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This warbler, like most others, is nervous and quick while foraging. It creeps along branches and is found at all levels. It is solitary while nesting, but forms mixed flocks after breeding. The Tennessee warbler prefers coniferous forests, mixed conifer-deciduous forests, early successional woodlands and boreal bogs. It makes a cup-shaped nest ...
†Bachman's warbler. Vermivora bachmanii (Audubon, 1833) Formerly southeast United States and wintering in Cuba: Size: Habitat: Diet: EX Blue-winged warbler. Vermivora cyanoptera Olson & Reveal, 2009: southern Ontario and the eastern United States: Size: Habitat: Diet: LC Golden-winged warbler. Vermivora chrysoptera Linnaeus, 1766
Leiothlypis is a genus of New World warbler, formerly classified within the genus Oreothlypis or Vermivora.. The genus was introduced by the Dutch ornithologist George Sangster in 2008 with the Tennessee warbler (Leiothlypis peregrina) as the type species.
The Nashville warbler (Leiothlypis ruficapilla) is a small songbird in the New World warbler family, found in North and Central America. It breeds in parts of the northern and western United States and southern Canada, and migrates to winter in southern California and Texas , Mexico, and the north of Central America.
Swainson's warbler American redstart. Order: Passeriformes Family: Parulidae. The wood-warblers are a group of small and often colorful passerine birds restricted to the New World. Most are arboreal, but some, like the ovenbird and the two waterthrushes, are more terrestrial. Most members of this family are insectivores.
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Based on these results, the ornithologists Edward Dickinson and Leslie Christidis in the fourth edition of Howard and Moore Complete Checklist of the Birds of the World, chose to split the genus and moved most of the species into a resurrected genus Curruca retaining only the Eurasian blackcap and the garden warbler in Sylvia.
The family Sylviidae has undergone several revisions since the above phylogeny was published. As of August 2024, the International Ornithological Committee (IOC) recognizes these 32 species divided among two genera: [10] This list is presented according to the IOC taxonomic sequence and can also be sorted alphabetically by common name and binomial.