Enter ancient lands of wind and waves where the planet's greatest
flyers battle for survival.
As the only creatures at home on land, at sea, and in the air, seabirds
have evolved to thrive in the most demanding environment on Earth.
In The Seabird's Cry, Adam Nicolson travels ocean paths, fusing
traditional knowledge with astonishing facts science has recently
learned about these creatures: the way their bodies actually work, their
dazzling navigational skills, their ability to smell their way to fish
or home and to understand the discipline of the winds upon which they
depend.
This book is a paean to the beauty of life on the wing, but, even as we
are coming to understand the seabirds, a global tragedy is unfolding.
Their numbers are in freefall, dropping by nearly 70 percent in the last
sixty years, a billion fewer now than in 1950. Extinction stalks the
ocean, and there is a danger that the hundred-million-year-old cries of
a seabird colony, rolling around in the bays and headlands of high
latitudes, will this century become but a memory.