could not refrain from indulging in the thought that,
notwithstanding the many difficulties attending any attempts--my mission I must
call it--to study God's works in this wild region, I was highly favoured. At
every step, new objects presented themselves, and whenever I rested, I enjoyed a
delight never before experienced. Humbly and fervently did I pray for a
continuation of those blessings, through which I now hoped to see my undertaking
completed, and again to join my ever-dear family.
I first became acquainted with the White-crowned Sparrow at Henderson, in
the autumn of 1817. I then thought it the handsomest bird of its kind, and my
opinion still is that none other known to me as a visiter or inhabitant of the
United States, exceeds it in beauty. I procured five individuals, three of
which were in full plumage and proved to be males. The sex of the other two
could not be ascertained; but I have since become convinced that these birds
lose the white stripes on the head in the winter season, when they might be
supposed to be of a different species. During spring and summer the male and
the female are of equal beauty, the former being only a little larger than the
latter. The young, which I procured in Labrador, shewed the white stripes on
the head as they were fully fledged, and I think they retain those marks in
autumn longer than the old birds, of which the feathers have become much worn at
that season. In the winter of 1833, I procured at Charleston in South Carolina,
one in its brown livery.
One day, while near American Harbour, in Labrador, I observed a pair of
these birds frequently resorting to a small hammock of firs, where I concluded
they must have had a nest. After searching in vain, I intimated my suspicion to
my young friends, when we all crept through the tangled branches, and examined
the place, but without success. Determined, however, to obtain our object, we
returned with hatchets, cut down every tree to its roots, removed each from the
spot, pulled up all the mosses between them, and completely cleared the place;
yet no nest did we find. Our disappointment was the greater that we saw the
male bird frequently flying about with food in its bill, no doubt intended for
its mate. In a short while, the pair came near us, and both were shot. In the
female we found an egg, which was pure white, but with the shell yet soft and
thin. On the 6th of July, while my son was creeping among some low bushes, to
get a shot at some Red-throated Divers, he accidentally started a female from
her nest. It made much complaint. The nest was placed in the moss, near the
foot of a low fir, and was formed externally of beautiful dry green moss, matted
in bunches like the coarse hair of some quadruped, internally of very fine dry
grass, arranged with great neatness, to the thickness of nearly half an inch,
with a full lining of delicate fibrous roots of a rich transparent yellow. It
was 5 inches in diameter externally, 2 in depth, 2 1/4, in diameter within,
although rather oblong, and 1 3/4 deep. In one nest we found a single feather
of the Willow Grouse. The eggs, five in number, average 7/8 of an inch in
length, are proportionally broad, of a light sea-green colour, mottled toward
the larger end with brownish spots and blotches, a few spots of a lighter tint
being dispersed over the whole. This description differs greatly from that of
the nest and eggs of this species given by others, who, I apprehend, have
mistaken for them those of the Fox-tailed Sparrow, or the Anthus Spinoletta. We
found many nests, which were all placed on the ground, or among the moss, and
were all constructed alike. They deposit their eggs from the beginning to the
end of June. In the beginning of August, I saw many young that were able to
fly, and by the 12th of that month the birds had already commenced their
southward migration. The young follow their parents until nearly full grown.
The food of this species, while in Labrador, consists of small coleopterous
insects, grass-seeds, and a variety of berries, as well as some minute
shellfish, for which they frequently search the margins of ponds or the
sea-shore. At the approach of autumn, they pursue insects on the wing, to a
short distance, and doubtless secure some in that manner.
The song of the White-crowned Finch consists of six or seven notes, the
first of which is loud, clear, and musical, although of a plaintive nature; the
next broader, less firm, and seeming merely a second to the first; the rest form
a cadence diminishing in power to the last note, which sounds as if the final
effort of the musician. These notes are repeated at short intervals during the
whole day, even on those dismal days produced by the thick fogs of the country
where it breeds, and where this species is of all the most abundant. The
White-throated Finch was also very plentiful, and we found it breeding in the
same localities.
The flight of this interesting bird is usually low, swift, and greatly
protracted. It is performed without any jerk of the tail. They migrate mostly
by day--I say mostly, because while crossing a great arm of the sea, like the
Gulf of St. Lawrence, they perhaps may not always be able to accomplish their
transit in one day.
I have met with this bird in almost every portion of the United States
during early spring and autumn, but always either single or in very small
groups. I have shot some near New Orleans in April, at Cincinnati, and near New
York in May. They reach the Magdeleine Islands, Newfoundland, and the coast of
Labrador, about the first of June. Those which I have seen on their passage
through the United States were perfectly silent, and usually frequented low
bushes and grape-vines, the fruit of which they eagerly eat, but never entering
the woods. In every instance I found them as gentle and unsuspicious as whilst
at Labrador.
In the plate are to be seen two of these birds, drawn many years ago, one
of them a male in full summer plumage, the other a female in the winter dress.
I have no doubt that this species retires far south in Mexico, to spend the
winter. It is nearly allied to the White-throated and Fox-tailed Sparrows, and
in its winter plumage it may perhaps prove to be the Fringilla ambigua of my
friend NUTTALL.
Male, 7 1/2, 10 1/2.
Breeds from Newfoundland and Labrador northward. Abundant. Migratory.
Passes southward in autumn beyond the Texas.
WHITE-CROWNED BUNTING, Emberiza leucophrys, Wils. Amer. Orn., vol. iv.p. 49.
FRINGILLA LEUCOPHRYS, Bonap. Syn. p. 479.
FRINGILLA (ZONOTRICHIA) LEUCOPHRYS, White-crowned Finch, Swains. and Rich., F. Bor. Amer., vol. ii. p. 255.
WHITE-CROWNED BUNTING, or FINCH, Nutt. Man., vol. i. p. 479.
WHITE-CROWNED SPARROW, Fringilla leucophrys, Aud. Orn. Biog., vol. ii.p. 88; vol. v. p. 515.
Adult Male.
Bill very short, robust, conical, acute; upper mandible scarcely broader
than the lower, both almost straight in their outline, rounded on the sides,
with the edges inflected and sharp; the gap-line very slightly deflected at the
base, and not extending to beneath the eye. Nostrils basal, roundish, partially
concealed by the feathers. Head rather large, neck short, body full. Legs of
moderate length, rather strong; tarsus longer than the middle toe, covered
anteriorly with a few longish scutella; toes scutellate above, free, the lateral
ones nearly equal; claws slender, arched, compressed, acute, that of the hind
toe rather large.
Plumage soft and rather blended above, loose beneath. Wings short and
curved, rounded, the third quill longest, the second and fourth almost as long.
Tail rather long, nearly even, of twelve rounded feathers.
Bill reddish-orange, tipped with brown. Iris reddish-brown. Feet pale
brown. The head is marked with three stripes of white, and four of deep black.
Back and wing-coverts dark reddish-brown, with pale grey margins, the posterior
part of the back and upper tail-coverts lighter brown. Quills and tail dark
brown, margined with pale; the tip of the smaller coverts white, as are those of
some of the primary coverts, which, with the secondary quills, have
chestnut-brown edges. Throat and belly white; sides of the neck and the breast
dull purplish-grey; the flanks and under tail-coverts pale brownish-grey.
Length 7 1/2 inches; extent of wings 10 1/2; bill along the ridge
(4 1/2)/12, along the edge 7/12; tarsus 10/12.
Adult Female.
In its summer dress, the female resembles the male at that season; but in
winter the white lines on the head are less pure, the dark lines are
reddish-brown, but the tints of the other parts are nearly similar, these
circumstances being the same in the male.
Length 7 1/4 inches.
The lower mandible is broader than the upper, and deeply concave; the
palate ascending, with two longitudinal ridges, forming a soft protuberance at
their junction anteriorly; the upper mandible beneath with three ridges and four
grooves. Tongue 4 twelfths long, deeper than broad, with a median groove above,
and tapering to an acute point. OEsophagus,
[a b c], 2 inches 3 twelfths in length, its greatest width when dilated 5 twelfths.
Proventriculus, [b c], 3 twelfths in breadth. Stomach, [d e], placed obliquely,
6 twelfths long, 7 1/2 twelfths broad, its lateral muscles large and distinct, the lower muscle also
prominent, but thin, the epithelium as usual, with strong longitudinal rugae.
Intestine, [e f g h i j], 8 inches long, from 2 twelfths to 1 1/2 twelfths in
breadth; coeca, [i], 1 1/2 twelfths long, and twelfth in breadth, 9 twelfths
distant from the extremity, [j]. Trachea 1 inch 8 twelfths long, the rings 70
with 2 dimidiate, pretty firm and a little flattened. Bronchial half rings
about 12. Muscles as usual, the inferior laryngeal moderately large.
THE SUMMER GRAPE.
VITIS AESTIVALIS, var. SINUATA, Pursch, Flor. Amer. Sept., Vol. i. p. 169.
This variety has large cordate leaves, which are less deeply lobed, and
with large marginal teeth. It occurs in all the barren lands of the Western
Country, particularly in those of Kentucky, Tennessee, and Illinois. Although
it seldom attains much strength of stem, it spreads broadly on the bushes, and
forms beautiful festoons. The grapes are juicy and agreeable to the taste.
They are fully ripe by the middle of August, and remain hanging until destroyed
by the frost. When wild pigeons happen to be abundant where it grows, they
speedily devour the fruit.
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