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Singing bush lark

The singing bush lark or Horsfield's bush lark (Mirafra javanica) is a species of lark which inhabits grassland throughout most of Australia and much of Southeast Asia. It was described by the American naturalist Thomas Horsfield.

Singing bush lark
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Alaudidae
Genus: Mirafra
Species:
M. javanica
Binomial name
Mirafra javanica
Horsfield, 1821
Subspecies

See text

Taxonomy Edit

The singing bush lark was formally described in 1821 by the American naturalist Thomas Horsfield from a specimen collected on the island of Java. He placed the lark in the genus Mirafra and coined the binomial name Mirafra javanica.[2][3]

The singing bush lark is one of 100 species of larks of the rather large and fairly diverse family, Alaudidae. They are small to medium-small passerines, usually with rather drab, brownish plumage. Predominantly an Old World family, the species are distributed widely across Europe, Africa, Asia and the Indian subcontinent but the singing bush lark is the only species occurring naturally in Wallacea, New Guinea and Australia.[4]

The alternate shortened name "bush-lark" can also refer to many of the other species in the genus Mirafra. The alternate name of "cinnamon bush lark" is also an alternate name for the flappet lark.[5][6] Other alternate names for the singing bush lark include the Australasian bushlark, Australian lark, eastern bush lark, eastern lark, eastern singing bush lark, Horsfield's lark and Javan lark.[7]

Morphologically, the family Alaudidae constitutes a well-defined group, whose members share unique features of the syrinx and tarsus. The syrinx lacks a pessulus, which is unique among oscines but occurs in many suboscine genera. They have a single fossa at the head of the humerus, rather than the double fossae of other passeroid songbirds, but typical of corvoid songbirds.[4]

Linear classifications have generally placed them at the beginning of the oscine passerines whereas, based on DNA–DNA hybridization they were placed in the super-family, Passeroidea. However, recent studies based on sequence data, have unanimously shown them to be part of the super-family Sylvioidea. Together with the morphologically and ecologically radically different monotypic genus, Panurus (Panuridae), they form a sister clade to the rest of the Sylvioidea.[8]

The widespread M. cantillans, which ranges from west Africa to India, and the similarly widely distributed M. javanica, from Myanmar to Australia are closely related and their separation is comparatively recent. These taxa have apparently spread over a vast area in a very short time, and are in the early stages of the speciation process. For larks, which inhabit mostly open habitats, cryptic plumages are evidently important. Consequently, the strength of streaking and colour shades  appear to be particularly adaptable, reflecting the amount of vegetation cover (aridity) and substrate colour more than phylogeny.[8] 

Subspecies Edit

Twenty subspecies are recognized:[9]

  • M. j. williamsoni - Baker, ECS, 1915: Originally described as a subspecies of the singing bush lark. Found from central Myanmar to southern China, central and south-central Thailand, Cambodia, central and southern Vietnam.
  • M. j. philippinensis - Wardlaw-Ramsay, 1886: Originally described as a separate species. Found in northern Philippines
  • M. j. mindanensis - Hachisuka, 1931: Found in southern Philippines
  • M. j. javanica - Horsfield, 1821: Found in Borneo, Java and Bali
  • M. j. parva - R. Swinhoe, 1871: Originally described as a separate species. Found in the western Lesser Sunda Islands
  • M. j. timorensis - Mayr, 1944: Found in the eastern Lesser Sunda Islands
  • M. j. aliena - Greenway, 1935: Found in northern and north-eastern New Guinea
  • M. j. woodwardi - Milligan, 1901 (cinnamon lark): Originally described as a separate species. Found in extreme north-western Western Australia
  • M. j. halli - Bianchi, 1907: Found in northern Western Australia
  • M. j. forresti - Mayr & McEvey, 1960: Found in north-eastern Western Australia
  • M. j. melvillensis - Mathews, 1912: Found on Melville and Bathurst Islands (off northern Australia)
  • M. j. soderbergi - Mathews, 1921: Found in northern Northern Territory (northern Australia)
  • M. j. rufescens - Ingram, W, 1906: Originally described as a separate species. Found in central Australia
  • M. j. athertonensis - Schodde & Mason, IJ, 1999: Found in north-eastern Australia
  • M. j. horsfieldii - Gould, 1847: Originally described as a separate species. Found in eastern and south-eastern Australia
  • M. j. secunda - Sharpe, 1890: Originally described as a separate species. Found in south-central Australia
  • M. j. marginata - Hawker, 1898: Found from southern Sudan to Somalia, Kenya and north-eastern Tanzania.
  • M. j. chadensis - Alexander, 1908: Senegal to central Sudan and western Ethiopia
  • M. j. simplex- (Heuglin, 1868): western, southern Arabia
  • M. j. cantillans- Blyth, 1845: Pakistan, India, and Bangladesh

The subspecies cantillans, marginata, chadensis and simplex have sometimes been considered as a separate species, the singing bush lark Mirafra cantillans.[9][10]

Description Edit

The singing bush lark is a small, thickset bird with a large head, a short, sparrow-like bill and a small crest which is only visible when raised. Its dorsal plumage colour is brown, reddish or sandy with darker central streaks to the feathers. The breast is mottled or streaked and it has a buff eyebrow. The underparts are pale, with a brown tail. The adult upper parts and crown are near black with coarse buff to russet streaking. Juveniles are similar but the crown and upper parts are neatly scaled by narrow white fringes to the feathers. Nestlings have dense natal down and contrasting dark spots on their tongue and mouth.[4]

The average lengths for the wing are 61–81 mm, tail 40–56 mm, bill 12–16 mm and weight 18–25 grams.[11] The wings are short and rounded with a distinctive rufous panel. The innermost secondary feather is vestigial and of the ten primary feathers, p10 is very short but not vestigial. The primaries moult outward starting at p1 while the tail and body moult during the early stages of, or just before the start of the moult of the primaries.[4]

Similar species Edit

In appearance and size the bushlark is very similar to the Australian pipit and can also be mistaken for a half-grown Eurasian skylark. The bush lark's wings lack the white trailing edge of the skylark while in flight, its tail is white-sided like the skylark and pipits, but is only half as long. Identification of the bush lark is usually obvious from its structure and the rufous wing panels however, this colouring can bleach to a buffish tone. When flushed the bush lark gives a slurred chirrup and the flight action is often sufficient for identification. With jerky wing beats, the head raised slightly, the tail depressed and before landing or dropping into cover, will briefly hover or flutter. By contrast, the Australian pipit has a more upright stance, a slimmer build and bill and struts purposefully on long legs. When standing the pipit persistently bobs its tail and in flight, drops into cover without hovering.[11]

Distribution and habitat Edit

The range of the singing bush lark is very broad, with an estimated global extent of occurrence of 10,000,000 km2.[1] In Australia, the bush lark occurs from the Eyre Peninsula, South Australia, through Victoria, New South Wales, Queensland, Northern Territory and Western Australia to Shark Bay. This species is a summer migrant to south-eastern continental Australia and vagrant to the island of Tasmania.[12] In Australia they inhabit chenopod shrublands, native and exotic grasslands in temperate and tropical areas, coastal heathlands, dunes, mudflats and also modified open habitats such as crop and pastureland. They are found less commonly on playing fields, golf courses, road verges, salt marshes and other shrublands or heathland and rarely in treed habitats.[12][4]  

Behaviour and ecology Edit

Breeding Edit

In Australia the bush lark is known to breed following significant rainfall in arid areas.[12] They defend territory during the breeding season and both parents incubate and feed the nestlings and fledglings and remove faecal sacs. The young remain in the nest for up to 12–14 days or longer but if disturbed, may depart the nest at 7–8 days old before they are capable of flight. For almost a month after fledging they are dependent on the parents. Nesting success can be low with most losses from introduced mammalian predators.[4]

Of historical interest is an account written by ornithologist and former curator of the Australian Museum, Edward P. Ramsay. Published in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London in 1865 he described nidification of M. j. horsfieldii, "The nests of Mirafra horsfieldi are usually found during the months of November, December, and often as late as January and February. They are loose ragged structures, and not finished off nicely, like those of Anthus australis. They are cup-shaped, and are composed wholly of grasses, without any particular lining. The situation chosen is a little hollow scraped out by the side of a tuft of grass or straw, or behind a clod of earth; the front edge of the nest alone is smoothed down-the back part being left ragged, and often drawn forward as if to help to conceal the eggs. The nest is about 28 inches in diameter by 1 inch in depth. On the 4th of' February, 1861, we took a nest from a hay-field at M'Quarie Fields containing three eggs, which is the usual number. These are in length from 8 to 10 lines by from 6 to 7 in breadth, and of a light earthy brown, thickly marked over the whole surface with freckles of a much darker hue. Some specimens are darker in colour than others; and after a time the ground-colour becomes of a more yellowish tint, and the markings much duller and more indistinct."[13]

Vocalisation Edit

During the breeding period they sing any time of day or night, on the ground and low perches or in song-flights hovering high over territory. The bush lark can sustain a melodious song which is typically interspersed with skillful mimicry of many other species.[11] An account from the 1930s suggested the following, "he possesses either a considerable memory or an ability to 'pirate' certain borrowed calls from brother-mimics. An instance of this is his rendering of the 'tink, tink' of Climacteris picumnus, which bird has long since vanished from the district. The notes, then, must have been either heard during migratory wanderings or 'cribbed' from the repertoire of another Lark".[14]

Feeding Edit

Bush larks are terrestrial and omnivorous foragers with a short, stout bill suited for crushing seeds. They eat mainly grass seeds and invertebrates, particularly insects during the breeding season. By gleaning and probing most food is taken from the ground surface or, just below.[4] Mostly they forage alone, but sometimes are found in small parties.[12]

Gallery Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b BirdLife International (2017). "Mirafra javanica". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2017: e.T103765775A112867456. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2017-1.RLTS.T103765775A112867456.en. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  2. ^ Horsfield, Thomas (1821). "Systematic arrangement and description of birds from the island of Java". Transactions of the Linnean Society. 13: 133–200 [159].
  3. ^ Mayr, Ernst; Greenway, James C. Jr, eds. (1960). Check-List of Birds of the World. Vol. 9. Cambridge, Massachusetts: Museum of Comparative Zoology. p. 5.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g Higgins, P.J.; Peter, J.M.; Cowling, S.J. (2006). Handbook of Australian, New Zealand & Antarctic Birds Vol 7. Melbourne: Oxford University Press. pp. 1018–1020. ISBN 978-0195532449.
  5. ^ "Mirafra rufocinnamomea rufocinnamomea - Avibase". avibase.bsc-eoc.org. Retrieved 2016-11-26.
  6. ^ "Mirafra cantillans - Avibase". avibase.bsc-eoc.org. Retrieved 2016-11-26.
  7. ^ "Mirafra javanica - Avibase". avibase.bsc-eoc.org. Retrieved 2016-12-10.
  8. ^ a b Alström, P.; Barnes, K.; Olsson, U.; Barker, F.; Bloomer, P.; Khan, A.; Qureshi, M.; Guillaumet, A.; Crochet, P. & Ryan, P. (2013). "Multilocus phylogeny of the avian family Alaudidae (larks) reveals complex morphological evolution, non-monophyletic genera and hidden species diversity" (PDF). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 69 (3): 1043–1056. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2013.06.005. PMID 23792153.
  9. ^ a b Gill, Frank; Donsker, David; Rasmussen, Pamela, eds. (July 2023). "Nicators, Bearded Reedling, larks". IOC World Bird List Version 13.2. International Ornithologists' Union. Retrieved 24 July 2023.
  10. ^ Alström, P.; Ryan, P. (2022). Keeney, B.K. (ed.). "Horsfield's Bushlark (Mirafra javanica), version 1.0". Birds of the World. Ithaca, NY, USA: Cornell Lab of Ornithology. doi:10.2173/bow.sinbus6.01.
  11. ^ a b c Menkhorst, P.; Rogers, D.; Clarke, R.; Davies, J.; Marsack, P. & Franklin, K. (2017). The Australian Bird Guide. Melbourne Clayton South: CSIRO. pp. 498–499. ISBN 9780643097544.
  12. ^ a b c d "Horsfield's Bushlark". Birdlife Australia.
  13. ^ Ramsay, Edward (1865). "Note on the nidification of Mirafra Horsfieldi". Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London. 33 (1): 689–690. doi:10.1111/j.1469-7998.1865.tb02407.x.
  14. ^ Cameron A. C. (1936). "Vocal mimicry of the Horsfield Bushlark". Emu. 36 (2): 133–134. doi:10.1071/mu936132c.
  • Compilers: Stuart Butchart, Jonathan Ekstrom (2008). "Australasian Lark - BirdLife Species Factsheet". Evaluators: Jeremy Bird, Stuart Butchart. BirdLife International. Retrieved May 11, 2009.

singing, bush, lark, singing, bush, lark, horsfield, bush, lark, mirafra, javanica, species, lark, which, inhabits, grassland, throughout, most, australia, much, southeast, asia, described, american, naturalist, thomas, horsfield, conservation, statusleast, co. The singing bush lark or Horsfield s bush lark Mirafra javanica is a species of lark which inhabits grassland throughout most of Australia and much of Southeast Asia It was described by the American naturalist Thomas Horsfield Singing bush larkConservation statusLeast Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ChordataClass AvesOrder PasseriformesFamily AlaudidaeGenus MirafraSpecies M javanicaBinomial nameMirafra javanicaHorsfield 1821SubspeciesSee text Contents 1 Taxonomy 1 1 Subspecies 2 Description 2 1 Similar species 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Behaviour and ecology 4 1 Breeding 4 2 Vocalisation 4 3 Feeding 5 Gallery 6 ReferencesTaxonomy EditThe singing bush lark was formally described in 1821 by the American naturalist Thomas Horsfield from a specimen collected on the island of Java He placed the lark in the genus Mirafra and coined the binomial name Mirafra javanica 2 3 The singing bush lark is one of 100 species of larks of the rather large and fairly diverse family Alaudidae They are small to medium small passerines usually with rather drab brownish plumage Predominantly an Old World family the species are distributed widely across Europe Africa Asia and the Indian subcontinent but the singing bush lark is the only species occurring naturally in Wallacea New Guinea and Australia 4 The alternate shortened name bush lark can also refer to many of the other species in the genus Mirafra The alternate name of cinnamon bush lark is also an alternate name for the flappet lark 5 6 Other alternate names for the singing bush lark include the Australasian bushlark Australian lark eastern bush lark eastern lark eastern singing bush lark Horsfield s lark and Javan lark 7 Morphologically the family Alaudidae constitutes a well defined group whose members share unique features of the syrinx and tarsus The syrinx lacks a pessulus which is unique among oscines but occurs in many suboscine genera They have a single fossa at the head of the humerus rather than the double fossae of other passeroid songbirds but typical of corvoid songbirds 4 Linear classifications have generally placed them at the beginning of the oscine passerines whereas based on DNA DNA hybridization they were placed in the super family Passeroidea However recent studies based on sequence data have unanimously shown them to be part of the super family Sylvioidea Together with the morphologically and ecologically radically different monotypic genus Panurus Panuridae they form a sister clade to the rest of the Sylvioidea 8 The widespread M cantillans which ranges from west Africa to India and the similarly widely distributed M javanica from Myanmar to Australia are closely related and their separation is comparatively recent These taxa have apparently spread over a vast area in a very short time and are in the early stages of the speciation process For larks which inhabit mostly open habitats cryptic plumages are evidently important Consequently the strength of streaking and colour shades appear to be particularly adaptable reflecting the amount of vegetation cover aridity and substrate colour more than phylogeny 8 Subspecies Edit Twenty subspecies are recognized 9 M j williamsoni Baker ECS 1915 Originally described as a subspecies of the singing bush lark Found from central Myanmar to southern China central and south central Thailand Cambodia central and southern Vietnam M j philippinensis Wardlaw Ramsay 1886 Originally described as a separate species Found in northern Philippines M j mindanensis Hachisuka 1931 Found in southern Philippines M j javanica Horsfield 1821 Found in Borneo Java and Bali M j parva R Swinhoe 1871 Originally described as a separate species Found in the western Lesser Sunda Islands M j timorensis Mayr 1944 Found in the eastern Lesser Sunda Islands M j aliena Greenway 1935 Found in northern and north eastern New Guinea M j woodwardi Milligan 1901 cinnamon lark Originally described as a separate species Found in extreme north western Western Australia M j halli Bianchi 1907 Found in northern Western Australia M j forresti Mayr amp McEvey 1960 Found in north eastern Western Australia M j melvillensis Mathews 1912 Found on Melville and Bathurst Islands off northern Australia M j soderbergi Mathews 1921 Found in northern Northern Territory northern Australia M j rufescens Ingram W 1906 Originally described as a separate species Found in central Australia M j athertonensis Schodde amp Mason IJ 1999 Found in north eastern Australia M j horsfieldii Gould 1847 Originally described as a separate species Found in eastern and south eastern Australia M j secunda Sharpe 1890 Originally described as a separate species Found in south central Australia M j marginata Hawker 1898 Found from southern Sudan to Somalia Kenya and north eastern Tanzania M j chadensis Alexander 1908 Senegal to central Sudan and western Ethiopia M j simplex Heuglin 1868 western southern Arabia M j cantillans Blyth 1845 Pakistan India and BangladeshThe subspecies cantillans marginata chadensis and simplex have sometimes been considered as a separate species the singing bush lark Mirafra cantillans 9 10 Description EditThe singing bush lark is a small thickset bird with a large head a short sparrow like bill and a small crest which is only visible when raised Its dorsal plumage colour is brown reddish or sandy with darker central streaks to the feathers The breast is mottled or streaked and it has a buff eyebrow The underparts are pale with a brown tail The adult upper parts and crown are near black with coarse buff to russet streaking Juveniles are similar but the crown and upper parts are neatly scaled by narrow white fringes to the feathers Nestlings have dense natal down and contrasting dark spots on their tongue and mouth 4 The average lengths for the wing are 61 81 mm tail 40 56 mm bill 12 16 mm and weight 18 25 grams 11 The wings are short and rounded with a distinctive rufous panel The innermost secondary feather is vestigial and of the ten primary feathers p10 is very short but not vestigial The primaries moult outward starting at p1 while the tail and body moult during the early stages of or just before the start of the moult of the primaries 4 Similar species Edit In appearance and size the bushlark is very similar to the Australian pipit and can also be mistaken for a half grown Eurasian skylark The bush lark s wings lack the white trailing edge of the skylark while in flight its tail is white sided like the skylark and pipits but is only half as long Identification of the bush lark is usually obvious from its structure and the rufous wing panels however this colouring can bleach to a buffish tone When flushed the bush lark gives a slurred chirrup and the flight action is often sufficient for identification With jerky wing beats the head raised slightly the tail depressed and before landing or dropping into cover will briefly hover or flutter By contrast the Australian pipit has a more upright stance a slimmer build and bill and struts purposefully on long legs When standing the pipit persistently bobs its tail and in flight drops into cover without hovering 11 Distribution and habitat EditThe range of the singing bush lark is very broad with an estimated global extent of occurrence of 10 000 000 km2 1 In Australia the bush lark occurs from the Eyre Peninsula South Australia through Victoria New South Wales Queensland Northern Territory and Western Australia to Shark Bay This species is a summer migrant to south eastern continental Australia and vagrant to the island of Tasmania 12 In Australia they inhabit chenopod shrublands native and exotic grasslands in temperate and tropical areas coastal heathlands dunes mudflats and also modified open habitats such as crop and pastureland They are found less commonly on playing fields golf courses road verges salt marshes and other shrublands or heathland and rarely in treed habitats 12 4 Behaviour and ecology EditBreeding Edit In Australia the bush lark is known to breed following significant rainfall in arid areas 12 They defend territory during the breeding season and both parents incubate and feed the nestlings and fledglings and remove faecal sacs The young remain in the nest for up to 12 14 days or longer but if disturbed may depart the nest at 7 8 days old before they are capable of flight For almost a month after fledging they are dependent on the parents Nesting success can be low with most losses from introduced mammalian predators 4 Of historical interest is an account written by ornithologist and former curator of the Australian Museum Edward P Ramsay Published in the Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London in 1865 he described nidification of M j horsfieldii The nests of Mirafra horsfieldi are usually found during the months of November December and often as late as January and February They are loose ragged structures and not finished off nicely like those of Anthus australis They are cup shaped and are composed wholly of grasses without any particular lining The situation chosen is a little hollow scraped out by the side of a tuft of grass or straw or behind a clod of earth the front edge of the nest alone is smoothed down the back part being left ragged and often drawn forward as if to help to conceal the eggs The nest is about 28 inches in diameter by 1 inch in depth On the 4th of February 1861 we took a nest from a hay field at M Quarie Fields containing three eggs which is the usual number These are in length from 8 to 10 lines by from 6 to 7 in breadth and of a light earthy brown thickly marked over the whole surface with freckles of a much darker hue Some specimens are darker in colour than others and after a time the ground colour becomes of a more yellowish tint and the markings much duller and more indistinct 13 Vocalisation Edit During the breeding period they sing any time of day or night on the ground and low perches or in song flights hovering high over territory The bush lark can sustain a melodious song which is typically interspersed with skillful mimicry of many other species 11 An account from the 1930s suggested the following he possesses either a considerable memory or an ability to pirate certain borrowed calls from brother mimics An instance of this is his rendering of the tink tink of Climacteris picumnus which bird has long since vanished from the district The notes then must have been either heard during migratory wanderings or cribbed from the repertoire of another Lark 14 Feeding Edit Bush larks are terrestrial and omnivorous foragers with a short stout bill suited for crushing seeds They eat mainly grass seeds and invertebrates particularly insects during the breeding season By gleaning and probing most food is taken from the ground surface or just below 4 Mostly they forage alone but sometimes are found in small parties 12 Gallery Edit nbsp Mirafra javanica javanica 1838 Illustrated by Nicolas Huet nbsp Singing bush lark Mooloort Plains Central Vic source source source source source source Bryden south east Queensland Australia nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mirafra javanica nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Mirafra javanica References Edit a b BirdLife International 2017 Mirafra javanica IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2017 e T103765775A112867456 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2017 1 RLTS T103765775A112867456 en Retrieved 13 November 2021 Horsfield Thomas 1821 Systematic arrangement and description of birds from the island of Java Transactions of the Linnean Society 13 133 200 159 Mayr Ernst Greenway James C Jr eds 1960 Check List of Birds of the World Vol 9 Cambridge Massachusetts Museum of Comparative Zoology p 5 a b c d e f g Higgins P J Peter J M Cowling S J 2006 Handbook of Australian New Zealand amp Antarctic Birds Vol 7 Melbourne Oxford University Press pp 1018 1020 ISBN 978 0195532449 Mirafra rufocinnamomea rufocinnamomea Avibase avibase bsc eoc org Retrieved 2016 11 26 Mirafra cantillans Avibase avibase bsc eoc org Retrieved 2016 11 26 Mirafra javanica Avibase avibase bsc eoc org Retrieved 2016 12 10 a b Alstrom P Barnes K Olsson U Barker F Bloomer P Khan A Qureshi M Guillaumet A Crochet P amp Ryan P 2013 Multilocus phylogeny of the avian family Alaudidae larks reveals complex morphological evolution non monophyletic genera and hidden species diversity PDF Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 69 3 1043 1056 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2013 06 005 PMID 23792153 a b Gill Frank Donsker David Rasmussen Pamela eds July 2023 Nicators Bearded Reedling larks IOC World Bird List Version 13 2 International Ornithologists Union Retrieved 24 July 2023 Alstrom P Ryan P 2022 Keeney B K ed Horsfield s Bushlark Mirafra javanica version 1 0 Birds of the World Ithaca NY USA Cornell Lab of Ornithology doi 10 2173 bow sinbus6 01 a b c Menkhorst P Rogers D Clarke R Davies J Marsack P amp Franklin K 2017 The Australian Bird Guide Melbourne Clayton South CSIRO pp 498 499 ISBN 9780643097544 a b c d Horsfield s Bushlark Birdlife Australia Ramsay Edward 1865 Note on the nidification of Mirafra Horsfieldi Proceedings of the Zoological Society of London 33 1 689 690 doi 10 1111 j 1469 7998 1865 tb02407 x Cameron A C 1936 Vocal mimicry of the Horsfield Bushlark Emu 36 2 133 134 doi 10 1071 mu936132c Compilers Stuart Butchart Jonathan Ekstrom 2008 Australasian Lark BirdLife Species Factsheet Evaluators Jeremy Bird Stuart Butchart BirdLife International Retrieved May 11 2009 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Singing bush lark amp oldid 1166871577, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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