John James 勛圖窪蹋: Confused, Wrong, or Neither?

勛圖窪蹋 painted a bunch of birds that no one has seen since. We explore the most likely options behind the mystery birds.

John James 勛圖窪蹋s Birds of America is an incredible featin large part thanks to how comprehensive the 435 watercolor paintings are for their era. 勛圖窪蹋 wasnt just working at a time when European Americans didnt know the breadth of American birdlife宇hey didnt really know the extent of America itself.  Painted during the early 1800s with little more than a rifle and some friends help, 勛圖窪蹋 was able to correctly distinguish and paint (to scale!) more than 400 distinct speciesmore than half of our native birds.

For 勛圖窪蹋, every unusual song could signal a new bird, every isolated swamp or mountain range could host species no ornithologist had ever seen before. All that possibility must have been exhilaratingmaddening, even. To avoid missing out, he shot heaps of birds地nd compatriots exploring far-flung regions of the continent brought him heaps more. Among the messes of (dead) birds he had to sort through were weird-looking juveniles, birds with plumage anomalies, or even the occasional hybrid.

So its no wonder the man didnt get everything right.  And indeed, there are several birds painted and explained in Birds of America that are not, in fact, actual species. Some are immature birds mistaken for adults of a new species (the mighty Washingtons Eagle was, in all likelihood, an immature Bald Eagle).  Some were female birds that didnt look anything like their male partners (Selbys Flycatcher was a female Hooded Warbler).

Others were安ell, no one really knows. 勛圖窪蹋 painted a handful of birds that arent an exact match for anything weve currently got. These are 勛圖窪蹋s mystery birds.

Maybe theyre just mistaken plumages, like the eagle or the flycatcher, and we still cant sort it out.  Maybe they were birds that 勛圖窪蹋 just painted poorly, or from a vague memory, or from a partially decomposed corpse.

Maybe theyre species that have gone extinct since 勛圖窪蹋 painted them. There certainly are a bunch of those, sadly, including Bachmans Warbler, Ivory-billed Woodpecker, Passenger Pigeon, and Carolina Parakeet. Its certainly possible that some already-range-restricted species could have been wiped out before conservationists even knew to notice.

Or maybe these birds are still out there somewhere, flitting around unseen. In any case, its worth taking a look. Heres a rundown of 勛圖窪蹋s mystery birds, and what the likely scenario behind each one might be.

Carbonated Warbler

Named for its dark cap and streakingnot, unfortunately, because it was fizzy on the tongue 勛圖窪蹋 painted his Carbonated Warbler from two individuals he shot in Kentucky in 1811. He himself was uncertain about its species, admitting he thought the birds were youngor as he put it, not in full plumage, as they had no part of their dress seemingly complete.

Field guide author David Allen Sibley took an artistic angle to bring further skepticism to the birds in a fascinating (give it a read, and dont neglect the comments!). Sibley pointed out several structural oddities and impossibilities in 勛圖窪蹋s renderings. Several feather groups were arranged incorrectly or are misshapen. The painting lacks the detail present in 勛圖窪蹋s other drawings. Sibley takes these errors and imprecisions to mean that 勛圖窪蹋 might not have been looking at actual specimens when he painted.

There may be a benign explanation for the poor quality of the painting. 勛圖窪蹋 recounts in his Ornithological Biography that 200 of his original paintings were eaten by rats in 1812, a  that nearly put a stop to [his] researches in ornithology.  勛圖窪蹋s original  drawing was lost this way, so the Carbonated Warbler could have been in there as well, and perhaps he repainted it from memory of the original bird.

Another possibility, as pointed out by the writer Scott Weidensaul in the comments to the Sibley blog (I told you they were worth it), is that some of the ornithological discrepancies might be the result of later artists who engraved and colored the printing plates used to produce the final images.

Unless one of these birds is rediscovered, well never know.

Best guess: Sibley didnt name a species, because with all the errors in the painting who knows what the actual specimen looked like? But Ill give it a shot. If the painting did have a real life model, the black cap, wing bars, and general pattern of streaking are pretty good matches for Blackpoll Warblersexcept those birds are black and white, not yellow. However, there can be a lot of variation in blackpolls, including some . Ill take it.

Cuvier's Kinglet

As much as everyone would enjoy another adorable kinglet species in the world, Cuviers Kinglet hasnt resurfaced since 勛圖窪蹋 (supposedly) shot one in Pennsylvania in 1812 and named it after the famous French zoologist.  Even 勛圖窪蹋 admitted the bird was very similar to Ruby-crowned and Golden-crowned Kinglets, admitting that even he didnt know it was any different until he picked it up off the ground. 

Unlike those other species, though, per 勛圖窪蹋s rendering, Cuviers Kinglet had a dark forehead, with the dark head stripes of the golden-crowned kingletexcept with a red crown. Despite never seeing another specimen, 勛圖窪蹋 kept up hope of the bird being rediscovered, to inquire about any odd kinglets they might have turned up. Alas, none ever has.

Best Guess: The plumage is really not that different from a Golden-crowned Kinglet, whose head feathers are often darker than their name suggests. Cuviers Kinglet was probably just a golden-crowned, according to the American Ornithologists .

Small-headed Flycatcher and Blue Mountain Warbler

These two birds appear together with other small birds on a print that, I think its fair to say, does not rank with 勛圖窪蹋s masterpieces.  Both birds look stiff and lack detail, and its possible that 勛圖窪蹋 had neither specimen in front of him when he painted them.

Both species likely owe their presence in Birds of America to 勛圖窪蹋s chief rival of the time, Alexander Wilson. After a brief imprisonment for writing satirical poems in his native Scotland, Wilson immigrated to America in 1794 and eventually set out to paint all the birds of his new home. He published the first volume of American Ornithology in 1808years before 勛圖窪蹋s far superior paintings were publishedand continued painting until his death in 1813.

The Blue Mountain Warbler was a bird that Wilson claimed to have shot in the blue mountains of Virginia. 勛圖窪蹋 never saw one alive, but claims to have gotten ahold of a specimen from the Council of the Zoological Society of London, and which had come from California. Sounds to me like 勛圖窪蹋 was jealous that Wilson found a bird he couldnt, but claimed he had one in the same way some people claim to have a long-distance girlfriend. Its possible that 勛圖窪蹋 had only Wilsons painting to go off. 

The story is reversed for the Small-headed Flycatcher: 勛圖窪蹋 claims that Wilson copied it from him. 勛圖窪蹋 painted his from a specimen he shot in Kentucky in 1808, a painting he later showed to Wilson (yeah, they were sort of frenemies). The bird showed up in later works by Wilson, who claimed hed seen some in New Jersey, and shot one in an orchard somewhere. 勛圖窪蹋 didnt believe him, and regretted showing him the earlier drawing.

The trouble is, neither of these stories shed any light on just what the heck these birds actually were, if they existed. The descriptions given by the men accompanying the artwork point to a wood-warbler of some kind, but the plumages dont match anything exactly.

Best Guess: No easy answers on these two.  The 19th century ornithologist Elliott Coues suggested the Blue Mountain Warbler was just a , or maybeif the specimen did actually come from Californiaa young Townsends Warbler. As for the Small-headed Flycatcher, Coues doubted its existence at all, chalking it up to a misunderstanding between Wilson and 勛圖窪蹋, and calling the whole thing a .  It looks like a Pine Warbler to me, but no one can say for sure.

Bartram's Vireo

On the same plate as the Small-headed Flycatcher and Blue Mountain Warbler is another mystery bird, Bartram's Vireo (I said it was a weird plate). 勛圖窪蹋 claims that this bird must often be confounded with, or mistaken for, the Red-eyed Vireo, which makes sense because it looks exactly like one. The remarkable difference between Bartrams and Red-eyed Vireos, supposedly, is that Bartrams stays in thickets low to the ground while red-eyed sing from the treetops. Not sure Im convinced.

Best Guess: Red-eyed Vireo.

Townsend's Bunting

This ones a mystery that might have been recently solved. In 1833, a Pennsylvania man named John Townsend shot a bird near Philadelphia that neither he nor 勛圖窪蹋 had ever seen. It was built like a sparrow, with a strong, conical bill, but had a white throat and gray chest unlike any known species. The men figured it was a new bird, and it was named after its discoverer.

Unlike any of the other birds on this list, though, the specimen still existsits in the Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C. Ornithologist Kenneth Parkes in 1985 and, also consulting with field notes from Townsend, concluded that the bunting was simply an aberrant-plumaged Dickcissel.

But in 2014, the case was reopened when images of a were taken in Ontario. Thanks to an alert birder with a fast shutter-finger, the whole birding world was able to get a look. When the dust had settled and all the experts weighed in, the consensus was an aberrant-plumaged Dickcissel. Still, as only the second-known example of this plumage in historythe first one coming from 勛圖窪蹋 himselfthis was a fun moment.

Best Guess: Who am I to blow against the wind? Aberrant-plumaged Dickcissel.

These mysterious birds are well-known to any serious birder, tucked into the back of the mind in hopes of some future miraculous rediscovery. Its one of the true joys of birding: You never quite know what youre going to find out there. And if you do happen upon something crazy, take a quick shotideally with a camera, not a rifle.