THE BIRDS
VAUX SWIFT. Chaetura vauxi (Townsend)
Field characters.Size
about that of Violet-green Swallow; form and behavior like those of
White-throated Swift. Plumage plain blackish brown, except for silvery
suffusion on breast and throat. No white on flanks.
Occurrence.Noted in
Yosemite Valley in fall (Mailliard, 1918, pp. 16, 18). Not observed by
us. Courses in open air, during day time.
The Vaux Swift may be known in flight from the more
common and better known White-throated Swift by its smaller size, lesser
degree of whiteness on the throat, and by the absence of white on its
flanks. It is distinguished from the Northern Black Swift by its much
smaller size and by the silvery appearance of its throat and breast.
This swift has been reported from Yosemite Valley by
only one observer, Mr. Joseph Mailliard (as above), who found it present
in some numbers in the early fall of 1917. "One or two often seen, and
quite a flock at times"; this statement referring to occurrence on
August 21 and for a few days subsequently (Mailliard, MS).
Mr. Donald D. McLean reports the Vaux Swift as having
occasionally been seen by him in spring and summer at his home place 6
miles east of Coulterville.
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