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Topic: Yellow rumped Warbler


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In the News (Wed 19 Nov 08)

  
 Warblers
Yellow-rumped Warblers certainly would not be expected to do as well in Clearcuts, where they were frequently detected, but the relationship between tree retention levels and reproductive success needs to be studied.
Yellow Warblers were detected on 101, 74, and 57 of the points in the three years, respectively.
Townsend's Warblers were detected primarily in the westernmost part of the region on 614, 611, and 599 of the points in the three years, respectively, primarily in the coniferous forest cover types.
biology.dbs.umt.edu /landbird/warbler.htm

  
 Yellow-rumped Warbler
Palm Warblers and Magnolia Warblers also have yellow rumps, although they are not as bright and contrasting as the Yellow-rumped Warbler's.
Yellow-rumped Warbler song and calls were recorded by Arthur A. Allen, Peter Paul Kellogg, and Charles A. Sutherland and are included on the Peterson Field Guide to Eastern/Central Bird Songs.
Until recently, the Yellow-rumped Warbler was considered to be two separate but closely related species: Myrtle Warbler and Audubon's Warbler.
birds.cornell.edu /BOW/YERWAR

  
 eNature.com Nature Guides
Until recently, the eastern and western populations of the Yellow-rumped Warbler were thought to be two distinct species, respectively the "Myrtle Warbler" and "Audubon's Warbler." However, it has been found that in the narrow zone where the ranges of the two come together, the birds hybridize freely.
Yellow-rumped Warblers are vivid and conspicuous birds that search for food both high and low in Douglas firs or pines.
In the East, the "Myrtle Warbler" is an abundant migrant, and the only warbler that regularly spends the winter in the northern states.
www.enature.com /flashcard/show_flash_card.asp?recordNumber=BD0354

  
 All About Birds
The Yellow-rumped Warbler is the only warbler able to digest the waxes found in bayberries and wax myrtles.
The Yellow-rumped Warbler is one of the most common warblers in North America.
Although other warblers have yellow rumps, none are as conspicuous as consistently as this species.
www.birds.cornell.edu /programs/AllAboutBirds/BirdGuide/Yellow-rumped_Warbler_dtl.html

  
 Warbler Watch: Yellow-rumped Warbler
An early spring migrant Yellow-rumped Warblers arrive at their breeding grounds by late April.
The "Audubon’s Warbler" has bluish gray head, broken eye-ring, and black chest and sides with yellow on flanks.
The Eastern "Myrtle Warbler" has a white throat, while the western "Audubon’s Warbler" has a yellow.
www.birdsource.org /warblers/species/yerwar

  
 BISON Species Account 042450
Yellow-rumped warblers of Fort Bliss are fairly common from the middle of September to the middle of April, common from the middle of April to the beginning of May, and are fairly common from the beginning of May to the middle of May *94*.
The yellow-rumped warbler (Audubon's form) was listed as a common transient (spring and fall) in the Sandia and Manzanita Mountains, within the Cibola National Forest (Bernalillo County).
ARIZONA Yellow-rumped Warblers have been seen during the Spring, Fall, and Winter; though their abundance is common at the Coronado National Memorial NP (NPS,1985) *97*.
www.fw.vt.edu /fishex/nmex_main/species/042450.htm

  
 Yellow-Rumped Warbler
This bird, formerly known as the "Audubon's Warbler", is very abundant in our area during the winter months.
Female is a duller gray with less intense yellow.
No wonder it's the most widespread and best known of all the warblers.
www.bird-friends.com /BirdPage.php?name=Yellow-Rumped%20Warbler

  
 Birders Watch, Friday May 31, 2002
The Yellow Warbler prefers shrubby, second-growth areas and can be found close to human habitats like garden shrubbery and thickets while the Yellow-rumped Warbler habituates the deeper mixed forests.
The Yellow-rumped Warbler earned the name of Myrtle Bird (then later Myrtle Warbler) because of its fondness for Bayberries, which were formerly known as Myrtle Wax berries.
Yellow-rumps are the first of the warblers to arrive in the spring and next to Yellow warblers, are the most abundant in numbers.
www.tier.net /natureclub/bw053102.html

  
 Yellow-Rumped Warbler
The best way to locate yellow-rumped warblers is to look for a wooded patch in late April, through which you can slowly creep, searching the branches with a good set of binoculars.
Yellow-rumped warblers show up in North Dakota between mid-April and early May. They are abundant and often found in shelterbelts and other open, wooded areas.
Yellow-rumped is the name given a warbler once known as two separate species.
www.npwrc.usgs.gov /resource/1998/closlook/yellwarb.htm

  
 Nearctica - Natural History - Birds of Eastern North America - Warblers - Yellow-rumped Warbler
The immature of the Cape May Warbler is very similar to that of the Yellow-rumped Warbler, but the yellow rump patch is less conspicuous and the back is not as strongly streaked with black.
Habitat: The Yellow-rumped Warbler breeds in a variety of coniferous and deciduous woods.
The most significant difference between the two populations is the breeding male's yellow throat in the "Audubon's Warbler" and the white throat of the "Myrtle Warbler".
www.nearctica.com /birds/warbler/Dcoro.htm

  
 yellow rumped warbler madspedersen.com
Yellow Rumped Warbler by Donald L. Cohen ( w) is permanently archived at this url.
www.madspedersen.com /exhibition.php?function=largearchive&photoid=309

  
 Yellow Rumped Warbler
This is a yellow rumped warbler, also known as a myrtle warbler.
www.jfoo.org /yrwarbler.shtml

  
 Warblers
The Yellow-rumped Warbler is well named, as one of its distinguishing features is its bright yellow rump.
The second has a yellow throat and was known as the Audubon Warbler.
The female may not have yellow patches on her head and the sides of her breast.
www.royalbcmuseum.bc.ca /programs/songbirds/warbler-yellowrumped.html

  
 Master Guide to the Warbers of Canada
The Yellow-rumped Warbler is by far the most abundant and widespread Warbler species and is comprised of two distinct sub-species.
Audubon's subspecies has a yellow throat and a plain face, grey in spring males, brown in other plumages, with a pronounced, broken eyering."Hybrids" or intergrades can often be identified by the mixture of yellow and white feathers in the throat.
Fall birds are browner but retain some of the yellow in the rump and flanks.The Myrtle subspecies has a black or dark mask with a white eyeline and throat.
www.collections.gc.ca /warblers/species/yrwa.htm

  
 Yellow-rumped Warbler
The bird pictured below, in fall or basic plumage, is a member of the northern and eastern form of the Yellow rumped Warbler complex, and is one of the most abundant and widespread of all warblers.
The Yellow-rumped Warbler is a relatively new species created by lumping several subspecies, especially the eastern Myrtle Warbler (D. c.
The Yellow-rumped Warbler is probably the most widespread breeder of the warblers.
www.wbu.com /chipperwoods/photos/yellrumwarb.htm

  
 Birds » Wild Birds » Warbler - Yellow Rumped Main Page
Yellow Rumped Warblers are highly adaptable, and can grow to live in nearly any environment, but they do have preferences and will move to these locations if such a location exists.
The two types of Yellow Rumped Warbler were once categorized as two different species, depending on their location, the eastern being called the Myrtle Warbler and the western the Audubon's Warbler.
The Audubon variety of Yellow Rumped Warbler is another story, coming in overall darker tones than the Myrtle race and sporting only a yellow spot on the throat instead of all over its body.
www.centralpets.com /animals/birds/wild_birds/wbd3834.html

  
 Yellow-rumped Warbler
The two forms of the Yellow-rumped Warbler were once considered separate species, but because of their overlapping ranges in the Rockies, and because they interbreed, they are now considered a single species.
Yellow-rumped Warblers come in two forms: the 'Audubon's Warbler,' which has a yellow throat, and the 'Myrtle Warbler,' which has a white throat.
The Yellow-rumped Warbler is the most abundant and widespread North American wood warbler.
www.birdguide.com /brdpgs/655.htm

  
 Nature Notebook: Birds: Yellow-Rumped Warbler
Known colloquially as "butter butt" because of its bright yellow rump, the yellow-rumped warbler is a common winter resident in areas with plentiful berries.
www.naturalsciences.org /funstuff/notebook/birds/yellow_warbler.html

  
 BCBC Newsletter - May 2003
The warblers seen were Cerulean Warblers 8, Prairie 4, Blue-winged 4, Yellow-breasted Chat, Yellow-throated Warbler, American Redstart, Worm-eating Warbler, Black-and-white Warbler, Ovenbird, Hooded Warbler and a Common Yellowthroat.
The birds of note that he saw were Black-throated Green Warbler, Chestnut-sided Warbler, Blue-headed Vireo, White-eyed Vireo, a Swamp Sparrow, a Ruffed Grouse, an Osprey, a Sharp-shinned Hawk, Blue-winged Teal, a Great Blue Heron and a Common Raven.
Their most important find of the day was a Swainson’s Warbler that was heard several times near the Cold Spring Trail.
www.bcplnet.org /birdclub/newsletters/May03NL.htm

  
 Birds of Nova Scotia - Yellow-rumped Warbler
A bright male "Audubon's Warbler" was closely observed among migrant Yellow-rumped Warblers on Sable Island on 4 May 1967 by Christel and Norman Bell, a first for Atlantic Canada.
However, these two also have strongly streaked yellow underparts which the Yellow-rumped Warbler lacks.
Remarks This warbler's bright yellow rump is conspicuously worn by both sexes, including immatures (except in juvenile plumage), throughout the year.
museum.gov.ns.ca /mnh/nature/nsbirds/bns0319.htm

  
 YELLOW-RUMPED (MYRTLE) WARBLER
The myrtle warbler is the bird with the yellow rump.
The nest of the myrtle warbler is usually located in a coniferous tree from ten to twenty feet up in a bulky nest of twigs, grass, or bark fibers, and lined with feathers.
The myrtle warbler is common in the Historic Triangle area throughout the year being the only warbler to spend the winter.
www.baylink.org /Wpc/warbler.html

  
 BIRDEAST Postings: [BIRDEAST] Central PA Birdline for 5/4/2000
JAYS and YELLOW-RUMPED WARBLERS were there on May 2.
WARBLERS of the year were seen at the park on April 30 (PS, BM, RK).
A YELLOW WARBER was found on April 30 (JM).
www.capecodconnection.com /hypermail/birds/0010.html

  
 preview.phtml?blank+18707
A beautiful example of a Yellow-rumped Warbler, I also have a screen saver with all of my warblers pictures, with a clock and warbler sounds.
If this is the case, and you own the copyright and wish to have the file removed, please inform us, and we will notify the author and remove the file)
animemanganetwork.ezthemes.com /pcenhance/wp/preview.phtml?blank+18707

  
 Yellow-rumped Warbler - Mrytle
TheYellow-rumped Warbler - Mrytle Dendroica coronata the eastern Mrytle and western Audubon were listed as different species in the past.
In the spring the female Yellow-rumped warbler will lay a clutch of 4 - 6 eggs, sometimes she will lay a second clutch in the summer.
Yellow-rumped Warbler Picture gallery, description, Myrtle warbler, Audubon warbler, recording of the Yellow-rumped warbler song, distribution and status.
www.cat1234.com /id107.htm

  
 Yellow-rumped Warbler
Yellow-rumped Warbler shows very similar patterns to other temperate-wintering species such as the American Robin, with dramatic increases over the past 25 years.
It is possible that its numbers have been influenced by relatively mild winters in recent years.
www.bsc-eoc.org /plots/yrwa.html

  
 ABO Education - Songbird Activity Book - Yellow-rumped Warbler
More yellow-rumped warblers are caught at ABO than any other species.
The male's rump, crown and sides are bright yellow.
Watch for a flash of yellow as this bird flies through mixed forest habitats.
www.alaskabird.org /ABOSongbirdBook/ABOEducSongbirdBookMYWA.html

  
 Yellow-rumped Warbler status in Ohio
Jones 1903 : This is an irregular warbler, sometimes being abundant and again hardly even common.
It is the earliest to appear in spring and the latest to depart southward in autumn.
Langdon saw them as early as March 4, and as late as November 29.
www.aves.net /birds-of-ohio/birdyrwa.htm

  
 Yellow-rumped Warbler description
Distribution: The Yellow-rumped Warbler is one of the last wood warblers to migrate from the breeding grounds and winters from the southern United States to Central America, although some birds may not migrate.
A small (14cm) bird, the Yellow-rumped Warbler is identified by its characteristic yellow rump, yellow shoulder patches, white tail patches and yellow crown.
The Yellow-rumped Warbler's grayish back and wings are striped with black.
www.nps.gov /yuch/Expanded/key_resources/birds/species_descriptions/yrwa_description.htm

  
 Yellow-rumped warbler
The Yellow-rumped Warbler breeds from eastern North America west to the Pacific, and southward from there into parts of Mexico.
Two closely related North American bird forms, the eastern Myrtle Warbler and its western counterpart, Audubon's Warbler, are periodically lumped as the Yellow-rumped Warbler ( Dendroica coronata).
These birds are primarily insectivorous, although when bugs are scarce, the Myrtle Warbler also enjoys eating the wax-myrtle berries which gave it its name.
www.omniknow.com /common/wiki.php?in=en&term=Yellow-rumped_warbler

  
 Georgia Wildlife Web Site; birds: Dendroica coronata
The completely yellow breast and belly is a key difference between the Magnolia Warbler and the Yellow-rumped Warbler.
All Yellow-rumped Warblers have a white belly, white or pale throat, a white eyebrow, and variable amounts of streaking on the breast and flanks.
The Yellow-rumped Warbler forages by searching among the vegetation for food and catching prey on the wing.
museum.nhm.uga.edu /gawildlife/birds/passeriformes/dcoronata.html

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