278 CHECK-LIST OF NORTH AMERICAN BIRDS. 



Vireo calidris barbatulus (Cabanis). Black-whiskered Vireo. [623.] 



Phyllomanes harhatulus Cabanis, Journ. fiir Orn., Ill, No. 18, Nov., 1855, 

 467. (Cuba.) 



Range. — Breeds on west coast of southern Florida (as far north as Anclote 

 Keys), Key West, Dry Tortugas, Haiti, Cuba, Little Cayman, and the 

 Bahamas. Winters in Colombia. [Allied races are found in the West Indies.] 



• Vireo flavoviridisfiavoviridis (Cassin). Yellow-green Vireo. [625.] 



Vireosylviaflavoviridis Cassin, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., V, No. 7, Dec, 

 1850-Feb., 1851 [June 30, 1851], 152. (Panama and San Juan de 

 Nicaragua = Nicaragua.) 



Range. — Breeds in Mexico from Sinaloa, Nuevo Leon, and Tamaulipas 

 south to Costa Rica. Winters chiefly in Amazonian Ecuador and Peru. 

 Accidental at Brownsville, Texas, (Aug. 23, 1877), ^ Riverside, CaUfornia 

 (Oct. 1 [= Sept. 29], 1887),2 and Godbout, Quebec (May 13, 1883).^ [Allied 

 races occur in southwestern Costa Rica, Panama, and on the Tres Marias 

 Islands.] 



Vireo olivaceus (LiNNAEiTs). Red-eyed Vireo. [624.] 



Muscicapa olivacea Linnaeus, Syst. Nat., ed. 12, I, 1766, 327. Based 

 mainly on The Red ey'd Fly-catcher, Muscicapa oculis rubris Catesby, 

 Carolina, I, 54. (in America septentrionali = South Carolina.; ^ 



Range. — Breeds from central British Columbia, central western Mackenzie, 

 central Manitoba, central Ontario, Anticosti Island, and Cape Breton Island 

 south to northern Oregon, Washington, Idaho, southern Montana, eastern 

 Wyoming, eastern Colorado, western Texas, northern Coahuila, southern 

 Alabama, and central Florida. Migrates through eastern Mexico, Yucatan, 

 and Central America (casually Cuba and the Bahamas); winters in Colombia 

 and Venezuela south to Ecuador and southern Brazil. Accidental in Nevada, 

 California, and Greenland. 



Vireo philadelphicus (Cassin) . Philadelphia Vireo. [626.] 



Vireosylvia philadelphica Cassin, Proc. Acad. Nat. Sci. Phila., V, No. 7, 

 Dec, 185(>-Feb., 1851 [June 30, 1851], 153 (pi. 10, fig. 2). (Philadel- 

 phia, Pa.) 



1 Merrill, Proc. U. S. Nat. Mus., I, 1878, 125. 



2 Price, Auk, V, 1888, 210. 



3 Merriam, Bull. Nuttall Orn. Club, VIII, 1883, 244. 



* It has been claimed that inasmuch as Edwards's Muscicapa olivacea upon 

 which Linnaeus, in part, based his name is apparently Vireo calidris, the 

 name olivaceus must be transferred to that species. As, however, Catesby's 

 Red ey'd Fly-catcher, which is also quoted by Linnaeus, is unquestionably this 

 bird, no change has been made, cf. Bangs and Penard, Bull. Mus. Comp. 

 Zool., LXVII, No. 3, 1925, 205. 



