FIELD KEY TO THE LAND BIRDS.
22
and ponds. He leaves his perch to catch passing insects, and returns to the same spot. He is a determined foe to crows and hawks, which, though double his size, he drives from his quarters. His nest is usually on some branch overhanging the water. A rivers,
common summer
bird.
OLIVE-SIDED FLYCATCHER. realis.
— Length,
T.J
inches.
Contopus
ho-
Resembles the Kingbird
and is dark gray all over, except the throat, and behind the wing, where he is white. Rare, 41. CRESTED FLYCATCHER. Myiarchus crifiitus. Length, 9 inches. Gray-brown above tail red-brown throat and bi-east gray belly yellow. His
in shape, belly,
—
habits are similar to those of the Kingl)ird, except that he prefers the tops of trees. He has a peculiar fashion of lining his nest with cast-off snakeskins.
43.
PHOEBE, PEWEE.
Saynornis plwehe.— Blackish gray above underparts soiled white, gray, and yellow ; no wing bars. Always untidy looking. One of the earliest birds to arrive in the spring. He builds his nest in the barn or woodshed, raising two or three broods a year in the
Length, 7 inches.