Components
North American Bird Profiles
Interactive Bird Coloring Book
Hear Bird Songs
State Birds
Bird Integration

Backyard Birds Reading Comp.

Peregrine Falcon Reading Comp.
Baltimore Oriole Reading Comp.
Birds Cloze Reading
Birds Sentence Surgeons
Birds Interactive Scavenger Hunt
Birds Printable Scavenger Hunt
Bird Math
Birds Interactive
Birds Crossword
Birds online word search
Goldfinch Jigsaw
Birds Hangman
Bird Identification Quizzes
Easy
Intermediate
Ornithologist

Internet mrnussbaum.com

Home >> Science >> American Birds >> State Birds >> Lark Bunting
Select a state bird:
Lark Bunting Range Map | Play this bird's song

Photo Credit: mt.gov (Montana Government)

Description: The conspicuous Lark Bunting is entirely black with a large white wing patch. It reaches a length of about seven inches. Females and winter males are brownish with heavy streaks. The male Lark Bunting is the only member of the sparrow family to molt from a bright summer plumage to a dull winter plumage. Lark Bunting are often seen on telephone wires or on fences.

Diet: The Lark Bunting eats insects, grains, seeds, and occasionally fruit. It often forages on the ground, and will sometimes snatch insects out of mid-air.

Range: The Lark Bunting is primarily confined to the western plains. It breeds east to eastern Kansas, eastern Nebraska and the Dakotas, west to eastern Idaho. It breeds north to southern portions of the Canadian prairie provinces and south to northern Oklahoma. The Lark Bunting winters in desert regions of Mexico and the American southwest.

Habitat: The Lark Bunting requires grasslands, prairies, meadows and sagebrush. In the winter, the Lark Bunting can be found in desert regions.

Nesting: Female Lark Buntings lay 2-6 eggs in a loose bowl of grass on the ground, usually under a shrub.

Status: Some reports consider the Lark Bunting to be a species in decline.

 

mrnussbaum.com copyright 2005-2006 by Greg Nussbaum. All rights reserved | Privacy Policy | Advertise on this site

 

 

 

 
1 1 1