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T H E P R A I R I E WARBLER.
SYLVIA DISCOLOR. VIEILL.
P L A T E X I V . MALE AND FEMALE.
T H I S little bird has no song, at least I never heard any from it, excepting
a delicate soft whir?", ejaculated whilst it stands erect on the top
of some rank weed or low bush. Its nest, which forms by far the most
interesting part of its history, is uncommonly small and delicate. Its
eggs I have uniformly found to be four in number, and of a white colour,
with a few brownish spots near the larger end. The nest is sometimes
attached to three or four blades of tall grass, or hangs between two small
sprigs of a slender twig. At first sight, it seems to be formed like that of
the Humming Bird, the external parts being composed of delicate grey
lichens and other substances, and skins of black caterpillars, and the interior
finished with the finest fibres of dried vines. Two broods are reared
each season.
In Louisiana I found this bird amongst our cotton fields, where it
easily procures the small insects and flies of which its food is entirely
composed. It is also found in the prairies along the skirts of the woodlands.
I have shot several within a few miles of Philadelphia, in the
Jerseys, in a large opening where the woods had been cut down, and were
beginning to spring up again. Its flight is light and short, it making
an effort to rise to the height of eight or ten yards, and immediately sinking
down to the grass or bushes. Whilst on the ground, where it remains
a good deal, it searches amongst the leaves slowly and carefully,
differing in this respect from all the true warblers with which I am acquainted.
They go singly, and far apart, scarcely more than three or
four being ever seen on an extent of twenty or thirty acres. It is one of
the first birds that arrives in spring in Louisiana, and one of the first to
depart, being rarely found after the first week of September. I never
saw it farther east than on the ridges of the Broad Mountain, about
twelve miles from Mauch Chunk; but I have seen it on the Arkansas
River, and high up on the Mississippi, as well as along the southern borders
of Lake Erie. The young are apt to leave the nest if discovered
when unable to fly, and follow their parents through the grass to be fed.
PRAIRIE WARBLER. 77
The plant on which a pair of Prairie Warblers are represented, is
commonly called Buffalo Grass, and is found all along the edges of our extensive
prairies, in the barrens of Kentucky, and in Louisiana, excepting
in the swamps, it being more inclined to grow in dry soil and stiff
grounds.
SYLVIA DISCOLOII, Ch. Bonaparte, Synops. of Birds of the United States, p. 8 3.
PRAIRIE WARBLER, SYLVIA MINUTA, Wils> Americ Ornith. voL iii. p. 87. Pl« 25.
fig. 4. Mai.
Adult Male. Plate XIV. Fig. 1.
Bill of ordinary length, slender, nearly straight, acute, as deep ;is
broad at the base, slightly declinate at the tip. Nostrils oval, basal, lateral,
half closed by a membrane. Head rather small, elongated. Neck
and body slender. Feet of ordinary length, slender ; tarsus longer than
the middle toe, covered anteriorly by a few scutella, the upper long; toes
scutellate above, the inner free, the hind toe of moderate size; claws slender,
compressed, acute, arched.
Plumage soft, blended, tufty. A few short bristles at the base of the
upper mandible. Wings of ordinary length, the second quill longest.
Tail longish, rounded.
Bill brown, paler at the margin. Iris dark hazel. Feet and claws
dark brown. The upper parts are light olive, the back spotted with
brownish-red. The under parts, a line over the eye, and the cheeks, dull
ochrey yellow, the sides of the neck and breast spotted with brownishblack.
Lore, and a curved streak under the eye, black. Quills and tailfeathers
deep brown, the former margined with pale yellow; larger coverts
margined and tipped with the same, the second row almost entirely
yellow, the three outer tail-feathers with a broad oblique band of white.
Length 5 inches, extent of wings 7 ; beak along the ridge along
the gap £ ; tarsus §, middle toe
Adult Female. Plate XIV. Fig. %
The female is nearly of the same size, and is coloured in the same
manner, but wants the black markings about the eye, and has only two
of the lateral tail-feathers white in the middle. The spots on the sides of
the neck and breast are also much paler.
Length 4|.