FAM. Vn. WOOD WARBLERS 



81 



with -white wing bars and belly. This bird generally has a 

 darkish, more or less reddish band across the breast. The 

 greenish-yellow of the back forms a central patch. The female 

 sometimes lacks the dark-reddish breast band. (Blue Yellow- 

 backed Warbler.) 



Length, 4| ; wing 



(2}-2|) ; tail, 1|; culraen, |. United States 



from tlie Plains eastward, north to Canada ; breeding throughout, and 

 wintering from 6ul£ States south to eastern Mexico and West Indies. 

 Sennett's Warbler (649. Compsdthlypis nigrilbra), o£ western Texas, 

 southward, is a similar bird, but the parula has a white spot on each 

 eyelid, which is lacking in Sennett's warbler ; and in front of the eyes 

 (lores) of the parula there is a dusky spot. In Sennett's warbler this 

 spot is intensely black, and this black crosses the front of the head just 

 above the bill. 



12. Cape May Warbler (660. Dendroica tigrlna). — ■ This is a 

 rare but beautiful warbler, with black-streaked, olive-green 

 back, chestnut cheeks, black crown, and yellow rump; the 

 under parts are yellow, heavily streaked with black, but 

 changing to white 

 on the crissum. The 

 wing coverts form a 

 large white patch, 

 and the under tail 

 feathers have white 

 patches near the tips 

 on the inner webs. 

 The female lacks the 

 white wing patch, 

 but has a narrow, 

 white wing bar ; the 

 back is somewhat 

 grayish, the rump less yellow, but there is a yellow line over 

 the eye. The young female has almost no yellow below. This 

 is a warbler of the tree tops. 



Length, 6^ ; wing, 2} (2|-2J) ; tail, 2; culmen, f. North America 

 from the Plains eastward, north to Hudson Bay Territory; breeding 

 from northern New England northward, and wintering in the West Indies. 

 apgar's bikds. — 6 



Cape May Warbler 



