MNIOTILTIDiE — THE AMERICAN WABBLEE8. 145 



Dendroica pennsylvanica (Linn.) 



CHESTNUT-SIDED WAEBLER. 



MotacVla pennsylvanica Linn. S. N. ed. 12. i, 1760,333. 

 Sylvia pennsylvanica WiLS. Am. Orn. ii. 1810.99, pi. 14. fig. 5. 

 XlCHdroicapprinsyfranicnBAiRD, B.N.Am. 1858. 279; Cat. N.Am. B. IS-W. No. 200; Review, 



1865,191.— B. B. & E. Hist. N. Am. B. 1,1874,245, pi. IS.flgs. 7.8. 

 Dendrceca pennsylvanica ScL. & Sax,v,— Coues, Kny. 1872. 101; Check List, lS73,No. 83; 

 2d ed. 1882.No. 124; B. N. W. 1874,62; B. Col. Val. 1878.244.— RiDOW. Nom. N. Am. B. 

 1881, No. 99. 

 Molacilla icterocephala Linn. S. N. ed. 12,1,1766,3.34. 

 Sylvia icterocephala Lath.— AuD. Orn. Biog. 1,1832,306, pi. 59.— Ndtt. Man. 1,1832,380. 

 Sylvicola icterocephala Rich.— Aud. Synop. 1839,54; B. Am. ii, 1841, 35, pi. 81. 

 Hab. Eastern North America, breeding from northern United States northward into 

 British America. Winters in southewi Mexico, Honduras, Guatemala, and thence to 

 Panama; Bahamas. 



"Sp. Chab. Ma!e. Upper parts streaked with black and pale bluish gray, which be- 

 comes nearly white on the forepart of the back; the middle of the back glossed with 

 greenish yellow. The crown is continuous yellow, bordered by a frontal and superciliary 

 band, and behind by a square spot of white. Loral region black. sending off aline over 

 the eye, aiid another below it. Ear-coverts and lower eyelid and entire under parts pure 

 white ; a purpUsh chestnut stripe starting on each side in a line with the black mustache, 

 and extending back to the thighs. Wing- and tail-feathers dark brown, edged with bluish 

 gray, except the secondaries and tertials, which are bordered with light yellowish green. 

 The shoulders with two greenish white bands. Three outer tail-feathers with white 

 patches near the end of the inner webs. 



"Female like the male, except that the upper parts are yellowish green, streaked with 

 black; the black mustache scarcely appreciable. Length, 5.00; wing,2.50; tail, 2.20. 



"The young in autumn is very different from either male or 

 female in spring. The entire upper parts are of a continuous light 

 ohve-green ; the luider parts white ; the sides of the head, neck, 

 and breast ash-gray, shading insensibly into and tinging the white 

 of the chin and throat. No black streaks are visible above or on 

 the cheeks, and the eye is surrounded by a continuous ring of 

 white, not seen in spring. In this plumage it has frequently been 

 considered as a distinct species. 



"The male in this plumage may usually be distinguished from 

 the female by possessing a trace, or a distinct stripe, of chestnut 

 on the flanks, the young female at least lacking it." (Hist. N. Am. B.) 



Perhaps the prettiest of our Warblers, this elegant little bird is 

 usually, especially during the fall migration, one of the most abund- 

 ant. It breeds in the northern portion of the State, but how far 

 southward is not known. In June, 1871, the writer saw a pair in 

 the scrubby woods bordering Fox Prairie, in Ricliland county, at a 



time when all the summer residents were nesting; but they may 

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