THE BIRDS
CASSIN VIREO. Lanivireo solitarius cassini (Xantus)
Field
characters.Three-fourths bulk of Junco; tail shorter than
body. Plumage grayish green above, olive gray on head; under surface
whitish; eye encircled by white (pl. 50a); two light bars on
wing; bill black. Movements deliberate. Voice: Song of male a
series of detached notes, now rising, now falling in inflection,
quee-up, tseer, etc.; call note a harsh che.
Occurrence.Common summer
visitant to Transition Zone (sparing in lower Canadian) on west slope of
Sierra Nevada; recorded in nesting season from 3 miles east of
Coulterville and from El Portal, eastward to east fork of Indian
Cañon at 7300 feet and to near Merced Lake at 7500 feet altitude.
In spring migration passes through lowland and foothill country, as at
Snelling, Lagrange, and Pleasant Valley. In fall small numbers wander to
higher levels, as along McClure Fork to 8300 feet and along course of
Rafferty Creek. Not observed on east slope. Frequents chiefly incense
cedars and golden oaks. Solitary except when pairs are caring for
broods.
The Cassin Vireo is a summer visitant at middle
altitudes along the west flank of the Sierra Nevada. Its distribution at
nesting time closely parallels the ranges of the golden oak and incense
cedar, though the bird does not restrict itself exclusively to these two
trees. In and around Yosemite Valley this species and the Western
Warbling Vireo are often to be found together, although the Cassin
shows preference for the drier portions of the Valley, for example, near
and upon the talus slopes along the north and south walls. During the
spring migration the Cassin Vireo is a common transient in the western
foothill country where, during its passage, it is to be seen in blue
oaks and chaparral on the dry hillsides. In early fall after the young
are grown a few of these vireos wander up into the Hudsonian Zone before
taking final leave of the country for the winter.
The first of the Cassin Vireos probably arrive in the
Yosemite region early in April. On our visit to El Portal on April 27,
1916, the species was already well established there, and the same was
found to be true in Yosemite Valley the day following. Near Lagrange, in
1919, Cassin Vireos were passing through the blue oak belt in numbers on
May 7, and a few transients were observed near Coulterville on May 9 and
10, while in 1915, migration was still in progress at Bullion Mountain
on May 26, at Pleasant Valley on May 23 to 28, and at Snelling on May
27. In 1919, however, nesting was already under way in Yosemite Valley
on May 22. It seems likely that the late migrants seen in the foothills
in 1915 were bound to some much more northerly station rather than that
they were going to swell the number in the Transition Zone of the region
immediately to the east. The species continued in evidence through
August; single birds were seen as late as September 1 near Echo Creek,
September 2 in Yosemite Valley, and September 7 along Rafferty Creek,
all in the year 1915. Mr. Joseph Mailliard (1918, p. 19) states that a
few were still in Yosemite Valley on September 28, 1917.
The Cassin Vireo is the largest of the four species
of vireos in the Yosemite section. (See pl. 50.) In general, the bird
gives the impression of having an abnormally large head and short tall,
and of being big-eyed, the latter obviously by reason of the conspicuous
circlet of white around the eye. In good light the head appears an olive
slate, the back greenish, and the under surface ashy white, with a
yellowish tinge on the sides.
The movements of this vireo are like those of the
Warbling Vireo, but they are even more slow and deliberate. It perches
stolidly, and when insects are spied captures them by direct thrusts of
the bill. Occasionally a bird will poise on fluttering wings to seize
some object not otherwise obtainable. But even then, there is little
suggestion of the nervous activity of, for example, the Audubon
Warbler.
The Cassin Vireo is a slow but persistent singer; the
syllables of its song are set off from one another by long rests. With
one bird which was kept under observation for some time these breaks
varied from about one to ten seconds. Another, similarly studied, sang
at intervals which, by the watch, ranged from one to three seconds.
After a long series of these closely spaced notes the latter bird was
quiet for ten minutes or more save for two series of five or six notes
each. Each note is clear cut and loud so that the song rings out, and
may be heard for a considerable distance. Successive notes are variously
inflected, some rising, others falling; at times a bird will give a
regular alternation of rising and falling inflections. Hence the name
"question-and-answer bird" has been suggested for the Cassin Vireo. Some
of the notes were syllabified by one of us as tseer', pee'rit,
pee'-o-wup, syrup, que'-up, tseer, etc. Another series was written
as che'weh, cheweuh', che wer, occasionally wee'cha. The
notes suggest the words "to eat? to cheer!" The bird has also a scolding
or alarm note che, che, che, and the two members of a pair when
together may indulge in low conversational notes. The Cassin Vireo
continues in song through much of the summer, one in song being heard in
Yosemite Valley on July 23, 1915. There is a revival of song after the
molt; on September 2, 1915, one was heard in the Valley giving a song
almost as full and persistent as that ordinarily to be heard in the
spring.
A nest of the Cassin Vireo was found in Yosemite
Valley on May 22, 1919. It was placed in an incense cedar at the edge of
the Merced River. The nest was on a branch which extended out over the
rushing stream and was about 18 feet above the surface of the water. The
nest was a deep cup lashed by the rim to two forking branchlets forming
a crotch. The following day another nest, in an early stage of
construction, was found near the road along the north side of the
Valley. It was 7-1/2 feet above the ground at a fork in an outswaying
branch of a young black oak beneath a larger tree of the same kind. The
bird came to the nest singing loudly and, while still singing, proceeded
to add material around the rim, standing on one of the supporting twigs
while it worked. Two automobiles passed unheeded by the bird, which sang
again before departing. Two minutes later the vireo came again with
material in its bill, sang, added material to the nest, sang, and
departed into the golden oaks across the road. The bird seemed not at
all inconvenienced by having its bill laden with supplies, and, indeed,
this is generally true of our song birds; movement of the bill is not a
necessity in singing.
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