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Hawks of North
America
by William S. Clark and
Brian K. Wheeler
2001. Second Edition. New York:
Houghton Mifflin Company. Vinyl-bound, $22.00. ISBN 0-395-67067-5.
This book in the Peterson Field Guide
series deals with all the diurnal raptors of North America, and is
substantially revised from a first edition. At first glance, this book has true
field guide dimensions, a tough, flexible cover, and excellent binding, and it
should survive years of serious field use. Following a brief introduction,
which includes a useful glossary, this book is divided into two main
sections.
The first section comprises forty
plates by Wheeler. These are generally excellent, dealing with an abundance of
subspecies, morphs and ages, and the artists knowledge of the subtleties
of these individual plumages is palpable. The four plates that contain over 40
images of Red-tailed Hawk Buteo jamaicensis subspecies may be worth the
cost of the book alone, and surpass the treatment of these taxa by other recent
guides. Regrettably, the color reproduction of some plates is anemic, and this
especially detracts from those that illustrate the falcons. Wheeler has a
tendency to paint some birds as bulkier than they usually appear in life (e.g.,
the flying Golden Eagles Aquila chrysaetos on Plate 32 look positively
Buteo-like). Given the importance of structure and proportions in the
flight identification of raptors this is unfortunate, but most plates are
valuable nonetheless.
The second main section consists of
the individual species accounts, which are clear and concise, and provide
information that goes well beyond the mainstream field guides. Each account
includes subsections giving detailed descriptions (further subdivided by
morphs, ages, and unusual plumages), similar species, appearance in flight,
molt, behavior, status and distribution (including detailed four-tone
distribution maps), fine points, subspecies, etymology, and measurements. The
accounts include a scattering of captioned colour photographs, which are
superbly reproduced and augment the text considerably. Even more photos would
have been useful, but the authors other joint venture, the
Photographic Guide to North American Raptors (Academic Press, 1995), is
a useful companion to this book. Presumably in an attempt to save some space,
the accounts for different species almost run into one another. Beginning each
account on a new page, and using the minimal extra space generated for
additional photographs, would have added few extra pages to the length of the
book, but would certainly have made navigating the text easier. Although the
distribution maps are accurate, it is a little disappointing that no attempt
was made to map the discrete distributions of separate subspecies. On a related
issue, the use of English names only for subspecies is unhelpful. Those who are
unfamiliar with the English names for Red-tailed Hawk subspecies, for example,
are left jumping back-and-forth from the subspecies section in order to
interpret some of the main text and the plate captions. If English names must
be used for subspecies, then at least provide the scientific name alongside
(the authors are inconsistent here, because they do use scientific names only
for Merlin Falco columbarius subspecies).
Despite some minor concerns, this
excellent guide packs an immense amount of information into a small space, and
should be invaluable to birders in the Central Valley and beyond. I strongly
recommend it.
Jon R. King
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