11 



Olive-sided Flycatcher. 

 Yellow-bellied Flycatcher. 

 Traill's Flycatcher. 

 Rusty Blackbird. 

 Bronzed Crackle. 

 Nelson's Sharp-tailed Sparrow. 

 Acadian Sharp-tailed Sparrow. 

 White-crowned Sparrow. 

 Lincoln's Sparrow. 

 Fox Sparrow. 

 Philadelphia Vireo. 

 Blue-headed Vireo. 

 Nashville Warbler. 

 Tennessee Warbler. 

 Cape May Warbler. 

 Black-throated Blue Warbler. 

 Myrtle Warbler. 



Magnolia Warbler. 

 Bay-breasted W T arbler. 

 Black-poll Warbler. 

 Blackburnian Warbler. 

 Black-throated Green Warbler. 

 Yellow Palm Warbler. 

 Water-Thrush. 

 Connecticut W'arbler. 

 Mourning Warbler. 

 Wilson's Warbler. 

 Canadian Warbler. 

 Titlark. 



Ruby-crowned Kinglet. 

 Gray-cheeked Thrush. 

 Bicknell's Thrush. 

 Swainson's Thrush. 

 Hermit Thrush. 



VII. Irregular Transient Visitants. These birds occur irreg- 

 ularly during the migrations. With certain exceptions they are 

 birds of the interior and breed in the northern United States and 

 British Provinces. Their regular line of migration is down the 

 Mississippi Valley, and their occurrence on the Atlantic coast is 

 more or less infrequent. Here are also included species formerly 

 common near New York but now practically extinct within our 

 -limits, where, however, they are sometimes found. 



LIST OF IRREGULAR TRANSIENT VISITANTS. 



Least Tern. 



Black Tern. 



Mallard. 



Gadwall. 



American Widgeon. 



Shoveller. 



Canvas-back. 



Ring-necked Duck. 



Greater Snow Goose. 



Blue Goose. 



American White-fronted Goose. 



Hutchins's Goose. 



Black Brant. 



Whistling Swan. 



Wilson's Phalarope. 



American Avocet. 

 Baird's Sandpiper. 

 Marbled Godwit. 

 Hudsonian Godwit. 

 Buff-breasted Sandpiper. 

 Long-billed Curlew. 

 Belted Piping Plover. 

 Passenger Pigeon. 

 Golden Eagle. 

 Pileated Woodpecker. 

 Raven. 



Loggerhead Shrike. 

 Orange-crowned Warbler. 

 Palm Warbler. 

 Grinnell's Water-Thrush. 



VIII. Accidental Visitants. The homes of the birds included 

 'in this class are so far removed from our boundaries that their 

 presence here at any time can be considered only as purely acci- 



