Desert lark
The desert lark breeds in deserts and semi-deserts from Morocco to western India. It has a very wide distribution and faces no obvious threats, and surveys have shown that it is slowly increasing in numbers as it expands its range. The International Union for Conservation of Nature has rated its conservation status as being of "least concern".
Taxonomy and systematics
Originally, the desert lark was classified as belonging to the genus Alauda until moved to Ammomanes. Alternate names include desert finch lark and sand lark.Subspecies
Twenty-two subspecies are recognized:- Southern Moroccan desert lark - Hartert, 1924: Found in southern Morocco and south-western Algeria
- Algerian desert lark or North Algerian desert lark - Sharpe, 1890: Originally described as a separate species. Found in northern Algeria, Tunisia, north-western Libya and north-western Chad
- South Algerian desert lark - Hartert, 1911: Found in south-eastern Algeria and south-western Libya
- Central Algerian desert lark or Saharan desert lark - Hartert, 1912: Found in central Algeria
- Damergu desert lark - Hartert, 1924: Found in Mauritania to southern Algeria and north-western Niger
- A. d. kollmannspergeri - Niethammer, 1955: Found in north-eastern Chad and western Sudan
- Red Sea desert lark - : Found from eastern Egypt to northern Sudan
- Khartoum desert lark - Reichenow, 1904: Found from western Chad to central Sudan
- Middle East desert lark or Sinai desert lark - : Originally described as a separate species in the genus Alauda. Found from northern Egypt to southern Turkey, Syria, central Arabia, northern and south-western Iraq
- Eritrea desert lark - Shelley, 1902: Originally described as a separate species. Found in north-eastern Sudan, Eritrea and southern Arabia
- A. d. taimuri - Meyer de Schauensee & Ripley, 1953: Found in northern Oman and UAE
- Danakil desert lark - Salvadori, 1902: Originally described as a separate species. Found in southern Eritrea, Ethiopia and north-western Somalia
- Somali desert lark - Elliot, DG, 1897: Originally described as a separate species. Found in northern Somalia
- A. d. azizi - Ticehurst & Cheesman, 1924: Found in east-central Arabia
- A. d. saturata - Ogilvie-Grant, 1900: Originally described as a separate species. Found in southern Arabia
- A. d. insularis - Ripley, 1951: Found in Bahrain
- Jordanian desert lark - Meinertzhagen, R, 1923: Found in Jordan and southern Syria
- Eastern Iraqi desert lark - Meinertzhagen, R, 1923: Found in eastern Iraq and western Iran
- A. d. parvirostris - Hartert, 1890: Found in north-eastern Iran and western Turkmenistan
- A. d. orientalis - Zarudny & Loudon, 1904: Found in north-eastern Iran, northern Afghanistan, southern Turkmenistan, southern Uzbekistan and southern Tajikistan
- A. d. iranica - Zarudny, 1911: Found in central, southern, eastern Iran to southern Afghanistan and western Pakistan
- Indian desert finch-lark or Indian desert lark - : Originally described as a separate species in genus Mirafra. Found in south-eastern Afghanistan, eastern Pakistan and north-western India
Description
The song is a mournful choo-wee-chacha , uttered from the ground or a boulder, or during undulating flight. It is more mellow and less squeaky than that of the bar-tailed lark. When flushed it utters a short or chee-lu.
Distribution and habitat
The desert lark is found from Mauritania, Western Sahara and southern Morocco in the west east through northern Africa south to Chad and Somalia through south west Asia to western India.It is resident apart from local movements in arid stony areas, and avoids flat sand and will always be found in broken terrain with a vertical element to it