Wild Guide: Horned Lark

By MDC | January 1, 2022
From Missouri Conservationist: January 2022
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Wild Guide: Horned Lark

Eremophila alpestris

Horned larks prefer areas with extensive bare ground. Look for them in plowed agricultural regions, where they prefer to nest before vegetation has a chance to grow tall. Their camouflaged upperparts make them inconspicuous, but they often occur in flocks, and their movement against the ground, and their distinctively marked faces and “horns,” can help you see them. Their song is a soft twittering and tinkling sound, usually delivered in flight. Their call is a lisping tsee or tzee-te-te.

Like other ground nesters, horned larks lose many young to predators such as raccoons, skunks, and weasels. Females avoid drawing attention to the nest. If a predator does draw too near, they perform a distraction display similar to the “broken-wing act” of killdeer.

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Photo of a horned lark perched on a fencepost.
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Serving Nature and You: Fiscal Year July 1, 2020 – June 30, 2021

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MAGAZINE MANAGER
Stephanie Thurber

EDITOR
Angie Daly Morfeld

ASSOCIATE EDITOR
Larry Archer

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Cliff White

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Kristie Hilgedick
Joe Jerek
Dianne Van Dien

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Shawn Carey
Marci Porter

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Noppadol Paothong
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Laura Scheuler