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THE GREEN BLACK-CAPPED FLYCATCHER.
MUSCÍCAPA WILSONII.
P L A T E C X X I V . M A L E A N D F E M A L E .
THIS species passes rapidly through the United States on its way to
the Northern Districts, where it breeds and spends the summer. WILSON
saw only a few specimens, which he met with in the lower parts of Delaware
and New Jersey, and supposed it to be an inhabitant of the Southern
States, where, however, it is never found in the summer months. It is
not rare in the State of Maine, and becomes more abundant the farther
north we proceed. I found it in Labrador and all the intermediate
districts. It reaches that country early in June, and returns southward
by the middle of August.
It has all the habits of a true Flycatcher, feeding on small insects,
which it catches entirely on the wing, snapping its bill with a smart clicking
sound. It frequents the borders of the lakes, and such streams as
are fringed with low bushes, from which it is seen every moment sallying
forth, pursuing its insect prey for many yards at a time, and again throwing
itself into its favourite thickets.
The nest is placed on the extremity of a small horizontal branch,
amongst the thick foliage of dwarf firs, not more than from three to five
feet from the ground, and in the centre of the thickets of these trees so
common in Labrador. The materials of which it is composed are bits
of dry moss and delicate pine twigs, agglutinated together and to the
branches or leaves around it, and beneath which it is suspended, with a
lining of extremely fine and transparent fibres. The greatest diameter
does not exceed 3^ inches, and the depth is not more than Ijt. The eggs
are four, dull white, sprinkled with reddish and brown dots towards the
larger end, where the markings form a circle, leaving the extremity plain.
The parents shew much uneasiness at the approach of any intruder,
skipping about and around among the twigs and in the air, snapping
their bill, and uttering a plaintive note. They raise only one brood in
the season. The young males shew their black cap as soon as they are
fully fledged, and before their departure to the south. The head of the
GREEN BLACK-CAPPED FLYCATCHER. 149
young females is at first of the same tint as the back, but I could not
ascertain if they acquire their full colour the first autumn.
I found these birds abundant in Newfoundland, but perceived that
they had already begun to migrate, on the 20th of August; they were
moving from bush to bush, and seldom flew farther than thirty or forty
yards at a time; yet when crossing the arms of the Gulf of St Lawrence,
they are obliged to fly forty miles or more without alighting. The little
Winter Wren must perform the same task, it being found in the same
countries, to which some individuals travel from the United States. I
observed the Green Black-capped Flycatcher in considerable numbers, in
the northern parts of Maine, in October 1832, and concluded that the
individuals seen must have come from a great distance.
M U S C Í C A P A W I L S O N I I .
S Y L V I A W I L S O N I I , Ch. Bonaparte, Svnops. of Birds of the United States, p. 86.
G R E E N B L A C K - C A P T F L Y C A T C H E R , M U S C Í C A P A P U S I L L A , Wils. Amer. Ornith.
voL iii. p. 103. pi. 26. fig. 4.
G R E E N B L A C K - C A P T W A R B L E R , Nuttall, Manual, vol. i. p. 408.
Adult Male. Plate CXXIV. Fig. 1.
Bill short, straight, conical, depressed at the base, compressed towards
the end, the tip acute; upper mandible slightly convex in its dorsal line,
the sides convex, the edges sharp ; lower mandible straight along the
back, the sides convex. Nostrils basal, oval, half covered by the bristly
feathers of the forehead. Head of ordinary size, neck short, body compact,
rather slender. Feet of ordinary length, slender; tarsus compressed,
covered anteriorly with a few long scutella, sharp behind, longer than
the middle toe; toes free, scutellate above ; claws arched, slender, much
compressed, acute.
Plumage soft and blended, slightly glossed; short but distinct bristles
at the base of the upper mandible. Wings short, the second quill longest.
Tail rather long, even, of twelve rounded feathers.
Bill light-brown. Iris hazel. Feet flesh-coloured. Back, rump,
and upper tail-coverts olive-green; crown black, bordered on the forehead
and over the eyes with a broad band of bright yellow. Wings and
tail dusky, the feathers margined with green, the tips of the first row of
small coverts and of the secondary coverts pale greenish-grey. The sides
of the neck greenish-grey, the lower parts in general bright yellow.