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  1. Yellow-Rumped Warbler. Setophaga coronata. Identifying Characteristics: Adults are 4.7 to 5.5 inches long and weigh 12 to 13 grams. Gray, with white wing bars and black on the chest. Patches on the rump and under the wings are yellow.

  2. Small, round-headed warbler with a beady black eye and stout bill. Adult males are bright yellow overall with a yellow-green back and chestnut streaks on the breast.

  3. Yellow Warblers are mainly spotted in California from April to October, but their numbers increase during migration. They occur in up to 10% of summer checklists and up to 21% of checklists during migration. Yellow Warblers are small bright yellow birds with a yellow-green back, and the males have chestnut streaks on the breast.

  4. North America has more than 50 species of warblers, but few combine brilliant color and easy viewing quite like the Yellow Warbler. In summer, the buttery yellow males sing their sweet whistled song from willows, wet thickets, and roadsides across almost all of North America.

  5. Common and widespread throughout North America; winters in Central and northern South America. “Mangrove” Yellow Warbler, currently considered a subspecies, is found in mangroves and nearby brush from Mexico to Ecuador. Males have a distinctive reddish-brown head. POWERED BY MERLIN.

  6. Yellow warblers are easily recognized. They are the most extensively yellow of warblers, with golden yellow plumage and rusty streaks on the breast. Yellow warbler males and females are similar with golden yellow upper parts tinged with olive, yellow under parts, and thin pointed beaks.

  7. The bright, sweet song of the Yellow Warbler is a familiar sound in streamside willows and woodland edges. This is one of our most widely distributed warblers, nesting from the Arctic Circle to Mexico, with closely related forms along tropical coastlines. Their open, cuplike nests are easy to find, and cowbirds often lay eggs in them.

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