THE BIRDS
CALAVERAS WARBLER. Vermivora ruficapilla gutturalis
(Ridgway)
Field characters.Half
bulk of Junco. Body coloration yellow beneath, olive green above; head
and neck (except throat) gray; eyelids white; male has a chestnut
colored crown patch, visible only at close range. No white or black
markings whatsoever on wings or tail. (See pl. 9a). Voice:
Song of male 4 or 5 rapidly uttered shrill notes followed by 3 or 4
lower ones: tsirp, tsirp, tsirp, tsirp, sup sup sup; call note a
tseep, or tsit.
Occurrence.Common summer
visitant to Transition Zone on west slope of Sierra Nevada. Recorded
from 3 miles east of Coulterville and from Sequoia eastward to Yosemite
Valley and slopes adjacent. Highest stations, at 7400 feet altitude near
Mono Meadow and at 6700 feet above Yosemite Falls. Some few individuals
wander higher in mountains after nesting (for example, 8000 feet on
McClure Fork of Merced River; August 29, 1915). Sings and forages 10 to
70 feet above ground in broad-leaved trees such as black oak and maple,
but nests in shaded situations on ground. Solitary.
The Calaveras Warbler is common during the summer
months in the black oaks and maples along each side of Yosemite Valley
and in similar situations elsewhere on the western flank of the Sierra
Nevada. Among all the warblers to be seen in the Yosemite Valley during
the summer months the present species is the only one which does not
forage and nest in the same niche. The Calaveras seeks its food and does
its singing well up in trees, but places its nest immediately upon the
ground.
The niche of the Calaveras Warbler is not invaded by
any other species of warbler, although other birds of this group may be
close around. (See fig. 56.) In the pines and cedars are the Audubon and
Hermit warblers, the golden oaks of the talus slopes harbor the
Black-throated Gray Warbler, and in the stream-side willows and
cottonwoods is the Yellow Warbler; while the tangles of underbrush above
moist ground on the Valley floor shelter Tolmie and Golden Pileolated
warblers.
During May and June the song of the Calaveras Warbler
may be heard frequently, for the males sing at short intervals through
most of the day. One bird watched near Columbia Point on June 2, 1915,
was singing at intervals of 7 to 12 seconds, each utterance occupying
but a second or two. The pitch is high although the notes are not so
piercing as those of a Yellow Warbler and the song as a whole suggests
that of the Lazuli Bunting. Four or five notes are given sharply and
distinctly, then three or four less sharp ones are uttered in more rapid
time. Three phrasings of the song written by us in the field are as
follows: tsirp, tsirp, tsirp, tsirp, sup sup sup; tsu'-ip, tsu'-ip,
tsu'-ip, tsu'-ip, seet-seet-seet-seet; again seit, seit, seit,
seit (4 or 5), che-che-che-cha. Sometimes the terminal group
of syllables is omitted.
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Fig. 56. Diagrammatic cross-section of
Yosemite Valley (looking eastward) showing principal vegetational
associations and the forage "niches" occupied by the seven species of
Warblers which breed in the Valley. The nesting places of some of the
species are in different locations from the forage places shown
here.
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The forage range of this warbler lies chiefly in
trees other than conifers. Such trees as the black oak and big-leafed
maple renew their foliage every spring and the Calaveras Warblers find
excellent forage in the insects and larvae which feed upon this tender
new leafage during the spring and summer months. Less often these birds
may be found in golden oaks and occasionally in Douglas spruces. They
usually forage 25 to 40 feet above the ground, keeping within the
stratum of new foliage, but they have been seen as low as 10 feet and as
high as 70 feet above the earth. When within the foliage their yellow
and green coloration makes it difficult to locate them, especially as
the birds do not move about as rapidly as some of the other warblers. At
times a Calaveras Warbler will poise on rapidly beating wings to capture
some insect otherwise out of reach.
A good view of the male Calaveras Warbler reveals a
plainly colored bird, lacking contrasted markings of any sort. (See pl.
9a). The head is clear gray, the throat and lower surface
continuously clear yellow, the upper surface olive green. The female
differs only in showing less contrast between the dull gray of the head
and the olive green of the back. There is lacking in both sexes the
brilliant yellow of the Yellow and Pileolated warblers, and there are
none of the black and white markings of the Audubon, Hermit, and
Black-throated Gray warblers. The Calaveras Warbler bears somewhat of a
resemblance to the Tolmie, especially in the immature plumage, but then
the difference in habitat and the smaller size of the former are
sufficient for distinguishing the two.
A nest of the Calaveras Warbler was discovered in
Yosemite Valley near the base of Sentinel Rock on May 26, 1911. The
location was only about 75 feet from the much traveled south road on the
Valley floor and at the base of the talus pile of huge boulders. The
nest was on the face of one of the larger of these boulders, partly in a
diagonal fissure. It was on the north side of the rock and so never
received any direct rays of sunlight. The whole face of the boulder was
covered densely with yellow-green moss which in places was overlaid by
olive-gray lichens. The nest was 43 inches from the base of the rock and
about 60 inches from the top. The whole vicinity was densely shaded by
black oaks and firs and the ground beneath was strewn with dead last
year's leaves of the oaks. There were 5 eggs, and incubation was far
advanced. When the nest was first discovered, the parent birds acted
very shyly, but after a while they began to show much anxiety, coming
down as close as 10 feet from the observer who was sitting below the
nest. The female was the bolder of the two birds. Their excited
tsits attracted other birds for a time, among these being a
brilliant male Hermit Warbler, a singing male Golden-crowned Kinglet,
and some Ruby-crowned Kinglets and Western Warbling Vireos.
On June 5, 1915, we were shown a nest of the
Calaveras Warbler in the vicinity of Smith Creek, east of Coulterville.
It was in a hollow of the ground at the base of an azalea bush, near an
old road along the hillside. The creek itself was about 50 feet
distant. This nest was 3 inches across the outside and about 2 inches
high, the cavity being 1-1/4 inches deep. Strips of bark of the incense
cedar, plant fibers, and horsehair comprised the building material. When
first discovered it had contained five eggs, but prior to our seeing it
the nest had been raided and all trace of the eggs was gone. A third
nest was discovered near the bridge over Yosemite Creek above Yosemite
Falls on July 1, 1915. It was ensconced in a shallow bole in the bank at
the side of a well traveled trail. A tuft of grass overhung and nearly
concealed the structure. One of the adult birds was flushed from the
nest, which, however, contained neither eggs nor young.
Calaveras Warblers continue in the Yosemite region at
least throughout August; individuals have been seen along the McClure
Fork of the Merced River on August 26 and 29, 1915. The latter is our
latest date of noting this species in the region, although Mr. Joseph
Mailliard (1918, p. 17) made definite record of an individual in
Yosemite Valley as late as September 16 (1917).
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