182 BIRDS OF OHIO. 



passing north. It returns early in September and remains 

 until the last week of the month. 



253. (660.) Dendroica castanea (Wils.). 45. 



Bay-breasted Warbler. 



Synonyms: Dendroeca castanea, Sylvia castanea, Sylvicola cas- 

 tanea. 

 Bay-breast. 

 Kirtland, Ohio Geol. Surv., 1838, 163, 181. 



Apparently this warbler is not well enough known to 

 make any statements of its spring migrations reliable. In 

 Lorain county it is fairly common every spring, and usually 

 more numerous in the autumn. That seems to be the gen- 

 eral verdict, except that in many places the species is not 

 at all common. The whole warbler group is perhaps less 

 known by the average bird student than any other. The 

 reason for this lack of acquaintance is not easy to explain, 

 because the usually bright patchy coloring of these birds 

 makes them somewhat conspicuous. Their small size and 

 arboreal habits, and the difficulty of detecting them among 

 the foliage, doutbless contribute largely to the difficulties. 



This is among the later arrivals in spring, not appearing 

 in Lorain county before May 5, generally, and has gone 

 northward by the 23d. In its southward migrations it 

 reaches Ohio about the middle of August, and tarries in the 

 southern counties until the middle of October. 



254. (661.) Dendroica striata (Forst.). 46. 



Black-poll Warbler. 



Synonyms: Dendroeca striata, Sylvia striata, Sylvicola striata, 

 Muscicapa striata. 

 Black-poll. 



Kirtland, Ohio Geol. Surv., 1838, 163, 182. 



This warbler arrives even a little later in spring than the 

 Bay-breast, and is frequently associated with it. Judging 

 from the reports it is a little more numerous in spring and 

 fully so in the autumn. Fall specimens of these two warb- 

 lers are so nearly alike that one not well acquainted with 



