Cuckoo: Cheating by Nature
Autor Nick Daviesen Limba Engleză Paperback – 9 mar 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781408856581
ISBN-10: 1408856581
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Paperbacks
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1408856581
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Paperbacks
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
Illustrated with 8pp colour photographic section of never-before-seen photographs of every aspect of cuckoos' lives, plus beautiful pen and wash illustrations by renowned bird artist James McCallum
Notă biografică
Nick Davies is Professor of Behavioural Ecology at the University of Cambridge, and a Fellow of Pembroke College. His cuckoo research has been presented on BBC 4 Radio, and as a BBC film, produced by Mike Birkhead and narrated by David Attenborough. His previous books include Cuckoos, Cowbirds and other Cheats that won Best Book of the Year from the British Trust for Ornithology and British Birds Magazine.
Recenzii
This amazing detective story by one of the country's greatest field naturalists is also a fascinating study that solves many of the puzzles surrounding this most extraordinary bird
Wonderful
Davies' beguiling account of his 30 years' cuckoo-watching on the East Anglian fens brings a far more sensible and revelatory approach to the subject. Davies is a leading field naturalist whose work will be known to Radio 4 listeners. He frames his research and discoveries as "a nature detective story", a natural history-mystery . The tale features astonishing insights into the processes of both evolution and scientific research, and it beguiles because of Davies' plain, personable style and his relating of his own experiments . the reader is taken nest-hunting, fake-egg planting and landscape-gazing. Rich, tactile description is lightly burnished with the poetic while illustrations by watercolourist James McCallum complete a package that will suit both dedicated twitcher and armchair naturalist alike, and gives springtime's feathered friend and fiend a fair hearing at last
The cuckoo . is also nature's most notorious cheat. Ever since Aristotle noted . that "it lays its eggs in the nest of small birds after devouring these birds' eggs", people have been appalled by its parasitic behaviour and puzzled by how on earth, given its disproportionate size compared with its hosts, it gets away with such brazen dissembling. In this fascinating piece of natural-history detective work, Nick Davies, professor of behavioural ecology at Cambridge University, looks at how it does it
Davies is a hugely knowledgeable and readable guide, whose reasoning is often fascinating . This is a fine and involving book, whose insights - wrung from decades of hard graft and constant questioning - make you wonder again at nature's extraordinary ingenuity
Charming . Reveals how Wicken's reed warblers are locked in an evolutionary arms race in The Fens with the female cuckoo
A new book tells in mesmerising detail how the host birds are first outwitted by the female cuckoo, and then by the cuckoo chick. Cuckoo - Cheating By Nature is by Nick Davies, the world expert on Cuculus canorus, the Eurasian cuckoo, our bird. He gives a riveting account not only of how the cuckoo evolves deceptive stratagems, such as eggs which mimic the eggs of the host, but also of how the host birds evolve defences, such as learning to reject any eggs which seems slightly different from their own. This is in effect an "evolutionary arms race" and its complexities are elucidated with exemplary clarity and humour by Professor Davies . An even more fascinating take on curious behaviour. I've just read it, and it's a terrific read
The perfect combination of science and folklore
Fascinating . A fine and involving book, whose insights make you wonder again at nature's extraordinary ingenuity
Wonderful
Davies' beguiling account of his 30 years' cuckoo-watching on the East Anglian fens brings a far more sensible and revelatory approach to the subject. Davies is a leading field naturalist whose work will be known to Radio 4 listeners. He frames his research and discoveries as "a nature detective story", a natural history-mystery . The tale features astonishing insights into the processes of both evolution and scientific research, and it beguiles because of Davies' plain, personable style and his relating of his own experiments . the reader is taken nest-hunting, fake-egg planting and landscape-gazing. Rich, tactile description is lightly burnished with the poetic while illustrations by watercolourist James McCallum complete a package that will suit both dedicated twitcher and armchair naturalist alike, and gives springtime's feathered friend and fiend a fair hearing at last
The cuckoo . is also nature's most notorious cheat. Ever since Aristotle noted . that "it lays its eggs in the nest of small birds after devouring these birds' eggs", people have been appalled by its parasitic behaviour and puzzled by how on earth, given its disproportionate size compared with its hosts, it gets away with such brazen dissembling. In this fascinating piece of natural-history detective work, Nick Davies, professor of behavioural ecology at Cambridge University, looks at how it does it
Davies is a hugely knowledgeable and readable guide, whose reasoning is often fascinating . This is a fine and involving book, whose insights - wrung from decades of hard graft and constant questioning - make you wonder again at nature's extraordinary ingenuity
Charming . Reveals how Wicken's reed warblers are locked in an evolutionary arms race in The Fens with the female cuckoo
A new book tells in mesmerising detail how the host birds are first outwitted by the female cuckoo, and then by the cuckoo chick. Cuckoo - Cheating By Nature is by Nick Davies, the world expert on Cuculus canorus, the Eurasian cuckoo, our bird. He gives a riveting account not only of how the cuckoo evolves deceptive stratagems, such as eggs which mimic the eggs of the host, but also of how the host birds evolve defences, such as learning to reject any eggs which seems slightly different from their own. This is in effect an "evolutionary arms race" and its complexities are elucidated with exemplary clarity and humour by Professor Davies . An even more fascinating take on curious behaviour. I've just read it, and it's a terrific read
The perfect combination of science and folklore
Fascinating . A fine and involving book, whose insights make you wonder again at nature's extraordinary ingenuity