Page:The birds of America, volume 7.djvu/475

 On the same day that Harris' Finch was procured, Mr. J. G. Bell, who, as I have already said, accompanied me in my journey to the Yellow Stone river, &c, shot one of the species which I am now about to describe, and which I have named, it being also a new and hitherto undescribed species, with great pleasure, after Mr. Bell; the more especially as Mr. Bell is himself a person who possesses a good general knowledge of our birds, and was an excellent companion in our not unperilous rambles.

This species, like other Vireos of the smaller class, is usually found in the bottom lands along the shores of the Upper Missouri river, from the neigh- bourhood of the Black Snake Hills as far as we went up that river; finding it in many instances, whether in the bottom lands, overgrown with low shrubbery, or along the borders of ravines that discharge the water accumu- lating during the spring meltings of the snows that cover the upper country prairie land. In its habits it is probably more nearly allied to the White- eyed Vireo ( V. noveboracensis J than to any other; as although it does not possess all the swiftness of movement and quaint look exhibited by that species, still it evinces all the movements usually observable in birds of this family.

We never found its nest, although it doubtless breeds in the countries which we traversed; as on many occasions, and during the very heat of summer, we found it as far up the Missouri river as Fort Union, one of the principal and handsomest factories of the American Fur Company.

Bell's Vireo or Greenlet, Vireo Bellii, Aud.


 * See vol. iv. p. 140. t Ibid.