Kaufman Field Guide to Advanced Birding

by Kenn Kaufman

A guide that helps intermediate birders advance their skills by teaching principles that apply to all groups of birds in addition to details about the most challenging groups to identify.

  • Format: eBook
  • ISBN-13/ EAN: 9780547570549
  • ISBN-10: 0547570546
  • Pages: 448
  • Publication Date: 04/19/2011
  • Carton Quantity: 1
About the Book
About the Author
Excerpts
  • About the Book
    Birders can memorize hundreds of details and still not be able to identify birds if they don’t really understand what’s in front of them.Today birders have access to almost too much information, and their attempts to identify birds can be drowned out by excess detail. The all-new Kaufman Field Guide to Advanced Birding takes a different approach, clarifying the basics and providing a framework for learning about each group. Overall principles of identification are explained in clear language, and ten chapters on specific groups of birds show how these principles can be applied in practice. Anyone with a keen interest in identifying birds will find that this book makes the learning process more effective and enjoyable, and that truly understanding what we see and hear can make birding more fun.

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  • About the Author
  • Excerpts

    1. AN INTEGRATED APPROACH TO
    FIELD IDENTIFICATION OF BIRDS

    In the two decades since the first edition of Advanced Birding was published, the
    amount of information available has increased by staggering amounts. In
    the late 1980s, a serious birder’s reference library on ID would have included
    Gulls: A Guide to Identification by P. J. Grant, Shorebirds: An Identification
    Guide by Peter Hayman et al., and a handful of detailed articles from
    British and American birding magazines. Today there are multiple fine
    books  specifically treating the identification of gulls, shorebirds,hawks,
    hummingbirds, and any other group you can think of, and so
    many fine articles have been published that it is impossible to keep
    track of them all. In the late 1980s, Peter Pyle had just produced a first
    slim guide to the molts and plumages of songbirds. Today that guide
    has been superseded by two fat volumes by Pyle, totalling over 1,500
    pages, detailing molt, plumage sequences, and geographic variation of
    every North American bird. In the late 1980s an expert birder asked
    me, in all seriousness, whether the Pomarine Jaeger even has a distinct
    plumage as a juvenile. Today it takes a few clicks on the Internet to
    find dozens of photos of this plumage, and many of these actually are
    identified correctly! What had been a trickle of published material has
    become a torrent. While the challenge formerly had been to find basic
    information on identifying most birds, the challenge now is to sift
    through the blizzards of information to find those points that are relevant,
    significant, and reliable.
     As times change, reference books and field guides must change also.
    The first edition of Advanced Birding included detailed chapters on
    identification of 34 species pairs or groups, providing information that
    was not readily available to most birders. Simply updating that book
    now without changing its focus would hardly serve a useful purpose,
    because virtually all birders have access to vastly more information today
    than they did in 1990.
     If I were to simply list more and more field marks for more species,
    this guide would take on the dimensions of an encyclopedia before it
    added materially to what is already available. So in this edition I have
    taken a different approach altogether, and the focus here is on how to
    identify birds, or how to learn to identify birds. In other words, it’s not
    about memorizing field marks, it’s about truly understanding what
    you see and hear.
     Most of this book, then, consists of a thorough exploration of how
    to look at birds and how to listen to them, how to come to grips with
    the special challenges of each group of birds. Unlike many field guides,
    this one is not designed for quick reference in the field. The best time
    to study it is before going out to look at birds. The first seven chapters
    will help orient you to universal aspects of bird recognition. Then, if
    you’re heading to the tidal flats or the sewage ponds, read the chapter
    on learning to identify shorebirds. If you’re heading to a hawkwatch
    site, read the chapter on learning to identify birds of prey. And so on.
     In addition to all these introductory chapters, I have included ten
    “sample” chapters treating specific groups in depth. These should be
    useful in their own right, but they also illustrate various principles: the
    challenges involved in identifying jaegers, for example, are very different
    from those we encounter with Empidonax flycatchers. As you master
    the identification of more groups of birds, you will develop the kind
    of background knowledge that makes it easier to learn even more.

    SCHOOLS OF THOUGHT: IMPRESSIONS VS. FEATHER-EDGES

    Since the 1980s, the birding world has put a lot of discussion into two
    distinct approaches to identification. One involves what is often called
    “giss” (for “general impressions of size and shape”), or “birding by impression.”
    The other involves a careful study of fine details, down to the
    pattern of individual feathers (this may be referred to, sometimes with
    a hint of sarcasm, as the “feather-edges” approach).
     Both of these styles seem to be at least partly a reaction against the
    system of simplistic field marks. Under that system, everything was reduced
    to simple on-off characters: the bird has wing bars or doesn’t, it
    has streaks below or doesn’t, and so on. That approach, ignoring both
    the obvious aspects of shape and the subtle nuances of fine detail, led
    to a lot of superficial identifications and a lot of potential for error.
    Simple field marks hold many traps and pitfalls for the unwary. Both
    of these other approaches, impressions and feather-edges, have their
    drawbacks and their strengths, and a serious birder will work on developing
    both.
     Identifying birds by impression has been called “the new Cape May
    school of birding,” which would be a surprise to the experts who were
    practicing this approach in California in the 1960s or in Massachusetts
    in the 1940s. Still, this style of ID has been raised to a higher level and
    well publicized by several experts associated with Cape May, New Jersey,
    especially Pete Dunne, Michael O’Brien, and Kevin Karlson.
     Most people, even if they have not considered it, are already subconsciously
    capable of using this approach. We may use it frequently
    in other contexts. If we know a person well, we may recognize her from
    half a mile away by subtle clues of posture or the way she walks. Likewise,
    if we know a bird well, we may recognize it at a great distance by
    almost subliminal hints of its shape and actions. An experienced birder
    seeing a speck soaring slowly over a faraway ridge might identify it as a
    Turkey Vulture without being able to discern a single detail. An experienced
    birder seeing a flock of birds wheeling tightly in the air over a
    distant mudflat might identify the birds as Dunlins, even without being
    able to see anything of color or markings. In these cases, factors of
    place, season, habitat, and probability are added to clues provided by
    shape and actions to create an identification that seems almost intuitive
    but in fact is based on real evidence.
     Identifying birds by looking at fine detail is an approach that goes
    back even further — to the days when most birds were identified in
    the hand. Until the latter part of the 20th century, of course, such fine
    points usually couldn’t be seen in the field, but optics today are so good
    that we often can see details of individual feathers — either in the field,
    or in digital photos later. This has allowed birders to rediscover some of
    the same technical details that were familiar to museum ornithologists
    a century ago and to employ in the field some of the same fine points
    that are used by banders examining birds in the hand. This kind of detailed
    study opens up many avenues for identifying the age and sex and
    subspecies of a bird, not just its species, in ways that simply would not
    be possible in birding by general impression.
     Both of these approaches — impressions and fine details — have
    their advantages and drawbacks. An experienced birder may identify
    many birds by quick impression and may be highly accurate with this
    approach, but occasional birds give very misleading first impressions.
    As described on pp. 32 – 40 under Common Pitfalls of Field Identification,
    individual birds can be aberrant in small ways that utterly change
    their superficial appearance. External factors such as lighting can ...

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