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Hardcover Golden Wings & Hairy Toes: Encounters with New England's Most Imperiled Wildlife Book

ISBN: 1584656263

ISBN13: 9781584656265

Golden Wings & Hairy Toes: Encounters with New England's Most Imperiled Wildlife

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good*

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Book Overview

This book profiles fourteen of New England's most rare and endangered flora and fauna--mammals, birds, insects, plants, and fish--by following the biologists who are researching, monitoring, and protecting them. Each chapter includes a first-person account of the author's experience with these experts, as well as details about the species' life history, threats, and conservation strategies. McLeish traps bats in Vermont and lynx in Maine, gets attacked by marauding birds in Massachusetts, and observes the metamorphosis of dragonflies in Rhode Island. He visits historical cemeteries to see New England's rarest plant, tracks sturgeon in the Connecticut River, and observes a parade of what may be the rarest mammal on earth, the North Atlantic right whale, in Cape Cod Bay. The book's title comes from the name of one of the birds in the book, the golden-winged warbler, and the unusual characteristic used to distinguish the rare Indiana bat from its common cousins, its hairy toes. McLeish, a longtime wildlife advocate and essayist, has a gift for communicating scientific information in an interesting and accessible way. His goal in this book--to make an emotional connection to a variety of fascinating animals and plants--is successfully conveyed to the reader, who comes away amazed by the complexity of individual species and the ecosystems necessary for their survival. Sometimes there are surprises: how lynx benefit from the clear cutting of forests or how utility companies --often blamed for environmental degradation--have accidentally succeeded in creating excellent habitat for golden-winged warblers along their power line corridors. Such examples support McLeish's assertion that we can meet the immense challenges to species preservation, such as global warming, acid rain, and mercury poisoning, as well as the difficulty of adding new species to the 1973 Endangered Species Act. As McLeish's book shows, each rare species has an important story to tell about the causes of its population decline, the obstacles each face in rebuilding a sustainable population, and the people who go to extraordinary lengths to give these species a chance to thrive.

Customer Reviews

1 rating

In the field with ecologists and conservationists

Consistently well-written, informative, enjoyable reports from the field of muddy boots, bat nets, and intelligent, dedicated and very interesting wildlife workers. Recommended to anyone who would enjoy learning a wealth of detail about New England fauna (and some flora) that you just can't read about in most books (because the field is too fast-moving). Ordinary citizens, even those who are bird watchers or leaf peepers, largely have no inkling of the situations and on-going events so well described in this book. I certainly learned a lot, and I am the bird-watching, eco-touring son of a professional biologist. The quality of writing is high, comparable, say, to the New York Times Sunday magazine articles or better. Imagine a year's worth of such articles, all on the subject of New England wildlife, many species of which are silently fighting for survival in an increasingly chopped down, burned up, polluted and paved over world. Recommended.
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