Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
These birds are sometimes mistakenly identified as New World warblers.
Like other New World warblers, this species does not actually warble.
These New World warblers seem to mob predators only rarely.
Like all New World warblers, the red warbler is an insectivore.
Compared to many other New World warblers, sexual dimorphism is slight however.
An entire genus of New World warblers has been given the name Vermivora.
Bachman's warbler migrated quite early in comparison with other New World warblers.
Vermivora is a genus of New World warblers.
The yellowthroats are New World warblers in the genus Geothlypis.
New World Warblers.
It is somewhat warbler-like but not closely related to the New World warblers (Parulidae).
The northern waterthrush (Parkesia noveboracensis) is one of the larger New World warblers.
Wilsonia is a small genus of New World warblers which breed in North America.
Ergaticus was a genus of New World warblers - small passerine birds found only in the Americas.
The black-throated blue warbler is one of the New World warblers or wood-warblers in the family Parulidae.
Basileuterus is a genus of New World warblers, best represented in Central and South America.
The birdlife of the park has 150 species of birds including twenty species of New World warblers.
Blue-winged warblers are migratory New World warblers.
As usual for New World warblers (Parulidae), they nest in trees, building a small but very sturdy cup nest.
Moving about alone or in pairs, it often joins mixed-species feeding flocks with tanagers, New World warblers and honeycreepers.
Unlike most other New World warblers that are mostly dimorphic, there is no difference in appearance between a male or female Swainson's warbler.
Passeroidea - "finches", "New World warblers/blackbirds" and allies.
Recent work has shown all of the following species are closely related to the New World warblers and New World blackbirds.
Volume IX. Buntings and New World Warblers.
The species usually travels in mixed flocks which commonly include Puerto Rican todies, vireos and other New World warblers.
The family name, Parulidae, also derives from this source.
Phaeothlypis is a genus of bird in the Parulidae family.
There are a number of issues in the taxonomy and systematics of the Parulidae.
The family Parulidae are the warblers of the New World.
Recently, it has been shown be too genetically distant from the Parulidae proper to be included there with good justification.
That it was not in the family Parulidae was supported by the arrangement of muscles in the legs.
This article refers to the New World wood warbler family of birds, the Parulidae.
Kirtland’s Warblers are unusual among Parulidae in that they nest in loose colonies.
Its family is Parulidae.
Family Parulidae.
Biogeographic history of the species complex Basileuterus culicivorus (Aves, Parulidae).
The black-throated blue warbler is one of the New World warblers or wood-warblers in the family Parulidae.
The white-bellied warbler (Basileuterus culicivorus hypoleucus) is a bird in the Parulidae family.
Molecular Characterization of a Monophyletic Parulidae.
The yellow-headed warbler (Teretistris fernandinae) is a species of bird formerly placed in the Parulidae family.
Parulidae Trends from the Breeding Bird Survey in Canada:
A comprehensive multilocus phylogeny for the wood-warblers and a revised classification of the Parulidae (Aves).
Genus Granatellus (from Parulidae)
Generally placed in the New World "warbler" family Parulidae, it constitutes a monotypic genus Microligea.
If they are considered part of the family Parulidae (New World warblers), yellow-breasted chats are the largest species of parulid.
Molecular phylogenetic relationships among the Wood Warblers (Parulidae) and historical biogeography in the Caribbean Basin.
The tepui whitestart (Myioborus castaneocapilla), or, less accurately, the tepui redstart, is a species of bird in the Parulidae family.
The Kirtland’s Warbler is a medium-sized, omnivorous songbird in the Family Parulidae (North American wood-warblers).
Morphological description The Kirtland’s Warbler is a medium-sized songbird and a relatively large member of the Parulidae (Mayfield 1992).
In 2011, the American Ornithologists' Union reclassified the Parulidae, which resulted in D. adelaidae being transferred to genus Setophaga.