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| Bird Tracks & Sign : A Guide to North American Species | 
enlarge | Authors: Mark Elbroch, Eleanor Marks, C. Diane Boretos Publisher: Stackpole Books Category: Book
List Price: $34.95 Buy New: $17.87 You Save: $17.08 (49%)
New (24) Used (7) from $17.87
Avg. Customer Rating: 10 reviews Sales Rank: 62459
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 464 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.9 Dimensions (in): 8.2 x 5.5 x 1
ISBN: 0811726967 Dewey Decimal Number: 598.097 EAN: 9780811726962 ASIN: 0811726967
Publication Date: December 2001 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: Ships immediately! Perfect and New! 2001 Paperback.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description A sighting in the field is just one way birders can identify bird species. Observant nature-lovers can discover what birds are where by examining tracks, trails, and a variety of bird sign: discarded feathers, feeding leftovers and caches, pellets, nests, droppings, and skulls and bones. This fully illustrated guide-the first of its kind for North American birds-presents thorough and straightforward instruction for identifying bird families or individual species by careful examination of the unique sign they leave behind. It also offers keys to the birds' behavior in the wild. Includes songbirds, waterfowl, owls, shorebirds, warblers, woodpeckers, nightjars, and birds of prey. For trackers, birders, and nature-lovers.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 5 more reviews...
One of my main tracking books September 12, 2008 When I first got this book I read it through like a novel . it is that interesting!! Then, as I used the book as a field guide I realized that birds make much more of a mess than we realize and that trackers can easily mistake bird sign for that of man or other animals without this knowledge. Lots of things that I thought were mystery disturbances in the woods were solved for me with this guide. No other bird book touches it for bird behavior.
Excellent Book September 24, 2005 This book is a much needed guide to bird sign and tracks. It complements Elbroch's guide to Animal sign. It is well written and informative.
Expand Your Birder Skills With This June 17, 2005 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
I really got excited when I saw this reviewed in National Wildlife magazine. I often see bird tracks or even a nest when out walking but didn't know how to translate that into useful information. This book clues me in on the bird that matches those signs. The author, a renowned tracker, spent 14 months, 12 hours a day studying bird tracks, scats, nests, feeding signs and roosts plus collected information from museums for this book. Users of this guide may also want to try: -Flattened Fauna: A Field Guide to Common Animals of Roads, Streeets and Highways -Scats and Tracks of the Southeast (also guides for other areas) -A Field Guide to Desert Holes -A Key-Guide to Mammal Skulls and Lower Jaws -That Gunk on Your Car (insects) Bird lovers now have another tool to identify birds.
Great gift for that serious birder November 7, 2003 11 out of 11 found this review helpful
This is a guide to identifying bird families or individual species by clues they leave behind of their presence. The title may appear, at first glance, to be a typo. It is not. As the authors explain on the first page: "Sign refers to all the possible signs of their passing: sign of feeding, gathering material for nesting, the nests or cavity holes themselves, pellets, droppings, feathers lost during molt, or kill sites."This book appears to be packed with too much information for a beginner to digest. But its actually quite good for anyone who is interested in birds and would use such a book more than once or twice. The information is organized by types of sign - tracks, feathers, feeding signs, droppings, nests and roosts, etc., rather than by species. This allows you to read about whichever subject you're interested in and to take in the basics behind, say, interpreting signs of feeding, rather than getting bogged down by details specific to a certain species.
Due to the nature of the topic, the squeamish may not enjoy all the pictures. However, the pictures are certainly not as gruesome as they could have been. In the introduction, one of the authors writes: "real tracking is bigger than one lifetime. Tracking, as our ancestors knew it, was a body of knowledge handed down from generation to generation. Each person added to this knowledge..." The authors clearly see themselves as a continuation if this process, referring to and giving credit to other excellent books, such a Rezendes' "Tracking and the Art of Seeing". To my knowledge, this is the only book like this specific to birds. I feel this would be an excellent gift idea for that hard-to-buy-for bird watcher. petervtamas@mail.com
At Last! Something that actually contributes to the Field! October 9, 2003 3 out of 3 found this review helpful
Call me cynical but in the last twenty years I have seen field guide publishers recylce the same old info over and over again, just adding a new tabulature or color photos. The text is minimal and always leaves me wanting more.Not so with this book! Mark and Eleanor have created something that goes well beyond any field guide currently on the market concerning birds! This stuff is new and never before seen except for experienced birders in the field. It is easy to use, fun to use and it will help anyone learn more about birds, their habits and sign. The photography is stunning as well. I cannot over-recommend this book. Go get it, now! Ricardo Sierra
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