Presented with the latest shark research, the reader is offered a clear and balanced understanding of the shark's evolution, biology and behavior and its place in the ecological chain. More than 200 photographs, most in full-color.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
A great introductory book to those interested in sharks.,
By A Customer
This review is from: Sharks (Hardcover)
An excellent book written by some of the leaders in thier fields of expertise. The text is easily understood by those outside of scientific research and is complemented with numerous pictures and diagrams.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Dusted, But Still Great,
By Bonam Pak (Berlin) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Sharks (Hardcover)
I read the German edition of 2004. Having bought it in 2006 I thought it to be a new book. It didn't mention anywhere that it is much older. Actually reading this coffee table book recently, I found out from the context that it must have been written in 1986 or 1987. This German edition also printed the name of the publishing house in a way and instead of the author(s)'s name, so that even German amazon mistook "Karl Müller" for the author. In fact, most of the real authors aren't mentioned anywhere, just the editor. Ok, but that may be of less interest to non-German bilinguists, as much as the many typos of the respective edition. It remains inconclusive, wether the peculiar geography (Tsingtao in China supposedly being located in the eastern Pacific) is the result of a faulty or uncorrected translation...
No question, this is a great book. You learn anything from bulimia to womb cannibalism in sharks. However, more than two decades old, it isn't really up to date. The criticism about protective shark nets at beaches is still a bit tame. There's a double page about shark fin soup without the dire consequences in the ecology of the overfished oceans, not to mention the endangerment of shark species because of that. The nuclear test induced hyper aggressiveness of one formerly not particularly hostile shark species in the Pacific wasn't probably known back then. If I recall correctly, there's also no explicit mention of the sensory organ in the shark's palate, which is responsible for many shark bites, which are intended as something like: "Hello, who or what are you?" Even though the book goes at great length to convince the reader that the bad reputation of sharks far exceeds their real life danger. Curiously, the largest section in this book - 66 of 240 pages, i.e. far more than one fourth - is devoted entirely to shark attacks, arranged according to geography. I find that a little bit a case of defeating the cause. As I did know about the worse reputation issue before, I am not entirely sure, wether the book really succeeded in taking away further or re-adding some shark phobia in me... The bottom line is: Despite some criticism, get this book in addition to a more recent one, if the recent ones aren't as elaborate and/or as well-pictured as this one.
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