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Mammals of North America: Temperate and Arctic Regions

Mammals of North America: Temperate and Arctic Regions
By Adrian Forsyth

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Product Description

This landmark reference by award-winning science writer Adrian Forsyth is completely up-to-date with the latest scientific names and behavioral data on the wild mammals of North America. Much more than a field guide, "Mammals of North America" goes beyond simple identification and description, and delves into the reasons wild mammals live and act the way they do: Why are some predators highly social, while others live alone? Why must shrews no bigger than a thimble eat more than their body weight each day or face certain starvation? How can a bat pick a small insect off the surface of a leaf in total darkness? How did a squat prehistoric pig-like animal evolve into one of the world's fastest creatures, the pronghorn antelope?

Blessed with vast areas of wilderness, the United States and Canada support the largest and healthiest populations of native mammals on Earth. Even residents of urban centers are seldom more than a morning's drive from the splendors of wild- mammal life. Whether you enjoy wildlife firsthand or from the comfort of your armchair, Adrian Forsyth's "Mammals of North America" will prove an essential and fascinating resource.

Adrian Forsyth is the author of "Tropical Nature," "The Natural History of Sex," "The Nature of Birds," "Portraits of the Rainforest," "The Architecture of Animals," "Exploring the World of Birds" and "Exploring the World of Insects." A specialist in animal behavior and rainforest ecology, Forsyth lives in Washington, D.C., where he is a researcher at the Smithsonian Institution.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2031385 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-10-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 352 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review
Field guides help naturalists identify animals, but understanding their behavior is much more difficult. That's why this hefty reference work is so welcome. Mammals of North America is an excellent introduction to the behavior, ecology, and evolution of temperate and arctic mammals. Adrian Forsyth, a scientist and author of several other books on natural history, provides more than 100 species accounts, complete with excellent color photographs, range maps, basic life-history data, and concise summaries of behavior and ecology. From bighorn sheep to pygmy shrew, blue whale to black bear, Forsyth always finds something interesting to say.

But Forsyth's best writing shines in the mini-essays that occur throughout the text. What good are antlers? At less than a 10th of an ounce, how do shrews stay warm? Why do mammals produce milk? (From modified sweat glands, no less!) Why are seals such excellent divers? These topics allow him to address the big issues raised by recent advances in ecology and evolution, but always in the context of the mammal at hand, hoof, or flipper.

The geographical coverage is not truly North American. Forsyth provides accounts for only one-third of the North American species in some families. Most of the species omitted are from California, the arid Southwest, and Mexico. Is a companion volume for the arid regions of North America planned? Even with these omissions, Mammals of North America provides rich rewards for armchair naturalists as well as those who follow Louis Agassiz's advice to "study Nature, not books." --Pete Holloran

From Library Journal
This book provides information on over 150 species of mammals organized by taxonomic classification. Although the focus is on Canada and the northern United States, many species have ranges extending far to the south. Forsyth, a biologist with the W. Alton Jones Foundation and the Smithsonian Institution, furnishes the usual details about anatomy, habitat, diet, gestation, and range for each species, but the emphasis is on animal behavior--particularly why animals behave the way they do. He also covers some subjects that usually fall outside the realm of field guides, such as animal welfare, pollution, and the effects of human interaction. Whereas The Smithsonian Book of North American Mammals (LJ 11/15/99) covers twice as many species, it is geared toward a more scholarly audience. Forsyth's book, with its accessible style of writing and useful index, is more easily approachable for the lay reader who may not know the scientific classification of a species. The currency of the material is questionable, however, as this work duplicates to a large extent Forsyth's earlier Mammals of the American North (1985. o.p.), the primary differences being the reversed order of the chapters and new photographs. Libraries should therefore choose the more comprehensive and authoritative Smithsonian book over Forsyth's.
-Teresa Berry, Univ. of Tennessee Libs., Knoxville
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From The Washington Post
Adam Forsyth writes knowledgeably and succinctly about his subjects ... The photographs in this book are nicely variegated -- a mountain lion with mouth agape in a growl, a lazy seal with half-open eyes, a hoary marmot poised on a rock to take an alpine sniff.


Customer Reviews

MAMMAL REVIEW3
THE BOOK MAMMALS OF NORTH AMERICA IS VERY WELL PHOTOGRAPHED. BUT AS I FOUND WHEN I CHECKED IT MORE CLOSELY IT HAS MOST OF THE AUTHORS SAME TEXT FROM AN OLDER BOOK.MAMMALS OF THE AMERICAN NORTH THAT HE HAD WRITTEN IN 1985. BUT TO BE FAIR IT IS STILL A GOOD BOOK. AND IT SHOULD BE ADDED TO ANYBODIES COLLECTION OF MAMMAL BOOKS.

happy book buying, when looking for editions that are not in the local book store.5
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