THE BIRD BOOK 
631b. Bermuda Vireo. Vireo griseus ber- 
mudianus. 
Range. — Bermudas. 
This variety is said to be slightly smaller and to have 
no yellow on the sides. Its eggs are probably the same as 
those of the others. 
63 lc. Small White-eyed Vireo. Vireo griseus 
micrus. 
Range. — Eastern Mexico north to southern Texas. 
Said to be slightly smaller and grayer than the common 
White-eyed Vireo. Its eggs will not differ. 
632. Hutton’s Vireo. Vireo liuttoni huttoni. 
Range.— Resident on the California coast; chiefly in 
the southern parts. 
A similar species to noveboracensis but 
with the under parts tinged with yellow. 
These birds are quite common but shy, nest- 
ing at any height from the ground in open 
woods or groves; the nests are made of 
grasses and moss and swung from forked 
limbs; the three or four eggs are pure white, 
finely specked with reddish brown. Size .70 x .50. 
White 
632a. Stephen’s Vireo. Vireo huttoni stephensi. 
Range. — Northwestern Mexico and the boundary of the United States. 
This variety, which is more yellowish than the last, appears to be rather un- 
common but as far as I can learn its habits and nesting do not differ from those 
of the other Vireos; the eggs are white, specked with brown. Size .70 x .50. 
632c. Anthony’s Vireo. Vireo huttoni obscurus. 
Range.- — Pacific coast from Oregon (and Cal. in winter) 
to British Columbia. 
The nesting habits and eggs of this darker and smaller 
variety are the same in all respects as those of the Hutton’s 
Vireo. 
633. Bell’s Vireo. Vireo belli belli. 
Range. — Interior of the United States, breeding from 
Texas to Minnesota and Dakota. 
The nesting habits of this smaller species 
are just the same as those of the larger va- 
rieties, they suspending their small grass- 
woven baskets in the forks of bushes or 
trees and usually at a low elevation. Their 
nests are handsome and compact little struc- 
tures, being often made almost wholly of 
strips of bark lined with very fine grasses. The eggs are 
white, specked with reddish brown. Size .70 x .50. Data. 
— Austin, Texas, June 16, 1898. Nest of strips of bark, 
fibres and grasses, neatly woven and swung from the fork 
of a low bush, 2 feet from the ground. 
White 
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