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Bachman's Warbler is possibly extinct, and was most likely never common.
Bachman's Warbler molts over the summer into its fall plumage.
Bachman's Warbler fed by gleaning and probing into leaf clusters.
Bachman's Warbler breeds in timbered bottomland swamps with pools of still water.
The latest recorded Bachman's Warbler in Florida was noted on April 9.
The bill of Bachman's Warbler is blackish brown in adults and brown in the young.
When alarmed, Bachman's Warbler jerked its tail and raised its crown feathers.
Bachman's Warbler migrates quite early in comparison with other New World warblers.
In South Carolina, all Bachman's Warblers leave their breeding ground by July 19.
Bachman's Warbler's song is composed of a rapid series six to twenty-five buzz notes, sometimes ending in a sharp, slurred note zip.
Bachman's Warbler's last stronghold was in I'on Swamp, South Carolina.
Bachman's Warbler is small for a warbler and is unique for its thin and decurved bill.
Bachman's Warbler is a sexually dimorphic species and the adults have two distinct plumages, one for the spring and one for the fall.
Bachman's Warbler was originally collected by John Bachman in 1832 and described by Audubon in 1833.
Furthermore, on January 14, 2002, a bird reminiscent of a female Bachman's Warbler was filmed at Guardalavaca, Cuba.
Rarities include sets of Passenger Pigeon, Carolina Parakeet, and Bachman's Warbler eggs.
Bachman's Hare, Bachman's Sparrow, and Bachman's Warbler are named in his honor.
The disappearance of the canebrake ecosystem may have contributed to the rarity and possible extinction of the Bachman's Warbler, which was dependent upon it for nesting sites.
Bachman's Warbler, Vermivora bachmanii, is (or was) a small passerine bird that inhabits the swamps and lowland forests of the southeast United States.
The genus used to include nine other new world warblers but now includes only the Golden-winged Warbler and the Bachman's Warbler which is believed to be extinct.
Juvenile Bachman's Warblers have a dusky brown head and upperparts and are a paler brown below, which transitions to dull white on the lower body and undertail.
Bachman's Warbler breeds primarily in two distinct regions, namely the southern Atlantic coastal plain and the Gulf Coast states north along the Mississippi River watershed to Kentucky.
The Reverend John Bachman, who presented study skins and descriptions to his friend and collaborator, John James Audubon discovers Bachman's Warbler.
Bachman's Warbler does not have any extremely close relatives, though the Blue-winged and Golden-winged Warblers, also members of the genus Vermivora, are thought to be its closest relatives.