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British Wildlife is the leading natural history magazine in the UK, providing essential reading for both enthusiast and professional naturalists and wildlife conservationists. Published eight times a year, British Wildlife bridges the gap between popular writing and scientific literature through a combination of long-form articles, regular columns and reports, book reviews and letters.

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Field Guides & Natural History  Ornithology  Passerines

RSPB Spotlight: Swifts and Swallows

Popular Science
By: Mike Unwin(Author)
128 pages, colour photos, colour maps
RSPB Spotlight: Swifts and Swallows
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  • RSPB Spotlight: Swifts and Swallows ISBN: 9781472950116 Paperback Jun 2018 In stock
    £12.99
    #239042
Price: £12.99
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About this book

The RSPB Spotlight series introduces a selection of iconic UK wildlife to the general reader. This latest title focuses upon the swallow and the swift, two well known birds that, although unrelated, are often combined – and, indeed, confused – in the popular imagination.

Traditional heralds of the European summer, swallows and swifts have many things in common. Both feed on aerial insects and are thus similarly adapted for an aerial lifestyle, with long wings, aerodynamic bodies and fast agile flight. Both have a penchant for breeding on or around buildings, bringing them into close contact with people. And both are long-distance migrants, departing our insect-free shores in autumn to spend winter in sub-Saharan Africa then returning the follow spring. These seemingly miraculous journeys, combined with a predilection for returning to the same building to breed year after year, has seen both birds embedded deep in our cultural heritage.

Appearances, however, can be deceptive. Swallows and swifts are not related. Swallows (which also include martins) belong to the order passeriformes, or 'perching birds', alongside the likes of sparrows and robins. Our UK species, the barn swallow, is the best known of some 83 species worldwide. Swifts belong to the order Apodiformes, alongside hummingbirds, and our common swift is one of some 100 species worldwide. The striking similarities come down to 'convergent evolution', a process by which animals from separate evolutionary roots evolve to resemble one another – in this case, by adapting to the shared demands of a life spent catching small flying insects. The similarities are so striking that it is perhaps unsurprising how often swifts and swallows are confused.

This highly readable study looks closely at both birds, examining both their differences and similarities. Separate chapters cover all aspects of their biology and lifestyle, from their mind-boggling migrations to the mud construction of their nests. Fascinating secrets are revealed, such as how swifts may pass an entire year in flight without once landing. RSPB Spotlight: Swifts and Swallows also looks at other swifts and swallows around the world, placing our two UK species within this broader context. Finally, it examines the relationship that we have enjoyed with these birds since time immemorial, spanning both culture and conservation, and offers expert tips on where and how you can watch them for yourself.

Customer Reviews

Biography

Mike Unwin is the author of 30 books for both adults and children, including two existing titles in this series (Foxes and Eagles), plus The Atlas of Birds (Bloomsbury), 100 Bizarre Animals (Bradt) and A Parliament of Owls (Quarto). A specialist in natural history and travel, he writes regularly for numerous publications, including The Telegraph, The Independent, BBC Wildlife, Nature’s Home (RSPB) and Bird Watching, and has a popular column in Travel Africa magazine. Mike was awarded the prestigious ‘UK Travel Writer of the Year 2013’ by the British Guild of Travel Writers and in 2000 won ‘BBC Wildlife Nature Travel Writer of the Year’. He is based in Brighton, UK, but lived for eight years in southern Africa and has thus watched both birds at both ends of their journeys

Popular Science
By: Mike Unwin(Author)
128 pages, colour photos, colour maps
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