MELANOCORYPHA LEUCOPTERA. 
White- wing'ed Lark. 
Alauda leucoptera, Pall. Zoog. Rosso-Asiat., tom. i. p. 518, tab. 33. fig. 2. 
sibirica, Gmel. edit. Linn. Syst. Nat., tom. i. p. 799. 
himaculata ?, Menetr. 
Calandrella sibirica, Brandt. 
Phileremos sibirica. Keys, et Bias. Wirbelth. Eur., p. 37. 
leucoptera. Bias. List of Birds of Eur., Newton’s Eng. edit. p. 12. 
Melamcorypha leucoptera, Bonap. Consp. Gen. Av. tom. i. p. 243, Melanocorypha, sp. 5. 
A FINE specimen of this eastern bird was captured near Brighton in the latter part of the year 1869, prior 
to which the furthest westward that the species was known to have occurred is the environs of Liege ; where, 
M. Ch. F. Dubois states in his ‘ Oiseaux de la Belgique,’ an example, in the possession of the Baron de 
Selys-Longchamps, was taken in December 1855. Captain Blakiston obtained examples in the Crimea; Mr. 
Tristram has others from the Volga ; and the earlier w’riters deseribe it as inhabiting Siberia ; it is, in fact, 
another of the many Continental birds that have of late years wandered into the British Islands, such as the 
Sand-Grouse, Scindian Bustard, and others. 
The White-winged Lark is a fine speeies, and, if it occurred frequently with us, would add considerably to 
the interest of our avifauna. By Pallas and Latham it was regarded as a variety of the Calandra Lark ; but 
although nearly allied to, it is really quite distinct from that species. Its proper home seems to be Siberia, 
Tartary, and Southern Russia ; but it occasionally occurs in Poland, and, as above mentioned. Captain 
Blakiston found it in the Crimea. Of its habits, manners, and general economy but little is known ; that 
little I shall here give on the authority oi the various writers. 
Latham says, “ this is plentiful in the sunny fields, in the neighbourhood of the river Irtish, in Siberia, 
where it makes its nest on the ground, like the Skylark, but is inferior to it in song.” 
Dubois remarks that “ its voice is not so agreeable as that of the Skylark ; but its movements are equally 
elegant. It nests like it on the ground in a slight excavation. It is not very timid, and allows people to 
approach closely without fear.” 
Speaking of the bird in the Crimea, Captain Blakiston says, in tbe ‘ Zoologist ’ for 1857, p. 5509 : — 
“ A few days after this, the 5th of January, I was again on the qui vice, as a friend told me he had seen 
some Buntings, white below and rusty-colour above ; with this hint I made for a camp where he said some 
had been shot, the ground being covered with snow; and sure enough, on looking over a heap of small birds, 
I found the Calandra Lark, Common Bunting, and another new to me, which I put down for distinction, as a 
‘ Lark Bunting, No. 20,’ the skin as well as the sternum of which I preserved. The same officer, a day or 
two after, kindly sent me a specimen of the same bird, the White-winged Lark {Alauda leucoptera^, a male. 
I never observed or heard of this species again ; on my return to England Mr. Gould kindly made this 
bird out for me.” 
Of the occurrence of the bird in England, all that has been recorded is comprised in the following- 
brief notices, published by Mr. Bond in the ‘ Zoologist ’ for 1870. At page 1984, after enumerating a number 
of rare or new British birds which had been taken near Brighton between September and the 6th of 
December, 1869, he says : — “I also saw another bird, which I believe to be a young Snowfinch {Frmgilla 
nivalis). I saw it very shortly after its capture, and am quite sure of its being a truly wild bird. I hope 
soon to send you more particulars.” Accordingly at page 2022 he says : — The bird I believed might be 
a young Snowfinch is a specimen of the Siberian Lark, the first that has been recorded as occurring in 
Britain, and a very interesting addition to our list, as it is very rare as a European species.” To this the 
Editor adds : — “ Mr. G. Dawson Rowley has favoured me with a note to exactly the same purjiort, and 
adds that Professor Newton aequiesces in this decision.” 
The sexes differ considerably ; the rufous colouring of the crown of the male, and the greater amount of 
white across his wings, render him by far the finest bird of the two. Tbe plumage of the example 
taken near Brighton, which is now, I believe, in the possession of T. J. Monk, Esq., of Mountfield House, 
Lewes, is represented by the lower figure in the accompanying Plate. 
The male has the head, shoulders, and the base of the tail rufous ; the upper surface of the body 
greyish brown, with a blackish-brown stripe down the centre of each feather; wings dark brown, the 
external feather margined with white, the remainder tipped with light reddish brown ; secondaries 
