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Description
Sujets
Informations
Publié par | Graffeg Limited |
Date de parution | 20 avril 2021 |
Nombre de lectures | 0 |
EAN13 | 9781913634940 |
Langue | English |
Poids de l'ouvrage | 5 Mo |
Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0250€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.
Extrait
The Puffin Book
by Drew Buckley
Series editor Jane Russ
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The Puffin Book
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Contents
4 About This Book 11 About the Atlantic Puffin
19 Puffins Through the Seasons
21 Winter
27 Spring
31 Colony Life
52 Swimming
56 Flying
65 Summer
67 Burrows and Breeding
84 Eggs and Early Days
92 Feeding
103 Adult Life, Predators and Threats
115 Fledging
125 Autumn
127 The Great Migration
136 Questions & Answers
143 Myth, Legends and Art by Jane Russ
158 Drew Buckley
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The Puffin Book
From the breeding cycle to the habitats and burrows in which they reside, this book will help the reader learn more about what goes on out of view too, as not everything can be captured on camera. There’ll be information and facts about what happens both out at sea and underground, especially about the young, which only emerge at their final stages of fledging – a concise presentation of fine photography with life facts and stories for even the hardened puffin fan to enjoy.
This tough little seabird is the epitome of the underdog. Through its characterful face and behaviour it draws you into its world and you’re instantly their biggest fan. With their habitats and food sources threatened by climate change and overfishing, it’s hoped through this book we can
About This Book
Being a local resident to where these characterful avians call home for a few months of the year, I have spent many years and thousands of hours watching, documenting and photographing puffins at their busiest time of the year, the breeding season, all on this small island off the Pembrokeshire coast, called Skomer.
With a lifelong passion for puffins and through intimate photography, I will take you on a journey through what goes on in the life of a puffin through the breeding season, with insights into their world over the winter months. The book includes details of the puffin’s biology, interesting stories and facts I’ve observed over the years and the trials and tribulations of how the puffin goes about its life.
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About This Book
raise more awareness of the fragile environment in which they live their lives and, hopefully, you too will become a lover of puffins for life.
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The Puffin Book
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Skomer Island, Pembrokeshire Coast.
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About the Atlantic Puffin
About the Atlantic Puffin
The puffin – such fantastic little birds, they instantly make you smile just looking at them! They’re so full of colour and character and even standing still they appear to strike a pose, oozing personality and charm. Sometimes affectionately known as the clowns of the sea or sea parrots, these extremely inquisitive seabirds grace our shores in the springtime, arriving in their thousands to breed. At the same time, they bring joy to many birdwatchers and photographers who head out to the coast to see them.
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The Puffin Book
The puffin, or Atlantic puffin to give it the proper title, belongs to the auk family, a large group of 25 or so species of sea birds all over the world, ranging from razorbills, guillemots and puffins, among others.
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About the Atlantic Puffin
Puffins are stocky, plump little birds and are smaller than a lot of people think, compared to their environment or the distances they travel, standing at just 20cm tall, measuring 29cm from the tip of their bill to the tail and weighing about 600g. Their long legs mean they can walk and run quite well on land compared to some other seabirds. The most striking parts of the puffin are undoubtedly their bright orange feet and how can you miss that boldly marked red, orange and grey bill!
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The Puffin Book
Puffins appear to be black and white, but if you look closer you’ll notice an array of shades in between, especially around the face. A striking black collar extends around the neck and on the cheeks on each side of the head are areas of grey. These patches meet at the back of the eye and create a crease that leads back to the nape.
The eyes are a light bluish grey in appearance and you can sometimes notice the whites of the eye, a trait which is not too common in the animal kingdom. The eyes are set in a triangular shape, with the vivid orange of the surrounds of the eye most pronounced. The breast and most of the underside are made up of white feathers, leading to orange legs with webbed feet and black claws, which are great for digging.
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About the Atlantic Puffin
There’s no denying that the puffin’s most iconic feature is the bright, colourful beak; this is reserved for the summer months, when it is a lot more obvious and colourful. During the winter, the puffin’s beak is quite stubby and dull grey in colour – more like that of a fledgling. Throughout the breeding season, the bill is broad
and triangular but quite narrow. The first half of the beak is made up of orangey-red tones with grooved stripes and the rest of the bill is grey in colour. The chevron-shaped lines on the bill can go someway to determining an individual birds’ age. A yellow ridge surrounds the bill where it meets the skull and
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towards the base of the mandibles there is a fleshy bright yellow ‘rosette’ which aids the puffin’s ability to hold fish.
Later in the breeding season, the darker plumage can go more brown than black as they start their transformation into their winter colours. Despite them residing on remote parts of the country through the breeding season, everyone seems to have a universal affinity to the puffin and recognise them even when they have never seen them in the flesh. That could partly be due to their unique colouring and stance. But I like to think it’s their sad face that tugs at the heartstrings of the masses and then their small stature, giving them an underdog appearance, and who doesn’t root for those guys?
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Summer
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Summer
Puffins Through the Seasons
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Winter
Winter
The Latin name for the Atlantic puffin is Fratercula arctica , meaning ‘little brother of the Arctic’. This is because the loveable and colourful birds we see in the UK in summer spend most of the winter months out in the colder waters of the northern Atlantic Ocean, where they exist in a life of solitude, dressed in their grey winter colours.
Their breeding grounds cover the coasts of north-west Europe, eastern parts of North America and the Arctic coasts, such as Greenland, Iceland and Scandinavia. The rest of the year Iceland holds over 60 per cent of the world’s breeding population of Atlantic puffins, while other large colonies can be found in Newfoundland, the Faroe Islands, the coasts of Norway and the Shetland and Orkney