34 BIRDS OF SWOPE PARK 



The List— Section Number 5. 



Tufted Titmouse 10 Meadowlark 2 



Towhee 8 Blue-winged Warbler 2 



Cardinal 7 Kentucky Warbler 2 



Chickadee 6 Catbird 2 



Indigo Bunting 5 Blue-gray Gnatcatcher 2 



Field Sparrow 4 Bob White Quail 



Blue Jay 4 Red-headed Woodpecker 



American Crow 3 Kingbird 



Crested Flycatcher 3 Goldfinch 



Brown Thrasher 3 Maryland Yellowthroat 



Flicker 3 Yellow-breasted Chat 



Yellow-billed Cuckoo 2 Carolina Wren 



Downy Woodpecker 2 Wood Thrush 



Cowbird 2 



Total Species, 27; Male Birds 80 



Note : This tract was canvassed in the early morning of 

 June 7th. On that date I heard three Olive-backed Thrushes 

 singing their weirdly beautiful songs. They had delayed 

 their northward migration journey unusually long and this was 

 a surprisingly late date to find them in this region. The sex 

 instincts of the males had impelled them to begin their love 

 songs, and there was no mistaking the note, for when once 

 heard and learned, it is never forgotten. I had heard faint 

 undertone snatches of their songs before, but never so en- 

 ticingly thrilling as on this morning. I was carried away in 

 memory to a summer spent in the woods of the Great North- 

 west, where among the firs and hemlocks and canvas tents, I 

 learned to know and to love the indescribable notes of the 

 Russet-back Thrush, a western variety of our Olive-back. I 

 could recall no difference in the songs of the two birds. 



