The ongoing online debate about whether Old World or New World warblers are more wonderful isn’t just confined to 10,000 Birds. Round Robin, the Cornell Blog of Ornithology, covers some of the finer points of who’s got the best warblers and why.
Recent Posts
Bird Guides of the World: Gerard Gorman, HungaryBy Editor
Birding Lodges of the World: Pico Bonito, HondurasBy Editor
Birding around Nanjian, YunnanBy Kai Pflug
Birding Brochure English, Part 2: ElusiveBy Kai Pflug
Three Photos: The Long and the ShortBy Editor
Swamp!By Peter
How to Be an Urban Birder by David LindoBy Carrie
Posting Calendar
| DAY | WRITER(S) | SERIES (w) |
|---|---|---|
| MON | Kai (w) | Birding Lodges |
| TUE | Donna (m) Susan (m) Hannah (m) Fitzroy (m) Grace (m) | Bird Guides |
| WED | Leslie (bw) Faraaz (bw) | Ask a Birder |
| THU | Paul (w) Cathy (bw) Kelly (m) | Birder’s Lists |
| FRI | David (w) Kendall (m) | Species Spotlight |
| SAT | Peter (bw) Luca (bw) | From the Archives |
| SUN | Clive (w) Sanjana (m) | Three Photos |
| w weekly, bw biweekly, m monthly | ||
| Any time: Dragan, Erika, Jason, John, Mark, Rolf, Sara; Location Profiles | ||
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It’s long past time somebody thought of a new name for the wood warblers.
I suggest lemon-finches. Cause then you could have Black-throated Grey Lemon-finch.
“Look! a Worm-eating Lemon-finch is being chased by an American Bison-badger!
They aren’t finches. They are WARBLERS!