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Overview
Bird migration captivates the human imagination, yet for most of us, key aspects of the phenomenon remain a mystery. How do birds sense the ideal moment to take wing, and once the epic journey has begun, how do they find their distant destinations? Fresh insights about avian movements are still constantly emerging, powered by new tools like molecular genetics and transmitter miniaturization.
In this book, renowned ornithologist and author John H. Rappole reveals intriguing results of recent scientific studies on migration, explaining their importance for birders, nature lovers, and researchers alike. Debunking misconceptions about the lives of birds that have persisted for thousands of years, Rappole explores unexpected causes and previously misunderstood aspects of the annual migration cycle. From the role of migrating birds in zoonotic disease transmission to climate change's impact on migration patterns, Rappole tackles crucial questions and ensures that readers come away with a new understanding of why and how birds migrate.
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781421442389 |
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Publisher: | Johns Hopkins University Press |
Publication date: | 02/22/2022 |
Pages: | 344 |
Sales rank: | 751,066 |
Product dimensions: | 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.05(d) |
Age Range: | 18 Years |
About the Author
Table of Contents
PrefaceAcknowledgmentsChapter 1. The Bird Migration ParadigmChapter 2. The Migrant Annual Cycle According to the Dispersal TheoryChapter 3. Fall MigrationChapter 4. Wintering PeriodChapter 5. Spring MigrationChapter 6. Breeding PeriodChapter 7. Postbreeding Period Chapter 8. Population BiologyChapter 9. Origin and EvolutionChapter 10. BiogeographyChapter 11. ConservationCodaAppendix 1. Common and Scientific Names of Bird Species Mentioned in the TextAppendix 2. A Critical Examination of the Assumptions in "Temperate Origins of Long-Distance Seasonal Migration in New World Songbirds" by Benjamin M. Winger, F. Keith Barker, and Richard H. ReeAppendix 3. Notation Corrections for Alan Pine's Multiple Carrying Capacity Equations from "Age-Structured Periodic Breeders" by Alan S. Pine in The Avian Migrant: The Biology of Bird Migration by John H. Rappole (New York: Columbia University Press, 2013)Annotated BibliographyIndexWhat People are Saying About This
"John Rappole distills a life of study and contemplation of the tantalizing and challenging phenomenon of bird migration into wonderfully accessible prose. This is a once-in-a-generation, highly readable, and insightful overview of the topic. A landmark volume for scholar and amateur alike."
John Rappole takes our beliefs about avian migration and flips them upside down, prompting the reader to reassess their own assumptions. Rappole's frank presentation of the process of scientific discovery and controversy is revealing and absorbing.
John Rappole takes our beliefs about avian migration and flips them upside down, prompting the reader to reassess their own assumptions. Rappole's frank presentation of the process of scientific discovery and controversy is revealing and absorbing.—Danielle J. Whittaker, author of The Secret Perfume of Birds: Uncovering the Science of Avian Scent
In engaging language, the reader can expect revelations throughout that will both challenge and greatly inform. For many, their perceptions of the avian world will never be the same.—Colin Rees, author of Nature's Calendar: A Year in the Life of a Wildlife Sanctuary
In his insightful and thought-provoking new book, ecologist John Rappole explains that birds migrate in order to locate seasonally abundant food resources, not, as commonly assumed, because of seasonally unfavorable weather. This theory shows that most familiar migrant species evolved from resident tropical species.—Bruce M. Beehler, author of Birds of Maryland, Delaware, and the District of Columbia
Bird Migration is an excellent scholarly release aimed at a wide readership within the citizen science community and beyond. Rappole creates a skillful presentation of the different facets of bird migration, combining it intelligently with personal annotations of his own research contributions and enriching it with some stunning answers derived from most recent bird behavior studies.—Karl-L Schuchmann, Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig
John Rappole distills a life of study and contemplation of the tantalizing and challenging phenomenon of bird migration into wonderfully accessible prose. This is a once-in-a-generation, highly readable, and insightful overview of the topic. A landmark volume for scholar and amateur alike.—Thomas E. Lovejoy, coauthor of Ever Green: Saving Big Forests to Save the Planet
Bird Migration is an excellent scholarly release aimed at a wide readership within the citizen science community and beyond. Rappole creates a skillful presentation of the different facets of bird migration, combining it intelligently with personal annotations of his own research contributions and enriching it with some stunning answers derived from most recent bird behavior studies.
John Rappole distills a life of study and contemplation of the tantalizing and challenging phenomenon of bird migration into wonderfully accessible prose. This is a once-in-a-generation, highly readable, and insightful overview of the topic. A landmark volume for scholar and amateur alike.
In engaging language, the reader can expect revelations throughout that will both challenge and greatly inform. For many, their perceptions of the avian world will never be the same.
In his insightful and thought-provoking new book, ecologist John Rappole explains that birds migrate in order to locate seasonally abundant food resources, not, as commonly assumed, because of seasonally unfavorable weather. This theory shows that most familiar migrant species evolved from resident tropical species.