• İçeriğe atla
Macaulay Library Macaulay Library
Ara
Bulunamadı
Bulunamadı
Menü
Kapat

Main navigation

  • Ara
  • Kaynaklar
  • Dashboard
  • Merlin
  • Hakkında
  • Yardım

Secondary navigation

  • Bağış Yap
  • Giriş

Dil

  • Čeština
  • Deutsch
  • English
  • Español (América Latina)
  • Español (España)
  • Euskara
  • Français
  • עִברִית
  • Italiano
  • 日本語
  • Монгол
  • Norsk
  • Português (Portugal)
  • Português (Brasil)
  • Русский
  • Türkçe
  • Українська
  • 中文 (繁體)
  • 中文(简体)

ML637543796

Singing Bushlark (Singing) Mirafra javanica [cantillans Group]

Raporla

Kullanıcı

Samarth Shadakshari Bu kullanıcının medyaları Profil

Tarih

6 Haz 2025 eBird gözlemi S247272777

Konum

Singapura
Tumakuru, Karnataka, India
Bu konumdan medyalar Resimli Tür Listesi
Harita
Harita Koordinatlar: 13.6042273, 76.4712065
Yaş ve cinsiyet
Erişkin, cinsiyet belirsiz - 1
Davranış
Kur davranışı veya çiftleşme
Ses
Ötüş
Kayıttan çalma
Ses çalınmamış

Medya notları

Mostly the bushlark serenade, with calls of other species heard in between.

Gözlem detayları

Bare minimum. Clearly heard, identified, seen and photographed for a good five minutes after confirming their ID! Never in my wildest dreams did I expect to see them right at my hometown after spending one evening near Mysuru to find them! A pair initially seen flitting across the road and crossing the fallow fields intermittently earlier in the evening, initially speculated to be various other expected species, such as its Indian counterpart, ACSL, paddyfield pipit and even RTL, partly due to poor record shots and views. However, later in the evening while observing the Indian fellow display, I noticed another lark giving an extremely varied melody atop a small mud mound. Assuming it to be tawny (seen here earlier with a similar diverse repertoire), I clicked a couple of record shots; only to find it had an unusually different plumage and build! Then as if to lend me a confirmation, the other bird swooped in from seemingly nowhere, and the two flew about the fields again! This time, they were closer and I could obtain shots in flight, where the white outer tail feathers were clearly visible. While one of the birds flew out of view into the grasses, another continued to sit and sing atop a stone pole, allowing for the final clear shots and audio I desired (will be uploaded soon). Very different from Indian in plumage and behaviour; not performing much displays in flight and instead relying on their song to attract potential mates. Also not very shy, sitting right on the asphalt road twice; unlike Indian that always landed on the electric wires or vegetation nearby. After obtaining quite a bit more media than I probably needed, I left the birds to fend for themselves and headed back with a happy heart. A unique, amazing species that definitely deserves an enormous eBird description!

Teknik bilgiler

Kayıt cihazı
Nikon D5300
Mikrofon
Aksesuar
Orijinal dosya boyutu
240.7 KB

Cornell Lab of Ornithology

Collections and Guides

  • Cornell Guide to Bird Sounds: United States and Canada
  • Radio Expeditions
  • Internet Bird Collection
  • Oriental Bird Club Image Database

Kaynaklar

  • Medya hazırlanıyor ve yükleniyor
  • Ses kaydı için püf noktaları
  • Medyaların kullanımı ve derecelendirilmesi
  • Medya talep et
  • Hedef tür
  • Fotoğraf ve Ses Bulmacası
  • Ses kaydı düzenleme yönergeleri
  • Ses kaydı için uygulamaların kullanımı
  • Ses kaydı için ekipman seçimi
  • Ses kaydı atölyeleri
  • Öğrenciler için imkanlar

Hakkında

  • Tarihçe
  • Ekibimiz
  • Kişi
  • Yerli Toprakları Beyanı
  • Web erişim kolaylığı
  • Gizlilik politikası
  • Kullanım koşulları
Bağış Yap

Bizi takip et

Cornell University Cornell University
© 2025 Cornell University