. Wisconsin bird-study bulletin . pairs to begin their housemaking and house keeping duties in the crotch of some bush or tree. From the viewpoint of the farmer and gardener the goldfinch isa most desirable neighbor. He takes no liberties with anything thatman in his selfishness has tried to appropriate to his own exclusiveuse. He is not only negatively good, he is very positively good. Heis one of the unpaid but very efficient assistants of the weed conunis-sioner, and never hesitates to invade a thistle patch for fear of hurt-ing the feelings of the owner of the land, nor for fear of injurin


. Wisconsin bird-study bulletin . pairs to begin their housemaking and house keeping duties in the crotch of some bush or tree. From the viewpoint of the farmer and gardener the goldfinch isa most desirable neighbor. He takes no liberties with anything thatman in his selfishness has tried to appropriate to his own exclusiveuse. He is not only negatively good, he is very positively good. Heis one of the unpaid but very efficient assistants of the weed conunis-sioner, and never hesitates to invade a thistle patch for fear of hurt-ing the feelings of the owner of the land, nor for fear of injuring hisown chances of reelection. He helps with the dandelions and plan-tain, with the ragweed and dock. He is fond of sunflower seeds butgets hardly a taste of them if English sparrows are about. These beautiful birds are more than weed-seed destroyers. Liketheir relatives, the finches and sparrows, they feed their young on in-sects and thus help to hold in check the beetles and grasshoppers andthe rest of that pestilential army:. 81 YELLOW WARBLER. 652. Dendroica sestiva. (Gmel.) g Life-size. COPYRIGHT 1900, BY A. W. MUMFORD, CHICAGO WISCONSIN BIRD^STUDY BULLETIN. 13 YELLOW WARBLER, SUMMER YELLOW BIRD. Abundant summer resident; length five incJies; sexes nearly alike;nest of fine grass, plant-down and fibers placed in bush or tree, som,e-times about the home grounds, more frequently in ivoods or clearings. This little fellow is a member of the largest and to many, the mostinteresting family of birds that visit Wisconsin—the warblers. Withone exception they are small, dainty birds; so trim and prettilydressed and so active and graceful that they merit the title giventhem by JNIr. Henry Van Dyke, The little dandieg of the air. Not one of them is a winter resident mth us, and only two or threestay through the summer, unless it be in the very northern part of thestate. They go to extremes: to Central and South America for thewinter and to British America for the summer. The warbl


Size: 1371px × 1824px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectbirds, bookyear1906