Where to Watch Birds in Australasia and Oceania
Editorial Reviews
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The belt of islands leading from Australia northeastward to Hawaii offers any number of choice birders' destinations: some 20 families (cassowaries, logrunners, and honeycreepers, for instance) are endemic, while another hundred or so are common, including most of the world's birds of paradise species and an astonishing variety of sunbirds, flycatchers, and nightjars. Wheatley, an accomplished birder and writer, offers a guide to some 200 destinations, with notes on endemic and characteristic populations, other regional wildlife, and lodging and other services. --Gregory McNamee
Review
This vast area [covered in this volume] includes about 1,563 species of birds (16% of the world's species), and Wheatley provides advice on how to seek almost every one of them. . . . The amount of information provided in this pocket-size book is truly impressive.
Where to Watch Birds in Australasia and Oceania
Where to Watch Birds in Australasia and Oceania,Nigel Wheatley,Princeton University Press,0691002312,Australasia,Australia & Oceania - General,Bird Watching,Birds & Birdwatching - General,Guidebooks,Nature,Nature/Ecology,Oceania,Birds and Natural History,Nature / Birds & Birdwatching
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