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Mallorca, Spain - September 2018

Cap Lardier puis cap Taillat à partir de Gigaro

Cathedrale du Cap-Haitien

Cap Lardier puis cap Taillat à partir de Gigaro

Great Smoky Mountains National Park

 

The fog-capped mountains at the Smokies were a wonderfully peculiar view. The fog stopped being remote and eerie but instead became tangible, animated, and positively emotional. It was an unexpected highlight of our trip.

Cap Spartel , Tangier , Morocco.

Rooikoplewerik

(Calandrella cinerea)

 

Rooikoplewerik

(Calandrella cinerea)

 

The red-capped lark, Calandrella cinerea, is a small passerine bird. This lark breeds in the highlands of eastern Africa southwards from Ethiopia and northern Somalia. In the south, its range stretches across the continent to Angola and south to the Cape in South Africa.

 

The red-capped lark was originally placed in the genus Alauda. Alternate names for the red-capped lark include rufous short-toed lark and short-toed lark, although the former may also describe the Somali short-toed lark and the latter is also used as an alternate name for three other species in the genus Calandrella. Formerly, some authorities considered both the Mongolian short-toed lark (as C. c. dukhunensis) and Erlanger's lark (as C. c. erlangeri or C. c. ruficeps) to be subspecies of the red-capped lark . Additionally, some authorities considered the red-capped lark itself to be ether conspecific with or as a subspecies of the greater short-toed lark.

 

Four subspecies are recognized:

 

C. c. saturatior - Reichenow, 1904: Found from Uganda and western Kenya south to Angola, north-eastern Namibia, northern Botswana and Zambia

C. c. williamsi - Clancey, 1952: Found in central Kenya

C. c. spleniata - (Strickland, 1853): Originally described as a separate species in the genus Alauda. Found from west-central Angola to west-central Namibia

C. c. cinerea - (Gmelin, 1789): Found in southern and central Namibia, southern Botswana, Zimbabwe and South Africa

 

The red-capped lark is a 14- to 15-cm-long bird, with a typically upright stance. The colour of the streaked grey to brown upperparts is variable, with subspecies differing in hue and brightness, but this species is easily identified by its rufous cap, white underparts, and red shoulders. The short head crest is normally not noticeable except when it is raised during courtship displays.

 

The male has redder plumage and a longer crest than the female. Juveniles lack the red cap and shoulders of the adults, have dark spotting on the breast, and white spots on the dark brown upperparts.

 

The call of the red-capped lark is a tshwerp like a sparrow, and the song, given in the display flight, is a jumble of melodious phrases treee, treee, tip-tip, tippy, tippy tippy. It also imitates other birds.

 

This is a species of short grassland including fallow agricultural areas. In eastern Africa, it is found in the highlands, normally above 1000 m, but it occurs down to sea level in suitable habitat in the cooler south of its extensive range.

 

Wikipedia

 

Kenny - Semaine 8

Caps_out

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Kenny YVES © 2013

China Cap and beyond from the summit of Granite Butte in the Wallowa Mountains of eastern Oregon.

 

More information about the trip.

Photo Credit: Bob Capazzo, American Red Cross

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