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Bird Populations

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Bird Populations Synopsis

In the latest addition to the New Naturalist series, Ian Newton explores bird populations and what causes their fluctuation - food supplies, competitors, predators, parasites, pathogens and human activity.

The combination of a rapidly expanding human population, a predominantly utilitarian attitude to land, central government policy on land use and increasing mechanisation have combined to promote massive changes in land use in recent decades than at any previous comparable period. These developments have in turn brought huge changes in bird habitats and populations; some species dependent on the old landscapes declined, while others have increased. Over the same period, changing public attitudes to wildlife allowed previously scarce bird species to recover from past onslaughts, while climate warming has promoted further changes.

In this seminal new work, Ian Newton sets out to explain why different bird species are distributed as they are, and changed over the years in the way that they have. The regular watching and study of birds now provides a source of recreation and pleasure for very large numbers of people, while continued monitoring of bird numbers can also alert us to impending environmental problems. For all of us, a world with fewer birds would be a poorer place.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9780007429530
Publication date: 29th August 2013
Author: Ian Newton
Publisher: William Collins an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 608 pages
Series: Collins New Naturalist Library
Genres: Wildlife: birds and birdwatching: general interest
Endangered species and extinction of species
Climate change
Environmental economics
Zoology: birds (ornithology)
Population and migration geography
Biodiversity
Agricultural land management
Social impact of environmental issues
The Earth: natural history: general interest