Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Tennessee warbler has long wings, short tail and a thin, pointy bill. Juveniles and first-year birds are quite similar to the female. In winter and fall, adult male resembles juvenile and spring adult female but shows more yellow below: the grey neck and crown turn into an olive green while the underside takes a yellow hue.
The mourning warbler (Geothlypis philadelphia) is a small songbird of the New World warbler family. Mourning warblers are native to eastern and central North America as well as some countries in Central America. [2] They are neotropical migrants and tend to be found in dense second growth forests. [3]
The blackpoll warbler (Setophaga striata) is a New World warbler. Breeding males are mostly black and white. Breeding males are mostly black and white. They have a prominent black cap, white cheeks, and white wing bars.
Wilson's warbler is an insectivore, feeding primarily on insects gleaned from leaves and twigs, or caught by flycatching. [14] Some of these insects include beetles, bees, or caterpillars. Wilson's warbler is an active forager, moving rapidly through shrubs, on the ground, and sometimes in taller trees during the winter. [12]
Adult Kentucky warblers are mostly an olive-green in color on their back and nape, and a brilliant yellow below from their throat to their belly. They have a small tinge of black on their crown, and a large black mask with a yellow pattern that runs from the beak and encircles the eyes, resembling a pair of spectacles .
The two families of American warblers are part of another superfamily, which unites them with New World sparrows, buntings, finches, etc. "New World warblers", formerly all in the family Parulidae: Olive warbler, in the monotypic family Peucedramidae; New World warblers, remaining in the family Parulidae
Blackburnian warbler Blackburnian Warbler (1st winter) Rancho Naturalista Baja - Costa Rica. Blackburnian warblers are small passerines and average-sized wood-warblers. They measure around 11 to 13 cm (4.3 to 5.1 in) long, with a 20 to 22 cm (7.9 to 8.7 in) wingspan, and weigh 8 to 13 g (0.28 to 0.46 oz).
Bay-breasted warblers breed in the boreal spruce-fir forests of eastern and central Canada, as well as the extreme northern United States. [3] The species winters in the wet lowland forests of northeastern South America, the Caribbean, and southern Central America, and may be seen during spring and fall migration across the eastern half of the United States in a variety of vegetative communities.