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In a volume as urgent and eloquent as Rachel Carson's Silent Spring, this book-winner of the Southern Environmental Law Center's 2016 Reed Environmental Writing Award in the book category-reveals how the health and well-being of a tiny bird and an ancient crab mirrors our own Winner of the 2016 Rachel Carson Environment Book Award given by the Society of Environmental Journalists Each year, red knots, sandpipers weighing no more than a coffee cup, fly a near-miraculous 19,000 miles from the tip of South America to their nesting grounds in the Arctic and back. Along the way, they double their weight by gorging on millions of tiny horseshoe crab eggs. Horseshoe crabs, ancient animals that come ashore but once a year, are vital to humans, too: their blue blood safeguards our health. Now, the rufa red knot, newly listed as threatened under the Endangered Species Act, will likely face extinction in the foreseeable future across its entire range, 40 states and 27 countries. The first United States bird listed because global warming imperils its existence, it will not be the last: the red knot is the twenty-first century's "canary in the coal mine." Logging thousands of miles following the knots, shivering with the birds out on the snowy tundra, tracking them down in bug-infested marshes, Cramer vividly portrays what's at stake for millions of shorebirds and hundreds of millions of people living at the sea edge. The Narrow Edge offers an uplifting portrait of the tenacity of tiny birds and of the many people who, on the sea edge we all share, keep knots flying and offer them safe harbor. Winner of the 2016 National Academies Communications Award for best book that honors the best in science communications. Sponsored by the Keck Futures Initiative-a program of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine, with the support of the W.M. Keck Foundation
Red knot --- Shore birds --- Migratory birds --- Birds --- Migratory animals --- Beach birds --- Shorebirds --- Seashore animals --- Water birds --- Calidris canutus --- Knot (Bird) --- Knot, Red --- Lesser knot --- Calidris --- Migration
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The Northern California coast--from Monterey County to the Oregon border--is home to some of the richest avian habitats on the North American continent. Field Guide to Birds of the Northern California Coast provides a comprehensive ecological overview of this extensive and diverse region. It features detailed discussions of the area's most common water birds, raptors, and land birds and highlights the most productive birding sites in each Northern California coastal county. Accessibly written and user-friendly, this guide contains nearly 250 species accounts that focus on seasonal rhythms and behavioral characteristics of each species. More than 130 color photographs and hand-drawn sketches depict the birds in context, and maps and occurrence charts indicate when readers might spot each species.
Shore birds --- Beach birds --- Shorebirds --- Seashore animals --- Water birds --- Shore birds -- California, Northern. --- america. --- avian habitats. --- bird behaviors. --- bird lovers. --- bird species. --- birders. --- birding sites. --- birdwatching. --- california coast. --- coastal birds. --- coastal counties. --- color photographs. --- diverse region. --- easy to read. --- ecological overview. --- field guide. --- landbirds. --- maps. --- monterey county. --- natural history. --- natural sciences. --- nonfiction. --- northern california. --- ornithology. --- raptors. --- reference. --- regional ornithology. --- sketches. --- species identification. --- waterbirds. --- zoology.
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Each year shorebirds from North and South America migrate thousands of miles to spend the summer in the Arctic. There they feed in shoreline marshes and estuaries along some of the most productive and pristine coasts anywhere. With so much available food they are able to reproduce almost explosively; and as winter approaches, they retreat south along with their offspring, to return to the Arctic the following spring. This remarkable pattern of movement and activity has been the object of intensive study by an international team of ornithologists who have spent a decade counting, surveying, and observing these shorebirds. In this important synthetic work, they address multiple questions about these migratory bird populations. How many birds occupy Arctic ecosystems each summer? How long do visiting shorebirds linger before heading south? How fecund are these birds? Where exactly do they migrate and where exactly do they return? Are their populations growing or shrinking? The results of this study are crucial for better understanding how environmental policies will influence Arctic habitats as well as the far-ranging winter habitats used by migratory shorebirds.
Bird surveys --- Shore birds --- Avifaunal surveys --- Bird inventories --- Ornithological inventories --- Ornithological surveys --- Ornithology --- Vertebrate surveys --- Beach birds --- Shorebirds --- Seashore animals --- Water birds --- Methodology --- arctic ecosystems. --- arctic habitats. --- bird population. --- bird science. --- bird watchers. --- birds in the cold. --- birds in the winter. --- books about birds. --- books for animal lovers. --- conservation of birds. --- distractions for kids. --- educational books. --- environment books. --- environmental ecosystem. --- head south for the winter. --- home school science books. --- interesting books. --- leisure reads. --- life sciences. --- nature lovers. --- ornithology. --- passion books. --- planet earth lovers. --- shorebirds. --- vacation books. --- wildlife. --- winter habitats. --- zoology.
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