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Ecology and Behavior of Chickadees and Titmice
An Integrated Approach

Edited by Ken A. Otter

Price: £55.00 (hardback)
ISBN-13: 978-0-19-856999-2
Publication date: 1 February 2007
344 pages, 79 illus., 246x189 mm
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This book is available in Oxford Scholarship Online

Reviews
  • 'I would recommend it as an excellent starting point for any research scientist wishing to learn more about the North American Paridae. Ibis (2008), 150, 200-213' -
  • ''..phenomenally important book that should be in the library of every ornithologist, whether they study chickadees or not.'...This book is on a par with the classic works by Perrins (1979) and Smith (1991).' The Auk 124 (4) 1461-1463, 2007' -

Description
  • Contributions from the leading research teams involved with Parid research
  • Focuses on major research themes, including proximate mechanisms in behaviour and evolution, reproductive ecology and behaviour, communication and conservation
  • Compares and contrasts research findings on the Paridae of the New World with those of their Old World relatives (e.g. blue and great tits)
  • Highlights directions for future research and collaboration
Chickadees and titmice are among the most popular birds in North America, due in large part to their readiness to use bird feeders, to nest in urban gardens, and even to be trained to take food from people's hands. These attributes have also made them (and their Eurasian tit counterparts) perhaps the most intensively studied bird family in the world. Long-term research in Europe has yielded some of the most comprehensive data on the impact of global warming on the breeding ecology of birds. Chickadees have amongst the best-studied and most complex vocal behaviour of any bird species, displaying one of the closest analogies to human sentence structure in the animal kingdom in their familiar chick-a-dee call. The social dominance hierarchies commonly witnessed in the form of squabbling at winter feeders are some of most stable and closely studied, and have huge impacts on controlling the lives of these small birds. Their food-storing behavior, and the brain and physiological mechanisms controlling this, has contributed significantly to our wider understanding of spatial orientation. In recent years, these birds have also been used as model species for investigating topics as diverse as inter-species hybridization, the impacts of forest fragmentation and complex systems of communication. In short, chickadees and titmice have contributed enormously to our understanding of a myriad of topics in ecology, behavior and psychology.
This book brings together a range of experts from across North America who utilise chickadees or titmice as study organisms. Each chapter reviews the latest advances in evolution and behavioral research that have been accomplished through the study of North American Parids, and compares and contrasts this literature with research on their Eurasian counterparts as well as other avian families.

This research level text is aimed at professional avian biologists and ornithologists as well as graduate students of avian behavioral ecology and evolution. It will also appeal to a more general audience of behavioural ecologists, neuroethologists and experimental psychologists.

Readership: This book is aimed at professional avian biologists and ornithologists as well as graduate students of avian behavioural ecology and evolution, but will also be of interest behavioural ecologists, neuroethologists and experimental psychologists

Authors, editors, and contributors


Edited by Ken A. Otter, Ecosystem Science & Management Program, University of Northern British Columbia


Links to web resources and related information
Link to author's website


More in the same subject area:
Birds (ornithology
Animal ecology
Conservation of wildlife & habitats

The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.

 
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