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The Corncrake - An Ecology of an Enigma (Paperback)
Loot Price: R521
Discovery Miles 5 210
You Save: R53
(9%)
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The Corncrake - An Ecology of an Enigma (Paperback)
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List price R574
Loot Price R521
Discovery Miles 5 210
You Save R53 (9%)
Expected to ship within 9 - 15 working days
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Changes in farmland management throughout the twentieth century,
including agricultural intensification and increasing
mechanisation, have resulted in the loss of habitat for many
species. The Corncrake is one such species that has faced multiple
challenges to its survival. Although it was once a common bird
throughout northern Europe, the breeding areas of Corncrakes have
been steadily reduced to a fraction of what they once were, and in
many areas their continuation as a regularly breeding bird is in
serious doubt. In addition, the behaviour of the Corncrake, nesting
under the cover of tall grass and undertaking annual long-distance
migrations, means that for most of the last hundred years, its
detailed ecology has remained mysterious and little understood.
Although there have been millions of words written about the
Corncrake in scientific papers, until now there has been no
full-length book that attempts to capture all the aspects of its
ecology, and to present this information to non-specialists. As a
result, until very recently, many important facts about its
lifestyle and behaviour have not been widely known, even among
ornithologists. Although scarcely seen in its natural habitat, the
Corncrake is well-known in many rural areas due to its
characteristic (and persistent) night-time calling, but new
discoveries with the aid of acoustic science have proved
surprising, and may offer new ways of improving the location,
identification, and management options to protect and enable the
population of this iconic species to recover, even to thrive in our
countryside. A new appreciation of the requirements of this species
and the ways in which our sensitive management of the whole
landscape, both in its potential breeding areas across Europe and
Asia and in the seasonal quarters in regions of Africa, offer new
hope for the future of this fascinating bird.
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