WARBLER. 209 



the body, the forehead, and sides round the eye, throat, breast, and 

 belly, yellow ; tips of the wing coverts, and lower belly white ; outer 

 tail feather white on the outer web. 



Found about New York, and other parts of North America, in 

 summer, departing in autumn. — M. Vieillot supposes this to be the 

 male of the Grey, or last Species. 



278— RUFOUS AND WHITE WARBLER. 



Le Roux et blanc, Voy. d 'Azara, iii. No. 231. 



LENGTH six inches and a half, breadth seven. Bill straight, 

 compressed, black, beneath blue; head and all above brown; but 

 the back, rump, and wing coverts incline to rufous; quills dusky 

 brown, with a crimson spot, occupying two-thirds of the breadth of 

 the web, near the base, but not seen on the four outer ones ; tail 

 much cuneiform, the two outer feathers shorter than the middle ones 

 by two lines; the latter are deep brown, the others crimson ; throat 

 yellow ; the under parts of the body dirty white ; sides and under 

 wing coverts rufous brown ; legs dusky. 



Common at Paraguay. 



279.— RUFOUS-NECKED WARBLER. 



La Gorge tricolor, Voy. d'Azara, iii. 229. 



LENGTH eight inches and three quarters. Bill slender, com- 

 pressed on the sides, nearly straight, the point a trifle bending, 

 colour dusky, beneath bluish; forehead brown, streaked with dusky; 

 top of the head crimson, with dusky streaks ; from the nostrils a 

 white one, nearly surrounding the eyes; sides, back of the head, and 

 neck, brown, with a dusky stripe down the middle ; back light 

 brown, streaked with black ; upper wing coverts and inner part of 



VOL. VII. E E 



