Bird Populations

“Bird Populations” by Ian Newton, published by William Collins in 2013, is an illustrated volume comprising 596 pages. This book examines the fluctuations in bird populations across the British Isles, exploring the various factors that contribute to these changes over time. Newton discusses how shifts in landscapes, human impacts, and ecological dynamics have influenced bird numbers, challenging earlier perceptions of stability in avian populations.
Readers will find a thorough analysis of the elements affecting bird populations, including food supplies, competition, and environmental changes. Newton emphasizes the importance of understanding these factors for effective management of bird species, whether for conservation, sustainable hunting, or agricultural protection. The book also highlights the role of changing public attitudes and protective legislation in aiding the recovery of certain bird species, while addressing the implications of climate change on avian diversity. This comprehensive overview serves as a resource for both birdwatchers and those interested in ecology and natural resource management.
Official synopsis Publisher
Earlier naturalists formed the impression that bird numbers remained more or less stable through time. In the years since these words were written, however, changes have occurred in the landscapes of the British Isles and in the seas around our coasts, causing bird populations to fluctuate in an unprecedented way.
In Ian Newton’s latest New Naturalist volume, he explores bird populations and why their numbers vary in the way they do, from year to year or from place to place. He addresses the various factors that we know limit bird numbers – food supplies and other resources, competitors, predators, parasites and pathogens, and various human impacts.
The combination of a rapidly expanding human population, a predominantly utilitarian attitude to land, central government policy on land use, and increasing mechanisation have combined to promote more massive changes in land use – and hence in bird habitats – in recent decades than at any comparable period previously. These developments have in turn brought huge changes in bird populations, as some species dependent on the old landscapes declined, and others benefiting from the changes increased. Over the same period, changing public attitudes to wildlife, protective legislation and a growing network of nature reserves allowed previously scarce bird species to recover from past onslaughts, while climate warming has promoted further changes.
In this seminal new work, Ian Newton sets out to explain why different bird species are distributed in the numbers that they are, and have changed over the years in the way that they have. He emphasises the factors that influence bird numbers, rather than the numbers themselves, thus providing a much-needed overview which is necessary if we are to successfully manage bird populations, whether for conservation reasons, for sustainable hunting or for crop protection. The continued monitoring of bird numbers can also alert us to impending environmental problems. In addition, the regular watching and study of birds now provides a source of recreation and pleasure for very large numbers of people, who would find a world with fewer birds a poorer place.
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