Molt in North American Birds

Front Cover
Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2010 - Nature - 267 pages

To most observers, molt seems an overwhelming subject. But birders use many aspects of molt more than they realize--to distinguish juvenile birds from adults, to pick out an individual hummingbird from among dozens visiting a feeder, and much more.

And for those whose interest goes beyond simply identifying birds, questions such as What triggers molt to start? How fast do feathers grow? and How long do they last? offer a fascinating window into the lives of birds. Put plainly, molt relates in some way to everything a bird does, including where it lives, what it eats, and how far it migrates.

Here, for the first time, molt is presented for the nonscientist. Molt is very orderly and built on only four underlying strategies: simple basic, complex basic, simple alternate, and complex alternate. This book clearly lays out these strategies, relates them to aspects of life history, such as habitat and migration, and makes this important subject accessible.


 

Contents

Underlying Patterns
20
Birds in the RealWorld
45
Swans Geese and Ducks
70
Plain Chachalaca
79
New World Quail85
85
Albatrosses
91
Tropicbirds
97
Cormorants
103
Falcons
123
Plovers
130
Sandpipers
136
Gulls
147
Black Skimmer
156
Auklets Murres and Puffins
162
SONGBIRDS
184
Acknowledgments
244

Herons
110
New World Vultures
116

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About the author (2010)

STEVE N. G. HOWELL is an international bird tour leader with WINGS and a popular speaker and trip leader at birding festivals. He has been watching birds for as long as he can remember. Steve has authored numerous books and articles, mainly about birds, and the common thread to his life is that birding should be fun.

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