Dear All,
For those that may be into raptors,.
Cheers,
Carl Clifford
Begin forwarded message:
From: WWGBP@aol.com Date: 6 January 2011 4:03:19 AM To: MEBirdNet@yahoogroups.com, orientalbirding@yahoogroups.com, Ornithology_Ukraine@yahoogroups.com , RGSS@yahoogroups.com, ukrainianbirds@yahoogroups.com Subject: [OB] RAPTORS IN THE MODERN WORLD now online
In remembrance of R. D. (Robin) Chancellor (* 24 October 1921 – † 27 October 2010) WWGBP has started to digitise it’s bird of prey volumes and to provide them free of charge for all interested persons as PDF download data on the WWGBP website; indeed, “Eagle Studies”, “Holarctic Birds of Prey” and “Birds of Prey Bull. No. 4” are already available.
The following volume has now been posted to the website
B.-U. Meyburg & R. D. Chancellor (eds.) 1989 RAPTORS IN THE MODERN WORLD Proceedings of the 3rd World Conference on Birds of Prey and Owls WWGBP, Berlin, London and Paris ISBN 3-9801961-0-0, 612 pp.
“The editors of this conference proceedings are to be congratulated for such an excellently produced, interesting and attractive volume. It is packed with information, containing 72 papers in 8 sections by 112 authors from 27 countries, and concluding with the 12 resolutions passed by the conference. Like all conference proceedings, the papers are varied in scope and content, ranging from little more than abstracts, to some fairly weighty ones with new information or synthesis.
The first section covers ‘Raptors on migration and wintering grounds’, a particularly difficult aspect of their annual cycle to study, but many of the 19 papers are simply lists of raptors migrating through, or wintering in, different areas. The next 3 sections are ‘Population biology and breeding’ (a very meaty series of 10 papers, including Sparrowhawk (Newton), Golden Eagle (Watson & Langslow), Kestrel (Village) and Osprey (Poole)), and the biology and conservation of rare diurnal raptors (14 papers) and owls (10 papers).
The 11 papers of section 5 considering ‘Raptors in Polluted Environments’ cover fluorosis, lead, mercury and PCBs but the main emphasis is still on organochlorine pesticides. A very important paper by Davies & Randall shows how eggshell thinning in the African Fish Eagle is correlated with DDT levels in southern African watersheds which, in turn, is associated with differing levels of cotton production. Furthermore, they have shown that inland eggshells are naturally thinner than those from marine areas, thus casting doubts on previous investigations of eggshell thinning that have failed to take this into account. Another paper (Furness et al.) shows how Golden Eagles that feed on seabirds in western Scotland accrue high pollutant burdens and suffer low reproductive success.
Three short sections on habitat analysis and census techniques (4 papers), promotion of legislation (4), and education in raptor conservation (10 abstracts) conclude an important worldwide contribution to raptor research and conservation.”
Humphrey Crick (Review in Bird Study, 37, 1990, p.70)
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