Crossbills and Conifers

One Million Years of Adaptation and Coevolution

Boken vil appellere til et bredt publikum. Studenter innen ornitologi og evolusjonsbiologi vil få en dypere forståelse av verdien av naturhistorie, og spesielt nytten av å vite «hvem spiser hvem og hvorfor». Fugleentusiaster og naturforskere vil lære mye om korsnebbens verden, årsakene til deres mangfold – som har utfordret og inspirert mange ornitologer – samt truslene disse fuglene står overfor.

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Produktnummer: 828029 Kategorier: , ,
Utgivelsesår: 2025-07
Antall sider: 224
Fotos – illustrasjoner: Fargeillustrasjoner.
Innbinding: Innbundet
ISBN: 9781784275525
Språk: Engelsk
Forlag: Pelagic Publishing
Forfatter: Craig W. Benkman
  • Crossbills are an ideal group of species to investigate some of the foremost topics in evolutionary ecology.
  • The clear link between bill and cone structure makes obvious the reciprocal adaptations between crossbills and conifers, including especially the coevolutionary arms race driving the evolution of the newly discovered Cassia Crossbill.
  • This accessible and handsomely illustrated book will appeal to a wide audience.

Crossbills and Conifers explores an intimate natural historical connection, revealing why crossbills have become an exemplar of diversification and coevolution. Craig Benkman takes readers on his 40-year journey of research and discovery, exploring a series of unique and interrelated findings about the behavior, ecology, evolution and conservation of a remarkable group of birds.

Key to revealing these insights is the ease with which one can measure how variation in bill structure, and conifer cone structure and phenology, influence the efficiency at which crossbills extract seeds from cones. Consumer-resource interactions are fundamental to much of ecology, but such relationships are rarely so readily quantified, not least with the coevolutionary arms race driving the evolution of the newly discovered Cassia Crossbill.

This accessible and handsomely illustrated book will appeal to a wide audience. Students of ornithology and evolutionary biology will gain a greater understanding of the value of natural history and especially the utility of knowing when who eats whom and why. Bird enthusiasts and naturalists will learn much about the world of crossbills, the causes of their diversity which has challenged and inspired many ornithologists, and the threats that these birds face.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments

1. Why Crossbills? Crossbills, Conifers and the Origins of an Interaction
2. Challenges and Opportunities of Relying on Cone-seed
3. How Cone and Bill Structure Shape Conifer and Habitat Use
4. How and When Key Resources Favor Specialization
5. Coevolution: Crossbills Are More than Just Ornaments
6. Flocking, Patch Assessment and the Evolution of Contact Calls
7. Speciation in the Cassia Crossbill
8. Causes and Consequences of Variation in Reproductive Isolation
9. The Future of Crossbills: Climate Change and Other Threats
10. Epilogue

Glossary
References
Index

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