Summer Red Bird
Tanagra aestiva Gmelin [now Piranga rubra]
Folio edition, plate 44
âÃÂÃÂThis beautiful species is destitute of song, and is of solitary habits. . . . The vine on which you seeàthem is usually called the Muscadine. It grows everywhere in Louisiana. . . . In favourable seasons,àthey are laden with grapes. . . . The skin is thick and very tough, the pulp glutinous, but so peculiarlyàflavoured as to be very agreeable to the taste. These grapes are eaten by most people, although an idea prevails, in Lower Louisiana particularly, that the eating of them gives rise to bilious fevers. For my part, I can well say, that the more I have eaten of them the better I have found myself.âÃÂÃÂ
John James Audubon,ÃÂ Ornithological Biography, orÃÂ An Account of the Habits of the Birds of the United States of AmericaÃÂ (Edinburgh: A. Black [et al.], 1831), vol. 1, p. 232-234.
View bird inÃÂ National Audubon Society Guide to North American Birds.