Magnolia Warbler
| Dendroica magnolia |
Order PASSERIFORMES - Family PARULIDAE |
Magnolia Warbler, breeding male
About the photographs
Magnolia Warbler, breeding female, May
Magnolia Warbler, nonbreeding plumage, Cape May, NJ
Menu
- Description
- Sound
- Conservation Status
- Other Names
- Cool Facts
- Full detailed species account
The Magnolia Warbler is a handsome and familiar warbler of the northern forests. Though it often forages conspicuously and close to the ground, we have relatively scant information on its nesting behavior.
Description
- Small songbird.
- Yellow chest and throat.
- Black necklace and black stripes down sides.
- White wingbars or large white patch on wings.
- Gray crown.
- Yellow rump.
- Large white patch in black-tipped tail.
- Size: 11-13 cm (4-5 in)
- Wingspan: 16-20 cm (6-8 in)
- Weight: 6-15 g (0.21-0.53 ounces)
Sex Differences
Breeding male has a bold black-and-white facial pattern, wingbars fused into a broad white panel, and heavy black streaks down the sides and flanks. Female is duller, with mostly gray face and modest streaks on the sides.
Sound
Song short and weak whistled, "weta, weta, WETA." Call a nasal "zic."
»listen to songs of this species
Conservation Status
Populations increasing slightly throughout most of range.
Other Names
Paruline à tête cendrée (French)
Reinita Colifajeada, Verdin de los magnolias (Spanish)
Cool Facts
- Though it has very specific habitat preferences in
the breeding season, the Magnolia Warbler occupies a very broad range of
habitats in winter: from sea level to 1,500 meters elevation, and most
landscape types, except cleared fields.
- The name of the species was coined in 1810 by
Alexander Wilson, who collected a specimen from a magnolia tree in
Mississippi. He actually used the English name "Black-and-yellow Warbler" and
used "magnolia" for the Latin species name, which became the common name over
time.
- The male Magnolia Warbler has two songs. The first song, issued
in courtship and around the nest, consists of three short phrases with an
accented ending. The second song, possibly issued in territory defense against other
males, is similar to the first but is sweeter and less accented.
Sources used to construct this page:
Hall, G. A. 1994. Magnolia Warbler (Dendroica magnolia). In The Birds of North Americaa, No. 136 (A. Poole and F. Gill, Eds.). Philadelphia: The Academy of Natural Sciences; Washington, D.C.: The American Ornithologists' Union.