Book Review

Mark Brown
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The introduction is full of anecdotal accounts of Richard’s own entry into the world of shorebirds, and his frustrations getting to grips with this difficult group of birds – something many of us can relate to. By setting his readers minds at ease with these great stories, he draws us into the world of these fascinating birds, and takes us on a journey to explore the group, and their varied ways of life.The author is up front – this is not meant to be another identification guide, although with the book covering around 80% of the worlds shorebird species, it definitely adds value in that arena. It is rather an exploration intended to draw the reader deeper into the lives of shorebirds through a combined use of excellent photographs and well-written accounts of the elaborate lives shorebirds lead. The book then has a strong chapter on current taxonomy of the group, discussing current issues of debate, but wisely choosing to follow the taxonomic standpoint of the IOC.As such, it presents a great overview of the current taxonomic views around this difficult group of birds, including the recent decision taken to include the buttonquails (Turnicidae) within the Charadriiformes. This chapter takes the time to introduce each group within the shorebirds, and a brief mention of each species found globally. Alternative common names are mentioned where appropriate, which is a nice touch – there is even an honorable mention in this chapter of the name ‘dikkop’, for the Thickknees! I personally love the high number of quality photographs used in this section to illustrate examples of species from each taxonomic group, giving the book a great introduction to the variety of species of shorebirds found around the world, and definitely making the taxonomic section much more palatable to wade through, if you will excuse the pun. The following chapter deals with plumage and moult, and does so in a really pragmatic way.While many general shorebird books carry a strong northern hemisphere bias, this one at least takes the time to summarise differences between northern and southern hemisphere lifestyles, and gives advice on how to estimate southern hemisphere parameters for the data it presents from the northern hemisphere.The chapter goes to great lengths to deal with the confusing terminology often found in plumage discussions. It breaks shorebird plumages down into easily understandable periods, and helps the reader separate out birds in different plumages. The section includes great photographs of the chicks of many shorebird species, which brings a feel good factor into it as most shorebird chicks are undeniably attractive! There are also great sequence photos of plumages of specific species at different ages and stages of adult life cycles, which will be beneficial to birders. This is a well-written chapter that clearly is the culmination of literally thousands of hours watching and researching shorebirds. The level of detail is impressive, especially when delving into more unusual aspects of non-traditional moults and plumages like in the Ruffs for example, and the discussion of geographic variation of timing of moult within a species. The addition of a separate but dedicated discussion of the age and temporal related changes to the bare parts – the eye, bill and legs is a bonus. A succinct discussion on different wing moult strategies follows, which includes quite possibly the best simple plain English explanation of wing moult I have seen to date. One small criticism of this chapter is that in some cases a sentence is split between what in some cases ends up being five pages of photographs and","PeriodicalId":49492,"journal":{"name":"South African Journal of Wildlife Research","volume":"48 1","pages":"256"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2018-10-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"South African Journal of Wildlife Research","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.3957/056.048.027001","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Richard Chandlers new book ‘Shorebirds in Action: an introduction to waders and their behaviour’ is a well-timed addition to the growing literature on this fascinating group of birds.The first thing you notice when you start reading it is that Richard knows his waders personally, and is extremely passionate about them. This comes through strongly in the fantastic language used to describe them in the book’s introduction, and filters through into the rest of the text. This is not a dry account of waders meant for academics and students alone, it is a passionate summary of knowledge that transcends from being purely academic in its writing to being eloquently written to appeal to all birders interested in shorebirds. It does this with excellent emotional prose that does not lose its scientific appeal. The introduction is full of anecdotal accounts of Richard’s own entry into the world of shorebirds, and his frustrations getting to grips with this difficult group of birds – something many of us can relate to. By setting his readers minds at ease with these great stories, he draws us into the world of these fascinating birds, and takes us on a journey to explore the group, and their varied ways of life.The author is up front – this is not meant to be another identification guide, although with the book covering around 80% of the worlds shorebird species, it definitely adds value in that arena. It is rather an exploration intended to draw the reader deeper into the lives of shorebirds through a combined use of excellent photographs and well-written accounts of the elaborate lives shorebirds lead. The book then has a strong chapter on current taxonomy of the group, discussing current issues of debate, but wisely choosing to follow the taxonomic standpoint of the IOC.As such, it presents a great overview of the current taxonomic views around this difficult group of birds, including the recent decision taken to include the buttonquails (Turnicidae) within the Charadriiformes. This chapter takes the time to introduce each group within the shorebirds, and a brief mention of each species found globally. Alternative common names are mentioned where appropriate, which is a nice touch – there is even an honorable mention in this chapter of the name ‘dikkop’, for the Thickknees! I personally love the high number of quality photographs used in this section to illustrate examples of species from each taxonomic group, giving the book a great introduction to the variety of species of shorebirds found around the world, and definitely making the taxonomic section much more palatable to wade through, if you will excuse the pun. The following chapter deals with plumage and moult, and does so in a really pragmatic way.While many general shorebird books carry a strong northern hemisphere bias, this one at least takes the time to summarise differences between northern and southern hemisphere lifestyles, and gives advice on how to estimate southern hemisphere parameters for the data it presents from the northern hemisphere.The chapter goes to great lengths to deal with the confusing terminology often found in plumage discussions. It breaks shorebird plumages down into easily understandable periods, and helps the reader separate out birds in different plumages. The section includes great photographs of the chicks of many shorebird species, which brings a feel good factor into it as most shorebird chicks are undeniably attractive! There are also great sequence photos of plumages of specific species at different ages and stages of adult life cycles, which will be beneficial to birders. This is a well-written chapter that clearly is the culmination of literally thousands of hours watching and researching shorebirds. The level of detail is impressive, especially when delving into more unusual aspects of non-traditional moults and plumages like in the Ruffs for example, and the discussion of geographic variation of timing of moult within a species. The addition of a separate but dedicated discussion of the age and temporal related changes to the bare parts – the eye, bill and legs is a bonus. A succinct discussion on different wing moult strategies follows, which includes quite possibly the best simple plain English explanation of wing moult I have seen to date. One small criticism of this chapter is that in some cases a sentence is split between what in some cases ends up being five pages of photographs and
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书评
理查德·钱德勒的新书《行动中的滨鸟:涉水者及其行为介绍》是对这一迷人鸟类群体的文献的及时补充。当你开始阅读时,你注意到的第一件事是理查德对他的涉水者非常了解,并且对他们非常有热情。这一点在书的引言中描述他们的奇妙语言中表现得淋漓尽致,并渗透到正文的其余部分。这本书并不是仅仅为学者和学生写的枯燥的涉禽描述,而是对知识的热情总结,它超越了纯粹的学术写作,以雄辩的笔触吸引了所有对滨鸟感兴趣的观鸟者。它以出色的情感散文做到了这一点,但又不失科学的吸引力。引言中充满了理查德自己进入滨鸟世界的轶事,以及他在与这群难相处的鸟打交道时的挫败感——这是我们很多人都能理解的。通过这些精彩的故事让读者安心,他把我们带进了这些迷人的鸟类的世界,带我们踏上了探索这个群体的旅程,以及它们不同的生活方式。作者是站在前面的——这并不是另一本识别指南,尽管这本书涵盖了世界上80%的滨鸟物种,它绝对在这个领域增加了价值。这本书是一种探索,旨在通过结合使用优秀的照片和对水鸟精致生活的精心描述,让读者更深入地了解水鸟的生活。然后,书中有一个强有力的章节是关于该群体的当前分类学,讨论当前争论的问题,但明智地选择遵循IOC的分类学立场。因此,它提供了一个关于这一困难鸟类群的当前分类学观点的大概述,包括最近决定将纽扣鹌鹑(Turnicidae)纳入charidiformes。本章花时间介绍滨鸟中的每一组,并简要介绍全球发现的每一种。在适当的地方提到了其他常见的名字,这是一个很好的接触-在本章中甚至有一个光荣的名字“dikkop”,为厚膝!我个人很喜欢这部分使用大量高质量的照片来说明每个分类组的物种例子,给这本书一个很好的介绍了世界各地发现的各种滨鸟,并且绝对使分类部分更加美味,如果你会原谅双关语的话。接下来的一章讨论羽毛和蜕皮,并以一种非常实用的方式来讨论。虽然许多一般的滨鸟书籍都带有强烈的北半球偏见,但这本书至少花了时间总结了北半球和南半球生活方式的差异,并就如何根据北半球的数据估计南半球的参数给出了建议。本章花了很大篇幅来处理在羽毛讨论中经常发现的令人困惑的术语。它将滨鸟的羽毛分解成易于理解的时期,并帮助读者区分不同羽毛的鸟。该部分包括许多滨鸟物种的小鸡的伟大照片,这带来了一个感觉良好的因素,因为大多数滨鸟小鸡是不可否认的吸引力!这里也有很多特定物种在不同年龄和成年生命周期阶段的羽毛序列照片,这对观鸟者来说是有益的。这是一个写得很好的章节,显然是数千小时观察和研究水鸟的高潮。细节的水平令人印象深刻,特别是当深入研究非传统换羽和羽毛的更不寻常的方面时,比如在Ruffs中,以及在一个物种内换羽时间的地理变化的讨论。另外还有一个单独的,但专门讨论裸露部位的年龄和时间相关的变化-眼睛,喙和腿是一个额外的奖励。以下是关于不同换羽策略的简短讨论,其中包括很可能是迄今为止我所见过的最好的简单易懂的英语解释。对这一章的一个小小的批评是,在某些情况下,一个句子被分成了五页的照片和
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