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'Tales and Trails' column about the western meadowlark's presence during colder months. No song epitomizes the open spaces of the American West like that of the Western Meadowlark. Indeed, the song of the Western Meadowlark can be rightly .
Ranges from 3 to 6 eggs, with 5 egg clutches most common. The female alone builds the nest on the ground in a shallow depression of a pasture, meadow, or hayfield. It is well hidden in thick vegetation and constructed of grasses, and often has an arch or a roof, and a runway leading to the opening. The Eastern Meadowlark is a common year round resident statewide. In winter it often gathers in loose flocks of 25 to 50 individuals in prime feeding areas.
The species is declining in Tennessee, as well as rangewide, because of changes in land use and human encroachment. Dynamic map of Eastern Meadowlark eBird observations in Tennessee.
Best places to see in Tennessee: Eastern Meadowlarks should be easy to find in farmland across the state, especially in spring and summer when they sing from fence posts and powerlines. University of Michigan Museum of Zoology. National Audubon Society species information.
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A search through what ornithological literature I have available fails to disclose any published reference to night singing of the Western Meadowlark Sturnella neglecta. My observations concerning the nocturnal singing habits of this bird in extreme northwestern Montana may therefore be of interest. In this locality, songs of the Western Meadowlark can be heard at night regularly from about the middle of April until the middle of June.
Usual daytime songs are heard daily from the date of spring arrival of the birds, early in March, until the time of their departure in October. Singing is not continued for any length of time during the night; instead, it seems to be done at occasional awakenings, which occur at all hours of the night, but most frequently between dark and midnight.
Usual daytime songs are heard daily from the date of spring arrival of the birds, early in March, until the time of their departure in October. Their nests are situated on the ground, and are covered with a roof woven from grass. Often a song by one bird is followed at once by songs from one to four other birds within hearing range of the first. International Union for Conservation of Nature. When winter weather is especially harsh, eastern meadowlarks may even feed on roadkill. Eastern meadowlarks are area-sensitive birds, requiring at least acres of unbroken grassland habitat for nesting. Sometimes a song will he broken off abruptly after the first two or three notes have been given.
Although generally only one song is given by a bird during one awakening, frequently two to as many as twelve songs are uttered, at intervals ranging from a few seconds to a minute or longer. Often a song by one bird is followed at once by songs from one to four other birds within hearing range of the first.
The songs given by the birds at night are usually their typical territory songs. Sometimes a song will he broken off abruptly after the first two or three notes have been given. All singing is done with fully as great vigor as during daylight hours.