Online Encyclopedia

NONPAREIL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 738 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NONPAREIL  , the name under which, from its supposed match-less beauty, a little cage-

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bird, chiefly imported from New Orleans, has long been known to
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English dealers (cf . Edwards, Gleanings, i . 132) . It is the Emberiza ciris of
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Linnaeus, and the Cyanospiza ciris of most
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recent ornithologists, belonging to a small
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group, now included with the buntings and finches, although some authors have regarded it as a
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tanager (q.v.) . The cock has the head, neck and lesser wing-coverts bright blue, the upper
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part of the back yellow, deepening into green, and the
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lower parts generally, together with the rump, bright
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scarlet, tinged on the latter with
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purple . This gorgeous colouring is not assumed until the bird is at least two years old . The
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hen is green above and yellow beneath; and the younger cocks
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present an appearance intermediate between the adults of both sexes . The
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species, which is often also called the painted bunting, after wintering in Central
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America or Mexico, arrives in the
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Southern states of the
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American Union in
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April, but does not ordinarily proceed to the northward of South Carolina . In
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Louisiana, where it is generally known to the French-speaking inhabitants as the Pape—as it was to the Spaniards of
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Florida as the Mariposa pintada (painted butterfly)—it is said to be very abundant; and on its appearance in spring
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advantage is, or was, taken of the pugnacious disposition of the
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males to capture them alive in
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great numbers by means of the stuffed skin of one so placed in connexion with a cage-trap that they instantly fall into the latter on attacking what they conceive to be a
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rival . Belonging to the same genus as the nonpareil is the indigo-bird, Cyanospiza cyanea, which, as a summer visitant, is widely diffused from the
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Missouri to the
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Atlantic, and extends into the provinces of Ontario and New Brunswick, being everywhere regarded with favour . Though wanting most of the bright hues of its Congener, the indigo-bird has yet much beauty, the adult cock being nearly all over of a deep blue, changing, according to the
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light, to green . The hen is brown above and ochreous-white beneath.' The " pintailed nonpareil " of aviculture (Erythrura prasina) is a somewhat similarly coloured but really very different bird; the male has a long sharp tail, and the species belongs to the Ploceidae (see WEAVER-BIRD) .

End of Article: NONPAREIL
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