Shortlisted for the BB/BTO Best Bird Book of the Year 2022. The first comprehensive coverage of a subject that has fascinated natural historians for centuries. Avian vagrancy is a phenomenon that has fascinated natural historians for centuries. From Victorian collectors willing to spend fortunes on a rare specimen, to todays high-octane bird-chasing twitchers, the enigma of vagrancy has become a source of obsession for countless birders worldwide. Vagrancy in Birds explores both pattern and process in avian vagrancy, drawing on recent research to answer a suite of fundamental questions concerning the occurrence of rare birds. For each avian family, the book provides an in-depth analysis of recent and historical vagrancy patterns, representing the first comprehensive assessment of vagrancy at a global scale. The accounts are accompanied by hundreds of previously unpublished images featuring many of the most exceptional vagrants on record. The book synthesises for the first time everything we know about the subject, making the case for vagrancy as a biological phenomenon with far-reaching implications for avian ecology and evolution.
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Product Details
Weight: 1270g
Publication Date: 09 Dec 2021
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781472964786
About Dr Alexander LeesDr James Gilroy
Alexander Lees is a Senior Lecturer in Biodiversity at Manchester Metropolitan University a Lab Associate of the Cornell Lab of Ornithology and serves on both the British Ornithologists' Union Records Committee (BOURC) and the Brazilian Ornithological Records Committee (CBRO). Alex has written over one hundred academic papers in addition to many popular ornithology articles and his research focuses primarily on understanding how birds respond to environmental change particularly in the Amazon where he has been working for the last 17 years. Alex now lives in the Derbyshire Peak District arguably not the finest place to find vagrants but hasnt given up hope yet. James Gilroy is a Lecturer in Ecology at the University of East Anglia. His childhood fascination with bird migration led him into a career studying the long-distance movements of animals and how these movements are changing in in response to human impacts. Since completing his PhD in the UK he has worked in many countries around the world including spending several years at Rutgers University in New Jersey and the Norwegian University of Life Sciences in Oslo as well as long spells in the tropics. He remains an obsessive birder and vagrant-hunter (when time allows!) and still pores religiously over weather charts in an effort to predict the arrival of interesting species in his local area.