Tales of remarkable birds

Dominic Couzens

Book - 2015

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Subjects
Published
London ; New York : Bloomsbury 2015.
Language
English
Main Author
Dominic Couzens (author)
Physical Description
224 pages : color illustrations ; 26 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (page 220) and index.
ISBN
9781408190234
  • Introduction
  • Europe
  • Northern Wren: Roost site available, not everyone need apply
  • Great Spotted Cuckoo: A cuckoo, yes - but not as we know it
  • Great Grey Shrike: Catching on to a neat idea
  • Common Crossbill: A bird with leftist tendencies
  • Eurasian Oystercatcher: The oystercateher's trade unions
  • Africa
  • Sunbirds: Hovering might be catching
  • Ostriches: The benefits of sharing a nest
  • Straw-tailed Whydah and Purple Grenadier: The strange case of the avian stalker
  • Boubous: It takes two
  • Widowbirds: A tale of two tails
  • Asia
  • Greater Racket-tailed Drongo: The life of a professional agitator
  • Yellow-browed Warbler: The wrong-way migrant
  • Pheasant-tailed Jacana: Children of the lily-pads
  • Arabian Babbler: Keeping its friends close...
  • Swifts and swiftlets: Living in the dark
  • Australasia
  • White-winged Chough: Our family group needs some extra help
  • Fairywrens: What is the significance of the flower gilt?
  • Great Bowerbird: Stage managing a nuptial bower
  • Southern Cassowary: Don't mess with this big bird
  • Varied Sittellas: The benefits of working together
  • North America
  • White-throated Sparrow: A tale of two sparrows
  • Black-capped Chickadee: Memories of garden birds
  • Cliff Swallow: Unnatural selection
  • Harris's Hawk: The hunter-gatherer
  • Marbled Murrelet: Breeding in a different world
  • South America
  • Andean Cock-of-the-Rock: Working together with its friends
  • Toucans: Why a big bill pays
  • Antbirds: Following the ants
  • Tanagers: The crown jewels
  • Hummingbirds: When the humming stops
  • Antarctica
  • Rockhopper Penguin: The most unloved egg
  • Albatrosses: Masters of the oceans
  • Emperor and Galapagos Penguins: A tale of the penguins
  • Sheathbills: The basement cleaners
  • Wandering Albatross: A slow dance to success
  • Islands
  • Swallow-tailed Gull: Making the most of dark nights
  • Megapodes: The patter of great, big feet
  • New Caledonian Crow: The world's cleverest bird?
  • Blue Bird-of-paradise: Figs and fruits turn paradise upside down
  • Extinctions: Islands: lands of lost birds
  • Further reading
  • Index
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Booklist Review

Birds never cease to fascinate us. If it isn't their ability to fly, then it's their beautiful plumage or their intriguing behaviors. In this celebration of the complexity and diversity of the lives of birds, author Couzens (The Secret Life of Puffins, 2014) focuses on the latter. In eight sections (differentiated geographically), Couzens describes 40 species of birds, each of which exhibits an interesting behavioral trait. In Europe, tiny northern wrens must band together in a roost on cold winter nights to survive but these notably feisty birds are very choosy about whom to let in. The African boubous tend to sing interminably throughout the day, but the song is actually a duet that is so beautifully coordinated between a pair of birds that it sounds like the vocalization of one. The marbled murrelet is a small North American seabird whose nest wasn't discovered until more than 100 years of searching turns out it doesn't nest on islands or sea cliffs, like all of its kin, but on the moss-covered branches of old-growth forests. Beautifully illustrated with color photos, Couzens' deft stories of these sometimes baffling birds are told in a chatty style that will absorb any nature lover.--Bent, Nancy Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Library Journal Review

In this worldwide survey of selected birds that exhibit unusual behavior, Couzens, a British author of more than 30 wildlife books, engagingly describes five or more birds from all seven continents plus some noncontinental islands. The gamut of behaviors includes bigamy, nest-robbing, physical intimidation, group-living, duetting, brood parasitism, communal foraging, and much more, but this dry listing does not do justice to the amazing variety of avian lifestyles the author explores. Backing up Couzens's lively text are 120 color photographs of the predominantly dramatic species he has chosen to highlight, including ostriches, hummingbirds, albatrosses, penguins, crows, gulls, hawks, chickadees, wrens, and sparrows. Others are less familiar but equally enchanting. The photographs, augmented by substantial captions, are of high quality. The brief bibliography may be seen as fatuous because 13 of the 37 titles are multivolume handbooks and should have consisted of two citations. -VERDICT Recommended for birders and those interested in natural history and animal behavior.-Henry T. Armistead, formerly with Free Lib. of Philadelphia © Copyright 2015. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.