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Carnivore Behavior, Ecology and Evolution, Volume 1 [Kietas viršelis]

  • Formatas: Hardback, 600 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 1220 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-May-1989
  • Leidėjas: Chapman and Hall
  • ISBN-10: 0412343509
  • ISBN-13: 9780412343506
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 600 pages, aukštis x plotis: 234x156 mm, weight: 1220 g
  • Išleidimo metai: 04-May-1989
  • Leidėjas: Chapman and Hall
  • ISBN-10: 0412343509
  • ISBN-13: 9780412343506
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
Carnivores have always fascinated us, even though they make up only 10% of all mammalian genera and only about 2 % of all mammalian biomass. In Greek mythology most of the gods adorned their robes and helmets with depictions of carnivores, and the great hero Hercules' most famous feat was killing the "invulnerable" lion with his bare hands. Part of our fascination with carnivores stems from fright and intrigue, and sometimes even hatred because of our direct competition with them. Cases of "man-eating" lions, bears, and wolves, as well as carnivores' reputation as killers of livestock and game, provoke communities and govermllents to adopt sweeping policies to exterminate them. Even President Theodore Roosevelt, proclaimer of a new wildlife protectionism, described the wolf as "the beast of waste and desolation. " The sheer presence and power of carnivores is daunt­ ing: they can move quickly yet silently through forests, attaining rapid bursts of speed when necessary; their massive muscles are aligned to deliver powerful attacks, their large canines and strong jaws rip open carcasses, and their scis­ sor-like carnassials slice meat. Partly because of our fear of these attributes, trophy hunting of carnivores has been, and to a certain extent still is, a sign of bravery and skill. Among some Alaskan Inuit, for example, a man is not eligible for marriage until he has killed a succession of animals of increasing size and dangerousness, culminating with the most menacing, the polar bear.
An Introduction to the Carnivora.- I Behavior.- 1 Acoustic Communication
by Fissiped Carnivores.- 2 The Role of Odor in the Social Lives of
Carnivores.- 3 Behavioral Development of Terrestrial Carnivores.- 4 The
Comparative Behavioral Ecology of Hyenas: The Importance of Diet and Food
Dispersion.- 5 Intraspecific Variation in Canid Social Systems.- 6 The Mating
Tactics and Spacing Patterns of Solitary Carnivores.- 7 Carnivore Group
Living: Comparative Trends.- II Ecology.- 8 The Feeding Ecology of Giant
Pandas and Asiatic Black Bears in the Tangjiahe Reserve, China.- 9
Adaptations for Aquatic Living by Carnivores.- 10 Ecological Constraints on
Predation by Large Felids.- 11 The Advantages and Disadvantages of Small Size
to Weasels, Mustela Species.- 12 Basal Rate of Metabolism, Body Size, and
Food Habits in the Order Carnivora.- 13 Patterns of Energy Output during
Reproduction in Carnivores.- III Evolution.- 14 Locomotor Adaptations by
Carnivores.- 15 Carnivore Dental Adaptations and Diet: A Study of Trophic
Diversity within Guilds.- 16 The Physiology and Evolution of Delayed
Implantation in Carnivores.- 17 Molecular and Biochemical Evolution of the
Carnivora.- 18 The Phylogeny of the Recent Carnivora.- 19 Fossil History of
the Terrestrial Carnivora.- Appendix: Classification of the Recent
Carnivora.- Species and Subject Index.