User:Franciscsy/Yellow-rumped warbler

=== Note: The text of my article's editing has been moved here, the exact version (with citation, etc.) to be published remains in my personal sandbox: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User:Franciscsy/sandbox? ===

Modified Lead Section
The Yellow-rumped Warbler (Setophaga coronata) is a regular North American bird species that can be commonly observed all across the continent. Its extensive distribution range connects both the Pacific and Atlantic coasts of the U.S. as well as Canada and Central America, with the population concentrating in the continent's northern parts during the breeding season and migrating southwards to southern North and Central America in Winter. The species generally prefers coniferous forests or mixed coniferous-deciduous forests as its breeding habitat, while during the winter it can be found inhibiting more open areas such as shrublands that offer food resources. The diet of the Yellow-rumped Warbler is based primarily on insects, though the species does eat fruits like juniper berries as well, especially in winter.

The species combines four closely related forms: the eastern Myrtle Warbler (spp. coronata); its western counterpart, Audubon's Warbler (spp. group auduboni); the northwest Mexican Black-fronted Warbler (spp. nigrifrons); and the Guatemalan Goldman's Warbler (spp. goldmani). All subspecies groups of the Yellow-rumped Warbler are characterized by the yellow rump as its name implies, while intra-group and inter-group variations in appearance exist in spite of many similarities. The Myrtle and Audubon's groups, as two major subspecies, are distinguished by noticeable features such as different color of throat, etc.

Rewritten Distribution
The Yellow-rumped Warbler breeds from eastern North America west to the Pacific, and southward from there into Western Mexico. "Goldman's" Yellow-rumped Warbler is a non-migratory endemic within the highlands of Guatemala and the Black-fronted Warbler is also a non-migratory Mexican endemic. The Myrtle and Audubon's forms are migratory, traveling to the southern U.S., Mexico, Central America, and the Caribbean for winters.

The breeding area of the Myrtle Warbler group ranges from eastern Alaska all the way across Canada towards Newfoundland, and to the south, from Alberta in Canada towards the New England region of the U.S., also including the northern Great Lakes region. As a migratory form of the Yellow-rumped Warbler, the Myrtle Warbler group spent the winter in a wide variety of places outside its aforementioned breeding area. On the U.S. West Coast, in winter, the Myrtle group ranges from the state of Washington all the way to California; it can also be found in the state of New Mexico, as well as the region extending from southern Nebraska towards the Gulf of Mexico. On the U.S. East Coast, the Myrtle group most commonly winters along the Atlantic Coast north to the state of Massachusetts, but can also be found in other places such as Pennsylvania, New York, and Ohio, etc., though the exact population tend to vary on an annual basis. Part of the Myrtle group may also choose to spend the winter further to the south of the U.S., in many areas of Mexico and Central America, including the Bahamas, Cuba, and Puerto Rico.

The Audubon's Warbler group's breeding area concurs with many mountain terrains, which ranges from British Columbia and Alberta in Canada towards Baja California in Mexico, as well as certain parts of many states in the U.S., including Arizona, Dakota, Wyoming, Nebraska, Texas, California, Nevada, New Mexico, Colorado, etc.; some other isolated subspecies belonging to this group can be found in northwest Mexico and in Central America, Guatemala in particular. Among Warblers, the Audubon's is by far the most widespread in North America in winter, and in the northern and central parts of the continent, it is among the last to leave in the fall and among the first to return and is an occasional vagrant to the British Isles and Iceland. Similar to the Myrtle group, the Audubon's is a migratory group as well. Studies have shown that its northern subspecies spends the winter in the area along the Pacific Coast of the North American continent, ranging from British Columbia and Vancouver Island in Canada to several southwest states of the U.S., including California, Arizona, Nevada, Utah, Texas, and New Mexico, etc. Some parts of the Audubon's group may also spend their winter further to the south of the U.S., too, in Mexico and several other Caribbean states, including Guatemala and Honduras.

Rewritten: Habitat in Breeding Range
During the breeding season, the Yellow-rumped Warbler is generally known to be residing in either exclusively coniferous areas across the North American continent, or mixed coniferous-deciduous habitats where coniferous forests merge with trees like aspen (Populus spp.) and willow (Salix spp.), etc. Many of its habitats in the western U.S. tend to be mountainous, but it can also inhabit places at the sea level as long as there are conifers present--which is the case of its habitats in the Pacific Northwest and the Northeast of the United States. Studies indicate that the Yellow-rumped Warbler is generally adaptive to changes in its breeding habitat's tree density (usually as a result of selective logging), as its population densities are found to remain largely unaffected in areas where the logging regime leads to decreasing densities of trees; the Yellow-rumped Warbler is believed to be capable of maintaining its breeding density in habitats as long as there still exists some mature trees, which may be used for nesting. The nest of the Audubon's Warbler group is known to have the shape of a deep cup: its frame is built out of twigs, barks, and fiber, etc.; the surrounding rim of the "cup" is woven by softer materials such as grass, hair, and feather, etc., structured in a way to conceal the eggs from predator when parent Warblers are absent from the nest.

Rewritten: Habitat in Non-Breeding Range
During the winter, when the Yellow-rumped Warbler is not in breeding season, it often inhabit resourceful open areas with shrubs or scattered the trees, that can provide it with some source of food supply, such as bayberries and insects, etc. Open areas preferred by the Yellow-rumped Warbler may include agricultural and residential areas, second growth, and shrublands, etc., these habitats generally do not have very dense vegetation; the species can also inhabit forests that are relatively open, such as mangroves, pine forests, and even coffee plantations, etc. The Yellow-rumped Warbler tends to have more diversified habitats during the migration process, though it is sometimes found in desert areas of the U.S. southwest, it is more common for the species to inhabit alpine habitats during migration as it tends to arid lowland areas.

Modified Description Section
The Yellow-rumped Warbler has an average length of 14 cm and weight of 12.5 g, its appearance is known to be different across its subspecies groups, especially the two major ones: the coronata group (Myrtle Warbler) and the auduboni group (Audubon's Warbler); intra-group variations are also observed. In spite of varying appearances, the yellow rump (as suggested by its name) is present in all subspecies and thus characterizes the Yellow-rumped Warbler. Within the Myrtle Warbler group, adult males during the breeding season have gray backs with dark streaks, while females have brown backs in contrast; male and female Myrtle Warblers can also be distinguished by their different cheek colors, with the former's being black and the latter having brown or gray cheeks. The Audubon's subspecies group is not very dissimilar to the Myrtle: in summers, males of both forms have streaked backs of black on slate blue, white wing patches, a streaked breast, and conspicuous yellow patches on the crown, flank, and rump (the latter giving rise to the species's nickname "butter butt" among birdwatchers). Yet the color of the coronata and auduboni groups' throat patches differs and distinguishes them, as the Audubon's Warbler sports a yellow throat patch while the Myrtle Warbler has a white throat and eye stripe, and a contrasting black cheek patch. Females of both forms are more dull, with brown streaking front and back, but still have noticeable yellow rumps. Goldman's warbler, found in Guatemala, resembles Audubon's but has a white lower border to the yellow throat and otherwise darker plumage; males replace the slate blue of Audubon's with black.

Newly Added: Migratory Behaviors
The Yellow-rumped Warbler's migratory behaviors vary greatly across different groups and subspecies. Some individuals in Central America, such as in Mexico and Guatemala, migrate only limitedly or do not migrate at all; while individuals in the northern parts of the continent may either choose to migrate all the way towards Central America or winter near their breeding area along the Pacific Coast of the U.S. The species's migratory behaviors are generally nocturnal, as individuals tend to travel at night; accordingly, during the Yellow-rumped Warbler's migration in Spring, it often relies on skylight polarization as a way to navigate and orient at dusk. The general direction of its migratory route maintains southwards during Winter, as more individuals are present in Central America and southern parts of North America during the season, while less are observed in the north. Every year, Fall migration usually takes place from September to November, Spring migration from April to May, and the species known to depart from its Winter habitats from March to April.Research shows that before migration, the Yellow-rumped Warbler intentionaly gains weight and accrues more fat in its body: as a preparation for this energy-intensive activity, it consumes more food than other times for the purpose of increasing net energy intake from feeding, along with a refined diet that gives priority to food that supplies more energy.