Birds of Southeast Texas and the Upper Texas Coast: People exploring nature in Southeast Texas can use this handy photographic field guide to identify 88 bird species. The birds in the guide are grouped by family for ease in identification, and the accompanying text indicates size, habitat, field marks, and seasonal occurrence. The guides six double-sided panels fold up into a packet narrow enough to fit in a back pocket yet sturdy enough to stand up under repeated use. Lamination has made the guide waterproof. The birds included here reside, migrate through, or spend part of the year in the area from the Texas/Louisiana border to south of Freeport and including the inland Piney Woods and Coastal Prairie regions.
Parabuteo unicinctus Rare winter visitor winter: (4–5 Aug; 17, 23 Sep; 2 Oct) early Oct to mid-Mar (4 May; 8 Jun) habitat: Harris's Hawk is widely distributed from the savannas, brushland, and cactus deserts of S Texas and Arizona ...
Whether you are making your annual spring pilgrimage to Texas, leisurely traveling with the family along the coast, or wondering what to do during a layover in Houston, using this book as your guide to the trail will greatly enhance your ...
There’s no need to look through dozens of photos of birds that don’t live in your area. This book features 170 species of Texas birds organized by color for ease of use. Do you see a yellow bird and don’t know what it is?
Aimed at beginning and intermediate birders, this guide will easily fit into any daypack, pocket or glove compartment, facilitating easy field identificationwhether in a Houston Backyard, on a family vacation to Texarkana, or a birding trip ...
Ferris, Clifford D., and F. Martin Brown. 1981. Butterfliesof the Rocky Mountain states. Norman: Univ. of Oklahoma Press. Forey, Pamela, and Cecilia Fitzsimons. 1987. An instant guideto butterflies:The most familiar species of North ...
The US Fish and Wildlife Service helped fund Cornell's extraordinary effort to capture a photograph, video, or a sound recording of the bird, an effort that lasted a couple of years and included some of the most sophisticated field ...
This is a book that will inspire seasoned birders and novices alike to explore the region's woodlands, marshes, and beaches and discover for themselves the avian riches that await.
The American Birding Association Field Guide to Birds of Texas includes more than 300 species birders are most likely to see in the state.
If you want to see a Hooked-billed Kite, Muscovy Duck, or Altamira Oriole, this is the place.
Butterflies of South Texas including the Lower Rio Grande Valley beautifully illustrates over 80 species of butterflies and most of their caterpillars found in South Texas, including the Lower Rio Grande Valley, considered the number one ...