Kea, Bird of Paradox

Regular price €61.50
A01=Alan B. Bond
A01=Judy Diamond
adaptability
adaptive behavior
alpine habitat
animal behavior
animals
Author_Alan B. Bond
Author_Judy Diamond
behavioral flexibility
biology
bird
Category=PD
Category=WNCB
ecology
ecosystem
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
ethology
habitat
kaka
kea
life sciences
mountain birds
mountains
natural history
nature
new zealand
nonfiction
open program animals
ornithology
parrot
rainforest
science
southern alps
unforgiving environment
wild animals
wilderness
zoology

Product details

  • ISBN 9780520213395
  • Weight: 454g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 10 Jan 1999
  • Publisher: University of California Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The kea, a crow-sized parrot that lives in the rugged mountains of New Zealand, is considered by some a playful comic and by others a vicious killer. Its true character is a mystery that biologists have debated for more than a century. Judy Diamond and Alan Bond have written a comprehensive account of the kea's contradictory nature, and their conclusions cast new light on the origins of behavioral flexibility and the problem of species survival in human environments everywhere. New Zealand's geological remoteness has made the country home to a bizarre assemblage of plants and animals that are wholly unlike anything found elsewhere. Keas are native only to the South Island, breeding high in the rigorous, unforgiving environment of the Southern Alps. Bold, curious, and ingeniously destructive, keas have a complex social system that includes extensive play behavior. Like coyotes, crows, and humans, keas are 'open-program' animals with an unusual ability to learn and to create new solutions to whatever problems they encounter. Diamond and Bond present the kea's story from historical and contemporary perspectives and include observations from their years of field work. A comparison of the kea's behavior and ecology with that of its closest relative, the kaka of New Zealand's lowland rain forests, yields insights into the origins of the kea's extraordinary adaptability. The authors conclude that the kea's high level of sociality is a key factor in the flexible lifestyle that probably evolved in response to the alpine habitat's unreliable food resources and has allowed the bird to survive the extermination of much of its original ecosystem. But adaptability has its limits, as the authors make clear when describing present-day interactions between keas and humans and the attempts to achieve a peaceful coexistence.
Judy Diamond is Associate Professor and Assistant Director for Public Programs at the University of Nebraska State Museum. Alan B. Bond is Research Professor of Biological Sciences at the University of Nebraska.