Cornell University Press
Seabirds of Hawaii
About this book
Hawaii is known throughout the world for its uniquely hospitable climate and people. Because of its geographical isolation and tropical-subtropical location, it harbors numerous animals that are unknown elsewhere in the United States. Unfortunately, Hawaii is special in another respect: it is the endangered species capital of the world. Many of its birds are in jeopardy of extinction.
This book, the first to portray a tropical seabird community, treats the 22 species of seabirds of the Hawaiian archipelago from a conservationist point of view. Craig S. Harrison first establishes the setting, describing Hawaii's birth from undersea volcanoes, its marine biology, and the effects of Polynesians and Westerners on its pristine island ecosystem. He summarizes current knowledge of albatrosses, shearwaters, petrels, frigatebirds, boobies, tropicbirds, terns, and noddies, explaining their similarities and differences with respect to nesting, food habits, migration at sea, and adaptation to a tropical environment.
Author / Editor information
Craig S. Harrison, a professional biologist, is an attorney in the Washington, D.C., office of Hunton & Williams, a national law firm. He was formerly with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and lived in Hawaii for 11 years.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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CONTENTS
v -
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FIGURES AND TABLES
vii -
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Preface
ix - Part I. The Environment and Humans
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1. The Islands
3 -
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2. The Sea
19 -
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3. The Humans
29 - Part II. Comparative Biology of Hawaiian Seabirds
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4. Origin and Adaptations of Hawaiian Seabirds
43 -
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5. Populations
53 -
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6. Breeding Ecology
67 -
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7. Feeding Ecology
83 -
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8. Pelagic Ecology: Life at Sea
98 - Part III. Hawaiian Seabirds: Family Groups and Species
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9. Albatrosses: Family Diomedeidae
107 -
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10. Shearwaters and Gadfly Petrels: Family Procellariidae
120 -
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11.Storm-Petrels: Family Oceanitidae
135 -
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12. Frigatebirds: Family Fregatidae
143 -
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13. Boobies: Family Sulidae
153 -
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14. Tropicbirds: Family Phaethontidae
166 -
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15. Terns and Noddies: Family Laridae (Subfamily Sterninae)
175 - Part IV. Conservation
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16. Conservation on the Islands
191 -
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17. Conservation at Sea
207 -
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18. Conservation Dilemmas
219 -
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APPENDIX: Some Common and Scientific Names
229 -
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Selected Bibliography
233 -
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Index
239