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The gray vireo (Vireo vicinior) is a small North American passerine bird.It breeds from the southwestern United States and northern Baja California to western Texas.It is a migrant, wintering in northwestern Mexico, in western Sonora state, and the southern Baja Peninsula in Baja California Sur; it remains all year only in Big Bend National Park in southwest Texas.
Vireo is a genus of small passerine birds restricted to the New World. Vireos typically have dull greenish plumage (hence the name, from Latin virere , "to be green"), but some are brown or gray on the back and some have bright yellow underparts.
The greater roadrunner is the state bird of New Mexico. This list of birds of New Mexico are the species documented in the U.S. state of New Mexico and accepted by the New Mexico Bird Records Committee (NMBRC). As of August 2022, 552 species were included in the official list. Of them, 176 are on the review list (see below), five species have been introduced to North America, and three have ...
Gray vireo, Vireo vicinior (n) Hutton's vireo, Vireo huttoni (n) Yellow-throated vireo, Vireo flavifrons; Cassin's vireo, Vireo cassinii; Blue-headed vireo, Vireo solitarius (A) Plumbeous vireo, Vireo plumbeus (n) Philadelphia vireo, Vireo philadelphicus (A) Warbling vireo, Vireo gilvus (n) Red-eyed vireo, Vireo olivaceus; Yellow-green vireo ...
Birds of the three valley regions of the Rio Grande−Rio Bravo — a river and its river valleys in the Southwestern United States and two states of Mexico. The three valley sections are: 1.) in central New Mexico (U.S.); 2.) along the border in southwestern Texas (U.S.) and northern Chihuahua (Mexico); and
Observers have commented on the vireo-like behaviour of the Pteruthius shrike-babblers, but apparently no-one suspected the biogeographically unlikely possibility of vireo relatives in Asia. Some recent taxonomic treatements, such as the IOC taxonomy followed here, include Pteruthius and Erpornis in Vireionidae, [ 7 ] [ 8 ] whereas other place ...
[7] [8] The white-eyed vireo is now placed in the genus Vireo was introduced in 1808 by the French ornithologist Louis Pierre Vieillot. [9] [10] The word vireo was used by Latin authors for a small green migratory bird, probably a Eurasian golden oriole but a European greenfinch has also been suggested. The specific epithet griseus is Medieval ...
The adult yellow-green vireo differs from the red-eyed vireo in its much yellower underparts, lack of a black border to the duller gray crown, yellower upperparts and different eye color. Some individuals are difficult to separate, even in the hand, from the similar red-eyed vireo , with which it is sometimes considered conspecific .