YELLOAV-RVMPED AVARBLEK. 2 I 



necticut and Northern Central ^^Tassachusetts, also along the 

 mountain rano-es as far south as North Carolina. 



Migrates south in early September. I found them com- 

 mon at Watsontown, September third, 1875, and they con- 

 tinued common for about three weeks, then gradually disap- 

 peared, but I saw a single specimen as late as October tenth. 



I obtained a sinole male on Kev West, Florida, Novem- 

 ber twenty-fourth, i868. On November fifteenth, 1887, I saw 

 a single female at Nassau, Bahamas. I found a few on In- 

 agua in early February, 1880, and obtained a single male at 

 Nassau, February twenty-first, 1897. Thus I do not think 

 that many pass the winter on the Bahamas. They are re- 

 ported from the Greater Antilles and Guatemala at this 

 season. On their way north they pass the Bahamas in great 

 numbers scatteringly in early April, and increasing in num- 

 bers towards the last of the month. Thus I saw them in 

 large numbers betw^een the twenty-fifth and twenty-seventh 

 on South Andros in 1882. They were quite common on 

 Eleuthera, May second, 1897, and that year rem.ained up to 

 the tenth of the month at Nassau. I have found them mi- 

 grating through Middle Florida in large numbers April 24. 

 I found them at Williamsport, Pennsylvania on May ninth, 

 1876, and as seen, they reach Massachusetts a little later in 

 the month. ( See appendix ). 



YELLOAV-RUMPED WARBLER. 



Deiidroica coronata. 



Plate IT, Fig. 1, male; Fig. 2, female. 



Ashy above, streaked with black. Top of head and 

 cheeks, black. Patch on crown, rump, and one on either 

 side, bright yellow. Throat and lower parts, white broadly 

 streaked across breast and along sides with black. Migrates 

 through Southern to breed in Northern New England. In 

 spring, from the last week in April until the middle of May, 



