Raptor Prey Remains: A Guide to Identifying What's Been Eaten by a Bird of Prey
'The book you have all been waiting for!' - John Miles, Birdwatching

Are you curious about the remains of an animal you have found? This compilation of the most likely found body parts of animals eaten by raptors will help you identify your discovery. Including over 100 species of bird and mammal prey of raptors such as sparrowhawks, peregrines and hen harriers, this photographic guide highlights the common feathers, fur and other body parts found at raptor nests, roosts, plucking posts and other opportunistic spots.

Discovering what raptors eat is an important part of confirming their feeding ecology and how this might change over time, vary on a local level or in response to changing prey populations, as well as dispelling myths and assumptions about what certain raptors species eat. Diet studies are vital for the conservation of raptor species; the more we know about what they need for survival the more we can predict and plan long-term for the protection and survival of raptors that may be vulnerable and in decline.

This is the first book to show in detail the actual parts of a bird, mammal or other animal that you are likely to find in a garden, woodland or beneath a raptor roost. As more people take an interest in raptors and watch species such as peregrines via webcams and through watch groups, there is greater opportunity for finding prey remains. This book provides the first and most important step in identifying a prey species.

"1139011967"
Raptor Prey Remains: A Guide to Identifying What's Been Eaten by a Bird of Prey
'The book you have all been waiting for!' - John Miles, Birdwatching

Are you curious about the remains of an animal you have found? This compilation of the most likely found body parts of animals eaten by raptors will help you identify your discovery. Including over 100 species of bird and mammal prey of raptors such as sparrowhawks, peregrines and hen harriers, this photographic guide highlights the common feathers, fur and other body parts found at raptor nests, roosts, plucking posts and other opportunistic spots.

Discovering what raptors eat is an important part of confirming their feeding ecology and how this might change over time, vary on a local level or in response to changing prey populations, as well as dispelling myths and assumptions about what certain raptors species eat. Diet studies are vital for the conservation of raptor species; the more we know about what they need for survival the more we can predict and plan long-term for the protection and survival of raptors that may be vulnerable and in decline.

This is the first book to show in detail the actual parts of a bird, mammal or other animal that you are likely to find in a garden, woodland or beneath a raptor roost. As more people take an interest in raptors and watch species such as peregrines via webcams and through watch groups, there is greater opportunity for finding prey remains. This book provides the first and most important step in identifying a prey species.

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Raptor Prey Remains: A Guide to Identifying What's Been Eaten by a Bird of Prey

Raptor Prey Remains: A Guide to Identifying What's Been Eaten by a Bird of Prey

by Ed Drewitt
Raptor Prey Remains: A Guide to Identifying What's Been Eaten by a Bird of Prey

Raptor Prey Remains: A Guide to Identifying What's Been Eaten by a Bird of Prey

by Ed Drewitt

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Overview

'The book you have all been waiting for!' - John Miles, Birdwatching

Are you curious about the remains of an animal you have found? This compilation of the most likely found body parts of animals eaten by raptors will help you identify your discovery. Including over 100 species of bird and mammal prey of raptors such as sparrowhawks, peregrines and hen harriers, this photographic guide highlights the common feathers, fur and other body parts found at raptor nests, roosts, plucking posts and other opportunistic spots.

Discovering what raptors eat is an important part of confirming their feeding ecology and how this might change over time, vary on a local level or in response to changing prey populations, as well as dispelling myths and assumptions about what certain raptors species eat. Diet studies are vital for the conservation of raptor species; the more we know about what they need for survival the more we can predict and plan long-term for the protection and survival of raptors that may be vulnerable and in decline.

This is the first book to show in detail the actual parts of a bird, mammal or other animal that you are likely to find in a garden, woodland or beneath a raptor roost. As more people take an interest in raptors and watch species such as peregrines via webcams and through watch groups, there is greater opportunity for finding prey remains. This book provides the first and most important step in identifying a prey species.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781784272074
Publisher: Pelagic Publishing
Publication date: 10/17/2020
Pages: 230
Product dimensions: 5.57(w) x 8.69(h) x 0.51(d)

About the Author

Ed Drewitt has been collecting feathers and skulls since he was seven years old and studying the diet of urban peregrines for over twenty years. He has a good eye for identifying even the tiniest of feathers and has learnt which body parts we are most likely to find after a raptor has fed.

Table of Contents

Introduction 1

Finding and identifying raptor prey remains 2

Where to begin 2

Who's been at work? A mammal or bird predator? 2

Signs of predation 3

Visiting regular prey sites 6

Collecting safely 6

Working out how many individuals of a species you have 7

Building up a reference collection and protecting from insects 7

What clues do different raptors leave behind? 8

Other resources for identifying prey 10

My own story - learning my feathers and identifying peregrine prey 11

Parts of a bird 13

Glossary 17

Mallard 19

Teal 22

Other ducks 25

Red grouse 26

Red-legged partridge 29

Grey partridge 33

Quail 35

Pheasant 37

Chicken 42

Storm petrel 44

Manx shearwater 45

Little grebe 48

Sparrowhawk 50

Water rail 52

Corncrake 54

Spotted crake 56

Moorhen 59

Coot 62

Oystercatcher 63

Avocet 67

Lapwing 69

Golden plover 72

Grey plover 74

Ringed plover 76

Whimbrel 78

Curlew 82

Bar-tailed godwit 83

Black-tailed godwit 86

Knot 88

Dunlin 89

Woodcock 91

Jack snipe 93

Snipe 95

Common sandpiper 98

Green sandpiper 99

Redshank 101

Black-headed gull 104

Gulls (chicks and fledglings) 109

Adult gulls 112

Sandwich tern 114

Common tern 117

Auks 119

Feral pigeon 122

Stock dove 124

Woodpigeon 125

Turtle dove 128

Collared dove 130

Cuckoo 131

Barn owl 135

Little owl 137

Swift 139

Kingfisher 140

Lesser spotted woodpecker 142

Great spotted woodpecker 143

Green woodpecker 146

Kestrel 147

Ring-necked parakeet 148

Red-backed shrike 149

Great grey shrike 150

Jay 151

Magpie 153

Jackdaw 155

Blue tit 157

Great tit 158

Skylark 160

Sand martin and house martin 162

Swallow 164

Willow warbler and chiffchaff 166

Blackcap 168

Goldcrest 169

Wren 170

Starling 171

Blackbird 176

Fieldfare 178

Redwing 180

Song thrush 181

Mistle thrush 183

Robin 185

Wheatear 186

House sparrow 188

Dunnock 189

Pied wagtail 190

Meadow pipit 192

Tree pipit 193

Chaffinch 194

Brambling 196

Hawfinch 198

Bullfinch 199

Greenfinch 200

Linnet 202

Goldfinch 203

Siskin 205

Yellowhammer 206

Reed bunting 207

Fledglings 208

Other animals 209

Photo credits 228

With thanks 230

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