A new photographic guide to New Zealand birds has been
released at the end of Conservation Week. Birds of New Zealand: A
Photographic Guide, by leading ornithologist Paul Scofield and avian
photographer Brent Stephenson (Auckland University Press - $59.99), is the definitive
introduction to the identification and behaviour of our country’s extraordinary
and popular bird life.
To describe the book as stunning if anything understates just what a wonderful publication this is.My copy is going up to the bach this coming weekend where it will be an invaluable guide especially in identifying the many sea birds we have visiting our bay.
‘New Zealand is truly a land of birds,’ says author Paul
Scofield, ‘with no naturally occurring terrestrial mammals. Birds are the
commonest wild animals that New Zealanders will see outdoors – in the bush,
taking the dog for a walk or going to the beach.
‘When our national parks and recreation facilities are put
together and designed, birds are more taken into account than anything else and
increasingly tourism is benefitting from our endemic birdlife.’
Birds of New Zealand: A Photographic Guide covers all
365 bird species found today in New Zealand and its offshore islands.
Before
the arrival of humans, New Zealand birds were an extraordinarily diverse group.
Eleven families of birds existed here, with six of these still around today –
kiwi, New Zealand parrots, New Zealand
wrens, New Zealand wattlebirds, New Zealand creepers and stitchbirds.
When
humans arrived, hunting, habitat destruction and introduced mammals had
apocalyptic ill-effects. Consequently, 61 bird species became extinct and 77
are currently threatened with extinction, some critically so. Many are now
confined to offshore islands without predators and New Zealand has become a
world leader in the techniques required to bring severely endangered species
back from the brink of extinction, including the eradication of introduced
mammals.
There have also been additions
to our native avifauna, including more than 100 species introduced from
northern Europe since 1850 brought both for sport
and for a connection with the settlers’ homelands. This has meant that in urban
and modified rural habitats the common species seen each day are mostly those
introduced from northern Europe.
Birds of New Zealand includes all birds that occur
naturally, those that have established wild populations and all rare visitors.
Each entry is dedicated to a single species, and includes a brief introduction,
new photographs, a distribution map and sections on Identification, Separation
from Similar Species, Vocalisations, Distribution, Breeding Biology, Biometrics
and Taxonomic Notes, which include Māori, English and scientific names.
About the authors:
Paul Scofield is the Senior Curator in Natural
History at the Museum of Canterbury. He is a leading New Zealand birder and
ornithologist. He has watched birds since he was a child in Auckland and has
travelled extensively throughout the world studying birdlife from the Arctic to
the Antarctic. He currently works on the conservation biology of endangered
seabirds and specialises in Albatross and petrel biology. In 2006 he authored a
landmark field guide to the Albatross and Petrels of the world. Much of his recent
work has been researching the lives of New Zealand’s extinct species and he has
been involved in ground breaking work using ancient DNA and the analysis and
interpretation of the relationships of the extinct fauna.
Top nature photographer and birding tour leader Brent
Stephenson also started a lifelong love affair with birds very young. Brent
was one of the first nature photographers to start using digital photography in
New Zealand and he has amassed a huge portfolio of images. His main passion is
seabirds and this was strengthened by his involvement in the rediscovery of the
supposedly extinct New Zealand storm-petrel in 2002, and then in the John
Ridgway Save the Albatross Voyage (2003–4), sailing from New Zealand to the
Falkland Islands.
Their book is a treasure and I offer them, and their publishers, my warmest congratulations on a fine piece of publishing.
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