"Crows
and Jays" by Steve Madge and Hilary Burn is a serious and succinct
scientific reference work covering the entire crow family. All 122 species of
crows, magpies and jays are included. There are 30 colour plates, showing all
species and many subspecies. The colour plates also include range maps. The
plate section is followed by text pages with species presentations. For obvious
reasons, the presentations are rather short, but they nevertheless give a good
overview of the habits, habitat and geographic variation of the various
species. Provided, of course, that such information is at all available. Many
tropical corvids are still little known, the most extreme being the Banggai
Crow from the tiny island of Banggai in Indonesia, which is known only from two
stuffed specimens in New York! Incidentally, I have an earlier, British edition
of this book, published in 1999. I haven't seen this new American edition, but
judging by the other customer reviews, it's essentially the same book. And no,
it's not intended for light bedtime reading, unless you have a strange
obsession with corvids. If you do, they are all in there, LOL.
Another scientific reference work about corvids is Derek Goodwin's "Crows of the World". Goodwin's book has very few illustrations, but it contains more information about the habits of the European corvids. Thus, Goodwin's book nicely complements "Crows and Jays". Both books are worth buying, if you have a serious, scientific interest in these birds.
Hopefully, both books will be superseded next year, when Lynx Editions will finally publish a volume of their "Handbook of the Birds of the World" scheduled to include the crow family. I'm sure both Madge, Burn and Goodwin are already involved in that project...
;-)
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