The first comprehensive, up-to-date treatment of mammals of Oregon since Vernon Bailey's THE MAMMALS AND LIFE ZONES OF OREGON was published in 1936. This new book provides a basic reference to mammalian life in the northwestern U.S., with descriptions of 136 extant or recently extirpated species. 122 color and 36 b&w photos, 140 maps, 150 drawings.
Read More
The first comprehensive, up-to-date treatment of mammals of Oregon since Vernon Bailey's THE MAMMALS AND LIFE ZONES OF OREGON was published in 1936. This new book provides a basic reference to mammalian life in the northwestern U.S., with descriptions of 136 extant or recently extirpated species. 122 color and 36 b&w photos, 140 maps, 150 drawings.
Read Less
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good jacket. Size: 9x1x11; Green cloth with gold spine titling, very good with light edgewear. Spine square. Binding sound. Dust jacket very good with light shelf-wear and edgewear. Pages bright and unmarked.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
Very Good in Very Good jacket. Size: 9x1x11; First printing. Binding a bit shaken but sound. Some light bumping to corners. Text and images unmarked. The dust jacket shows light edge wear, in a mylar cover. 4to. 668pp.
Choose your shipping method in Checkout. Costs may vary based on destination.
Seller's Description:
New in New jacket. "The most complete and up-to-date reference that exists on Oregon's land mammals today. It is written in a manner that should appeal to everyone from the budding naturalist who simply yearns to learn about basic life history characteristics of Oregon's land mammals, to the seasoned scientist whose needs are much more technical in nature. It not only provides the reader with what is currently known about individual species, but also identifies deficiencies in our knowledge base and therefore suggests the direction for future work."Walter A. Van Dyke, Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife" This is the first comprehensive, up-to-date treatment of mammals in the state of Oregon since 1936, when Vernon Bailey's The Mammals and Life Zones of Oregon was published. It provides a basic reference for mammalogists, wildlife biologists, students, and anyone interested in mammalian life in the northwestern United States. Indeed, researchers in states adjacent to Oregon will find much useful information regarding the mammals their regions share with Oregon. Descriptions of all 136 extant or recently extirpated mammal species in Oregon are in the book, with information on geographical variation, diet, reproduction, ontogeny, mortality, and behavior. The authors provide range maps and lists of collection localities based on their examination of 55, 265 museum specimens and brief accounts of morphology, species diversity, distribution, and fossil records. Keys to orders, families, and species are provided for identification of unknown specimens. Also helpful is the introductory section with its discussion of skull morphology, evolutionary history, basic taxonomy, zoogeography, zoonotic diseases, and the history of mammalogy in Oregon. A bibliography of 2, 925 references makes the volume especially useful for anyone wishing to do further research.