It’s the festive season and I am holding the new Lynx Edicions’s Birds of Japan, thinking what a perfect gift to any international birder this book represents. Its waterproof fold-able covers bring back childhood memories… I must have had some illustrated children book with similar covers – my fingertips remember the experience.

Birds of Japan is a lavishly illustrated field guide with maps neatly packed among the paintings, and QR codes packed into text. Being a European birder, I find it particularly interesting to discover which of “my birds” extend their ranges through Asia all the way into this Pacific island country, and it is especially fascinating to see the diversity of stilts, woodcocks and snipes as one goes further east.

This is not my first review of a field guide coming in this series; hence I would like to reflect on the series common traits. All these guides follow the same design. They come as a result of cooperation between Lynx and BirdLife International and they are mostly country-focused (so far, only West Indies has the region-wide coverage). One thing I deeply respect is the addition of common bird names in a local language.

The authors are not just experts on the area, but usually are from within the country in focus. The illustrations come from the Handbook of the Birds of the World series, plus some additional images prepared specifically for the guides. Annoyingly, not many non-passerines are shown in their immature plumage, and the coverage also lacks passerines shown in flight (apart from swallows and martins).

The distribution maps are produced from the digitized maps compiled by BirdLife International and Lynx, which are then improved with local input from the authors. For species with more than one subspecies in the region, the separate resident/breeding ranges of the distinct subspecies are indicated on the map. The taxonomy follows the HBW and BirdLife International Illustrated Checklist of the Birds of the World. To give more attention to local taxa, all subspecies groups present in the region have full entries as well.

The features not commonly encountered in guides by other publishers include QR code for each species (linking to the Internet Bird Collection gallery of photos, videos and sounds), subspecies ranges denoted on the maps, subspecies groups with full accounts as well as local species name and local conservation status.

What I like about the book? Most of the paintings – especially owls

As a rule of thumb, all books that I reviewed were of noticeably high quality. My complaints were minor, but also uniform for the entire series (making it more of an editor’s choice, rather than an oversight), and so far I would dare to say you cannot go wrong if choosing a book from this series.

Back to Japan, the Birds of Japan covers 740 species; among them 30 endemics or near-endemics, 19 introduced and 190 vagrants. Vagrants apart, regular species ranges are shown in 550 distribution maps. Detailed texts cover status, habitat and behavior, age, sex and geographical variation, voice, and confusion-causing species. As I said before, well-marked subspecies groups receive full accounts, and the distributions of subspecies breeding in the region are clearly mapped. With the book you get a coded card so you could download a checklist with full taxonomy.

What I don’t like? Some illustrations, e.g. that White-tailed Eagle

The author, Otani Chikara, has travelled and birded extensively in Japan and elsewhere in Asia, Africa, Oceania and the Americas. He was responsible for rediscovering the Chinese endemic Tibetan Rosefinch after more than 50 years without sightings. He has worked as a birding guide for at least 15 years, leading trips both within and outside Japan.

What I like about the book? Its flexi covers, full coverage of subspecies (very important e.g. when it comes to gulls – there’s an entire plate devoted solely to the Mew Gull and its three subspecies in the country), most of the paintings (especially owls, I had to check which one of 26 illustrators is responsible for them – it turned out there are several of them, my favourite being Hilary Burn). With its 394 pages, the book still feels relatively lightweight and manageable as a tool to be carried in the field.

What I don’t like? Six blank pages in the end, decorated with the title ‘Notes’ (well, I already carry a notebook and don’t need writing paper inside the guide covers). And as much as I like many illustrations, some I don’t, e.g. that White-tailed Eagle.

The standing bird looks like it has pushed its head and neck under water, so all the feathers are flattened and head/neck seems proportionately too small when compared with the rest. Also, the adult in flight has too rounded wings (rear edge should be almost parallel to the leading edge, giving an impression of a plank).

Still, the oddest birds in the book are grebes and loons (appropriately so, I guess) because they are shown in a swimming posture, but not on water (so you cannot tell how much of the bird is above water and what would you actually see), but levitating in mid-air (and most certainly, that is not the way you see them in the wild).

Nevertheless, like the rest of the series Birds of Japan is one more highly successful and very recommendable field guide.

PS. I am really looking forward to the announced Lynx Columbia guide. I wonder how Lynx will pack 2000 species into a single volume that should be manageable in the field – the biggest field guide challenge in the world.

Birds of Japan | By Otani Chikara | Lynx Edicions | 2019 | Flexibound | 392 Pages | 1800+ colour illustrations, 540+ colour distribution maps | ISBN: 9788416728121

Written by Dragan
Dragan Simic is obsessively passionate about two things – birding and travelling in search of birds, and that has taken him from his native Balkans to the far shores of Europe and the Mediterranean, southern Africa, India and Latin America. His 10,000 Birds blog posts were Highly Commended in the International Category of the 2015 BBC Wildlife Blogger Awards. Birder by passion and environmental scientist by education, he is an ecotourism consultant, a field researcher and a bird blogger who always thinks that birding must be better behind that next bend in the road, and that the best bird ever is – the next lifer. He tweets as @albicilla66