Family XI. SYLVIANAE. WARBLERS.
Bill of moderate length, slender, straight, a little broader than high at
the base, compressed toward the end; upper mandible with its dorsal line
straight and declinate, convex at the end, the tip small, acute, the notches
small; lower mandible with the angle of moderate length and narrow, the dorsal
line straight, the sides convex, the tip narrow. Nostrils basal, oval or
oblong. Head rather large, ovate; neck short; body rather slender. Feet of
ordinary length, slender; tarsus compressed, with seven anterior scutella; toes
moderate, compressed; first stouter, second and fourth nearly equal, third much
longer, and adherent at the base; claws moderate, arched, slender, compressed,
acute. Plumage soft and blended. Bristles short or weak. Wings of moderate
length or long; the first quill very small, the second, third, and fourth
longest. Tail long or of moderate length, of twelve feathers. Tongue,
sagittate, slender, tapering to a slit and lacerated point. OEsophagus rather
narrow, without crop; proventriculus oblong; stomach a gizzard of moderate
strength, with the muscles distinct, the epithelium dense and rugous; intestine
of moderate length; coeca very small. Trachaea simple, with four pairs of
inferior laryngeal muscles.
Of this family, which in Europe is so numerous, there are in North America
only two genera, Regulus and Sialia, the former composed of very small birds,
allied in manners to the Tits, the latter approaching the Thrushes in form. The
connecting links being wanting with us, these genera might seem at first sight
very dissimilar.
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