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Book Club - by Luke

Field Guide
Oxford Field Guide to Mammals
Field guides for birds seem to be everywhere and I think it's fair to say that there are far more bird-watching groups then there are groups for watching any other kind of animal (that's if any other kind of animal-watching groups indeed exist!) And whilst I'm interested in birds, my primary interest in animals has always been mammals and when I was younger I was always annoyed at the apparent lack of field guides for Australian mammals.


Well, since those days I've become a bit more savvy in the world of books and I've noticed that there are more than a few such guides for observing and identifying Australian mammals in the field. I finally bought one such guide last week after much deliberating (these guides aren't cheap, they're usually around $40 to $50). I think this guide, the Oxford second edition, is probably the best of the lot.

Now, as I said, I've looked at a few guides on Australian mammals but I didn't really like any of them except for this one. The other main mammal field guide that seems to be available in most bookstores has photographs for each mammal... I actually prefer illustrations. There's something about photographs that make it hard to tell certain species apart, there's always a shadow somewhere that obscures some detail or the angle of the animal doesn't do it justice when you're trying to spot it in the bush or something. This Oxford guide that I eventually chose has illustrations, which I think make it easier - as the differences are clearer between species, they're all drawn in profile so you can compare them and there aren't any dodgy shadows to be seen.


This field guide is also handy as it covers every mammal you could possibly see in Australia. All the marsupials, monotremes and native mice, rats and bats are present, along with every seal and whale species one could possibly sight from our shores. It even details the various feral animals that have taken up residence here since European settlement and lists a few recently extinct mammals in the hope that there might still be a few rogue living specimens as yet un-spotted.

As can be expected from a field guide, it shows the distribution of each mammal in Australia, talks about their appearance in detail, their behaviour and the likelihood of seeing them in certain areas. It also, where neccessary, shows diagrams of their feet/footprints or droppings for help in identifying the tracks and trails of certain species. Very useful!

So, if you've read this far and haven't been completely bored to death by my description of this Field Guide, I'd highly recommend it to anyone who is interested in learning the names of native mammals that they might spot in their backyard and beyond. Have fun.
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Animal

July 21st 2006 09:16
If you're on the lookout for a mighty fine reference book than you couldn't go past this book from DK and the Smithsonian Institute.

Animal
Animal!


It's a big ol' book and fairly weighty but it presents all it's wares in an easy-to-read fashion and there are LOTS of pictures. Which is what we like. Oh yes we do.

Okay, so I love animals... passing this review off as anything more than that would be a futile exercise in me lying to myself. I bought this mainly because it has a photograph of pretty much every mammal currently in existence - it's exhaustive! From BOTH kinds of echidnas right up to all the various whales and rodents and monkeys and pangolins. I love mammals.

Then there's a big section on birds, followed by reptiles, amphibians, fish of all kinds, and the various molluscs, insects, arachnids and other inveterbrates that make up our amazingly diverse animal kingdom.

It's like owning your own private zoo, each animal is presented alongside it's vital statistics, location in the world, how endangered it is and a brief rundown of it's general lifestyle. There are also more detailed write ups on the families and orders each group of animals belongs to and it's all so fascinating, fascinating, fascinating!

The front proclaims 'The Definitive Visual Guide to the World's Wildlife' and I'm inclined to agree. I've been working in bookstores for a few years now and I'm yet to see anything that matches this book. Go get it! It's cool!
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A Gap in Nature

May 3rd 2006 06:48
A Gap in Nature
A Gap in Nature, by Tim Flannery and Peter Schouten
'A Gap in Nature' is a large hard cover (at least, I haven't seen a soft cover version of it about so I'm pretty sure it's only available in hard cover) book about animals that have become extinct in the last four or five hundred years or so. Each animal is given a page or three... one page of text, provided by the reliable Australian naturalist/writer Tim Flannery, and a page or two for an extremely detailed painting by Peter Schouten. If you're interested in reading in-depth accounts of extinct animals then this isn't the book for you... this is more of a coffee table book, and is worth getting mostly for the pictures - and that's not to write off Flannery's efforts at all, his text is more than sufficient.

Quagga
A Quagga, now extinct.

Bluebucks
Bluebucks, now extinct.

Pig-Footed Bandicoot
A Pig-Footed Bandicoot, now extinct. (As you can see)

A lot of the book is given over to the dozens of bird species that have disappeared at human hands. The saddest story would have to be that of the Stephen's Island Wren - a flightless bird found on one tiny New Zealand island that was wiped out completely by a lighthouse keeper's cat. In fact, it's sad to witness how much of an effect humans have had on islands all over the world... a lot of the birds and other animals shown in 'A Gap in Nature' are endemic island creatures that had prospered in isolation for thousands of years only to be wiped out suddenly by the arrival of people.

I think I would've liked to who have seen some of the older and more unusual animals that have become extinct at our hands, like the Barbary Lion or Cypriot Elephant, but I guess lack of solid information makes it hard to present a clear scientific picture of such creatures so I'll guess I'll have to make do with my Dodos, Tasmanian Tigers, Quaggas and Bluebucks.

Please note: the pictures shown here aren't from the book. The pictures from the book need to be seen in full size in real life to be appreciated.
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