THE BIRDS
HORNED LARKS. Otocoris alpestris (Linnaeus)20
Field characters.In size
somewhat larger than Linnet; decidedly smaller than Meadowlark; length
about 6 inches. A patch on breast, one on either side of head, and a bar
across forehead, black; tail blackish with narrow white margins; upper
surface of body light brown, more or less darkly streaked; under surface
whitish. Adult male has a short 'horn' (tuft of black feathers) above
each eye. When on ground walks rather than hops; runs with celerity.
Voice: Call notes faint and high pitched, see-weetle,
see-tle, or sleet; song, a series of tinkling notes, teet,
toot, teet-teetle-eetle-eetle, which is uttered most persistently
when the bird circles about high overhead.
Occurrence.Common
resident on the plains of the San Joaquin Valley (Lower Sonoran Zone);
occasionally visits small open meadows in foothills west of main Sierra
Nevada (race actia). Also occurs, at least in summer, locally,
east of the Sierras (race merrilli). Casual in fall and winter at
Smith Creek east of Coulterville, and above Ten Lakes. Live on the
ground in open country, usually in loose flocks.
20The Horned Larks at
Lagrange and Snelling and west of Pleasant Valley belong to the common
resident subspecies of the San Joaquin Valley, the California Horned
Lark, Otocoris alpestris actia Oberholser. Another race, the
Dusky Horned Lark, Otocoris alpestris merrilli Dwight, is found
in the Mono Lake region, and a few individuals stray westward during the
fall and winter. With specimens in hand, merrilli as compared
with actia is seen to be of larger size throughout and to have a
grayish rather than reddish cast of coloration, with the dark streaks on
the upper surface more sharply contrasted.
The Horned Lark is a bird of the open country,
inhabiting the plains of the San Joaquin Valley and the adjacent rolling
grasslands. It also occurs here and there on the meadows in the adjacent
western foothills of the Yosemite section, as well as again in the open
country east of the Sierra Nevada. Wherever it nests the species is
probably resident through out the year, as it most certainly is in the
San Joaquin Valley. East of the mountains, where heavy snow covers the
ground for at least a portion of the winter season, the birds may be
partially migratory, although of this we are uncertain, because we made
no winter observations in the Mono Lake region.
The Horned Lark is a notably gregarious species. Even
during the breeding season, when the pairs severally are attending to
the duties of nesting, members of neighboring pairs are wont to convene
together, apparently for the mere sake of sociability. Dusty roadways
are favorite meeting places and here it is that the Horned Lark is most
likely to come to the attention of the traveler. When on the ground the
birds walk with alternate tread and a consequent side to side movement
of the body and fore and aft movement of the head, resembling, in these
respects, Brewer Blackbirds and Pipits. If a bird be excited or
frightened its walk changes into a gliding run; when advancing in this
manner the straight forward movement of its pale-colored body along the
ground renders it decidedly inconspicuous.
If put to flight Horned Larks get under way quickly,
each individual pursuing an undulating course; the flock assumes an
irregular, scattered formation, circles about, and often alights close
to the place from which it was frightened. The dull colored back and
pale under surface match well with the earth or sky; but at times, as
the birds glide slantingly through the air, the white under lining of
the wings shows momentarily in silvery flashes.
The rather faint call notes, see-weetle,
see-tle, or just sleet, are uttered at irregular intervals
while the birds are either on the ground or in flight. A distinct flight
call is also given when the members of a flock begin to take wing; this
resembles the syllables twee-too-too-too, twee-too, clear and
plaintive. In the spring there is a definite song on the part of the
male, consisting of a series of weak finely attenuated notes, with a
pleasant tinkling quality: teet, toot, teet-teetle-eetle-eetle.
This song may be uttered when the bird is perched on a clod or hummock,
but is also given, and then much more impressively, when the bird
circles high overhead in seemingly aimless course. This it does for many
minutes at a time, giving a suggestion of the genetic relationship which
the Horned Lark bears to the Skylark of the Old World.
The race of Horned Lark occurring east of the
mountains is relatively uncommon there, doubtless because of the
scarcity of suitable prairie land. On May 12, 1916, a pair was
encountered on an open piece of ground which had been cleared of
sagebrush and used as a sheep corral. A few others were met with in dry
places where the sagebrush was naturally sparse. Some at least of these
east-side birds wander westward in the fall and winter seasons, though
this movement is not so general as to constitute a real migration. On
October 11, 1915, three Horned Larks were seen on an open level spot at
an altitude of 9700 feet, above Ten Lakes. The one taken here proved to
belong to the race merrilli, as did another bird collected at
Smith Creek, six miles east of Coulterville on January 20, 1916.
At Snelling and Lagrange, Horned Larks (of subspecies
actia) are to be found in considerable numbers throughout the
year. In December and January they were seen on the open rolling
tableland back from the Merced River on common ground with Pipits. In
one instance the two species were mingled in the same flock. On January
8, 1915, Horned Larks at Snelling were darting about erratically, at
dusk, in pairs, giving the trilled pursuit notes which mark the
beginning of the courting season.
The breeding season in the San Joaquin Valley is
early, beginning in early April; and by the latter part of May fully
grown young are to be seen in numbers. On May 28, 1915, fully 50 birds,
adults and juveniles, were recorded in an hour and a quarter's census at
Snelling. East of the mountains the breeding season is somewhat later.
The first young bird observed there in 1916 was seen on June 26.
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