WILSON'S WARBLER 339 



only the memory of the delightful little songster 

 himself. 



Wilson's Warbler : WUsonia pmilla. 

 (See Fig. 182, p. 346.) 



Adult male, cap black, upper parts bright olive-green ; under 

 pai-ts bright yellow ; no marks on wings or tail. Female and 

 young, similar, but generally without cap. Length, 5 inches. 



Geogkaphic Distribution. — North America ; breeds from 

 the Sierra Nevada, Minnesota, and Nova Scotia northward ; 

 winters in Mexico and Central America. 



Piquant and jaunty, this little black-capped 

 yellow Warbler hunts low in the bushes, and 

 comes out to peer at you, twitching its tail from 

 side to side in pretty, half shy, half trastful and 

 interested fashion. 



For a song, it has a surprisingly harsh chatter, 

 and its call is rather a nasal note. 



As this is the last of the AVarblers we will 

 examine, it will be well to glance back over the 

 family, to make sure of their distinguishing char- 

 acters. 



The Yellow Warbler may be known by its 

 almost uniformly yellow plumage, and the red- 

 dish brown streaks on its yellow breast (Fig. 

 191 ^) : the Redstart by its salmon and black, and 

 its long fan-shaped tail (Fig. 195) : the Black- 

 throated Green by an inverted V of black under- 

 neath yellow cheeks, with white in its tail (Fig. 

 192) ; the Black-throated Blue by the colors that 

 1 For Figs. 180-195 see pp. 340-348. 



