. . 158 MAGNOLIA WARBLER Dcndroica maculosaLife-size. 106 CERULEAN WARBLER. (Dendroica caerulea.) ya Life-size. WARBLERS 895 Magnificence fluttering above an insect-laden leaf, his cupof joy is full. But the bird is no recluse, and numbers ofthem join that bright array which consecrates our tree-topsyear by year. The song of the magnolia, though not often heard, isclear and musical and fairly distinctive. The nests, hidden in evergreens, from four to forty feetabove the ground, are built of stiff stems, lined with finestems and a lit


. . 158 MAGNOLIA WARBLER Dcndroica maculosaLife-size. 106 CERULEAN WARBLER. (Dendroica caerulea.) ya Life-size. WARBLERS 895 Magnificence fluttering above an insect-laden leaf, his cupof joy is full. But the bird is no recluse, and numbers ofthem join that bright array which consecrates our tree-topsyear by year. The song of the magnolia, though not often heard, isclear and musical and fairly distinctive. The nests, hidden in evergreens, from four to forty feetabove the ground, are built of stiff stems, lined with finestems and a little grass. Four or five eggs are laid in Mayor June. They are pale bluish-white, spotted and blotchedwith different shades of red and brown. CERULEAN WARBLER The Cerulean Warbler, commonly called the blue war-bler, inhabits the United States west to Nebraska and Min-nesota, breeding from the States bordering the Great Lakesnorthward through New England, Quebec, and Ontario,and wintering in the tropics. This little warbler probablyhaunts the highest timber of any that frequents decidu-ous growth. It may be con


Size: 1385px × 1805px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectnaturalhistory, booky