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The Unfeathered Bird – Katrina van Grouw

July 17, 2013
by

BOOK REVIEW

The Unfeathered Bird
Katrina van Grouw
Princeton University Press, NJ & Oxford, 2013, 287 pgs, $49.95.

This blog hasn’t posted book reviews in the past – we prefer to stick to issues concerning our chapter and local birds and not deluge our readers with email – but this book demands special attention. It is stunning, beautiful, mind-boggling, fascinating, and other space-hogging superlatives. It is not just a book, but a work of art, lovely, wonderful just to leaf through, drinking in the beauty and detail of hundreds of images. It is not just a work of art, it is a book, filled with fascinating bits of information, yet not random or disconnected, but woven together into a complete book. Even the print type is perfect: elegant, yet easily readable. I could go on, but I’d rather let you see some images and read some text for yourself. [Note – the images presented here do not do justice to the originals as they are both file-compressed and size-reduced.]

European Robin

European Robin with worm

The book is organized is what seems at first a peculiar manner, following the original 1758 Systema Naturae of Linnaeus. Not only does this work well, as the reader quickly realizes, but it awakens in us a new-found respect for Linnaeus’ magnificent obsession: to organize all living beings in a sensible manner, ending confusion for all time. The alterations to his structure made since then by legions of scientists are beyond count, but Linnaeus, for the most part, got it right. It is such alterations that author van Grouw chose to avoid, as she explains in her introduction:

My answer – a somewhat unorthodox one – was to turn modern classification on its head and to base my order of chapters on a system that is concerned only with outward structural appearances….rapacious birds, swimming birds, gallinaceous birds, and so on are grouped together according to convergent evolution….I’ve attempted to place groups that are superficially similar next to each other for ease of comparison. Thus storks are next to cranes and swifts next to swallows. The actual relationships are discussed within the text at some length.

Part One concerns generic avian structures: trunk, head, neck, hind limbs, wings, and tail.  The much longer Part Two illustrates and discusses most modern families, arranged into Linnaeus’ schema: Accipitres, Picae, Anseres, Grallae, Gallinae and Passeres. You’ll have to read the book to find out which family falls into which of these groups, but if you know what these six names refer to and guess where the families fall, you’ll be close. Hint: Anseres includes ducks and penguins; Passeres includes pigeons, swifts and passerines. The book explains why. And it works.

Let’s sample some artwork and text without my comments.

Woodpecker skull & tongue

Woodpecker skull & tongue – note groove around eye in right figure

Pgs 78-79 – Woodpeckers
The characteristic head shape of wood-pecking woodpeckers – with the braincase above the level of the bill – is another clue to their specialism. Simple but effective; this is to place the brain safely above the trajectory of impact. Any forces that do reach the cranium are absorbed by the thickened bone; its pockmarked surface a distinctive feature of woodpecker skulls. The skull of the excavating specialists also meets the neck at an almost perpendicular angle so that the bill faces the tree trunk rather than pointing vertically upward. This enables the bill to strike the wood at right angles to it with a smooth swinging motion like using a hammer and to avoid the jarring that would result from a forward thrust….They do, however, share one important attribute that has been the key to their success – an extensible tongue.  The basic structure of this organ is the same as in all birds: a tongue anchored to the floor of the mouth just in front of the opening to the windpipe, where it divides into two branches called hyoid horns. These “horns” extend backward along the inside of the lower jaw and behind the ear openings, hugging the back of the skull. In most birds the tongue cannot be extended beyond the tip of the bill, but woodpeckers, among others, are an exception. Their long tongue, tipped with various barbs or bristles and coated with sticky saliva from a well-developed salivary gland at the base of the jaw, can be shot out rapidly to trap insects. It’s all achieved by the action of the muscles surrounding the flexible and whip-like hyoid horns. But the horns do need to be considerably longer than those of other birds. So long are they in some species that they meet at the back of the head, extending right over the top of the cranium along a channel in the skull and may even twirl around the right eyeball or plunge into the right nostril. When the bird is feeding the slack in the hyoid horns is pulled sharply taut, thrusting the tongue forward.

Pg 122 – Grebes
The attractively striped chicks spend their first few weeks of life being carried on their parents’ back. Among more “normal” foodstuffs, the chicks are fed on feathers that the adults pluck from their breast and flanks. The adults eat these, too, and they are thought to serve as a wrapping for fish bones and other indigestible material ejected from the mouth as pellets.

Storm Petrel dancing on the water

Storm Petrel dancing on the water

Pg 130 – Storm petrels
In all petrels the upper arm and forearm bones are of approximately equal length. It’s the length of the hand that varies, and in general the larger the bird, the smaller the hand. Albatrosses have really long “arms” but small “hands.” But in storm petrels it’s the other way around. The section from the wrist to the wingtip is significantly longer than the bones of the upper and lower arm. They correspondingly have more functional primary flight feathers (attached to the hand) and fewer secondary flight feathers (attached to the arm) than do albatrosses. The breastbone, too, is long, and the wishbone curves outward to give the maximum area for the attachment of the well-developed flight muscles. Storm petrels may not be able to soar effortlessly for long periods like their long-winged cousins, but they can fly like butterflies and change direction with the slightest movement.

Their nocturnal habits are facilitated by their strong sense of smell – unusual in birds but common to most petrels whose well-developed olfactory apparatus is linked with the characteristic tubular nostrils. The birds use their sense of smell to locate and identify their nest site, find food, and even recognize one another. Indeed, most petrels have a pungent odor, but most breed in inaccessible areas such as islands and stacks, free from mammalian predators that would be able to detect them in this way. The aroma of storm petrels is sensual and complex; as enigmatic as the birds themselves.

Pg 178 – Storks
Considering storks as waterbirds, the carrion-eating habits of Marabou Storks seem rather incongruous. This habit was conveniently rationalized when researchers pioneering DNA hybridization techniques in the 1980s revealed the storks’ closest living relatives to be, not the herons, nor even the ibises and spoonbills, but the New World vultures.  In fact, some late nineteenth-century taxonomists had arrived at the same conclusion from a purely anatomical standpoint. The two groups certainly do share many similarities, including the bare facial skin and soaring flight. However, more recent molecular studies have blasted this theory – at least for now: Marabou Storks are probably not, after, long-legged vultures but simply rather vulturesque storks.

Pg 194 – Plovers
The plovers hunt by sight rather than by touch. In most, the bill is shorter, for aimed pecks rather than opportunistic probing, and their eyes are much larger than those of the sandpipers. In fact plovers are also nocturnal feeders, so having large eyes maximizes the amount of light hitting the retina. They also have a high density of rod cells in the eye, which aids vision under poor light conditions, though at the expense of some color perception. Like those of the woodcocks, plovers’ eyes are raised above the level of the cranium, but these are directed much farther forward to give the birds the good field of binocular vision they need. Stone curlews, too – same order, different family – have similarly large eyes to help with night feeding.
[End of excerpted portions]
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You may have noticed that the images are not merely of bare bones lying there – most of them depict active birds, in motion, doing things. In my experience, this is utterly unique. Not only is the text graceful and uncluttered, but highly informative and always interesting. I’ve been a bird lover for almost 40 years, but I quite literally learned something new on every page. It’s a book, it’s a work of art, it’s both. It is unique.

All book reviews are supposed to be critical in nature and thus must point out shortcomings, even if they don’t amount to much. I had two points which I presented to the author, whose explanation follows my comment.

1. No drawing(s) at the beginning of the book of a generic bird with labels on all the various bones, organs & muscles mentioned in the text. Von Grouw replies: “I did consider the generic bird idea, but dismissed it early on as being unnecessary….Firstly, an illustration with pointer arrows labeling the different parts would be rather like a textbook diagram, which is the very thing I was trying to avoid. Everything in The Unfeathered Bird is a deliberate antithesis of the textbook stereotype! Secondly, you’ll notice that I went to great lengths to avoid the use of any jargon. This was to make readers who are unfamiliar with technical anatomical terms feel more comfortable reading the text and, again, to make it seem less like a textbook. So it would have seemed a bit strange to then label a diagram with technical terms that were not used in the text, or a bit unscientific to label it with descriptive terms that speak for themselves like ‘upper arm’ and ‘breastbone’.”

2. More complete index – the text was so interesting and useful that I was disappointed to find the index didn’t really cover it, only the pictures. Von Grouw replies: “…we (the publishers and myself) kept [the index] deliberately brief for the same reason – the avoidance of textbookishness and the desire to keep it simple. But if I’d made the Index bigger there would have been less room in my 304 pages for the content of the book, so something would have had to go. Every page was precious!”

My quibbles are minor; I find Von Grouw’s explanations entirely satisfactory.

The author lives in England not far from Oxford, is a former curator of the ornithological collections at London’s Natural History Museum, hikes in the nearby hills where she enjoys Neolithic and Iron Age earthworks, hill forts, flowers, butterflies and the occasional horse figure cut into white chalk downs. Her current project is Unnatural Selection, a similar book about about domesticated birds and mammals, which  she describes as “a sort of update of Darwin’s ‘Variations’ in which he used domesticated animals to explain evolution by natural selection.”  Following that will be a book about mammals, which I hope includes a few hominids.

Link to the book’s website: http://www.unfeatheredbird.com/index.html

The book is available at the Los Angeles Public Library but after reading it you’ll want to have your own copy. If my review hasn’t convinced you to buy it, here’s a Barnes & Noble  interview with the author, featuring many more pictures.   [Chuck Almdale]

Puffins! Live! and other Wildlife Cameras

July 14, 2013

 Puffins were the first birds ever to capture my interest. Starting at age 10, I collected postage stamps for a couple of years, and my favorites were a series of puffin stamps issued by the short-lived independent nation of Puffin Island, which in reality was a small islet somewhere off the coast of England.  Apparently its independence lasted just long enough to run off a load of stamps before the British government landed a boat and shut them down.  Their validity as true postage stamps was a bit “dodgy” as the Brits might say, but they were lovely portraits of beautiful birds.  Alas, long since gone, as is the nation which issued them.

However, you can see live Atlantic Puffins right now, in the comfort of your very own home as they cavort on the rocks of Seal Island National Wildlife Refuge off the coast of Maine, accompanied, of course, by their friends the terns.  There are a few decoys in the bunch which will never move, and occasionally the camera freezes up. Be patient, or re-load the site, and you will be rewarded.
http://explore.org/#!/live-cams/player/puffin-loafing-ledge-cam

What’s more, you can see one fuzzball puffin chick, doodling about in it’s burrow, waiting for the occasional feeding from a parent.
http://explore.org/#!/live-cams/player/puffin-burrow-cam

If for some reason those links don’t work for you – they occasionally go wonky – here’s the main Audubon page for all their live cams. I counted 51 different cams.  http://explore.org/#!/live-cams/player

Now go and while away the hours.
[Chuck Almdale]

The Plovers are coming! The plovers are coming!

July 10, 2013
by

As close to Independence Day as we’ve recorded in L.A. County. The vanguard of the Snowy Plover flock made its appearance at two beaches today. I was surprised to see a female land right in front of Lifeguard Station 6 on Santa Monica Beach this afternoon, a good 10 days earlier than the first record of the year in my memory. When I sent a text message to Stacey Vigallon, the LA Audubon coordinator, she answered that she had seen Plovers at Malibu Lagoon this morning. They are expected to live on our beaches through the month of April. Welcome, Little Guys!

Kestrel Photoshow

July 7, 2013

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Go to the blog to see all 21 pictures in the slideshow.  For the most part the photos are self-explanatory.

With two exceptions, the photos were taken on June 17, 2013. Two nests were involved, with significant age differences between the two groups of nestlings.

Kestrel Team Leader, Don McCartney, provided the following comment on Kestrel chick meals, which sheds light on some of the pictures.

Quite a handful - now I know why the parents build nests  (Don & Diana Roberts 6/17/13)

Quite a handful – now I know why the parents build nests
(Don & Diana Roberts 6/17/13)

We have documented some of the rather amazing eating habits of nestling Kestrels. One photo, taken in Wisconsin in 2005, shows an approximately 18-day old female slooowly devouring a snake. Another photo shows a little glutton on the Crooked River Ranch, who was being retrieved for banding from its nestbox by volunteer Marilynne Keyser. Several photos show close-ups of the bird as it devours a western fence lizard. It’s too bad that we didn’t have the time to check on the progress of the nestling/lizard situation a day or two later.

Looks like a western fence lizard  (Don & Diana Roberts 6/17/13)

It’s a western fence lizard
(Don & Diana Roberts 6/17/13)

How do they do this? Once the chicks reach a certain size, the adults drop the intact reptile in the box rather than tearing them to pieces. Specialized mouth parts, including the median ridge, keep the prey progressing inward while allowing the nestling to breathe. It is very often interesting to check the remains of prey in the boxes to discover the animals on which the Kestrels have been dining.

*****************
Photographers Don & Diana Roberts live in the small town of Prineville, northeast of Bend, Oregon, just east of the central Cascade Mountains. Don is a professional fly fisherman, photographer and writer; Diana is an avid birder and photographer, as is Marilynne Keyser, the intrepid bird-handler in many of the photos. The fellow in the straw hat and holding the ID booklet is Don McCartney; when Jim Anderson isn’t checking wings and ringing  the legs of  birds, he’s resting in his portable lawn chair.    [Chuck Almdale]

Least Tern Monitoring in L.A. County

July 4, 2013

Stacey Vigallon reports on this year’s Least Tern monitoring:

Least Tern chick

Terrifically cute Least Tern chick

1) The Least Terns arrived like clockwork in April at the Venice Beach colony enclosure. As happens every year, predation of the eggs by crows is happening, but the terns are still doing their best, and they’re definitely roosting there at night. The terns seem to be spending a considerable amount of time away from the colony, which may possibly indicate that food resources are not conveniently close or plentiful this year. In short, we’ve done what we can to make sure the Venice colony enclosure has great habitat for nesting, but there are factors out of our control (crows, food resources) that definitely affect the terns. We’ve been told that other colonies in Southern California have also experienced lower numbers of Least Terns this year. As the nesting season progresses, we will likely start to see groups of Least Tern adults and fledglings from other colonies arriving at the Venice colony and adjacent beach in mid to late July. To ID the fledglings, keep an eye out for the Least Terns that don’t have the crisp uniform of black cap and yellow bill – juvenile Least Terns are pretty much adult-size but they’re sloppier dressers.

Least Tern brings fish gift to prospective mate
(Wendy Miller – Huntington Beach – May’13)

2) Crows… Every year they present a challenge, and every year we get lots of questions about them. Crows and their relatives, ravens and jays (collectively called “corvids”), can be predators pretty much wherever their range overlaps with any other nesting species. Whether it’s plovers and terns on southern California beaches, marbled murrelets in Pacific Northwest forests, or baby tortoises in the Mojave desert, predation by corvids can be a real problem. They are extremely smart and typically well-adapted to humans and the way we alter the landscape. In Los Angeles, we have created excellent crow habitat where none previously existed by replacing coastal sage scrub and wetland habitat with lawns (which means year-round water and invertebrate food sources), trees for nesting, and plentiful food waste. We have worked with wildlife management agencies at the Venice site for years, and everyone is very well aware of the problem.

More fish business (Wendy Miller - Huntington Beach - May'13)

More fish business
(Wendy Miller – Huntington Beach – May’13)

3) But, what we currently lack in tern-viewing, we can make up for in other bird species… If you have time to branch out from the beach, LA Audubon will be offering guided (free!) birdwalks at Topanga State Park, Franklin Canyon Park, and the Ballona Wetlands in July. Here’s a link to info about birdwalks:
http://losangelesaudubon.org/index.php/recreation-mainmenu-189/bird-walks-mainmenu-190/486-bird-walks

Even more fish business (Wendy Miller - Huntington Beach - May'13)

Even more fish business
(Wendy Miller – Huntington Beach – May’13)

If you want a more intensive birding experience, check out the LA Audubon field trips too. The August 3rd shorebird ID trip along the LA River is also free and it can really get you started identifying shorebirds. Here’s a link:
http://losangelesaudubon.org/index.php/component/jevents/icalrepeat.detail/2013/08/03/721/309/lower-la-river-shorebird-migration-field-trip-with-larry-allen?Itemid=1
[Stacey Vigallon – Los Angeles Audubon Society Least Tern Monitoring Project World HQ]

Santa Monica Bay Audubon will again be offering a field trip – focusing on shorebirds – in the latter half of August to the lower Los Angeles River.  Details to be posted on this blog.    [Chuck Almdale]
The final four photos on this blog were kindly shared with us by Wendy Miller, Least Tern Monitor Volunteer at the Huntington Beach colony in Orange county.  Check out the rest of her many photos here on Flickr. I have also placed a permanent link to these photos in the “Bird Links” section on the right sidebar.

Adult Least Tern with chick  (Wendy Miller - Huntington Beach - May'13)

Adult Least Tern with chick
(Wendy Miller – Huntington Beach – May’13)