|
Showing 1 - 5 of
5 matches in All Departments
The taxonomy of recent mammals has lately undergone tremendous
revision, but it has been almost four decades since the last update
to Timothy E. Lawlor's acclaimed identification guide the Handbook
to the Orders and Families of Living Mammals. Integrating the
latest advances in research, Douglas A. Kelt and James L. Patton
provide this long-overdue update in their new, wholly original
work, A Manual of the Mammalia. Complemented by global range maps,
high-resolution photographs of skulls and mandibles by Bill Stone,
and the outstanding artwork of Fiona Reid, this book provides an
overview of biological attributes of each higher taxon while
highlighting key and diagnostic characters needed to identify
skulls and skins of all recent mammalian orders and most families.
Kelt and Patton also place taxa in their currently understood
supra-familial clades, and discuss current challenges in higher
mammal taxonomy. Including a comprehensive review of mammalian
anatomy to provide a foundation for understanding all characters
employed throughout, A Manual of the Mammalia is both a
user-friendly handbook for students learning to identify higher
mammal taxa and a uniquely comprehensive, up-to-date reference for
mammalogists and mammal-lovers from across the globe.
This document details the objectives of this inventory which were
as follows: 1) Intensively sample the original Grinnell-Storer
transect sites in Yosemite National Park to document
presence/absence and distribution for primarily non-volant small
mammals, amphibians, and reptiles; 2) To the extent possible,
replicate Grinnell-Storer bird surveys at these same sites; 3)
Determine the current status of species that, based on the limited
prior records, were either considered rare or of unknown status;
and 4) Compare the Grinnell-era and modern data to document changes
in distribution.
The second installment in a planned three-volume series, this book
provides the first substantive review of South American rodents
published in over fifty years. Increases in the reach of field
research and the variety of field survey methods, the introduction
of bioinformatics, and the explosion of molecular-based genetic
methodologies have all contributed to the revision of many
phylogenetic relationships and to a doubling of the recognized
diversity of South American rodents. The largest and most diverse
mammalian order on Earth-and an increasingly threatened
one-Rodentia is also of great ecological importance, and Rodents is
both a timely and exhaustive reference on these ubiquitous
creatures. From spiny mice and guinea pigs to the oversized
capybara, this book covers all native rodents of South America, the
continental islands of Trinidad and Tobago, and the Caribbean
Netherlands off the Venezuelan coast. It includes identification
keys and descriptions of all genera and species; comments on
distribution; maps of localities; discussions of subspecies; and
summaries of natural, taxonomic, and nomenclatural history. Rodents
also contains a detailed list of cited literature and a separate
gazetteer based on confirmed identifications from museum vouchers
and the published literature.
Oliver P. Pearson's studies on mammalian biology remain standard
reading for ecologists, physiologists, taxonomists, and
biogeographers. Reflecting this, the papers gathered here continue
to expand our understanding of the ecology and evolution of
subterranean mammals, and of ecology, taxonomy, and biogeography of
Neotropical mammals, a group that was central to the latter half of
Pearson's career.
|
|