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Meet Stunning Summer Tanager, A Sight To Behold In The North America's Sky

When selecting which hues work best together, you should utilize the colors of birds as a reference. They'll provide you with the most colorful palettes you've ever seen, we guarantee it. And although we are aware that birds come in a wide variety of colors because of their feathers, can you believe that certain birds even have varied colors based on their gender? If this is new to you, you should have met the Summer Tanager, one of the most stunning birds in the North American sky.
The summer tanager (Piranga rubra) is a medium-sized songbird native to North America. It and other members of its genus were previously classified in the tanager family (Thraupidae), but are now included in the cardinal family (Cardinalidae).

Source: forrestwilleyphoto

While adult females are olive-brown on the wings and tail and orangish on the underparts, adult males are rose-red and resemble the hepatic tanager in appearance. Besides, all shades of red and orange in birds come from their nutrition, just like in all other birds.

Source: justinchildress_photography

Source: jimiandersonphotography

Male juveniles have a similar appearance to females because of their matching brilliant yellow-green coloring, which is brighter yellow on the head and underparts as well as a bit greener on the wings and back.

Source: keithricflick

Adults have strong, pointed bills, are 17 cm (6.7 in) long, and weigh 29 g (1.0 oz). The wing spans between 28 and 30 cm.
Being the only entirely red bird in all of North America, the summer tanager is a sight to behold when compared to the forest's green foliage. Each summer, they rear one brood after their lone breeding each year.

Source: bill.draker

They keep one mate all through each reproducing season, but not really in successive seasons, which means they are sequentially monogamous.
Summer Tanagers typically build a nest on a horizontal branch between 2.5 and 10.5 meters above the ground after arriving in their nesting locations in the spring. Three to four eggs are placed in the nest, which is solely constructed by the female of the grass and other herbaceous flora.

Source: dpwagtail

Incubation is done exclusively by the female, and it lasts between 12 and 13 days. Depending on his inclination, the male might take care of the female during this time, or he may care for his feathers.
The male, however, moves forward quickly after the chicks hatch to help the mother feed them and keep an eye on their requirements. After 8 to 10 weeks, the chicks fly from their nest.

Source: Ospr3yy

The summer tanager prefers open, wooded areas, particularly those with oak trees. These birds mostly devour honey bees and wasps, but they may occasionally ingest other insects and berries.
Tanagers in the summer usually perch high in woodland shelters. They wait and then go out to catch insects that are flying through the air. To find food, they may also move gently along tree branches.

Source: marvinw.laynes

Both sexes of the summer tanager produce the distinctive pit-ti-tuck call note, which is sweet and whistling like an American Robin.
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