fbpx
Wikipedia

Horned lark

The horned lark or shore lark (Eremophila alpestris) is a species of lark in the family Alaudidae found across the northern hemisphere. It is known as "horned lark" in North America and "shore lark" in Europe.

Horned lark
Temporal range: Calabrian–Present
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Aves
Order: Passeriformes
Family: Alaudidae
Genus: Eremophila
Species:
E. alpestris
Binomial name
Eremophila alpestris
Subspecies

See text

Distribution map of horned lark
  Breeding
  Resident
  Passage
  Non-breeding
Synonyms
  • Alauda alpestris Linnaeus, 1758
  • Chionophila alpestris (Linnaeus, 1758)
  • Otocorys alpestris (Linnaeus, 1758)

Taxonomy, evolution and systematics edit

The specific alpestris is Latin and means "of the high mountains", from Alpes, the Alps.[2]

The horned lark was originally classified in the genus Alauda.

The horned lark is suggested to have diverged from Temminck's lark (E. bilopha) around the Early-Middle Pleistocene, according to genomic divergence estimates.[3][4] The horned lark is known from around a dozen localities of Late Pleistocene age, including those in Italy,[5] Russia, The United Kingdom and the United States. The earliest known fossil is from the Calabrian of Spain, around 1–0.8 million years old.[6] In 2020, a 46,000 year old frozen specimen was described from the Russian Far East.[7]

Recent genetic analysis has suggested that the species consists of six clades that in the future may warrant recognition as separate species.[3] A 2020 study also suggested splitting of the species, but into 4 species instead, the Himalayan horned lark E. longirostris, mountain horned lark E. penicillata, common horned lark E. alpestris (sensu stricto), alongside Temminck's lark.[4]

Subspecies edit

Forty-two subspecies are recognized:[8]

  • Pallid horned lark (E. a. arcticola) – (Oberholser, 1902): Found from northern Alaska to British Columbia (western Canada)
  • Hoyt's horned lark (E. a. hoyti) – (Bishop, 1896): Found in northern Canada
  • Northern American horned lark (E. a. alpestris) – (Linnaeus, 1758): Found in eastern Canada
  • Dusky horned lark (E. a. merrilli) – (Dwight, 1890): Found on western coast of Canada and USA
  • Streaked horned lark (E. a. strigata) – (Henshaw, 1884): Found on coastal southern British Columbia (western Canada) to coastal Oregon (western USA)
  • St. Helens horned lark (E. a. alpina) – (Jewett, 1943): Found on mountains of western Washington (northwestern USA)
  • Oregon horned lark (E. a. lamprochroma) – (Oberholser, 1932): Found on inland mountains of western USA
  • Desert horned lark (E. a. leucolaema) – Coues, 1874: Also known as the pallid horned lark. Found from southern Alberta (southwestern Canada) through north-central and central USA
  • Saskatchewan horned lark (E. a. enthymia) – (Oberholser, 1902): Found from south-central Canada to Oklahoma and Texas (central USA)
  • Prairie horned lark (E. a. praticola) – (Henshaw, 1884): Found in southeastern Canada, northeastern and east-central USA
  • Sierra horned lark (E. a. sierrae) – (Oberholser, 1920): Also known as the Sierra Nevada horned lark. Found on mountains of northeastern California (western USA)
  • Ruddy horned lark (E. a. rubea) – (Henshaw, 1884): Found in central California (western USA)
  • Utah horned lark (E. a. utahensis) – (Behle, 1938): Found on mountains of west-central USA
  • Island horned lark (E. a. insularis) – (Dwight, 1890): Found on islands off southern California (western USA)
  • California horned lark (E. a. actia) – (Oberholser, 1902): Found on coastal mountains of southern California (western USA) and northern Baja California (northwestern Mexico)
  • Mohave horned lark (E. a. ammophila) – (Oberholser, 1902): Found in deserts of southeastern California and southwestern Nevada (southwestern USA)
  • Sonora horned lark (E. a. leucansiptila) – (Oberholser, 1902): Found in deserts of southern Nevada, western Arizona (southwestern USA) and northwestern Mexico
  • Montezuma horned lark (E. a. occidentalis) – (McCall, 1851): Originally described as a separate species. Found in northern Arizona to central New Mexico (southwestern USA)
  • Scorched horned lark (E. a. adusta) – (Dwight, 1890): Found in southern Arizona and southern New Mexico (southwestern USA), possibly north-central Mexico
  • Magdalena horned lark (E. a. enertera) – (Oberholser, 1907): Found in central Baja California (northwestern Mexico)
  • Texas horned lark (E. a. giraudi) – (Henshaw, 1884): Found in coastal south-central USA and northeastern Mexico
  • E. a. aphrasta(Oberholser, 1902): Found in Chihuahua and Durango (northwestern Mexico)
  • E. a. lacteaPhillips, AR, 1970: Found in Coahuila (north-central Mexico)
  • E. a. diaphora(Oberholser, 1902): Found in southern Coahuila to northeastern Puebla (north-central and eastern Mexico)
  • Mexican horned lark (E. a. chrysolaema) – (Wagler, 1831): Originally described as a separate species in the genus Alauda. Found from west-central to east-central Mexico
  • E. a. oaxacae(Nelson, 1897): Found in southern Mexico
  • Colombian horned lark (E. a. peregrina) – (Sclater, PL, 1855): Originally described as a separate species. Found in Colombia
  • Shore lark (E. a. flava) – (Gmelin, JF, 1789): Originally described as a separate species in the genus Alauda. Found in northern Europe and northern Asia
  • Steppe horned lark (E. a. brandti) – (Dresser, 1874): Also known as Brandt's horned lark. Originally described as a separate species. Found from southeastern European Russia to western Mongolia and northern China
  • Moroccan horned lark (E. a. atlas) – (Whitaker, 1898): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Originally described as a separate species. Found in Morocco
  • Balkan horned lark (E. a. balcanica) – (Reichenow, 1895): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Found in southern Balkans and Greece
  • E. a. kumerloeveiRoselaar, 1995: Found in western and central Asia Minor
  • Southern horned lark (E. a. penicillata) – (Gould, 1838): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Originally described as a separate species in the genus Alauda. Found from eastern Turkey and the Caucasus to Iran
  • Lebanon horned lark (E. a. bicornis) – (Brehm, CL, 1842): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Originally described as a separate species. Found from Lebanon to Israel/Syria border
  • Pamir horned lark (E. a. albigula) – (Bonaparte, 1850): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Originally described as a separate species. Found from northeastern Iran and Turkmenistan to northwestern Pakistan
  • E. a. argalea(Oberholser, 1902): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Found in extreme western China
  • Przewalski's lark (E. a. teleschowi) – (Przewalski, 1887): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Originally described as a separate species. Found in western and west-central China
  • E. a. przewalskii(Bianchi, 1904): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Found in northern Qinghai (west-central China)
  • E. a. nigrifrons(Przewalski, 1876): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Originally described as a separate species. Found in northeastern Qinghai (west-central China)
  • Long-billed horned lark (E. a. longirostris) – (Moore, F, 1856): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Originally described as a separate species. Found in northeastern Pakistan and western Himalayas
  • E. a. elwesi(Blanford, 1872): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Originally described as a separate species. Found on southern and eastern Tibetan Plateau
  • E. a. khamensis(Bianchi, 1904): This subspecies is also called "shore lark". Found in southwestern and south-central China

Description edit

Unlike most other larks, this is a distinctive-looking species on the ground, mainly brown-grey above and pale below, with a striking black and yellow face pattern. Except for the central feathers, the tail is mostly black, contrasting with the paler body; this contrast is especially noticeable when the bird is in flight. The summer male has black "horns",[clarification needed] which give this species its American name. North America has a number of races distinguished by the face pattern and back colour of males, especially in summer. The southern European mountain race E. a. penicillata is greyer above, and the yellow of the face pattern is replaced with white.

Measurements:[9]

  • Length: 6.3-7.9 in (16-20 cm)
  • Weight: 1.0-1.7 oz (28-48 g)
  • Wingspan: 11.8-13.4 in (30-34 cm)

Vocalizations are high-pitched, lisping or tinkling, and weak. The song, given in flight as is common among larks, consists of a few chips followed by a warbling, ascending trill.

Distribution and habitat edit

The horned lark breeds across much of North America from the high Arctic south to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, northernmost Europe and Asia and in the mountains of southeast Europe. There is also an isolated population on a plateau in Colombia. It is mainly resident in the south of its range, but northern populations of this passerine bird are migratory, moving further south in winter.

This is a bird of open ground. In Eurasia it breeds above the tree line in mountains and the far north. In most of Europe, it is most often seen on seashore flats in winter, leading to the European name. In the UK it is found as a winter stopover along the coasts and in eastern England. In North America, where there are no other larks to compete with, it is also found on farmland, on prairies, in deserts, on golf courses and airports.

Breeding and nesting edit

Males defend territories from other males during breeding season and females will occasionally chase away intruding females. Courting involves the male singing to the female while flying above her in circles. He then will fold his wings in and dive towards the female, opening his wings just before reaching the ground.[10] The nest site is selected in the early spring by only the female and is either a natural depression in the bare ground or she digs a cavity using her bill and feet.[11] She will spend 2–4 days preparing the site before building her nest. She weaves fine grasses, cornstalks, small roots, and other plant material and lines it with down, fur, feathers, and occasionally lint. The nest is about 3-4 inches in diameter with the interior diameter about 2.5 in wide and 1.5 in deep. It has been noted that she often adds a “doorstep” of pebbles, corncobs, or dung on one side of the nest. It is speculated that this is used to cover the excavated dirt and hide her nest more.[12]

Females will lay a clutch of 2-5 gray eggs with brown spots, each about 1 in long and 0.5 in wide. Incubation will take 10–12 days until hatching and then the nestling period will take 8–10 days. During the nestling period, the chick is fed and defended by both parents. A female in the south can lay 2-3 broods a year while in the north, 1 brood a year is more common.[13]

The structure of horned lark nests can vary depending on the microclimate, prevailing weather and predation risk, revealing flexibility in nesting behaviour to adjust to changing environmental conditions to maintain nest survival and nestling size development.[14]

Status and conservation edit

Horned lark populations are declining according to the North American Breeding Bird Survey. In 2016, the Partners in Flight Landbird Conservation Plan detailed the horned lark as a “Common Bird in Steep Decline,” but the horned lark as of 2016 is not on the State of North America's Birds’ Watch List.[11] This species’ decline could be contributed to the loss of habitat due to agricultural pesticides, the disturbed sites the birds prefer reverting to forested lands through reforestation efforts, urbanization and human encroachment as well as collisions with wind turbines.[12] In the open areas of western North America, horned larks are among the bird species most often killed by wind turbines.[15] In 2013, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service listed the subspecies streaked horned lark as threatened under the Endangered Species Act.[16]

Gallery edit

References edit

  1. ^ BirdLife International (2019). "Eremophila alpestris". IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. 2019: e.T22717434A137693170. doi:10.2305/IUCN.UK.2019-3.RLTS.T22717434A137693170.en. Retrieved 12 November 2021.
  2. ^ Jobling, James A (2010). The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names. London: Christopher Helm. pp. 42, 148. ISBN 978-1-4081-2501-4.
  3. ^ a b Drovetski, Sergei V.; Raković, Marko; Semenov, Georgy; Fadeev, Igor V.; Red'kin, Yaroslav A. (2014-01-01). "Limited phylogeographic signal in sex-linked and autosomal loci despite geographically, ecologically, and phenotypically concordant structure of mtDNA variation in the Holarctic avian genus Eremophila". PLOS ONE. 9 (1): e87570. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...987570D. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0087570. ISSN 1932-6203. PMC 3907499. PMID 24498139.
  4. ^ a b Ghorbani, Fatemeh; Aliabadian, Mansour; Olsson, Urban; Donald, Paul F.; Khan, Aleem A.; Alström, Per (January 2020). "Mitochondrial phylogeography of the genus Eremophila confirms underestimated species diversity in the Palearctic". Journal of Ornithology. 161 (1): 297–312. doi:10.1007/s10336-019-01714-2. ISSN 2193-7192. S2CID 203439127.
  5. ^ CARRERA, Lisa; PAVIA, Marco; PERESANI, Marco; ROMANDINI, Matteo (2018). "Late Pleistocene fossil birds from Buso Doppio del Broion Cave (North-Eastern Italy): implications for palaeoecology, palaeoenvironment and palaeoclimate". Bollettino della Società Paleontologica Italiana (2): 145–174. doi:10.4435/BSPI.2018.10. ISSN 0375-7633.
  6. ^ Sánchez-Marco, Antonio (September 1999). "Implications of the avian fauna for paleoecology in the Early Pleistocene of the Iberian Peninsula". Journal of Human Evolution. 37 (3–4): 375–388. doi:10.1006/jhev.1999.0345. PMID 10496993.
  7. ^ Dussex, Nicolas; Stanton, David W. G.; Sigeman, Hanna; Ericson, Per G. P.; Gill, Jacquelyn; Fisher, Daniel C.; Protopopov, Albert V.; Herridge, Victoria L.; Plotnikov, Valery; Hansson, Bengt; Dalén, Love (2020-02-21). "Biomolecular analyses reveal the age, sex and species identity of a near-intact Pleistocene bird carcass". Communications Biology. 3 (1): 84. doi:10.1038/s42003-020-0806-7. ISSN 2399-3642. PMC 7035339. PMID 32081985. S2CID 211217336.
  8. ^ "IOC World Bird List 6.4". IOC World Bird List Datasets. doi:10.14344/ioc.ml.6.4.
  9. ^ "Horned Lark Identification, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology". www.allaboutbirds.org. Retrieved 2020-09-28.
  10. ^ "Horned Lark - Eremophila alpestris | Wildlife Journal Junior". nhpbs.org.
  11. ^ a b "Horned Lark Life History, All About Birds, Cornell Lab of Ornithology". www.allaboutbirds.org.
  12. ^ a b "Horned Lark". American Bird Conservancy.
  13. ^ "Horned Lark". Audubon. 13 November 2014.
  14. ^ de Zwaan, D.R.; Martin, K. (2018). "Substrate and structure of ground nests have fitness consequences for an alpine songbird". Ibis. 160 (4): 790–804. doi:10.1111/ibi.12582.
  15. ^ Erickson, W.P., G. D. Johnson, D. P. Young, Jr., M. D. Strickland, R.E. Good, M.Bourassa, K. Bay. 2002. Synthesis and Comparison of Baseline Avian and Bat Use, Raptor Nesting and Mortality Information from Proposed and Existing Wind Developments. Technical Report prepared for Bonneville Power Administration, Portland, Oregon. http://www.bpa.gov/Power/pgc/wind/Avian_and_Bat_Study_12-2002.pdf
  16. ^ "Species Fact Sheet: Streaked horned lark". U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. 2014-08-05. Retrieved 2014-08-19.

Further reading edit

  • van den Berg, Arnoud (2005) Morphology of Atlas Horned Lark Dutch Birding 27(4):256–8
  • Small, Brian (2002) The Horned Lark on the Isles of Scilly Birding World 15(3): 111–20 (discusses a possible Nearctic race bird on the Isles of Scilly in 2001)
  • Dickinson, E.C.; R.W.R.J. Dekker; S. Eck & S. Somadikarta (2001). "Systematic notes on Asian birds. 12. Types of the Alaudidae". Zool. Verh. Leiden. 335: 85–126.
  • Seebohm, H (1884). "On the East-Asiatic Shore-Lark (Otocorys longirostris)". Ibis. 26 (2): 184–188. doi:10.1111/j.1474-919x.1884.tb01153.x.
  • Beason, Robert (1995). Horned Lark (Eremophila alpestris), version 2.0. In The Birds of North America. Ithaca, New York, USA: Cornell Lab of Ornithology.

External links edit

  • – Cyberbirding
  • Species account – Cornell Lab of Ornithology
  • "Horned lark media". Internet Bird Collection.
  • Horned lark – Eremophila alpestris – USGS Patuxent Bird Identification InfoCenter
  • Horned lark photo gallery at VIREO (Drexel University)
  • Interactive range map of Eremophila alpestris at IUCN Red List maps

horned, lark, horned, lark, shore, lark, eremophila, alpestris, species, lark, family, alaudidae, found, across, northern, hemisphere, known, horned, lark, north, america, shore, lark, europe, temporal, range, calabrian, present, preꞒ, conservation, status, le. The horned lark or shore lark Eremophila alpestris is a species of lark in the family Alaudidae found across the northern hemisphere It is known as horned lark in North America and shore lark in Europe Horned larkTemporal range Calabrian Present PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg N Conservation status Least Concern IUCN 3 1 1 Scientific classification Domain Eukaryota Kingdom Animalia Phylum Chordata Class Aves Order Passeriformes Family Alaudidae Genus Eremophila Species E alpestris Binomial name Eremophila alpestris Linnaeus 1758 Subspecies See text Distribution map of horned lark Breeding Resident Passage Non breeding Synonyms Alauda alpestris Linnaeus 1758 Chionophila alpestris Linnaeus 1758 Otocorys alpestris Linnaeus 1758 Contents 1 Taxonomy evolution and systematics 1 1 Subspecies 2 Description 3 Distribution and habitat 4 Breeding and nesting 5 Status and conservation 6 Gallery 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksTaxonomy evolution and systematics editThe specific alpestris is Latin and means of the high mountains from Alpes the Alps 2 The horned lark was originally classified in the genus Alauda The horned lark is suggested to have diverged from Temminck s lark E bilopha around the Early Middle Pleistocene according to genomic divergence estimates 3 4 The horned lark is known from around a dozen localities of Late Pleistocene age including those in Italy 5 Russia The United Kingdom and the United States The earliest known fossil is from the Calabrian of Spain around 1 0 8 million years old 6 In 2020 a 46 000 year old frozen specimen was described from the Russian Far East 7 Recent genetic analysis has suggested that the species consists of six clades that in the future may warrant recognition as separate species 3 A 2020 study also suggested splitting of the species but into 4 species instead the Himalayan horned lark E longirostris mountain horned lark E penicillata common horned lark E alpestris sensu stricto alongside Temminck s lark 4 Subspecies edit Forty two subspecies are recognized 8 Pallid horned lark E a arcticola Oberholser 1902 Found from northern Alaska to British Columbia western Canada Hoyt s horned lark E a hoyti Bishop 1896 Found in northern Canada Northern American horned lark E a alpestris Linnaeus 1758 Found in eastern Canada Dusky horned lark E a merrilli Dwight 1890 Found on western coast of Canada and USA Streaked horned lark E a strigata Henshaw 1884 Found on coastal southern British Columbia western Canada to coastal Oregon western USA St Helens horned lark E a alpina Jewett 1943 Found on mountains of western Washington northwestern USA Oregon horned lark E a lamprochroma Oberholser 1932 Found on inland mountains of western USA Desert horned lark E a leucolaema Coues 1874 Also known as the pallid horned lark Found from southern Alberta southwestern Canada through north central and central USA Saskatchewan horned lark E a enthymia Oberholser 1902 Found from south central Canada to Oklahoma and Texas central USA Prairie horned lark E a praticola Henshaw 1884 Found in southeastern Canada northeastern and east central USA Sierra horned lark E a sierrae Oberholser 1920 Also known as the Sierra Nevada horned lark Found on mountains of northeastern California western USA Ruddy horned lark E a rubea Henshaw 1884 Found in central California western USA Utah horned lark E a utahensis Behle 1938 Found on mountains of west central USA Island horned lark E a insularis Dwight 1890 Found on islands off southern California western USA California horned lark E a actia Oberholser 1902 Found on coastal mountains of southern California western USA and northern Baja California northwestern Mexico Mohave horned lark E a ammophila Oberholser 1902 Found in deserts of southeastern California and southwestern Nevada southwestern USA Sonora horned lark E a leucansiptila Oberholser 1902 Found in deserts of southern Nevada western Arizona southwestern USA and northwestern Mexico Montezuma horned lark E a occidentalis McCall 1851 Originally described as a separate species Found in northern Arizona to central New Mexico southwestern USA Scorched horned lark E a adusta Dwight 1890 Found in southern Arizona and southern New Mexico southwestern USA possibly north central Mexico Magdalena horned lark E a enertera Oberholser 1907 Found in central Baja California northwestern Mexico Texas horned lark E a giraudi Henshaw 1884 Found in coastal south central USA and northeastern Mexico E a aphrasta Oberholser 1902 Found in Chihuahua and Durango northwestern Mexico E a lactea Phillips AR 1970 Found in Coahuila north central Mexico E a diaphora Oberholser 1902 Found in southern Coahuila to northeastern Puebla north central and eastern Mexico Mexican horned lark E a chrysolaema Wagler 1831 Originally described as a separate species in the genus Alauda Found from west central to east central Mexico E a oaxacae Nelson 1897 Found in southern Mexico Colombian horned lark E a peregrina Sclater PL 1855 Originally described as a separate species Found in Colombia Shore lark E a flava Gmelin JF 1789 Originally described as a separate species in the genus Alauda Found in northern Europe and northern Asia Steppe horned lark E a brandti Dresser 1874 Also known as Brandt s horned lark Originally described as a separate species Found from southeastern European Russia to western Mongolia and northern China Moroccan horned lark E a atlas Whitaker 1898 This subspecies is also called shore lark Originally described as a separate species Found in Morocco Balkan horned lark E a balcanica Reichenow 1895 This subspecies is also called shore lark Found in southern Balkans and Greece E a kumerloevei Roselaar 1995 Found in western and central Asia Minor Southern horned lark E a penicillata Gould 1838 This subspecies is also called shore lark Originally described as a separate species in the genus Alauda Found from eastern Turkey and the Caucasus to Iran Lebanon horned lark E a bicornis Brehm CL 1842 This subspecies is also called shore lark Originally described as a separate species Found from Lebanon to Israel Syria border Pamir horned lark E a albigula Bonaparte 1850 This subspecies is also called shore lark Originally described as a separate species Found from northeastern Iran and Turkmenistan to northwestern Pakistan E a argalea Oberholser 1902 This subspecies is also called shore lark Found in extreme western China Przewalski s lark E a teleschowi Przewalski 1887 This subspecies is also called shore lark Originally described as a separate species Found in western and west central China E a przewalskii Bianchi 1904 This subspecies is also called shore lark Found in northern Qinghai west central China E a nigrifrons Przewalski 1876 This subspecies is also called shore lark Originally described as a separate species Found in northeastern Qinghai west central China Long billed horned lark E a longirostris Moore F 1856 This subspecies is also called shore lark Originally described as a separate species Found in northeastern Pakistan and western Himalayas E a elwesi Blanford 1872 This subspecies is also called shore lark Originally described as a separate species Found on southern and eastern Tibetan Plateau E a khamensis Bianchi 1904 This subspecies is also called shore lark Found in southwestern and south central ChinaDescription editUnlike most other larks this is a distinctive looking species on the ground mainly brown grey above and pale below with a striking black and yellow face pattern Except for the central feathers the tail is mostly black contrasting with the paler body this contrast is especially noticeable when the bird is in flight The summer male has black horns clarification needed which give this species its American name North America has a number of races distinguished by the face pattern and back colour of males especially in summer The southern European mountain race E a penicillata is greyer above and the yellow of the face pattern is replaced with white Measurements 9 Length 6 3 7 9 in 16 20 cm Weight 1 0 1 7 oz 28 48 g Wingspan 11 8 13 4 in 30 34 cm Vocalizations are high pitched lisping or tinkling and weak The song given in flight as is common among larks consists of a few chips followed by a warbling ascending trill Distribution and habitat editThe horned lark breeds across much of North America from the high Arctic south to the Isthmus of Tehuantepec northernmost Europe and Asia and in the mountains of southeast Europe There is also an isolated population on a plateau in Colombia It is mainly resident in the south of its range but northern populations of this passerine bird are migratory moving further south in winter This is a bird of open ground In Eurasia it breeds above the tree line in mountains and the far north In most of Europe it is most often seen on seashore flats in winter leading to the European name In the UK it is found as a winter stopover along the coasts and in eastern England In North America where there are no other larks to compete with it is also found on farmland on prairies in deserts on golf courses and airports Breeding and nesting editMales defend territories from other males during breeding season and females will occasionally chase away intruding females Courting involves the male singing to the female while flying above her in circles He then will fold his wings in and dive towards the female opening his wings just before reaching the ground 10 The nest site is selected in the early spring by only the female and is either a natural depression in the bare ground or she digs a cavity using her bill and feet 11 She will spend 2 4 days preparing the site before building her nest She weaves fine grasses cornstalks small roots and other plant material and lines it with down fur feathers and occasionally lint The nest is about 3 4 inches in diameter with the interior diameter about 2 5 in wide and 1 5 in deep It has been noted that she often adds a doorstep of pebbles corncobs or dung on one side of the nest It is speculated that this is used to cover the excavated dirt and hide her nest more 12 Females will lay a clutch of 2 5 gray eggs with brown spots each about 1 in long and 0 5 in wide Incubation will take 10 12 days until hatching and then the nestling period will take 8 10 days During the nestling period the chick is fed and defended by both parents A female in the south can lay 2 3 broods a year while in the north 1 brood a year is more common 13 The structure of horned lark nests can vary depending on the microclimate prevailing weather and predation risk revealing flexibility in nesting behaviour to adjust to changing environmental conditions to maintain nest survival and nestling size development 14 Status and conservation editHorned lark populations are declining according to the North American Breeding Bird Survey In 2016 the Partners in Flight Landbird Conservation Plan detailed the horned lark as a Common Bird in Steep Decline but the horned lark as of 2016 is not on the State of North America s Birds Watch List 11 This species decline could be contributed to the loss of habitat due to agricultural pesticides the disturbed sites the birds prefer reverting to forested lands through reforestation efforts urbanization and human encroachment as well as collisions with wind turbines 12 In the open areas of western North America horned larks are among the bird species most often killed by wind turbines 15 In 2013 the U S Fish and Wildlife Service listed the subspecies streaked horned lark as threatened under the Endangered Species Act 16 Gallery edit nbsp A male at the North Carolina Zoo in Asheboro North Carolina US nbsp In British Columbia Canada nbsp A lark displaying its horns at the Rocky Mountain Arsenal National Wildlife Refuge nbsp A nest with three chicks in the oil fields of Alberta Canada nbsp Eggs of Eremophila alpestris flava nbsp Horned lark in Ystad 2009 References edit BirdLife International 2019 Eremophila alpestris IUCN Red List of Threatened Species 2019 e T22717434A137693170 doi 10 2305 IUCN UK 2019 3 RLTS T22717434A137693170 en Retrieved 12 November 2021 Jobling James A 2010 The Helm Dictionary of Scientific Bird Names London Christopher Helm pp 42 148 ISBN 978 1 4081 2501 4 a b Drovetski Sergei V Rakovic Marko Semenov Georgy Fadeev Igor V Red kin Yaroslav A 2014 01 01 Limited phylogeographic signal in sex linked and autosomal loci despite geographically ecologically and phenotypically concordant structure of mtDNA variation in the Holarctic avian genus Eremophila PLOS ONE 9 1 e87570 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 987570D doi 10 1371 journal pone 0087570 ISSN 1932 6203 PMC 3907499 PMID 24498139 a b Ghorbani Fatemeh Aliabadian Mansour Olsson Urban Donald Paul F Khan Aleem A Alstrom Per January 2020 Mitochondrial phylogeography of the genus Eremophila confirms underestimated species diversity in the Palearctic Journal of Ornithology 161 1 297 312 doi 10 1007 s10336 019 01714 2 ISSN 2193 7192 S2CID 203439127 CARRERA Lisa PAVIA Marco PERESANI Marco ROMANDINI Matteo 2018 Late Pleistocene fossil birds from Buso Doppio del Broion Cave North Eastern Italy implications for palaeoecology palaeoenvironment and palaeoclimate Bollettino della Societa Paleontologica Italiana 2 145 174 doi 10 4435 BSPI 2018 10 ISSN 0375 7633 Sanchez Marco Antonio September 1999 Implications of the avian fauna for paleoecology in the Early Pleistocene of the Iberian Peninsula Journal of Human Evolution 37 3 4 375 388 doi 10 1006 jhev 1999 0345 PMID 10496993 Dussex Nicolas Stanton David W G Sigeman Hanna Ericson Per G P Gill Jacquelyn Fisher Daniel C Protopopov Albert V Herridge Victoria L Plotnikov Valery Hansson Bengt Dalen Love 2020 02 21 Biomolecular analyses reveal the age sex and species identity of a near intact Pleistocene bird carcass Communications Biology 3 1 84 doi 10 1038 s42003 020 0806 7 ISSN 2399 3642 PMC 7035339 PMID 32081985 S2CID 211217336 IOC World Bird List 6 4 IOC World Bird List Datasets doi 10 14344 ioc ml 6 4 Horned Lark Identification All About Birds Cornell Lab of Ornithology www allaboutbirds org Retrieved 2020 09 28 Horned Lark Eremophila alpestris Wildlife Journal Junior nhpbs org a b Horned Lark Life History All About Birds Cornell Lab of Ornithology www allaboutbirds org a b Horned Lark American Bird Conservancy Horned Lark Audubon 13 November 2014 de Zwaan D R Martin K 2018 Substrate and structure of ground nests have fitness consequences for an alpine songbird Ibis 160 4 790 804 doi 10 1111 ibi 12582 Erickson W P G D Johnson D P Young Jr M D Strickland R E Good M Bourassa K Bay 2002 Synthesis and Comparison of Baseline Avian and Bat Use Raptor Nesting and Mortality Information from Proposed and Existing Wind Developments Technical Report prepared for Bonneville Power Administration Portland Oregon http www bpa gov Power pgc wind Avian and Bat Study 12 2002 pdf Species Fact Sheet Streaked horned lark U S Fish and Wildlife Service 2014 08 05 Retrieved 2014 08 19 Further reading editvan den Berg Arnoud 2005 Morphology of Atlas Horned Lark Dutch Birding 27 4 256 8 Small Brian 2002 The Horned Lark on the Isles of Scilly Birding World 15 3 111 20 discusses a possible Nearctic race bird on the Isles of Scilly in 2001 Dickinson E C R W R J Dekker S Eck amp S Somadikarta 2001 Systematic notes on Asian birds 12 Types of the Alaudidae Zool Verh Leiden 335 85 126 Seebohm H 1884 On the East Asiatic Shore Lark Otocorys longirostris Ibis 26 2 184 188 doi 10 1111 j 1474 919x 1884 tb01153 x Beason Robert 1995 Horned Lark Eremophila alpestris version 2 0 In The Birds of North America Ithaca New York USA Cornell Lab of Ornithology External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to the horned lark nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Eremophila alpestris Picture Cyberbirding Species account Cornell Lab of Ornithology Horned lark media Internet Bird Collection Horned lark Eremophila alpestris USGS Patuxent Bird Identification InfoCenter Horned lark photo gallery at VIREO Drexel University Interactive range map of Eremophila alpestris at IUCN Red List maps Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Horned lark amp oldid 1189350253, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.