National Geographic Birding Essentials

by Jonathan Alderfer

Other authorsJon L. Dunn
Paper Book, 2007

Status

Available

Call number

598.07234

Publication

National Geographic (2007), Paperback, 224 pages

Description

Offers tips and advice for how to improve bird watching skills, from choosing equipment and guides to where to watch and what features to look for when trying to identify a bird.

User reviews

LibraryThing member jnavia
On the bird walks, there were many things I heard from other birders that I didn’t understand. And I couldn’t fathom how birders, no matter how experienced, could look up at a bird and quickly declare its species name.When I saw the beautifully illustrated book, National Geographic Birding
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Essentials, on the to-be-cataloged cart at the library, I flipped through it, and knew I needed to buy a copy. The writers have put together a comprehensive guide for the beginner-to-intermediate birder. They explain basics such as how to buy a pair of binoculars and use them effectively, and what information one can get (and can’t get) from field guides (of course using as a sample the National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America that they themselves edited). Distribution and range maps are explained as is the question we beginning birders often wonder: why are the species in field guides arranged the way they are?

Chapter 4 is devoted to the parts of a bird. Probably every part that could exist on any bird is discussed in detail – crowns, beaks, wings, flank, vent bands, scapulars, primaries, chins, carpal bars, tertial steps, everything. Chapter 5 talks about how to identify birds and gives examples of specific things to look for—eye rings, face masks, tail lengths and more. Chapter 6 discusses variation in birds. Females and males sometimes look similar, but in some species the differences are striking. Juveniles sometimes look very different from adults. Chapter 7 discusses the authors’ twelve hardest species to identify. Fieldcraft, the actual how-tos of birding, is described in Chapter 8. From obvious advice about listening for birds to the more peculiar practices of phishing and listing, it’s all here. Birding hot spots, annual surveys, magazines and journals are discussed. Scopes, digiscoping, GPS units, listing software and other tools are mentioned. The last chapter is on taxonomy and nomenclature. A two-page glossary and a one-page bibliography, including websites, are included.

The only birding essential that is not discussed in detailare the specific differences between all the popular field guides, but it is understandable that the authors only discuss their own.
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Language

Original publication date

2007

Physical description

224 p.; 9 inches

ISBN

1426201354 / 9781426201356
Page: 1.2594 seconds