The Birds of Konza
The Avian Ecology of the Tallgrass Prairie
John L. Zimmerman
216 pages, 20 photographs, 23 figures/maps, 6 x 9
Cloth ISBN 978-0-7006-0597-2, $19.95
Renowned for its tall grasses,
the Konza Prairie in east-central Kansas provides shelter for
a variety of birds, from the mourning dove to the wild turkey.
Yet many birds come to the Prairie for other reasons--the
Virginian rail prefers the seasonal marshy swales, the northern
rough-winged swallow searches the clay banks of active streams
for its nest sites, the common poorwill nests in the sparsely
vegetated rocky outcrop, while the yellow-rumped warbler favors
a broad range of woody habitats, from clumps of dogwood in the
upland prairies to the denser interior of the gallery forest.
Just passing over in search of wetter spots, the Great Blue Heron
occasionally alights on a pond or a creek, while, living up to
its name, the chimney swift resides only in the chimney of the
stone house at the Konza Prairie headquarters.
Konza Prairie, an 8,600-acre ocean of tallgrass cut by occasional
stands of forests along streams and creeks, is a stomping ground
or permanent home to more than 200 species of birds. Owned by
The Nature Conservancy and administered by the Division of Biology
at Kansas State University, the Prairies is located in the middle
of the Flint Hills, which are covered by the last major remnants
of virgin tallgrass prairie that once stretched from the eastern
Dakotas to Oklahoma and east through Iowa and Illinois to Indiana
and Ohio.
Featuring a current synopsis of the seasonal occurrence, habitat
preference, breeding status, and abundance for all 208 species
that have been recorded on the site, The Birds of Konza
provides a basis for comparisons to other habitats and geographic
areas as well as the benchmark for continuing studies in the
tallgrass prairie. It is the only long-term, comprehensive analysis
of bird populations in both grassland and forested habitats in
the region.
"This is the most comprehensive survey of avian ecology
in prairie habitats of the Great Plains yet available. It offers
a highly useful mix of real data and well-written descriptions
that facilitate its accessibility to the general reader."--Paul
A. Johnsgard, author of Birds of the Rocky Mountains
and Birds of the Great Plains: Breeding Species and Their
Distribution
"Zimmerman has no peer when it comes to avian ecology
of the tallgrass prairie. He brings his full knowledge to bear
in this book."--Max C. Thompson, coauthor of the
two-volume Birds in Kansas
"This book is a distillation of the information gained
from twenty years of experience observing in one tallgrass prairie
site. It is particularly strong in describing the relations of
bird populations to the vegetative communities and to such physical
phenomena as fire and seasonal change. It also contains a large
amount of useful natural history information about prairie birds
and will enhance an understanding and appreciation of our natural
prairie heritage in Kansas."--Dwight Platt, Bethel
College
JOHN L. ZIMMERMAN, former professor of biology at Kansas
State University, is author of Cheyenne
Bottoms: Wetland in Jeopardy, and coauthor of Kansas Breeding Bird Atlas and A Guide to Bird Finding in Kansas and Western
Missouri. He lives in Virginia.
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