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Birds of Peru (Paperback)
Thomas S. Schulenberg, Daniel F. Lane, Douglas F. Stotz, John P. O'Neill, Theodore A. Parker III; Illustrated by …
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R991
Discovery Miles 9 910
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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With over 1800 species, Peru has the second richest avifauna of any
country in the world. As a consequence it is one of the most
popular birding destinations in South America. This will be the
first comprehensive and fully illustrated field guide to the birds
of Peru. Text is arranged opposite the plates, in conventional
field guide manner. The combination of authoritative text and
superb artwork will set new standards for South American field
guides.
Birds of Peru is the most complete and authoritative field guide to
this diverse, neotropical landscape. It features every one of
Peru's 1,817 bird species and shows the distinct plumages of each
in 307 superb, high-quality color plates. Concise descriptions and
color distribution maps are located opposite the plates, making
this book much easier to use in the field than standard neotropical
field guides. This fully revised paperback edition includes
twenty-five additional species. * A comprehensive guide to all
1,817 species found in Peru--one fifth of the world's birds--with
subspecies, sexes, age classes, and morphs fully illustrated *
Designed especially for field use, with vivid descriptive
information and helpful identification tips opposite color plates *
Detailed species accounts, including a full-color distribution map
* Includes 25 additional species not covered in the first edition *
Features 3 entirely new plates and more than 25 additional
illustrations
A synthesis of the ecological information on 4037 species of birds
found from Mexico south to Tierra del Fuego. This work summarizes
details on 40 key ecological parameters for each bird species.
Additional data and further analyses are provided for migratory
species. Because bird communities are good indicators of habitat
type and condition, and because extensive bird surveys can be done
quickly, bird communities are critical to rapid evaluations of an
ecosystem's biological value and integrity. The authors analyze the
bird species of major habitats from a conservation perspective, and
develop specific guidelines to illustrate how governments,
conservation organizations, and wildlife managers can use this
ecological information to anchor conservation strategies on sound
biological reality.
The remote, rugged Cabeceras Cofanes-Chingual is one of the
last intact mountainous regions in Ecuador and serves as the most
important remaining refuge for endangered, range-restricted flora
and fauna of the Ecuadorian Andes. In October 2008 scientists from
Ecuador, Peru, and the United States conducted a rapid biological
inventory and a rapid social inventory to assess the region’s
suitability for protection as a municipal reserve. Working closely
with local communities and indigenous Cofan, whose ancestral
territory abuts the proposed reserve to the south, the teams
surveyed the hydrology, geology, soils, vegetation and flora,
fishes, amphibians and reptiles, birds, mammals, archaeology, and
current human communities. Full and abstracted results of the
fieldwork are provided in Spanish and English.
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