Birds of Vietnam2nd Edition

(1 条用户评价)

$53.94

完整更新的第二版,新增13种在越南新记录的鸟类,修订后的科学名称和英文名称,以及来自**IUCN红色名录(2024)**的最新保护状况。包括更新后的分布地图和优化的物种描述,全方位探索越南丰富多样的鸟类群。

文本语言:英语

查看说明

产品代码 GUI0071V

ISBN: 978-84-16728-72-5 Flexi-cover / 978-84-16728-71-8 Hardback

SKU: GUI0071V 分类: , , , 标签:

重量

1 kg

尺寸

16 × 23 厘米

语言

English

格式

精装, 柔性封面

页面

408

出版日期

2025年3月10日。

出版商

Lynx Nature Books

描述

越南,作为习性隐匿的稀有雉类、如珠宝般华美的八色鸫、羽色艳丽的噪鹛和往往只闻其声难见其影的鹛类的故乡,是亚洲最令人兴奋的新兴起观鸟目的地。该国有16个特有种及特有亚种,还有着42个近乎特有种和亚种,在东南亚大陆国家首屈一指。

本现代化的野外指南全面介绍了越南丰富多样的鸟类群,涵盖 931 种鸟类,并配有详细的文字描述、精美插图和分布地图。

主要特点

  • 全面覆盖 所有 931 种 鸟类,详细描述其状态、栖息地和行为、年龄、性别、地理变异、鸣声及易混淆物种。
  • 超过 1,970 幅高质量插图,精确描绘所有鸟种及显著亚种,包括飞行状态、公鸟、母鸟、幼鸟及非繁殖羽色(如适用)。
  • 每种鸟类均配备二维码,链接至相关音视频资料,提供更深入的观鸟体验。
  • 超过 880 幅全彩分布地图,涵盖所有常见鸟类的地理范围。
  • 显著的亚种群 设有完整描述,并清晰标注各繁殖亚种的分布范围。
  • 包含本地鸟名,提升可读性和实用性。

第二版新增内容

  • 新增鸟种:收录 2018 至 2024 年间 在越南发现的 13 种新鸟类,并提供详细描述、最新保护状态、高质量插图、分布地图以及可链接至音视频资料的二维码。
  • 更新命名系统:所有科学名称和英文名称均根据 HBW 和 BirdLife International《世界鸟类数字核查表》(第 9 版,2024 年) 进行了修订。
  • 保护状态更新:所有鸟种的全球保护状态已根据IUCN 红色名录(2024 年)的最新数据进行调整。
  • 优化分布地图:针对约 30 种鸟类,更新了分布地图,以反映截至 2024 年 的最新观测数据。

本次第二版相较于第一版进行了重大更新,融入了最新的研究成果和发现,为观鸟者和鸟类学家提供最精准、权威、全面的越南鸟类参考指南。

Birds of Vietnam2nd Edition 有 1 个评价

  1. 英语

    Gehan de Silva Wijeyeratne

    Field guides for birds in Asia have come a long way since I first began to bird watch in Asia. Growing up in Sri Lanka I got off to a good start with G. M. Henry’s ‘A Guide to the Birds of Ceylon’ and Dillon Ripley and Salim Ali’s ‘Handbook of the Birds of the Indian Subcontinent’ in 10 volumes. For travels further east into South-east Asia, I used ‘A Field Guide to the Birds of South-East Asia’ by Ben King, Martin Woodcock and E.V. Dickinson. It took nearly another three decades before this was superseded by Craig Robson’s ‘A Field Guide to the Birds of South-East Asia’ in the modern format with every species illustrated in colour on plates. However, the first edition and even the updated edition in 2008 still had the plates and text in separate parts of the book as was the old custom when full colour printing across the whole book was expensive.

    The Handbook of the Birds of the World (HBW) in 17 volumes resulted in the publisher now known as Lynx Nature books having a comprehensive suite of colour illustrations and text for every species of bird in the world. This has placed them placing in an ideal position to produce books which are country specific. The field guides in this spin off series mark an important step change in the development of bird field guides in the world and perhaps more so in part of Asia. Now for many countries we have thoroughly modern field guides with first class illustrations with the species text on a facing page, covering the standard field guide topics on identification, distribution and behaviour. These guides are not important only tools in the hands of scientists and conservationists but they also play an important part in the development of wildlife tourism which provides a further economic impetus to conserve the last remaining wildernesses.

    As this book makes clear, Vietnam is a special place for birding with 931 species, 16 endemics and 42 near endemics. Vietnam at one time suffered from the perception that its biodiversity had been largely lost due to human pressures with forests being replaced by agricultural land. In 2006, ‘Vietnam: A Natural History’ by Eleanor Janes Sterling, Martha Maud Hurley and Le Duc Minh’ sought to dispel this myth by providing a fine all-round account of its natural history and outlining many of the exciting recent discoveries of new species not alone with its flora but even with vertebrate species. Nevertheless, Vietnam continues to be still under-appreciated as a birding destination despite the efforts of people like lead author Richard Craik who has been leading birding tours in the country. However, a second edition, 6 years after the first suggests that perceptions on Vietnam’s wildlife potential is changing for the better.

    The field guide follows the standard formula for field guides in the Lynx series with the text updated and supplemented by local experts, in this case Richard Craik and Lê Quý Minh. The QR codes take you to the eBird website for supplementary information, images and most usefully sound recordings from the Macaulay Library. The growth of citizen science and the wealth of information that is available now and is being continuously updated is phenomenal and is another essay in itself.

    The inner front cover shows Vietnam in relation to its South-east Asian neighbours and the inner back cover marks out 18 of the top birding sites in Vietnam. The first 19 pages of the preliminary sections include an overview of the country’s recent ornithological exploration history, a geographical overview, a summary of key habitat types and a synopsis of the important birding hotspots. There is also an important note on avoiding harm to birds from tape playback and the dangers of baiting at feeding stations and photographic hides resulting in local extinction due to the illegal activity of bird trappers. Conservation in Asia is never easy and even wildlife tourism which is generally a good thing can have unintended consequences.

    29 artists are credited with the illustrations, many of which first appeared in HBW. Many of the artists are household names to keen birders who know them for producing some of the finest field guide illustrations in the world. Combine that with first class text, clear distribution maps and QR codes and you are left with an absolutely superb book. The species accounts have the families separated by a shaded header with brief details of the number of extant species in the family and that in the region. The text in addition to describing the bird’s status in Vietnam briefly outlines any sub-species in the region, followed by typical habitat, identification-oriented text, voice and also describes similar species. This is a functional book intended for field use (the flexi-cover option has a water resistant cover). Nevertheless, I find the quality of the overall production and beauty of the artwork also lends the book a certain aesthetic appeal. But then, I enjoy the company of ornithological books and I still have in my collection the books by Ali and Ripley, King, Robson and many more from the Asian region.

    Despite multiple visits to some countries in Asia and several natural history book titles on Vietnam in my book collection, I have not yet birded in Vietnam. But with this book on my shelf, I think it will not be long before I go to Vietnam.

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