THE BIRDS OF SPRINGFIELD AND VICINITY. 25 



456. Sayornis Phcebe (I/ath.). Phcebe. Common 

 summer resident. 



459. Contopus borealis (Swains.). Olive-sided 

 Flycatcher. A rather rare summer resident ; breeds regu- 

 larly at Tatham, in West Springfield. For several succes.sive 

 .seasons a pair made their home in the Peabody cemetery, 

 Springfield, but they abandoned that place .some five or .six 

 years ago. 



461. Contopus virens (I/inn.). Wood Pewee. Com- 

 mon summer resident. 



463. Knipidonax flaviventris Baird. Yellow- 

 bellied Flyc.\tcher. Tolerably common spring and autumn 

 visitor. Once a .specimen of this kind was brought to me with 

 a broken wing, and evidently in a half-starved condition ; I 

 forced a fly down its throat, and in a few minutes it took them 

 in this unusual way without re.sistance, and in half an hour it 

 would come across the cage in which it was confined, and 

 eagerly snap a fly from mj' hand. This was the quickest tam- 

 ing of a wild bird that I have ever known. 



465. Bmpidonax virescens (Vieill.). Green- 

 CRESTED Flycatcher. Accidental vi.sitor ; it has been taken 

 at Suffield. (See Merriam's Birds of Connecticut, page 58.) 



466. a Bmpidonax traillii alnorum Brewst. Alder 

 Flycatcher. A rare summer resident ; found in the ex- 

 treme western part of Hampden and Hampshire counties. 



467. Bmpidonax minimus Baird. Least Fly- 

 catcher. Common summer re.sident. 



474. Otocoris alpestris (I/inn.). Horned Lark. A 

 rare .spring and autumn visitor. 



474. b Otocoris alpestris praticola Hensh. Prairie 

 Horned Lark. There is an old specimen in the Science 



