| A Field Guide to the Birds of Brazil |  | Author: Ber van Perlo Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA Category: Book
List Price: $39.95 Buy New: $28.76 as of 9/10/2010 22:04 EDT details You Save: $11.19 (28%)
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Seller: Amazon.com Rating: 15 reviews Sales Rank: 244,949
Media: Paperback Pages: 480 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.3 Dimensions (in): 9.2 x 6.4 x 1.1
ISBN: 0195301552 Dewey Decimal Number: 598.0981 EAN: 9780195301557 ASIN: 0195301552
Publication Date: October 9, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description Brazil's bird diversity is one of the richest in the world. And yet there has never been a comprehensive field guide to this splendid and elusive avifauna. Until now. The carefully vetted text and images are the first to cover the full range of bird life in this vast and varied country. The more than 1800 up-to-date accounts treat the Yellow-nosed Albatross to the Sombre Hummingbird, the Ash-throated Gnat-eater to the Black-bellied Whistling-Duck, Nighthawks and Jacamars to Motmots, Puffbirds, and Peppershrikes. They are all here--every species and many subspecies found in each region of Brazil--with special attention given to the 218 Brazilian endemics. The book is laid out so that the illustrations sit across from the commentary and the distribution maps, so it is easy to use. Also, the author uses short-hand notation throughout, to make the book compact and easy to carry when in the field. For each bird, the scientific, English, and Portuguese name are given as well as detailed information on measurement; identifying features; habitat; voice, song, and call. Distribution maps show the range for each species, also indicating seasonality and occurrence, essential for finding and identifying specific birds. From the equatorial North to the tropics, the introductory paragraphs set the stage in describing Brazil's varied biogeography, climate, geomorphology, and natural vegetation. A list of protected areas of Brazil, information on relevant national and international organizations, a bibliography and further references, and an English-Portuguese dictionary of frequently used terms enhance the user-friendly qualities. Anyone wishing to fully explore the fabulously varied bird life of Brazil will find this light-weight, easy-to-use, attractive guide an invaluable field companion.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 15
Good complete guide that you must take to Brazil September 23, 2009 Soleglad (Arizona, USA) 26 out of 26 found this review helpful
Basics: softcover, 187 color plates of all 1,800+ species in Brazil; short paragraph of minimal identification or description notes along with simple description of the voice; brief habitat notes; a 9-colored range map for each bird
This book is one of very few books to cover all the birds of Brazil. The other books available today (Sep 2009) either have inferior artwork (Souza) or no identification text (Sigrist) or cover only the passerines from the entire continent (Ridgely). Without a doubt, you'll want and need this book when birding in Brazil. It's a bit larger (9.5 x 6.5 inches) and heavier than a usual smaller field guide, but its content makes it a requirement to be carried in your larger pocket.
The bulk of this book is its 187 color plates which illustrate all 1,800+ species in the country. Each plate contains about 10 species with multiple illustrations of each for about 80% of the birds. It seems most of the birds with only one illustration are the passerines, notably the woodcreepers, spintetails, foliage-gleaners, antpittas, and much of the flycatcher family. The multiple illustrations of a bird depict the gender differences and the plumage variations between some of the races and subspecies; however, these races are not always identified in the text. The plates often only refer to the variations with an "a" or "b" next to them.
The quality of the artwork between the plates varies between simply okay to good. As an example, the pelican, herons, tropicbirds, owls, some hummingbirds, puffbirds, tapaculos, and tityras can be sketchy, as if a first good draft was sufficient enough for this initial publication. In contrast, the artistry and detail can be quite nice in some of the woodcreepers, antbirds, flycatchers, and warblers. As a last note on the plates, some of the illustrations lean towards the smaller size. Some are simply too small (e.g., the Purpletufts) and leave much of the page as blank white space. There is definitely room to enlarge many of the birds. I suspect the smaller size was an artifact of trying to maintain relative size with the other species on the plate.
Each bird receives a brief paragraph (4-10 short lines) across from its plate. This information is very concise and often provides only the minimum of information on identification. As an example, the description on the Brown-breasted Pygmy-Tyrant simply says, "Loral spot is buff, not white". The Klages's Antwren reads, "Resembles [bird] 106.2 but less extensive streaking below". These tidbits are helpful, but lack depth or additional notes that will be needed for many of the similar birds in Brazil. For a few of the birds, some short notes are given to differentiate between the more frustratingly similar birds. The remainder of the paragraph consists of a sentence describing the voice and another partial sentence on the bird's preferred habitat.
Next to the bird's text is a small map showing the range within Brazil. This range is not shown extending beyond the country's borders. To help give more accuracy or reference with the range, the Brazilian states are outlined and some major rivers are included. Except for some of the tiny dots representing limited ranges, the maps do a good job at being visible. Three different shades of blue, red, and green denote the abundance (aka, likelihood of finding) of the birds in winter, summer, and year-round residency.
I like the inclusion of a list of all 218 Brazilian endemics at the rear of the book along with the plate number on which the bird can be seen. An attempt to highlight the endemism of the species in the plates was done by using a blue font for the bird's name. Unfortunately, this did not print well and you must look intently at the lettering to discern if the word is black versus almost-black-but-not-quite. The code of "En" is put at the end of the bird's text as well.
As a last note, the taxonomic order of the birds mostly follows conventional practice. However, as the author noted in the introduction, some of the birds have been relocated to be next to "like groups". Consequently, it took me a while to find the tinamous. Normally located on the first plate, these birds were found later on plate 27 between the hawks and guans.
This is a most welcome book and is definitely the best guide available today. You must have this book if you're serious about birding in Brazil. It will be nice to see two new Brazilian bird books by Zimmer (2010) and by Grantsau (2010). -- (written by Soleglad at Avian Review / Avian Books, September 2009)
For Brazil it's the Only Game in Town... October 28, 2009 S. Paci (New York, NY) 8 out of 8 found this review helpful
As other reviewers have noted, at the moment, this is the only manageably-sized field guide in print that covers the all the birds of Brazil. Several other field guides are currently in the works (most notably Kevin Zimmer, and I believe Bret Whitney is also working on one) so hopefully within a few years there will be plenty of choice. However, if you are going to Brazil now, despite its shortcomings, you need this book.
A big disapointment is that the Illustrations are really fairly poor for the most part. Van Perlo is just not that good an illustrator. Also, the design of the color plates is not good, with many bird images being tiny little specks on a big sea of blank page. Most of the illustrations seem good enough to ID the species, which I guess is the point, but you will not sit down with this book and just love looking thru the illustrations.
Other than this, the book seems well thought out. I just got it, so I haven't used it in the field or even sat down for a good long study session. The plates are on the right hand side and the corresponding text and range maps are on the left. Because Brazil is so big, it is useful to have detailed range maps that cover only it and not all of SA.
Much better, much more beautiful and much larger and more useful illustrations can be found in the new Ridgely/Tudor passerines book, though this one is large and heavy (even in paperback) and covers all of SA. On a trip to Brazil, I'd take the Perlo, but I'd also take Ridgely/Tudor. On a trip to Peru this summer, my guide and I were only able to ID several difficult birds by checking the excellent, accurate illustrations in Ridgely/Tudor.
Other books you could take, if you still have room in your luggage and have been doing your weight training at the gym, are the two Princeton illustrated checklists for the Non-Passerines of SA and (for southern Brazil) the birds of Southern SA. These are both fairly small in size and are pretty useful in the field.
Beautiful and Complete Book September 22, 2009 Stephen Y. Paez (Miami, Florida, USA) 5 out of 5 found this review helpful
Have to say that I can't put the book down. Well-made book and very complete. All species covered and illustrated (including many subspecies) with brief data and excellent maps (highlighting States and main cities) adjacent. I have all of Mr. Van Perlo's books and this one is probably the best one (though the Mexico/Central America is my personal favorite). The book is a little larger than his other books. Resilient-looking soft cover.
Just a bit larger than necessary. October 9, 2009 Robert K. Furrer (Sempach, Switzerland) 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
There is not much to be added to the previous reviews. But I must say that I have somewhat mixed feelings about this book..
On the one hand, I very much like its contents, as far as I can tell from a brief first inspection. Overall, very fine illustrations, and the book has the classic layout with the text AND range maps both being opposite the plates.
So why my mixed feelings? Well, this is a field guide, and it is unnecessarily large. For one, there is a broad (21 mm wide) grey band at the top that I consider basically superfluous. The page and plate numbers could have been fitted without that band. Overall, I think a full inch or 25 mm could have been lopped off in the book's height. And at least one cm could have been taken off in its width as well. That would have resulted in a book that would be quite a bit more compact. As it is now, many plates look like there is an awful lot of white space all around the illustrations. And if the publishers had chosen a print with just slightly less space between the lines, the book could have been made even more compact.
Somehow, I can't avoid the suspicion that there will be a more compact version in the future, after everbody has bought the large one. Doesn't this look like a business strategy we already know from other field guides? It may make economic sense, but it does not further the goodwill of the buyers. I have now made it my policy that I only get the more compact version if I really visit the area. Alternatively, one might also opt for not buying this book now, waiting for the more compact version, or the forthcoming competing books if one has no plans to visit the area in the near future.
Simply invaluable January 15, 2010 Midwest Book Review (Oregon, WI USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Any birdwatcher planning a trip to Brazil needs A Field Guide to the Birds of Brazil. It is the first modern, in-depth guide to Brazil's birds and offers information on size, call and identifying features for nearly 2,000 birds. Clear color drawings pack a portable dictionary including an English-Portuguese dictionary especially for birders and some 1,700 species-distribution maps. Simply invaluable.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 15
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