Book of the Week: The Norfolk Bird Atlas

Continuing our weekly selection of the very best titles available through NHBS:

The Norfolk Bird Atlas: Summer and Winter Distributions 1999-2007

by Moss Taylor and John H Marchant

What?

A survey of Norfolk’s breeding and wintering avifauna.The Norfolk Bird Atlas jacket image

Why?

As with all their projetcs, the BTO have produced this excellent survey with conservation in mind. A huge undertaking, it has involved the work of over 300 observers. Not only does it document the distribution in Norfolk of the all the different bird species, it also assesses their abundance. It also highlights the changes since previous atlases – for instance, the new breeding colonists such as the Mediterranean Gull, the Little Egret and the Goosander.

In-depth charts and figures, deft analysis by the authors, and beautiful full-colour photography and illustrations give this substantial volume wide appeal and an enduring and deserved place on any ornithologists bookshelf.

Who?

Moss Taylor has had a lifelong interest in ornithology and has 50 years experience as a bird ringer. He has been involved with previous BTO atlas projects and served on several BTO committees, and was the instigator and co-ordinator of the fieldwork on which The Norfolk Bird Atlas is based, as well as being an active participant. His previous books include The Birds of Norfolk and Collins Identifying Birds by Colour.

John Marchant joined the BTO in 1973. Bird surveys occupy a major part of his paid and personal time. He has served on the BOU Records Committee and the British Birds Rarities Committee, for which he is archivist. He has written many scientific papers and reports, and among the books he has co-authored is Population Trends in British Breeding Birds.

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Book of the Week: Great British Marine Animals

Continuing our weekly selection of the very best titles available through NHBS:

Great British Marine Animals, 3rd Ed.

by Paul Naylor

What?

A photographic guide to the fishes, crustaceans, molluscs and other resident animals of the waters around the British Isles.Great British Marine Animals jacket image

Why?

This is the third edition of this best-selling guide to the creatures that roam the British coastal seas. Accessible and clear, with detailed photography by the author, this is the perfect companion for those who enjoy exploring these waters and their residents. Previous editions have been very popular with the diving community, and this new edition takes a closer look at rock pool life which should broaden its appeal to those who like to appreciate sea-life while remaining on solid ground.

New features of the 3rd edition include:
  • 240 new photographs
  • 30 extra species (making 280 in total)
  • An expanded introduction showing a selection of habitats and some of the typical animals that live in them
  • A joint foreword by The Wildlife Trusts and the Marine Conservation Society
  • Unusual action shots of cuttlefish hunting, a commensal ragworm feeding with its hermit crab host, sunstars and starfish spawning, gobies attacking a large sea anemone, a sea slug’s defences in operation and many more…

Who?

Paul Naylor has been snorkelling and diving around the coast of Britian for 35 years, and photographing the resident animals for 25 years. Paul is actively involved in education, from schools to governmental organisations, on the subject of our marine fauna. He has a doctorate in marine biology and is an Associate of the Royal Photographic Society.

Visit Paul’s website for more information and to view image galleries

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Book of the Week: Garden Bird Confidential

Continuing our weekly selection of the very best titles available through NHBS:

Garden Bird Confidential

by Dominic Couzens

What?

An insider’s guide to what’s really going on with the birds in your garden.Garden Bird Confidential jacket image

Why?

Garden Bird Confidential profiles 60 of Europe’s regular garden birds. It includes the usual identification information – voice, habitat, breeding etc., but takes it a stage further. The ‘confidential’ section for each species presents fascinating nuggets of scientific research from the last 40 years. For example, it was recently discovered that great tits had developed a taste for roosting bats in a cave in Hungary; that the blackcap’s song rate can be related to the safekeeping of its nest; and that some bird species, such as the dunnock, have found breeding success in an arrangement of tense polygamy. Colour photography abounds, including some lovely full-page portraiture.

Who?

Dominic Couzens is a leading nature writer and lecturer who has been writing about wildlife for over 20 years. He is the author of several successful books including Top 100 Birding Sites of the World,  Atlas of Rare Birds and The Secret Lives of Garden Birds. Dominic has appeared on BBC television and regularly contributes to leading magazines including BBC Wildlife Magazine, Birdwatching and Birds, the magazine of the RSPB.

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Book of the Week: Conservation Biogeography

Continuing our weekly selection of the very best titles available through NHBS:

Conservation Biogeography

by Richard J Ladle and Robert J Whittaker

What?

An authoritative key volume for students and researchers in this developing field.Conservation Biogeography jacket image

Why?

The authors of Conservation Biogeography are both associated with the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford where the nascent field was formally defined in 2005. They state their aim in the preface as “[…]to expand the scope and agenda of conservation biogeography, to identify critical gaps and weaknesses, and to provide an introduction to the toolbox of concepts and methods – and thereby to produce a broad-based text for university courses and programmes.

After defining the field, the chapters work their way through the impact of social values on conservation, biodiversity mapping and its processes, planning considerations, island biogeography, invasions and homogeneity, and the volume ends with discussions on the future prospects and challenges associated with the biogeographical approach to global conservation management.

Who?

Richard J. Ladle was the founding Director of Oxford University’s MSc in Biodiversity, Conservation and Management. Since 2009 he has been working in Brazil as an international conservation consultant and science writer. He is currently a Visiting Professor at the Federal University of Alagoas, teaching and doing research on diverse and interdisciplinary aspects of conservation, biogeography and ecology.

Robert J. Whittaker is the current Academic Director of the MSc in Biodiversity, Conservation and Management, and holds the title of Professor of Biogeography in the School of Geography and the Environment, University of Oxford. He is a founding member and past President (2009–2010) of the International Biogeography Society. He is currently editor-in-chief of the Journal of Biogeography. He has a long-standing interest in island biogeography, patterns and processes controlling diversity, and the application of biogeography to conservation.

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Book of the Week: Lives of Conifers

Continuing our weekly selection of the very best titles available through NHBS:

Lives of Conifers: A Comparative Account of the Coniferous Trees

by Graham R. Powell

What?

A detailed account of the life cycle of conifers, and an analysis of their ecological and environmental importance.Lives of Conifers jacket image

Why?

This is a comprehensive reference work, by an expert in tree growth and morphology. The author has published over 40 refereed papers and more than 20 technical reports and handbooks during his 34-year career in the faculty of forestry and environmental management.

As well as being authoritative on the growth of conifers, this volume introduces the reader to environmental considerations and the reliance of humankind on the conifers.

Lives of Conifers is extensively illustrated throughout (see images below), with detailed comparative sequences of morphological portraiture, stylish diagrammatic representations of anatomical features and many informative charts and figures. The chapters follow the stages of the life-cycle and there is an extensive glossary.

Who?

Graham R. Powell is Professor Emeritus in the Faculty of Forestry and Environmental Management at the University of New Brunswick, Canada

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The Metropolitan Field Guide reviews Crow Planet

Crow Planet

This book cleverly manages to blend personal stories with the natural history of crows and the wilderness of the city in a very entertaining read. No matter whether you’re a naturalist, urbanite, suburbanite or already an urban naturalist, this book will undoubtedly introduce you to some idea you never considered before.More…

Read the full review of Crow Planet: Essential Wisdom from the Urban Wilderness at The Metropolitan Field Guide. It’s one of our favourite wildlife blogs – an excellent resource on urban wildlife and ecology.

Book of the Week: The Rise of Fishes

Continuing our new weekly selection of the very best titles available through NHBS:

The Rise of Fishes: 500 Million Years of Evolution

Edited by John A Long

What?

A tour of the past 500 million years, seeing the evolution of fishes from “Glorified Swimming Worms”The Rise of Fishes jacket image to the diverse and complex groups we see today.

Why?

Fishes are the ancestors of all amphibians, leading to reptiles, birds and mammals – including ourselves – and they continue to dominate the world’s waters. This is a superbly illustrated guide to the process of their evolution and diversification.  The images range from clearly photographed fossils and skeletal portions, through detailed anatomical diagrams, to colourful reconstructions of life in the ancient oceans and photographs of living species.  The science is brought to life through stories from the author’s own experiences in the field. A brilliant exposition of a key drama in the evolution of life as we know it.

Who?

John A. Long is the vice president of Research and Collections at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. His numerous books include Prehistoric Mammals of Australia and New Guinea: One Hundred Million Years of Evolution and Palaeozoic Vertebrate Biostratigraphy and Biogeography, also published by Johns Hopkins.

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Status of Waterbirds in Asia, Reviewed in IBIS

“I strongly recommend that anyone with an interest in bird conservation in the region obtain a copy of this book for reference.”

Status of Waterbirds in Asia jacket imageStatus of Waterbirds in Asia: Results of the Asian Waterbird Census: 1987 – 2007


“In recent years, studies at tidal sites in Korea, Japan and Australia have revealed a significant decline in the numbers of shorebird species such as the Great Knot (Calidris tenuirostris) and the Far Eastern Curlew (Numenius madagascariensis), and these species were listed as globally threatened in 2010.

We have good reason to believe that populations of many other species have suffered a similar decline in Asia, where the decline of migratory species is far more severe than in Europe and the Americas. Not only is Asia the most populated continent, it is also one that has been undergoing decades of rampant economic development. Many important sites for wildlife conservation are gone or under serious threat from human disturbance, reclamation or pollution. There have been few inventories to show policy makers and the general public the location of priority sites for conservation, and even fewer studies to assess the population trend of birds.

The only important regional monitoring effort is the Asian Waterbird Census. It was started in 1987 and more than 6700 sites have been counted at least once. Not only has much valuable information been collected, but networks of conservationists have been established throughout the region. I strongly recommend that anyone with an interest in bird conservation in the region (which is, strictly speaking, not conventional ‘Asia’ but East and South Asia plus Australasia) obtain a copy of this book for reference. NGOs and government agencies should also be encouraged to conduct more detailed studies at sites where high numbers of waterbirds have been recorded and to ensure that these important sites are well protected and managed.

Nevertheless, we are still gaining experience in this region, there is still room for improvement in census methodology, and the results should also be interpreted with care. The distribution of the sites counted during the 20-year period is uneven: many sites have been visited and counted in countries with more ornithologists and birdwatchers, such as India, Australia, Japan and South Korea, but some countries that are important to waterbirds, such as China, Indonesia and Vietnam, are still rather poorly covered. An added disadvantage is that the Asian Waterbird Census depends on voluntary submission of data and very little has been done to achieve a consistent approach, so that the monitoring is far from ideal. Not all the important sites are counted every year, and the methodology is not necessarily the same between sites, or even for multiple visits to a single site, which makes it difficult to compare the results obtained in different years.

There is an indication in Table 3 of which sites surveyed met the Ramsar criteria as internationally important. However, it would be more useful if those visited more regularly were highlighted so we know monitoring data exist and trends can be interpreted. The inventory at times also confuses the same sites under different names or spellings: for example, Yamdrok Co and Yangcaoyong Co of Xizang (Tibet) are in fact the same site with different spellings.

A strong point of the book is that it presents a wealth of data on important sites. However, because of the rather poor coverage in East Asia and the inconsistent methodology, population trends of many species cannot be analysed precisely. Table 4 gives the maximum numbers of individuals of species counted in four 5-year periods (1987–92, 1993–97, 1998–2002 and 2003–2007). As the number of sites counted differed between years, this again has made any attempt to analyse trends difficult, except for a few highly gregarious species whose wintering sites are easily covered: for example, Black-faced Spoonbill (Platalea minor), Siberian Crane (Grus leucogeranus) and Hooded Crane (Grus monacha), of which over half of the wintering individuals are to be found at single sites and those sites are regularly counted.

To understand the trend of more widespread species, we must have a carefully planned monitoring programme. As the East Asian Australasian Flyway Partnership has been established in this region since 2006, I hope we can develop good monitoring programmes based on what has been done so far. In the face of the rapid decrease in numbers of many species in the region, this should be a challenge to be taken up without delay.”

Simba Chan,

IBIS The International Journal of Avian Science

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Book of the Week: Spider Behaviour

Continuing our new weekly selection of the very best titles available through NHBS:

Spider Behaviour: Flexibility and Versatility

Edited by Marie Elisabeth Herberstein

What?

10 chapters from 15 contributors showcasing the variety of spider behaviour andSpider Behaviour: Flexibility and Versatility jacket image making a strong case for their value as behavioural models.

Why?

The unique and charismatic behaviours of spiders, such as web-building and cannibalism, have long fascinated biologists and the general public alike. Yet so far, spiders have been underestimated as useful subjects of study in behavioural ecology. This volume rectifies this omission through a series of complementary chapters covering the range of spider behaviours, bringing the field up to date with all the very latest research from around the world.

Who?

Marie Elisabeth Herberstein is an Associate Professor in the Department of Biological Sciences at Macquarie University, Sydney. Her research investigates a range of behaviours in spiders, such as web building, learning, mating (including sexual cannibalism) and the use of deceptive signals.

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Book of the Week: Animal Migration

Continuing our new weekly selection of the very best titles available through NHBS:

Animal Migration: A Synthesis

Edited by EJ Milner-Gulland, John M Fryxell and Anthony R E Sinclair

What?

A collection of papers drawing together all the very latest theory and research about animal migration, presented thematically, and suitable for graduate students, and researchers in animal ecology, evolutionary theory, movement biology and conservation biology.Animal Migration jacket image

Why?

Animal Migration covers all major migratory groups, broadening the scope of migration studies from its usual bias towards birds. It provides a wide and integrative view of the subject, bringing into consideration the most recent developments in the ecological and evolutionary sciences, including technological improvements in computer modelling and tracking systems.

Who?

E.J. Milner-Gulland studied Pure and Applied Biology at Oxford University, and then did a PhD in resource management at Imperial College London. She later became a Reader and then Professor in Conservation Science, also at Imperial College London. Her current research interests concern the interaction between human decision-making and the dynamics of exploited populations, as well as the ecology and conservation of the migratory saiga antelope in Central Asia.

John Fryxell obtained both his undergraduate and graduate degrees from the University of British Columbia. His PhD research was on the ecology of the white-eared kob – a migratory antelope in the southern Sudan. He held a lectureship at the University of British Columbia and briefly worked with the Government of Newfoundland before assuming a faculty position at the University of Guelph, where he is currently a Professor in the Department of Integrative Biology.

Anthony Sinclair has conducted research in Serengeti, Tanzania, since 1965, mainly on the problem of what determines the size of animal populations, particularly vertebrates, and the mechanisms of regulation. This work has expanded to look at the whole ecosystem, documenting how the different components of soils, plants, herbivores and predators interact.

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