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Smithsonian Magazine on MSNSee the Wonders of Bird Engineering in These Photos of Intricate NestsBirds, for the most part, do not live in nests. These complex structures, sometimes meticulously assembled for more than a ...
The lark bunting, the state bird of Colorado, has been described thus: “Our Troubadour of the Plains is gentle of manner and pleasingly sociable among his fellows.
Lark Buntings are the Colorado State Bird and you can find them at Rocky Mountain Arsenal wildlife refuge.
This week, scientists have published a description of the bird—an approximately 46,000-year-old female horned lark, a bird still common across the Northern Hemisphere today—telling the story ...
The Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin held its first "Fat Bird Week" competition, and the hefty horned lark emerged victorious.
The Natural Resources Foundation of Wisconsin held its first "Fat Bird Week" competition, and the hefty horned lark emerged victorious.
Humorist, author and illustrator Matt Kracht of "A Dumb Birds Field Guide to the Worst Birds Ever" ranks a handful of common North American birds and why you should hate them as much as he does.
These birds nest on the ground, of course, and they hide themselves and their nests by having wonderful camouflage. The feathers of their back look like the brown soil and dry grasses they sit and ...
Appearances are deceptive, and unbelievably so for the tiny Tawny lark: the dull brown-coloured bird that is small enough to fit in your palm can imitate calls of 34 other birds found in its ...
The sighting of Horned Lark (Eremophila alpestris) in Haa on December 20 takes the bird count to 739 in the country. The bird was spotted at a field in Gakidling gewog when a forester, Wangchuk, and ...
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