Nature and the natural world: general interest Books

2737 products


  • Mannahatta

    Abrams Mannahatta

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisIn this new, accessible package, Sanderson takes you on a trip back through time, to explore Manhattan in its primitive form. Readers will be given a glimpse of what Manhattan looked like to its early explorers; before the skyscrapers, before the crowded sidewalks and the busy intersections of avenues and streets

    Out of stock

    £34.00

  • Beastly

    Harry N. Abrams Beastly

    10 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    10 in stock

    £22.40

  • ORIENTAL GAMEFOWL A Guide for the Sportsman Poultryman and Exhibitor of Rare Poultry Species and Gamefowl of the World

    15 in stock

    £45.55

  • Conundrum The Evolution of Homosexuality

    15 in stock

    £12.49

  • Field Guide to the Street Trees of New York City

    Johns Hopkins University Press Field Guide to the Street Trees of New York City

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisYour evening walk will never be the same once you come to know the quiet giants that line the city's streets.Trade Review"Dr. Day... A sort of Julia Child of nature." (New York Times) "This little gem fills you in on everything finned, furred, feathered, or leafed, and how to find it, in all five boroughs." (House and Garden) "Leslie Day ('a child of Manhattan') reveals hidden depths of this urban behemoth... A wonderful guide to the green side of the Big Apple." (Guardian)"Table of ContentsForeword, by Amy FreitagAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Leafy Neighborhoods of the Five Boroughs2. Tree Terminology3. Illustrated Glossary4. TreesDeciduous ConifersBald CypressDawn RedwoodDeciduous Broadleaf TreesSimple, UnlobedCallery PearNorthern CatalpaSchubert ChokecherryKwanzan CherryCrabappleDowny ServiceberryEastern RedbudAmerican ElmChinese ElmJapanese ZelkovaFlowering DogwoodGinkgo BilobaHawthornEuropean HornbeamJapanese Tree LilacKatsuraAmerican LindenLittlelead LindenSilver LindenSaucer MagnoliaPurple Leaf PlumSimple, LobedLondon PlaneHedge MapleJapanese MapleNorway MapleRed MapleRilver MapleSugar MapleSycamore MapleWhite MulberryEastern White OakEnglish OakNorthern Red OakPin OakSawtooth OakSwamp White OakWillow OakSweetgumTuliptreeCompound, PinnateTree of HeavenGreen AshWhite AshBlack LocustHoney LocustGoldenrain TreeJapanese PagodatreeKentucky PagodatreeCompound, Chestnut5. Tree PeopleTree Care TipsBibliographyIndex

    15 in stock

    £19.35

  • Bats of the United States and Canada

    Johns Hopkins University Press Bats of the United States and Canada

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsisand Canada.Trade ReviewRichly illustrated with an outstanding assortment of full-color photographs... Written in a clear and conversational style... Whether you are just becoming interested in bats or are already a well-informed chiropteran reader, this text will be a fine addition to your caving library. -- Danny A. Brass Underground Movement If you are at all interested in bats, get a copy of this book. You will be glad you did! Book Bargains and Previews A well-written, interesting primer on bats that provides a broad overview of bat biology and conservation... The book is richly illustrated with an excellent assortment of full-color photographs. Written in a clear, conversational style, the volume is suitable for general readers interested in learning more about this fascinating and unique group of mammals. Choice Almost anyone who has an interest in bats will find the book useful. For the expert it's a quick but not overly detailed description of the biology, distribution, and appearance of the species in question and perfect for quick questions regarding life history or distribution. For novice bat biologists it should be a great introduction to the biology of bats; I can see it as an inexpensive text for an undergraduate class in bats. And for the general reader it's an easy way to start to plumb bat diversity, biology,and threats. Journal of Mammalogy A nice addition to home and library bookshelves everywhere. -- Micheal D. Baker Journal of Mammal Evolution I would recommend this book to anyone interested in an up-to-date introduction to bats and their biology, in the United States and Canada... an inexpensive and invaluable resource for teaching and outreach. -- Matina Kalcounis-Rueppell Bat Research News This comprehensive guide will be useful for all interested in Chiroptera. -- Evelyne Bremond-Hoslet MammaliaTable of ContentsPrefaceAcknowledgmentsIntroductionClassificationBiologyEcholocationsBenefits of Insectivorous BatsForagingFeeding BehaviorNoninsectivorous BatsVampire BatsGuanoSummer HabitatSummer–Autumn SwarmingWinter Habitat and HibernationMigrationHoming AbilityReproduction and LongevityBats as FoodBat "Bombs"Mines and BridgesControlling "Nuisance" BatsAttracting BatsThreats to BatsRabiesHistoplasmosisBats and Wind PowerWhite-nose SyndromeConservationStatus of Bats in the United States and CanadaEndangered Species and SubspeciesResearch TechniquesInventoriesThermal ImagingNets and TrapsBat BandingRadiotelemetryAcoustic IdentificationAdditional TechniquesSpecies AccountsMexican Long-tongued Bat, Choeronycteris mexicanaMexican Long-nosed Bat, Leptonycteris nivalisLesser Long-nosed Bat, Leptonycteris yerbabuenaeCalifornia Leaf-nosed Bat, Macrotus californicusJamaican Fruit-eating Bat, Artibeus jamaicensisPeter's Ghost-faced Bat, Mormoops megalophyllaFlorida Bonneted Bat, Eumops floridanusGreater Bonneted Bat, Eumops perotisUnderwood's Bonneted Bat, Eumops underwoodiPallas' Mastiff Bat, Molossus molossusPocketed Free-tailed Bat, Nyctinomops femorosaccusBig Free-tailed Bat, Nyctinomops macrotisBrazilian Free-tailed Bat, Tadarida brasiliensisBig Brown Bat, Eptesicus fuscusWestern Red Bat, Lasiurus blossevilliiEastern Red Bat, Lasiurus borealisHoary Bat, Lasiurus cinereusSouthern Yellow Bat, Lasiurus egaNorthern Yellow Bat, Lasiurus intermediusSeminole Bat, Lasiurus seminolusWestern Yellow Bat, Lasiurus xanthinusEvening Bat, Nycticeius humeralisCanyon Bat, Parastrellus hesperusTri-colored Bat, Perimyotis subflavusRafinesque's Big-eared Bat, Corynorhinus rafinesquiiTownsend's Big-eared Bat, Corynorhinus townsendiiSpotted Bat, Euderma maculatumAllen's Big-eared Bat, Idionycteris phyllotisPallid Bat, Antrozous pallidusSilver-haired Bat, Lasionycteris noctivagansSouthwestern Bat, Myotis auriculusSoutheastern Bat, Myotis austroripariusCalifornia Bat, Myotis californicusWestern Small-footed Bat, Myotis ciliolabrumLong-eared Bat, Myotis evotisGray Bat, Myotis grisescensKeen's Bat, Myotis keeniiEastern Small-footed Bat, Myotis leibiiLittle Brown Bat, Myotis lucifugusDark-nosed Small-footed Bat, Myotis melanorhinusArizona Bat, Myotis occultusNorthern Long-eared Bat, Myotis septentrionalisIndiana Bat, Myotis sodalisFringed Bat, Myotis thysanodesCave Bat, Myotis veliferLong-legged Bat, Myotis volansYuma Bat, Myotis yumanensisSpecies of Accidental OccurrenceHairy-legged Vampire Bat, Diphylla ecaudataBuffy Flower Bat, Erophylla sezekorniCuban Flower Bat, Phyllonycteris poeyiCuban Fig-eating Bat, Phyllops falcatusSummaryAppendix: Bats of the United States and Canada (Including Protection Status)Index

    15 in stock

    £30.20

  • Deer

    Johns Hopkins University Press Deer

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisNature lovers, hunters, and anyone curious about deer will find this fact-filled book both fascinating and full of surprises.Trade ReviewWith vivid color photographs and an accessible and engaging question-and-answer format, this easy-to read book is the go-to resource on deer. Nature lovers, hunters, and anyone curious about deer will find this fact-filled book both fascinating and full of surprises. Southeastern Naturalist A nice book to read. -- Robert E. Hoopes Wildlife Activist This introductory work translates scientific studies/terminology into an easy-to-read format for lay readers to gain an understanding of the Cervidae family. Choice Hunters, nature lovers, and anyone curious abot deer will enjoy reading this book. -- Evelyne Bremond-Hoslet MammaliaTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Introducing DeerWhat are deer?What is the difference between bucks, stags, and bulls?How many kinds of deer are there?How are musk deer different from "true" deer?What are the most common species of deer?What species of deer are most rare?Why are deer important?Where do deer live?What is the current classification of deer?What characterizes the major groups of deer?When did deer evolve?What is the oldest fossil deer?2. Form and FunctionWhat are the largest and smallest living deer?What is the metabolism of deer?What is the structure and function of deer teeth?Can deer see color?Can deer swim?How fast can deer run?How high can deer jump?What are antlers?What determines antler size in an individual?Why do deer have antlers?Do all male deer have antlers?Do female deer ever have antlers?Why do female caribou usually have antlers?How do antlers differ from horns?What is the yearly cycle of antlers?When and how do antlers grow?How fast can antlers grow?Do antlers of tropical deer differ from those of temperate species?How large and heavy can antlers get?How are antlers shed?Why shed antlers and regrow them every year?Why are relatively few shed antlers found on the ground?Are antlers always symmetrical?How do antler anomalies occur?How did antlers evolve?3. Deer Coat ColorsWhat are the functions of the coat in deer?What causes the different coat colors of deer?How are hair colors determined genetically?What about patterns of coat color?Are there age-related differences in coat color?Do coat colors change in different seasons?Is there geographic variation in coat color within a given species?4. Deer BehaviorAre deer social?Do deer fight?How smary are deer?Do deer play?Do deer talk?How do deer avoid predators?5. Deer EcologyDo deer sleep in the same place each night?Do deer migrate?Which geographic regions have the most species of deer?How do deer survive in the desert or during droughts?How do deer survive the winter?Do deer have enemies?Do deer get sick?Are deer good for the environment?6. Reproduction and DevelopmentHow do deer reproduce?When do deer mate and give birth?Do deer breed only one time per year?How many fawns do deer have?Are all deer fawns full siblings?Can the sex of a deer be determined visually?Do deer care for their young?How fast do deer grow?How can you tell the age of a deer?How long do deer live?7. Foods and FeedingWhat do deer eat?How do deer find food?Are any deer scavengers?How do deer digest their food?Do deer store food?8. Deer and HumansDo deer make good pets?Should people feed deer?Do deer feel pain?What should I do if I find an injured deer?What should I do if I find a fawn?What is the best way to observe deer?How economically important are deer today?What are deer game farms and game ranches?How and where did deer farms begin?What parts of deer are used in traditional Asian medicine?9. Deer Problems (from a human viewpoint)Can deer be pests?How do I reduce deer damage?How many deer are hit by vehicles?Where are deer most often hit?What are ways to reduce deer-vehicle collisions?Do deer have diseases that are contagious?Can deer negatively affect forest regeneration and structure?How can exotic species of deer cause problems?Where have deer been introduced?Why introduce deer to different places?10. Human Problems (from a deer's viewpoint)Do people hunt and eat deer?Are any deer species endangered?What is so unusual about the endangered Père David's deer?What about other conservation efforts?Why are some species endangered while others reach pest proportions?How will deer be affected by global warming?11. Deer in Art and LiteratureWhat roles do deer play in art, religion, mythology, and popular culture?How have deer been incorporated into literature andpoetry?12. "Deerology"Who studies deer?What species are best known?What species are least known?How do scientists tell deer apart?Appendix A: Deer of the WorldAppendix B: Deer Conservation OrganizationsBibliographyIndex

    15 in stock

    £41.50

  • Deer

    Johns Hopkins University Press Deer

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisNature lovers, hunters, and anyone curious about deer will find this fact-filled book both fascinating and full of surprises.Trade ReviewWith vivid color photographs and an accessible and engaging question-and-answer format, this easy-to read book is the go-to resource on deer. Nature lovers, hunters, and anyone curious about deer will find this fact-filled book both fascinating and full of surprises. Southeastern Naturalist A nice book to read. -- Robert E. Hoopes Wildlife Activist This introductory work translates scientific studies/terminology into an easy-to-read format for lay readers to gain an understanding of the Cervidae family. Choice Hunters, nature lovers, and anyone curious abot deer will enjoy reading this book. -- Evelyne Bremond-Hoslet MammaliaTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Introducing DeerWhat are deer?What is the difference between bucks, stags, and bulls?How many kinds of deer are there?How are musk deer different from "true" deer?What are the most common species of deer?What species of deer are most rare?Why are deer important?Where do deer live?What is the current classification of deer?What characterizes the major groups of deer?When did deer evolve?What is the oldest fossil deer?2. Form and FunctionWhat are the largest and smallest living deer?What is the metabolism of deer?What is the structure and function of deer teeth?Can deer see color?Can deer swim?How fast can deer run?How high can deer jump?What are antlers?What determines antler size in an individual?Why do deer have antlers?Do all male deer have antlers?Do female deer ever have antlers?Why do female caribou usually have antlers?How do antlers differ from horns?What is the yearly cycle of antlers?When and how do antlers grow?How fast can antlers grow?Do antlers of tropical deer differ from those of temperate species?How large and heavy can antlers get?How are antlers shed?Why shed antlers and regrow them every year?Why are relatively few shed antlers found on the ground?Are antlers always symmetrical?How do antler anomalies occur?How did antlers evolve?3. Deer Coat ColorsWhat are the functions of the coat in deer?What causes the different coat colors of deer?How are hair colors determined genetically?What about patterns of coat color?Are there age-related differences in coat color?Do coat colors change in different seasons?Is there geographic variation in coat color within a given species?4. Deer BehaviorAre deer social?Do deer fight?How smary are deer?Do deer play?Do deer talk?How do deer avoid predators?5. Deer EcologyDo deer sleep in the same place each night?Do deer migrate?Which geographic regions have the most species of deer?How do deer survive in the desert or during droughts?How do deer survive the winter?Do deer have enemies?Do deer get sick?Are deer good for the environment?6. Reproduction and DevelopmentHow do deer reproduce?When do deer mate and give birth?Do deer breed only one time per year?How many fawns do deer have?Are all deer fawns full siblings?Can the sex of a deer be determined visually?Do deer care for their young?How fast do deer grow?How can you tell the age of a deer?How long do deer live?7. Foods and FeedingWhat do deer eat?How do deer find food?Are any deer scavengers?How do deer digest their food?Do deer store food?8. Deer and HumansDo deer make good pets?Should people feed deer?Do deer feel pain?What should I do if I find an injured deer?What should I do if I find a fawn?What is the best way to observe deer?How economically important are deer today?What are deer game farms and game ranches?How and where did deer farms begin?What parts of deer are used in traditional Asian medicine?9. Deer Problems (from a human viewpoint)Can deer be pests?How do I reduce deer damage?How many deer are hit by vehicles?Where are deer most often hit?What are ways to reduce deer-vehicle collisions?Do deer have diseases that are contagious?Can deer negatively affect forest regeneration and structure?How can exotic species of deer cause problems?Where have deer been introduced?Why introduce deer to different places?10. Human Problems (from a deer's viewpoint)Do people hunt and eat deer?Are any deer species endangered?What is so unusual about the endangered Père David's deer?What about other conservation efforts?Why are some species endangered while others reach pest proportions?How will deer be affected by global warming?11. Deer in Art and LiteratureWhat roles do deer play in art, religion, mythology, and popular culture?How have deer been incorporated into literature andpoetry?12. "Deerology"Who studies deer?What species are best known?What species are least known?How do scientists tell deer apart?Appendix A: Deer of the WorldAppendix B: Deer Conservation OrganizationsBibliographyIndex

    15 in stock

    £28.57

  • Secret Lives of Ants

    Johns Hopkins University Press Secret Lives of Ants

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisIn the words of the author, Once you get to know them, you'll love them.Trade ReviewA good general introduction to the biology of ants. Birdbooker Report Choe's goal is to expose the fascinating miniature world of ants to curious minds... Highly recommended. Choice Enter the miniature world of ants and learn about their societies, from massacres and power plays to self-sacrifice and factory-like enterprises. Science News An enjoyable popular read from an author who combines expert scientific knowledge of ants with a real passion for these miniscule marvels. The text is amply illustrated with complementary and captivating illustrations and original photographs. It will be a welcome addition to the bookcase of naturalists of any age. -- J. Zd'arek European Journal of EntomologyTable of ContentsForeword, by Jane GoodallPrefaceIntroduction: My First Journey to the AntsPart I: The Economics of Ant Society1. Ants Mean Business: How the Futuristic Economics of Ants Maximizes Their Returns2. Economies of Scale and Rational BusinessManagement: From Joint Ventures to Multinational Enterprises3. A 50-Million-Year Tradition of Farming: The Massive Underground Mushroom Farms of the Leaf-cutter Ants4. Ant Ranchers: Masters of Dairy Farming Second Only to Mankind5. The World's First Bodyguards: Standing Watch for Room and Board6. The Charge of the Ant Brigade: The Terrifying March of the Army AntsPart II: The Culture of Ant Society7. Talking with the Ants: The Clever Designs of Ant Communication8. The Ants Come Home: Sense of Direction and Biological Clocks9. Ants at Work: Maids, Nannies, Laborers, Soldiers10. Con Artists of the Ant World: Parasites That Have Cracked the Ants' Secret Code11. Villains and Monsters of the Ant World: Predators and ParasitesPart III: The Politics of Ant Society12. No Children of Their Own: Females in the Service of an Amazon Queen13. Conflict in the Queendom: Divine Right of the Queen? Or the Will of the Masses?14. Political Conflict and International Alliances: Yesterday's Comrade, Today's Enemy15. The Foundation Myth of the Aztec Ant Queendom: The Queens' Battle for the Throne16. War and Slavery: From Full-Scale Slaughter to Bloodless WarfareEpilogue: To Know Them Is to Love Them

    15 in stock

    £33.00

  • Squirrels of the World

    Johns Hopkins University Press Squirrels of the World

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisFrom the familiar gray squirrel of American backyards to the exotic and endangered woolly flying squirrel of Pakistan, this title provides color photographs that document rare and unusual squirrels as well as common varieties, evolution, morphology, and ecology.Trade ReviewAs a comprehensive guide, the book is quite informative, easy to use, beautifully designed, and an excellent resource for anyone interested in this family of mammals. -- Selma Glasscock The Wildlife Society Southwest Section Newsletter This thorough guide to the squirrel family profiles 285 species, including not only the tree and flying squirrels, but also chipmunks, ground squirrels (including prairie dogs), and marmots. Choice Squirrels of the World does a wonderful job at surveying this charismatic group of animals... The photographs in this book are worth the cost of the book themselves. -- Randy Lauff Canadian Field-Naturalist This is a wonderful book with hundreds of full-color photographs packed with loads of information on the 285 known living species of squirrels found all over the world. -- Sonu Chandiram Biz India Magazine The heart of this book is an account of each of the 285 species of squirrels... The photographs and color range maps give the book a striking and handsome appearance... excellent treatment of the squirrel family. -- Kenneth Armitage Quarterly Review of Biology Squirrels of the World provides an excellent guide to the present state of scientific knowledge of the Sciuridae, but also sheds light on the degree of ignorance that remains. -- Nicholas Gould International Zoo News Still think you know all you need to about the Sciuridae? What tree squirrel specializes in ant-eating, and has a distinct skull with a long snout? What bushy-tailed tree squirrel weighs only around 15 g, the size of a deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus)? I'm not going to tell you. Buy the book. -- Edward J. Heske Journal of Mammology If you need a squirrel inventory, this is a good one. And it's nice to feel that this type of catalogue is still appearing in print rather than on some obscure website of doubtful reliability. The back cover 'blurb' reveals the authors' impeccable institutional affiliations. -- Pat Morrie Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society A guide to the squirrels of the world is long overdue. This one is information rich, clearly written and beautifully presented. It incorporates an extensive bibliography (well over 1,500 references), discussions about important squirrel biology topics, critical conservation information, a large array of images and a massive collection of species-dependent information. -- Clay E. Corbin African Journal of Ecology As a teacher of mammalogy, this is a valuable contribution and I expect that I will use it while preparing multiple lectures for my courses. As a squirrel devotee, I am sure this I will return to many of the species accounts to glean more information and thereby bolster my enthusiasm for these fascinating animals. -- Eileen A. Lacey Journal of Mammalian EvolutionTable of ContentsPrefaceAbbreviationsTaxonomic IntroductionPaleontologyAnatomyEcology, Behavior, and ConservationSpecies AccountsRatufinaeRatufaSciurillinaeSciurillusSciurinaeSciuriniMicrosciurusRheithrosciurusSciurusSyntheosciurusTamiasciurusPteromyiniAeretesAeromysBelomysBiswamoyopterusEoglaucomysEupetaurusGlaucomysHylopetesIomysPetaurillusPetauristaPetinomysPteromysPteromyscusTrogopterusCallosciurinaeCallosciurusDremomysExilisciurusFunambulusGlyphotesHyosciurusLariscusMenetesNannosciurusProsciurillusRhinosciurusRubrisciurusSundasciurusTamiopsXerinaeXeriniAtlantoxerusSpermophilopsisXerusProtoxeriniEpixerusFunisciurusHeliosciurusMyosciurusParaxerusProtoxerusMarmotiniAmmospermophilusCallospermophilusCynomysIctidomysMarmotaNotocitellusOtospermophilusPoliocitellusSciurotamiasSpermophilusTamiasUrocitellusXerospermophilusAppendix: Representative Skulls of Each Squirrel GenusReferencesIndex

    15 in stock

    £68.00

  • Plants of the Chesapeake Bay

    Johns Hopkins University Press Plants of the Chesapeake Bay

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisIts compact, portable design encourages naturalists, local residents, boaters, researchers, and the curious-minded alike to throw the guide in their pack and explore the botanical bounty of the Chesapeake Bay.Trade ReviewPlants of the Chesapeake Bay deserves shelf space in the library of every Chesapeake boater who would like to understand how our Bay's ecosystem works. -- John Page Williams Chesapeake Bay Magazine Plants of the Chesapeake Bay is a beautiful book covering a beautiful region. ChoiceTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroductionChapter 1. Plant Communities of the Chesapeak BayChapter 2. Plants of Hyper Saline HabitatsChapter 3. Plnats of Maritime HabitatsChapter 4. Plants of Brackish HabitatsChapter 5. Plants of Freshwater HabitatsAppendixScientific Names, Authors, and Families of Plants of the Chesapeake BayIndex of Scientific NamesGeneral Index

    15 in stock

    £30.28

  • Ordering Life

    Johns Hopkins University Press Ordering Life

    5 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe broader social context in which scientists work is just as important to the project of naming, describing, classifying, and, ultimately, explaining life.Trade ReviewFor those with an interest in the history of natural history. -- Ian Paulsen, GrrlScientist Guardian A very readable account of the long-lived naturalist/entomologist Karl Jordan (1861-1959). Choice Any college-level natural history holding will find this enlightening. Midwest Book Review Karl Jordan's innovative methods of classifying insect species are highlighted in this biography of the early 20th century entomologist. Science News Ordering Life, by Kristin Johnson, is one part biography to three parts history and philosophy of science. 'Jordan serves as a useful guide', Johnson writes, 'not only to understanding how knowledge about biodiversity is obtained but how the answer to that question has changed over time and why'. -- Louise Fabiani Times Literary Supplement There are layers of richness in Johnson's book and readers will doubtless draw their own conclusions for Johnson's pleasong style leads the reader by means of historical narrtive rather than proselytization. -- Malcolm J. Scoble Biological Journal of the Linnean SocietyTable of ContentsIntroduction1. Joining the Naturalist Tradition"Beetles. Beautiful beetles"Becoming a ZoologistThe Cosmopolitan NaturalistsThe "nice berth": Curating a Zoological MuseumMobilizing the Naturalist Tradition2. Reforming EntomologyThe "strange mixture" of EntomologistsHow to Do EntomologyThe "making" of SpeciesA New Type of CollectionRetraining the Natural History Network3. Ordering Beetles, Butterflies, and Moths"The great desideratum"Revising the SwallowtailsMaking Systematics ScientificCrossing over to BiologyAmassing the Concreta4. Ordering NaturalistsMen of Two ClassesOrganizing EntomologistsThe End of Tring's Heyday"Science knows no country"A "nation of Entomologists"5. A Descent into DisorderTelling "which way the wind blows"The Balance of Europe Is UpsetThe StandstillRecovering Friends, Committees, and Congresses I"The requirements for a thorough investigation"Taxonomy in a Changed WorldThe Rise of Applied EntomologyThe Rise of Applied EntomologyVarious Utopias I: The Ithaca CongressVarious Utopias II: The International Entomological InstituteA Lad's Last Marble7. The Ruin of War and the Synthesis of BiologyThe Edges of EmpireWhere Subspecies Meet"The end of Tring as we have known and cherished it""Provided Europe does not get quite mad""Without the collection I am hopeless"8. Naturalists in a New LandscapeRecovering Friends, Committees, and Congresses IIThe Quest to "clear up the chaos" in Weevils and FleasAvoiding the Snake in the GrassGlorified Office BoysLate for a KnighthoodConclusionAcknowledgments

    5 in stock

    £37.50

  • Porcupines

    Johns Hopkins University Press Porcupines

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisRoze highlights the conservation issues that surround some porcupine species, such as the thin-spine porcupine of Brazil, which is so rare that it was thought to be extinct until its rediscovery in the 1980s.Trade ReviewPorcupines: The Animal Answer Guide presents solid, current, science of porcupine biology... A good general introduction into the biology of porcupines. -- Ian Paulsen Birdbooker Report Delightful. -- Jason Bittel Slate A fine survey recommended for any serious natural history holding. Midwest Book Review Roze has produced a useful guide to a familiar but often not entirely understood mammal... This informative, interesting volume will be a valuable addition to any academic library. Choice A tome that can be appreciate by trained biologists, interested general readers, and budding junior naturalists... Anyone interested in mammalian natural history will want to add this excellent work to their collection. -- John L. Koprowski Quarterly Review of BiologyTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Introducing PorcupinesWhat is a porcupine?How many kinds of porcupines are there?Who's who among the Old World porcupines?Who's who among the New World porcupines?Why are porcupines important?Why should people care about porcupines?What is the current classification of porcupines?What characterizes the major groups of porcupines?When did porcupines evolve?Why is the North American porcupine successful?2. Form and Function of PorcupinesWhat are the largest and smallest living porcupines?Can porcupines see color?Can porcupines swim?Can porcupines burrow?What senses are best developed in porcupines?How do porcupines use their tails?How many quills does a porcupine have?Do quills provide good winter insulation?Does a porcupine throw its quills?What happens when a quill strikes a predator?How does a porcupine minimize self-quilling?How long does it take to replace a lost quill?How did porcupine quills evolve?Why are a porcupine's front teeth orange?Do porcupines have scent glands?How long does it take for a porcupine to digest a meal?Do porcupines suffer from old-age diseases?3. Porcupine ColorsWhat color are porcupine quills?Is there a reason for coat color patterns in porcupines?Do porcupine colors change with age?How does fur color indicate that a female porcupine is lactating?Are albino porcupines found in nature?Why do porcupines glow under a black light?4. Porcupine BehaviorAre porcupines social?Do porcupines fight?Do porcupines bite?Do porcupines play?How smart are porcupines?How do porcupines communicate?Do porcupines hibernate?How fast can porcupines run?How do porcupines climb trees?Do porcupines fall out of trees?How can I tell whether a tree is being used as food source by a porcupine?5. Porcupine EcologyWhich geographic regions have the most porcupine species?Do porcupines migrate?Can several porcupine species live together in the samearea?Are there porcupines in the desert?How do porcupines survive the winter?Do porcupines get sick?How can you tell if a porcupine is sick?Are porcupines good for the environment?What are the important porcupine predators?What possible mutualists live with porcupines?Do porcupines compete for food with other vertebrate herbivores?Do porcupines undergo population cycles?6. Reproduction and DevelopmentHow do porcupines reproduce?Do porcupines always reproduce in the same season?How is a male porcupine distinguished from a female?How long are porcupines pregnant?How is a baby porcupine born?How many babies do porcupines have?What is a baby porcupine called?Do porcupines care for their young?How long do female porcupines nurse their young?How fast do porcupines grow?How can you tell the age of a porcupine?At what age do porcupines start breeding?Do female porcupines go through menopause?How long do porcupines live?How do individual porcupines differ in reproductive success?7. Foods and FeedingWhat do porcupines eat?How do porcupines find food?Do porcupines scavenge?Do porcupines store food?Why do porcupines eat clay?How often do porcupines drink?8. Porcupines and HumansDo porcupines make good pets?Should people feed porcupines?What should I do if I find an injured porcupine?What should I do if I find a diseased porcupine?How can I see porcupines in the wild?Why are so many porcupines found as roadkills?9. Porcupine Problems (from a human's viewpoint)Are some porcupines pests?Why do porcupines sometimes gnaw the rubber tires of cars?How can I keep porcupines from my cabin in the woods?Can there be too many porcupines in a forest?How can I keep porcupines away from valuable trees?Are porcupines dangerous to people or pets?Do porcupines transmit human diseases?Is it safe to eat porcupines?How can I remove quills from a pet?What should I do if I'm injured by a porcupine?Can porcupines act as invasive species?10. Human Problems (from a porcupine's viewpoint)Are any porcupine species endangered?Will porcupines be affected by global warming?Why do people hunt and eat porcupines?Is there a hunting season for porcupines?What can I do to help porcupines?11. Porcupines in Stories and LiteratureWhat roles do porcupines play in religion and mythology?Are there porcupines in fables and folk tales?What role do porcupines play in native cultures?How are porcupines featured in poetry and literature?What king used the porcupine in his royal seal?What place names feature the porcupine?12. "Porcupinology"Who studies porcupines?Which species are best known?Which species are least known?How do scientists tell porcupine species apart?How can a researcher safely mark a porcupine for identification in the wild?What don't we know about porcupines?Appendix A: Porcupines of the WorldAppendix B: Worldwide Wildlife Rehabilitation OrganizationsBibliographyIndex

    1 in stock

    £34.00

  • Porcupines

    Johns Hopkins University Press Porcupines

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisRoze highlights the conservation issues that surround some porcupine species, such as the thin-spine porcupine of Brazil, which is so rare that it was thought to be extinct until its rediscovery in the 1980s.Trade ReviewPorcupines: The Animal Answer Guide presents solid, current, science of porcupine biology... A good general introduction into the biology of porcupines. -- Ian Paulsen Birdbooker Report Delightful. -- Jason Bittel Slate A fine survey recommended for any serious natural history holding. Midwest Book Review Roze has produced a useful guide to a familiar but often not entirely understood mammal... This informative, interesting volume will be a valuable addition to any academic library. Choice A tome that can be appreciate by trained biologists, interested general readers, and budding junior naturalists... Anyone interested in mammalian natural history will want to add this excellent work to their collection. -- John L. Koprowski Quarterly Review of BiologyTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Introducing PorcupinesWhat is a porcupine?How many kinds of porcupines are there?Who's who among the Old World porcupines?Who's who among the New World porcupines?Why are porcupines important?Why should people care about porcupines?What is the current classification of porcupines?What characterizes the major groups of porcupines?When did porcupines evolve?Why is the North American porcupine successful?2. Form and Function of PorcupinesWhat are the largest and smallest living porcupines?Can porcupines see color?Can porcupines swim?Can porcupines burrow?What senses are best developed in porcupines?How do porcupines use their tails?How many quills does a porcupine have?Do quills provide good winter insulation?Does a porcupine throw its quills?What happens when a quill strikes a predator?How does a porcupine minimize self-quilling?How long does it take to replace a lost quill?How did porcupine quills evolve?Why are a porcupine's front teeth orange?Do porcupines have scent glands?How long does it take for a porcupine to digest a meal?Do porcupines suffer from old-age diseases?3. Porcupine ColorsWhat color are porcupine quills?Is there a reason for coat color patterns in porcupines?Do porcupine colors change with age?How does fur color indicate that a female porcupine is lactating?Are albino porcupines found in nature?Why do porcupines glow under a black light?4. Porcupine BehaviorAre porcupines social?Do porcupines fight?Do porcupines bite?Do porcupines play?How smart are porcupines?How do porcupines communicate?Do porcupines hibernate?How fast can porcupines run?How do porcupines climb trees?Do porcupines fall out of trees?How can I tell whether a tree is being used as food source by a porcupine?5. Porcupine EcologyWhich geographic regions have the most porcupine species?Do porcupines migrate?Can several porcupine species live together in the samearea?Are there porcupines in the desert?How do porcupines survive the winter?Do porcupines get sick?How can you tell if a porcupine is sick?Are porcupines good for the environment?What are the important porcupine predators?What possible mutualists live with porcupines?Do porcupines compete for food with other vertebrate herbivores?Do porcupines undergo population cycles?6. Reproduction and DevelopmentHow do porcupines reproduce?Do porcupines always reproduce in the same season?How is a male porcupine distinguished from a female?How long are porcupines pregnant?How is a baby porcupine born?How many babies do porcupines have?What is a baby porcupine called?Do porcupines care for their young?How long do female porcupines nurse their young?How fast do porcupines grow?How can you tell the age of a porcupine?At what age do porcupines start breeding?Do female porcupines go through menopause?How long do porcupines live?How do individual porcupines differ in reproductive success?7. Foods and FeedingWhat do porcupines eat?How do porcupines find food?Do porcupines scavenge?Do porcupines store food?Why do porcupines eat clay?How often do porcupines drink?8. Porcupines and HumansDo porcupines make good pets?Should people feed porcupines?What should I do if I find an injured porcupine?What should I do if I find a diseased porcupine?How can I see porcupines in the wild?Why are so many porcupines found as roadkills?9. Porcupine Problems (from a human's viewpoint)Are some porcupines pests?Why do porcupines sometimes gnaw the rubber tires of cars?How can I keep porcupines from my cabin in the woods?Can there be too many porcupines in a forest?How can I keep porcupines away from valuable trees?Are porcupines dangerous to people or pets?Do porcupines transmit human diseases?Is it safe to eat porcupines?How can I remove quills from a pet?What should I do if I'm injured by a porcupine?Can porcupines act as invasive species?10. Human Problems (from a porcupine's viewpoint)Are any porcupine species endangered?Will porcupines be affected by global warming?Why do people hunt and eat porcupines?Is there a hunting season for porcupines?What can I do to help porcupines?11. Porcupines in Stories and LiteratureWhat roles do porcupines play in religion and mythology?Are there porcupines in fables and folk tales?What role do porcupines play in native cultures?How are porcupines featured in poetry and literature?What king used the porcupine in his royal seal?What place names feature the porcupine?12. "Porcupinology"Who studies porcupines?Which species are best known?Which species are least known?How do scientists tell porcupine species apart?How can a researcher safely mark a porcupine for identification in the wild?What don't we know about porcupines?Appendix A: Porcupines of the WorldAppendix B: Worldwide Wildlife Rehabilitation OrganizationsBibliographyIndex

    1 in stock

    £21.60

  • Geckos

    Johns Hopkins University Press Geckos

    2 in stock

    Book SynopsisAnyone who owns a gecko, has seen them in the wild, or has wondered about them will appreciate this gem of a book.Trade ReviewThis book is recommended if you are considering getting a gecko for a pet or if you just want to know more about the ecology and behavior of the 1,400 or so living species of these peculiar lizards. -- Whit Gibbons Aiken Standard [This book] successfully broadens our outlook and appreciation of these fascinating creatures. -- Aliza Gecko Time Anyone who owns a gecko, has seen them in the wild, or has wondered about them will appreciate this gem of a book. Northeastern Naturalist All you ever wanted to know about geckos is here in a nice, readable format. -- Robert E. Hoopes Wildlife Activist Geckos may very well be the most recognizable lizards, and their diversity is astounding across their near-global distribution. Geckos: The Animal Answer Guide therefore provides a general audience with a much-needed encyclopedia where they can get an answer to nearly any question they may have about gecko biology. There is no authority better suited than Aaron Bauer to compile a gecko book at any academic level, and he does a shining example here of making his astounding knowledge of geckos accessible to general readers. -- Matthew K. Fujita Quarterly Review of BiologyTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Introducing GeckosWhat are geckos?Where does the name "gecko" come from?Why are geckos important?Why should people care about geckos?Where do geckos live?What is the difference between geckos and other lizards?How many kinds of geckos are there?What is the current classification of geckos?What characterizes the major groups of geckos?When did geckos evolve?What is the oldest fossil gecko?Where have fossil geckos been found?What did extinct geckos look like?2. Form and FunctionWhat are the largest and smallest living geckos?When are geckos active?Do geckos sleep?Why do geckos have big eyes?Can geckos see color?Do geckos have eyelids?Why do geckos lick their eyes?What are the bulges on the necks of some geckos?Are some geckos limbless?How do geckos climb?How fast can geckos run?Can geckos run upside down?What are flying geckos?How strong is a gecko's grip?Can geckos hang on when they are dead?Can geckos swim?Can all geckos lose and regrow their tails?Why do geckos shed their skin?At what temperatures are geckos most active?3. Gecko ColorsWhat colors are geckos?What causes the different skin colors of geckos?What color are a gecko's eyes?Is there a reason for specific patterns on a gecko's skin?Are male and female geckos colored differently?Do a gecko's colors change as it grows?Can geckos change color?Is there much geographic variation in a single gecko species?4. Gecko BehaviorAre geckos social?Do geckos fight?Do geckos bite?How smart are geckos?Do geckos play?How do geckos communicate?How do geckos make noise?Do geckos have good hearing?How do geckos avoid or escape predators5. Gecko EcologyWhere do geckos sleep?Which geographic regions have the most species of geckos?Do geckos burrow?How do geckos survive in the desert?How do geckos survive the winter?Do geckos bask?What animals eat geckos?Do geckos get sick?How can you tell that a gecko is sick?6. Reproduction and DevelopmentHow do geckos reproduce?How can you tell the sex of a gecko?Do all geckos lay eggs?How long do gecko eggs take to hatch?Where do geckos lay their eggs?Why do geckos lay hard-shelled eggs?Do geckos only lay eggs once a year?How many babies do geckos have?How is the sex of a baby gecko determined?Are some gecko species all female?Do geckos care for their young?How fast do geckos grow?How long do geckos live?7. Foods and FeedingWhat do geckos eat?How many teeth do geckos have?Do geckos chew their food?Why do geckos' eyes sink in when they bite?How do geckos find food?Can geckos taste?Are any geckos cannibals?Can geckos store energy from food?Do geckos drink?8. Geckos and HumansDo geckos make good pets?How do you take care of a pet gecko?Are geckos venomous?Do geckos feel pain?How can I see geckos in the wild?Do people eat geckos?Are parts of geckos used as medicine?Can gecko-style adhesion be useful to humans?9. Gecko Problems (from a human viewpoint)Are geckos pests?Do geckos have diseases and are they contagious?How do I keep geckos away from my house?10. Human Problems (from a gecko's viewpoint)Are any geckos endangered?What is the rarest gecko?Have any geckos become extinct because of humans?Are geckos protected by law?Will geckos be affected by global warming?What are the greatest threats to geckos?11. Geckos in Stories and LiteratureWhat roles do geckos play in religion and mythology?What roles do geckos play in native cultures?What roles do geckos play in popular culture?What roles have geckos played in poetry and other literature?12. "Geckology"Who studies geckos?Which species are best known?Which species are least known?How do scientists tell geckos apart?Appendix A: Geckos of the WorldAppendix B: Organizations and Publications Devoted (in Part) to the Study of GeckosBibliographyIndex

    2 in stock

    £38.67

  • Geckos

    Johns Hopkins University Press Geckos

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisAnyone who owns a gecko, has seen them in the wild, or has wondered about them will appreciate this gem of a book.Trade ReviewThis book is recommended if you are considering getting a gecko for a pet or if you just want to know more about the ecology and behavior of the 1,400 or so living species of these peculiar lizards. -- Whit Gibbons Aiken Standard [This book] successfully broadens our outlook and appreciation of these fascinating creatures. -- Aliza Gecko Time Anyone who owns a gecko, has seen them in the wild, or has wondered about them will appreciate this gem of a book. Northeastern Naturalist All you ever wanted to know about geckos is here in a nice, readable format. -- Robert E. Hoopes Wildlife Activist Geckos may very well be the most recognizable lizards, and their diversity is astounding across their near-global distribution. Geckos: The Animal Answer Guide therefore provides a general audience with a much-needed encyclopedia where they can get an answer to nearly any question they may have about gecko biology. There is no authority better suited than Aaron Bauer to compile a gecko book at any academic level, and he does a shining example here of making his astounding knowledge of geckos accessible to general readers. -- Matthew K. Fujita Quarterly Review of BiologyTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Introducing GeckosWhat are geckos?Where does the name "gecko" come from?Why are geckos important?Why should people care about geckos?Where do geckos live?What is the difference between geckos and other lizards?How many kinds of geckos are there?What is the current classification of geckos?What characterizes the major groups of geckos?When did geckos evolve?What is the oldest fossil gecko?Where have fossil geckos been found?What did extinct geckos look like?2. Form and FunctionWhat are the largest and smallest living geckos?When are geckos active?Do geckos sleep?Why do geckos have big eyes?Can geckos see color?Do geckos have eyelids?Why do geckos lick their eyes?What are the bulges on the necks of some geckos?Are some geckos limbless?How do geckos climb?How fast can geckos run?Can geckos run upside down?What are flying geckos?How strong is a gecko's grip?Can geckos hang on when they are dead?Can geckos swim?Can all geckos lose and regrow their tails?Why do geckos shed their skin?At what temperatures are geckos most active?3. Gecko ColorsWhat colors are geckos?What causes the different skin colors of geckos?What color are a gecko's eyes?Is there a reason for specific patterns on a gecko's skin?Are male and female geckos colored differently?Do a gecko's colors change as it grows?Can geckos change color?Is there much geographic variation in a single gecko species?4. Gecko BehaviorAre geckos social?Do geckos fight?Do geckos bite?How smart are geckos?Do geckos play?How do geckos communicate?How do geckos make noise?Do geckos have good hearing?How do geckos avoid or escape predators5. Gecko EcologyWhere do geckos sleep?Which geographic regions have the most species of geckos?Do geckos burrow?How do geckos survive in the desert?How do geckos survive the winter?Do geckos bask?What animals eat geckos?Do geckos get sick?How can you tell that a gecko is sick?6. Reproduction and DevelopmentHow do geckos reproduce?How can you tell the sex of a gecko?Do all geckos lay eggs?How long do gecko eggs take to hatch?Where do geckos lay their eggs?Why do geckos lay hard-shelled eggs?Do geckos only lay eggs once a year?How many babies do geckos have?How is the sex of a baby gecko determined?Are some gecko species all female?Do geckos care for their young?How fast do geckos grow?How long do geckos live?7. Foods and FeedingWhat do geckos eat?How many teeth do geckos have?Do geckos chew their food?Why do geckos' eyes sink in when they bite?How do geckos find food?Can geckos taste?Are any geckos cannibals?Can geckos store energy from food?Do geckos drink?8. Geckos and HumansDo geckos make good pets?How do you take care of a pet gecko?Are geckos venomous?Do geckos feel pain?How can I see geckos in the wild?Do people eat geckos?Are parts of geckos used as medicine?Can gecko-style adhesion be useful to humans?9. Gecko Problems (from a human viewpoint)Are geckos pests?Do geckos have diseases and are they contagious?How do I keep geckos away from my house?10. Human Problems (from a gecko's viewpoint)Are any geckos endangered?What is the rarest gecko?Have any geckos become extinct because of humans?Are geckos protected by law?Will geckos be affected by global warming?What are the greatest threats to geckos?11. Geckos in Stories and LiteratureWhat roles do geckos play in religion and mythology?What roles do geckos play in native cultures?What roles do geckos play in popular culture?What roles have geckos played in poetry and other literature?12. "Geckology"Who studies geckos?Which species are best known?Which species are least known?How do scientists tell geckos apart?Appendix A: Geckos of the WorldAppendix B: Organizations and Publications Devoted (in Part) to the Study of GeckosBibliographyIndex

    15 in stock

    £30.17

  • A Year across Maryland

    Johns Hopkins University Press A Year across Maryland

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhether you want to see snow geese and trumpeter swans pausing in their northward migration each March, or the mating jubileeof polychaete worms during the new moon in May, A Year across Maryland offers valuable advice for the spontaneous adventurer and the serious planner alike.Trade ReviewWhether you want to see Snow Geese and Trumpeter Swans pausing in their northward migration each March, or the mating 'jubilee' of polychaete worms during the new moon in May, A Year across Maryland offers valuable advice for the spontaneous adventurer and the serious planner alike. Northeastern NaturalistTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroductionJanuaryWeek 1: Winter Songbirds, Evergreen PlantsTrip of the Week: Deep Creek Lake areaWeek 2: Unusual Birds, Reindeer Moss, Gray SquirrelsTrip of the Week: The National AquariumWeek 3: Cranefly Orchids, Roadside Hawks, Coldest WeekTrip of the Week: Smithsonian Natural History MuseumWeek 4: Bald Eagles, Liverworts, "January Thaw"?Trip of the Week: Polar Bear Plunge, Sandy Point State ParkNotes from the Field: English Ivy and American RobinsFebruaryWeek 1: Prickly Pear Cactus, Miocene FossilsTrip of the Week: Flag Ponds Nature ParkWeek 2: Red-winged Blackbirds, Long-tailed SalamandersTrip of the Week: Caves of the Shenandoah ValleyWeek 3: Great Blue Herons, Yellow PerchTrip of the Week: Cross-country skiing, New Germany State ParkWeek 4: Skunk Cabbages, Maple SapTrip of the Week: Oregon Ridge Nature Center and ParkNotes from the Field: A Gathering of GeeseMarchWeek 1: Bluebirds, WaterfowlTrip of the Week: Middle Creek Wildlife Management AreaWeek 2: Wood Frogs, Mourning Cloak ButterfliesTrip of the Week: Woodcock walksWeek 3: Red Maples, Weeds, OspreyTrip of the Week: Fort Smallwood hawk watchWeek 4: Hepatica, Spring PeepersTrip of the Week: National Cherry Blossom FestivalNotes from the Field: Timberdoodles!AprilWeek 1: Wildflowers, BloodrootTrip of the Week: Wildflowers at your local parkWeek 2: American Toads, Migrant Birds, Spring BeautiesTrip of the Week: Great Falls of the Potomac and the C&O Canal towpathWeek 3: Rockfish (Striped Bass), Lesser Celandine, American Robins, Virginia BluebellsTrip of the Week: Susquehanna State ParkWeek 4: Canopy Closure, Lyre-leaved Rock Cress, Morel Mushrooms, Redbuds and DogwoodsTrip of the Week: The National ArboretumNotes from the Field: The Wildflowers of AprilMayWeek 1: Azaleas, Yellow Lady's Slipper Orchids, Prothonotary Warblers, Large-flowered TrilliumTrip of the Week: Thompson Wildlife Management AreaWeek 2: Black Locusts, Fantail Darters, May Worm Jubilee,Warbler MigrationTrip of the Week: Birding for neotropical migrantsWeek 3: Blackpoll Warblers, Multiflora Rose, Carpenter FrogsTrip of the Week: The Pine BarrensWeek 4: Diamondback Terrapins, Mountain Laurel, Shorebirds and Horseshoe CrabsTrip of the Week: Delaware Bay shorebirds and horseshoe crabsNotes from the Field: Phalaropes, Polyandry, and ProfligacyJuneWeek 1: Strawberries, Sweetbay Magnolias, Day Lilies, FawnsTrip of the Week: Shenandoah National ParkWeek 2: Gypsy Moths, Mulberries, Periodical CicadasTrip of the Week: Trap Pond State Park and Trussum PondWeek 3: Mockingbirds, Sea Nettles, Self-heal, RhododendronsTrip of the Week: Swallow Falls State Park and Cranesville BogWeek 4: Enchanter's Nightshade, Blueberries, Fireflies,Brown PelicansTrip of the Week: Chesapeake Bay islandsNotes from the Field: A Journey down a Swampy RiverJulyWeek 1: Least Terns, Annual Cicadas, Queen Anne's LaceTrip of the Week: Gettysburg National Military ParkWeek 2: Early Birds of Autumn, Lyme Disease, WildflowersTrip of the Week: Hemlock GorgeWeek 3: Cicada Killer Wasps, Black-eyed Susans, Hottest DaysTrip of the Week: Harpers Ferry for history and tubingWeek 4: Manatees, Showy FlowersTrip of the Week: Ohiopyle State ParkNotes from the Field: Cownose Rays and the ChesapeakeEcosystemAugustWeek 1: Asiatic Dayflower, Canada Geese, ShorebirdMigration, Red SpruceTrip of the Week: Dolly Sods WildernessWeek 2: Goldfinches, Bluefish, Herons, American LotusTrip of the Week: Gunpowder Falls State ParkWeek 3: Flowering Grasses, May Apple and Jack-in-the-Pulpit, Stinging NettlesTrip of the Week: Potomac River float trip; Dam Number Four Cave, C&O CanalWeek 4: Japanese Knotweed, Ragweed, Ghost CrabsTrip of the Week: Assateague Island National SeashoreNotes from the Field: The Turtles of MidsummerSeptemberWeek 1: Pawpaws, Nighthawks and BatsTrip of the Week: Rock Creek ParkWeek 2: Grasses, Neotropical SongbirdsTrip of the Week: Cape MayWeek 3: Broad-winged Hawk, Monarch Butterfly Migration,Tickseed SunflowerTrip of the Week: Jug Bay area, Patuxent RiverWeek 4: Chimney Swifts, Chestnut Oak AcornsTrip of the Week: South Fork of Shenandoah River for canoeing and canoe campingNotes from the Field: A Cold Green FireOctoberWeek 1: Fringed Gentian, Sharp-shinned Hawk MigrationTrip of the Week: Hawk MountainWeek 2: Stink Bugs, Canada Geese, Pokeweed FruitsTrip of the Week: Great Allegheny Passage by train and bicycleWeek 3: Wild Fruits, Prime Fall Color (Western Maryland),Cottony SeedsTrip of the Week: Old Rag Hike, Shenandoah National ParkWeek 4: Brook Trout, Prime Fall Color (Central Maryland)Trip of the Week: Appalachian Trail hikeNotes from the Field: Autumn RiverNovemberWeek 1: Witch Hazel, Water Clarity, Bald CypressTrip of the Week: Pocomoke River for canoeing and campingWeek 2: Whitetail Deer, Prime Fall Color (Eastern Shore),Norway MaplesTrip of the Week: The Waterfowl FestivalWeek 3: Ducks, Blue CrabsTrip of the Week: Bombay Hook National Wildlife RefugeWeek 4: Osage Oranges, Whitetail DeerTrip of the Week: Chincoteague National Wildlife RefugeNotes from the Field: Life and Death at the MarshDecemberWeek 1: Tundra Swans, Beefsteak PlantTrip of the Week: Bald eagles at Conowingo DamWeek 2: Asiatic Bittersweet, Christmas FernTrip of the Week: Blackwater National Wildlife RefugeWeek 3: Mistletoe, Club MossesTrip of the Week: United States Botanic GardenWeek 4: Winter Solstice, Saw-whet OwlsTrip of the Week: Christmas Bird CountNotes from the Field: VulturesAppendix of Common and Scientific NamesSelected BibliographyIndex

    15 in stock

    £27.08

  • Penguins

    Johns Hopkins University Press Penguins

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhether you hope to travel to the Southern Hemisphere or simply want to learn more about wildlife, Penguins: The Animal Answer Guide deserves a spot on your bookshelf.Trade ReviewThe writing is crisp and often witty and entertaining. These characteristics make it appealing to professional ornithologists as well as enthusiastic children-it would be great bedtime reading for any penguin lover... Highly recommended. Choice In an easy-reading question-and-answer format, Kooyman and Lynch pack a huge amount of information into this volume, which covers a wide array of topics... As a penguin biologist, I was surprised how much I learned reading Penguins that I had not already known. For penguin enthusiasts, Penguins: The Animal Answer Guide is a must read that will, thanks to Lynch's spectacular photographs, be thoroughly thumbed through by the whole family. Likewise, this book should be required reading for those doing penguin outreach or informal education. -- Heather J. Lynch Quarterly Review of BiologyTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Introducing Penguins2. Form and Function3. Penguin Colors4. Penguin Behavior5. Penguin Ecology6. Reproduction and Development7. Food and Feeding8. Penguins and Humans9. Penguin Problems (from a human viewpoint)10. Human Problems (from a penguin's viewpoint)11. Penguins in Stories and Literature12. Penguinology"Appendix A: Penguins of the WorldAppendix B: Penguin Research and Conservation OrganizationsBibliographyIndex

    15 in stock

    £45.50

  • Penguins

    Johns Hopkins University Press Penguins

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhether you hope to travel to the Southern Hemisphere or simply want to learn more about wildlife, Penguins: The Animal Answer Guide deserves a spot on your bookshelf.Trade ReviewThe writing is crisp and often witty and entertaining. These characteristics make it appealing to professional ornithologists as well as enthusiastic children-it would be great bedtime reading for any penguin lover... Highly recommended. Choice In an easy-reading question-and-answer format, Kooyman and Lynch pack a huge amount of information into this volume, which covers a wide array of topics... As a penguin biologist, I was surprised how much I learned reading Penguins that I had not already known. For penguin enthusiasts, Penguins: The Animal Answer Guide is a must read that will, thanks to Lynch's spectacular photographs, be thoroughly thumbed through by the whole family. Likewise, this book should be required reading for those doing penguin outreach or informal education. -- Heather J. Lynch Quarterly Review of BiologyTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Introducing Penguins2. Form and Function3. Penguin Colors4. Penguin Behavior5. Penguin Ecology6. Reproduction and Development7. Food and Feeding8. Penguins and Humans9. Penguin Problems (from a human viewpoint)10. Human Problems (from a penguin's viewpoint)11. Penguins in Stories and Literature12. Penguinology"Appendix A: Penguins of the WorldAppendix B: Penguin Research and Conservation OrganizationsBibliographyIndex

    15 in stock

    £31.09

  • Sharks

    Johns Hopkins University Press Sharks

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisWhether your fascination with sharks stems from fear or curiosity, your knowledge of these animals will improve immensely when you consult this book.Trade ReviewWhether you fear sharks or just have a curiosity about them, Sharks: The Animal Answer Guide will home school you about these fascinating creatures that have been around for millions of years... Get a copy, you'll be glad you did. -- Skip Clement Fly Life Magazine.com Why do sharks attack people? How often do attacks really occur? Must we really contemplate a visit to the beach with terror? Such questions come to mind as shark season approaches. Fortunately, the answer to these and many other shark questions can be found in Sharks: The Animal Answer Guide. -- Whit Gibbons Tuscaloosa News I most highly encourage that all interested not only purchase and read Sharks: The Animal Answer Guide themselves but that additional consideration be given to presenting a copy as a gift to anyone with an interest in sharks... Ignorance and error are indeed a darkness of the mind for which the easiest correction is the introduction of light. To that end, this book veritably glows. -- John E. Riutta The Well-read Naturalist Sharks: The Animal Answer Guide is captivating without being too light, and includes all shark facts. The result is a lovely survey recommended for any interested in sharks. -- James A Cox The Midwest Book Review Johns Hopkins University Press has produced many fantastic 'animal answer guide' books on a wide range of animals, including geckos, turtles, and porcupines. Now comes Sharks -- and it may be the best of the bunch... [The] books is witty and clear, and should inspire a wide audience, young and old and laypersons and professionals... This is exactly the kind of book this reviewer would love to give to a child interested in studying sharks or marine biology. Choice Underpinning a well-written and accurate book, what makes Sharks: The Animal Answer Guide so enjoyable was the palpable enthusiasm exhibited by both authors... Sharks: The Animal Answer Guide is written with a contagious passion that will undoubtedly inspire the public of our generation to learn about, protect, and conserve these magnificent denizens of the deep. -- J. Marcus Drymon Bulletin of Marine ScienceTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. Introducing Sharks, Skates, Rays, and Chimaeras2. Form and Function of Sharks3. Shark Colors4. Shark Behavior5. Shark Ecology6. Reproduction and Development7. Foods and Feeding8. Sharks and Humans9. Shark Problems (from a human's viewpoint)10. Human Problems (from a shark's viewpoint)11. Sharks in Stories, Media, and Literature12. "Sharkology"Appendix A: Sharks, Skates, Rays, and Chimaeras of the WorldAppendix B: Organizations That Promote the Study and Conservation of SharksAppendix C: Websites That Provide Useful and Accurate Information on SharksBibliographyIndex

    15 in stock

    £29.34

  • Biology and Conservation of North American

    Johns Hopkins University Press Biology and Conservation of North American

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe most comprehensive book ever published on North America''s native tortoises.Tortoises, those unmistakable turtles, evolved from a lineage that split off from the familiar pond turtles roughly 100 million years ago. Over time, these plant-eating land turtles spread around the world, growing to an enormous size (depending on the species) and living so long that they have become the stuff of legends. By most accounts, they are indeed the longest-lived of the turtles, with good records suggesting individuals may live as long as 180 years (anecdotal records suggest that some reach ages of 200 years or more).Providing the first comprehensive treatment of North America's tortoises, Biology and Conservation of North American Tortoises brings together leading experts to give an overview of tortoise morphology, taxonomy, systematics, paleontology, physiology, ecology, behavior, reproduction, diet, growth, health, and conservation. The contributors carefully comTrade ReviewA vital tool and reference base for researchers and conservationists, with the added bonus that there is plenty of informatin that could be applied to other species worldwide. -- Christine Tilley British Chelonia Group A valuable resource for public and academic libraries. Choice ... Valuable additions to the collections of herpetologists and conservation biologists... Comprehensive... The Quarterly Review of BiologyTable of ContentsPrefaceChapter 1. Morphology, Taxonomy, and Distribution of North American Tortoises: An Evolutionary PerspectiveChapter 2. The Fossil Record for the North American TortoisesChapter 3. Systematics of Extant North American TortoisesChapter 4. Thermoregulation and Energetics of North American TortoisesChapter 5. Reproductive Physiology of North American Tortoises Chapter 6. Embryonic Development, Hatching Success, and Temperature Dependent Sex Determination in North American Tortoises Chapter 7. Growth Patterns of North American TortoisesChapter 8. Health Issues of North American TortoisesChapter 9. Habitat Characteristics of North American TortoisesChapter 10. Water and Food Acquisition and Their Consequences for Life History and Metabolism of North American TortoisesChapter 11. Home Range and Movements of North American TortoisesChapter 12. Social Behaviors of North American TortoisesChapter 13. Nesting and Reproductive Output among North American TortoisesChapter 14. Abundance of North American TortoisesChapter 15. Population and Conservation Genetics of North American TortoisesChapter 16. Demography of North American TortoisesChapter 17. History of Human Interaction with North American TortoisesChapter 18. Threats and Conservation Needs for North American Tortoises ReferencesIndex

    15 in stock

    £60.00

  • A Field Guide to Coastal Fishes  From Alaska to

    Johns Hopkins University Press A Field Guide to Coastal Fishes From Alaska to

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisTrade ReviewA must have for those with an interest in the marine fishes of the West Coast. Birdbooker Report This book will soon become your go-to identification guide, and is compact and durable enough with water resistant pages to throw in your dive bag, fishing tackle box, or field sampling gear. Together with Kells's previous book on fishes from Maine to Texas, you will be prepared to identify almost any coastal species you come across in the continental United States. Copeia This new guide to Pacific coast fishes from Johns Hopkins University Press would be a great addition to any Oregon Master Naturalist's library. Oregon Master Naturalist Program A Field Guide to Coastal Fishes by Kells, Rocha, and Allen is a wonderful field guide that would be a welcome addition to any dive bag or tackle box... I cannot recommend this book enough to anglers, divers, hobby naturalists, and students alike. It is a musthave for anyone who wants to quickly and accurately identify a Pacific Coast fish on the go. Environmental Biology of FishesTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsPrefaceAbout This BookArea and Species CoveredNames and Sequence of SpeciesOrganization and PresentationIntroductionDiversity and ClassicationAdaptations to Life in WaterIdentifying FishesConservationFamiliesSpeciesGlossaryRare Fishes Also in the AreaSelect Bibliography and Additional ResourcesIndex

    15 in stock

    £22.80

  • The Mammals of Luzon Island

    Johns Hopkins University Press The Mammals of Luzon Island

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisBased on a century of accumulated data and fifteen years of intensive study, The Mammals of Luzon Island delivers a message that will appeal equally to scientists, conservationists, and ecologically minded travelers.Trade Review... a very much anticipated work indeed for naturalists interested in [island biogeography]. The Well-Read Naturalist A must have for those with an interest in the mammals of the region. The Birdbooker Report This well written book will help to raise attention to the threatened mammals of Luzon and species conservation on Luzon and the Philippines as a hotspot for mammal biodiversity. Suiform Soundings The Mammals of Luzon: Biogeography and Natural History of a Philippine Fauna, is the most comprehensive book about Philippine mammals ever written. It is a highly accessible story of scientific inquiry and discovery Acta Chiropterologica The book is so important that students of Biology, particularly those studying natural history, should read this book. Libraries in universities should have a copy of this book for their students Dumaguete Metropost ... I cannot recommend this book highly enough. It is an insightful, thorough and fascinating text based upon a lifetime of thought and hard-won data. The text is engagingly written throughout, the volume wonderfully produced and illustrated, and overall well worth the cover price. It could be set as a discussion text for students, used to generate examples for lectures, or simply read for pleasure alone. Frontiers of BiogeographyTable of ContentsPrefaceAcknowledgmentsPart I. The Biogeography of Diversity1. The Mammals of Luzon, 1895– 20122. Climate and Habitats3. Discovering Diversity4. Geological History and Fossil Mammals5. Producing Diversity6. Habitat Disturbance and Invasive Species7. Conservation of Luzon's Mammalian Diversity8. SynthesisPart II. Natural History of Luzon Mammals9. Large Mammals10. A Guide to the Small Mammals1: Order Soricomorpha2: Old Endemics3: Old Endemics4: New Endemic Rodents5: Non-Native Rodents11. A Guide to the Bats1: Introduction to Bats2: Family Pteropodidae3: Family Emballonuridae4: Family Megadermatidae5: Family Hipposideridae6: Family Rhinolophidae7: Family Vespertilionidae8: Family MolossidaeGlossaryLiterature CitedIndex

    15 in stock

    £75.76

  • The Quick Guide to Wild Edible Plants

    Johns Hopkins University Press The Quick Guide to Wild Edible Plants

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe Quick Guide to Wild Edible Plants is a great gift for the beginning naturalist and the perfect addition to every serious forager's library.Trade ReviewThe book is witty and full of commonsense. It is a jolly good read for anyone. Portland Book Review Whether this is your passion or merely something you might be interested in learning about, check out The Quick Guide to Wild Edible Plants... Should I ever get a craving for stinging nettle omelet or black locust fritters, I will know exactly which wild edible plant book to look in. Aiken StandardTable of ContentsAcknowledgments1. IntroductionWild Plants as FoodBefore You BeginEmergency FoodHow to Use This BookGuidelines for Using the Recipes .About Flavorings, Sweeteners, and OilsBeveragesRecipes for Failure2. Deadly HarvestPoison Ivy, Poison Oak, Poison SumacPoison HemlockMushrooms3. Nature's Storehouse of Edible Plants4. CondimentsSassafrasField Garlic5. AperitifsSwamp BayRed Spruce6. GreensChicoryCurly DockGlasswortKudzuStinging NettleBlack Walnut7. StarchesAmerican LotusArrowheadGroundnutNut SedgeOaksSoftstem BulrushSpring Beauty8. Grains and Plants Used Like GrainsCaneManna GrassRiver OatsYellow Pond Lily9. FlowersBlack LocustCattailsOrange Day LilyRedbud10. SweetsIndian StrawberryPawpaw11. CordialsBlueberries12. MushroomsOyster MushroomChicken of the WoodsPuffballsIndex of Recipes

    1 in stock

    £15.20

  • The Chesapeake in Focus

    Johns Hopkins University Press The Chesapeake in Focus

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe people, policies, and forces transforming a national treasurethe Chesapeake Bay. When Captain John Smith arrived in Virginia in 1607, he discovered a paradise in the Chesapeake Bay. In the centuries that followed, the Bay changed vastlyand not for the better. European landowners and enslaved Africans slashed, burned, and cleared the surrounding forests to grow tobacco. Watermen overfished oysters, shad, and sturgeon, decimating these crucial species. Baltimore, Washington, and Richmond used its rivers as urban sewers. By the 1960s, the Chesapeake was dying. A crossroads of life and culture, the Chesapeake straddles the North and the South, mixes salt water with fresh, and is home to about 18 million people and 3,600 species of animals and plants. Although recent cleanup efforts have improved its overall health, they have not been enough to save this national treasure. In The Chesapeake in Focus, award-winning writer Tom Pelton examines which environmental policies have worked aTrade ReviewTom Pelton, one of the country's leading environmental journalists, offers us a wealth of knowledge about the Chesapeake Bay, collected from his more than two decades of reporting on this ecological, cultural, and historical treasure . . . The highlight, perhaps, comes toward the end, when Pelton proposes 10 realistic steps for bay restoration. We should listen to him.—Lauren Larocca, Baltimore MagazineA terrific book . . . Really puts in perspective the different issues swirling about the Bay.—Tom Hall, "Midday" on WYPR 88.1 FMReally good book about a really great ecosystem.—Society of Environmental JournalistsTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction1. The WatersSusquehanna RiverGunpowder RiverCorsica RiverPatuxent RiverPotomac RiverJames RiverSouthern Bay2. The PeopleHarry HughesParris GlendeningJohn GriffinBonnie BickMichael BeerCarole MorisonOoker Eskridge3. The WildlifeOystersDermo and MSXBlue CrabsStriped BassAmerican EelsSturgeon4. The PoliciesEnforcementPennsylvaniaAir Pollution versus Water PollutionAgricultureClimate ChangeAdvocacy and Pollution TradingAccountabilityConclusionNotesIndex

    1 in stock

    £18.45

  • Field Guide to Freshwater Fishes of Virginia

    Johns Hopkins University Press Field Guide to Freshwater Fishes of Virginia

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisA beautifully illustrated guide to the diverse and numerous freshwater fish species in Virginia. In Field Guide to Freshwater Fishes of Virginia, the foremost experts on Commonwealth fishes bring their decades of field experience to readers, offering a complete reference to the fishes of the entire state of Virginia. Gathering information that until now could only be found scattered across numerous reference works and online databases, this book provides everything you need to know to identify fish families and species in the Virginia region. Covering how to collect, handle, observe, conserve, and protect these unique fishes, the book's key features include more than 175 vibrant, full-color illustrations, set side by side with descriptions of each fish helpful line drawings that depict the most reliable diagnostic characteristics for field identifications (e.g., snout shape, pigment patterns, mouth morphology) descriptions of Virginia's freshwater habitats examples of incredible fiTrade ReviewThe Field Guide to Freshwater Fishes of Virginia is one of the best fish field guides I've encountered. It covers all the fish in detail, but is small enough to easily fit in a pack or carry-on bag. The illustrations are beautiful and the text focuses on information most helpful for field identification.—Matthew L. Miller, The Nature Conservancy, Cool Green ScienceThe new Field Guide to Freshwater Fishes of Virginia takes on the daunting challenge of covering the 226 species of freshwater fishes found in the state in the abbreviated format of a true field guide. The authors succeed in this task, producing a book that is both informative and portable. The book's format makes it useful to a wide range of potential users, including fishers, professional biologists, and those interested in keeping native species in aquaria . . . I highly recommend the book.—Bruce W. Stallsmith, FisheriesTable of ContentsAcknowlegmentsIntroduction How to Use This Guide Virginia's Freshwater Fishes Fish Watching, Photographing, and Keeping Management and Conservation Fish Anatomy Key to FamiliesSpecies AccountsGlossarySelect BibliographyScientific Name IndexCommon Name IndexCreditsAbout the Authors

    1 in stock

    £20.70

  • Freshwater Fishes of North America

    Johns Hopkins University Press Freshwater Fishes of North America

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisThe highly anticipated second volume of Freshwater Fishes of North America, a monumental, fully illustrated reference that provides comprehensive details on the freshwater fishes of the United States, Canada, and Mexico. When the first volume of Freshwater Fishes of North America was published, it was immediately hailed as the definitive reference in the field. Readers have been fervently awaiting the next volume in this encompassing three-book set ever since. Now complete, volume 2, covering families Characidae to Poeciliidae, is the result of decades of analysis by leading fish experts from universities and research laboratories across North America. Each volume in this authoritative synthesis covers the ecology, morphology, reproduction, distribution, behavior, taxonomy, conservation, and the fossil record of the included North American fish families. The encyclopedic reviews of each family are accompanied by color photographs (nearly 250 in this volume alone), range maps, and aTrade ReviewIt is enough to keep a fish nerd occupied for a very, very long time . . . I think of this as the encyclopedic complement to the field guide.—Matthew L. Miller, Nature - Cool Green ScienceTable of ContentsList of ContributorsPreface Melvin L. Warren, Jr., and Brooks M. BurrAcknowledgmentsChapter 14 Characidae: Characins Norman Mercado-Silva, Claudia P. Ornelas-García, Juan Jacobo Schmitter-Soto, Nicholas J. Gidmark, and Andrew M. SimonsChapter 15 Ictaluridae: North American Catfishes Brooks M. Burr, Melvin L. Warren, Jr., and Micah G. BennettChapter 16 Ariidae: Sea Catfishes Matthew R. Thomas and Ricardo Betancur-R.Chapter 17 Heptapteridae: Seven-finned Catfishes Matthew R. Thomas and Mark Henry SabajChapter 18 Osmeridae: Smelts Robert L. Hopkins II and Melvin L. Warren, Jr.Chapter 19 Esociformes: Esocidae, Pikes, and Umbridae (Mudminnows) Frank H. McCormick, Terry Grande, Cheryl Theile, Melvin L. Warren, Jr., J. Andrés López, Mark V. H. Wilson, Roger A. Tabor, Julian D. Olden, and Lauren M. KuehneChapter 20 Percopsidae: Trout-perches Brooks M. Burr and Melvin L. Warren, Jr.Chapter 21 Amblyopsidae: Cavefishes Ginny L. Adams, Brooks M. Burr, and Melvin L. Warren, Jr.Chapter 22 Aphredoderidae: Pirate Perches Brooks M. Burr and Melvin L. Warren, Jr.Chapter 23 Gadidae (Gadinae and Lotinae): Cods and Cuskfishes Peter B. BerendzenChapter 24 Mugilidae: Mullets Steven L. PowersChapter 25 Atherinopsidae: New World Silversides Kyle R. Piller and Clyde D. BarbourChapter 26 Beloniformes: Belonidae (Needlefishes) and Hemiramphidae (Halfbeaks) Bruce B. Collette and Stephen J. WalshChapter 27 Rivulidae: New World Rivulines Ann M. Uzee O'Connell, Martin T. O'Connell, and Anthony A. EchelleChapter 28 Profundulidae: Middle American Killifishes Mollie F. Cashner and Anthony A. EchelleChapter 29 Goodeidae: Goodeids Shane A. WebbChapter 30 Fundulidae: Topminnows Robert C. Cashner, Jacob Schaefer, Melvin L. Warren, Jr., Anthony A. Echelle, Fernando Galvez, and Michael J. GhedottiChapter 31 Cyprinodontidae: Pupfishes Anthony A. Echelle and Alice F. EchelleChapter 32 Poeciliidae: Livebearers Michael J. Ghedotti, Matthew P. Davis, and Anthony A. EchelleLiterature CitedIndex of Scientific NamesGeneral Index

    1 in stock

    £107.10

  • Why Sharks Matter

    Johns Hopkins University Press Why Sharks Matter

    15 in stock

    Book SynopsisGet submerged in the amazing world of sharks! Your expert host, award-winning marine biologist Dr. David Shiffman, will show you howand whywe should protect these mysterious, misunderstood guardians of the ocean. Sharks are some of the most fascinating, most ecologically important, most threatened, and most misunderstood animals on Earth. More often feared than revered, their role as predators of the deep have earned them a reputation as a major threat to humans. But the truth is that sharks are not a danger to usthey're in danger from us. In Why Sharks Matter, marine conservation biologist Dr. David Shiffman explains why it's crucial that we overcome our misconceptions and rise above cinematic jump scares to embrace sharks as the imperiled and elegant ocean guardians they really are. Sharing his own fascinating experiences working with sharks, Shiffman tells us why healthy shark populations are a must for supporting ocean ecosystemsand the coastal economies that depend on them whTrade ReviewShiffman says he wants 'to teach you why sharks are remarkable and awe-inspiring animals, why we're better off with sharks than we are without them, and what you can do to help protect the alarming and increasing number of sharks of conservation concern.' He succeeds on all counts.—San Francisco ChronicleThe argument of Shiffman's book is that we should do a better job of protecting sharks, and his method is to dip analysis and policy recommendations in a sugar coating of cool facts. For Shiffman, our inability to conceptualize relative risk is both an ecological and aesthetic tragedy, undermining conservation efforts while preventing us from exulting in the glory of sharks—with their dermal denticles, their total lack of bones and their ability to hear an injured fish from a mile away.—Molly Young, New York TimesWhether this book makes you pause and reflect on your perception of sharks, or teaches you some new facts about these predators, Shiffman hopes he has shed light on human side of shark conservation through this work.—Forbes[Shiffman] delivers the book he was born to write.—The RevelatorJoin award-winning marine biologist Dr. David Shiffman in an approachable, humorous and adventure-packed narrative about sharks—the mysterious guardians of the ocean. You'll learn why we should overcome our misconceptions regarding these creatures, delve deep into Shiffman's own experiences with sharks, and explore decades of scientific research and policymaking related to shark conservation.—Scuba DivingA fun, engaging and informative read.—Biological ConservationWritten by a US shark-conservation expert with a solid academic background...[Shiffman] question[s] the easy assumptions we divers sometimes make for emotional reasons about protecting sharks, rather than being guided by the science.—DivernetShiffman is quick to celebrate those who advance the interests of sharks, profiling a diverse group of dedicated scientists (itself laudable in a field dominated by white men). His bluntness and specificity is refreshing in the face of so much advocacy that just sets its sights at 'raising awareness.'—New ScientistShiffman is an entertaining writer, not afraid to nerd out over sharks and share plenty of interesting stories. But what I really appreciate is that every piece of information is grounded in science. Think of it as the anti-Shark Week: the book is entertaining and informative without being sensational or lurid.—Cool Green Science (The Nature Conservancy)Those that want to learn more about sharks and their conservation will find [Why Sharks Matter] a valuable resource. Shiffman is aiming to educate this generation and inspire them to help make the difference that will see shark populations rebuild....As such, this is a book as much about people as it is about sharks.—Colin A. Simpfendorfer, Current BiologyA humorous and pleasant read, packed with lots of facts and stories.—The Marine BiologistTable of ContentsIntroductionChapter 1. Shark Basics, and Fun Facts to Keep You ReadingChapter 2. Sharks Are Not a Threat to HumansChapter 3. The Ecological Significance of Sharks Chapter 4. What Are the Threats to Sharks and How Threatened Are They? Chapter 5. How Can We Protect Sharks? Chapter 6. Sustainable Fisheries for Shark Conservation: Target-Based PoliciesChapter 7. Fishing and Trade Bans for Shark Conservation: Limit-Based PoliciesChapter 8. How Are Scientists Helping Sharks?Chapter. How Are Environmentalists Helping Sharks?Chapter 10. How Can You Help Sharks? (Dos and Please Just Don'ts)AfterwordAcknowledgmentsBibliographyIndexColor plates follow page ___

    15 in stock

    £19.47

  • Energizing Neoliberalism

    Johns Hopkins University Press Energizing Neoliberalism

    7 in stock

    Book SynopsisHow the 1970s energy crisis facilitated a neoliberal shift in US political culture. In Energizing Neoliberalism, Caleb Wellum offers a provocative account of how the 1970s energy crisis helped to recreate postwar America. Rather than think of the crisis as the obvious outcome of the decade's oil shocks, Wellum unpacks the cultural construction of a crisis of energy across different sectors of society, from presidents, policy experts, and environmentalists to filmmakers, economists, and oil futures traders. He shows how the dominant meanings ascribed to the 1970s energy crisis helped to energize neoliberal visions of renewed abundance and power through free market values and approaches to energy. Deeply researched in federal archives, expert discourse, and popular culture, Energizing Neoliberalism demonstrates the central role that energy crisis narratives played in America's neoliberal turn. Wellum traces the roots of the crisis to the consumption practices and cultural narratives spTable of ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroduction. Energy in CrisisChapter 1. "Is America Running Out of Gas?": Assembling the Energy CrisisChapter 2. "A Time to Choose": Interpreting the Energy CrisisChapter 3. "A Vibrant National Preoccupation": The Energy Conservation Ethic and Market ForcesChapter 4. "Put Your Foot on the Pedal": Contesting Conservation in Seventies Car CinemaChapter 5. "Markets Born of Shocks": NYMEX Oil Futures, Financialization, and Neoliberal NarrativesEpilogue. Enduring CrisisNotesBibliographyIndex

    7 in stock

    £42.50

  • Wilderness Essays

    Gibbs M. Smith Inc Wilderness Essays

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis

    Out of stock

    £13.99

  • Walden Life in the Woods

    Gibbs M. Smith Inc Walden Life in the Woods

    1 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    1 in stock

    £12.59

  • John Muir

    Gibbs M. Smith Inc John Muir

    2 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    2 in stock

    £13.99

  • Steep Trails

    Gibbs M. Smith Inc Steep Trails

    2 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    2 in stock

    £13.99

  • John Muir Wilderness Box Set

    Gibbs M. Smith Inc John Muir Wilderness Box Set

    Out of stock

    Book Synopsis

    Out of stock

    £40.00

  • Earth Man and Devolution

    Trafford Publishing Earth Man and Devolution

    15 in stock

    15 in stock

    £14.47

  • Sugar Gliders Living with and Caring For Sugar Gliders Is this the Right Pet for You

    15 in stock

    £15.73

  • National Geographic Tales of the Weird

    National Geographic Society National Geographic Tales of the Weird

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisWhen a farmer in Spain captured a two-headed snake in 2002, scientists wanted to study it. When National Geographic Daily News published a story about the discovery, people wanted to read all about it. More than a million people clicked on the site and kept coming back for more unbelievably true stories. An Internet sensation was born.Since then, more than 100 million individuals have clicked on stories put together by David Braun and his crack team of editors for National Geographic Daily News. And readers cannot get enough information about the often weird, sometimes miraculous things being discovered by scientists every day--incredible flying sharks, the strange sex lives of ducks, mind-controlling fungus that turns ants into zombies, and the darkest planet in the universe. This reader features the most wildly popular, incredibly weird, and totally true stories from National Geographic's Daily News site presented in a compact, fact-filled reader.

    Out of stock

    £16.11

  • National Geographic Illustrated Guide to Nature

    National Geographic Society National Geographic Illustrated Guide to Nature

    Out of stock

    Book SynopsisBursting with beautiful images and completely authoritative text, this comprehensive nature field guide will help families, amateur adventurers, and empty nesters enjoy and understand nature--from wilderness camping to their own backyard. This nature guide introduces you to constellations and weather, rocks and minerals, plants and wildflowers, and trees and shrubs. All of the most common varieties in each natural category in North are identified and explained, from quartz and granite to dandelions and oak trees. Learn to read the clouds--and understand why one shape predicts rain and another sunshine. Point out constellations in the night sky and recognize planets visible to the naked eye. Each chapter identifies 160 species or phenomena by giving key information for each plus a readable paragraph accompanied by photos and original art that help you sharpen your eyes and knowledge. Five field guides in one, representing a total of 800 of North America's most common wildflowers, trees, rocks and minerals, constellations, and weather patterns. Generously illustrated and logically organized with pointers, pictures, and identification tips, this is the ultimate field guide, an essential family reference and an excellent starting point for anyone eager to learn more about the natural world.Trade Review"This terrific book is a doorway to a wider, richer universe — for children and adults alike."-- Richard Louv, author of The Nature Principle: Reconnecting with Life in a Virtual World and Last Child in the Woods

    Out of stock

    £32.00

  • Sublime Nature

    National Geographic Society Sublime Nature

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisThis inspiring book of landscape photography from National Geographic captures the beauty of nature in all its breathtaking variations. Trade Review"One [image] more stunning than the next." --The Boston Globe"The book as a whole is like a meditation tool — pick it up, open to any page, and just simply enjoy." --Mother Nature Network"Founder of the International League of Conservation Photographers Cristina Mittermeier has been given access to National Geographic’s archive to select images depicting the awe-inspiring and beautiful forms of nature. The spectacular selection includes images by Paul Nicklen, Art Wolfe and Hans Strand, and are complemented by quotes from recognised figures connected to the natural world, including Henry David Thoreau, John Muir and Ralph Waldo Emerson. Divided into four chapters loosely linked to the four seasons, Mittermeier’s poetic text at the beginning of each section promotes preservation of our planet and its precious resources – an ethos aligned with her own life mission." --Outdoor Photography

    10 in stock

    £26.12

  • National Geographic Magnificent Animals Coloring

    National Geographic Society National Geographic Magnificent Animals Coloring

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisIntricate and soothing, this elegant coloring book for adults invites creative people of all ages to dive into the colorful and complex world of animals, using the power of their own imaginations. With 50 intricate black and white illustrations, printed on perforated pages that will render them collectible, users will color and embellish the detailed wings of a dragonfly, and the intricate patterns of zebras. Armed with artist's tools, they will explore the majesty of the world's wild animals. Fans of National Geographic and newcomers to the coloring world alike will welcome this creative and relaxing journey into our natural world.

    10 in stock

    £16.19

  • National Geographic Magnificent Ocean A Coloring

    National Geographic Society National Geographic Magnificent Ocean A Coloring

    10 in stock

    Book SynopsisCapitalizing on this year's mega-trend in publishing, this stylish coloring book geared to adults features dazzling National Geographic-branded content: oceans.

    10 in stock

    £13.19

  • National Geographic Atlas of Wild America

    National Geographic Society National Geographic Atlas of Wild America

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisFrom the deep forests of the Canadian Northwest to the red-rock deserts of the American Southwest, North America offers a myriad of opportunities for hiking, camping, trekking, and simply enjoying the abundance of the natural world. This opulent volume highlights 41 of those wilderness locations.Filled with authoritative maps, data-driven graphics, awe-inspiring photographs, and thoughtful essays, this vivid book will feed the soul of everyone who loves wild places. Six lush chapters take readers from the eastern woodlands to the central plains, from the northern wilderness to southwestern desert lands—including key wilderness areas in Canada and Mexico. You’ll discover the fascinating history of the High Peaks of the Adirondacks, learn about fossil remains on the Upper Missouri River, gaze through the rainforest canopy of Alaska’s Tongass National Forest, and experience Grand Canyon Parashat’s Dark Sky Park. A special section rich inTrade Review"For on-the-go vacationers aswell as armchair travelers,…National Geographic: Atlas of Wild America...provides a picturesque super-dive into spectacular horizons. Written by Jon Waterman, a former park ranger and veteran guide, with a foreword by environmental historian Roderick F. Nash, this hefty tome, with 308 photos and 262 maps, applauds both well-known majestic favorites and off-the-beaten-path intimate finds, unveiling intricate details and data galore. Be awed by nature-loving secrets and surprises."—Laura Manske, Forbes"This gorgeous coffee table book chronicles 41 of the most spectacular public lands across North America from wilderness areas to state parks, seashores to trails. Filled with stunning National Geographic photography, essays, graphics and maps you’ll discover new places to add to your bucket list." —Outside's Yosemite National Park Trips

    1 in stock

    £45.59

  • Secrets of the Elephants

    National Geographic Society Secrets of the Elephants

    1 in stock

    Book SynopsisCompanion to the National Geographic television series, this book reveals the remarkable intelligence, family loyalty, unique personalities, and fascinating behaviors of elephants.As big as a bus, weighing up to 11 tons, elephants have fascinated us for centuries, but only recently have scientists been able to observe their innermost workings as individuals, families, and herds. This enlightening book—companion to the highly anticipated televisions series from National Geographic—takes us to the few places in the world where elephants roam. Filled with glorious photography and groundbreaking narratives of current science, these pages capture the life and behavior of these iconic creatures as never before seen.We also meet the researchers and conservationists dedicating their time and risking their lives to understand and protect the world''s two species, African and Asian, as they share new insights into elephant culture.Combining autho

    1 in stock

    £24.00

  • Slipper Orchids Paphiopedilum

    Trafford Publishing Slipper Orchids Paphiopedilum

    15 in stock

    Book Synopsis

    15 in stock

    £119.02

  • American Roots The Last Will and Testament of an Extremely

    15 in stock

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    15 in stock

    £9.45

  • American Roots A WindStorm in the Forests American Roots

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    £9.45

  • Capstone Press Las Personas En OtooPeople in Fall Todo Acerca

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    Book Synopsis

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    £21.99

  • Capstone Press Patterns Everywhere Wonder Readers Emergent Level

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    Book Synopsis

    Out of stock

    £6.99

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