The Gyrfalcon

Hardback

Main Details

Title The Gyrfalcon
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Eugene Potapov
By (author) Richard Sale
SeriesPoyser Monographs
Physical Properties
Format:Hardback
Pages:288
Dimensions(mm): Height 234,Width 154
Category/GenreBirds
ISBN/Barcode 9780713665635
ClassificationsDewey:598.96
Audience
General
Tertiary Education (US: College)
Illustrations 8pp colour section; b/w ills throughout

Publishing Details

Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Imprint Poyser
Publication Date 7 July 2005
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

This book is the first monograph on one of the most beautiful and admired birds in the world. The Gyrfalcon is the world's largest and most powerful falcon - a truly awe-inspiring bird which inhabits the ferociously inhospitable Arctic taiga, from Greenland and Iceland right across Siberia and northern Canada. Its plumage varies from a dark mottled grey to pure white - the white birds in particular are coveted by birders and falconers. Like other titles in the series, it covers all aspects of the species' biology, taxonomy, distribution, status and historical associations with mankind. The result is an exhaustively researched and enthrallingly readable biography of a spectacular bird, illustrated throughout with photographs and line drawings.

Author Biography

Eugene Potapov gained is DPhil at the EGI in Oxford and has worked extensively on Arctic birds in Siberia. Richard Sale gave up full-time work as a physicist to concentrate on writing and photography, chiefly in the Arctic.

Reviews

"a good read, presenting much previously inaccessible information, as well as some interesting insights into some of the most remote and inhospitable places on earth." Ian Newton British Birds (Feb 2006) "A well-writen and a beautifully produced book." Ornithos (2005) "A fascinating read." BTO News (Jan/Feb 2006) "Well writen and informative This book is highly recommeneded In my opinion, it is equal to the best in single-species raptor books yet published." William S Clark Birdwatch (March 2006) "There is no doubt that this is a scholarly work and probably one of the most valuable and comprehensive on this species." Scottish Bird News (December 2005)