For the members, who are interested bird photographers, there are a couple of articles I recommend: "More Burgs May Mean Less Sex", pg. 29 and "Brainiacs", pp. 108-129. If you want to do further reading on the topics, a wildlife professor mentioned in the articles at the University of Washington, Dr. John Marzluff, has a couple of books of interests: In the Company of Crows and Ravens; Welcome to Subirdia: Sharing Our Neighborhoods with Wrens, Robins, Woodpeckers, and Other Wildlife.
Barn Owl wrote:
For the members, who are interested bird photographers, there are a couple of articles I recommend: "More Burgs May Mean Less Sex", pg. 29 and "Brainiacs", pp. 108-129. If you want to do further reading on the topics, a wildlife professor mentioned in the articles at the University of Washington, Dr. John Marzluff, has a couple of books of interests: In the Company of Crows and Ravens; Welcome to Subirdia: Sharing Our Neighborhoods with Wrens, Robins, Woodpeckers, and Other Wildlife.
For the members, who are interested bird photograp... (
show quote)
I have not opened my magazine yet. Thanks.
Barn Owl wrote:
For the members, who are interested bird photographers, there are a couple of articles I recommend: "More Burgs May Mean Less Sex", pg. 29 and "Brainiacs", pp. 108-129. If you want to do further reading on the topics, a wildlife professor mentioned in the articles at the University of Washington, Dr. John Marzluff, has a couple of books of interests: In the Company of Crows and Ravens; Welcome to Subirdia: Sharing Our Neighborhoods with Wrens, Robins, Woodpeckers, and Other Wildlife.
For the members, who are interested bird photograp... (
show quote)
Thanks, Barn Owl and have already read these great articles and the March-April edition of Audubon has also had a fantastic and almost unbelievable article on birds in the corvid family titled "Crows' Feats"!
Thanks for the recommendation for "Meet the Bird Brainiacs: American Crow" in Audubon. I would have missed the article without your help. Glad that Professor John Marzluff is so well recognized for his Corvid research and his skills in working with his graduate students and colleagues.
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