Description

Book Synopsis
Throw it in your backpack, hop on the subway, and explore.

Trade Review
Dr. Day... A sort of Julia Child of nature. -- Ellen Pall New York Times 2007 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 2007 Provides historic facts, photographs and maps to give a snapshot of the city's natural resources and to remind hard-charging New Yorkers of the unchanging parts of their environment. -- Sally Goldenberg Staten Island Advance 2007 A complete guide for the urban naturalist. -- Greg Rienzi Gazette 2007 Describes how to find and explore some of the greener parts of the concrete jungle. -- Walter Dawkins The Record 2007 This book should be in every New Yorker's library as both reference and inspiration for low-carbon-impact journeys to places of unexpected beauty and tranquility. Crawford-Doyle Booksellers Newsletter 2007 You may well wonder why I am reviewing a book about New York city when we preach 'local, local, local' throughout these pages. I'll tell you, because this beautifully illustrated handbook is a wonderful example of exploring the bucolic city... All illustrated with gorgeous watercolors by Klingler. We should have one of these. But in the meantime, you will find many of the same species in our fair cities., so why not pick up a copy for inspiration? Minneapolis Observer Quarterly 2007 A guidebook to nature in the Big Apple would range from slim to empty, one might think. Try again. Painted turtles, American eels, dwarf centipedes, Eastern spotted newts, black-crowned night herons and Manhattan schist rocks are among the highlights of Leslie Day's Field Guide to the Natural World of New York City. -- Robin Lloyd www.livescience.com 2007 Leslie Day ('a child of Manhattan') reveals hidden depths of this urban behemoth... A wonderful guide to the green side of the Big Apple. -- PDSmith Guardian 2008 This guide is useful for students and anyone interested in locating and identifying the flora and fauna of New York City. -- Denise A. Garofalo American Reference Books Annual 2008 Wonderfuly written and well organized... In short, this useful book is, quite simply, beautiful. Living the Scientific Life 2008 This is a unique an excellent beginner's guide... Highly recommended. International Hawkwatcher 2008 Useful for students and anyone interested in locating and identifying the flora and fauna of New York City. -- Denise Garofalo ARBA Online 2008 The scientific detail is appropriate for all levels, and additional readings are referenced in a selected bibliography. Highly recommended. Choice 2008

Table of Contents

Foreword, by Michael R. Bloomberg
Acknowledgments
1. The Natural History of New York City
2. The Parks
The Bronx
Brooklyn
Manhattan
Queens
Staten Island
3. Forever Wild
4. Animals
INVERTEBRATES
Annelid
Earthworm
Arachnids
Horseshoe Crab
Daddy Longlegs
Goldenrod Spider
Rabid Wolf Spider
Myriopods
Hoffman's Dwarf Centipede
Garden Centipede
Garden Millipede
Insects
Pyralis Firefly
Two-Spotted Ladybug Beetle
Honeybee
Eastern Carpenter Bee
Yellow Jacket
Common Green Darner Dragonfly
Eastern Amberwing Dragonfly
Eastern Forktail Damselfly
Polyphemus Moth
Eastern Tent Moth
Cabbage White Butterfly
Mourning Cloak Butterfly
Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly
Eastern Black Swallowtail Butterfly
Monarch Butterfly
Crustaceans
Pillbug
Sowbug
Blue Crab
Northern Rock Barnacle
Spiny Cheek Crayfish
VERTEBRATES
Fish
American Eel
Striped Bass
Pumpkinseed Sunfish
Bluegill
Largemouth Bass
Amphibians
American Bullfrog
Fowler's Toad
Red-Backed Salamander
Eastern Spotted Newt
Reptiles
Common Snapping Turtle
Diamondback Terrapin
Eastern Painted Turtle
Eastern Garter Snake
Birds
Double-Crested Cormorant
Mute Swan
Canada Goose
Brant Goose
American Black Duck
Mallard Duck
Wood Duck
Canvasback Duck
Bufflehead Duck
Red-Breasted Merganser
Hooded Merganser
Great Blue Heron
Black-Crowned Night Heron
Red-Tailed Hawk
Osprey
Peregrine Falcon
Barn Owl
Monk Parakeet
Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
Red-Bullied Woodpecker
Blue Jay
Black-Capped Chickadee
Tufted Titmouse
White-Breasted Nuthatch
Gray Catbird
Northern Mockingbird
American Robin
Black-and-White Warbler
Common Yellowthroat
Yellow Warbler
Red-Winged Blackbird
European Starling
Baltimore Oriole
Scarlet Tanager
House Sparrow
Dark-Eyed Junco
Northern Cardinal
House Finch
American Goldfinch
White-Throated Sparrow
MAMMALS
Eastern Red Bat
Little Brown Bat
Big Brown Bat
Common Raccoon
Eastern Chipmunk
Eastern Gray Squirrel
Opossum
Red Fox
5. Plants
AQUATIC PLANTS
Common Cattail
Common Reed
WILDFLOWERS
Red and White Clover
Common Milkweed
Common Mullein
Dandelion
Black-Eyed Susan
TREES
Eastern White Pine
Austrian Pine
Bald Cypress
Ailanthus
American Elm
American Hornbeam
Ginkgo
Horsechestnut Tree
Lindens
Honey Locust
Black Locust
Sugar Maple
Red Maple
Norway Maple
White Mulberry Tree
Red Mulberry Tree
Eastern White Oak
Northern Red Oak
Pin Oak
Osage Orange
Eastern Redbud
Sweetgum
London Plane
American Sycamore
Tulip Tree
Weeping Willow
Wild Cherry
NATIVE SHRUBS
Spicebush
Common Elderberry
Arrowwood Viburnum
NONNATIVE SHRUBS
Butterfly Rush
Rugosa Rose
6. Mushrooms
Artist's Conk
Chicken Mushroom, or Chicken-of-the-Woods
Turkey Tail
7. Geology
Fordham Gneiss
Inwood Marble
Manhattan Schist
Serpentenite
Hartland Formation
Organizations
Bibliography
Index
Credits

Field Guide to the Natural World of New York City

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    £21.85

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    RRP £23.00 – you save £1.15 (5%)

    Order before 4pm tomorrow for delivery by Wed 8 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Leslie Day, Mark A. Klingler, Michael R. Bloomberg

      Trusted by thousands of customers. See 2,385+ Customer Reviews

      View other formats and editions of Field Guide to the Natural World of New York City by Leslie Day

      Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
      Publication Date: 25/01/2008
      ISBN13: 9780801886829, 978-0801886829
      ISBN10: 0801886821

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Throw it in your backpack, hop on the subway, and explore.

      Trade Review
      Dr. Day... A sort of Julia Child of nature. -- Ellen Pall New York Times 2007 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 2007 Provides historic facts, photographs and maps to give a snapshot of the city's natural resources and to remind hard-charging New Yorkers of the unchanging parts of their environment. -- Sally Goldenberg Staten Island Advance 2007 A complete guide for the urban naturalist. -- Greg Rienzi Gazette 2007 Describes how to find and explore some of the greener parts of the concrete jungle. -- Walter Dawkins The Record 2007 This book should be in every New Yorker's library as both reference and inspiration for low-carbon-impact journeys to places of unexpected beauty and tranquility. Crawford-Doyle Booksellers Newsletter 2007 You may well wonder why I am reviewing a book about New York city when we preach 'local, local, local' throughout these pages. I'll tell you, because this beautifully illustrated handbook is a wonderful example of exploring the bucolic city... All illustrated with gorgeous watercolors by Klingler. We should have one of these. But in the meantime, you will find many of the same species in our fair cities., so why not pick up a copy for inspiration? Minneapolis Observer Quarterly 2007 A guidebook to nature in the Big Apple would range from slim to empty, one might think. Try again. Painted turtles, American eels, dwarf centipedes, Eastern spotted newts, black-crowned night herons and Manhattan schist rocks are among the highlights of Leslie Day's Field Guide to the Natural World of New York City. -- Robin Lloyd www.livescience.com 2007 Leslie Day ('a child of Manhattan') reveals hidden depths of this urban behemoth... A wonderful guide to the green side of the Big Apple. -- PDSmith Guardian 2008 This guide is useful for students and anyone interested in locating and identifying the flora and fauna of New York City. -- Denise A. Garofalo American Reference Books Annual 2008 Wonderfuly written and well organized... In short, this useful book is, quite simply, beautiful. Living the Scientific Life 2008 This is a unique an excellent beginner's guide... Highly recommended. International Hawkwatcher 2008 Useful for students and anyone interested in locating and identifying the flora and fauna of New York City. -- Denise Garofalo ARBA Online 2008 The scientific detail is appropriate for all levels, and additional readings are referenced in a selected bibliography. Highly recommended. Choice 2008

      Table of Contents

      Foreword, by Michael R. Bloomberg
      Acknowledgments
      1. The Natural History of New York City
      2. The Parks
      The Bronx
      Brooklyn
      Manhattan
      Queens
      Staten Island
      3. Forever Wild
      4. Animals
      INVERTEBRATES
      Annelid
      Earthworm
      Arachnids
      Horseshoe Crab
      Daddy Longlegs
      Goldenrod Spider
      Rabid Wolf Spider
      Myriopods
      Hoffman's Dwarf Centipede
      Garden Centipede
      Garden Millipede
      Insects
      Pyralis Firefly
      Two-Spotted Ladybug Beetle
      Honeybee
      Eastern Carpenter Bee
      Yellow Jacket
      Common Green Darner Dragonfly
      Eastern Amberwing Dragonfly
      Eastern Forktail Damselfly
      Polyphemus Moth
      Eastern Tent Moth
      Cabbage White Butterfly
      Mourning Cloak Butterfly
      Eastern Tiger Swallowtail Butterfly
      Eastern Black Swallowtail Butterfly
      Monarch Butterfly
      Crustaceans
      Pillbug
      Sowbug
      Blue Crab
      Northern Rock Barnacle
      Spiny Cheek Crayfish
      VERTEBRATES
      Fish
      American Eel
      Striped Bass
      Pumpkinseed Sunfish
      Bluegill
      Largemouth Bass
      Amphibians
      American Bullfrog
      Fowler's Toad
      Red-Backed Salamander
      Eastern Spotted Newt
      Reptiles
      Common Snapping Turtle
      Diamondback Terrapin
      Eastern Painted Turtle
      Eastern Garter Snake
      Birds
      Double-Crested Cormorant
      Mute Swan
      Canada Goose
      Brant Goose
      American Black Duck
      Mallard Duck
      Wood Duck
      Canvasback Duck
      Bufflehead Duck
      Red-Breasted Merganser
      Hooded Merganser
      Great Blue Heron
      Black-Crowned Night Heron
      Red-Tailed Hawk
      Osprey
      Peregrine Falcon
      Barn Owl
      Monk Parakeet
      Ruby-Throated Hummingbird
      Red-Bullied Woodpecker
      Blue Jay
      Black-Capped Chickadee
      Tufted Titmouse
      White-Breasted Nuthatch
      Gray Catbird
      Northern Mockingbird
      American Robin
      Black-and-White Warbler
      Common Yellowthroat
      Yellow Warbler
      Red-Winged Blackbird
      European Starling
      Baltimore Oriole
      Scarlet Tanager
      House Sparrow
      Dark-Eyed Junco
      Northern Cardinal
      House Finch
      American Goldfinch
      White-Throated Sparrow
      MAMMALS
      Eastern Red Bat
      Little Brown Bat
      Big Brown Bat
      Common Raccoon
      Eastern Chipmunk
      Eastern Gray Squirrel
      Opossum
      Red Fox
      5. Plants
      AQUATIC PLANTS
      Common Cattail
      Common Reed
      WILDFLOWERS
      Red and White Clover
      Common Milkweed
      Common Mullein
      Dandelion
      Black-Eyed Susan
      TREES
      Eastern White Pine
      Austrian Pine
      Bald Cypress
      Ailanthus
      American Elm
      American Hornbeam
      Ginkgo
      Horsechestnut Tree
      Lindens
      Honey Locust
      Black Locust
      Sugar Maple
      Red Maple
      Norway Maple
      White Mulberry Tree
      Red Mulberry Tree
      Eastern White Oak
      Northern Red Oak
      Pin Oak
      Osage Orange
      Eastern Redbud
      Sweetgum
      London Plane
      American Sycamore
      Tulip Tree
      Weeping Willow
      Wild Cherry
      NATIVE SHRUBS
      Spicebush
      Common Elderberry
      Arrowwood Viburnum
      NONNATIVE SHRUBS
      Butterfly Rush
      Rugosa Rose
      6. Mushrooms
      Artist's Conk
      Chicken Mushroom, or Chicken-of-the-Woods
      Turkey Tail
      7. Geology
      Fordham Gneiss
      Inwood Marble
      Manhattan Schist
      Serpentenite
      Hartland Formation
      Organizations
      Bibliography
      Index
      Credits

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