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- From: lanny@hummingbirds.net (Lanny Chambers)
- Newsgroups: rec.birds,rec.answers,news.answers
- Subject: rec.birds Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) (Part 2/2)
- Summary: Info about rec.birds and wild birds
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- Archive-name: birds-faq/wild-birds/part2
- Last-modified: August 24, 2001
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-
- rec.birds Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) (Part 2/2)
-
- This is part 2 (of 2) of the Frequently Asked Questions list for the
- Usenet
- newsgroup rec.birds. The FAQ is posted every five weeks. Its current
- editor
- is Lanny Chambers; send suggestions for new questions and other comments
- to him.
- Remember the FAQ is intended as a living document about rec.birds,
- constant
- updating is welcome!
-
- This section of the FAQ contains information about rec.birds and about
- wild birds. The other section of the FAQ contains pointers to more
- information about wild birds.
-
- Do not send articles to the FAQ editor for posting. rec.birds is an
- unmoderated newsgroup, so you may post articles yourself. If you are a
- newcomer to Usenet, please read the official articles about etiquette
- in the newsgroup news.announce.newusers before you post.
-
- This section of the FAQ contains pointers to more information about wild
- birds. The other section of the FAQ contains information about rec.birds
- and about wild birds.
-
- Contents:
-
- 2.0. How can I get this and other FAQs by anonymous FTP? On the Web?
- 2.1. Which field guide should I buy as a first purchase?
- 2.2. I'm going on a trip. How can I find out where are good places to go
- birding?
- 2.3. How can I get on-line bird checklists?
- 2.4. What are good wild-bird magazines?
- 2.5. What are good wild-bird-related organizations?
- 2.6. What is BIRDCHAT? EuroBirdNet?
- 2.7. Are there good computer programs for maintaining bird lists?
- 2.8a. Where can I get digitized pictures of birds?
- 2.8b. What are some birding resources on the Internet and the Web?
- 2.9. Where can I find recordings of birdsongs?
- 2.10. Are there field guides for nests, eggs, and nestlings?
- 2.11. Are there newsgroups or mailing lists for my part of the world?
- 2.12. Bird House Information
- 2.13. Acknowledgements
-
- -------
-
- 2.0. How can I get this and other FAQs by anonymous FTP? On the Web?
-
- Many Usenet FAQs, including those for rec.birds, are archived on
- rtfm.mit.edu. Here is a URL that will get you there:
-
- rtfm.mit.edu/pub/usenet-by-hierarchy/rec/birds
-
-
- -------
-
- 2.1. Which field guide should I buy as a first purchase?
-
- The most general advice one can give is this: Go to your bookstore
- and buy any field guide in which the birds are illustrated with
- paintings rather than photographs. Paintings in field guides pose
- the birds for maximum learning, and call attention to the distinguishing
- features that are most important in the field. Regrettably, the
- National Audubon Society's field guide uses photos, and is thus
- of limited learning value. On the other hand, photo field guides
- do show birds as they would appear under actual lighting conditions,
- so they can be valuable in making identifications. You may wish to
- consider a photo-based field guide as a later purchase; it's common
- for birders to own and use several field guides.
-
- The ultimate advice for a first-purchase field guide is this: go to a
- bookstore and select whichever book for your area you feel most
- comfortable
- with. Enjoyable associations with the birding hobby have begun with all.
-
- In North America, the four most popular painted general-purpose field
- guides are the following:
-
- National Geographic Society: _Field Guide to the Birds of North America_
- ISBN: 0-87044-692-4
-
- Peterson, Roger Tory: _A Field Guide to the Birds_ (eastern and central)
- and _Western Birds_ (published by Houghton Mifflin)
- ISBN: 0-395-26619-X, 0-395-51424-X
-
- Zim, Herbert S., et al: _Guide to Field Identification: Birds of North
- America_ (published by Golden Books, hence called the "Golden" book)
- ISBN: 0-307-37002-X and 0-307-33656-5 (pbk.)
-
- Each choice has its advantages and disadvantages. For example, the
- Peterson books are easier to carry in the field than the NGS book, because
- each covers only half the continent. Beginners may find it helpful that
- each Peterson volume shows only those birds likely to be found in its
- covered region, so there are fewer confusing choices (of course, birds
- do wander).
-
- The NGS book and the Golden book both present each species' range map on
- the same page as its description, a great convenience. The Golden book is
- the only one of the three to to present "sonograms," graphical
- representations
- of birds' songs and calls, but these graphs are difficult to use
- correctly.
-
- All of the books include a few paintings which some birders find
- questionable.
-
- North American beginners who feel overwhelmed by the number of birds in
- these all-purpose books should consider the _Peterson First Guide: Birds_.
- It displays the most common North American birds in a convenient format.
-
- An often recommended European field guide is Lars Jonsson's _Birds
- of Europe, with North Africa and Middle East_, although it is a bit large
- for easy portability. In the U.K. and central Europe, Harris, Tucker, and
- Vinicombe's _The Macmillan field guide to bird identification_ will be
- useful. (The book is available in French and German as well as English.)
- David Allen writes that the Macmillan guide does not cover all species;
- rather, it shows those species most easily confused with one another.
-
- Peterson, R., Mountfort, G., and Hollom, P.A.D.: _A Field Guide to the
- Birds of Britain and Europe_ (Collins, 1993)
- ISBN: 0-00-219073-7
- "The basic Peterson guide with painted plates and pointers; maps and
- descriptions separate. The new edition is certainly available in Spanish,
- and I think in French and German as well." --David Allen
-
- Heinzel, H., Fitter, R., and Parslow, J.: _The Birds of Britain and Europe
- with North Africa and the Middle East_ (1995)
- ISBN: 0-00-219894-0
- Expanded from the 1979 version, with improved plates. Fits into a pocket.
- "Especially good on geographic forms." --Derek Turner
-
- Perrins, C.: _New Generation Guide to the Birds of Britain and Europe_
- (Collins, 1987)
- ISBN: 0-00-219769-3
- "More plumage variants than any other small guide, maps and text
- opposite illustrations, and a whole section on general ornithology
- topics, anatomy, behaviour, etc. BUT four of the illustrations fit
- onto a postage stamp. My favourite guide for use in the field."--DA
-
- Ferguson-Lees, J.; Willis, I.; Sharrock, J.T.R.: _The Shell Guide to
- the Birds of Britain and Ireland_ (Michael Joseph, 1983)
- ISBN: 0-7181-2220-8
- "Vignette illustrations, painted, including plenty of action shots showing
- typical poses. Maps, text, and illustrations all together. Split into
- two sections: regulars and rarities."--DA
-
- Jorgen Grahn recommends _The Hamlyn Guide to Birds of Britain and
- Europe_ by Bruun, Delin, Svensson; illustrations by Singer, Zetterstrom.
- Select a recent edition.
-
- The most commonly used field guides for Australian birds are Simpson and
- Day,
- _Field Guide to the Birds of Australia_ (Penguin Books, Aust.); and
- Slater, Slater, and Slater, _The Slater Field Guide to Australian Birds_
- (Weldon)
-
- King et al., _A Field Guide to the Birds of South-East Asia_ (Collins,
- London) has also been recommended (although it now seems to be out of
- print).
-
- -------
-
- 2.2. I'm going on a trip. How can I find out where are good places to go
- birding?
-
- There may be a "bird-finding guide" for the area you wish to visit.
- Bird-finding guides are books that cover the birdlife of an area in
- detail; they include discussions of promising sites, maps and directions,
- and indications of birds' seasonal abundance. The American Birding
- Association offers by mail order an enormous selection of these books,
- covering both North America and elsewhere, and their service is quite
- prompt. See section 2.4 for information on how to reach them.
-
- Please post your request as well to rec.birds. Locals (and recent
- visitors to the same area) may be able to give you up-to-the-minute
- information, and you might even find people to go birding with when
- you're there.
-
- Many traveling birders write trip reports for the benefit of others.
- There are several sources of archived trip reports on the world-wide web:
-
- Lisa Bryan's North and Central American trip report archive:
- http://www.azstarnet.com/~lisab/triplist.html
-
- Urs Geiser's archive of mainly Old World trip reports:
- http://www.xnet.com/~ugeiser/Birds/TripReports/TripReports.html
-
- Archive of trip reports posted to BIRDCHAT and BIRDTRIP:
- http://listserv.arizona.edu/lsv/www/birdtrip.html
-
- Trip reports posted to the mailing list EuroBirdNet:
- http://ebn.unige.ch/ebn/trip.html
-
- Worldtwitch (tm), a repository of recent sightings and searches for
- rare birds around the world:
- http://www.geocities.com/RainForest/Vines/9684/
-
- Finally, Tina McDonalds armchair traveler's birding web site, "Where do
- you want to go Birding Today?", has many useful links, grouped by
- location,
- and worldwide coverage:
- http://www.camacdonald.com/birding/birding.htm
-
- -------
-
- 2.3. How can I get on-line bird checklists?
-
- An excellent collection of lists is available at Jack Siler's
- website:
-
- http://www.birdingonthe.net/birdlists/
-
- A checklist of the birds of North America is available on floppy disk
- from the American Birding Association (see section 2.4 below).
-
- Santa Barbara Software Products will send bird lists for any region
- by e-mail at no charge. Their e-mail address is
- sbsp@aol.com.
- -------
-
- 2.4. What are good wild-bird magazines?
-
- That depends on your purpose. Bird magazines have three main offerings:
- interesting articles, compelling photography, and records of unusual
- sightings. Many publications have strengths in only one area.
-
- Below is a list of many magazines, with their organizations. Bernard
- Volet
- supplied much of the European information. Also, see the next section, as
- its subject matter overlaps this one's.
-
- North America:
-
- _Audubon Field Notes_ (five issues; important repository of
- sighting
- records; in financial difficulty; US$30/yr)
- P.O. Box 490
- Yorktown Heights, NY 10598
- 700 Broadway
- USA
-
- (editorial address is 700 Broadway, New York, New York 10003,
- USA
- +1 212 979-3000)
-
- _Birders Journal_ (bimonthly; general-interest; C$34/yr)
- Circulation Department
- 8 Midtown Dr., Suite 289
- Oshawa, Ontario L1J 8L2
- CANADA
-
- _QuebecOiseaux_ (4 issues/yr; C$16)
- Box 514
- Drummondville, Quebec J2B 6W4
- Canada
-
- _Birder's World_ (bimonthly; general-interest;
- outstanding photos; US$19.75/yr)
- Subscription Dept.
- 434 W Downer Pl
- Aurora, Illinois 60506-9919
- USA
-
- _Birding_ (bi-monthly; with _Winging It_, a monthly newsletter;
- US$36 with membership)
- American Birding Association, Inc.
- P. O. Box 6599
- Colorado Springs, Colorado 80934
- USA
- Toll-free phone (North America) (800) 850-2473
- ABA Sales: in North America (800) 634-7736
- Otherwise +1 719 578 0607
-
- _Birds of the Wild_ (quarterly; C$16.00/yr)
- P.O. Box 73
- Markham, Ontario L3P 3J5
- CANADA
-
- _Bird Watcher's Digest_ (bimonthly; aimed at novices and backyard
- feeders; US$17.95/yr)
- Pardson Corporation
- P. O. Box 110
- Marietta, Ohio 45750-9977
- USA
- In North America (800) 879-2473
-
- _Living Bird_ (quarterly; US$30 with membership)
- Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology
- 159 Sapsucker Woods Road
- Ithaca, New York 14850
- USA
-
- _Partners in Flight/Aves de las Americas_ (free quarterly)
- National Fish and Wildlife Foundation
- Suite 900, Bender Bldg.
- 1120 Connecticut Ave., NW
- Washington, DC 20036
- USA
-
- _WildBird_ (monthly; general-interest; US$23.97/yr)
- Subscription Dept.
- P.O. Box 52898
- Boulder, Colorado 80323-2898
- USA
-
- In the United Kingdom:
-
- _British Birds_ (monthly; Europe, the Middle East, and North
- Africa. US$73 or 38.60 pounds sterling. Sample
- issue requests should be directed to Erika
- Sharrock at this address, mentioning this FAQ)
- Fountains
- Park Lane
- Blunham
- Bedford
- MK44 3NJ
- ENGLAND
-
- _Birds_ (quarterly; 20 pounds sterling/yr)
- Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
- The Lodge
- Sandy
- Beds
- SG19 2DL
- ENGLAND
-
- Switzerland:
-
- _Nos Oiseaux_ (quarterly; bird behavior and distribution,
- local bird
- sightings, in French with German and English
- summaries
- SFr.33/yr)
- Musee d'Histoire Naturelle
- 2300 La Chaux-de-Fonds
- SWITZERLAND
- Phone and Fax: +41 039 23 39 76
-
- France:
-
- _Alauda_ (quarterly; bird studies in France and Africa, in
- French,
- FFr.260/yr)
- Museum d'histoire naturelle
- Laboratoire d'Ecologie generale
- 4, avenue du Petit-Chateau
- 91800 Brunoy
- FRANCE
-
- _Ornithos_ (quarterly, field ornithology, national rare birds
- report, in French with English summaries, FFr. 270/yr)
-
- Ligue pour la Protection des Oiseaux
- BP 263
- 17305 Rochefort Cedex
- FRANCE
-
- _L'Oiseau magazine_ (quarterly, more general public oriented,
- bird
- protection, in french, FFr.140/yr)
- Same address as Ornithos
-
- Germany:
-
- _Limicola_ (six issues, field ornithology, in German with English
- summary, DM 69/yr)
- Limicola
- Uber dem Salzgraben 11
- OT Druber
- D-37574 Einbeck
- GERMANY
- Phone +49 (05561) 82224, Fax 82289
-
- _Ornithologischer Jahresbericht Helgoland_
- (annual, report of bird sightings on the famous
- island, in German with English summary, DM 15)
- Ornithologische Arbeitsgemeinschaft Helgoland e.V.
- Postfach 869
- 27490 Helgoland
- GERMANY
-
- Spain:
-
- _Ardeola_ (biannual, papers in Spanish and English with summaries
- in both languages)
- SEO
- Facultad de Biologica
- 28040 Madrid
- SPAIN
- Fax +34 1 549 5740
-
- The Netherlands:
-
- Dutch Birding (in Dutch and English)
- Postbus 75611
- 1070 AP
- Amsterdam
- THE NETHERLANDS
-
- -------
-
- 2.5. What are good wild-bird-related organizations?
-
- Start locally. Your local bird club, or, in North America, chapter
- of the Audubon Society, organizes birding trips that will help you
- hone your skills. Many states and regions have independent ornithological
- societies.
-
- The National Audubon Society, once a bird-oriented conservation
- group, is now trying to be a broad-spectrum environmental organization;
- whether it is succeeding is a matter of debate.
-
- National Audubon Society
- 700 Broadway
- New York, New York 10003
- USA
-
- What was formerly the Canadian Audubon Society is now:
-
- Canadian Nature Federation
- 1 Nicholas, Suite 520
- Ottawa, Ontario, K1N 7B7
- CANADA
-
- In North America, the organization dedicated to birding as a sport
- is the American Birding Association.
-
- American Birding Association
- P.O. Box 6599
- Colorado Springs, Colorado 80934
- USA
- Toll-free phone in North America (800) 634-7736
- Otherwise +1 719 578 0607
-
- Professional ornithological associations, by and large, are much more
- welcoming of amateur members than those of other sciences. They publish
- scholarly journals, which may be had very reasonably with membership.
-
- The American Ornithologists' Union, US$35/yr
- (publishes _The Auk_ quarterly)
- 810 East Tenth Street
- Lawrence, Kansas 66049-8897
- USA
-
- Western Field Ornithologists
- (Covers Western North America US$18/yr (outside U.S. US$23))
- c/o Dori Myers, Treasurer
- 6011 Saddletree Lane
- Yorba Linda, CA 92696
-
- The British Ornithologists Union, 18 pounds sterling/yr
- (publishes _The Ibis_ quarterly)
- c/o British Museum
- Sub-Department of Ornithology
- Tring
- Herts HP23 6AP
- ENGLAND
-
- Ontario Field Ornithologists
- Box 1204, Station B
- Burlington, Ontario L7P 3S9
- CANADA
-
- Vogelbescherming
- (the Dutch Society for the Protection of Birds; publishes
- _Vogels_)
- (member of BirdLife International)
- Driebergseweg 16c
- 3708 JB Zeist
- THE NETHERLANDS
- +31 03404 37744
- fax +31 03404 18844
- birdinfophone +31 03404 37773
-
- Norsk Ornitologisk Forening
- (publishes _Vaar Fuglefauna_ quarterly)
- Seminarplassen 5
- 7060 Klaebu
- Oslo
- NORWAY
-
- Bird Observers Club of Australia
- (publishes The Bird Observer, monthly except January; A$40/yr,
- overseas A$60 includes airmail)
- 183 Springvale Rd
- Nunawading, Victoria 3131
- AUSTRALIA
- fax +61 3 894 4048
-
- Birds Australia (RAOU), A$64/yr
- (publishes _The Emu_)
- 415 Riversdale Road
- Hawthorn East
- Victoria 3123
- Australia
- +61-3-9882-2622
- fax +61-3-9882-2677
- mail@birdsaustralia.com.au
- http://www.birdsaustralia.com.au/
-
- AUSTRALIA
-
- Papua New Guinea Bird Society
- P.O. Box 1598
- Boroko, NCD
- PAPUA NEW GUINEA
-
- Southern African Ornithological Society, around R65/yr
- (publishes _Birding in Southern Africa_; scientific members
- [around R20 more] also receive _Ostrich_)
- P.O. Box 84394
- Greenside
- Johannesburg 2034
- SOUTH AFRICA
- +27 11 8884147
- fax +27 11 7827013
-
- Here is a sampling of international conservation organizations:
-
- The Royal Society for the Protection of Birds
- The Lodge
- Sandy
- Beds
- ENGLAND
- +44 01767 680551
- http://www.rspb.org.uk
-
- BirdLife International (formerly International Council for
- Bird Preservation; quarterly journal,
- US$35/yr)
- Wellbrook Court
- Girton Road
- Cambridge
- CB3 0NA
- ENGLAND
- +44 223 277318
- (U.S. affiliate : World Bird Club
- P.O. Box 57242
- Washington, DC 20037-7242
- +1 202 778 9649)
-
- British Trust for Ornithology
- The Nunnery
- Thetford
- Norfolk
- IP24 2PU
- ENGLAND
- http://www.bto.org
-
- See the previous section for more such organizations.
-
- -------
-
- 2.6. What is BIRDCHAT?
-
- BIRDCHAT is one of a family of mailing lists dedicated to wild birds.
- BIRDCHAT is for discussion of general wild-bird topics; the subjects
- are much like those raised on rec.birds, but the tone is substantially
- more serious. It is not forbidden to post an article both to BIRDCHAT
- and rec.birds if the content is not frivolous.
-
- BIRDEAST, BIRDCNTR, and BIRDWEST, other mailing lists in the family,
- contain reports of rare birds (transcribed by volunteers from hotlines)
- from eastern, central, and western North America, respectively.
-
- To subscribe to BIRDCHAT, send a message to LISTSERV@LISTSERV.ARIZONA.EDU
- containing this command:
-
- SUBSCRIBE BIRDCHAT _Your Name_
-
- To unsubscribe, send this message:
-
- SIGNOFF BIRDCHAT
-
- BIRDCHAT subscriptions can generate many e-mail messages to you per day.
- If you would like to receive only one daily message which will contain
- all of that day's traffic, send this message after subscribing:
-
- SET BIRDCHAT DIGEST
-
- For more information, send this message:
-
- HELP
-
- See also EuroBirdNet below.
-
- -------
-
- 2.7. Are there good computer programs for maintaining bird lists?
-
- Commercial computer programs exist for this purpose; they are advertised
- in the back pages of many birding magazines.
-
- One prominent commercial program, AviSys, is reviewed in the August
- 1992 issue of _Birding_. _Birding_ has reviewed several such programs
- in the past few years, including Plover. _Living Bird_ reviewed nine
- PC-based programs in its Summer 1992 issue.
-
- Many shareware and public-domain programs also exist, such as LifeLister.
- Check public-domain archives to get copies of these programs.
-
- Carena Pooth <HFDH09A@prodigy.com> graciously provided the following list
- of names, addresses, and phone numbers. If you find any problems with
- it, please notify her as well as the FAQ maintainer. All prices are
- U.S. dollars.
-
- FOR MS-DOS or Microsoft Windows:
- AviSys ~ Perceptive Systems, P.O. Box 369,
- Placitas, NM 87043. (In N.A. (800) 354-7755)
- The latest version is AviSys 4.58 for
- Windows 3.x, 95, 98, Me, XP, NT, 2000.
- It is priced at $99.95 + $4 S&H.
- Information at http://www.avisys.net
- BirdBase for Windows: http://members.aol.com/sbsp
- Santa Barbara Software Products, 1400 Dover Rd., Santa Barbara,
- CA 93103 [BirdBase for Windows 3.X, 95, 98, ME, XP, NT, and 2000,
- including the world species list, is US$59.95 + US$4.00 shipping to
- the U.S. and Canada, or US$8.00 shipping to elsewhere; with the
- North American/Hawaiian species list it is $US$39.95 + US$3.00 S&H]
- Birder's Diary: http://www.thayerbirding.com
- Thayer Birding Software
- PO Box 110613, Naples, FL 34108 [Birder's Diary 2.5 is compatible with
- Windows 9x/Me/NT/2000, includes four different species lists (Sibley,
- ABA, AOU, Thayer) and the last edition of Charles Sibley's
- ornithological
- reference - "Birds of the World". US $140 + $5.95 shipping to U.S. and
- Canada, $20 shipping to elsewhere.]
- BirdRecorder 32, Wildlife Computing: http://www.Wildlife.co.uk
- <mailto:sales@wildlife.co.uk>
- [US$125.00 for the Windows version (Including World Bird Data)]
-
- FOR MACINTOSH:
- BirdBrain 4.0, Ideaform, Inc., P.O. Box 1540, Fairfield,
- Iowa 52556 (In N.A. (800) 779-7256, or +1 515 472 7256).
- [US$79.95 or US$99.95 with World Birds Data]
- MacPeregrine, Whole Life Systems, P.O. Box 162,
- Rehoboth, NM 87322
-
- If you use a bird-listing program, please post a review to rec.birds.
-
- -------
-
- 2.8a. Where can I get digitized pictures of birds?
- 2.8b.What are some birding resources on the Internet and the Web?
-
- Here is a sampling.
-
- Jack Siler's page: http://www-stat.wharton.upenn.edu/~siler/birding.html
-
- http://www.im.nbs.gov
- http://www.im.nbs.gov/bbs/bbs.html
- http://www.audubon.org/
- http://www.fws.gov/~r9endspp/endspp.html
- http://www.interlog.com/~gallantg/ontario.html
-
-
- -------
-
- 2.9. Where can I find recordings of birdsongs?
-
- For North American birds, Houghton Mifflin's Peterson series includes
- Walton and Lawson's _Backyard Bird Song_, a simple introduction to common
- birds, as well as _Birding by Ear_, a more advanced course. These are
- available in CD and cassette format. They also offer "aural field guides"
- for North America on cassette and compact disc: there is an Eastern/
- Central and a Western volume.
-
- The National Geographic Society (In N.A. (800) 638-4077) offers an audio
- field guide. Lang Elliot offers a series of recordings called _Know Your
- Bird Songs_ that are very useful for advanced and intermediate birders.
-
- Bernard Volet suggests the following for European bird songs:
-
- Roche, J.-C.: _All the Bird Songs of Britain and Europe_
- 4 cassettes covering 420 species or 4 CDs covering 396 species,
- Comments in French and English.
-
- "For research, teaching, identification problems, covering Western and
- Eastern Paleartic, Afro-tropical, Oriental, Australasian, Nearctic,
- Neotropical and Antarctic, inquire at:
- British Library of Wildlife Sounds (BLOWS)
- National Sound Archive
- 29 Exhibition Road
- London SW7 2AS
- ENGLAND
- Fax +44 071 412 7441"
-
- The British Library maintains an archive of wildlife recordings. See
- their web page at
- http://www.bl.uk/collections/sound-archive/wild.html .
- -------
-
- 2.10. Are there field guides for nests, eggs, and nestlings?
-
- Yes, but they must be used with great caution. Never interfere with
- nesting birds, and spend as little time as possible in the nest's
- vicinity.
- Needless to say, do not touch the nest's contents.
-
- The main North American reference is:
-
- Harrison, Colin: _A Field Guide to the Nests, Eggs, and Nestlings of
- North American Birds_ (published by Collins, 1978).
- ISBN: 0-00219-316-7
-
- Be sure to read this book's introductory text; don't skip right to the
- species entries.
-
- If you have an interest in nests and eggs, the FAQ editor suggests that
- you seek out and get involved with an organized bird survey.
-
- -------
-
- 2.11. Are there newsgroups or mailing lists for my part of the world?
-
- EuroBirdNet is a private mailing list for relaying information about birds
- in Europe (or actually the whole Western Palearctic region), consisting
- of, for example, rarity reports and trip reports. Join by using the link
- http://www.listserv.funet.fi/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=ebn&A=1 and only if that
- fails by writing to the list administrator at
- ebn-request@listserv.funet.fi.
-
- There is now a newsgroup uk.rec.birdwatching for birding in
- the United Kingdom. A mailing list UKBIRDNET also exists; to subscribe,
- send e-mail to ukbirdnet-request@dcs.bbk.ac.uk with the word "subscribe"
- in the body. Subscribers to UKBIRDNET automatically get all EuroBirdNet
- traffic.
-
- -------
-
- 2.12. Bird House Information
-
- This section is meant only to give several internet links to Web sites
- which contain more detailed and complete information about specific topics
- related to birdhouses that you may want to explore on your own topics like
- birdhouse dimensions, placement, timing, etc.. I couldn't begin to rewrite
- all of that information here.
-
- For you builders and handypeople out there, several sites on the Web
- provide dimensions and drawings for many of the birds who are cavity
- dwellers. As of March 12, 1998, the following sites contain this
- information. At least one is principally devoted to Bluebirds, and the
- struggles they've had against rival, non-native birds like the House
- sparrow and Starling. Enjoy:
-
- http://audubon-omaha.org/bbbox/index.htm (bluebird site, BB box drawings,
- etc. - good one)
- http://www.tpwd.state.tx.us/adv/birding/birdhous/birdhous.htm (Nestboxes
- and bird houses)
- http://www.bcpl.lib.md.us/~tross/by/house.html (Homes for Birds)
- http://www.fws.gov/r9mbmo/pamphlet/house.html (Homes for Birds plus some
- commentary)
- http://www.conservation.state.mo.us/nathis/birds/birdfedr.html (How to
- Build a Bird Feeder basic)
- http://www.pacifier.com/~mpatters/bird/nestbox.html (Building a Basic
- Birdbox - good one)
- http://www.ces.ncsu.edu/nreos/forest/steward/www16.html (Song bird nesting
- box plans)
-
- Further, web sites which contain information about birds/birding and
- related issues abound and one need only to do some searching to find them
- (also discussed in FAQ 2.8b).
- Try the following sites:
-
- http://www.birdware.com/owbf.htm (Overview of Wild Bird Feeding)
- http://birds.cornell.edu/ (lots of stuff - good one)
- http://www.naturesongs.com (principally devoted to bird sounds)
- http://home.sol.no/~tibjonn/index.htm (has many links to other, specific
- sites - good one)
- http://www.camacdonald.com/birding/birding.htm (birding hot spots around
- the world)
-
- Bill Oldroyd, Gail Spitler and John J. Collins provided the links and
- information above. Much thanks.
-
- -------
-
- 2.13. Acknowledgements
-
- The acknowledgements list is maintained in part 1 of this FAQ.
-
-
- *********end of part 2 (of 2) of the rec.birds FAQ*********
-
-