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Prairie Warbler Setophaga discolor Scientific name definitions

V. Nolan Jr, E. D. Ketterson, and C. A. Buerkle
Version: 1.0 — Published March 4, 2020
Text last updated June 12, 2014

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Introduction

Throughout most of the eastern United States and in southern Ontario, the Prairie Warbler breeds in shrubby old fields, early-stage regenerating forests, dunes, and other early successional habitats. It spends the winter in the Bahamas, on Caribbean islands, and in southern Florida, where it usually occupies habitats structurally like those of the breeding range. Before European settlement, the species was rare or absent in much of its present breeding range; following deforestation, it became widespread by the mid-twentieth century. Since about 1970, its numbers have declined in parts of the breeding range, as forests have regenerated, and it is now one of the Neotropical migrant species whose status, at least in some regions and physiographic strata, is a matter of concern.

The Prairie Warbler (S. d. discolor) was the subject of a long-term study near Bloomington, Indiana (Nolan 1978), which is the principal source for this life history. Authors referred to in Nolan 1978 ordinarily will not be cited separately in this account.

The most important developments since 1978 are: 1. Concern about the decline in numbers of Neotropical migrant species has led to many accounts of the Prairie Warbler's status and ecology in the winter range. Among these, Stacier's (Staicer 1992) study in Puerto Rico deals also with aspects of behavior and is the most comprehensive. The same concern is responsible for attention to Prairie Warbler populations in the breeding range, notably the study by James et al. (James et al. 1992).

2. Prather and Cruz (Prather and Cruz 1995) have summarized and added to knowledge of the breeding biology of S. d. paludicola.

3. Buerkle (1997, 1999, 2000) investigated the morphological and genetic differentiation of the subspecies discolor and paludicola.

4) Lovette et al.'s (2010) comprehensive study that shook up generic relationships in the wood-warblers and found that all species of Dendroica warbler, as well as W. citrina, were merged into the genus Setophaga.

Distribution of the Prairie Warbler - Range Map
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  • Year-round
  • Migration
  • Breeding
  • Non-Breeding
Distribution of the Prairie Warbler

Recommended Citation

Nolan Jr, V., E. D. Ketterson, and C. A. Buerkle (2020). Prairie Warbler (Setophaga discolor), version 1.0. In Birds of the World (A. F. Poole, Editor). Cornell Lab of Ornithology, Ithaca, NY, USA. https://doi.org/10.2173/bow.prawar.01
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