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Field Guides & Natural History  Ornithology  Non-Passerines  Seabirds, Shorebirds & Wildfowl

The Norfolk Plover A Study of the Stone-Curlew

By: Chris Knights(Author), Nick Acheson(Foreword By)
215 pages, colour photos
The Norfolk Plover
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  • The Norfolk Plover ISBN: 9781399955690 Hardback Dec 2023 In stock
    £30.00
    #265195
Price: £30.00
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About this book

No British photographer has spent more time studying Stone-curlews than Chris Knights. He has lived in the Breckland area of Norfolk for most of his life and took his first photograph of a Stone-curlew over 60 years ago. As a farmer, Knights educated his workers to look out for nests so that they were protected against nearby farming operations.

This book is a must for any lovers of nature, farming or wildlife and chronicles this bird throughout the year in Breckland, Norfolk.

The opening chapter introduces us to the Breckland habitat and the birds to be found there throughout the year. The remainder is mostly split into the seasons, covering the birds’ early arrival in early spring, through two nesting cycles, autumn flocking and then departure. Photo sequences for individual pairs show aspects of display, nesting and defence. There is a section on wintering, which became a regular occurrence in Norfolk, with up to a dozen birds in most years from 2000 until 2018.

The book closes with a chapter on interactions with people. The future for Stone-curlews depends very much on the cooperation of farmers to adjust their operations to give the birds a better chance of success. In some places that is helped through the creation of government-funded nesting plots, but in Norfolk many birds nest among the fields of sugar beet. This has proved to be an ideal habitat for them, and the existence of nearby pig farms often provides ideal foraging.

Customer Reviews (1)

  • Fantastic photos and facts
    By Keith 13 Jul 2024 Written for Hardback
    Stone-curlews are brilliant at the art of hiding and so relatively few of us see them regularly. I am lucky to live close to where they breed in Hampshire, but even as a volunteer on the RSPB’s Stone-curlew monitoring team, I rarely get closer than 100 metres from their nests. Their lives are mostly about camouflage, whether it is their eggs, their chicks – or themselves. So to be faced with a book that is full of close-up images such as the one on its cover feels very special.

    No British photographer has spent more time studying the species than Chris Knights. He has lived in the Breckland area of Norfolk for most of his life and took his first photograph of a Stone-curlew over 60 years ago. As a farmer, Knights educated his workers to look out for nests so that they were protected against nearby farming operations. He even paid them for every nest they could find. Alongside his efforts, conservation organisations worked with other farmers in the area to create suitable nesting plots within the busy farming landscape. Gradually over the last forty years, the numbers both in East Anglia and Wessex have increased, even though in that time their breeding range has contracted.

    The opening chapter introduces us to the Breckland habitat and the birds to be found there throughout the year. The remainder is mostly split into the seasons, covering the birds’ early arrival in early spring, through two nesting cycles, autumn flocking and then departure. In particular, there are photo sequences for individual pairs showing aspects of display, nesting and defence. Stone-curlews normally lay two eggs in each clutch, but Knights includes photographs of two clutches of three eggs, and one of four. In each case, it is thought that two females used the same nest, although full details of the outcomes are not given.

    There is also a surprising section on wintering, which became a regular occurrence in Norfolk for up to 12 birds in most years from 2000 until 2018. That last year saw an anticyclone bring deep snow and two weeks of exceptionally cold weather at the end of February, and it is likely that all of those wintering Stone-curlews perished. There have been no further sightings in winter, but if milder autumn temperatures become the norm, perhaps the wintering trend will recommence.

    The book closes with a chapter on interactions with people. The future for Stone-curlews depends very much on the cooperation of farmers to adjust their operations to give the birds a better chance of success. In some places that is helped through the creation of government-funded nesting plots, but in Norfolk many birds nest among the fields of sugar beet. This has proved to be an ideal habitat for them, and the existence of nearby pig farms often provides ideal foraging. In my experience, Stone-curlews are opportunistic, and while traditional sites are maintained by regular pairs, others manage to find small areas of temporary habitat and grab a chance at nesting. If they are on land that is managed by a farmer who wants them to win, then their chances of success are so much higher. This book can only help to make farmers feel proud to have these birds nesting alongside them.
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By: Chris Knights(Author), Nick Acheson(Foreword By)
215 pages, colour photos
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