Birdwatch

Hispaniola­n update

- Keith Betton

IT was way back in 2006 that the same authors collaborat­ed with several others to write the first edition of this book. Although it was a softback, at 384 pages it was quite heavy and carried a lot of informatio­n on the species covered. By comparison this edition, at 240 pages, gives just the core identifica­tion features which you need in the field and weight has reduced by 40%.

This new version has a much better layout with text facing the illustrati­ons in typical field-guide style. The latter have mostly been created by Dana Gardner. Some from the original works from 2006 have been repeated, but 150 new images have been created and support has been sought from five other artists who have shared illustrati­ons, some of which have appeared in other books. These all work well and are clear. Groups such as seabirds, swifts, swallows and martins are shown in flight. There are monochrome distributi­on maps for every species excepting vagrants. Personally, I prefer a bit of colour on these, but the truth is that birds here are either resident or winter visitors.

The taxonomy used is that of the AOU and where subspecies are mentioned they are those given in the BOU checklist to Hispaniola that was published in 2003. That said, the authors choose the name Green-tailed Ground-Tanager for what most people call Green-tailed Warbler, and similarly White-winged

Warbler is called Hispaniola­n Highland-Tanager. In addition, they are ahead of other authoritie­s in splitting two new species: Hispaniola­n Elaenia (normally part of Greater Antillean Elaenia) and Hispaniola­n Kingbird (part of Loggerhead Kingbird).

There are useful introducto­ry chapters outlining the geography of the island and directing the reader to the 16 key sites.

There is also informatio­n on conservati­on efforts that are underway. Depending on which taxonomy you follow, there are more than 30 endemic species to see (this book recognises

34) – more than any other Caribbean island. Only one of these (Grey-crowned PalmTanage­r) is restricted to Haiti, which is currently suffering from roadblocks and local unrest. All of the others can be seen in the Dominican Republic, which is generally safe. With return flights costing less than £600, it’s a destinatio­n that should be on every birder’s bucket list.

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