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This amazingly informative book has now been redesigned and
republished as the first volume in The British Natural History
Collection. Sadly Chris Mead died in 2003 so the original text has
been brought right up to date by his former colleague and friend
Mike Toms.Now includes colour photographs. A feature of the book is
the beautiful and accurate line drawings and cartoons by renowned
wildlife artist Guy Troughton. This special edition also features
an eight-page gallery of stunning colour images by bird
photographer Mark Hancox including his photograph of a Short-eared
Owl, winner of the Bird-Guides Photo of the Year 2010
competition.Owls reveals all sorts of curious and unexpected facts
about the owls found in Britain, and also some oddities about those
species found elsewhere. The book gives readers helpful advice on
how to observe and count their local owls and how to assist in
protecting them. It even has a section on the design and
construction of nest-boxes and where best to position them.
Britain's gardens are a vast, living landscape and the home to
hundreds of species of birds. Learn to pay attention to these
visitors to your own garden or local park and you'll have a
front-row seat to the unfolding drama that is the garden bird's
year. As dawn breaks across your back garden, if you were paying
attention, you would notice that the robin and the blackbird are
always the first birds to arrive. These ground hunters have large
eyes, so don't mind the dim light of the early morning. And that's
just the beginning of what you can learn watching your own back
garden. Ornithologist Mike Toms has spent a year avidly observing
his own garden, and the result is a comprehensive picture of the
lives of garden birds. From the crowded yet quiet January garden
populated by migratory fieldfares and bramblings, to the riotous
gardens of spring, filled with songbirds competing for mates, the
garden ecosystem changes throughout the year. Learn to spot these
changes, to greet the arrival of the swifts in May and the new crop
of fledgling goldfinches and blackbirds in June, and you'll find a
new world opening up to you. A Garden Bird's Year is the perfect
introduction to this world. Supremely readable, it explains biology
and behaviour to paint a picture of the lives of common bird
species, while also offering practical information for watching and
feeding the birds in your own backyard. Toms details birds'
preferences for particular plants, seeds and feeders, so you can
learn to attract different species to your own garden. He also
charts fascinating recent adaptations - urban birds sleep later
than their rural counterparts, probably because cities are on
average a few degrees warmer, and they sing either earlier or
later, to avoid competing with local traffic; and the balance of
migratory birds to Britain is being affected by the world's
changing climate. Many species of garden birds are threatened, but
there is much that each one of us can do to support them, to
attract them, and to help them thrive through the year.
Gardens make a significant contribution to the amount of urban
green space and are the main contributors to urban biodiversity.
Birds are one of the most visible components of this urban
biodiversity, and many of us enjoy attracting wild birds into our
gardens. This timely addition to the New Naturalist Library
examines the ways in which birds use gardens, revealing the many
new discoveries that are being made and explaining why individual
species of bird use gardens in the ways that they do. Why, for
example, do Blackcaps now winter in UK gardens - favouring those in
the southwest and those that are urban in nature - and why do
Siskins increase their use of garden feeders on damp winter days?
With a growing human population, the process of urbanisation is set
to continue and it is important to recognise the impacts that
urbanisation will have on bird populations and the community of
species making a living within the built environment. Although many
people do not regard themselves as birdwatchers, most of those who
seek to attract wild birds into their gardens do so because they
enjoy watching them. Some have taken their interest further by
becoming involved in citizen science projects that have helped to
develop our understanding of how and why birds use our gardens and
the resources that they provide. This research demonstrates the
role that gardens play in the ecology of many wild bird populations
and reveals insights that continue to fascinate a growing audience,
increasingly interested in the wildlife that lives alongside them.
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