Online Encyclopedia

GROSBEAK (Fr. Grosbec)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 616 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GROSBEAK (Fr. Grosbec)  , a name very indefinitely applied to many birds belonging to the families Fringillidae and Ploceidae of
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modern ornithologists, and perhaps to some members of the Emberizidae and Tanagridae, but always to birds distinguished by the
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great
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size of their
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bill . Taken alone it is commonly a synonym of
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hawfinch (q.v.), but a prefix is usually added to indicate the
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species, as pine-grosbeak, cardinal-grosbeak and the like . By early writers the word was generally given as an
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equivalent of the Linnaean Loxia, but that genus has been found to include many forms not now placed in the same
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family . The Pine-grosbeak (Pinicola enudeator) inhabits the conifer-zone of both the Old and the New Worlds, seeking, in
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Europe and pzobably elsewhere, a
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lower latitude as winter approaches—often journeying in large flocks; stragglers have occasionally reached the
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British Islands (Yarrell, Br . Birds, ed . 4, ii . 177-179) . In structure and some of its habits much resembling a bullfinch, but much exceeding that
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bird in size, it has the plumage of a crossbill and appears to undergo the same changes as do the members of the restricted genus Loxia—the young being of a dull greenish-grey streaked with brownish-black, the adult hens tinged with
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golden-green, and the cocks glowing with
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crimson-red on nearly all the
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body-feathers, this last colour being replaced after moulting in confinement by bright yellow . Nests of this species were found in 1821 by Johana Wilhelm Zetterstedt near Juckasjarwi in
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Swedish Lapland, but little was known concerning its nidification until 1855, when John Wolley, after two years' ineffectual search, succeeded in obtaining near the Finnish
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village Muonioniska, on the Swedish frontier, well-authenticated specimens with the eggs, both of which are like exaggerated bullfinches' . The food of this species seems to consist of the seeds and buds of many sorts of trees, though the
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staple may very possibly be those of some kind of pine . Allied to the pine-grosbeak are a number of species of smaller size, but its equals in beauty of plumage.' They have been referred to several genera, such as Carpodacus, Propasser, Bycanetes, Uragus and others; but possibly Carpodacus is sufficient to contain all . Most of them are natives of the Old
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World, and chiefly of its eastern division, but several inhabit the western portion of North
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America, and one, C. githagineus (of which there seem to be at least two
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local races), is an especial native of the deserts, or their
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borders, of
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Arabia and North Africa, extending even to some of the Canary Islands—a singular modification in the habitat of a form which one would be
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apt to associate exclusively with
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forest trees, and especially conifers .

The cardinal grosbeak, or Virginian

nightingale, Cardinalis virginianus, claims
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notice here, though doubts may be entertained as to the family to which it really belongs . It is no less remarkable for its bright
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carmine attire, and an elongated crest of the same colour, than for its
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fine
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song . Its ready adaptation to confinement has made it a popular cage-bird on both sides of the
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Atlantic . The
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hen is not so good a songster as the cock bird . Her plumage, with exception of the wings and tail, which are of a dull red, is
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light-olive above and brownish-yellow beneath . This species inhabits the eastern parts of the
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United States southward of 400 N.
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lat., and also occurs in the
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Bermudas . It is represented in the south-west of North America by other forms that by some writers are deemed species, and in the
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northern parts of South America by the C. phoeniceus, which would really seem entitled to distinction . Another kindred bird placed from its short and broad bill in a different genus, and known as Pyrrhuloxia sinuata or the Texan cardinal, is found on the
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southern borders of the United States and in Mexico; while among North
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American " grosbeaks " must also be named the birds belonging to the genera Guiraca and Hedymeles—th,e former especially exemplified by the beautiful blue G. caerulea, and the latter by the brilliant rose-breasted H. ludovicianus, which last extends its range into
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Canada . 1 Many of them are described and illustrated in the Monographie
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des loxiens of Prince C . L .
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Bonaparte and Professor Schlegel (1850), though it excludes many birds which an
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English writer would call " grosbeaks." The species of the Old World which, though commonly called " grosbeaks," certainly belong to the family Ploceidae, are treated under WEAVER-BIRD . (A .

End of Article: GROSBEAK (Fr. Grosbec)
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ALEXANDER BALLOCH GROSART (1827-1899)
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FRANCIS GROSE (c. 1730–1791)

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