/gf 



258 Bulletin No. 



Dedham, about 1868 (Ptirdie, Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, III, 1878, 

 146). It is recorded as an accidental visitor to Connecticut 

 (Mcrriam, Rev. Bds. Conn., 1877, 17). 



*301. Dendroica virens. BLACK-THROATED GREEN WAR- 

 BLER. Common summer resident. 



*302. Dendroica vigorsii. PINE WARBLER. Common sum- 

 mer resident. Occasionally stays in winter (Framingham, Hogg, 

 Journ. Boston Zool. Soc., I, 25 ; Duxbury, Dec. 1882, Brewster, 

 Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, VIII, 1883, 120). 



[303.] Dendroica palmarum. PALM WARBLER. Rare. 

 Brookline, Oct., 1878 (Deane, Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, IV, 1879, 60, 

 186) ; Cambridge, Sept. 13, 1880, and Belmont, Sept. 7, 1881 

 (Spelman, ibid., VII, 1882, 54), and Sept. 29, 1883 (Lamb, Journ. 

 Boston Zool. Soc., II, 1883, 55). 



303#. Dendroica palmarum hypochrysea. YELLOW PALM 

 WARBLER. Abundant spring and autumn migrant ; a few have 

 been observed at favorable localities in winter. 



*304. Dendroica discolor. PRAIRIE WARBLER. Common 

 summer resident near the seaboard ; less common in the interior. 



*305. Seiurus aurocapillus. GOLDEN-CROWNED THRUSH. 

 Abundant summer resident. 



*306. Seiurus noveboracensis. WATER-THRUSH. Rather 

 common spring and autumn migrant. Some remain in summer, 

 and it is recorded as breeding near Boston (Brewer, Hist. N. 

 Am. Birds, I, 1874, 285). 



[307.] Seiurus motacilla. LOUISIANA WATER-THRUSH. 

 Rare or accidental. One record of its capture (Mount Tom, 

 April 28, 1869, Allen, Am. Nat., Ill, 1870, 5^7). It has been found 

 breeding near Norwich, Conn. (Ingersoll, Am. Nat., VIII, 238), and 

 at Saybrook in the same State (Sage, Orn. and Ool., VII, 1882, 

 145). Merriam gives it as "not rare in Southern Connecticut, 

 where it breeds regularly, and probably in considerable numbers " 

 (Rev. Bds. Conn., 1877, 20). It has been taken also at Lake 

 George, N. Y., May 16, 1881 (Fisher, Bull. Nutt. Orn. Club, VI, 

 1 88 1, 245), and in Rhode Island (Deane, ibid., V, 1880, 116; 

 Jencks, Orn. and Ool., VII, 1882, 114). 



