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Books > Sport & Leisure > Natural history, country life & pets > Wild animals > Birds & birdwatching
Chickens, with their natural beauty and big personalities, are
beloved for the humor and wisdom they bring to daily life. Few are
better acquainted with chickens' charm than Melissa Caughey, who
has introduced the appeal of owning a flock and chronicled the
lives and personalities of her own backyard birds in her
best-selling books. In Chicken Wisdom Frame-Ups, she delivers that
charm for all to enjoy, anywhere a dose of inspiration might be
needed. Sage sentiments meet delightful chicken photography on 50
individual cards, and with a pull-out table-top frame included, you
can display your favorite card or easily swap it out for one that
fits the mood or suits the moment. It's an all-in-one package that
delivers the joy of keeping chickens -- without having to clean the
coop!
A compact, lightweight and informative guide to 215 of the UK's
most common birds. Featuring 950 colour illustrations and 215
up-to-date colour distribution maps, this new edition of RSPB
Pocket Guide to British Birds showcases 215 bird species regularly
seen in the UK. Each species is illustrated in all distinct plumage
forms likely to be observed in the wild, and includes concise and
succinct descriptions, with details on identification, calls and
song, habitat, distribution and behaviour. Along with helpful
distribution maps, the species accounts also feature confusion
species, with their most important and easily noted differences
described. Portable and easy-to-use, RSPB Pocket Guide to British
Birds is the perfect guide for use in the field.
Know Your Ducks is designed for the novice enthusiast of any age.
For each breed the right hand page is dedicated to a quality
picture of the duck accompanied by a description of its appearance.
On the facing page is a concise description of the breed's origins
and its history. For many for the breeds Jack gives a description
of their personality, egg laying and flying abilities and how they
are best kept.
The pelecaniformes are a large and important group of seabirds,
containing many spectacular species. This book addresses the
breeding biology of the six pelecaniform families, which comprise
the closely-related core groups (pelicans, cormorants/shags,
darters, gannets/boobies) and their more distant relatives, the
frigate birds and tropic birds. Many fundamental questions can be
addressed through the pelecaniformes: Why do they breed in
colonies? What are the links between their feeding methods and
their reproduction? What part does territorial and pairing behavior
play in their life-cycles? These and scores of comparable issues,
including those related to man, are woven here into a richly
interpretative text.
The author's approach to the subject is threefold. First, the
pelecaniformes are placed within the framework of four discrete
disciplines, with chapters on evolutionary relationships,
comparative behavior, ecology, and the birds' relationship with
humans. Secondly, each of the six families is discussed,
elucidating the range of taxonomy, behavior, and ecology within
each. Finally, we progress to specific level, using the same
structure as for the family accounts. In this way, each of the
60-odd species can be understood not just as discrete units, but as
part of their family and order. The book is unique in its coverage
of the entire order and in its combination of facts and
interpretation.
Pelicans, Cormorants, and their Relatives will enable readers not
only to identify the many spectacular species which make up this
large and important group of seabirds, but also to understand their
breeding biology.
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Herons
(Hardcover)
James A. Kushlan, James A. Hancock; Illustrated by David Thelwell
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R4,916
Discovery Miles 49 160
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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Herons and their close relatives, the egrets and bitterns, comprise
sixty species in total and are found all over the world except in
polar regions, and are a strikingly beautiful part of the wetlands
they inhabit. They are particularly abundant and popular in South
West USA, especially Florida. Herons are a diverse group, easily
recognised by their long legs, necks and bills. Many species are
notable for their sociality as they feed, roost, and nest together
in single or mixed species assemblages. The authors have extensive
experience of research and observation of these birds and this book
provides an up to date comprehensive review of the herons of the
world. Covering their biology, distribution, description,
systematics, breeding, feeding, and conservation, James Hancock and
James Kushlan have distilled their lifetimes' research on the heron
into one volume. This volume is complemented by beautiful colour
paintings especially painted for the book, colour photographs, and
distribution maps.
This book is the most up to date work on honeycreepers, covering the life history, relationships, and biology of the birds. The honeycreepers, with their bright colouration, and canary-like songs, are famed for their unique evolutionary history as a geographically isolated group that has undergone a spectacular burst of adaptions to the islands of the Hawaiian archipelago.
This practical pocket field guide, published in association with
the Wildlife Trusts, includes 170 species of coastal birds from
Britain and the near Continent. Each species account contains
accurate artworks that show details of variations in plumage for
male, female and juvenile birds, as well as breeding and
non-breeding birds. A concise written account outlines further
essential information, such as size, description, voice, habitat,
distribution and habits. The easy-to-follow layouts and
illustrations aid quick and precise identification, and make this
book an indispensable reference in the field as well as at home. It
is compact enough to fit in the pocket yet packed with essential
information for nature enthusiasts.
Those who are unfamiliar with grebes tend to think of them as odd
ducks, but their strange behaviours reveal them to be fascinating
and intriguing birds. Grebes are unusual and unique in many ways:
their habit of feather-eating; their method of sunbathing; their
special method of underwater propulsion; the unusual structure of
their feet; their courtship behaviour; and their floating nests. As
the birds are dependent upon shallow wetlands, they are strongly
affected and threatened by our use of their habitats, leading to
dwindling populations and even extinction of some species. In this
new addition to the Bird Families of the World series Jon Fjeldsa,
a renowned expert on the grebes, provides an overview of the
results of all the research that has been done on grebes. Part I
contains a brief presentation of the grebe family, constraints of
diving, the relationships between grebes and divers, and the
morphology of grebes. Part II covers their biogeography, ecological
distribution, feeding ecology, behaviour and communication,
breeding biology, environmental threats, and conservation. Part III
follows with 22 species accounts, including distribution maps. The
plates section contains sixteen stunning paintings showing all the
grebe species, by Jon Fjeldsa. The Grebes, like its companion
volumes in the series, will be an indispensable work of reference
for ornithologists, whether professional or amateur.
The bowerbirds are confined to the great island of New Guinea and
the island continent of Australia, and their immediately adjacent
islands. They are medium-sized birds, omnivorous and largely
solitary. They are unique in the avian world in that the males
build elaborate 'bowers': structures of sticks, grasses or other
plant stems on or close to the ground for display and courtship,
often incorporating objects such as colourful fruits, flowers,
feathers, bones, stones, shells, insect skeletons, and numerous
other natural (and human-made) objects. The highly sophisticated
building, decorating, collecting, arranging, thieving, singing, and
courtship posturing and dancing by males is primarily to attract
and impress females. As much of it is performed in the absence of
females, however, some consider it possible that males may also
enjoy such activities for their own sake. The bowers and the birds'
behaviour associated with them have been much studied by
behavioural ecologists searching for evolutionary and ecological
explanations of behavioural patterns. The authors' aims include:
(a) making the reader aware of the broader significance of
bowerbirds to general biological studies and (b) providing
references to key literature on theoretical issues. Part I contains
general chapters on bowerbird evolution, behaviour, environment,
demography, courtship patterns, breeding biology, and sexual
selection. Part II follows with 21 species accounts, giving
comprehensive information on the birds in their natural state,
including distribution maps and sonographs. Complementing the
species accounts are superb colour plates by Eustace Barnes,
especially commissioned for this volume. The Bowerbirds, like its
companions in the series, is an indispensable work of reference for
everyone interested in birds.
The purpose of this book is to explain why red-winged blackbirds
are polygynous and to describe the effects of this mating system on
other aspects of the biology of the species. Polygyny is a mating
system in which individual males form long-term mating
relationships with more than one female at a time. The authors show
that females choose to mate polygynously because there is little
cost to sharing male parental care in this species, and because
females gain protection against nest predation by nesting near
other females. Polygyny has the effect of intensifying sexual
selection on males by increasing the variance in mating success
among males. For females, polygyny means that they will often share
a male's territory with other females during the breeding season
and will thus be forced to adapt to frequent female-female
interactions. This work reviews the results of many studies by
other researchers, as well as presenting the authors' own results.
Studies of red-winged blackbirds have ranged from long-term
investigations of reproductive success and demography, to research
on genetic parentage based on modern molecular methods, to a
variety of experimental manipulations of ecological circumstances
and behavior. Since the red-winged blackbird is one of the best
studied species of any taxa in terms of its behavior and ecology,
the authors have a particularly extensive body of results on which
to base their conclusions. Originally published in 1995. The
Princeton Legacy Library uses the latest print-on-demand technology
to again make available previously out-of-print books from the
distinguished backlist of Princeton University Press. These
editions preserve the original texts of these important books while
presenting them in durable paperback and hardcover editions. The
goal of the Princeton Legacy Library is to vastly increase access
to the rich scholarly heritage found in the thousands of books
published by Princeton University Press since its founding in 1905.
Pete Dunne, one of the foremost birding writers in the country,
shares 33 funny, poignant, whimsical, and informative tales about
birders and birding in his first collection of birding essays in
more than ten years.- Dunne is an expert birder, sought-after
teacher, and popular author- Includes wonderful illustrations by
David Gothard
Occasionally tense, frequently humorous, and always
straightforward, Alaska's Father Goose is a celebration of flight,
a wartime memoir, a history of airline growth, and ultimately a
quintessentially Sourdough success story.
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Laggard
(Hardcover)
Ronald Stevens, Brian Allderbridge
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R906
Discovery Miles 9 060
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Ships in 12 - 19 working days
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This is the first comprehensive review of avian incubation. It is written by leading authorities from around the world and covers all aspects of Incubation Biology from evolution to practical aspects. This is an invaluable text for both applied and pure scientists in the fields of Incubation and Ornithology.
This book covers in unmatched detail the life history, relationships, biology, and conservation of all the world's toucans, barbets, and honeyguides. These number 133 species, found in tropical regions around the world. The toucans are especially well-known because of their dramatic bills and their association with the Amazon rainforest. The authors have been working with these birds for over 20 years, and their knowledge and expertise in these groups is unrivalled. Much of the information in this book has never previously been published. The color plates, painted by well-known US artist Albert Earl Gilbert, are probably the best paintings of these birds ever produced.
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