
Audubon
Plate 256, Purple Heron $500
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Click the small image to see more detail. This is one of our most popular
prints.
Print size: 26 1/4" x 39
1/4"

Audubon drew both the birds
and the background in Florida in April 1832. When he first saw them in the
Keys, he puzzled at their coloration: "Some of them were as white as driven
snow, the rest of a delicate purplish tint, inclining to grey on the back
and wings, with heads and necks of a curious reddish colour. Males and
females there were, but they were all of one species..." He concluded that
those with white plumage were immature birds. He was incorrect, since in
this species, coloring depends on the individual and has no relation to
either age or sex. It is dimorphic and displays two color phases, one
white, the other purplish blue. The birds illustrated here are both adults.
The reddish egret inhabits
shallow, open salt pans. When wading, it often rakes the bottom with one
foot to stir up the prey and when pursuing fish, it has a habit of spreading
its wings in a canopy, then running, hopping and cavorting in a curious
dance.