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The Complete Fauna of Iran
 
 
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  • This item: The Complete Fauna of Iran by Eskandar Firouz

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Editorial Reviews

Review

"This book is the logical starting point for any English-speaker interested in the fauna of Iran, whether an experienced scientist or an ecotraveller contemplating a visit to Iran."--Steven C. Andersen, University of the Pacific

"Firouz's generous contribution to future generations of naturalists is a legacy of inestimable value, and its publication is a fitting recognition of his tireless efforts on behalf of the fauna of his country."--David Challinor, Senior Scientist Emeritus, Smithsonian Institute


Product Description

This prize-winning book is the most comprehensive work to date on the fauna of Iran, now available for the first time to an English-speaking readership. Despite the emergence of a conservation movement in the 1960s and 70s, the last quarter century has witnessed continuing environmental degradation and the destruction of natural habitats in Iran. The position of a number of species unique to Iran, such as the Asiatic cheetah, is critical. More than a source of scientific knowledge, this book also alerts the public to an environmental situation which is becoming increasingly imperilled.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: I. B. Tauris (September 22, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 185043946X
  • ISBN-13: 978-1850439462
  • Product Dimensions: 9.4 x 7 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank: #1,799,117 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

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The Complete Fauna of Iran
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The Complete Fauna of Iran 5.0 out of 5 stars (2)
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Field Guide to the Birds of the Middle East (Princeton Field Guides) 3.7 out of 5 stars (9)
$26.40

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Bibliographer, Wildlife Bibliographic Servcies, June 17, 2008
This book contains the most recent information on vertebrates of Iran, with updated accounts of species for mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibians and freshwater fish found within Iran's borders. Special features include 'Network of Reserves' and biogeographic areas of the country. Since Iran is in the crossroads for Central Asian, Indian, Arabia, and lands around the Caspian Sea, a diverse geographic fauna can be found in various habitats and localities. A secion of the biogeographic regions, from mountains to deserts is included. Most of the information about Iran's fauns, especially in the last twenty years, has been in journal articles and unpublished reports. This book brings the information together in a form available to everyone. I recommend this book as a definitive source of current information on Iran's vertebrates.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Complete Vertebrate Fauna of Iran, May 1, 2008
For nearly three decades, Americans have been conditioned to have negative associations with Iran. Few now have any knowledge of Persia's rich culture and history, much less its natural history. This book is an introduction to the vertebrates of Iran (the title is not quite accurate: to have included the invertebrate fauna would have required many volumes). Although this author published a similar volume in Persian in 2000, this is the first book since 1876 to make this information available in English (and that book did not include the fishes, as this one does). The book is aimed at a general audience interested in natural history, but will also be particularly useful to the professional naturalist visiting Iran for the first time. How I wish I had had such a volume when I first visited Iran in 1958 to begin my dissertation work! For the casual visitor, the book will be especially interesting to birdwatchers, as these are the animals most visible during daylight hours.
Many of the birds of Iran will be familiar to the birdwatcher familiar with the birds of Europe and/or Africa, both because Iran is on the major migration routes between these continents, but also because the distributions of more sedentary species extend into areas of Iran. Iran sits not only on the major routes of trade and cultural exchange in Asia, it is an area where the faunas and floras of Central Asia, Europe, Africa, and monsoon Asia come together and, to some extent, commingle. It also has the greatest diversity of habitats in Southwest Asia, from the Caspian Sea and moist temperate forests of the north, the high mountain chains of the Alborz and Zagros Mountains, the internal drainage basis of the Central Plateau, to the Persian Gulf and the low North Arabian deserts of the south and southwest. This habitat diversity, together with the fact that it occupies a tectonically active area, where the Arabian Plate and the Asian Plate are colliding, has given Iran a biogeographically interesting fauna and flora.
As in most of the world, Iran faces a conservation and ecological crisis as population grows rapidly and human incursions, air and water pollution, and other man-made influences affect habitats to an ever greater extent. In 1975, I was one of many international scientists and specialists brought to Iran by the Department of Environment to study the fauna and flora and to consult on conservation issues. At that time, Iran was on the forefront of conservation, with ambitious and forward-looking programs, having established national parks, national nature monuments, wildlife refuges, and protected areas in all of the major habitats of the country. The Department of Environment had offices in cities throughout the country, and the government was engaged in development of a botanic garden, a natural history museum and a state of the art zoological garden in Tehran. The major force behind this movement, with the support of the royal family, was Eskandar Firouz, Director of the Department of Environment and author of the present book.
Following the Islamic Revolution, priorities changed in Iran and although the protected habitats remain, the larger dream was lost. The good news is that there is a growing number of students and young professors in several universities around the country actively working on natural history. For the most part, they are eager for international collaboration, and most weeks I hear from one or more of them. What has been lost over the past nearly three decades in terms of conservation and growth of knowledge of the fauna is difficult to estimate, but only someone with many years of observation on the ground would recognize, as Firouz does, that the commonest frog species has severely declined, as have amphibians worldwide, or that no more than 25% of the avifauna of the late 1970s is seen today in Iran.
The book is well laid out, with useful maps showing drainage basins, political divisions, topography, and reserves of Iran. It includes a history of hunting in Iran, contrasting the extremely large bags of game, extending into the 20th century, with the diminishing to vanishing numbers of animals large and small. Both the Persian lion and the Caspian tiger became extinct in the past century. It details the history of conservation, which reached its apex in the 1970s. The formal study of the fauna is outlined and continues today. I know of a number of species that have been described just since the writing of this book. Faunal research has primarily concentrated on taxonomy and ecological, behavioral studies and other aspects of natural history are sorely needed. The physical geography and climate are briefly discussed as context for the fauna. The greater part of the book deals with the classes of vertebrates and every species known is listed by Latin name, English common name, and Persian name. The Iranian distribution of each species by provinces is also included. A summary of the natural history is included for the better known species, especially mammals, and an account of every order and family is presented. Most families are illustrated by at least one color illustration, both photographs and paintings for mammals, paintings for birds and fishes and photographs for reptiles and amphibians. The paintings are both accurate and beautifully rendered. I found a few misidentified or switched photographs of reptiles, but overall, errors of fact or typography are very few.
As with many fine books these days, the price may put this one out of reach of all but both professional and amateur naturalists with specific interest in Iran and Southwest Asia generally, but I hope that it will be found in many public and academic libraries and on the shelves of many naturalists who appreciate beautiful and well written natural history books.
When I first visited Iran nearly 50 years ago, I had the experience and the thrill of seeing wolf, bear, and hyena during the nine months I spent there. I suspect that such viewings are rare these days, but I hope that this book and its earlier Persian version will help to inspire a renewed period of environmental leadership and that populations of now rare animals will have a resurgence.


Steven C. Anderson
Professor Emeritus
University of the Pacific;
Research Associate
California Academy of Sciences

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