106 
NEW-YORK FAUNA — BIRDS. 
(EXTRA-LIMITAL.) 
S. pensilis. (Aud. Vol. 2, p. 32, pi. 79.) Slate-colored. Frontlet, lores and above the eye black ; 
throat and breast yellow; belly and line over the eye white. Wings and tail black, varied with 
white. Length, 54 inches. Southern States. 
S. tigrina. (Aud. Vol. 2, p. 69, pi. 98.) Yellow olive. Front, cheeks and sides of neck yellow; 
breast and belly pale yellow, streaked with dusky. Wings and tail dusky brown; the former 
bifasciate with white. Length, 5 inches. Virginia. Rare. 
S. occidentals. (Id. Vol. 2, p. 60, pi. 93.) Bluish grey. Head and cheeks yellow; head spotted 
with black; throat black. Female: throat dusky, spotted with black. Length, 3| inches. Texas 
and Columbia river. 
S. townsendi. (Id. Vol. 2, p. 59, pi. 92.) Greenish olive. Cheeks and throat black: a band over 
the eye, on the side of the neck, and fore part of the neck yellow. Beneath white. Length, 4^ 
inches. Texas and Columbia river. 
S. auduboni. (Id. Vol. 2, p. 26, pi. 77.) Bluish ash. Crown, rump, throat and sides of the body 
bright yellow; frontlet, cheeks and breast black. Length, 5b inches. Columbia river. 
S. rathbonia. (Id. Vol. 2, p. 53, pi. 89.) Generally yellow; slightly darker above. Length, 4^ 
inches. Mississippi. 
S. halseii. (Giraud, B. of Tex. plate.) Slate; white beneath. Forehead dusky: a spot of yellow 
at the base of the upper mandible. Cheeks brown; throat white: a broad streak of white over 
the eye, extending down the neck. Secondaries and coverts tipped with white. Length, 5 ‘0. Mr. 
Giraud suggests that this may prove to be the female of V. nigrescens of Townsend. Texas. 
S. olivacea. (Giraud, lb. plate.) Ashy grey. Head, throat, breast, neck and hind neck dull ochre; 
lore, and a broad patch behind the eye black. Wings with two white bands. Abdomen soiled 
white, tinged with greenish yellow. Length, 5 "4. Texas. 
GENUS WILSONIA. Bonaparte. 
Bill moderate, much broader than high. Upper mandible with its dorsal outline nearly straight, 
and very indistinctly notched. Bristles long, at the base of the bill. Tarsus with three 
scutellse beneath, blended above. Second or third quills longest. Tail rounded. 
Obs. This genus, which was first indicated by Bonaparte, and dedicated to the memory of 
the great pioneer in American ornithology, has since been very improperly given to the world 
under the new and less appropriate name of Myiodioctes. It comprises a few species 
detached from the great genus Sylvicola. 
