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* ''[[The Sibley Guide to Birds]]'' by [[David Allen Sibley]] was published in 2000, and was widely regarded as setting a new standard for field guides in [[North America]].
* ''[[The Sibley Guide to Birds]]'' by [[David Allen Sibley]] was published in 2000, and was widely regarded as setting a new standard for field guides in [[North America]].


* ''[[The Collins Bird Guide]]'' by [[Peter J. Grant]] and [[Lars Svensson]] was first published in 2000, and was received extremely warmly by birders. It deals with the birds of the bulk of the Western Palearctic.
* ''[[The Collins Bird Guide]]'' by [[Peter J. Grant]] and [[Lars Svensson (ornithologist)|Lars Svensson]] was first published in 2000, and was received extremely warmly by birders. It deals with the birds of the bulk of the Western Palearctic.


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Revision as of 16:30, 1 February 2008

The literature relating to birding is vast, however certain books or series are regarded by the birding community as key milestones, setting standards of quality and influencing the development of birding literature, or birding itself. These works and their impact are dealt with on this page, in chronological order of publication. More information on each of the individual works can be found on their individual pages.

  • The Helm Identification Guides are a series, originally produced by Christopher Helm, covering the identification of groups of birds at a worldwide scale. The first volume produced was Seabirds by Peter Harrison, published in 1983.
  • The Macmillan Field Guides to Bird Identification are two small field guides. They adopt an unusual format, in that not all species in the geographical area of coverage are included; instead only groups of species which the authors regarded as difficult to identify are covered. Each such group is given a chapter, where identification is covered discurively rather than in the abbreviated form more usually used in a field guide. The publication of the first volume (covering Britain and Ireland) was the first time that this approach had been used in a European guide; the book undoubtedly had a major influence on improving the identification skills of birders in Britain during the [1990s]][.