THE BLACK-POLL WARBLER. 233 
at one while she was sitting on her nest, and she almost 
permitted me to touch her before she flew off. 
By the first week in September, the old birds and young, 
apparently in a group by themselves, leave for the South, 
and winter in Panama and the Bahamas. 
DENDROICA STRIATA. — Baird. 
The Black-poll Warbler. 
Muscicapa striata, Forster. Philos. Trans., LXII. (1772) 388, 428. Gm. Syst. 
Nat., I. (1788) 930. 
Sylvia striata, Wilson. Am. Orn., IV. (1811) 40. Nutt. Man., I. (1832) 383. 
Aud. Orn. Biog., II. (1834) 201. 
Sylvia autumnalis, Wilson. Am. Orn., III. (1811) 65. Aud. Orn. Biog., I. (1832) 
447. Nutt. Man., I. (1832), 390. (Female or young in autumn.) 
DESCRIPTION. 
Male. — Crown, nape, and upper half of the head black; the lower half, including 
the ear coverts, white, the separating line passing through the middle of the eye; 
rest of upper parts grayish-ash, tinged with brown, and conspicuously streaked with 
black; wing and tail feathers brown, edged externally (except the inner tail feathers) 
with dull olive-green; two conspicuous bars of white on the wing coverts, the ter- 
tials edged with the same; under parts white, with a narrow line on each side the 
throat from the chin to the sides of the neck, where it runs into a close patch of 
black streaks continued along the breast and sides to the root of the tail; outer two 
tail feathers with an oblique patch on the inner web near the end, the others edged 
internally with white. : 
Female similar, except that the upper parts are olivaceous, and, even on the 
crown, streaked with black; the white on the sides and across the breast tinged 
with yellowish; a ring of the same round the eye, cut by a dusky line through it. 
Length of male, five and seventy-five one-hundredths inches; wing, three inches; 
tail, two and twenty-five one-hundredths inches. 
This bird, although very abundant in all parts of New 
England in the spring migrations, passes far to the north 
to breed; but few remain in the States through the breed- 
ing season, and these in the most northern districts. It 
arrives from the South about the last week in May, and pro- 
ceeds leisurely on its journey, arriving at its destination 
about the second week in June. I have two nests in my 
collection, both found in the northern part of Maine: 
they were placed in low trees or saplings, and are con- 
structed of first a layer of twigs and grass, then the 
oo 
