- Handbook of the Birds of the World Volume 11, edited by
Josep del Hoyo, Andrew Elliott
and David Christie (Ly nx Edicions, Barcelona,
2006).
- 800 pages, 55 colour plates, 343 photographs, 733
distribution maps.
- ISBN 849655306X. Hbk, £138.
Review by Steve Hay
Time to reach for the thesaurus again. S for superlative.
Are there any that haven’t been used to describe this set of books, which now reaches
volume 11 and which, if anything, gets even better with each passing edition? It’s
no lie to say that every time the latest volume is delivered to the Birdwatch
office, there’s a queue just to be able to hold it and gaze at its pages (or is
that just too weird?).
Dr Cagan Sekercioglu of California’s Stanford University, in
his introductory essay, warns that while we know more about the earth’s
avifauna than any other comparable taxonomic group, what we do know is “deeply frightening”
and that birds are “clearly serving a function analogous to the canaries that
early coal miners took underground with them”. Down the pits, the canaries
would exhibit signs of distress or keel over when poisonous methane was in the
air. Now, they are warning us of potentially devastating and lethal changes in
the environment. “Birds are telling us that we are darkening our own futures
and the prospects of our descendants. It is high time we listened to them,”
writes Dr Sekercioglu.
Volume 11 tackles Old World flycatchers
to Old World warblers. Recent research suggests that the
chats, which were treated in HBW 10 as the subfamily Saxicolinae of Turdidae,
may in fact be closer to the Old World flycatchers, and also that the members
of the genus Sylvia, which give the name to the Old World warbler family
Sylviidae, are actually babblers, as opposed to warblers. Although the authors have
decided not to adopt the recent proposals, to avoid confusion for readers, the
changes have in fact been accommodated in part, by reshuffling the sequence of
families within volume 11. As a result, Muscicapidae is now placed immediately
after Saxicolinae, while the genus Sylvia now comes immediately before the
babblers.
For a work on this scale, it is amazing how up to date HBW manages
to be. Volume 11 contains three taxa described in 2006, including a new species
of batis, Dark Batis, found in central Tanzania, which was due to be described
in the Journal für Ornithologie in October 2006, around the time this volume
went to press. You just can’t get more timely than that, and HBW continues to
be at the forefront of scientific discovery.
Another example of this is the photograph of a Large-billed
Reed Warbler, which was trapped and ringed in Thailand
in March 2006, and which was the first of its species to be recorded since it
was originally collected in northern India
in 1867.
Its taxonomic treatments will certainly attract attention.
Among the warblers, for example, Green Phylloscopus nitidus, Greenish P
trochiloides and Two-barred P plumbeitarsus are all given full species status,
while Small Whitethroat Sylvia minula and Hume’s Whitethroat S althaea are separated
from Lesser Whitethroat S curruca, as are Marmora’s Warbler S sarda and
Balearic Warbler S balearica from each other. In contrast, Orphean Warbler S
crassirostris and Desert Warbler S nana remain lumped.
Acknowledging the difficulty of knowing which volume covers
a particular group or species, the authors recently launched a fully searchable
free access online global index for the HBW series (see www.hbw.com), which
should simplify the process considerably.
As always the plates, in this volume by Norman Arlott,
Hilary Burn, John Cox, Ren Hathway, Ian Lewington, Douglas Pratt, David Quinn,
Chris Rose, Brian Small, Jan Wilczur and Tim Worfolk, are stunning. Even plate
33, or as a friend put it, “A sight to fill most African birders’ hearts with
dread, a plate of cisticolas”, is amazingly detailed, though the differences in
the 25 little brown jobs depicted are, in the main, slight.
Not all of the species covered are ‘LBJs’, of course, and
some of the more spectacular representatives of the bird world are also featured
in this volume, among them the paradise-flycatchers. The superb photography beautifully
captures some of the behavioural traits which make these birds so fascinating. The
photos in volume 11 are never less than excellent, and depict the full range of
behaviour, from feeding and drinking to preening, copulation and nesting. And
some are just funny, as in the photo on page 210 of a Willie Wagtail in Australia,
perching on the hip of a Red Kangaroo.
At last, however, I have managed to find a complaint! HBW is
too heavy. I had to carry volume 11 in a rucksack across London
and out to Oxford, and I lost
around 6 lbs in sweat in the process. The search for perfection continues.
Mind you, despite the weight, I would carry HBW to John
O’Groats and back to have it in my library. It would be more than worth it for this
masterpiece.
First published in Birdwatch
175: 51 (January 2007). To order a copy of this issue please email:
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