Bird Senses - Pelagic Publishing

Bird Senses

How and What Birds See, Hear, Smell, Taste and Feel

  • New perspective on the worlds of birds
  • Over 100 colour illustrations and photographs, boxes explain technical detail
  • New insights into the problems of bird collisions and entrapment
    £30.00
    We currently have 916 in stock.

    • Useful analogies abound and the explanations given allow us, however briefly, to submerge into the sensory environment of birds, in their incredible diversity. This is a book you will want on your shelves and may well revisit.
      —Bo Beolens, Fatbirder
    Tags:
    • birds
    • migration
    • ornithology
    • senses
    • sensory

    Description

    Graham Martin takes the reader deep into the world of birds from a new perspective, with a ‘through birds’ eyes’ approach to ornithology that goes beyond the traditional habitat or ecological point of view. There is a lot more to a bird’s world than what it receives through its eyes. This book shows how all of the senses complement one another to provide each species with a unique suite of information that guides their daily activities.

    The senses of each bird have been fine-tuned by natural selection to meet the challenges of its environment and optimise its behaviour: from spotting a carcase on a hillside, to pecking at minute insects, from catching fish in murky waters, to navigating around the globe.

    The reader is also introduced to the challenges posed to birds by the obstacles with which humans have cluttered their worlds, from power lines to windowpanes. All of these challenges need explaining from the birds’ sensory perspectives so that effective mitigations can be put in place.

    The book leads the reader through a wealth of diverse information presented in accessible text, with over 100 colour illustrations and photographs. The result is a highly readable and authoritative account, which will appeal to birdwatchers and other naturalists, as well as researchers in avian biology.

    The author has researched the senses of birds throughout a 50-year career in ornithology and sensory science. He has always attempted to understand birds from the perspective of how sensory information helps them to carry out different tasks in different environments. He has published papers on more than 60 bird species, from Albatrosses and Penguins, to Spoonbills and Kiwi. His first fascination was with owls and night time, and owls have remained special to him throughout his career. He has collaborated and travelled widely and pondered diverse sensory challenges that birds face in the conduct of different tasks in different habitats, from mudflats and murky waters, to forests, deserts and caves. In recent years he has focused on how understanding bird senses can help to reduce the very high levels of bird deaths that are caused by human artefacts; particularly, wind turbines, power lines, and gill nets.

    DOI: https://doi.org/10.53061/ZWZP2178

    Readership

    Highly readable for keen birdwatchers and naturalists, as well as more specialist readers.

    Reviews

    • Useful analogies abound and the explanations given allow us, however briefly, to submerge into the sensory environment of birds, in their incredible diversity. This is a book you will want on your shelves and may well revisit.
      —Bo Beolens, Fatbirder
    • Bird Senses bundles the available knowledge and will be a milestone for a long time.
      —Walter Belis, Alauda
    • Bird Senses will undoubtedly appeal to (amateur) ornithologists, nature lovers and specialists.
      —Walter Belis, Natuur.oriolus
    • A very impressive and enjoyable read... Fascinating at a technical level and also at a more philosophical level... The more we can put ourselves into the minds of other sentient beings, the better we understand ourselves.
      —Mark Avery
    • Excellent and extremely comprehensive... This is not simply of academic interest; it also has important conservation implications.
      —Tim Birkhead, British Birds
    • So rich in explanation and surprises that it would be a dull reader who does not experience some appreciation of the worlds that birds perceive.
      —Douglas J. Futuyma, Quarterly Review of Biology
    • The book should be invaluable for scientists in the field, especially physiologists... For bird lovers, this title is inviting, well illustrated, and obviously the product of a ranking expert in the field.
      —H. T. Armistead, CHOICE

    About the Author

    Graham Martin is Emeritus Professor of Avian Sensory Science at the University of Birmingham where he established the Centre for Ornithology and set up the first Masters programme in ornithology in the UK. He also organised and taught on an extensive programme in ornithology courses for the public throughout the West Midlands.

    Bibliographic Information

    • 270 pages
    • 93 colour figures, 2 tables
    • BISAC SCO070040, NAT043000
    • BIC PSVW6, WNCB