THE BIRDS
YELLOW-HEADED BLACKBIRD. Xanthocephalus
xanthocephalus (Bonaparte)
Field characters.Male
slightly larger than Robin; head, neck, and breast bright yellow; small
patch on wing white; plumage otherwise dull black. Female smaller than a
Robin; body dark brown, not streaked; head, fore neck, and breast dull
yellow. Voice: Various harsh and scolding notes, recalling
Red-winged Blackbird but distinctly different.
Occurrence.Uncommon
transient. Recorded near Williams Butte, April 27, 1916, and May 11 and
12, 1916, and Yosemite Valley, "about January, 1917." Reported from
Dudley, six miles east of Coulterville, in spring.
The Yellow-headed Blackbird belongs to the fields and
marshes of the lowlands, hence is not often encountered in the Yosemite
section. None was seen by us during our work in the western part of the
region, and only three were noted in the vicinity of Mono Lake.
A male bird in full adult plumage was seen near
Williams Butte on April 27, 1916, and other individual males were
collected on May 11 and 12 of the same year; these latter lacked the
white wing patches, and so were probably yearlings. In 1919 there was
exhibited in the Park Superintendent's office in Yosemite Valley, a male
Yellow-headed Blackbird which was said to have been killed "almost at
the door of Sentinel Hotel about January, 1917." It was obviously a
stray wanderer from some point on one side or the other of the
Sierras.
Mr. Donald D. McLean has told us that Yellow-headed
Blackbirds are sometimes seen during the spring months at his home,
Dudley, 6 miles east of Coulterville.
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