Italy
For Italy birding, here' are my suggestions for books:
I would definitively recommend "A birdwatcher's guide to Italy" by by Luciano Ruggieri and Igor Festari Lynx Edicions 2005
Marco Girardello
girardellomarco@yahoo.itThere is not any Field guide about Italian birds.The best is Svensson guide. There is an ongoing publication on Italian avifauna with status photo consevation not in English (vol III due to be published within a few months) by P Brichetti and Fracasso. The best birdfing guide is the brand new A Birdwatchers Guide to Italy by my great friends and excellent birders L Ruggieri and I Festari(Lynx ed)
Gianluigi Castelli
pedrolamar@tiscali.itAt the moment, in Italy has been published only one Bird Finding book (A Birdwatcher's Guide to Italy by L Ruggieri and I Festari, 2005) that therefore it is the "best book" available.
Nevertheless, if you want my opinion on books and CD to make birwatching in Italy, these are: Collins Bird Guide, by L Svensoon, K Mullarney, D Zetterstrom and P J Grant
All the Bird songs of Britain and Europe, by J C Roch? (4 CD set)
Marcello Grussu, Sardinia, Italy
porphyrio@tiscali.itA Birdwatcher's Guide to Italy Finding most important Italian birds Luciano Ruggieri and Igor Festari 303 pages, maps.Lynx Edicions Softcover | 2005 | ?18.95 | approx. $34/?28 ISBN: 8487334865
Guide to finding birds in Italy, incl. Sardinia and Sicily. You can buy it online at:
http://www.nhbs.com/title.php?bkfno=156489 It came out late last year, so it has up to date information. Its authors are among the founding members of EBN Italy (
http://www.ebnitalia.it/), the first Italian birdwatching organisation and mailing list, of which I am a member and which publishes a six-monthly newsletter on CD-ROM.
More information, especially about the Po Delta area, one of Italy's foremost birdwatching areas can be found on:
http://www.birdinitaly.net/ As for field guides, again, the Italian ones are mostly translations of older "historical" guides such as the Bruun-Singer and the Peterson-Mountfort-Hollom, but most serious birders tend to use the Collins Bird Guide (Mullarney, Svensson, Zetterstrom) (in English), which is regarded as the best field guide for Europe and the Western Palearctic. In Italian there is also the new edtion of Hayman and Hume's .../ , which fits in your pocket and has a lot of good-quality illustrations for each bird, but only covers "regular" species (no vagrants). I keep it in the car or take it with me if I am going anywhere on a non-birdwatching trip.
In Italian there is also the new edtion of Hayman and Hume's The New Birdwatcher's Pocket Guide to Britain and Europe (ISBN: 1857328043) (in Italian "la nuova Guida del Birdwatcher", published by Muzzio), which fits in your pocket and has a lot of good-quality illustrations for each bird, but only covers "regular" species (no vagrants). I keep it in the car or take it with me if I am going anywhere on a non-birdwatching trip.
Cristiana Marti, Abbadia San Salvatore - Siena Italy
cristiana@montegualandro.com Jamaica
1. Birds of the West Indies - Herbert Raffaele et al It is a good easy reference guide with 94 colour plates and is useful throughout the West Indies. Extremely useful for Caribbean endemics which are resident in Jamaica and for our summer visitors.
ISBN 0691-11319-X
2. The North American Bird Guide - David Sibley
This is a well illustrated work and invaluable for identifying many of our resident birds and the large numbers of migrants and vagrants that we find in Jamaica.
ISBN 1-873403-98-4
3. New World Warblers - Helm Identification Guides - John Curson et al
Excellent book with very detailed descriptions of warblers (mostly migrant) that are found in Jamaica. The colour plates are superb and a real aid to identification of birds in non-breeding plumage.
ISBN 0-7136-3932-6
4. Birds of Jamaica -Audrey Downer and Robert Sutton
Superb photographs and text on Jamaican endemics. Sadly out of print but a few copies can still be found.
ISBN 0-521-38309-9
Regards
Vaughan Turland
vaughan.turland@cwjamaica.comhttp://www.reliableadventuresjamaica.com876 8654257
Japan
Birds of Japan by Mark Brazil is not out-of-print (despite what American booksellers say); it is still available from the UK, new; I recommend buyers go to
www.wildsounds.com. I have copies of A Birdwatcher's Guide to Japan, still available should anyone wish to buy one.
Next year my new book: Field Guide to the Birds of East Asia will be published.
Mark Brazil, Author.
markbrazil@world.email.ne.jp "A Field Guide to the Birds of Japan" by the Wild Bird Society of Japan and "A Birdwatcher's Guide to Japan" and "The Birds of Japan" by Mark Brazil that are all very usefull, but unfortunately all out of print and rather pricey.
I know that Mark Brazil is working on a field guide for birds of the region, but suspect that we are still several years away from seeing.
Mike Yough
myough@gmail.comActually, Japan is not very well represented in ornithological literature, although I can't think why as it's interesting in all seasons as we're on the flyway for stuff moving to and from the North of Russia and China.
I have not yet found a field guide in any language other than Japanese, and myself use a photographic guide called, in Japanese, 'Wild Birds of Japan'. Although the text is entirely in Japanese, the English names are also given as well as the scientific names. Unfortunately it's not in any real systematic sequence as it's a cobbling together of two books which were (and still are) published separately, Land Birds and Water Birds. It has numerous plates for most species, showing all of the plumages likely to be encountered, but the distribution maps show the species distribution world-wide, which is a bit silly for cosmopolitan species as you get a picture of the whole surface of the globe in a fairly small space. It does show you the months during which it can be expected to be seen in Japan though. There is an identification guide which uses drawings, too, but I think it's out of print and it has no English names.
The story for birding sites is almost as sad. The only comprehensive guide is Mark Brazil's book on Japanese sites, but this seems also to be out of print, although I was able to get a copy frpom the Japanese Wild Bird Society and I believe they may still have some copies. This book is also fairly old now (c.20 years, perhaps?) so I'm also not sure how accurate it still is, given the Japanese propensity for roadbuilding!
The really major and popular sites are, of course, mentioned in the Nigel Wheatley book dealing with Asia, but apart from Cranes and Sea Eagles, Japan seems not to be well-known to birdwatchers at all.
Another book which may be useful is the Mark Brazil book 'The Birds of Japan', which is a survey of the status of all species which have occured in the country. NHBS have recently cut the price on this one, but the only birds illustrated in colour (there are numerous line drawings) are the endemics.
All in all not too happy, I'm afraid. People who want a book in English will probably find the field guide to Korea the most useful. It has most if not all of the same birds.
Tony Bannister
igirisujin@japan.comJapan is pretty straightforward to deal with; there are not a lot of options. The major authoritative reference in English is Mark Brazil's The Birds of Japan(1991), ISBN 0-7136-8006-7.
The lone English-language field guide, Field Guide to the Birds of Japan, by the Wild Bird Society of Japan (WBSJ) and illustrated by S. Takano, has been out of print for several years, and is poorly illustrated by today's standards, while the text and taxonomy are considerably out of date. Used copies occasionally appear for sale at exorbitant prices, but are not worth the money unless you are a real sissy birder and need the moral support. An adequate substitute for the Takano field guide is A Field Guide to the Birds of Korea, Lee, Koo & Park, (2000), ISBN 89-951415-1-4, which covers many of Japan's accidentals and rarities in more detail than the Takano book, but lacks information on Japan's strict endemics, many of its pelagics, and species of the tropical islands south of Kyushu.
There are two English-language birdfinding guides, both out of print: A Birdwatcher's Guide to Japan, by Mark Brazil (1987), ISBN 0-87011-849-8 and A Birder's Guide to Japan, by Jane Washburn Robinson (1987), ISBN 0-934797-02-1, both growing outdated, but still quite functional. I recommend using both (if the miracle of their concurrent possession should occur), as their information is often complementary. Either is good on its own, however. As to availability, the Wild Bird Society of Japan bookstore still has new copies of the Brazil finding guide in stock, but their website and bookstore use only Japanese, and they do not mail order outside of the country.
For the multilingual, there are a number of excellent, up-to-date national and regional field guides (both photographic and with paintings) and birdfinding guides in Japanese. One good field guide is A Guide for Bird Lovers: 630 Birds (Japanese Society for the Preservations of Birds, 2002), ISBN 4-87246-532-6. It has an English index and English names in the species entries, but all else is in Japanese, so a non-speaker can glean no further information from the entries, except for the range maps.
The best CD set to my mind is the 6-CD set published by Shogakkan, called The Songs and Calls of 333 Birds in Japan(SNZ-480071-1 through -3 and SNZ-400072-4 through -6). The identifying voice on the tape is Japanese, but they do come with a trilingual (Japanese-English-Latin) index.
Charles Harper
mistermicawber@gmail.comThe main source is The Wild Bird Society of Japan. Unfortunately most of their information is in Japanese. They have a website, but only in Japanese. They published an excellent Field Guide to the Birds of Japan in English, which was the same as the Japanese version ,but it was allowed to expire and no new editions have been published. Copies are available on Amazon.com but they are expensive, about $160+. There are books available in English describing locations in Japan by Mark Brazil who wrote for the English newspaper Japan Times. I live in Aomori Prefecture, and the Birdwatching groups here have published a book of photos and descriptions of birds found in this Prefecture with photos taken by local members. It's very good, but in Japanese. I'm assuming that most of the other Prefecture groups have published similar books.
Herb Bastuscheck, Misawa, Japan
japanherb@yahoo.comHere are my recommendations for bird books and CDs useful for Japan.
Unfortunately, there are no illustrated fieldguides that even come remotely close to those published in Europe or the US.
The only half-decent English-language field for the region is A Field Guide to the Birds of Korea
Text: Woo-shin Lee, Tae-Hoe Koo, Jin-Young Park
Illustrations: Takashi Taniguchi
Translated by* Desmond Allen
Supported by: L.G. Evergreen Foundation
Published by: Toyokan Publishing Co, Ltd 2000
ISBN 89-951415-0-6 06490
This is a useful book as it includes the majority of commoner birds that can be seen in Japan, with reasonable illustrations and a relatively useful English text. However, it doesn't have any informantion on most of the 13 Japanese endemics or saome of the species that might occur in the Ryukyus islands, or in Hokkaido. The Wild Bird Society of Japan, published an English version of their field guide back in the early 1980's. Unfortunately it is out of print, and the illustrations also by Takasi Taniguchi are very poor for the most part, though the text was OK.
The best Japanese language field guide is the two-part book
'Nihon no Tori 550'. Like all the other current filed guides in japan, it is a photographic field guide. It is split into two books, the first is called Mizube no Tori (Waterbirds), covering everything from divers to terns. The second installment is called Sanya no Tiro (mountain birds), which covers from raptors to crows.
They were written by Masashi Kirihara, Norio Yamagata, Toshiyuki Yoshino and Himaru Iozawa.
Published in 200, and ISBN 4-8299-0163-2 and 3 respectively.
What sets it apart from the other guides is the number of photos llustating pumages other than adult and subspecies and depth of description (albeit in Japanese). There is another photographic fieldguide published in 1998, by Yamatei Publisher's Co, Ltd...which might make a good cross-reference. It is called Wild Birds of Japan (Nihon no Yacho). It was written by Takuya Kanouchi, Naoya Abe, Hideo Ueda. It has less variety of plumages in the photos, but does give dates and places for some of the rarer birds found in Japan. I am guessing this is currently out of print, as I haven't seen it in the shops for a while.
The only siteguides with any detail for Japan are Mark Brazil's 1987 book (A Birdwathcer's Guide to Japan) and a book by an American woman called Robinson, published sometime in the 1980's. Brazil's is the slimmer, less verbose and better of the two. Unfortunately, both are long out of print and very hard to get on the net. Brazil's book is published by Charles E Tuttle..who publish lots of English language books on Japan. Sorry I don't have more details on either of them, but I lent my copy of Brazil's book and never got it back, and I only have photocopies of extracts from Robinson's book.
Mark Brazil also published an excellent book called The Birds of Japan in 1991,w hich is basically a monograph of all species recorded in Japan. It was published by Helm, illustrated by Masayukli Yabuchi, ISBN 0-7-136-8006-7. He is currently working on an updated version of this book, but unfortunately not the site-guide.
The only CD7s I know of, are Yasei Tori no Koi 283 (translates as Songs and calls of 283 Wild Japanese birds. It is a set of 4 CD's published by Yama-kei in 1998 and recorded by Hideo Ueda. There are a few other slim guides on raptors, ducks, gulls and waders respectfully which are wonderfully illustrated. I can provide further details if necessary.
I would also recommend bringing along a copy of Collins Bird Guide, by Mullarney, Svennson, Zelterstrom and Peter Grant, as it is usueful for confusion species or vagrants if you are on the offshore islands...and helps to supplement the Japanese guides, wich don't have English text. The 2 Macmillan Guide is also useful for confusiopn gulls, warblers and buntings.
There are many ecellent websites with even more information, alas largely in Japanese, which I can provide at a later date if you want.
Happy Birding
Sean Minns
Hiroshima,Japan
minnsfuji@yahoo.com Kansas
First of all, thanks for birdingpal! I hooked up with a swell guy in the Netherlands, when I was living there last year.
I live in the state of Kansas in the U.S. - the northeastern part of this rather large state. The books to have are the following:
Zimmerman, John L. and Patti, Sebastian T. A Guide to Bird Finding in Kansas and Western Missouri. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1988. ISBN 0-7006-0366-2. This is still the most useful guide to find places and match them to seasons and species.
Thomson, Max C. and Ely, Charles. Birds in Kansas. (2 volumes). Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1989 and 1992. ISBNs: 0-89338-027-X (vol. 1) and 0-89338-040-7 (vol. 2). Not a field guide but a reference work - VERY thorough, though it's getting a bit outdated as to record sighting dates and county records. (hope they update it)
Also see the Kansas Ornithological Society web site:
http://www.ksbirds.org/kos/index.html for rare bird alerts, birding locations, etc.
In our neighboring state of Missouri, the Audubon Society publishes A Guide to Birding in Missouri. For St. Louis, use Birds of the St. Louis Area and Where to Find Them, published by the Webster Groves Nature Study Society, in that city. All of these books are available via the American Birding Association on-line store. The Missouri Dept. of Conservation publishes a free pamphlet, Enjoying Missouri's Birds, that has a terrific chart of species, with abundance by month and by habitat. This works well for the eastern fourth of Kansas, as well.
For the US more generally, the National Geographic Guide to Birdwatching Sites (2 vol) is very helpful - we are in the "Eastern US" volume.
Joe Harrington, Lawrence
jharring@ku.edu Kazakhstan
GAVRILOV, E. I. (2000): Guide to the Birds of the Kazakhstan Republic. Published by the author, Almaty. (Available from
www.osme.org)
KAZMIERCZAK, K. & B.v. PERLO (2000): A Field Guide to the Birds of the Indian Subcontinent. Pica Press, ---. RYABITSEV, V.K. (2001): Ptitsy Urala, Priuralya, i Zapadnoy Sibiri. Thesis, Yekaterinburg (russ.). Hard to get, if you want to have a copy, please write me an e-mail.
SVENSSON, L., K. MULLARNEY, DAN ZETTERSTR?M & P.J. GRANT (2001): The Complete Guide to the Birds of Europe.Princeton, London.
Mark Ashcroft
markjashcroft@yahoo.co.uk Kenya
There have been quite a large bunch of birding books that have been published and used by most of the birding client who come to Kenya but I would hate to say which ones. Most of them heavily depends on most beautiful birds they come across during their safari in kenya.
The most convinient and comprehensive of all is
1)''Birds of Kenya and Northern Tanzania' by Zimmerman, Turner and Pearson it is Seconded by Field Guide to the Birds of East Africa: Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi: by John Fanshawe and Terry Stevenson
This are the only I would advise and recognise as a guide to Kenya birds.
We still do not have the CD's for Kenya birds but there is a copy that Brain Finch who has been a guide to Kenya and has recorded several sounds is about to launch and soon it is I will let you know.
With kind regards
Joseph Mwangi
ornithologicalexpenditions@yahoo.co.uk Malaysia
1) New Holland Field Guide to the Birds of South-East Asia New
C. Robson
2005, Paperback; 304 pages
ISBN 1843307464
2) A Field Guide to the Birds of West Malaysia and Singapore by Allen
Jeyarajasingam and Alan Pearson
3) A Photographic Guide to the Birds of Southeast Asia
M. Strange
2000, Paperback, 400 pages
ISBN 9625934030
Lee Kok Chung
kclee@endemicguides.comTitle: Field Guide to the Birds of South-East Asia -New Edition
Author: C. Robson
Publicher: New Holland 2005, Paperback; 304 pages
ISBN 1843307464
Ahli Chung
ahlichung@yahoo.comI find that there are no "best" field guide for Birds of Malaysia. The most comprehensive is written by Allen Jeyarajasingam and Allan Pearson "A field Guide to the Birds of West Malaysia and Singapore" (Oxford University Press). However the illustrations by Allan Pearson resulted in "fat" birds and some errors of illustration. Allen Jeyarajasingam also collaborated with Morten Strange and co=authored "Birds: a photografic guide to the Birds of Peninsular Malaysia and Singapore" (Sun Tree Publishing Limited, Singapore; 1993)
My wife and I prefer to use the Thai book, "A Field Guide to the Birds of Thailand" by Boonsong Lekagul & Philip D. Round. The illustrations of the 900 odd species by Mongkol Wongkalasin and Kamol Komolphalin are very accurate although there are a few errors. A new field guide to the Birds of Thailand by Craig Robson is also one that we increasingly use as it is more comprehensive with the addition of the 30+ species from the south which were left out of Boonsong's book (the south was a hotbed for communist insurgency so the jungles were mined and no one dare to venture there until the ceasefire and eventual peace treaty).
Hope this is sufficient for you to put for general knowledge.
Happy birding.
Cheaw Hon Ming
cheawhm@streamyx.com Main
Currently there is only one book available for the State of Maine. "A birders Guide to Maine" Elizabeth C. Pierson, Jan Erik Pierson and Peter Vickery 1996 Down East Books PO Box 679 Camden, ME 04843 This book is pretty good at the local level, I can attest to that in the Down East area. Though some of the info is a little dated it still is pretty acurate. I have been told that Peter Vickery is involved in putting together a new book, though I'm not sure when it will be completed. The only other guides that would pertain to Maine would of course, be bird guides to New England, of which there are several. I hope this info is helpful take care
In reference to the local guides; the Peirsons, Jan Erik and Elizabeth C., also created "The Birders Guide to Coastal Maine", 1981. I have not read the book so I cannot give my opinion, though if it's similar to their other publication Im sure its is pretty acurate.
Barry Southard, Machias
brdman@hotmail.com Mali
Best field guide is without a doubt Birds of West Africa - the field guide version- 2005- Borrow and Demey.
Best CD's are Claud Chappuis' 11 CD set. That same set of CD's is for North and West-Central Africa.
There is no birdfinding guide yet for Mali. Maybe when I retire I will write one. Callan Cohen was recently in country and did a trip, so we slowly but surely gather info. There's a lot of places I have not yet been
Mary Crickmore
MaryCrickmore@compuserve.com Maryland
Finding Birds in the National Capital Area by Claudia Wilds
T. Beal
THBeal@aol.comFor the Baltimore Region the Birders Guide to Baltimore City/County. It was a collaborative effort by members of the Baltimore Bird Club. It is $10 per copy and if anyone wants a copy they can email me and I can get them one.
Wendy Olsson
rwolsson@verizon.net Massachusetts
David Sibley,
http://www.sibleyguides.com/ , has the what I consider to be the ultimate field guides for North America.
He has also taken the time to separate his original oversized guide with and East Coast Version and a West Coast Version:
SIBLEY'S GUID TO BIRDS OF EASTERN NORTH AMERICA
SIBLEY'S GUIDE TO BIRDS OF WESTERN NORTH AMERICA
All his publication are listed on his website:
http://www.sibleyguides.com/publications.htmI like to use this guide because he has a leader page that lists side views of all the birds of that general description: i.e.; gulls, kittiwakes.
A Birder not familiar with field markings of the Birds of this area has an opportunity to choose the side view [from smallest to largest] most resembling what is seen...a good starting point.
Calls are also noted in the text.
Ara Charder
arastours@yahoo.comBirding Western Massachusetts
Habitat Guide to 26 Great Birding Sites written and illustrated by Robert Tougias
Birding Western Massachusetts features 26 great birding locations in Western Massachusetts. Every site has been chosen either for diversity and volume of bird life, or for its unique and rare birds. All sites are easily accessible and are open year-round. Whether you are an avid birder looking for specific birds, or a casual nature enthusiast with an interest in seeing different kinds of birds, this guide will provide you with everything you need to make your experience a success.
Author Robert Tougias presents a "habitat" approach to birding, showing how to use the awareness of habitat to find birds. With mountains, meadows, rivers, and reservoirs, a wide variety of habitats exist in western Massachusetts. Within each habitat, a unique set of birds can be found. And what a variety! There are over 100 different birds nesting in western Massachusetts, and at least 200 different birds that migrate through the region -- a total of over 300 different birds are recorded annually through the seasons. Few people realize the ideal situation of such a large variety of birds, together with a large number of easily accessible places in which to see them. It is a winning combination for every birder at every level to enjoy. This guide allows you to seize this opportunity in an easy, user-friendly way. Bob Tougias
rtougias@snet.netBirding Cape Cod (2005 edition) compiled by the Cape Cod Bird Club, published by On Cape Publications P.O .Box 218, Yarmouth Port MA, 02675 USA
http://www.oncapepublications.com Excellent information on birding by season, habitats, and tides, easy-to-read maps and parking recommendations for all sites. In Massachusetts, this guide is available in birding stores and Massachusetts Audubon gift shops as well as from the publisher.
Pat White,
porchbird@charter.netMexico
I`ll send you the best site for birdwatching in north of Quintana Roo when can you to see about 80 or 100 species in one birding 06:00 to 13:hours
Botanical Garden DR. ALFREDO BARRERA MARIN Central Vallarta, Boca del Puma, Tres Bocas, siete bocas y verde lucero these site It?s a 20 km Botanical Garden across hightway in Puerto Morelos, Q. Roo Coba and Punta Laguna Muyil, Boca paila and vigia chico part of Sian Ka`an Felipe Carrillo Puerto
These site It`s the best for birdwatching in all site can you to see about 280 species in one or two week
The best field guide are for me:
A guide to the Birds of Mexico and Northern Central America Steve N. G. Howel and Sophie Webb, Oxford University
Field Guide to the birds of North America National Geographic Four Edition
AMERICAN BIRD CONSERVANCY`S FIELD GUIDE: ALL THE BIRDS OF NORTH AMERICA
These three books It`s the best for birdwatching
LUIS KU, Puerto Morelos, Quintana Roo
motmotbird@hotmail.comMy recomendations for Mexico are the next field guides:
Mexico its between two regions neartic and neotropical, then you need to use many guides that compliment:
A guide to the birds of M?xico and Northern Central America
National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America.
Aves de M?xico of Peterson and Chalif. I think its more complete the spanish version than the english version.
Sibley field guide to the birds. Western or Eastern North America.
Alejandro from Quer?taro, M?xico
ale220171@yahoo.comI would think that the best birding guide here in Mexico is Birds of Mexico & central America by Howell & Web.
The field guide to birds of North America by National Geografic , in winter we have many resident from the north that are not ilustrated in the Howell's book so the National is convinient to carry in the field for its size & exellent illustration.
Roque Antonio
roque_antonio740@hotmail.com Michigan
The Sibley Guide to Birds (David Allen Sibley) is the best field guide for Michigan, but it is lacking in regard to habitat and habits info. The National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America is solid all-around. Sibley has better drawings. The large Sibley is inconvenient to carry, so I leave mine in the car and carry the smaller Sibley Eastern or Nat'l Geo.
If you're birding in Michigan, a "must have" is A Birder's Guide to Michigan, by Allen T. Chartier and Jerry Ziarno. Its 660 pages are full of maps and info about all of the best birding locations in Michigan.
Bruce Bowman, Ann Arbor
bbowman99@comcast.net#1 Birds of Michigan, excellent book, great maps, great species information all and all this guide goes the distance, another nice thing, it's very understandable, you don't need a PHd. in Orinthology to understand it. Just for edification, Amazon.com lists this book at 13.57 (new). Authors Charles Black and George Kennedy, 2003, Lone Pine Publishing.
#2 If still availabe is a wonderful guide put out by Michigan Dept. of Natural Resources and the Natural Heritage Program. Michigan State University Press 1994, last I knew it was a donation type situation, I would check with the Michigan DNR in Lansing, MI. or onlne. Not only does this guide break the state into three geographical areas it also lists several (36-over 50 areas for each region) places with a nice description of not only birds, waterfowl ducks and wildlife and the times of the year to look, and done in an attractive manner.
Dick Burley, South Boardman
blackdogphoto@hotmail.comI live in South East Michigan
Here is a good web site that covers the area.
http://www-personal.umich.edu/~bbowman/birds/Here are 3 listservs that report the bird activity in the state.
http://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/MCHL.htmlhttp://birdingonthe.net/mailinglists/MICH.htmlhttp://www.upbirders.org/I recomend the Sibley Field Guide and the Stokes set of 3 CD's for Eastern US.
Andy Dettlinger
Andrew.R.Dettling@irs.gov Missouri
First of all, thanks for birdingpal! I hooked up with a swell guy in the Netherlands, when I was living there last year.
I live in the state of Kansas in the U.S. - the northeastern part of this rather large state. The books to have are the following:
Zimmerman, John L. and Patti, Sebastian T. A Guide to Bird Finding in Kansas and Western Missouri. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1988. ISBN 0-7006-0366-2. This is still the most useful guide to find places and match them to seasons and species.
Thomson, Max C. and Ely, Charles. Birds in Kansas. (2 volumes). Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas, 1989 and 1992. ISBNs: 0-89338-027-X (vol. 1) and 0-89338-040-7 (vol. 2). Not a field guide but a reference work - VERY thorough, though it's getting a bit outdated as to record sighting dates and county records. (hope they update it)
Also see the Kansas Ornithological Society web site:
http://www.ksbirds.org/kos/index.html for rare bird alerts, birding locations, etc.
In our neighboring state of Missouri, the Audubon Society publishes A Guide to Birding in Missouri. For St. Louis, use Birds of the St. Louis Area and Where to Find Them, published by the Webster Groves Nature Study Society, in that city. All of these books are available via the American Birding Association on-line store. The Missouri Dept. of Conservation publishes a free pamphlet, Enjoying Missouri's Birds, that has a terrific chart of species, with abundance by month and by habitat. This works well for the eastern fourth of Kansas, as well.
For the US more generally, the National Geographic Guide to Birdwatching Sites (2 vol) is very helpful - we are in the "Eastern US" volume.
Joe Harrington, Lawrence
jharring@ku.edu Mongolia
Actually there is almost nothing special guide book for Mongolian birds by now. It has a some clear reasons, for example the bird checklist of Mongolia is still not complete (now 464 species).
Our birds are from many different resources:
- from Siberia
- from Korea and Manjuur (North East China)
- from Central Asian desert
- from South East Asia
- from Australia and other Pacific countries
So we usually use different kind of field guidebooks of many regions. But I have some recommendations, those books were useful in my last trips.
1. Birds of Europe by Killian Mullarney, et al. 2001 year
It includes about 80% of our birds. This guidebook useful for Mongolia
2. Birds of Khentii region in Mongolia by N.Tzeveenmaydag, N.Bold 2005 year
The guidebook from Science Academy of Mongolia, the illustrations isn't good, but other informations are useful such as distribution and status. It has over 300 species. The Khentii region is center and east part of Mongolia.
3. A field guide to the Birds of Chinaby John Mackinnon, Karen Phillipps 2000 year
Important thing is it includes the most species of Mongolia. However it's illustrations aren't good, it is better than nothing. If there is a new good guide book for birds of China, it must be important for Mongolian birds.
4. I can't remember the name of this guide book, it is like as "Asian Waterbirds"... small book.
The most birds of Mongolia are migrants from Siberia, India, Pakistan, South China, Korea, Japan, Australia etc. So birders can use those countries guide books in Mongolia. But we have some special and endemic species in Mongolia, those are difficult to identify, I'm try to collect some pictures and materials about them, I can share it others.
End of mail, I'm good guidebook for Mongolian birds. It's joke :
By the way, I'm glad for new birders forum, soon I will join it, when my web become ready. Last year some birders visited to me from America and Germany, they found me with birdingpals site. They enjoyed both of birds and Mongolia.
Uugan Chulunnbaa
uu_bb2001@yahoo.com Morocco
I think the most usefull birdguide in French (and not too havy to take in the field), for Morocco, is, for the moment : "Le guide Ornitho", from Mullarney (K.), Svensson (L.), Zetterstr?m (D.) and Grant (P. J.), Ed. Delachaux et Niestl?, Paris (tirage 2004).
http://www.go-south.org for usefull informations for ornithology in Morocco.
Jacques FRANCHIMONT
MEKNES - MOROCCO
j.franchimont@menara.ma "Where to watch birds in Morocco" (Bergier) is really the best one, with maps, accomodations, species list (not only birds but mammals, reptiles, amphibians and orchids). Otherwise, the fieldguide to use would be "The Birds of Europe" or "Guide ornitho" (in french) from Svensson and all. There is also a song CD which is "Oiseaux du Maghreb" (J-C Roch?), very well made.
Olivier Fontaine
Olivier62136@yahoo.fr Namibia
As field Guide I would go with Sasol?s Birds of Southern Africa, as a finding guide Hugh Chittendens top Birding Spots is the most recent, I was ask to comment on the Namibian section of the much belated Birdfinding Guide by Cohen and Roussouw...and at the time of reading 2000 (??) I thought the information was outdated and lacked of any novel sites, hinged very much on old and already existing information, often outdated. Many birders and tours have cruised Nam since and a better job of deserving. Tropical Birding is busy putting together a birdfinding site which is yet not posted but coming....
CD wise i would reccomend Guy Gibbons collection... also his video collection and many other videos we are busy placing on the International Bird Collection
http://www.hbw.com/ibcChristian Boix
christian@tropicalbirding.com Netherlands
The information below is very similar to these from the surounding countries like Belgium, France and Germany but here it goes:
There is a whole pile of fieldguides to choose from for The Netherlands but I like the Collins birdguide by K. Mullarney, L. Svensson, D. Zetterstrom and P. Grant the best. Another very good one with beautifull plates is Birds of Europe, Northern Africa and the Middle East by Lars Jonsson.
'Where to watch'like information is quite common in Dutch but there's not much choice in English. The best one (although I have not used it myself) is probably where to watch birds in Holland, Belgium and Northern France by Arnoud van den Berg en D. Lafontaine. Of course the relevant chapters in Wheatleys where to watch birds in Europe (although very poor) and Gooders book ould be consulted.
There are seveal good sets with songs and calls but the old one of J. Roche ?ll the birdsongs of Brittain & Europe is good and very complete for Western Europe.
For recent news of national rarities you can check
http://www.dutchbirding.nl at the section sightings. These are updated daily (in the evening)
Pierre van der Wielen
wiele054@planet.nl Nevada
Having a site with recommended books/guides for travel ling birders is a good idea. My recommendations for North America are:
Field guide: National Audubon Society: The Sibley Guide to Birds. Sibley, David Allen. Alfred A. Knopf, New York US$35.00.
My recommendation is the large format, it having more aspects of each bird than the smaller edition. Yes, it is bigger than either of the European books I have: Peterson, et al., and Heinzel, et al, but I think the Sibley is worth it.
Tour guide: American Birding Association: Birdfinder: A Birder's Guide to Planning North American Trips. Cooper, Jerry A. US$23.95. Lower 48, Churchill & Alaska
Tourist birder who comes to Las Vegas, I have these books. If your birder would wish to buy copies of his own, Amazon.com can ship them to me for him to collect here, or, at a perhaps greater expense, to addresses outside of the U.S.
John Taylor
jcalhount@netzero.net Newfoundland, Canada
Newfoundland and Labrador (Newfoundland) is not served by its own field guide. However, any of the guides for North America will suffice. Birders traveling to Newfoundland and Labrador should choose a guide that provides good information on gulls and seabirds, and might even consider bringing The Seabirds by Peter Harrison. A dedicated gull guide, such as The Gulls by P.J. Grant, might also be of considerable use, particularly in the winter when as many as 13 species of gulls in varying plumages can be seen in one day around St. Johns. Of the many excellent general-purpose field guides available, the most popular among Newfoundland birders are the National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America, and the Sibley Guide to the Birds of North America (either the large original Sibley or the smaller Eastern North America Sibley will serve the purpose. Newfoundland gets more than its fair share of European rarities, and carrying a copy of Birds of Europe by Killian Mullarney, Lars Svensson, Dan Zetterstr?m, and Peter J. Grant is not a bad idea, either especially if you are visiting in the fall or winter.
Cam Finlays Bird Finding Guide to Canada 2nd Edition can be very useful for anyone planning a trip to Newfoundland. Be sure to get the SECOND Edition however, as the First Edition is badly out of date.
Visitors to Newfoundland should check the Saturday editions of The Telegram for Bruce Mactavishs birding column, entitled Winging It. The column regularly reports on rare and interesting birds seen throughout the province. NOTE: Although The Telegram is available on-line, Winging It is not available without a paid subscription.
The Checklist of the Birds of Insular Newfoundland is published by the Natural History Society of Newfoundland and Labrador, and is available at this website:
http://www.cs.mun.ca/~nhs/cbc_etc/checklist.htmHard copies can be purchased directly from the Society. Their website is:
http://www.cs.mun.ca/~nhs/index.html .
John Pratt
New Jersey
For New Jersey (which includes world famous Cape May), The Sibley Field Guide to Birds of Eastern North America is the current field guide of choice. Boyle's "Birdfinding in New Jersey" is the best guide to local birding areas.
Also check out
www.njaudubon.org for latest sightings
and other information, as well a as a source to order both.
Gary Wilson
k2gw@optonline.netGuide - Sibley, National Geographic
Local site guide, Bill Boyle's Guide to birdfinding in NJ, John and Justin Harding's Birds of the Delaware Valley.
Matt Sharp
sharp@acnatsci.orgI live near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. However, I am on the border of New Jersey, which is where I do most of my birding. For bird locations, I highly recommend A Guide to Bird Finding in New Jersey by William J. Boyle, Jr.
Unfortunately, the equivalent guide for Pennsylvania is in my opinion the worst state guide I own (I have purchased and used over a dozen). The name is Birders Guide to Pennsylvania by Paula Ford. In my opinion, the directions lack the detail, clarity, and precision Ive found in other guides. The whole book is simply too general.
For my immediate region (encompassing southeastern PA, central and southern New Jersey, and northern and central Delaware) I also recommend Birding the Delaware Valley Region by John and Justin Harding. The book has not been updated since 1980, so some areas are no longer as described in the book (especially around the Philadelphia Airport), but it is still a good guide and is better than the aforementioned state guide.
With regards to field guides, I personally use two: The Sibley Field Guide to Birds of Eastern North America, by David Allen Sibley, and the venerable Birds of Eastern and Central North America by Roger Tory Peterson.
With regards to CDs for bird songs and calls, I used Eastern/Central Birding by Ear by Richard K. Walton and Robert W. Lawson for learning. For reference, I also use Eastern/Central Bird Songs produced by the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology (part of the Peterson Field Guides series).
Steve Dupont
birdman52@comcast.net New York
One book is Where to find Birds in New York State by Susan Roney Drennan, and the other is put out by the Mohawk Hudson Bird Club, and covers eastern Adirondacks and Mohawk and Hudson Rivers. So far, have not put my hands on that one!! Persistence wins!! Book is Birding New Yorks Hudson-Mohawk Region, and is put out by the Hudson-Mohawk Bird Club. There is also good info on the web, specifically from Buffalo Audubon and Lake Champlain Birding Trail. Buffalo is working on a birding trail, but have not found details yet. That trail starts along Lake Erie south of Buffalo, continues north along Niagara River, Lake Ontario shoreline and then south into Iroquois Natl. Wildlife Refuge.
Other good area books that I have found include, Birds of the Blue Ridge Mountains by Marcus Simpson, Jr.
I also have Microsoft Streets and Trips with GPS. Using a laptop we can get exact information on where we are and how to get where we want to go. The other very useful software is Thayers Birding Guide. Prior to a trip you can set up a variety of quizzes, by location or by category. Again, using laptop, plan is to have this in truck, and we can replay songs, use the id wizard, and maintain trip or daily bird logs.
Nellie Hintz
rnhintz@adelphia.ne New Zealand
Your question is easy to answer as there really is only one field guide and one bird finding guide.
The field guide is The Field Guide to the Birds of NZ by Barrie Heather and Hugh Robertson. It comes in a text and plates only version. Both are easily found here, but I understand that many foreign birders have a tough time picking it up away from NZ. It can even be found in the airports, but expect to pay airport prices.
The bird finding guide is Birds of New Zealand Locality Guide by Stewart Chambers. It also has merits as a field guide, but is photorgraphs only and tends to concentrate on the more common stuff, avoiding the vagrants. It is fair to good in my opinion and will have options that most visiting birders can use to find what they are after. It is a bit shy on specifics, but will get birders to the right general area. It is much more difficult to find. It is still in print, but I have not seen it in any bookstores. The best place I have found to pick it up is at Miranda Shorebirds Centre south of Auckland, but I am sure that some of the other naturalist bookstores or park gift shops should have it.
Roger McNeill
themcneills@xtra.co.nzThere are only two real choices, both by Barrie Heather and Hugh Robertson and published by Penguin Books, Auckland.
Field Guide to the Birds of New Zealand contains a section of plates of almost all the birds seen in NZ in approx the last 100 years (missing only a few recent new vagrants such as Stilt Sandpiper, Franklin's Gull and Willie Wagtail - though these are mentioned in the text in an addendum). Maps/status and brief ID/habitat details are provided opposite the plates. In a seperate section of the guide fairly comprehensive details about the biology of the species are provided. A small selection of good birdwatching sites are provided (not necessarily the best sites though) The book in its latest 3rd edition (just appeared) is flexy-card bound (the first 2 eds were hardback). Downsides of the book are its weight and size (about 1 1/4 inch thick) - it would require a mightily big pocket! You would almost certainly know about it if you had to carry it all day.
The other guide I'd recommend is the Hand Guide to the Birds of New Zealand, which is essentially the above guide minus the comprehensive biology section of the book - so it contains the plates, ID tips, status, maps and the 'good birding sites'. For most overseas birders this will be all they require, though some may miss knowing when the bird breeds, how many eggs it lays, behaviour, feeding, population size, etc. The guide is roughly A5 size (like the Field Guide), so needs a big pocket unless folded, but is much more portable than the bigger guide. It is paperback, with a plastic protective cover. The book is now in its 2nd edition - not noticeably different from the first. It is available from many, even small, book stores in NZ if people can't manage to buy it mail order before their trip.
The bird-finding book is more of a problem. I still prefer Ross MacKenzie's book (In Search of Birds in New Zealand - How and Where to Find Them, published by Reed) over Stuart Chamber's (Birds of New Zealand - Locality Guide, published by Arun), even though Ross's has probably been out of print for over 30 years. It can still be picked up quite regularly in second hand book stores. It is not a site guide per se but a narrative of what particular areas of the country have (or in many cases, especially bush birds, had) to offer, with mentions of good sites, but not long lists of species or in many cases specific directions and no site maps.
Stuart's book is an identification guide cum site guide. It uses photos (largely excellent, but not as good for ID purposes as the drawings in the field guide), and paragraphs on status, ID features and some biology. After these are lists and short descriptions of where the species may be found. Many of these are good, however many are not comprehensive leaving big gaps in the range of many widespread birds - e.g. NZ Pigeon, Kingfisher, Bellbird, or downright wrong, e.g Variable Oystercatcher is common coastally in Canterbury and Fiordland, there is no mention of Pied Oystercatcher in most of the South Island, where it is a fairly common farmland and coastal species, or Rock Wren which cannot be seen in the Craigieburn Range, nor within easy walking distance of the Glacier car parks, nor near the start of the Routeburn Track (they are past the Routeburn Falls Hut about 4-5 hours along the track).
The back quarter of Stuart's book is a list of sites with target birds, and a selection of suggested itineraries. Having used the book in Auckland I can recommend it there as being mostly spot on. However for the area I live in Canterbury (and neighbouring regions) directions to sites are often either confusing, or wrong, e.g. Cass's forests (it doesn't have any) when the Hawdon Valley is meant.The bird lists are a little strange at times with vagrants being suggested as target species for many sites, or species that haven't been seen in an area for decades or are seen there so infrequently that it isn't worth mentioning them. For example some of the species on the Oceanwings (Kaikoura) trip list are perhaps seen once a year if that - Yellow-nosed Molly, Chatham Island Molly, Light-mantled Sooty Albatross, Mottled Petrel, etc.
It's a shame to say it, but this book could be so much better, and, at least in Canterbury, without having the knowledge of what to believe, and what to ignore, the book is rather disappointing and liable to lead to wasting of time looking for birds you ain't going to see at a place, if you can manage to find the place. Being perfect bound, the book tends to gain character with use as the pages tend to come loose.
Regarding sound recordings Les McPherson's set of 7 tapes/CDs is the best (New Zealand Birds - A Sound Guide). Order direct from his website
http://www.archivebirdsnz.webbase.net.nz. The recordings are mostly fairly long, and include seperate recordings for different races of NZ species. The main downside of the collection is that it is a large number of tapes/CDs, and overseas birders might be more used to more concise collections of tapes/CDs. An alternative is the tape by the former Wildlife Service called Birds of New Zealand (Viking VP445C), though this isn't nearly as comprehensive missing all the introduced species and even some common or fairly regular species such as Silvereye and Tomtit, or confusion species such as Weka (mistaken by some for kiwi). I have been told this latter recording is now available on CD, but I have still to encounter it. Perhaps a truly user-friendly sound guide for overseas birders still has to be produced for NZ.
Nick Allen
nick_allen@xtra.co.nz North Carolina
The 2005 FalconGuide "Birding North Carolina" is the best overall bird-finding guide to North Carolina. For more detailed info on eastern North Carolina, there is Fussell's 1994 "Birder's Guide to Coastal North Carolina". For the western mountains Simpson's 1992 "Birds of the Blue Ridge Mountains" is very good.
Frank Clayton
doctorichabod@yahoo.comA Birder's Guide to Coastal North Carolina, by John Fussell (Chapel Hill, N. C.: University of North Carolina Press, 1994) -- Indispensable. It's really all you need as a "birding pal". Fussell tells you where to go, how to get there, and what you'll see.
North Carolina Wildlife Viewing Guide, by Charles Roe (Helena and Billings, Montana: Falcon Press, 1992 -- Great quick reference for good locations for birding.
Birding North Carolina: More Than 40 Premier Birding Locations, edited by Marshall Brooks and Mark Johns (Helena, Montana: Falcon, The Globe Pequot Press, 2005) -- Good birder's companion, covers good birding locations.
Birding in North Carolina State Parks, Senior Editor, Karen Bearden, produced by Audubon North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N. C., 2002)-- Good resource since our State Parks are a great place to do your birding.
Ernie Marshall
MARSHALLE@ECU.EDU Nova Scotia
The only up-to-date and thorough guide for Nova Scotia is "The Birding Sites of Nova Scotia" by Blake Maybank, which is supplemented by a thorough companion web site:
http://maybank.tripod.com/BSNS/BSNS.htm Blake Maybank
maybank@ns.sympatico.ca Oklahoma
For Oklahoma-USA, I guess ANY of the field guides of North American birds (primarily Eastern) will do. My personal preference is Sibley's Guide to Eastern Birds, but that's just me; I could find you any number of other Oklahoma birders who prefer Peterson's or Nat'l Geographic and they all have their own reasons.
The website of the Tulsa Audubon Society (Oklahoma) offers detailed maps and notes about the birds to be found in and around Tulsa:
http://www.tulsaaudubon.org/birding.htm Just about everything you'd ever want to know about when to visit Tulsa and what birds can be found here is available at that website. Cyndie Browning, Tulsa
Buteoswainsoni@aol.com www.adimview.com Ontario, Canada
For Ontario birding, here' are my suggestions for books:
For Ontario I recommend as a field guide: National Geographic's Field Guide to the Birds of North America. It is user-friendly and fits in your pocket.
The Sibley Guide to Birds by David Allen Sibley is great, but my problem is the illustrations and text are too small to read without reading glasses, so I tend to use it as a back-up guide.
For Warblers in the spring I use Warblers of the Americas as a back-up to National Geographic
A Bird-finding guide to Ontario by Clive E Goodwin is a must unless you know a local Birdingpal
Knud Rasmussen
krkr@sympatico.ca Oregon
For Oregon, recommend checking the website
www.oregonbirds.org for purchase of the CD of Oregon Breeding Birds Atlas,Statewide and local resources including tapes, county site guides, status and distribution, checklists etc.
We use Nat'l Geo and Sibley NA as the 2 field guides most helpful for our area. Sibley for more options with drawings and Geo for the more rare species which may not be listed at all in Sibley.
For those wanting to do extensive reading on Oregon birds before a trip, BOGR - Birds of Oregon: A General Reference, has extensive status and distribution information on all the birds that have occurred in Oregon.
All of the above items are listed and for sale on the Oregon Birds website mentioned above. Some of the publications are also available from ABA Sales. Judy Meredith
jmeredit@bendnet.comFor the state of Oregon I recommend The Birders Guide to Oregon by Joseph Evanich (Audubon Society of Portland, 1990). It really is the only comprehensive sight-specific birding guidebook to the entire state. Despite its age it is hands down the best. Take along a field guide and this book and you're on your way to some good birding.
Brian Quinn, Portland
ukeiquinn@msn.comFor birders visiting Oregon, the best selection of books, optics, recordings, birdseed, gifts, and advice can be found at the Nature Store at the Audubon Society of Portland, 5151 NW Cornell Rd., Portland, OR 97210
http://www.audubonportland.org/naturestore/index_html (503) 292-9453 email:
store@audubonportland.org Hours 10-6 Mon - Sat. 10 - 5 Sun.
I recommend Joe Evanich's The Birder's Guide to Oregon, David Sibleys Guide to the Birds of North America, the National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America, plus Dennis Paulson's Shorebirds of the Pacific Northwest, and for beginners, either Kenn Kaufmann's or Don & Lillian Stokes guides.
Paul T. Sullivan (503) 646-7889
ptsulliv@spiritone.comIn addition to acquiring books and CDs, some like to subscribe to the mailing/discussion list Oregon Birders Online prior to their trip. They can ask for suggestions that are timely for the location they will be visiting (current rarities, etc.) and get a feel for what birds are around.
Subscription information is at:
http://lists.oregonstate.edu/mailman/listinfo/obolB Combs
bcombs@dialoregon.net Panama
To find birds in Panama The Panam? Audubon Society is about to release a book "Where to find birds in Panam?", Is going to be out this year.
Important bird areas in Panama by George Angehr list endangered and endemic birds of Panama and their geografic distribution.
Jose Carlos Garc?a.
joseca_10@hotmail.comA guide to the Birds of Panama by Robert S. Riglely and John A Gwynne Jr 2nd Edition.
For the Panama City Area birds "Que Vuela Ahi ?" or "What flying there" by Jorge Ventocilla are the best choices
Ivan Rodrigo Ortiz
gamboaecotours@yahoo.com Gamboa Eco Tours & Adventures
www.geocities.com/gamboaecotours/Gamboa_Eco_Tours.html Pennsylvania
The book, "Birding the Delaware Valley Region" is still the best publication for the Philadelphia area. The authors are John J. Harding and Justin J. Harding and the publisher is Temple University Press which is located in Philadelphia.
Ron French
quetzal2@verizon.netI live near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. However, I am on the border of New Jersey, which is where I do most of my birding. For bird locations, I highly recommend A Guide to Bird Finding in New Jersey by William J. Boyle, Jr.
Unfortunately, the equivalent guide for Pennsylvania is in my opinion the worst state guide I own (I have purchased and used over a dozen). The name is Birders Guide to Pennsylvania by Paula Ford. In my opinion, the directions lack the detail, clarity, and precision Ive found in other guides. The whole book is simply too general.
For my immediate region (encompassing southeastern PA, central and southern New Jersey, and northern and central Delaware) I also recommend Birding the Delaware Valley Region by John and Justin Harding. The book has not been updated since 1980, so some areas are no longer as described in the book (especially around the Philadelphia Airport), but it is still a good guide and is better than the aforementioned state guide.
With regards to field guides, I personally use two: The Sibley Field Guide to Birds of Eastern North America, by David Allen Sibley, and the venerable Birds of Eastern and Central North America by Roger Tory Peterson.
With regards to CDs for bird songs and calls, I used Eastern/Central Birding by Ear by Richard K. Walton and Robert W. Lawson for learning. For reference, I also use Eastern/Central Bird Songs produced by the Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology (part of the Peterson Field Guides series).
Steve Dupont
birdman52@comcast.netPennsylvania Best Guides:
Susquehanna River Birding and Wildlife Tail by PA Audubon (
www.pabirdingtrails.org). Can be gotten from PA Audubon Office, 100 Wildwood Way Harrisburg, PA 17110 phone 717 213 6880 I think the price3 is $7.00.
Birders Guide to Pennsylvania by Paula Ford is only okay.
Terry Neumyer
Trnbirder@aol.com Philippines
GUIDEBOOK:
I highly recommend: A Guide to the Birds of the Philippines By: Robert S. Kennedy, Pedro C. Gonzales, Edward C. Dickinson, Hector Miranda, Timothy H. Fisher
This book however is currently (May 2006) not available in local bookstores in the Philippines.
AUDIO RECORDING:
I have tried the first edition of "Birds of Tropical Asia" by Jelle Scharringa but I think the new version: "Birds of Tropical Asia 3", DVD-ROM for Windows should be a lot better.
TRIP REPORTS:
Please visit the official website of The Wild Bird Club of the Philippines, Inc. -
www.birdwatch.phNilo Arribas Jr.
ph_photo_97@yahoo.com Poland
I use Collins Bird Guide. The most complete field guide to the birds of Britain and Europe. I also use Birds of Europe and the Mediterranean area region by L. Jonsson.
I think those two books are one of the best available in Poland. Another interesting book I would recommend is "Shorebirds an identification guide" by P Hayman, J Marchant, T. Prater.
Now CD's- there is a really good CD with birds voices by Z. Palczyski - the Bird voices of Poland with voices of 150 most popular birds of Poland.
R Swierad
swiergol1@o2.plThe best Field Guides are (like for rest of Europe):
1) "Collins Bird Guide" from Lars Svensson Peter J. Grant
2) "Birds of Europe with North Africa and the Middle East" from Lars Jonsson Polish edition "Ptaki Europy i obszaru śr?dziemnomorskiego" from Lars Jonsson German edition "Die V?gel Europas und des Mittelmeerraumes" from Lars Jonsson
The best book ever about polish birds is:
"Ptaki ziem polskich" Volume I + II from Jan Sokołowski. But is only in Polish.
Book about bird populations in Poland: "Awifauna Polski Rozmieszczenie, liczebność i zmiany" form Ludwik Tomiałojć, Tadeusz Stawarczyk. In Polish with short English summary.
Smyku
smykuraf@wp.plThe choice is very limited. I can recommend "Finding Birds in Poland" by Dave Gosney. It is a smal field guide in English to eastern part of Poland/Bialowieza Forest and Biebrza only. I bought it in Danemark. Published by Gostours UK
Marek Kolodziejczyk, Czestochowa-Poland
lingua@lingua.edu.pl Quebec
I live in Pabos, on the south shore of Gasp? Peninsula. The local bird club published recently, the Guide to Birding Sites on the Gasp? Peninsula (available in English and also in French under title Guide des sites ornithologiques de la Gasp?sie.
These guides are available on the web site :
htttp://www.cogaspesie.orgJ'habite Pabos, sur le versant sud de la P?ninsule gasp?sienne, ? 30 minutes de Perc?. Le Club des ornithologues de la Gasp?sie a r?cemment publi? le Guide des sites ornithologiques de la Gasp?sie (aussi disponible en anglais sous le titre de: Guide to Birding Sites on the Gasp? Peninsula)
Ces guides sont disponibles en visitant le site web du Club des ornitholoques de la Gasp?sie
http://www.cogaspesie.org. La version anglaise est aussi disponible chez ABA Sales.
Pierre Poulin
oiseaux@globetrotter.net Birders traveling to St. Pierre et Miquelon should choose a guide that provides good information on gulls and seabirds, and might even consider bringing The Seabirds by Peter Harrison. A dedicated gull guide, such as The Gulls by P.J. Grant, might also be of considerable use, particularly in the winter. Of the many excellent general-purpose field guides available, the National Geographic Field Guide to the Birds of North America, and the Sibley Guide to the Birds of North America (either the large original Sibley or the smaller Eastern North America Sibley) will serve the purpose. Carrying a copy of Birds of Europe by Killian Mullarney, Lars Svensson, Dan Zetterstr?m, and Peter J. Grant is not a bad idea, either especially if you are visiting in the fall or winter.
John Pratt
w_j_pratt@hotmail.comRussia
The best Field Guide so far as I think is "Birds of the Urals, pre Urals and West Siberia" by V.K. Riabitzev. It is published in 2002 by the University of the Urals (Ekaterinburg city).There are 1800 high quality colored pictures (not photos!) of 410 bird species on 96 plates artistically done by the author. As I know the author was planning to create CDs for the book. There are many other good birding books in Russian such as "Birds in nature" by A.N. Promptov, "Birds of Russia", "Birds of the USSR", "Field guide to the birds of the european part of the USSR", "Guide to the birds of the USSR", "Ornithological excursions" etc. But I am successfully using "The birds of Britain and Europe with North Africa and the Middle East" here as well.
Evgeny Karev
evgeny_3@bashnet.ru Senegal
A field Guide to Birds of Gambia and Senegal by Clive Barlow, Tim Wacher and Tony Disley
Pica Press
Amiti?s du Niokolo Koba
wassadou@sentoo.snCampement Hotel de Wassadou
http://www.niokolo.com South Africa
Personally I use Newmans "Birds of Southern Africa" by Kenneth Newman as my field guide of choice. This is the one that I use predominently and only refer to other guides as a backup. The new Roberts 7 is very good, but is no longer a field guide as it is too large and heavy and therefore can only be used for referencing.
Second choice for an all round field guide is Sasols "Birds of Southern Africa" by Ian Sinclair.
Malcolm Henderson
malcolm.henderson@roche.comThe best Field Guides are the standard southern African ones.
Sinclair, Hockey and Tarboton. Birds of Southern Africa. 3rd Edition - not any of the earlier ones. I think it is published by New Holland Press in the USA - here in southern Africa it is published by Struik and is called the SASOL Guide after the principal sponsor.
Newman, K. Birds of Southern Africa. Sappi Guide. A bit dated but some people like it.
The best sound recordings are by Guy Gibbon. Bird Calls of Southern Africa. Same set of recordings that is widely used in South Africa. All the important species are there.
The best bird finding guides are a little more difficult.
Callan Cohen is bringing out a book in the next couple of months on where to watch birds in Southern Africa but I have no idea what the information is like. Otherwise the guides that are available are a bit dated. The best of which is Chittenden, H. 1992. Top Birding Spots in Southern Africa. Published by Struik??
Christopher Hines
pririt@yahoo.com Spain
Unfortunately, for Madeira Island there is still few information about it. The only book we know is: - A birdwatchers' guide to Portugal and Madeira. Moore C.C., Elias G. & Costa H., 1997. Prion Ltd., Perry.
There is a website where we are compiling information about Madeira's breeding birds, so there is a description of each bird, its habitat and nesting activity which is:
http://www.madeirabirds.comCatarina Fagundes
visitmadeira@gmail.comFor Spain birding, here is my suggestion:
Gu?a de las Aves de Espa?a. Pen?nsula, Baleares y Canarias. Eduardo de Juana & Juan M. Varela. Lynx Edicions.
Most compact and good pictures.
Jesus Laborda
jlaborda@unizar.es Sri Lanka
For Sri Lanka birding, here' are my suggestions for books:
After my trip to Sri Lanka I recommend as a field guide: A Field Guide to the birds of Sri Lanka by John Harrison and illustrated by Tim Worfolk.
I also used Birds of India by Bikram Grewal, Bill Harwey and Otto Pfister. It uses photographs and it is difficult to identify almost all birds in it.
You may also be interested in Prasanjith Caldera's Sounds of Sinharaja. A days walk through a Rainforest in Sri Lanka
To purchase the Sounds of Sinharaja CD contact Prasanjith Caldera
prasanjithcaldera@hotmail.comKnud Rasmussen
krkr@sympatico.ca Suriname
The best field Guide for Suriname is The Birds of Venezuela by Steve Hilty 2003.
Books may be found at VACO, a bookshop in the Domineestraat, Paramaribo. CD"s cannot be find here and ther are not many books either. Those thing are better purchased before arriving in Suriname. Cornell has many CD's but I do not have more info than this.
Where to find birds, cannot be said in a few words.
Otte Ottema
otteottema@yahoo.com Taiwan
For Taiwan birding, here' are my suggestions for books:
Taiwan - the title is 'Taiwan Wild Birds' but it is in Chinese only, as is the whole book. Bird names include English and scientific. Lovely illustrations, I think by a Japanese artist. Published by the Wild Bird Society of Taipei, it costs about HK$225. Includes all the Taiwan endemics, of course.
Andy Smith, Hong Kong
andysmith99@yahoo.com Texas
In answer to your query on best field guides for the Big Bend area, I would say the large Sibley Guide first. Not the western or eastern ones because we have many birds here from both regions. Also a good regional aid is Birds of the Trans- Pecos by Jim Peterson and Barry Zimmer. Those two books will be all a Big Bend birder needs.
Carolyn Ohl
carolynohl@yahoo.com Trinidad & Tobago
To find Tobago's unique forest birds one must visit the Gilpin trail within the Forest reserve. The Bon Accord sewerage ponds for wet land birds and the Grafton Bird Sanctuary for generalforest birds. To purchase CD of birds contact Newton George at 660-5