Birds of Indiana. 1015 



To me it seems the most shiggisli of the Vireos. They begin their fall 

 migration early in September, sometimes as early as the first of that 

 month. Some years they are passing into October. The following 

 are the latest dates I have: Plymouth, Mich., September 10, 1894; 

 Chicago, 111., September 21, 1896; Xjafayette, Ind., September 2, 1896; 

 Bicknell, September 18, 1894; Brookville, October 13, 1887. 



Of 21 specimens examined, 7 had eaten caterpillars, among them 

 geometers; 7, beetles, among them weevils and buprestis; 3, grass- 

 hoppers; 2, moths; 2, heteropterons insects, among them leaf-hoppers; 

 3. dipterous insects (King, Geol. of AVis., I., p. 523). While they are 

 Nvith us, practically their whole food is insects. " 



251. (<!29). Vireo solitarius (Wils.). 



Bkie-headed Vireo. 

 Synonyms, Solitary Vireo, Solitary Greenlet. 



Details of strueture of Blue-headed Vireo. Natural size. 



Above, top and sides of head and nape, bluish-ash; back and upper 

 tail coverts, olive-green; wings and tail, blackish, edged with olive- 

 green, the former crossed with two whitish bars; line from nostril to 

 eye and ring around eye, white. Below, white; sides, greenish- 

 yellow. 



Length, 5.00-6.00; wing, 2.90-3.00; tail, 2.10-2.20. 



Eange. — Eastern North America, from Guatemala and Cuba north 

 to Hudson Bay and Mackenzie River (Ft. Simpson). Breeds from 

 Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Michigan, north. Winters from 

 Florida, soitth. 



Nest, pensile; in bush, five to eight feet up; of bark and fibres, 

 outside often decorated with lichens. Eggs, 3-4; white, wreathed 

 with chestnut or black spots about the larger end; .79 by .55. 



The Blue-headed Vireo is a regular migrant; some years it is com- 

 mon, others rare. In the WTiitewater Valley they frequent the 

 wooded hillsides- and upland woods, where they seem to prefer the 

 undergrowth rather tlian the trees. In southern Indiana they are 



