Regular price €77.99
A01=Andreas Helbig
A01=Gabriel Gargallo
A01=Hadoram Shirihai
A12=Alan Harris
African parisomas
age
Author_Alan Harris
Author_Andreas Helbig
Author_Gabriel Gargallo
Author_Hadoram Shirihai
avifauna
bird
birding
Birdwatcher
Category=PSVJ
Category=WNCB
colour color illustration
distribution map
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_science
family
habitat
handbook
identify
illustrated
in the wild
moult
ornithologist
outdoors
photographic
phylogenetic research
pocket
racial difference
region
sex
sonogram
species
spotting
study
table
where to see
wildlife
wing diagram
zoology

Product details

  • ISBN 9780713639841
  • Weight: 1680g
  • Dimensions: 166 x 241mm
  • Publication Date: 31 May 2001
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Based on phylogenetic research, this complete study of the genus Sylvia describes two new species and establishes identification criteria for all members of the family.

A lengthy introduction explains the background to the research and outlines the main features of the genus. The 25 species are then treated in detail, including the African parisomas, which are here included in the Sylva group.

The species accounts include sections on every aspect of identification, with colour illustrations showing age, sex and racial differences, distribution maps, sonograms, moult and wing diagrams and tables.

Hadoram Shirihai is Israel’s foremost ornithologist, co-author of Handbook of Western Palearctic Birds, and the author of books including the acclaimed Sylvia Warblers and A Complete Guide to Antarctic Wildlife. While his work, especially on tubenoses, has taken him to virtually every corner of the globe, his love of deserts and bird migration means that he is still to be found at Eilat, the watchpoint at the head of the Red Sea that he brought to the world’s attention, virtually every spring. The scientific name of the Desert Tawny Owl (Strix hadorami), a species that attracted his attention and research from when he was a schoolboy, honours his devotion to Middle Eastern ornithology.

Andreas J. Helbig
grew up in northwest Germany and became interested in birds at an early age. He studied biology in San Diego and Frankfurt, gaining his doctorate from Frankfurt University in 1989 with a study of the inheritance of migratory behaviour of Blackcaps. Since 1993, he has been Director of Vogelwarte Hiddensee, and a lecturer at Greifswalk University. His research interests include the evolutionary biology of bird migration, phylogeny of birds, molecular methods of phylogeny reconstruction, and taxonomy. He has travelled worldwide to study birds and has led tours on a number of occasions.

Gabriel Gargallo was born in Barcelona and began his career in ornithology as a member of the Catalan Ringing Group in 1986. His main interests are the Sylvia warblers, moult, and species insularity, and he has published over 20 papers relating to these subjects in several international journals. In 1987 he became a member of Catalan Ringing Committee and worked as its coordinator. Since 1992 he has also been coordinating the efforts of Spanish ringing stations involved in the Piccole Isole project and, among other research programmes, is in charge of the Catalan 'Constant Effort Site Scheme'. He finished his studies on moult pattern and process at the École Pratique des Hautes Études, Montpellier.

Alan Harris has been a freelance illustrator since 1980, art consultant for British Birds since 1988, and one of the judges of the magazine's 'Bird Illustrator of the Year' competition since 1989 (have won first prize in 1982). His illustrations have appeared in numerous books including Storks, Ibises and Spoonbills of the World. Kingfishes, Bee-eaters & Rollers, Finchers & Sparrow, The Macmillan Birders' Guide to European and Middle Eastern Birds, volumes 5-7 of Birds of the Western Palearctic, Birds of the Western Palearctic - Concise Edition, and Birds of the Indian Subcontinent. He is particularly interested in Old World warblers and gulls.