MNIOTILTID^E. CLXXIII. 299 



bb. Throat yellow or white; ear coverts olive or ashy above, pale below. 



963. H. pinus * (L.). BLUE-WINGED YELLOW WARBLER. 

 Olive green ; crown and all under parts bright yellow ; wing 

 bars whitish ; loral strip black ; 9 similar. L. 4. W. 2J. 

 T. 2, E. U. S., N. to N. Y ; a handsome bird, like a miniature 

 Protonotaria. (Lat., pine.) 



aa. Tail feathers without white; no wing bars. 



964. H. peregrina (Wilson). TENNESSEE WARBLER. Olive 

 green ; head more or less ashy and without crown patch ; white or 

 slightly yellowish below. L. 4. W. 2f. T. If. N. Am., rare 

 E. of Ohio ; closely resembles the young of the two following, but 

 its wings are nearly half longer than the short tail ; celat a has no 

 ashy on head, and rujicapilla is yellower below. 



965. H. celata (Say). ORANGE-CROWNED WARBLER. Olive 

 green, never ashy on head ; crown patch orange brown, more or 

 less concealed ; greenish yellow below ; 9 duller, sometimes without 

 crown patch, known from the next by the more olive color of the 

 head, which is similar to the back ; belly less yellow. L. 4|. W. 

 2J. T. 2. N. Am. ; rare E. (Lat., concealed.) 



966. H. ruficapilla (Wilson). NASHVILLE WARBLER. Olive 

 green, ashy on head and neck, the color contrasting with back ; 

 crown patch bright chestnut, more or less concealed ; bright yellow 

 below ; lores and orbital ring pale ; 9 duller, crown patch obscure. 

 L. 4f W. 2. T. 2. E. N. Am., common. (Lat., rufus, red ; 

 capillus, hair.) 



512. COMPSOTHLYFIS Cabanis. (Parula Bonaparte ; changed 

 on account of the earlier Parulus.) (KO/T^OS, comely ; OXvnis, 

 a little bird or warbler.) 



967. C. americana (L.). BLUE YELLOW-BACKED WARBLER. 



Clear ashy blue ; back with a large golden green patch ; yellow be- 

 low, belly white ; a brown band across breast ; white wing bars ; 

 tail feathers with white ; 9 obscurely marked. L. 4|. W. 2J. T. 2. 

 E. N. Am., not rare ; very elegant. 



513. DENDROICA Gray. (Sei/8pop, tree ; oiVeo), I inhabit.) 

 A large genus comprising about 30 species of brightly colored 

 little birds, very abundant in the United States during the migra- 



1 H. Uucobronchialis (Brewster). Ashy gray ; throat and lower parts white ; wing 

 bands yellow or white; variable. E. U. S., not common; now considered as probably 

 a white phase of H. pinus, as H. lawrencei is a yellow phase of cfa-ysoptera. It is 

 further thought that the two species in both yellow and white condition hybridize. 

 (AeuKos, white ; /Spoyxos, throat.) 



H. cincinnatiensis Langdon. Olive green, lores and part of ear coverts black ; 

 spot below eye and entire lower parts yellow. Cincinnati ; now regarded, as a hybrid 

 of H. pinus and Geothlypis formosus. (See Ridgway, N. Am. Birds, p. 486.) 



