392 KINQLETS AND GNATCATCHERS. 



known species are found in the New World ; (3) the PolioptilincB, or 

 Gnatoatohers, an American group containing about fifteen species, 

 three of which are found in the United States. 



The Kinglets and Gnatcatchers are active little birds, and con- 

 stantly flit from limb to limb in their search for food. They are pos- 

 sessed of decided character, build remarkably beautiful nests, and some 

 species are noteworthy songsters. 



KEY TO THE SPEOIBa. 



A. With a bright-colored crest. 



0. Crest ruby, without black . . 749. EtrBY-OBOWNED Kinglet (Ad. i ). 



1. Crest yellow, or orange and yellow, bordered by black. 



748. GOLDEN-OBOWKED KiNOLET. 



B. Without a colored crest. 



a. Back ashy blue ; outer tail-feathers white. 



751. BLnE-GBAY Gnatcatcher. 

 h. Back olive-green ; no white in tail. Kuby-cbowned Kinglet ( s and im.). 



748. Begulus satraipa. lAcht. Golden-oeowned Kinglet. AcL. i . 

 — Center of crown bright reddish orange, bordered by yellow and black ; a 

 whitish line over the eye ; rest of upper parts olive-green ; wings and tail 

 fuscous, margined with olive-green ; tail slightly 

 forked ; under parte soiled whitish. Ad. 9 . — Sim- 

 ilar, but crown without orange, ite center bright 

 yellow, bordered on either side by black. L., 4'07 ; 

 W., 2-14; T.,l-7o; B., -28. 



Bange. — North America ; breeds from the 

 northern United States northward, and southward 

 along the Kockies into Mexico, and in the Alle- 



„ ..,„,, J ghanies to North Carolina; winters from the 



Fio. 115. -Golden-crowned ., t •.. *■ ■.. u j- ^ ^t ^ ,^ 



Kinglet. (Natural size.) southern limit ol its breeding range to the Gulf 



States. 



Washington, abundant W. V., Oct. 5 to Apl. 27. Sing Sing, common 

 W. v., Sept. 20 to Apl. 28. Cambridge, very common T. V., common W. V., 

 Sept. 20 to Apl. 25. 



Jffest., generally pensile, of green mosses, lined with fine strips of soft inner 

 bark, fine black rootlets, and feathers, in coniferous trees, six to sixty feet 

 from the ground, l^ggs, nine to ten, creamy white to muddy cream-color, 

 speckled and blotched with pale wood-brown, and, rarely, faint lavender, 

 •55 X -44. (See Brewster, Auk, v, 1888, p. 337.) 



This Kinglet resembles in habits its JRuby-orowned cousin, with 

 which during the migrations it is frequently associated. Its notes, 

 however, are quite unlike those of that species, its usual call-note being 

 a fine, high ti-ti, audible only to practiced ears. In his extended ac- 

 count of the nesting habits of this species, as observed by him in 

 Worcester County, Mass. (Auk, I. c), Mr. Brewster writes that its song 

 " begins with a succession of five or six fine, shrill, high-pitched, some- 



