15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Buy it !!, December 22, 1996
By A Customer
This review is from: The Encyclopedia of Snakes (Hardcover)
This comprehensive, highly illustrated book
covers the most popular aspects of snake biology
and is intended to be the most informative and
comprehensive title on the subject yet published.
Throughout, colour photographs show the
fascinating variety of snake coloration as well as
being used to illustrate and clarify points of
interest.
Each chapter consists of a main theme
containing text, photographs and diagrams.
There is a detailed coverage of snake
classification, evolution, natural diversity, size,
shape and coloration, physiology, ecology,
feeding, defensive behaviour, breeding,
mythology, superstition and modern human
attitudes to snakes. In addition, there are 'fact
boxes'within each chapter, which comprise
items of special importance and interest, such as
scale-type, population in the wild, egg
incubation, etc.
Above all, this will be a major international title
for all involved and interested in snakes, their
zoology and care in captivity.
Chris Mattison is a professional berpetologist,
based in Sheffield in the UK, with an international
reputation as a writer on the topic. He is a long-
established Cassell/Blandford author, having
written Snakes of the World, Keeping and
Breeding Snakes and half-a-dozen other related
titles. A member of both the British and
International Herpetological Societies, he
travels widely photographing reptiles in the wild
and is in demand as a lecturer on the subject in
Europe and North America.
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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Excellent general introduction to herpetology, March 23, 2000
This review is from: The Encyclopedia of Snakes (Hardcover)
This books provides great info for snakes and their physiology, as well as taxonomy/classification. The main thing I found lacking was information on specific species; though it cover family/genus info fairly well, I felt it forsook the "trees for the forest." But overall very good.
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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Useful for the amateur to intermediate, February 19, 2000
This review is from: The Encyclopedia of Snakes (Hardcover)
Although not quite a good reference work for the true professional, The Encyclopedia of Snakes covers a wide array of topics and goes through the classification of the snakes in a comprehensible family by family format. The quality of the photographs is quite excellent, and, coupled with the extensive tidbits on habits, anatomy, classification, and range makes a wonderful and compelling read.
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