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Birds of Peru (Princeton Field Guides)
 
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Birds of Peru (Princeton Field Guides) [Hardcover]

Thomas S Schulenberg , Douglas F Stotz , Daniel F Lane , John P O'neill , Theodore A Parker


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Product details

  • Hardcover: 656 pages
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press (20 Nov 2007)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0691049157
  • ISBN-13: 978-0691049151
  • Product Dimensions: 21.3 x 15.2 x 4.3 cm
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 1,474,080 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

" This book far surpasses the competition and for the first time allows identification of unfamiliar species throughout Peru using only one book " --Ibis (April 09)

'...this book is on a trajectory to revolutionise birding in Peru and to make a monumental contribution toward environmental awareness and conservation in the country.'
--Cotinga (2009) --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Synopsis

Nearly eighteen hundred different bird species - one fifth of the world's birds - have been recorded in Peru. "Birds of Peru" is the most complete and well-researched field guide to this rich and fascinating diversity. It illustrates every one of the 1,792 species and shows the distinct plumages of each. It includes 304 superb, high-quality color plates directly opposite concise descriptions and color distribution maps, making it much easier to use in the field than standard neotropical field guides. The detailed text discusses key identification features, status, distribution, and vocalizations for all species, and many subspecies. This field guide enables users to identify all species found in Peru, and is also useful throughout much of western South America, particularly southeastern Colombia, southern Ecuador, western Brazil, Bolivia, and northern Chile. "Birds of Peru" is an indispensable resource for birdwatchers, biologists, naturalists, and conservationists working or traveling in Peru and South America. This is the most complete and well-researched field guide to the 1,792 species of birds found in Peru.

It includes: 304 superb, high-quality color plates directly opposite concise descriptions and full-color distribution maps for quick reference and easy identification; distinct plumages, subspecies, sexes, age classes, and morphs are fully illustrated; and detailed text discusses key identification features, status, distribution, and vocalizations. It is designed especially for field use-compact, portable, and user-friendly.


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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com:  29 reviews
37 of 38 people found the following review helpful
A Nearly Perfect Field Guide for Peruvian Birds 31 Oct 2007
By Brian Allen - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
This is an excellent, rich guide to the identification of Peruvian Birds. You can tell as you look over the book that an incredible amount of research and time went into it and the authors do say that it had its beginnings as early as 1961! I also liked to see that the late great field ornithologist Theodore Parker was included as an author.

If I could, I would give this guide a 4.9 star rating as I feel there are only a few minor problems with it. With the vast number of species that have to be illustrated, described, and mapped it is almost impossible to make a field guide for most South American countries field worthy. This book is just a little too large and a bit heavy for the field. It is hardcover and a paperpack edition might be a bit lighter. I wish the illustrators could have been a bit more efficient in their use of space and condensed the plates slightly. For example on the Pigeons and Doves the Rock Dove, a species we are all familiar with takes up over 1/3 of a page while other species such as some difficult to id woodcreepers are limited to a much smaller area.

That said the book overall is excellent. I was relieved to see that all the species illustrated on the plates have species accounts on the opposite page with a map of their range. The species accounts are clear, concise and include information on altitude range, habitat,separation from similar species, population status, and additional identification notes. Most of the range maps are easy to use but I found some confusing as birds with small limited ranges are depicted only in a few provinces without reference to the country as a whole.

Most of the illustations are excellent but they do vary in quality as there are several illustrators for the book. I find that I prefer the plates in the Clements Field Guide to the Birds of Peru (not currently available on amazon.com) somewhat over those of this book but in general if I could only have one book it would be this one for ease of use and accessibility to the information on range and distribution.

Also for a much more detailed (and better) review see Frank Lambert's review of this guide in WorldTwitch at http://www.worldtwitch.com/birds_of_peru_review_lambert.htm
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
The long-awaited essential guide to the Birds of Peru 19 Jun 2008
By Christopher J. Sharpe - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
After some three decades of work, Birds of Peru was finally published last year. This is the field guide that was first conceived by ornithologists John O'Neill, Ted Parker and Larry McQueen during the LSU Peru trips of the 1970s. Residing off reliable mail routes, I only just got my hands on a copy earlier this year. I had used photographs of the draft plates of this guide for fieldwork in Peru in the 1980s and on later trips had carried a pre-publication draft, and later a commercial copy of Clements' rather unsatisfactory Field Guide to the Birds of Peru. In short, I had been eagerly awaiting the finished product for 20 years, so I was very excited to get it. Suffice to say, given the original authors, and several others that subsequently joined the team, this guide was well worth the wait.

The first innovation is that plates, maps and text for each species are found together on a single spread, eliminating the need to flip from one section of the book to another. With 1,800 species to choose from, this is a distinct help! Secondly, this guide has over 300 plates - 304 to be precise. That in itself is quite an achievement - compare 96 for Birds of Ecuador, 69 for Colombia or 67 for Venezuela. Sure enough, there are more illustrations per plate in those guides, but we are still dealing with a highly visual field guide. Boreal migrants are properly illustrated, reducing the need to carry an extra field guide to North American birds.

The plates are by a number of artists. For me, Larry McQueen's are breathtaking. Perhaps that's a question of personal taste. His large, chunky watercolours capture the essence of the bird in similar way to another favourite artist of mine, Lars Jonsson. McQueen covers some key Neotropical groups including Woodcreepers, Furnariids, Antbirds and Tyrannids, which gives these groups a stamp of authenticity. Whether this approach works in the field is something I will have to test, but I can say that they look beautiful and faithful on the page. Although the plates are never less than good, another major Neotropical family, Hummingbirds, is - to my eye - the weakest of all the plates.

The text is concise and oriented towards field identification, with minimal or no natural history data - information which adds crucial extra weight. An indication of abundance, geographical and altitudinal range and migratory status is given in the first sentence. Identification features follow. The voice descriptions are, to my ear, accurate and pleasing.

Lastly, the book is sturdily bound so it won't immediately fall a part in the field. Compared to a north temperate field guide, Birds of Peru is heavy - but then it covers three times as many species. It might have been possible to lose a little weight by eliminating some of the white space on the plates, but this is a minor observation. At the end of the day, one of the world's major avifaunas now has an excellent field guide. Essential!

Chris Sharpe, 18 June 2008. ISBN: 0691049157
16 of 16 people found the following review helpful
Finally, the field guide Peru deserves 4 Nov 2007
By A. Z. Savit - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover
Birds of Peru is a long awaited and overdue contribution to neotropical ornithology. That said, this volume was worth the wait. The book is very well laid out, with descriptions and plates on facing pages. There are range maps for each species and species descriptions are at once concise and very thorough, including altitudinal range, habitat preferences, abundances, and even songs and vocalizations. Even with all this information, this volume is very compact compared to books for other countries, such as Ecuador or Venezuela. An added bonus is the hardcover binding, which is certainly worth the extra weight since paperback field guides get dog-eared and ragged very quickly if you actually take them out in the field for any length of time.

In comparison to the Clements field guide to the birds of Peru, this new book is superior in almost every respect. Perhaps most notably, the quality of the artwork in this book is far more consistent than in the Clements book, which has several plates that are similar to what my toddler can do with his crayons. Also helpful is the fact that the birds on each plate are shown with accurate relative sizes, which makes size comparisons more obvious and intuitive without having to refer to the text. Overall, the quality of this book easily surpasses that of the previously published Clements field guide, which looks sloppy, rushed, and unprofessional by comparison. This book compares favorably with other classic neotropical field guides such as those for Columbia and Ecuador, but with the added advantage that this field guide can actually to out with you into the field without breaking your back! An excellent work - I can find no faults with it. I suppose my old Clements field guide will have to live out its days propping up my air conditioner.

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