BIRDS— SYLVICOLIDAE—MYIODIOCTES PUSILLUS. 293 
? MYIODIOCTES MINUTUS. 
Small-headed Flycatcher. 
Muscicapa minuta, Witson, Am. Orn. VI, 1812, 62; pl. 1, f. 5.—Aup. Orn. Biog. V, 1839, 291; pl. 434, f. 3.—Is. 
Syn. 1839, 44.—Is. Birds Amer. I, 1840, 238; pl. 67. 
Sylvia minuta, Bonar. Obs. Wils. 1826, No. 128. 
Wilsonia minuta, Bonar. List, 1838. 
Sylvania pumilia, Nutrauy, Man. I, 2d ed. 1840, 334. (Not Sylvia pumilia, Vieillot.) 
Sp. Cu.—* Wings short, the second quills longest. Tail of moderate length, even. General color of upper parts light greenish 
brown ; wings and tail dark olive brown, the outer feathers of the latter with a terminal white spot on the inner web ; a narrow 
white ring surrounding the eye ; two bands of dull white on the wings ; sides of the head and neck greenish yellow ; the rest 
of the lower parts pale yellow, gradually fading into white behind. Male, 5 inches long ; extent 8} inches.”’ 
Hab.—Kastern Atlantic States. 
I have never seen a specimen of the small-headed flycatcher, and copy the preceding descrip- 
tion from Audubon. It seems to be a perfectly distinct species from any other I have described, 
and evidently belongs to the Oscines rather than to the Zyrannulas (Clamatores.) Audubon 
expressly mentions that it has several rather pleasing notes. The white spots on the tail dis- 
tinguish it readily from any of our true tyrant flycatchers. The introduction of the bird into 
the genus Myiodioctes is purely conjectural, although its affinities seem nearest to the hooded 
warbler. 
MYIODIOCTES PUSILLUS, Bonap. 
Green Black-cap Flycatcher. 
Muscicapa pusilla, Witson, Am. Orn. III, 1811, 103; pl. xxvi, f. 4. 
Wilsonia pusilla, Bonar. List, 1838. 
Sylvania pusilla, Nurratt, Man. I, 2d ed. 1840, 335. 
WMyiodiectes pusillus, Bonar. Conspectus, 1850, 315. 
Myioctonus pusillus, Canants, Mus. Hein. 1851, 18. 
Sylvia wilsonii, Bonar. Obs. Wilson, 1826, No. 127.—Nurratt, Man. I, 1832, 408. 
Muscicapa wilsonii, Aup. Orn. Biog. II, 1834, 148; pl. 124. 
Setophaga wilsonii, Janp. ed. Wilson, 1832. 
Myiodioctes wilsoniit, Aup. Syn. 1839, 50.—Is. Birds Am. II, 1841, 21; pl. 75. 
‘© Sylvia petasodes ? Licut.’’ (Bonap. Consp.) 
Sp. Cu. —Forehead, line over and around the eye, and under parts generally bright yellow. Upper part olive green; a 
square patch on the crown lustrous black. Sides of body and cheeks tinged with olive. No white on wings or tail. Female 
similar ; the black of the crown obscured by olive green. 
Length, 4.75 ; wing, 2.25 ; tail, 2.30. 
Hab.—United States from Atlantic to Pacific ; south to Guatemala. 
The wings are moderate ; the second, third, and fourth quills considerably longest and nearly 
equal ; the first longer than the fourth. The tail is rather long and graduated ; the lateral 
feathers .25 of an inch shorter than the middle. 
Specimens differ in some respects. Thus, among those from the Pacific coast, some, as 7678, 
have longer wings than those before me from the Atlantic States. No. 7683, from California, 
has a broader frontlet of yellow, a richer yellow beneath, a lighter olive of the back, and a con- 
siderably smaller and slenderer bill. Other specimens, however, from the same localities agree 
precisely with Pennsylvania ones. 
