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Academic & Professional Books  Reptiles & Amphibians  Reptiles

The Chinese Alligator Ecology, Behavior, Conservation, and Culture

By: John Thorbjarnarson(Author), Xiaoming Wang(Author), George B Schaller(Foreword By)
265 pages, 41 b/w photos, 53 b/w illustrations
The Chinese Alligator
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  • The Chinese Alligator ISBN: 9780801893483 Hardback May 2010 Not in stock: Usually dispatched within 6 days
    £76.50
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Price: £76.50
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The Chinese AlligatorThe Chinese AlligatorThe Chinese Alligator

About this book

The rare and endangered Chinese alligator has long held a prominent place in Chinese culture and mythology. The Chinese Alligator provides comprehensive details about the biology, behavior, history and cultural and conservation significance of the animal thought to be the basis of the Chinese dragon legend.

Though more than 10,000 Chinese alligators live in zoos and breeding facilities, just a few hundred still exist in the wild. Much of their natural habitat has been lost to human development, leaving wild Chinese alligators clinging to small areas of the Yangtze River where it meets the Pacific Ocean. The authors recount how and why the species declined to the point where it is perhaps the most threatened of all crocodilians, discuss ongoing conservation works, and project what the future is likely to bring for the Chinese Alligator.

Their scientific synthesis sits in stark contrast to the alligators' unique relationship with Chinese culture, where folklore views it as a water deity related to dragons.

Contents

Foreword, by George B. Schaller
Preface
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations

1. The Earth Dragon
2. The Family of Dragons: Crocodilians of the World and Their Conservation
3. The History of Crocodilians in China
4. Alligators as Dragons
5. A Dragon's Life: Ecology and Behavior of the Chinese Alligator
6. The Dragon's Demise: Why the Chinese Alligator Disappeared
7. Habitat and Population Status
8. The Future of the Alligator in China

Literature Cited
Index

Customer Reviews

Biography

John Thorbjarnarson is a senior conservation zoologist for the Wildlife Conservation Society. Xiaoming Wang is an expert on the Chinese alligator, a professor of biology at East China Normal University, director of the Shanghai Science and Technology Museum, and one of China's leading conservation biologists.

By: John Thorbjarnarson(Author), Xiaoming Wang(Author), George B Schaller(Foreword By)
265 pages, 41 b/w photos, 53 b/w illustrations
Media reviews

"A well-written, well-referenced, thoughtful and sobering work. Highly recommended."
Choice

"A 'must read' for herpetologists concerned with conservation."
– Gunter Gollmann, Amphibia-Reptilia

"This book is highly recommended as a comprehensive overview of a fascinating species written by the people who know it best."
– IUCN Crocodile Specialist Group Newsletter

"This book is probably the most up-to-date and informative account of Chinese alligators available [...] It is an incredible resource for anyone dealing with or interested in crocodilians or conservation."
– James Hennessy, Herpetological Bulletin

"A model for how the natural history and conservation status of a species can be synthesized in a way that maximizes the information value to the specialist without leaving interested nonspecialists in the dust [...] Readers wanting a deeper understanding of the complexity of conservation biology, and of the balance needed between development and conservation will learn much [...] It would be tragic indeed if this book became a requiem and not a call to action."
– Christopher A. Brochu, Copeia

"This really is a book about the current problems of trying to conserve biodiversity in the modern world and should be read by anyone with an interest in that subject (which should be all of us)."
– Brian Livingstone, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society

"Drs. Thorbjarnarson and Wang are the ideal scientists – and truly the best qualified – to write this book. The story of the Chinese alligator is interesting on its own, and it primes those new to crocodilian conservation with what caused global declines of crocodilians and how crocodilian conservation has worked in many areas."
– Lee Fitzgerald, Texas A & M University

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