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A Field Guide to the Mammals of Central America and Southeast Mexico

Our Price $ 49.95  
 
 
Item Number 2449074  
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Item Description...

This is the only field guide to provide comprehensive coverage of the mammals of Central America and southeast Mexico. The fully revised second edition includes 21 new species, as well as updated illustrations and distribution maps. Each species account provides measurements, descriptions, and comparisons with similar species, and is accompanied by a range map showing where the species can be found in the region.

The 49 full-color animal plates contain similar species portrayed to scale on the same plate, with tracks and feet shown on the facing-page. 4 new full-color maps provide visual views of parks and protected areas, biomes, elevations and habitat loss, as well as a political map of the region. The book also features a detailed introduction with sections on how and where to find mammals and a listing of the most endangered species in the region.


Item Specifications...

Pages   384
Dimensions:   Length: 9.2" Width: 6.1" Height: 0.7"
Weight:   1.25 lbs.
Binding  Softcover
Release Date   Jun 9, 2009
Publisher   Oxford University Press
ISBN  0195343239  
EAN  9780195343236  


Availability  2 units.
Availability accurate as of May 30, 2012 02:14.
Usually ships within one to two business days from La Vergne, TN.
Orders shipping to an address other than a confirmed Credit Card / Paypal Billing address may incur and additional processing delay.


Product Categories
1Books > Subjects > History > Americas > Mexico   [1660  similar products]
2Books > Subjects > Outdoors & Nature > Reference   [3941  similar products]
3Books > Subjects > Professional & Technical > Professional Science > Biological Sciences > Zoology > Mammals   [80  similar products]
4Books > Subjects > Science > Biological Sciences > Animals > General   [1072  similar products]
5Books > Subjects > Science > Biological Sciences > Animals > Mammals   [636  similar products]
6Books > Subjects > Science > Biological Sciences > Zoology > General   [1745  similar products]
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8Books > Subjects > Science > Nature & Ecology > Oceans & Seas > General   [149  similar products]
9Books > Subjects > Travel > General > Guidebooks   [3094  similar products]
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Reviews - What do our customers think?
Great book, bad binding  Jun 24, 2008
If I were just covering the book I would give it a five -- hands down. It is a great book and easy to find the animals you see. However, if you A) live in a tropical environment B) handle this book at all, the binding falls apart. How sad that such a good book looks like it is 10 years old after a few months. I've now purchased this book twice because of the content only to find the binding fell apart both times.
 
Excellent resource  Mar 29, 2007
We just returned from a trip to Panama and Costa Rica that I had purchased the book for. I had little time to consult books as we were so busy but it was helpful as background before the trip and as a resource during the trip. It is a beautiful book and I will keep it. As an all around resource and book to have along two other books were helpful. One, Watching Wildlife: Central America (Lonely Planet) and another Birds of Costa Rica (photographic volume) were very helpful and easy to carry along. Others brought Birds of Panama and used it alot - very heavy to carry. The guides used the laminated wildlife "brochures", two I got on this site but there were others available down there. There doesn't seem to be one great resource for wildlife in the region but as we were traveling with naturalists and with the above two sources, we were pretty happy.
 
Absolutely the best mammals guide for the region  Aug 1, 2003
I had the opportunity to participate in a research project in Nicaragua. A local Nicaraguan university library allowed me to check out and use any field guide I wanted. Within days, all other field guides were permanently stowed in the bottom of my bag until I could return them to the university.

Having never been to the tropics before, I was still able to identify every bat I caught using mist nets with only the aid of this book (my local guides were unfamiliar with the bats).
This book will be your best piece of equipment if you plan to study mammals in Central America.

One of the first things I did when I returned home was order my own copy of this wonderful book.

 
A wonderful companion for both amateurs and pros  Aug 17, 1999
This field guide is a definitive yet handy guide that will surely be a classic of its type. It covers all the living species of native mammals from Mexico to Panama (including aquatic species such as whales and otters). For each species there is a careful description of its physical appearance along with notes on habitats, ranges (with maps) and behaviour, as well as other useful comments such as the best place to see a particular species, what the ground tracks look like and the status of threatened species. It is an absolute mine of fascinating information, much of it newly gathered or previously available only in obscure academic sources. There are excellent introductory sections on the main mammal groups, and good indexes and bibliographies -- in short , everything one needs to find and enjoy looking at mammals. But the most unique and useful feature (as well as the greatest delight -- and why this is a true classic), are the illustrations - hundreds of beautifully drawn colour plates painted from life (often in the most demanding of circumstances), that will allow you to settle important questions like "Is that a Woolly False Vampire Bat or a Great False Vampire Bat that just bit you" without flaming your travelling companions. (The book is especially strong on Bats.) Flying squirrels, monkeys, oppossums, sloths, deer mice, armadillos dolphins and skunks, they are all here. I would highly recommend this book both for amateurs and professionals (whether they are going to central america or not!). Every academic library should have a copy of it.

The care taken over detail throughout make the book both scientifically valuable and highly readable. It is a true labour of love - and just look at this quote from the author's preface! "Some species I painted while sitting in a truck, using the steering wheel as an easel, and some in a tent with a hadlamp at night, but most were done outside during the day, sitting on the ground or on a log. The white background of the plates suffered from a continuous onslaught of dust, sweat, and grime, and other indefinable debris. Carrying the plates throughout Central America involved some harrowing experiences, one of which was a short flight to Tortuguero in Costa Rica. The pilot had at length persuaded me to put my portfolio in the front baggage hold in the nose of the plane, and after we took off he realized that the door to this hold had come open. While the other four passengers agonized over the possibility of the plane going down if the luggage became tangled in the propellors, I was trying to follow our coordinates so I could search for my plates if they fell to the swampy ground below. Fortunately, we landed at a small airfield, corrected the problem, and lost nothing but peace of mind."

 

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