| Smithsonian Field Guide to the Birds of North America | 
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Avg. Customer Rating:   (based on 53 reviews) Sales Rank: 12250 Category: Book
Author: Ted Floyd Publisher: Collins Studio: Collins Manufacturer: Collins Label: Collins Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Paperback Edition: Pap/DVD Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 528 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.2 Dimensions (in): 7.9 x 5.4 x 1.4
ISBN: 0061120405 Dewey Decimal Number: 598.097 EAN: 9780061120404 ASIN: 0061120405
Publication Date: June 1, 2008 Release Date: May 27, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review
This new field guide provides a suite of modern tools to effectively aid in the identification of more than 750 species of birds across North America. It introduces a "whole bird" approach by concisely gathering a collection of information about birds into one portable and well-organized volume. - 2,000 stunning color photographs of birds in natural habitats show the most important field marks, regional population differences, life stages, and behaviors
- 700-plus detailed and up-to-date color range maps show summer, migration, winter, year-round, and rare but regular occurrences of every major species
- A DVD of birdsongs for 138 major species (587 vocalizations in all for 5 hours of play); each high-quality MP3 file is embedded with an image of the bird, perfect to view on home computers and portable MP3 players
- Concise descriptions of habits and ecology, age-related and seasonal differences, regional forms, vocalization, and informative captions pointing out the most important aspects of the bird
- 46 group essays with information outlining taxonomy, feeding, migration, habitats, behaviors, and conservation status
- A thorough and accessible introduction to birds and birding includes sections on parts of a bird, plumage and molt, food and feeding, migration, habitats, conservation, tips on bow to become a better birder, and more
- A detailed glossary of terms, species checklist, and quick index
The new Smithsonian Field Guide to the Birds of North America is perfectly designed to give birders the most powerful and user-friendly collection of information to carry into the field or wherever they enjoy learning about birds and nature. A Look (and Listen) Inside the Smithsonian Field Guide to the Birds of North America Click on an image below to sample one of the 587 different downloadable bird songs included with the guide. |  |  | | American Wigeon | Common Loon | Mallard |  |  |  | | Red-Winged Blackbird | Mourning Dove | Northern Cardinal |
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| Customer Reviews: Read 48 more reviews...
  "The Best" Field Guide! October 7, 2008 I am just starting out birding, so this is my first field guide. But as I was picking out which guide to purchase, I quickly realized this was the one to go with. The features that make this guide superior are: actual photos (not drawings), multiple images (juvenile, adult, male/female, multiple color morphs, subspecies, in flight, or anything that helps in ID). And the main thing I liked is that all the text info is on the same pages as the photos (unlike the audobon society guide which forces you to do a lot of page flipping and finding). It may be slightly larger than other field guides, but definitely not a hindrance. And the abundance of pics and info makes up for the size. The DVD w/ mp3 files are great, but I would not buy the book simply for the DVD of bird songs. -I actually did not realize it was there until after the purchase. But I am excited that I can bird with my iPod and add another dimension to my birding experience. Overall, I think you cannot go wrong with this field guide!
  Informative and thorough. September 26, 2008 This is an excellent field guide: well researched and written. The photos are beautiful and the descriptions are clear. A perfect layman's guide.
  Outstanding, but not alone September 18, 2008 The Smithsonian Field Guide to Birds of North America is an outstanding contribution to a crowded field. Unlike the Peterson and National Geographic Guides (among others), this guide uses high quality photographs taken of the birds in a characteristic environment. Detailed, well colored maps indicate the yearly range of the bird specifying breeding, migration, winter, year round, and rare ranges. Photographic quality is uniformly excellent. But the biggest advantage of this book is that it comes with a comprehensive CD of bird calls beautifully recorded. This is a feature that the other guides lack and is a very strong recommendation for this volume, for, as any birder knows, we hear many more birds than we see.
  Excellent guide September 18, 2008 I'm going to start with the summary first, for those in a hurry: this is a wonderful guide, chock full of full, high-color photographs and a fantastic CD with bird calls on it that can be downloaded to an MP3 player. With the possible exception of the fact I had some issues actually correlating the birds in real life before me with their counterparts in the book, I really like having this book as reference.
Birds are categorized according to their species and further information is provided with each bird such as their locations in the north American area (which, to be specific, comprises of the lower 48 states, Alaska and Canada, but not really Mexico and parts further south) and their winter ranges and otherwise.
Each entry is succinct and easy-to-follow. All variations, if they exist, in plumage are described. The different sexes and juveniles are also described, but all without being overwhelming. The only issue I had with using the guide was using it to find birds in my backyard, the names of which I didn't know. I wish there were a better way of quickly finding a bird in the book, perhaps by grouping them by color? I don't know, I suppose knowing which birds are which is a skill is picked up with practice.
Four stars.
  A great field-guide September 15, 2008 I am not a experienced bird watcher. My husband and I moved into our house 5 years ago and we have a bunch of butterfly bushes and tree's and I am always seeing birds around our yard. One even nested in the butterfly bush just outside my kitchen window. This guide has wonderful photographs, loads of birds all categorized by type.
My only issue with this guide is, as I am very inexperienced I really haven't figured out all the different types of birds, so I wish there was a way to have an index of small photographs categorized by color, so I could very quickly find a bird while I was watching it. I think the more I look at the book the more I'll learn to recognize what type of bird I am looking at and be able to look it up more quickly.
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