The World’s Rarest Birds
is a sumptuous visual treat for birders, featuring a gallery of
competition-winning bird photos from around the world. But it is more
than that: Erik Hirschfeld – and collaborators Andy Swash and Rob Still –
want everyone to be engaged with the plight of the rarest bird species.
Here’s what he has to say about the book:
I wanted to give the term “bird conservation” a more recognizable
face. In order to evoke feelings, funds, and engagement for a cause, it
is essential to make the cause recognizable. By presenting each one of
the world’s rarest species in text and image, and sorting them in a
geographical context, there is a bird for everyone: regardless of where
you live, it should be easy to find the birds in your vicinity. I work
much with beginners to birding, as a guide and lecturer, and the
taxonomic order does not make sense to them. I think it is important to
convince these newcomers about the conservation needs. It does not
matter if you are a beginner or expert, Swede or Polynesian – there is a
bird in the book that everyone can feel for in conservation terms. And
that was my aim, as I think it is extremely important to spread
knowledge about endangered birds.
Could you tell us a little about how you became a fully fledged conservation author?
My professional career is in an unrelated sector but I am basically a
birder, and was heavily involved on the Swedish twitching scene in my
early birding years. Over time my interest in birds has widened – I
hardly keep lists any more, and I appreciate the birds’ context in
nature more, as well as my own personal experiences of them. I am right
now enjoying watching Rooks doing clever things on my street more than
twitching a Yellow-nosed Albatross at my local patch (although I did
twitch it…). I have always written: identification papers in the
eighties, in British journals, and much about migration and faunistics.
With the maturing of my interest it was quite obvious I should do
something on conservation. I have been a staunch supporter of BirdLife International
for 20 years, and am very happy that I could make them benefit from
this book. It is important to remember though that the book is a team
effort by Andy Swash, Rob Still and myself.
There
are some beautiful and striking images in the book, which we loved. Do
you feel that the images are an essential way of engaging people with
the species?
Yes, as I touched on in the first question. It is a matter of
applying simple marketing principles from commercial contexts also in
conservation and the NGO world, to make people aware of the birds. You
know the old saying: a picture means more than a thousand words.
Some of the image contributions were from winners of an international photographic competition – did you get a good response?
Absolutely, I had tried it out with the Rare Birds Yearbooks
so we knew it was going to be a success. The timing has also been good.
With the digital photography boom, many people can take decent
pictures, and you see much more camera equipment in the field now than
30 years ago when you had to wait a couple of weeks to get your films
back. And we are very grateful to the photographers who submitted their
images.
The World’s Rarest Birds
is quite different in format and content from your previous series The
Rare Birds Yearbook, did you also have a different audience in mind?
No, actually not, I thought that basically the same people would buy
them. Andy Swash and Rob Still have been instrumental in the evolution
to The World’s Rarest Birds and I was convinced by them from the beginning this was the way to go. I remember Ade Long at BirdLife suggesting already after the first edition of the Rare Birds Yearbooks that I should go more for photos and less for texts.
The purchase of this book contributes towards supporting the BirdLife International Preventing Extinctions Programme which
is a fantastic cause. Could you tell us about any notable conservation
success stories that you have seen since your involvement with the
project started?
Several. The Madagascar Pochard project in which the species
population recently has quadrupled. The Spoon-billed Sandpiper project
with artificial hatching and building up a captive population. The
project that established a breeding centre for Spix’s Macaw, and now
will release birds into the wild this summer. The banning of diclofenac
in the Indian subcontinent which, slowly, helps vultures. Even if they
are not saved yet, it is not all gloomy! And the many dedicated people
and organizations behind these and other positive trends are success
stories in themselves.
Hakuna maoni:
Chapisha Maoni