EASTERN YELLOW WARBLER 179 



and Oot-sing-gree-ay- Island, Great Slave Lake) ; northern Manitoba 

 (Lac Du Brocket, Churchill, York Factory, and Severn House) ; and 

 central Quebec and Labrador (Richmond Gulf, Grand Falls of the 

 Hamilton River, probably Northwest River, and Cartwright). East 

 to eastern Labrador (Cartwright) ; Newfoundland (St. Anthony, 

 Twillingate, and St. John's) ; Nova Scotia (Cape Breton Island, Hali- 

 fax, and Yarmouth) ; and the Atlantic coastal region south to eastern 

 and central North Carolina (Pine Island, Lake Mattamuskeet, 

 Raleigh, and Charlotte) ; central South Carolina (Columbia) ; and 

 central Georgia (Augusta and Macon). South to central Georgia 

 (Macon) ; central Alabama, rarely ( Autauga ville) ; southern Arkan- 

 sas (Monticello and Arkadelphia) ; northeastern Texas (Paris, Com- 

 merce, and Dallas) ; west-central Oklahoma (Fort Reno and Thomas) ; 

 southern New Mexico (Roswell and Silver City) ; probably southwest- 

 ern Texas (Fort Hancock and El Paso) ; northern Sonora (Mocte- 

 zuma, Magdalena, and Colonia Indepencia) ; and northwestern Baja 

 California (El Rosario) . West to the Pacific coast from northern Baja 

 California (El Rosario) to western Alaska (Frosty Peak, Alaska 

 Peninsula ; Nushagak, Hooper Bay, Saint Michael, and Kobuk River) . 

 Wandering birds have been collected at Icy Cape and Wainwright 

 on the northwest coast of Alaska several hundred miles north of the 

 northernmost breeding record. 



Winter range. — The yellow warbler is found in winter north to 

 southern Baja California (La Paz) ; Jalisco (La Barca) ; Morelos 

 (Cuernavaca and Yautepec) ; southern Veracruz (Tlacotalpan) ; 

 Yucatan (Tunkas) ; and Quintana Roo (Akumal) ; occasional or acci- 

 dental in winter near Brownsville, Tex. East to Quintana Roo 

 (Akumal) ; Honduras (Tela and Ceiba) ; Nicaragua (Bluefields) ; 

 Panama (Almirante and the Canal Zone) ; Venezuela (Trinidad Is- 

 land) ; British Guiana (Georgetown and the Berbice River) ; Surinam 

 (Paramaribo) ; Cayenne (Cayenne and Approuague) ; and north- 

 eastern Brazil (Chaves). South to northern Brazil (Chaves, and 

 Boa Vista on the Rio Branco) and central Peril (La Merced) . West 

 to central western Peril (La Merced) ; western Ecuador (Guayaquil, 

 Chones, and Esmeraldas) ; western Colombia (Condoto, Medellin, 

 and Turbo) ; western Costa Rica (El General, San Jose, and Bolson) ; 

 El Salvador (Puerto del Triunfo) ; western Guatemala (San Jose and 

 Matzantinango) ; Chiapas (Huehuetan) ; Guerrero (Coyuca) ; Colima 

 (Manzanillo) ; and southern Baja California (La Paz). 



The range as outlined is divided into several subspecies or geo- 

 graphic races. The Newfoundland warbler {D. p. amnicola) breeds 

 from central vrestern Alaska south to central British Columbia, cen- 

 tral Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba, central Ontario and Quebec 

 northward and east to Newfoundland; the Alaska yellow warbler 



