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         Ornithology:     more books (102)
  1. The World of Birds: A Layman's Guide to Ornithology by Michael Corral, Keith Hansen, et all 1991-12
  2. The ornithology of Illinois by Robert Ridgway, 2010-09-07
  3. New England bird life: being a manual of New England ornithology; by Winfrid Alden Stearns, Elliott Coues, 2010-09-09
  4. History of American Ornithology Before Audubon (Transactions of the American Philosophical Society, New Ser.) by Elsa G. Allen, 1979-06
  5. A Concise History of Ornithology: The Lives and Works of Its Founding Figures by Michael Walters, 2003-01
  6. Ornithology Books in the Library of Trinity College, Hartford Including the Library of Ostrom Enders by Viola; Clarke, Karen B. Breit, 1983
  7. Enjoying Birds around New York City: an aid to recognizing,watcing.[Cornell Laboratory of Ornithology] by Robert S., Jr. with Olin Sewall Pettingill, Jr. and Sally HoytSpofford Arbib, 1966
  8. American Ornithology: Or the Natural History of the Birds of the United States, Volume 3 by Robert Jameson, William Maxwell Hetherington, et all 2010-04-08
  9. Ornithology: From Aristotle to the Present by Erwinn Stresemann, 1975-08-01
  10. An Introduction to Ornithology : second Edition by George J. Wallace, 1963
  11. The Osprey: An Illustrated Monthly Magazine of Popular Ornithology, Volume 3 by Anonymous, 2010-04-08
  12. American Ornithology (Volume 4); Or the Natural History of the Birds of the United States by Alexander Wilson, 2010-10-14
  13. A Popular Handbook of the Ornithology of Eastern North America (Volume 2); Game and Water Birds by Thomas Nuttall, 2010-10-14
  14. Our rarer birds, being studies in ornithology & oology by Charles Dixon, 2010-08-21

81. Cerulean Warbler Atlas Project Home Page
Project from the Cornell Lab of ornithology to map the distribution of the declining Dendroica cerulea. Includes species account, maps, and photos.
http://birds.cornell.edu/cewap/
CEWAP Home Page Why Study Ceruleans? Project Introduction CEWAP Objectives Study Protocol ... Partners in Flight The Cerulean Warbler , a Neotropical migratory bird of high conservation concern, is experiencing population declines in parts of its range. Due to the Ceruleans low population density and patchy distributions accurate population trends are difficult to estimate, therefore, in order to adequately protect this species more information is needed about its habitat requirements, breeding biology, and population status. In order to to determine the number of breeding pairs and productivity, describe nesting habitat, and identify potential threats to the population and its habitat, the Cerulean Warbler Atlas Project CEWAP ) employed enthusiastic birders and biologists to survey known and potential Cerulean Warbler breeding sites from 1997 to 2000. Results from CEWAP will be used to produce management guidelines for Cerulean Warblers. As of December 2000 you can download the final report, "An Atlas of Cerulean Warbler Populations."

82. Other Ornithological Collection Catalogs
Collections Databases Cornell University ornithology Collection Field Museum of Natural History World Inventory of Anatomical Specimens Research and Collections
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/collections/otherorn.html
Collections Databases
Cornell University Ornithology Collection
Field Museum of Natural History
World Inventory of Anatomical Specimens
Research and Collections: Birds ...
Bird Catalog (gopher)
Bird Biodiversity
Natural History Museum, Berne, Switzerland
Aves Catalog (gopher)
Goeldi Collection of Brazilian vertebrates and insects
University of Alaska Museum
Bird Collection
University of Bergen Department of Zoology ...
Scientific Collections: Birds Other resources
Field Museum of Natural History
Herman Bumpus data for house sparrows
Bibliography of the Icterinae
Goose Bibliography ... Other resources If you find that we have missed a site, or if a link is broken, please inform our webmaster
Links tested and updated March 7, 2000.

83. Ventana Wilderness Society
Based in Carmel Valley. California Condor reintroduction notes, Bald Eagle release and monitoring, Big Sur ornithology Lab, environmental education, and research.
http://www.ventanaws.org/
VENTANA WILDERNESS SOCIETY
Perpetuating plant and animal species native to the central California coast, through wildlife and habitat reintroduction, restoration, research and education.
New: April Condor Field Notes New: May Bird Quiz New: April BSOL Update New: Bird Banding Totals April 2004 New: Vacancy Announcement: Natural Science Discovery Camp Instructor New: Natural Science Discovery Camp 2004 New: Updated Staff Profiles Home Page
About VWS
Condors
Eagles
Education
Habitat
Ornithology Lab
Big Sur Center
Join VWS Donate to VWS Employment Updated May 5 Updated April 14 Updated May 10 Updated 4/24 N ature inspires. It stirs us, pushes us to question and find answers, teaches us to fly, draws us into its waters, invites us to climb. In nature we discover ourselves. In nature we gain our mental, spiritual and physical health. Nature enhances life. We teach nature to our children, we restore nature for their children. We preserve nature for its intrinsic value.

84. Crossbills Contents Page
Lists the different types of North American crossbills and provides sound files and facts for each type.
http://research.amnh.org/ornithology/crossbills/contents.html
DIRECTORY
Audio information.
This page takes some time to load.
Life history information for crossbill types
Clickable image map.
Natural history
of crossbills.

85. Birds - Ornithology - Home
australian museum online about the museum research and collections features explore. introduction collections research publications
http://www.amonline.net.au/birds/

An Australian Museum website

An Australian Museum website

86. Ornithology Resources On The Web
Dr. Jay s ornithology Resources. General ornithology Resources. Positions Announcements in ornithology and Wildlife Biology from OSNA.
http://www.anselm.edu/homepage/jpitocch/resorn2.html
Dr. Jay's Ornithology Resources
General Ornithology Resources
Attracting Birds Be a Professional Ornithologist Birding Resources - IdentificationTips, RBAs and Places To Bird Birds in Art and Photography ... Zoos, Aviaries Attracting Birds Landscaping to Attract Birds Nest Boxes Be a ProfessionalOrnithologist Birding Resources - General Information, Identification Tips, Places To Bird and RBAs General Information Identification Places to Bird

87. Journal Of Oregon Ornithology (JOO)
Archive of articles based on Oregon field studies of bird distribution, migration, and abundance.
http://www.orednet.org/~rbayer/j/joomenu.htm
Journal of Oregon Ornithology (JOO)
Journal of Oregon Ornithology ISSN for Online Version: 1092-3845; Journal of Oregon Ornithology ISSN for Print Version: 1066-9450 Last modified: 12 July 2003 The most recent Journal of Oregon Ornithology is No. 6 , November 1996
Journal of Oregon Ornithology Table of Contents
Major subject matter (e.g., site of observations) of papers is in parentheses.
  • Introduction to JOO . (Introduction, library, map, and photo availability; acknowledgments; large file sizes.)
  • JOO #1 . (JOO purpose and goals, estuarine ponds in Lincoln Co., misc.)
  • JOO #2 . (Siletz/Logsden area in Lincoln Co.)
  • JOO #3 . (Harlequin Duck, Mt. in Coast Range, Great Blue Heron, subspecies.)
  • JOO #4 . (Lincoln Co. semimonthly records through 1992.)
  • JOO #5
  • JOO #6 . (Newton Hill [Lincoln Co.], unpublished coastal Christmas Bird Counts, Brant.)
  • Index for JOO Nos. 1-6 (File: jindex.htm, 147K)
To see an article and any links to GIF files, please select the first .htm file listed after the article.
All files are listed so that they can be more easily downloaded. The filename is based on page numbers in the printed JOO and includes the first page of the article, the last page in the file if the article has been split into several .htm files, or the page number of a GIF file (e.g., j135.gif is a GIF file from JOO p. 135).

88. Women In Ornithology Resource Group
Your browser doesn t support frames! Please click below to connect to the Women in ornithology Resource Group with no frames!
http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~tsipoura/worg.html
Your browser doesn't support frames! Please click below to connect to the Women in Ornithology Resource Group with no frames! WORG

89. Yaquina Studies In Natural History (formerly SOO)
Archive of monographs about the biology of birds in Oregon.
http://www.orednet.org/~rbayer/s/s.htm
Yaquina Studies in Natural History (YSNH)
(formerly Studies in Oregon Ornithology)
Yaquina (pronounced yah kwin' ah) Studies in Natural History (YSNH) is published by Gahmken Press (gahm' ken)(P.O. Box 1467, Newport, Oregon 97365-0112 USA). Subject matter includes monographs about natural history in the Pacific Northwest. This series is numbered consecutively as independent monographs and appears at irregular intervals; there are no subscriptions. "Yaquina" refers to an Indian tribe, a river, an estuary, a headland, and an abandoned town along the central coast of Oregon, but this series is not limited to that geographical area . "Yaquina" also symbolizes the sense of geography or "place" that we can acquire for wherever we may be. What's New? (last modified on 2 March 2003)
Yaquina Studies in Natural History Table of Contents
Titles
Introduction
Links
Yaquina Studies in Natural History (formerly Studies in Oregon Ornithology) Titles
(Not yet available online) SOO No. 1 (1986). 1884-1923 Oregon Coast Bird Notes in Biological Survey Files. R. D. Bayer

90. Grad Studies
A GUIDE TO GRADUATE STUDIES IN ornithology IN NORTH AMERICA. Compiled by the Committee on Undergraduate Outreach of the Wilson Ornithological Society June 2003.
http://www.ummz.lsa.umich.edu/birds/studies.html

Home
Wilson Bulletin Library Book Sale ... UM Bird Division A GUIDE TO GRADUATE STUDIES IN ORNITHOLOGY IN NORTH AMERICA Compiled by the Committee on Undergraduate Outreach of the Wilson Ornithological Society
June 2003 The purpose of this guide is to furnish undergraduate college students and their academic advisors information about those graduate degree programs where they can do advanced studies in support of their interests in the biology of birds. We present information abstracted from brochures and catalogs furnished the Committee by the departments and faculty members of the institutions listed below. This guide organizes programs by geographic region. These regions are the following: North East : Canada east of Manitoba, south to Ohio, Pennsylvania, and New Jersey.
South East : Kentucky, West Virginia, Maryland , and Delaware, south to Mississippi, Alabama, and Florida.
North Central : Saskatchewan and Manitoba south to Nebraska, Iowa, Illinois, and Indiana.
South Central : Kansas, and Missouri south to Texas, and Louisiana.

91. Bird Bibliography Part 1
A Bibliography of ornithology. A resource of the UMMZ Bird Division. by Robert B. Payne. 1976. Fundamentals of ornithology. 2nd ed. John Wiley Sons, New York.
http://www.ummz.lsa.umich.edu/birds/birddivresources/bibliog1.html
A Bibliography of Ornithology A resource of the UMMZ Bird Division by Robert B. Payne PART 1 of 3 General Reference Regional: Old World Regional: New World Classifications, Anatomy, and Molecular Genetics ... Origins and Early Fossil Evolution to PART 2 (Nonpasserines) to PART 3 (Passerines) General Reference Peters, J. L., et al. 1931-1987. Check-list of Birds of the World. 15 vols with vol. 1 revision; vol. 16 index. Museum of Comparative Zoology, Cambridge, Mass. Standard taxonomic reference, particularly the recent volumes. to top of bibliography Regional: Old World Andrew, P. 1992. The birds of Indonesia: a checklist (Peters' sequence). Indonesian Ornithological Society, Jakarta, Indonesia. 83 pp. Kulika Checklist no. 1. Cheng Tso-Hsin. 1994. A Complete Checklist of Species and Subspecies of the Chinese Birds. Science Press, Beijing. Coates, B. J. 1985, 1990. The Birds of Papua New Guinea, vol. 1, Non-Passerines; vol. 2, Passerines. Dove, Alderley, Queensland. Cramp, S., ed. 1977-1994. Handbook of the Birds of Europe the Middle East and North Africa. The Birds of the Western Palearctic. vols. 1-9. Oxford Univ. Press. Elgood, J. H. et al. 1994. The Birds of Nigeria. 2nd ed. British Ornithologists' Union Check-list no. 4.

92. Association Of Field Ornithologists
Society of professional and amateur ornithologists with a focus on the Western Hemisphere, particularly the Neotropics. Journal of Field ornithology, banding supplies, organizational info, awards program, NeoOrnithological literature citations, and guide to graduate schools.
http://www.afonet.org/
Association of Field Ornithologists
Español English

93. Ornithology Program Of The Charles Darwin Research Station
In 2001, the program of ornithology is placing more emphasis in beginning to implement the recommendations of the Avian Diseases workshop, held in October 2000
http://www.darwinfoundation.org/terrest/birds.html
Ornithology Program of the Charles Darwin Research Station
A total of 140 species of birds have been registered in Galapagos: 58 residential, 76 migratory, and 6 introduced. Close to 50% of the resident birds are endemic to the Galapagos. Some of these species are currently threatened due to factors associated with human presence.
Some species, such as the mangrove finch (Cactospiza heliobates), the dark-rumped petrel (Pterodroma phaeopygia), the flightless cormorant (Compsohalieus [Nannopterum] harrisi), and the Galapagos penguin (Spheniscus mendiculus), among others, are threatened, in part, due to reduced populations and fluctuating reproductive success.
On the inhabited islands, there are endemic land birds that are facing a critical situation. Tree finches (Certhidea olivacea y Camarhynchus psittacula), the Galapagos dove (Zenaida galapagoensis), vermilion flycatcher (Pyrocephalus rubinus), and the Galapagos rail (Laterallus spilonotus) are increasingly rare on the inhabited islands.
In 2001, the program of ornithology is placing more emphasis in beginning to implement the recommendations of the Avian Diseases workshop, held in October 2000 with participation from 25 specialists. Another important component to the program is increasing research and monitoring activities of marine birds with the goal to support the process of zonification in the Galapagos Marine Reserve.

94. Ornithology
Florida bird songs and photo gallery of Southeastern US birds.
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/natsci/ornithology/ornithology.htm
Florida Museum of Natural History
Florida Bird Songs
Photo Gallery of Southeastern U.S. Birds

Experienced Birders Needed

The egg collection, consisting of 10,400 sets representing 733 species, is 11th largest in North America in number of sets and 15th largest in number of species. It represents approximately 90% of the species and subspecies of North American birds. The egg collection has grown by 1% in the last five years. It is cataloged in a card file that includes original collectors' data slips or page references to the collector's field notes. Especially well represented are sets from New England and Florida. The collection is rich in sets of raptor eggs, including Bald Eagles, Ospreys, Broad-winged Hawks, Red-shouldered Hawks, Crested Caracaras, and American Kestrels, and the Florida races of Seaside Sparrows and Clapper Rails. Rarities include sets of Passenger Pigeon, Carolina Parakeet, and Bachman's Warbler eggs. The bird sound collection, in the FLMNH Bioacoustic Archives, with 14,616 cataloged recordings representing 2,672 species, is perhaps third or fourth largest in the world in number of species. In the western hemisphere it is the second largest in number of species and third largest in number of recordings. We are now processing one of our largest accessions ever, the collection of Ben B. Coffey, Jr., with thousands of high-quality recordings from the southeastern USA and the Neotropics. The sound collection has grown by 20% in the last five years, not counting the Coffey accession. It is cataloged on a card file. Geographical strengths include North America, especially Florida, and the Neotropics, with smaller but notable numbers of recordings from Africa, Australia, and Southeast Asia. Some taxonomic groups especially well represented are tinamous, trogons, woodpeckers, antbirds, New World flycatchers, wrens, New World wood warblers, and corvids.

95. The Ornithology Of Anglo-Saxon England

http://www.kami.demon.co.uk/gesithas/birdlore/fugsrc.html

96. Recent Ornithological Literature Online
Serial compilation of citations and abstracts from the worldwide scientific literature that pertain to birds and the science of ornithology.
http://www.nmnh.si.edu/BIRDNET/ROL/
Back to BIRDNET Recent Ornithological Literature Online An Introduction Revised June 2002 Go to list of issues currently available Recent Ornithological Literature ROL ) is a serial compilation of citations and abstracts from the worldwide scientific literature that pertain to birds and the science of ornithology. The ROL deals chiefly with periodicals, but also announces new and renamed journals and provides abstracts of conference proceedings, reports, doctoral dissertations, and other serial publications. The entries are prepared by scientists who voluntarily scan journals for ornithological articles, generally according to their geographic region and special scientific interests. Papers dealing exclusively with domestic birds and their husbandry are excluded, unless applicable to non-domestic species. The Recent Ornithological Literature ROL ) was published for many years as a printed supplement to The Auk The Emu , or The Ibis In 1998, the societies that publish those journals, the American Ornithologists’ Union , the British Ornithologists’ Union , and Birds Australia (formerly the Royal Australasian Ornithologists’ Union), decided to discontinue the printed version and to switch to an online version instead.

97. Ornithology In Old England
The ornithology of AngloSaxon England. From an article in Ða Engliscan Gesiðas Handboc ©Frank Stanford A list of the bird names
http://www.kami.demon.co.uk/gesithas/birdlore/fugellar.html
The Ornithology of Anglo-Saxon England
From an article in Handboc
Frank Stanford
A list of the bird names appearing in and the sources used in the compilation of this article this article is available for separate reading
he variety and numbers of birds which bred or occurred in Anglo-Saxon England depended on the environment which on the whole was highly favourable. The contemporary interest in birds is shown by their mention in a wide variety of sources and subjects and in an extensive collection of Old English names. The systematic list of bird names and the sources are given later in this paper which is concerned with genuinely wild species and not with non-specific poetic names or with domestic fowl.
Birds and the Environment
The climate, as one of the crucial factors in natural history, has been discussed by Lamb and Hill and the Anglo-Saxon period lies squarely within the 'Little Climatic Optimum' . The warmer, drier summers were one factor which could have extended the range of breeding species further north, including some birds which are now considered Mediterranean or Continental and which only occur as rare vagrants, such as some raptors and fenland species. The natural history was influenced by changes to the environment which consisted mainly of the continuation of forest felling, coppicing and pollarding for building timber and fuel and the spread of cultivated and grazing land. These activities would be exceeded on an increasing scale in later centuries which, with other changes, had a proportional effect on the natural history, including the birds.

98. Naturenet: British Trust For Ornithology
Naturenet homepage. The British Trust for ornithology. BTO Web page. Contact BTO, The National Centre for ornithology, The Nunnery, Thetford, Norfolk IP24 2PU.
http://www.naturenet.net/orgs/bto.html
Naturenet homepage
The British Trust for Ornithology
BTO Web page The BTO is an organisation which is primarily concerned with the scientific study of birds. The most well known aspect of this concerns bird ringing and migration study. The BTO is the body which co-ordinates bird ringing in the UK. In general, all bird ringers working on wild birds must be licensed and trained by the BTO to practice legally. The British Trust for Ornithology has been gathering detailed information on the birds of Britain and Ireland for over 60 years. It does this through over 10,000 members voluntarily doing census work, recording at nests, counting wading birds on estuaries, plotting birds on atlases or ringing (banding) them. There is even a scheme for weekly counts of birds coming into gardens - this has more than 5,000 participants. BTO News is issued every two months. There are also two scientific journals - Bird Study and Ringing and Migration - and several newsletters addressed to amateurs who participate in different schemes. The British Trust for Ornithology also runs meetings nationally and locally, and has a system of Regional Representatives all over the country. Contact: BTO

99. Redirect
Information on a course designed to provide a detailed view of neotropical ornithology.
http://www.studyabroad.com/lasuerte/div.html
Please continue to our new address: http://www.lasuerte.org/

100. OUP: Ornithology
ornithology. Since the first volume of BWP was published in 1977, the ornithology publishing program at Oxford has grown and diversified.
http://www.oup.co.uk/academic/science/ornithology/
VIEW BASKET Quick Links About OUP Career Opportunities Contacts Need help? oup.com Search the Catalogue Site Index American National Biography Booksellers' Information Service Children's Fiction and Poetry Children's Reference Dictionaries Dictionary of National Biography Digital Reference English Language Teaching Higher Education Textbooks Humanities International Education Unit Journals Law Medicine Music Oxford English Dictionary Reference Rights and Permissions Science School Books Social Sciences World's Classics UK and Europe Science Ornithology Searching and Browsing Search the Catalogue Information and Services How to Order Rights and Permissions Science Email News Go To... Bird Families of the World Birds of the Western Palearctic Field Guides Handbooks ... Oxford Ornithology Series
Ornithology
The New Encyclopedia of Birds
  • The definitive single-volume guide to the bird families of the world Beautifully illustrated with spectacular photography of birds in their natural habitats Unsurpassed scholarship presented in everyday language
Albatrosses and Petrels Across the World
Visiting all the world's seas, the 125 species of albatross and petrel are the most oceanic and widespread of all seabirds. In this comprehensive and elegantly written book, Michael Brooke has brought together a wealth of information on all aspects of the biology and conservation of the species.

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