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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Steven Hilty , Mimi Hoppe WolfPublisher: University of Texas Press Imprint: University of Texas Press Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.399kg ISBN: 9780292706736ISBN 10: 0292706731 Pages: 312 Publication Date: 01 April 2005 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsAcknowledgments Dreams Meet Reality in the American Tropics: A Preface Avian Addresses: Structure of a Rainforest Bird Community Tropical Diversity: Why So Many Bird Species in Tropical Forests? Ghosts of Rainforests Past: Amazonian Biogeography High-Andean Genealogy: Unraveling Ice Age Secrets Tropical Travelers: Migration Within the Tropics The Clubbiest of Clubs: Life in a Mixed-Species Flock Antbirds Don't Eat Ants: Rhythms and Rituals at Ant Swarms Who Is the Fairest? Colorfulness in Tropical and Temperate Birds Fruit of the Land: Birds, Fruit and Seed Dispersal Anatomy of a Fruit Eater: Foraging Tactics of Fruit-Eating Birds A Good Song and Dance: Alternative Life-Styles of Manakins and Cotingas Territories or Traplines? Hummingbird Foraging Strategies Cold Reality: Highland Hummingbirds Sallying Forth: A Flycatcher Baedeker Finding a Needle in the Haystack: A Vulture's View of Paradise The Costs and Benefits of Growing Old: Life and Love Among the Caciques Sound Strategies: Sopranos Should Sing From the Treetops Perilous Paradise: Tropical River Islands In Search of a Season: When Do Tropical Birds Nest? Epilogue Bibliography IndexReviewsBirds of Tropical America offers a comprehensive look into the lives of some of the most fascinating birds in the world. The book will entertain and educate the amateur birder and professional ornithologist alike and would be a valuable addition to libraries at home and university. * Condor * Hilty, who has led birding expeditions to Central and South America and the Caribbean, supplies not a field guide to species identification but rather a natural history of tropical birds. He writes about tropical diversity, nesting habits, the structure of a rain forest bird community, biogeography, Andean genealogy, bird migration within the tropics, bird color and patterns, seed dispersal, foraging techniques, courtship rituals, and song patterns. This is a fascinating book for enthusiastic birders and stay-at-home naturalists alike. * Booklist * [Hilty] deals with such fascinating topics as why there are so many species in tropical America, why antbirds don’t eat ants, why there are so many flycatchers, why tropical birds are so colorful (or not), how hummingbirds survive and even prosper in the Andes, and what makes manakins and cotingas do their curious songs and dances. He writes with knowledge, grace, and humor. . . . After [Alexander] Skutch, Hilty is the finest synthesizer and popularizer of the life of Neotropical birds. * Birding * Birds of Tropical America offers a comprehensive look into the lives of some of the most fascinating birds in the world. The book will entertain and educate the amateur birder and professional ornithologist alike and would be a valuable addition to libraries at home and university. * Condor * Hilty, who has led birding expeditions to Central and South America and the Caribbean, supplies not a field guide to species identification but rather a natural history of tropical birds. He writes about tropical diversity, nesting habits, the structure of a rain forest bird community, biogeography, Andean genealogy, bird migration within the tropics, bird color and patterns, seed dispersal, foraging techniques, courtship rituals, and song patterns. This is a fascinating book for enthusiastic birders and stay-at-home naturalists alike. * Booklist * [Hilty] deals with such fascinating topics as why there are so many species in tropical America, why antbirds don't eat ants, why there are so many flycatchers, why tropical birds are so colorful (or not), how hummingbirds survive and even prosper in the Andes, and what makes manakins and cotingas do their curious songs and dances. He writes with knowledge, grace, and humor. . . . After [Alexander] Skutch, Hilty is the finest synthesizer and popularizer of the life of Neotropical birds. * Birding * Birds of Tropical America offers a comprehensive look into the lives of some of the most fascinating birds in the world. The book will entertain and educate the amateur birder and professional ornithologist alike and would be a valuable addition to libraries at home and university. Condor Author InformationSteven Hilty is a professional guide with Victor Emanuel Nature Tours, the largest international birding tour organizer in the world. He holds a Ph.D. from the University of Arizona and is a Research Associate at the University of Kansas Museum of Natural History. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |