14 MIGRATION OF WARBLERS 



Peucedramus, i species, Guatemala, Mexico, southern Arizona 

 and New Mexico. 



Dendroica, 34 species, South America, Central America, Mexico, 

 West Indies, North America. 



Catharopeza, i species, West Indies. 



Oporornis, 4 species, North America. 



Seiurus, 3 species, North America. 



Teretistris, 2 species, West Indies. 



Leucopeza, i species, West Indies. 



Microligea, i species, West Indies. 



Geothlypis, 19 species, South America from Argentina north to 

 Central America, Mexico, Bahamas, and North America. 



Chamcethlypis, 2 species, Mexico, Texas. 



Icteria, i species, North America and Mexico. 



Granatellus, 4 species, South America, Central America and 

 Mexico. 



Wilsonia, 3 species, North America. 



Cardellina, i species, Mexico, Arizona and New Mexico. 



Setophaga, 2 species, North America, Mexico, Guatemala. 



Myioborus, 12 species, South America, Central America, Mexico. 



Euthlypis, i species, Central America, Mexico. 



Basileuterus, 32 species, South America north to Central 

 America, and Mexico. 



Ergaticus, 2 species, Central America, Mexico. 



Certhidea, 9 species, Galapagos Archipelago. 



Rhodinocichla, 2 species, Northern South America to Mexico. 



MIGRATION OF WARBLERS 



BY W. W. COOKE 



Scarcely a Warbler in the United States remains through the 

 winter in the vicinity of its nesting site, while most of the North 

 American members of this family travel many hundreds, or even 

 thousands of miles, to their winter home. Among the few exceptions 

 are a small number of Florida Yellow-throats (Geothlypis trichas 

 ignota} that are resident throughout the year in Florida and southern 

 Georgia, and also a few of the western form of the Orange-crowned 

 Warbler (Vermivora c. sordida) resident on the Santa Barbara Islands, 

 California. 



The Pine Warbler has one of the shortest of Warbler migration 

 routes, for it does not pass farther south in winter than the southern 



