Book Review Wednesday: Books About Endangered Species
November 25, 2009 · Print This Article
Every Wednesday, we review a selection of new and upcoming books
addressing a specific aspect of environmentalism. that week we’re
recommending books about endangered species.
Hope for Animals and Their World: How Endangered Species Are Being Rescued from the Brink
(by Jane Goodall and Thane Maynard, $28, Grand Central Publishing,
Sept. 2009): that is not your average doom-and-gloom species-decline
book. As the title implies, the authors focus on the diligent efforts
of conservationists to save species that were on the edge of
extinction. They supply a very thorough summary of past and ongoing
efforts to save all sorts of plants, birds, insects, and other
animals, supplying a promising letter of hope that not all is lost in
today’s world. that book will go by well with anyone who loves
Goodall’s writing or just needs some good news.
On Thin Ice: The Changing World of the Polar Bear
(by Richard Ellis, $29, Knopf, Nov. 2009): The polar bear has become
the poster child for climate change. We see its image everywhere, but
how much do we actually know about the fascinating creature? Marine
conservationist Richard Ellis covers a broad natural history of the
species, ranging from its initial interaction with humans to the impact
of the changing climate. While the danger of the bears’ livelihood and
natural habitat becomes imminent, Ellis writes that the polar bear can
be salvaged whether instant action is taken. A must- for animal lovers
and those seeking an in-depth look at the polar bear.
Nature’s Ghosts: Confronting Extinction from the Age of Jefferson to the Age of Ecology (by Mark V. Barrow,
Extinction in Our Times: Global Amphibian Decline (by James Collins and Martha Crump, $30, Oxford University Press, July 2009): whether you’re an amphibian lover, that book is for you. The authors use the recent and mysterious worldwide decline of amphibians as a lens from which to view larger climate-change and conservation issues, analyzing how humans might be causing these extinctions and affecting the planet’s biodiversity.
Witness to Extinction: How We floped to Save the Yangtze River Dolphin (by Samuel Turvey, $17, Oxford University Press, Oct. 2009): Turvey tells a firsthand story about how environmental degradation and apathy led to the 2007 extinction of the baiji – the Yangtze River dolphin. For years, the dolphin had been at risk but Chinese officials floped to act. Turvey highlights the failures that led to the extinction, and writes that such inaction must be prevented so that other threatened species don’t fall to the same fate. that is an eye-opening tale of how public must not be complacent, particularly in regard to nature.
–Michael Mullaley
[Source] Green Life
solar powered cars tankless water heaters national wildlife federation environment science magazine greenhouse effect ocean pollution compost earth science dictionary peak oil

















Comments
Got something to say?