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E-grāmata: Secret Lives of Carnivorous Marsupials

  • Formāts: 328 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Aug-2018
  • Izdevniecība: CSIRO Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781486305155
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  • Cena: 104,76 €*
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  • Formāts: 328 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 01-Aug-2018
  • Izdevniecība: CSIRO Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781486305155

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Most living carnivorous marsupials lead a secretive and solitary existence. From tiny insect eaters to the formidable Tasmanian Devil, Secret Lives of Carnivorous Marsupials offers rare insight into the history and habits of these creatures – from their discovery by intrepid explorers and scientists to their unique life cycles and incredible ways of hunting prey.

Andrew Baker and Chris Dickman bring you on a journey through remote Australia, the Americas and dark, mysterious New Guinea – some of the last truly wild places on Earth. They describe frenzied mating sessions, miniscule mammals that catch prey far larger than themselves, and extinct predators including marsupial lions, wolves and even sabre-toothed kangaroos. The book contains a guide to the world’s 136 living species of carnivorous marsupials and is packed with never-before-seen photos. Biogeography, relationships and conservation are also covered in detail.

Features:
• A fascinating insight into the lives and behaviors of these secretive and solitary marsupials
• Extensively illustrated with stunning color photographs
• Includes extinct species such as giant kangaroos, marsupial lions and tigers.
Foreword iii
Acknowledgements vii
1 The carnivorous marsupials
1(6)
What are marsupials?
1(2)
What makes a marsupial `carnivorous'?
3(1)
Diversity: how many carnivorous marsupials are there?
4(3)
2 Guide to carnivorous marsupials
7(40)
Australian fauna (2 orders, 3 families, 15 genera, 61 endemic species)
7(19)
New Guinean fauna (1 order, 1 family, 6 genera, 15 endemic species)
26(5)
American fauna (3 orders, 3 families, 13 genera, 58 endemic species)
31(14)
`Nearly' carnivorous marsupials
45(2)
3 Biogeography
47(10)
Where are carnivorous marsupials found and how did they get there?
47(10)
4 Relationships
57(18)
General morphology: body plans of carnivorous mammals
57(3)
What is a `species', and how do you tell one from another?
60(2)
Systematics
62(13)
5 Extinct fauna
75(14)
Fossil carnivorous marsupials and their ecology
75(9)
Evolutionary patterns: I. From ancestral forms to the Pleistocene
84(1)
Evolutionary patterns: II. From Pleistocene megafauna extinctions to the present day
85(4)
6 The mammal hunters: discovery of carnivorous marsupials
89(32)
Early European discoveries of carnivorous marsupials
89(4)
Taxonomy of carnivorous marsupials: the pre-eminence of Oldfield Thomas
93(10)
Strangers in strange lands: other hunter-collectors of carnivorous marsupials
103(12)
Indigenous relationships with carnivorous marsupials
115(6)
7 Habitats and distributions
121(26)
Species' distributions and habitat preferences
121(1)
Specialists
122(2)
Generalists
124(6)
Detective work: how can we deduce habitat preferences?
130(9)
Big picture patterns: above the species level
139(8)
8 Habits: secret lives
147(22)
Specialists
147(2)
Generalists
149(20)
9 Diets and eating habits
169(20)
Diets: moving feasts
169(8)
Foraging behaviour: ambush versus search and destroy
177(5)
Processing the prey: teeth and other morphological adaptations
182(1)
Population- and community-level effects of carnivorous marsupials
183(6)
10 Reproduction and life histories
189(24)
Reproduction: the basics
189(4)
Life histories
193(15)
Big-bang theories
208(5)
11 Conservation
213(26)
Conservation in the Anthropocene
213(2)
Assessing conservation status
215(11)
Improving conservation status
226(8)
What can you do?
234(5)
Appendix: List of carnivorous marsupial species 239(4)
References 243(58)
Index 301
Andrew Baker is Senior Lecturer in Ecology at Queensland University of Technology and author of several books, including the Field Companion to the Mammals of Australia. Andrew has discovered six new species of carnivorous marsupial, two of which are being considered for Endangered Species Listing.

Chris Dickman is Professor in Ecology at the University of Sydney and world expert on marsupials. Over his 30-year career, he has studied and discovered numerous carnivorous marsupials. He has produced over 300 publications including the Whitley Medal-winning book A Fragile Balance: The Extraordinary Story of Australian Marsupials.