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  1. The Eurasian skylark (Alauda arvensis) is a passerine bird in the lark family, Alaudidae. It is a widespread species found across Europe and the Palearctic with introduced populations in Australia, New Zealand and on the Hawaiian Islands.

    • A. arvensis
    • Alauda
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  3. Skylark, (Alauda arvensis), Species of Old World lark particularly noted for its rich, sustained song and for singing in the air. It is about 7 inches (18 cm) long, with brown upper parts streaked with black and buffish white underparts. It breeds across Europe and has been introduced into.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  4. 4 de mar. de 2020 · In this excerpt from his poem "To a Skylark," Shelley was inspired by the exhilarating sight and sound of the bird's aerial flight-a swift skyward dart followed by a long, steady, graceful descent of the singing bird. This easy field character has made the renowned Sky Lark the best-known member of the lark family.

    • R. Wayne Campbell, L. M. Van Damme, Stephen R. Johnson, Paul Donald, Ernest Garcia
    • 2020
  5. Sky­larks usu­ally range in size from 18-19 cm. They have a wing-span of 30-36 cm. Fe­males of the species can weight 17-47 g, while males can weigh 27-55 g. Their bills are short but strong. Sky­larks gen­er­ally have streaked black-brown plumage, some have a yel­low or grey over­all tone.

  6. On native range in Eurasia (and where introduced in New Zealand and Australia), some recent declines but still widespread and abundant. Also introduced in Hawaii. Audubon. This is one of the most famous songbirds in the world, celebrated by British poets and naturalists.

  7. Like most larks, often inconspicuous on the ground and best detected by voice. The prolonged warbling and trilling song is given in flight, often so far overhead that the bird appears as a speck, if you can even see it. On the ground, note brown streaky plumage, distinct bushy crest, and broad, diffuse paler eyering. Chunkier than pipits, and does not habitually bob its rear end. In flight ...

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