
A field guide
A 'field guide' is a
book designed to help the reader identify
wildlife (
plants or
animals) or other objects of natural occurrence (e.g.
minerals). It is generally designed to be brought into the 'field' or local area where such objects exist to help distinguish between similar objects. Field guides are often designed to help users distinguish animals and plants that may be similar in appearance but are not necessarily closely related.
It will typically include a description of the objects covered, together with
paintings or
photographs and an index. More serious and scientific field identification books, including those intended for students, will probably include
identification keys to assist with identification, but the publicly-accessible field guide is more often a browsable picture guide organized by family, color, shape, location or other descriptors.
History
Popular interest in identifying things in nature probably were strongest in
bird and
plant guides. In
1902,
Florence Merriam Bailey, wife of well-known
zoologist Vernon Bailey wrote a ''Handbook of Birds of the Western United States'' which was arranged by
taxonomic order and had clear descriptions of
species size, distribution, feeding and nesting habits, resembling the modern field guide. From this point to the
1930s, many much more modern parts of field guides were tried out by
Chester A. Reed and others such as changing the size of the book to fit the pocket, including color plates, and different subjects such as
garden and
woodland flowers,
insects and
dogs.
In
1934,
Roger Tory Peterson, using his fine skill as an
artist, changed the way modern field guides approached identification. Using color plates with
paintings of similar species together - and marked with arrows showing the differences - people could use his bird guide in the field to compare species quickly to make identification easier. This technique was used in most of Peterson's Field Guides from
animal tracks to
seashells.
Also popular in the
1960s were the
Golden Guides which expanded the range of subjects of what a field guide could address, including antique
glass,
wine,
photography and
hallucinogenic plants (often written by experts in their respective field - the latter was written by
Schultes, a respected name in
ethnobotany). This series was mostly edited by
Herbert Zim for Golden Press.
Today, each field guide has its own range, focus and organization. Specialist publishers such as Croom Helm, along with organisations like the Audubon Society, the
RSPB, the
Field Studies Council,
National Geographic,
HarperCollins, and many others all produce quality field guides.
How field guides work
It is difficult to generalise about the way in which field guides work, because it depends on the audience and subject of the guide.
For general public use, the main point of field guides are to definitively identify a bird, plant, rock, butterfly or other natural object down to the popular naming level. To this end field guides may employ a few simple keys, scanning illustrations for a match and comparison of similar-looking things by their differences. They are designed to help people limit their search to a section of the book where choices are few.
Guides for students will often introduce the concept of
identification keys. Plant field guides such as Newcombs frequently have an abbreviated key that helps limit the search. Insect guides tend to limit identification to Order or Family levels rather than individual species due to their diversity.
Future of field guides
The
Internet and other technical and organizational advances shows promise for advancing the field guide concept. Products that use handheld devices and
GPS mapping to bring into the field will stretch the idea of what a field guide is for the future.
External links
★
Electronic Field Guides
★
A Guide to Golden Guides
★
A Guide to Observer's Books (Observer's Pocket Series)
★
PalmOs based Electronic Field Guide