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Songs, Roars, and Rituals:  Communication in Birds, Mammals, and Other Animals
 
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Songs, Roars, and Rituals: Communication in Birds, Mammals, and Other Animals [Hardcover]

Lesley J. Rogers (Author), Gisela Kaplan (Author)


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Book Description

September 18, 2000

From the calling macaw and the roaring lion to the dancing lyrebird, animals all around us can be heard and seen communicating with each other and, occasionally, with us. Why they do so, what their utterances mean, and how much we know about them are the subject of Songs, Roars, and Rituals. This is a concise, yet comprehensive, introduction to the complexities of communication in animals.

Rogers and Kaplan take us on an exciting journey through communication in the animal world, offering insights on how animals communicate by sight, sound, smell, touch, and even electrical signaling. They explore a wide variety of communication patterns in many species of mammals and birds and discuss in detail how communication signals evolved, how they are learned, and what song and mimicry may mean.

An up-to-date account of the science of animal communication, this book also considers modern concepts (such as that of deceptive communication) and modern controversies, primarily those surrounding the evolution of human language and the use of symbolic language by apes. It concludes with a thought-provoking look at the future of communication between humans and animals.

(20010101)

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

From the cat's meow to the bowerbird's bright-blue nest, animals constantly and variously exchange information. Avians, primates, seals, whales, even insects and lizards send signals in order to find and keep their mates; to deceive predators, or to warn them away; to mark their territories; to train their young; and to pass on useful information. Neurobiologist Rogers (Minds of Their Own) and social scientist Kaplan (also the author of books on Australian feminism) have written an accessible, consistently absorbing and scientifically scrupulous survey of how animals send signals and of what evolutionary theory tells us about how they came to do so. The authors first explain how biologists distinguish between intentional signaling and other behaviors, such as "intention movements" (e.g., a bird flapping its wings before takeoff). Bird songs have inspired their own flock of specialized research; much of this volume covers warblers' warbles, lyrebirds' melodies and finches' trills. We learn why certain acoustic properties suit certain calls (staccato chirps, for example, make birds easier to locate), and we find out how various species teach their young their own calls, signs and songsAsome calls are largely "learned," others seem to be genetically programmed in much more detail. Mammal calls have proven harder to study, but Rogers and Kaplan explain what we do know. A concluding chapter describes how humans communicate with animals: pet owners and tribal hunter-gatherers both get sympathetic attention. An earlier version of this work was published in England in 1998 as Not Only Roars and Rituals; this revised American edition follows the May publication of the authors' other collaborative survey, The Orangutans (Forecasts, May 22). 8 halftones, 14 line illus. (Sept.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

The authors (behavioral sciences, Univ. of New England, Australia) focus on communication among animals, with chapters on its definition, evolution, use, how it is learned, whether it is intentional, signaling and sensory perception, and human-animal contacts. This rather advanced look at animal behavior is authoritative and well documented but suffers from a pedantic, academic style that makes for laborious reading. Bland phrases such as it is important, invites further comment, we have said that, and research on any aspect of are legion. Nevertheless, because it effectively synthesizes available information, as evidenced by the extensive bibliography, this book is an important contribution to the study of animal behavior and ethologyDa field of growing interest, notable for such Nobel laureates and iluminaries as Konrad Lorenz, Niko Tinbergen, and E.O. Wilson. Therefore, it is recommended for academic and larger public libraries, but with reservations as to its writing style.DHenry T. Armistead, Free Lib. of Philadelphia
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 224 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press (September 18, 2000)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674000587
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674000582
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.3 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,996,412 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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