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Marine mammals have long captured the attention of humans. Ancient
peoples etched seals and dolphins on the walls of Paleolithic
caves; today, engineers develop microprocessors to track these
denizens of the deep. This groundbreaking book from highly
respected marine mammal paleontologist Annalisa Berta delves into
the story of the extraordinary adaptations that gave the world
these amazing animals. The Rise of Marine Mammals reveals
remarkable fossil record discoveries that shed light on the
origins, relationships, and diversification of marine mammals.
Focusing on evolution and paleobiology, Berta provides an overview
of marine mammal species diversity, enhanced with gorgeous life
restorations by Carl Buell, Robert Boessenecker, William Stout, and
Ray Troll and extensive line drawings by graphics editor James L.
Sumich. The book also considers ongoing conservation challenges,
demonstrating how the fossil record of adaptation in response to
past environmental shifts may illuminate the way that marine
mammals respond to global climate change. This invaluable
biological framework is essential for helping us understand how
best to protect and conserve today's polar bears, whales, dolphins,
seals, and fellow warm-blooded ocean dwellers. The Rise of Marine
Mammals also describes exciting breakthroughs that rely on new
techniques of study, including 3-D imaging, and molecular, finite
element, and morphometric analyses, which have enhanced scientists'
understanding of everything from the anatomy of fetal whales to the
genes behind limb loss in cetaceans. Mammalogists, paleontologists,
and marine scientists will find Berta's insights absorbing, while
developmental and molecular biologists, geneticists, and ecologists
exploring integrative research approaches will benefit from her
fresh perspective.
Return to the Sea portrays the life and evolutionary times of
marine mammals-from giant whales and sea cows that originated 55
million years ago to the deep-diving elephant seals and clam-eating
walruses of modern times. This fascinating account of the origin of
various marine-mammal lineages-some extinct, others extant but
threatened-is for the nonspecialist. Against a backdrop of geologic
time and changing climates and geography, this volume takes
evolution as its unifying principle to help us to understand
today's diversity of marine mammals and their responses to
environmental challenges. Annalisa Berta explains current
controversies and explores patterns of change now taking place,
such as shifting food webs and predator-prey relationships, habitat
degradation, global warming, and the effects of humans on
marine-mammal communities.
The eighty-nine cetacean species that swim our seas and rivers are
as diverse as they are intelligent and elusive, from the
hundred-foot-long, two-hundred-ton blue whale to the lesser-known
tucuxi, ginkgo-toothed beaked whale, and diminutive, critically
endangered vaquita. The huge distances these highly migratory
creatures cover and the depths they dive mean we catch only the
merest glimpses of their lives as they break the surface of the
water. But thanks to the marriage of science and technology, we are
now beginning to understand their anatomy, complex social
structures, extraordinary communication abilities, and behavioral
patterns. In this beautifully illustrated guide, renowned marine
mammalogist Annalisa Berta draws on the contributions of a pod of
fellow whale biologists to present the most comprehensive,
authoritative overview ever published of these remarkable aquatic
mammals. Opening with an accessible rundown of cetacean
biology--including the most recent science on feeding, mating, and
communication--Whales, Dolphins, and Porpoises then presents
species-specific natural history on a range of topics, from anatomy
and diet to distribution and conservation status. Each entry also
includes original drawings of the species and its key identifiers,
such as fin shape and color, tooth shape, and characteristic
markings as they would appear both above and below water--a feature
unique to this book. Figures of myth and--as the debate over
hunting rages on--figures of conflict since long before the days of
Moby-Dick, whales, dolphins, and porpoises are also ecologically
important and, in many cases, threatened. Written for general
enthusiasts, emergent cetacean fans, and biologists alike, this
stunning, urgently needed book will serve as the definitive guide
for years to come.
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