The Eurasian skylark was
described by the Swedish naturalist
Carl Linnaeus in 1758 in the
tenth edition of his
Systema Naturae and retains its original
binomial name of
Alauda arvensis. It is one of the four species placed in the genus
Alauda. The results of a
molecular phylogenetic study of the lark family Alaudidae published in 2013 suggested that Eurasian skylark is most closely related to the
Oriental skylark Alauda gulgula. Formerly, many authorities considered the
Japanese skylark as a separate species. It is now usually considered a
subspecies of the Eurasian skylark. Alternate names for the Eurasian skylark include northern skylark and sky lark.
Subspecies Eleven subspecies are recognized: •
A. a. arvensis Linnaeus, 1758 – northern, western and central Europe •
A. a. sierrae Weigold, 1913 – Portugal, central and southern Spain •
A. a. harterti Whitaker, 1904 – north-western Africa •
A. a. cantarella Bonaparte, 1850 – southern Europe from north-eastern Spain to Turkey and the Caucasus •
A. a. armenica Bogdanov, 1879 – south-eastern Turkey to Iran •
A. a. dulcivox Hume, 1872 – south-eastern European Russia and western Siberia to north-western China and south-western Mongolia •
A. a. kiborti Zaliesski, 1917 – southern Siberia, northern and eastern Mongolia and north-eastern China •
A. a. intermedia R. Swinhoe, 1863 – north-central Siberia to north-eastern China and Korea •
A. a. pekinensis Swinhoe, 1863 – north-eastern Siberia,
Kamchatka Peninsula and the
Kuril Islands •
A. a. lonnbergi Hachisuka, 1926 – northern
Sakhalin Island •
A. a. japonica Temminck &
Schlegel, 1848 – southern Sakhalin Island, southern Kuril Island, Japan and the
Ryukyu Islands: the
Japanese skylark Some authorities recognise the subspecies
A. a. scotia Tschusi, 1903 and
A. a. guillelmi Witherby, 1921. In the above list
scotia is included in the
nominate subspecies A. a. arvensis and
guillelmi is included in
A. a. sierrae. ==Description==