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Birds of Venezuela (Helm Field Guides)
 
 
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Birds of Venezuela (Helm Field Guides) [Paperback]

Steven L. Hilty
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Paperback: 896 pages
  • Publisher: Christopher Helm Publishers Ltd (29 Nov 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0713664185
  • ISBN-13: 978-0713664188
  • Product Dimensions: 23.2 x 15.8 x 5 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 544,927 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

Review

This is a state-of-the-science field guide that will remain essential to birders, biologists and biodiversity workers for years to come. -- Adrian Barnett, New Scientist

An amazingly useful resource, indispensable in the field. -- John Kricher, Birding --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Description

A field handbook covering one of the most bird-rich countries in the world - Venezuela. Over 1300 species are described and illustrated in the work, which is a completely reworked new edition of the Princeton title A Guide to the Birds of Venezuela", first published in 1978. The text of that book has been replaced with a new text by another author. Of the 67 plates, 27 are new, and the volume as a whole is over twice the length of its predecessor. Unlike the earlier title, this guide includes a distribution map for every species, using shading for wide-ranging species and locality dots for rarer birds."

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First Sentence
This book treats 1382 species of resident and migrant birds reported in Venezuela or on its island possessions as of January 2001. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
The second edition of Birds of Venezuela is really an entirely new field guide.

The new guide is twice as thick as the 1978 edition and the text is much more closely packed. The book now weighs in at over 1.8 kg (4 lbs) and its dimensions and format are similar to the field guide volume of the Birds of Ecuador (Ridgely and Greenfield 2001). Nearly a hundred new species are treated, taking the country total to 1381. Far more species are illustrated and more colour plates have been used, though eight black and white plates have been retained to depict flying raptors and swifts. We now have 67 plates compared with the previous 53 - a 25% increase. Twenty-five of the plates are entirely new with beautiful artwork primarily by John Gwynne. The new plates cover a range of taxa, with Cracids, owls, nightjars, toucans, tanagers, Fringillids, Emberizids and Icterids particularly well covered. A further four have been adapted from Birds of Panamá (Ridgely and Gwynne 1989) and one from Birds of Colombia (Hilty and Brown 1986). The remaining 37 are basically the same Guy Tudor plates (and one by John Gwynne) from the old edition with some modifications.

The text has been entirely rewritten. The format follows and improves on the standard set by Birds of Mexico (Howell and Webb 1995) and Birds of Ecuador. The type-setting and text layout have allowed far more text to be included than, say, Birds of Ecuador and Hilty has also been precise and economical with his words. This comes as no surprise to those familiar with Hilty's earlier Birds of Colombia.

The text is far more oriented towards identification than in the old edition with sections covering identification, similar species, voice, behaviour, status and habitat, and range. The text retains the custom established by the earlier edition of separating range information by subspecies, a feature which is particularly welcome in these times of ever changing taxonomy. Range maps are another new feature and they make use of points corresponding to specimen and sight records as well as the customary shading to indicate overall range. In short, they are similar in format to those provided in Birds of Ecuador.

Finally there is a good selection of references at the end of the book and some very nice colour habitat photographs at the beginning. A well annotated locality map of the country is also provided together with colour relief and vegetation maps.

Perhaps the only drawback might be the dimensions and weight of this new guide, though this is an inevitable product of the diversity of the avifauna in question and nothing that cannot be remedied with a pair of scissors and a certain degree of irreverence.

In resumé, an essential buy for all who are interested in Neotropical ornithology and truly great value for money too.

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
By Stephen
Format:Paperback
Steven L Hilty is either built like Geoff Capes or he has four arms. As if he is like me who takes a pair of bins, telescope, tripod, camera with a 500mm lens, 100mm lens and a small back pack for vital items, I don't need a 2 kilo brick to carry around as well. This book is just too heavy to be called a field guide.
To start with the book contains nearly 900 pages thats if you count all the pages. The first 51 yes 51 is all about the country, migration, climate and habitat. The next 136 page are the most usefull bit of the book as it contains illustrations and a brief description of the 1381 speices of birds. The next 700 pages contain maps and full tex about the bird IE identification, slimular species, behavior, voice, range, status and habitat. Which is all fine in a reference book but not a feild guide. Even the tex which accompanies the illistration is for alot of time a waste of space, for example take the bird Screaming Pilhas. The tex which accompanies the picture just says. Larger more robust than 6. Can always be told by call. Which means you have to look at illistration No 6 which is ok if the bird in question (Grayish Mourner) is sat next to it. (which would be nice) Then you would have to quikley flick to page 640 to find out what it's call is and a bit more of it's discription, and by the time you have done this, what do you know the bird flown off. I know its difficult to try fit all the imformation you might need, but I think this book has gone overboard on the imformation side. Ok if I was going to live in Venezuela or stay there for some time it would be worth buying, but has a field guide I don't think so.
How about this.
Screaming Pilhas 10' 25cm
Common widespread in humid forest in lowlands below 900m in the south west of the country, uncommon up to 1400m. Entirely gray with a paler throat and belly, brownish underparts with a hint of olive, both sexes are sim. Call is a very loud wolf whistle like sound WHEEyou. Perchers in mid canopy.
This is all I would need on a two week birding holiday after all there ia a picture of the bird in the book as well.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
complete guide, just the book you must have if interested in birds of venezuela or surrounding countries. the illustrations are basically the same of Phelps guide, but some are new, including the owl's one. also the information about each bird is more extensive in this book comparing to Phelps one. each birds is described widely, including a map of its location, behavior and sounds.

i really recommend this book
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