62 YELLOW-THROATED WARBLER 



Most of them soon pass on north or into the coun- 

 try, but some always remain to nest in the parks and 

 gardens of the city. They build in shrubbery or in 

 the smaller trees, and the nest is usually in an upright 

 fork. Fine grasses and plant-down are the choice 

 materials used, very compactly woven together. The 

 eggs, 4 to 5, are bluish white, thickly speckled with 

 brown. 



In the country these Warblers are frequently im- 

 posed upon by the Cowbird, but they show great 

 ingenuity in getting rid of the obnoxious egg by 

 building a second story to their nest, thus covering it 

 out of sight. 



Yellow Warblers are among our most useful bird 

 citizens, for besides winged-insects they eat canker- 

 worms, spiders, plant-lice and small beetles. 



Yellow-throated Warbler: Dendroica dom'mica. 



Length 5^4 inches. 



Upper parts gray; a yellow line in front of the eye and a 

 white line over it. 



Forehead and cheeks black; white patch on side of the 

 neck; two white wing-bars. 



Throat and breast yellow; belly white, sides streaked with 

 black. 



A rare summer resident, sometimes common in late July; 

 winters in the tropics. 



This handsome Warbler frequents woods that bor- 

 der streams, but he is a southern bird and is seldom 

 seen as far north as this. His song is said to 

 resemble that of the Indigo-bird. 



The nest is high in trees, often in pines. The eggs, 

 4 to 5, are thickly speckled with brown. 



