An essential field guide companion covering species pairs or groups that are difficult to identify
Whooper and Bewick’s Swans, Grey geese; Snow and Ross’s Geese;
Canada and Cackling Geese; Brent Geese; Mandarin and Wood Ducks;
Eurasian and American Wigeon; Large dabbling ducks in late summer
and autumn: Mallard, Gadwall, Pintail and Shoveler; Small dabbling
ducks: Common, Green-winged and Blue-winged Teals, and Garganey;
Aythya ducks: Greater and Lesser Scaup, Ring-necked Duck,
Ferruginous Duck and hybrids; Eiders: females, immatures and
eclipse males; Scoters; Goosander and Red-breasted Merganser;
Divers; Great and Cory’s Shearwaters; Manx, Balearic and Sooty
Shearwaters; Storm, Leach’s and Wilson’s Petrels; Slavonian,
Black-necked and Red-necked Grebes; Bittern and Night Heron; Purple
Heron; Egrets; Cormorant and Shag; Red and Black Kites; Hen,
Montagu’s, Pallid and Northern Harriers; Sparrowhawk and Goshawk;
Common, Rough-legged and Honey Buzzards; Golden and White-tailed
Eagles; Falcons: Peregrine, Merlin, Hobby and Red-footed Falcon;
Ringed, Little Ringed and Kentish Plovers; Large plovers: Grey,
European Golden, American Golden and Pacific Golden Plovers, and
Dotterel; Little Stint, Temminck’s Stints and Sanderling; The rare
stints: Semipalmated, Western and Least Sandpipers, and Red-necked
and Long-toed Stints; Baird’s and White-rumped Sandpipers; Dunlin,
Curlew Sandpiper, Broad-billed Sandpiper and Knot; Ruff,
Buff-breasted Sandpiper and Pectoral Sandpiper; Common, Jack and
Great Snipe; Godwits; Curlew and Whimbrel; Common and Spotted
Sandpipers; Green and Wood Sandpipers; Redshank, Spotted Redshank,
Greenshank and Marsh Sandpiper; Lesser and Greater Yellowlegs;
Phalaropes; Arctic, Pomarine and Long-tailed Skuas; Kittiwake,
Little and Sabine’s Gulls; Mediterranean Gull; Ring-billed Gull;
Herring, Lesser Black-backed and Great Black-backed Gulls;
Yellow-legged and Caspian Gulls; Glaucous and Iceland Gulls;
Gull-billed and Sandwich Terns; Marsh terns – Black, White-winged
Black, American Black and Whiskered Terns; Common, Arctic and
Roseate Terns; Auks; Pigeons and doves; Long-eared and Short-eared
Owls; Common, Pallid and Alpine Swifts; Red-backed, Turkestan,
Daurian, Brown, Woodchat and Masked Shrikes; Great Grey, Lesser
Grey and Steppe Grey Shrikes Crows: Carrion Crow, Rook, Raven,
Jackdaw and Chough; Marsh and Willow Tits; Skylark, Woodlark and
Short-toed Lark; Red-rumped Swallow; Cetti’s Warbler; Greenish and
Arctic Warblers; Yellow-browed, Hume’s and Pallas’s Warblers;
Goldcrest and Firecrest; Radde’s and Dusky Warblers; Wood Warbler,
Western and Eastern Bonelli’s Warblers; Willow Warbler and the
chiffchaffs; Aquatic Warbler; Unstreaked Acrocephalus warblers;
Iduna warblers: Booted, Sykes’s and Eastern Olivaceous Warblers;
Hippolais warblers: Melodious and Icterine Warblers; Locustella
warblers: Grasshopper, Savi’s and River Warblers; Sylvia warblers:
Common Whitethroat, Lesser Whitethroat, Subalpine, Garden and
Barred Warblers; Rose-coloured Starling; Ring Ouzel and Blackbird;
Song Thrush and Mistle Thrush; Common and Thrush Nightingales;
Common and Black Redstarts;
European Stonechat, Eastern Stonechat and Whinchat; House and Tree
Sparrows; Grey, Yellow, Eastern Yellow and Citrine Wagtails; Pied
and White Wagtails; Tawny, Richard’s and Blyth’s Pipits; Small
pipits: Meadow, Tree, Red-throated, Olive-backed and Pechora
Pipits; Rock, Water and Buff-bellied Pipits; Green finches:
Greenfinch, Siskin and Serin; Linnet, Twite and Common Rosefinch;
Lesser, Mealy and Arctic Redpolls; Common, Parrot, Scottish and
Two-barred Crossbills; Cirl Bunting and Yellowhammer; Reed, Little,
Rustic and Lapland Buntings
Keith Vinicombe is an ornithologist and bird
identification expert. Keith has served on both the British Birds
Rarities Committee and the BOU Records Committee; he is
identification consultant to Birdwatch magazine, and has written
extensively on bird identification in Birdwatch and other journals,
including Birding World and British Birds.
Alan Harris has been a bird artist since 1980. His work
includes a number of ground-breaking ornithological books,
including Helm Identification Guides such as Sylvia Warblers,
Kingfishers, Bee-eaters and Rollers and Finches and Sparrows, as
well as contributions to field guides such as Birds of the Indian
Subcontinent, Birds of Japan and Birds of Argentina. Alan has been
Art Consultant to British Birds magazine since 1988.
For beginner and intermediate-level birders, there's plenty of
information to soak up; plenty to learn about. And for those more
seasoned among us, it'll act as an extremely useful identification
reference on many of the more pressing quandaries relevant to
British (and European) birders in contemporary times.
*Birdwatch*
A godsend to anyone wanting to tell a bar-tailed from a
black-tailed godwit, a firecrest from a goldcrest or a greenfinch
from a siskin.
*Daily Express*
This major revision of a classic guide is a resounding success. Its
greater dimensions, its greater number of species and its more
in-depth treatments are ample testimony both to the advances of the
last twenty-five years and to the knowledge and skill of its author
and artist in condensing them so well.
*Andy Stoddart, Rare Bird Alert*
A helpful new book … It is carefully detailed but it is also
agreeably written.
*The Times*
This is a wonderful book for any birding enthusiast, and a very
useful companion to a good standard field guide. If it’s not
already on your wildlife bookshelf, I heartily recommend adding
it.
*Ireland's Wildlife*
A great source of reference to help us tackle those birds we all
come across while birding or surveying that we struggle with.
*BTO News*
This is an indispensable addition to your library.
*Scottish Birds*
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