6. THE BLACK-THROATED GREEN WARBLER |
Length: About 5 inches. Male: Olive-green above; dull black patch below eye, encircled with a broad rim of yellow; throat and breast black, becoming yellowish-white on the belly; sides streaked with black; wings with two whitish bars; tail with outer feathers largely white. Female: Similar to male; black of throat and breast mottled with yellow, streaks on sides less conspicuous. Song: An insect-like trill, zee-zee? ze-ze-zee? Habitat: Coniferous woods preferably. Range: North America, from central Canada to northern Ohio and Long Island and in the Alleghany Mts., to Georgia and South Carolina; winters from Mexico to Panama. For three summers I heard the persistent buzzing of this little Black-throat in the Maine woods before I was able to catch more than a fleeting glimpse of him. He is very shy and elusive. An opportunity to see this beautiful little jeweled bird at close range is an event to bird-lovers. He is an industrious gleaner of small insects from dark pine and spruce forests.
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