Birds and BerriesA&C Black, 30 нояб. 2010 г. - Всего страниц: 268 This thought-provoking text offers many insights not generally perceived by ornithologist or botanist and is illustrated in masterly fashion by John Busby's lively drawings. The book's subtitle - A study of an ecological interaction - properly reflects the author's theme but may tend to hide the fact that the relationships between birds and berries can be much more than the simple, mutually advantageous systems ('eat my fruits, spread my seeds' ) they may seem at first to be. Therein lies the core of the book - the less obvious intricacies and implications of plant/bird associations, the co-evolution of species in some cases and the adaptation of a species (bird or plant) to further its own advantage. To complicate the scene, too, there are the 'exploiters', the pulp-predators and seed-predators that feed at the plant's expense. In Part I of the book the authors provide accounts by species of the trees and shrubs they observed over many years in their study area of southern England; similarly, Part 2 records the bird species they watched feeding, or attempting to feed, or preventing other birds from feeding, on the fruits. Part 3 ranges widely and is not confined to Britain and Europe. It investigates the strategies and adaptations evolved and employed by plants to ensure their success, and their attempts at defence against the bird 'predators'. It looks at the birds themselves, their foraging techniques and fruit preferences, the limitations of a fruit diet and adaptations to it, the time and energy budgets of fruit-eaters and, finally, the intriguing question of co-evolution of plants and birds. |
Содержание
Introduction | 11 |
Acknowledgements | 16 |
1 THE FRUITS | 17 |
2 THE FRUITEATERS | 109 |
3 INTERPRETATION | 188 |
Appendices | 245 |
| 253 | |
| 261 | |
Другие издания - Просмотреть все
Birds and Berries: A Study of an Ecological Interaction Barbara K. Snow Недоступно для просмотра - 1988 |
Birds and Berries: A Study of an Ecological Interaction Barbara K. Snow,David William Snow Недоступно для просмотра - 1988 |
Часто встречающиеся слова и выражения
abundant adapted August autumn bird cherry bird-dispersed fruits black bryony blackberry Blackbirds Blackcaps Blue Tits Britain buckthorn Bullfinches bushes Chilterns Cotoneaster Crab-apple December diameter diet different fruits dispersers dogwood drupe elder ELSEWHERE Europe feeding records Fieldfares fleshy fruits flocks frugivores fruit fruit being eaten fruit crop fruit source fruit supply fruiting seasons fruits ripen Garden Warblers Greenfinches guelder rose Hawfinch Herrera hips ivy berries January July juniper kinds of fruit late Lesser Whitethroat mainly Marsh Tit meal sizes Mistle Thrushes mistletoe mistletoe berries monthly summary November nutritive observations October perched Perfoliate honeysuckle plants predators preferences privet probably pulp pulp-predators Redwings ripe fruit Robins sallies seed burden seed-predators September shrub sloe Song Thrushes southern England southern Spain specialised species spindle Starlings study area summary of feeding Table taking fruit Turček unripe Waxwing wayfaring tree weather weight white bryony whitebeam wild fruits winter woodland Woodpigeons woody nightshade ΙΟ

