The meadow pipit ( Anthus pratensis) is a small passerine bird that breeds throughout much of the Palearctic, from south-eastern Greenland and Iceland east to just east of the Ural Mountains in Russia, and south to central France and Romania; an isolated population also occurs in the Caucasus Mountains. It is bird migration over most of its range, wintering in southern Europe, North Africa, and south-western Asia, but is resident year-round in western Europe, although even here many birds move to the coast or lowlands in winter.D. W. Snow (1998). 019854099X, Oxford University Press. 019854099X
Taxonomy
The meadow pipit was formally described by Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the 10th edition of his
Systema Naturae under the binomial name
Alauda pratensis.
The type locality is Sweden.
The meadow pipit is now the
type species of the genus
Anthus that was introduced in 1805 by German naturalist Johann Matthäus Bechstein.
The species is
monotypic; no
subspecies are recognised.
[
]
The genus name Anthus is the Latin name for a small grassland bird mentioned by Pliny the Elder, and the species name pratensis means "of a meadow ", from pratum, "meadow". The name "pipit", first documented by Thomas Pennant in 1768, is onomatopoeia, from the call note of this species.[Lockwood, W. B. (1984). The Oxford Book of British Bird Names. Oxford University Press .] Old folk names, no longer used, include "chit lark", "peet lark", "tit lark", and "titling"; these refer to its small size and superficial resemblance to a lark.[
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Meadow pipit (Anthus pratensis whistleri) in flight Botnsvatn.jpg| A. p. whistleri
Meadow pipit (Anthus pratensis whistleri) in flight Botnsvatn 2.jpg|in Iceland
Description
This is a widespread and often abundant small pipit, measuring in length and weighing . It is an indistinguishable-looking species on the ground, mainly brown above and buff below, with darker barring on most of its plumage; the tail is brown, with narrow white lateral edges. It has a thin bill and pale pinkish yellow legs; the rear claw is conspicuously long, longer than the rest of the rear toes. The call is a faint tsi-tsi. The simple repetitive song is given in a short song flight.[ Birds breeding in Ireland and western Scotland are slightly darker coloured than those in other areas, and are often distinguished as the subspecies A. p. whistleri, though it intergrades clinally with Subspecies A. p. pratensis found in the rest of the species' range.][
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It is similar to the red-throated pipit A. cervinus, which is more heavily barred and (in summer only) has an orange-red throat, and to the tree pipit A. trivialis, which is slightly larger, less heavily streaked, and has stronger facial markings and a shorter rear claw. The song of the meadow pipit accelerates towards the end, while that of the tree pipit slows down.[
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Distribution and habitat
It is primarily a species of open habitats, either uncultivated or low-intensity agriculture, such as grassland, moorland, and heathland, but also occurs in small numbers on arable land. In winter, it also uses saltmarshes and sometimes open woodland. It is a fairly terrestrial pipit, always feeding on the ground, but using elevated perches such as shrubs, fence lines, or electric wires as vantage points to watch for predators.[Hagemeijer, W. J. M., & Blair, M. J., eds. (1997). The EBCC Atlas of European Breeding Birds. Poyser, London .]
The total population is estimated at 12 million pairs. It is an abundant species in the north of its range, and generally the most common breeding bird of the British uplands, but is less common further south. Breeding densities range from in northern Scandinavia, to in grassland in the south of the breeding range, and just in arable farmland.[ A few isolated breeding pairs are recorded from south of the main range, in the mountains of Spain, Italy, and the northern Balkans.][ There has been a general decline in the population over the past 17 years, most notablly in French farmland, where the species has declined by 68%.]
Behaviour
Breeding
The nest is on the ground concealed in dense vegetation, with two to seven (usually often three to five) eggs; the eggs hatch after 11–15 days, with the chicks fledging 10–14 days after hatching. Two broods are usually raised each year. This species is one of the most important nest hosts of the common cuckoo, and it is also an important prey species for merlins and .[
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Food and feeding
Its diet mainly consists of and other , mostly small items less than long. It also eats the seeds of Poaceae, Cyperaceae, Juncaceae, and Calluna, and Empetrum berries, especially in winter.[
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==Gallery==
External links