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E-grāmata: Jackals, Golden Wolves, and Honey Badgers: Cunning, Courage, and Conflict with Humans

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"This book explores the fascinating and complex lives of the honey badger, the African jackals (black-backed jackal and side-striped), African golden wolves and Eurasian golden jackals. In recent years, interest in these creatures has grown exponentially, through wildlife documentaries and media clips showing the aggressive, fearless and tenacious behaviour of the honey badger, with jackals often presented in a supporting role. Written by renowned journalist and educator Keith Somerville, this accessiblevolume includes historical narratives, folklore, and contemporary accounts of human-wildlife relationships and conflicts. It traces the evolution of the species, their foraging, diet, the development of their relationships with humans and their commensal, kleptocratic and symbiotic relationships with other carnivores, raptors and birds. It also charts the recent expansion in European jackal numbers and ranges, now including as far west as the Netherlands and as far north as Finland. Blending historic observations by non-scientists, colonial officials, administrators and early conservationists with contemporary scientific accounts, it presents a new multi-disciplinary approach that will interest researchers, scientists, and students in wildlife conservation, human-wildlife relations, zoology, biology and environmental science"--

This book explores the fascinating and complex lives of the honey badger, the African jackals (black-backed jackal and side-striped), African golden wolves and Eurasian golden jackals. It will interest researchers, scientists, and students in wildlife conservation, human-wildlife relations, zoology, biology and environmental science.

Recenzijas

"This book has benefited from more colour from Somervilles extensive on-the-ground reporting, including his first-hand observations of the interactions of jackals and honey badgers in Botswana observations that lead to this work, which stands as a definitive account of these often misunderstood and persecuted creatures."

Ed Stoddard, in an excerpt from a review in Daily Maverick, South Africa.

1. Jackals and Golden Wolves
2. Origins and evolution of jackals and
golden wolves
3. From the end of the Pleistocene to the start of the Common
Era (CE)
4. Jackals and humans in Africa in the pre-colonial era
5. The
jackals of Eurasia
6. Africa from colonisation to 1960
7. Black-backed
jackals and related species in contemporary Africa
8. Honey badgers: Dramatis
Personae
9. Origins, evolution and history of the honey badger
10. Honey
Badgers in the contemporary world
Keith Somerville is a Member of the Durrell Institute of Conservation and Ecology at the University of Kent, UK, where he is a professor at the Centre for Journalism. He is a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute of Commonwealth Studies, a Fellow of the Zoological Society of London, UK, and a Member of the IUCN CEESP/SSC Sustainable Use and Livelihoods Specialist Group, and a fellow of the Royal Historical Society.