Savile's Bustard vs Little Bustard
Lophotis savilei compared with Tetrax tetrax
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Attribute | Savile's Bustard | Little Bustard |
|---|---|---|
| Scientific Name | Lophotis savilei | Tetrax tetrax |
| Order | Otidiformes | Otidiformes |
| Family | Otididae | Otididae |
| Conservation Status | Least Concern | Near Threatened |
| Length | — | — |
| Wingspan | 48.9 cm (19.3 in) | 47.9 cm (18.9 in) |
| Weight | 712.1 g (25.12 oz) | 840.6666666666666 g (29.65 oz) |
| Diet | Omnivore of open grasslands, eating insects, small vertebrates, seeds, and green shoots. Beetles and grasshoppers … | Omnivore of European and Central Asian steppe; eats insects, clover, seeds, and green shoots. Beetles … |
| Clutch Size | 1-2 | 2-6 |
| Population Trend | — | — |
Habitat Comparison
Song & Call Comparison
Savile's Bustard
Loud, low booming call; deep resonant sound carrying well across open semi-arid African grassland habitat.
Little Bustard
Loud, low booming call; deep resonant notes carrying impressively across open African semi-arid landscape.
Geographic Range & Migration
Savile's Bustard
Found in arid savanna of the Sahel from Senegal to Ethiopia. Resident in dry woodland and grassland.
Little Bustard
Found in open grasslands and steppe from Western Europe to Central Asia. Partial migrant. Near Threatened.
Conservation Status
Savile's Bustard
Little Bustard
How to Tell Them Apart
Savile's Bustard
Asian Koel: males glossy blue-black; females dark brown barred white; red eye; long graduated tail; no wing bars; strongly dimorphic
Little Bustard
Horsfield's Bronze-cuckoo: bronze-green above; white barred below; narrow incomplete bars; reddish eye; bronze-green iridescence
About These Birds
Savile's Bustard
A small bustard (45-55 cm) found in arid savanna of the Sahel from Senegal to Ethiopia. Sandy-buff plumage with a short black-and-white crest. Omnivore. Males inflate their throat pouches during display. Named after the British ornithologist Alfred Savile.
Little Bustard
A small bustard (40-45 cm) found in open grasslands and steppe from Western Europe to Central Asia. Males have a distinctive black-and-white neck pattern during breeding. Short-distance migrant. Classified as Near Threatened due to agricultural intensification across European grasslands.