| The Birds of British Columbia: Volume 4 - Passerines, Wood-Warblers through Old World Sparrows |  | Authors: R. Wayne Campbell, Neil K. Dawe, Ian McTaggart-Cowan, John M. Cooper, Gary W. Kaiser, A. C. Stewart, Michael C. E. McNall Publisher: UBC Press Category: Book
List Price: $137.95 Buy New: $125.00 as of 2/10/2010 00:44 EST details You Save: $12.95 (9%)
New (3) Used (4) from $124.99
Seller: canadense Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 1900069
Media: Hardcover Pages: 744 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 6.8 Dimensions (in): 12.3 x 9.4 x 1.8
ISBN: 0774806214 Dewey Decimal Number: 598 EAN: 9780774806213 ASIN: 0774806214
Publication Date: May 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description This much-awaited final volume of The Birds of British Columbia completes what some have called one of the most important regional ornithological works in North America. It is the culmination of more than 25 years of effort by the authors who, with the assistance of thousands of dedicated volunteers throughout the province, have created the basic reference work on the avifauna of British Columbia.Volume 4 covers the last half of the passerines and describes 102 species, including the warblers, sparrows, grosbeaks, blackbirds, and finches. The text builds upon the authoritative format of the previous volumes and is supported by hundreds of full-colour illustrations, including detailed distribution maps, unique habitat shots, and beautiful photographs of the birds, their nests, eggs, and young. In addition, a species update lists and describes 27 species of birds new to the province since the first three volumes were published. The book concludes with Synopsis: The Birds of British Columbia into the 21st Century, which synthesizes data and information from all four volumes and looks at the conservation challenges facing birds in the new millennium. The four volumes in The Birds of British Columbia provide unprecedented coverage of the regions birds, presenting a wealth of information on the ornithological history, regional environment, habitat, breeding habits, migratory movements, seasonality and distribution patterns of 472 species of birds. It is the complete reference work for birdwatchers, ornithologists and naturalists.
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| Customer Reviews: A must for every BC birdwatcher May 29, 2009 Josephine Hammond (Gibsons, B.C. Canada) If you can afford this wonderful book and you already own the previous three in this series, it's a must have.
Even if you've just started with a cheap small bird book and you've not yet reached the obsessive stage, this will undoubtedly show you the way, if not drive you all the way there. It provides everything you'll want to know about BC birds, and is very hard to put down, even though it's HUGE and heavy.
My husband had bought the first three in the series as soon as they were published, and now he has died, I was compelled to complete the set just for his sake. But I'm very glad I did because it has opened a new world for me.
TOO MUCH October 22, 2005 Steven Mlodinow (Everett, WA USA) This is actually a review of the entire four volume set that is The Birds of British Columbia. Clearly not restrained by limitations on space, the authors drone on endlessly. Finding useful information is like sifting river sand for gold flakes. It's there but requires a lot of work to accumulate. There are innumerable graphs, but these are just information blotted onto the pages without interpretation. One could easily get the idea that Mountain Bluebirds, for instance, are nearly as common on the south coast (where rare) as the interior (where common). Why? Because the graphs show total number of sightings, not adjusted for the overall effort (which is much higher in the populous areas around Vancouver and Victoria. The noteworthy sighting section often contains many sightings that leave me scratching my head as to why they are noteworthy. Pictures often seem included just because an author happened to have them on hand. There are lots of photos of bluebirds or phoebes nesting in manmade sites yet precious few photos of the birds themselves.
Rather than presenting every bit of data obtained, relatively unedited and undeciphered, the authors should have condensed the information into compact statements that focus on important points of status and distribution in British Columbia. The reader is left to do so on his/her own, which is at times is frankly impossible. Making all of this more onerous is the enormous size of the 4 volumes and the concurrent enormous expense.
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