The crested lark is a species of lark distinguished from the other 81 species of lark by the crest of feathers that rise up in territorial or courtship displays and when singing. Common to mainland Europe, the birds can also be found in northern Africa and in parts of western Asia and China. It is a non-migratory bird, but can occasionally be found as a vagrant in Great Britain.
Taxonomy and systematics
The crested lark was one of the many species originally described by Carl Linnaeus in his landmark 1758 10th edition of Systema Naturae. It was classified in the genus Alauda until German naturalist Friedrich Boie placed it in the new genus Galerida in 1821. Colin Harrison recommended lumping members of Galerida and Lullula back into Alauda in 1865 due to a lack of defining characteristics. The current scientific name is derived from Latin. Galerida was the name for a lark with a crest, from galerum, "cap", and cristata means "crested" Alban Guillaumet and colleagues noted the distinctiveness of populations from the Maghreb - birds in the dryer parts of Morocco and Tunisia had longer bills while those in more coastal northern parts had shorter bills typical of the European subspecies. The authors sampled the mitochondrial DNA and found they were distinct genetically. Formerly, the Maghreb lark was considered as a subspecies of the crested lark.
North-west Moroccan crested lark - Erlanger, 1899: Found in north-western Morocco
West Moroccan crested lark - Hartert, 1902: Found in western Morocco
North Algerian crested lark - Kleinschmidt, O & Hilgert, 1905: Found from north-eastern Morocco to northern Tunisia
North-east Algerian crested lark - Tristram, 1859: Originally described as a separate species. Found in north-eastern Algeria, southern Tunisia and north-western Libya
Cyrenaica crested lark - Hartert, 1922: Found in coastal north-eastern Libya
North-east Libyan crested lark - Tristram, 1865: Found from inland north-eastern Libya to southern Iraq and northern Arabia
South-east Algerian crested lark - Lavauden, 1926: Found in south-eastern Algeria and south-western Libya
Nile Delta crested lark - Brehm, CL, 1855: Originally described as a separate species. Found in the Nile Delta
Northern Nile Valley crested lark - Brehm, CL, 1858: Found in central Egypt
Southern Nile Valley crested lark - Nicoll, 1921: Found in southern Egypt and northern Sudan
Dongola crested lark - Brehm, CL, 1855: Originally described as a separate species. Found in eastern Sudan and Eritrea
Somali crested lark - Reichenow, 1907: Found in southern Ethiopia, northern Somalia and northern Kenya
G. c. balsaci - Dekeyser & Villiers, 1950: Found in coastal Mauritania
Senegal crested lark - : Originally described as a separate species in the genus Alauda. Found from Mauritania and Senegal to Niger
Nigerian crested lark - Neumann, 1908: Found from northern Nigeria to western Sudan and north-eastern Central African Republic
Sudan crested lark - Bonaparte, 1850: Originally described as a separate species. Found in central Sudan
Coastal Levant crested lark - Hartert, 1904: Found in western Lebanon and north-western Israel
East Levant crested lark - Meinertzhagen, R, 1920: Found from southern Turkey to north-eastern Israel
Central Turkey crested lark - : Found from central Turkey to south-western Turkmenistan and northern Iran
Kazakhstan crested lark or Baluchistan crested lark - Hume, 1871: Originally described as a separate species. Found from central Iran and central Turkmenistan to north-western Pakistan, Kazakhstan, southern Mongolia and north-western China
G. c. leautungensis - : Originally described as a separate species in the genus Alauda. Found in north-eastern and eastern China
G. c. coreensis - Taczanowski, 1888: Found in Korea
Gilgit crested lark - Whistler, 1928: Found in northern Pakistan
Indian crested lark - : Originally described as a separate species in the genus Alauda. Found from central and eastern Pakistan through western and northern India to southern Nepal
Description
A fairly small lark, the crested lark is roughly the same size as a Eurasian skylark, but shorter overall and bulkier around the head and body, and very similar in appearance, with a height of and a wingspan of, weighing between. It is a small, brown bird which has a short tail with light brown outer feathers. Male and females have no real differences, but young crested larks have more spots on their back than their older counterparts. Its plumage is downy but sparse and appears whitish. The distinct crest from which the crested lark gets its name is conspicuous at all times but is more pronounced during territorial or courtship displays and when singing. In flight it shows reddish underwings. It shares many characteristics with the Thekla lark, with the main distinctions between the two being the beak, the Thekla's heavier black-brown streaks and its grey underwing, present in European specimens.
Distribution and habitat
The crested lark breeds across most of temperate Eurasia from Portugal to north-eastern China and eastern India, and in Africa south to Niger. It is non-migratory, and the sedentary nature of this species is illustrated by the fact that it is only a very rare vagrant to Great Britain, despite breeding as close as northern France. While the bird is not commonly found in Scandinavia today, it could be found in Sweden until the 1990s, with sources reporting six individual birds in 1992 before becoming extirpated in Sweden in 1993. The birds have also been extirpated in several other European countries, including Norway, Luxembourg and Switzerland. This is a common bird of dry, open country and is often seen by roadsides or in cereal fields, although it is also found occupying small, sandy patches by railways, docks and airfields.
Behaviour
The crested lark is a songbird, and has a liquid, warbling song described onomatopoeically as a ' or a '. It sings in flight from high in the sky, at roughly above the ground. The related Eurasian skylark exhibits similar behaviour but also sings during its ascent, whereas the crested lark sings either at altitude or on the ground. Their flight pattern is an example of undulatory locomotion.
Breeding
It nests in small depressions in the ground, often in wastelands and on the outskirts of towns. The nests are untidy structures composed primarily of dead grasses and roots. Three to five brown, finely speckled eggs, similar to those of the Eurasian skylark, are laid at a time and will hatch after. As with most larks, the chicks leave the nest early, after about eight days and take flight after reaching old. Two broods will usually be raised each year.
Food and feeding
Largely vegetarian birds, the crested lark primarily feeds on grains and seeds, such as oats, wheat and barley, but will also eat insects, particularly beetles, with food either being scavenged from the ground or dug up. Juvenile birds are fed by both parents, and generally leave the nest before they are able to fly to start foraging for food themselves.
Relationship to humans
considered the crested lark a bird of special significance, based on similarities he perceived between it and the life of the Friars Minor: its plain earth-coloured plumage and hood, its humility, and its time spent in song.
Status
The crested lark has been categorised by the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species as being of least concern, meaning that it is not currently threatened with extinction. Estimates for the global population of mature individuals of the species range from 22,000,000 to 91,200,000. Figures for Europe are less varied, with estimates putting the number of breeding pairs at between 3,600,000 and 7,600,000, or between 7,200,000 and 15,200,000 individuals. In Europe, trends since 1982 have shown an overall decline in the population of the species, resulting in the assumption that the crested lark is in decline globally.