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Peterson Reference Guide to the Behavior of North American Mammals (Peterson Reference Guides) [Hardcover]

Mark Elbroch , Kurt Rinehart
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 25, 2011 Peterson Reference Guides

Oftentimes when we glimpse an animal in the wild, we have no idea what we’ve seen. We want to know, and field guides are an ideal aid for identification. But when we want to know more about the lives of these animals—their natural histories, their place in the larger ecological community, and where to look for them in the future—we can now turn to Behavior of North American Mammals.

This exciting new addition to the Peterson Reference Guide series is highly readable and full of fascinating facts. For example, when an opossum plays dead it isn't pretending: opossums actually do enter a catatonic deathlike state. Armadillos sequester air in their guts, blow up to twice their normal volume, and paddle across the water. And beavers stockpile food for winter by caching it in beneath a raft of branches, which gets frozen in place and keeps them well supplied until spring.

A guide not to identifying mammals, but to understanding what they do, Behavior of North American Mammals provides detailed information on more than 70 species of mammals and includes illuminating and attractive photographs and drawings. Comprehensive, authoritative, and accessible, the book includes  information on daily and seasonal activity, food and foraging, home range and habitat, communication, courtship and mating, development and dispersal of young, interactions with their own species, and interactions with other species.


Frequently Bought Together

Peterson Reference Guide to the Behavior of North American Mammals (Peterson Reference Guides) + Mammal Tracks & Sign: A Guide to North American Species + Animal Skulls: A Guide to North American Species
Price for all three: $82.75

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Mark Elbroch is author and coauthor of several guides to natural history. He is currently leading cougar projects in Southern Chile and the United States.


Kurt Rinehart is a professional wildlife biologist. He lives in Vermont with his wife and children.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

This book attempts to capture and share portions of the rich, dynamic lives of many North American mammals. This is not a replacement for your Peterson Field Guide to Mammals, but a book to complement it. Think of the subtitle for this guide as “The Secret Lives of Mammals.” Our emphasis is on behavior and how mammals survive, reproduce, and interact with other animals and the environment in which they live. This information will not only fascinate and inform, but also leverage your time in the field and allow you to see and know more of what is happening when you watch wild mammals.

WHAT IS A MAMMAL?
Mammals are warm-blooded animals with hair that feed their young with milk produced by the mother. Mammalian bodies regulate their own temperatures, and hair functions in many mammals as insulation and protection against temperature and weather. Lactation—the production of milk in mammary glands—allows mothers to provide sustenance to offspring as they develop outside the womb. These traits have allowed mammals to extend their collective range from pole to pole, to inhabit nearly every aquatic and terrestrial ecological community on earth, and to build incredibly complex societies.

LEARNING ABOUT MAMMAL BEHAVIOR
AND NATURAL HISTORY
There are three easy ways to increase your knowledge of mammal natural history and behaviors: viewing wildlife, interpreting mammal tracks and signs, and delving into the literature—the books, articles, and other media that record and convey our collective knowledge of mammal life and behavior. Watching animals in the wild requires patience, stealth, and knowledge of where and how to find them. Of course, some species are more easily seen than others, and some places can make wildlife watching seem easy.
  In the Lamar Valley in northern Yellowstone National Park, with some patience and a spotting scope, you can watch wild wolves, coyotes, bison, elk, Brown Bears, Black Bears, ground squirrels, Red Foxes, and others. Atop Mount Evans in central Colorado you can easily observe Yellow-bellied Marmots, American Pikas, Bighorn Sheep, and Mountain Goats. There are plenty of books, websites, and employees of parks and refuges out there expressly to help you find these places. Any opportunity to watch animals move and interact with each other is valuable, and you shouldn’t wait until your next vacation to do so. Animals in zoos and wildlife parks are tremendously educational, and you can learn a lot from watching videos. Opportunities to watch urban and suburban wildlife abound, and even domestic animals provide us some insights into wild animals. Watching domestic cats hunt in the garden teaches us much about their wild counterparts. There is also new technology to help you watch wildlife at night, whether you are awake or not. New night-vision goggles expose nocturnal animals, and inexpensive remote cameras unobtrusively record mammal behaviors throughout the day and night while we are away.
  Learning to interpret wildlife tracks and signs will open a window to the hidden behavior of wild animals. Scratches on the trail are territorial scrapes of coyotes; girdled saplings are sites of feeding Snowshoe Hares. This book doesn’t teach you how to identify tracks and signs, but it supplies the critical knowledge necessary for finding and interpreting them. It will provide the “why” that is so important to understanding the bits and pieces you observe directly and indirectly through tracks and signs in the field. Some excellent field guides to wildlife signs are Mammal Tracks and Sign: A Guide to North American Species (Stackpole Books) and the Peterson Field Guide to Animal Tracks, 3rd ed. (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt).
  There are literally tons of printed material written about mammal behavior and natural history. Information can be found in literary accounts of naturalists; in field guides to mammals, forests, and regions of North America; in magazine articles; and in scientific journals. Every resource has something to offer. At one extreme, scientific publications are frustratingly opaque to most people, but they are the foundation of our knowledge of wildlife behavior. At the other extreme, various Internet sites deliver easily accessible information, but often of unknown accuracy. The species accounts provided by museum and university websites are often quite informative, and Wikipedia, too, provides wonderful accounts for many species. For many mammals, there is also a host of printed books for readers of all backgrounds and interests.
  Your local libraries and universities should have excellent books and journals, as well as special web-based search tools to help you find what you are after. Universities also maintain a staggering number of online subscriptions to the scientific journals that publish the latest research. The help of a librarian will be invaluable in learning to navigate the various different sources of information.

GETTING STARTED
Two handy concepts to help understand mammal behavior are niche and fitness. An animal’s niche describes how an animal makes its living, including what it does and where it does it. Wolves are social predators of large ungulates, which they hunt by coursing, or running, in packs. Chipmunks are solitary, seed-hoarding, burrowing rodents. There are more technical definitions of niche, but for now consider it as a snapshot of what a particular animal “is.”
  Fitness, on the other hand, helps us imagine the “why.” Fitness is the quality of success experienced by an animal. In ecology, it is measured by how well one reproduces—the continuation and proliferation of an individual’s genes into the future. Evolution selects for behavior that improves fitness, and keeping this in mind allows us to better interpret behavior. An animal has high fitness when it produces numerous offspring that themselves produce many offspring. Having offspring is not enough to ensure the continuation of one’s genetic heritage. An animal’s offspring need to survive long enough to breed, and their offspring too need to survive. Think of the measure of success as the number of grandchildren an animal has, since having grandchildren indicates successful production of offspring that were, in turn, able to survive and reproduce.
  A species’ niche is strongly influenced by its evolutionary heritage. Scientists use an evolutionary family tree to classify all living things based on how recently they shared a common ancestor. This book is organized phylogenetically, meaning “according to the evolutionary tree.” What this does in a practical sense is group species together in families—the “branches of the tree” that contain closely related, and therefore similar, species.
  You can improve your ability to understand any one species if you know something about the other members of the family. Many behaviors are common to entire families, and since space is limited, you might find an illustration for a behavior in another account in the same family as the one you are reading. That said, we wrote each species account to stand alone. If you are interested only in muskrats, walrus, or moles, you can find the relevant account and read the most economical, readable portrait we have been able to distill.

HOW TO USE THIS BOOK
Each species account follows the same organization, with information broken down into eight topical sections: Activity and Movement, Food and Foraging, Habitat and Home Range, Communication, Courtship and Mating, Development and Dispersal of Young, Interactions among the Species (for example, Interactions among Armadillos), and Interactions with Other Species. We begin with a series of brief snapshots of the eight sections, which provide background terminology and useful concepts to interpret and understand the information in the book. Enjoy.

ACTIVITY AND MOVEMENT
Activity studies in the field usually rely on animals with telemetry collars (radio and GPS collars) that relay to researchers when an animal is active and how far they travel in a period of time. Daily movement is related to food or reproduction and habits of rest, grooming, and maintenance. If an animal is most active at night, it is called nocturnal, and if active during the day, diurnal. Many animals are crepuscular, which means most active in the twilight hours around dawn and dusk.
  In North America, seasonal changes cause shifts in temperature, precipitation, and food availability and are a major factor in shaping mammalian ecology and behavior. Many behaviors are synchronized with the seasons, and often the length of daylight per day is the trigger. Breeding, migration, and hibernation all depend on changes in photoperiod (the amount of light per day) that trigger hormonal changes. External events also influence behaviors. When winter approaches and days grow shorter, a storm may cause a species migration, while at other times of year a storm will only cause animals to seek cover. With a redundant system, animals are less likely to migrate at the wrong time because of a freak snowstorm in July.

FOOD AND FORAGING
Most of a wild animal’s life is dominated by its search for food. Food determines where animals are found, and over time, food selection significantly influences the shape of a mammal’s jaws, teeth, tongue, and digestive system, as well as the manner in which it secures its food.

FORAGING
In the interest of survival, animals balance the benefits of a meal with the costs of foraging for it. Most animals maintain stable home ranges, allowing their experience to inform and refine their foraging. Foraging becomes more efficient when future searches are in areas that paid off in the past.
  The theory of optimal foraging predicts that animals make choices that optimize their gain, compared with the costs that they incur while collecting it. Generally speaking, if two types of food a...


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 374 pages
  • Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; 1 edition (October 25, 2011)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0618883452
  • ISBN-13: 978-0618883455
  • Product Dimensions: 10.1 x 7.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #66,519 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful, intimate details and fresh, exciting photos! November 20, 2011
Format:Hardcover
I have many excellent references for mammals, but this book is a wonderful and worthy addition to my library, as the essays on each of the mammals covered are extensive, fascinating, and filled with direct field observations. The writing is clear and reader-friendly, making it as much of a pleasure to read as it is a credible reference. The photos are also a pleasant surprise--not merely because they are of excellent quality, but because they aren't the typical identification type shots--instead, they reveal the actual behaviors that are being discussed. This is a treasure of a book for anyone who loves animals and an important addition to the literature in the field.
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10 of 10 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The missing link in all my field guides December 9, 2011
Format:Hardcover
This well laid out, well written and complete book is the one I have been waiting for. Last year I found some badger tracks and dens and was able to identify them from my Elbroch field guide for North American Animal tracks. But, I still didn't know what a badger looked like as I had never seen one. This book has helped me not only to recognize them on sight but also to understand their lives. Generally field guides can only go so far and the real learning takes place when you can actually observe the animal making tracks, feeding, sleeping and marking territories and what ever else their lives consist of . . I have been very lucky to have spent lots of time with Brown/grizzly and black bears but I want to know as much about all the other animals as I do about bears . . hence, this book will be with me everywhere from now on. This is an important, and up to date new work which is not just a rewrite of all the books that came before it. The information on each animal is the latest and most complete you will find. If you are weighing whether or not you should own this one, get your library to get a copy, but I warn you, you will want your own copy as it a reference book that you will refer to often.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Terrific addition to my bookshelf December 5, 2012
By Linda
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
This book picks up where other field guides end...animal behavior is endlessly fascinating. For instance, one might think that foxes on the cover of this book are playing...read the book to find out what's really going on here!
The photos are outstanding. The information is useful to the amateur naturalist and wildlife professional alike. I highly recommend this book to my fellow trackers.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars a good addition
This is a good general book for a lay person like me to expand their knowledge beyond basic tracking and ID skills. it is up to date, and i trust the information. Read more
Published 2 months ago by bkluvr
5.0 out of 5 stars Very Informative
This is a great source of information to supplement field guides. It is not for in the field-- but for the car or upon return home. All of Mark Elbroch's books are superb!
Published 2 months ago by Joni L. James
5.0 out of 5 stars great book for any wildlife enthusiast
This book has so much info about mammals. It really takes you into their lives and gives you the knowledge base to get out there and study them. Read more
Published 3 months ago by reedo breezo
5.0 out of 5 stars Quick and easy
This book has accurate information in a well laid out format that makes it easy to use as a reference book or a general reading book. A must for the wildlife enthusiast!
Published 4 months ago by Brian Salt
4.0 out of 5 stars Behavior of Mammals
I moved to Southern Nevada and I was interested in the mammals in this area. This book has helpful information on some of natures great Southwest mammals.
Published 5 months ago by Betty White
5.0 out of 5 stars Every Nature Aficionado Should Have It !!
"Behavior of North American Mammals" by Mark Elbroch and Kurt Rinehart is one of the splendid Peterson Field Guide series. Read more
Published 8 months ago by 5/0
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent book
So many interesting facts in this book. Very easy to read with a lot of technical aspects as well. Great book!
Published 10 months ago by Brenda M Dietzman
5.0 out of 5 stars Fascinating! Loaded with information and interesting things about...
For EACH animal the following are covered: Activity and Movement (daily/seasonal), Food and Foraging, Habitat and Home range, Communication, Courtship and Mating, Development and... Read more
Published 11 months ago by Stephanie
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