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RSPB Spotlight Crows
Barnes and Noble
RSPB Spotlight Crows
Current price: $18.00
Barnes and Noble
RSPB Spotlight Crows
Current price: $18.00
Size: Paperback
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RSPB Spotlight Crows
is packed with eye-catching, informative colour photos and features succinct, detailed text written by a knowledgeable naturalist.
In
Spotlight Crows
, Mike Unwin looks at the biology and ecology of all eight UK corvids and investigates why these birds have become deeply embedded in our culture, from children's rhymes and Norse mythology to Shakespeare's plays and the poems of Edgar Allen Poe.
Most of the UK's crow speciescarrion crow, hooded crow, rook, jackdaw, raven, chough, magpie and jayare very familiar birds to urban householder and countryside dweller alike. Together they make up the Corvidae family, and they have been deeply intertwined in our lives and culture since prehistoric times.
However, familiarity often breeds contempt, and crowsalso known as corvidshave long attracted a bad press. Reviled as raiders of crops, feeders on carrion, thieves of jewelry and bullies of smaller birds, crows have often found themselves on the wrong end of a shotgun. Yet the more we learn about them, the more fascinating they become.
Behind the behavior some find objectionable lie exceptional intelligence and resourcefulness. These qualities have long captivated scientists and excited the admiration of anyone who takes the time to know crows better.
is packed with eye-catching, informative colour photos and features succinct, detailed text written by a knowledgeable naturalist.
In
Spotlight Crows
, Mike Unwin looks at the biology and ecology of all eight UK corvids and investigates why these birds have become deeply embedded in our culture, from children's rhymes and Norse mythology to Shakespeare's plays and the poems of Edgar Allen Poe.
Most of the UK's crow speciescarrion crow, hooded crow, rook, jackdaw, raven, chough, magpie and jayare very familiar birds to urban householder and countryside dweller alike. Together they make up the Corvidae family, and they have been deeply intertwined in our lives and culture since prehistoric times.
However, familiarity often breeds contempt, and crowsalso known as corvidshave long attracted a bad press. Reviled as raiders of crops, feeders on carrion, thieves of jewelry and bullies of smaller birds, crows have often found themselves on the wrong end of a shotgun. Yet the more we learn about them, the more fascinating they become.
Behind the behavior some find objectionable lie exceptional intelligence and resourcefulness. These qualities have long captivated scientists and excited the admiration of anyone who takes the time to know crows better.