A Diver's Guide to Reef Life
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Average customer review:Product Description
"A Diver's Guide to Reef Life" is set to become the indispensable companion for reef divers wishing to identify, photograph or learn about the myriad of fascinating creatures who inhabit the world's tropical reefs and mangroves. The 1200 definitive and concise descriptions are drawn from the authors' first-hand experiences and are also accompanied by stunningly clear and detailed photographs, facilitating the identification of species. In addition, the authors also impart advice on how to use underwater cameras to capture beautiful images such as those presented within. Written by Andrea and Antonella Ferrari, authors of the highly popular "A Diver's Guide to Underwater Malaysia Macrolife" and "Oceani Segreti", which was awarded the prestigious World Grand Prize at the Underwater Image Festival at Antibes. 'The photos throughout the book are absolutely mesmerizing...The colors are so rich and the details are so amazing in these photos, that you'll wonder if this is a taxonomic guide or an underwater photography how-to...an absolute must-have for any diver who has eyes and plans on using them while diving' - Willy Volk, wetpixel.com. 'A stunning tropical marine life reference guide which is bursting at the seams with outstanding photographs' - Jane Morgan, "DIVE" Magazine, December 2006. 'This work is truly a must for all that are interested in the underwater creatures that inhabit our tropical waters' - Bob Goemans, Saltcorner.com, October 2006. 'As essential as your passport on every dive trip from the Red Sea to the Caribbean and Indo-Pacific' - Claudia Pellarini, "SUBMERGE" Magazine, October 2006. 'No marine guide in the world will excite you with this much color and fascinate you with this much information' - Willy Volk, Wetpixel.com. October 2006. '...a truly comprehensive work, and probably the only reef guide most divers will need to take with them on a trip' - Tim Ecott, "Divernet".
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #12214 in Books
- Published on: 2006-01
- Original language: English
- Binding: Hardcover
- 478 pages
Editorial Reviews
Jane Morgan, DIVE Magazine, December 2006
"A stunning tropical marine life reference guide which is bursting at the
seams with outstanding photographs".
Bob Goemans, Saltcorner.com, October 2006
"This work is truly a must for all that are interested in the underwater
creatures that inhabit our tropical waters".
Claudia Pellarini, SUBMERGE Magazine, October 2006
"As essential as your passport on every dive trip from the Red Sea to the
Caribbean and Indo-Pacific".
Customer Reviews
A leading guide
"A Diver's Guide to Reef Life" is another excellent production from Andrea and Antonella Ferrari. Anyone who enjoyed their 2003 publication: "Underwater Malaysia - Macrolife", will know the high level of quality these authors achieve. Although notionally focused (through the title) on Malaysia, this earlier book effectively served a much wider coverage, describing in detail some 600 species of the Indo-Pacific region. The latest book provides a splendid complement as it addresses an extensive variety of 1200 species on a worldwide basis. While it is an excellent guide it also has the attraction of top class photography combined with an informative, interesting, and thought-provoking text. All this makes it compulsive to browse through and, with its range, it also delivers a fascinating perspective of marine life on global scale. While there are plenty of publications on marine life, these two by the Ferraris are special and can be wholeheartedly recommended. Central to studying and successfully photographing marine life it its natural environment, is the art of seeing. These books provide a wonderful yet structured insight for raising the awareness of this art.
THE DIVE GUIDE TO HAVE!
If I had to choose just one dive field guide among the many available today I'd have no hesitation in picking this one. 1.200 tropical marine species worldwide from the Red Sea to the Indo-Pacific and the Caribbean, 1.300 absolutely spectacular color photographs, generally pleasant and highly informative texts, a handful of easily accessible in-depth essays on fish behaviour (such as "Camouflage", "Symbiosis" or "Group Strategies"), several simply wonderful and imaginative color photogalleries clearly aimed at improving the reader's U/W camera skills (look at those amazing Scorpionfish or Frogfish faces!) - all packed up in 480 photo-packed glossy pages, covering all sorts of stuff from big sharks to wildly colorful reef fishes and from tiny shrimps to dolphins and whales. Fairly small size makes the book quite handy for field use on beaches or dive boats, and the robust hardcover with reinforced stitching will allow it to survive years of abuse - what else can a diver, an avid U/W shutterbug or a snorkeller bound for tropical seas ask from life? Highly recommended to all, seasoned old crocs and starters alike - it's from the same authors of the wonderful A DIVER'S GUIDE TO UNDERWATER MALAYSIA MACROLIFE.
A terrific book for divers wanting more from their dives.
A Diver's Guide to Reef Life is an amazing reference guide detailing 1200 tropical species from the Caribbean to the Indo-Pacific. With over 1300 eye-popping photos, the book covers everything from corals to mammals, from reptiles to bony fish. More than just a photo album with lots of pretty pictures, the Ferraris write with as much authority on the skeletal components of coral polyps, for example, as they do on a shark's countershading. If you can rip yourself away from the crazy kaleidoscope of images, you'll find the engaging text to thoroughly yet concisely explain how cnidoblasts inject their nematocysts; what influences a coral colony's structure; and how calcareous spicules support soft corals. Don't worry if you don't know all the jargon before you crack the spine of this fabulous book. The Ferraris explain everything, and after spending a few minutes with A Diver's Guide, you'll understand plenty.
After a brief introduction that explains what a coral reef is and how you can protect it, the book sinks its teeth into Chondorichthyes -- cartilagionous fishes that include sharks and rays. Throughout the book, each creature profiled gets a snapshot and a detailed description that includes distribution, size, habitat, and "life habits." Thoughtfully, the Ferraris also provide underwater photo tips specific to many of the families, so you can come home with photos as brilliant as those in the book. After cartilagionous fishes, the Ferraris detail bony fishes, crustaceans, cephalopods, reptiles, and mammals. They even cover the "topside reef" and discuss some of the animals lurking along the sandy shoreline outside your dive lodge.
The Ferraris decided to throw in some bonus sections, as well. One of the sections, "Zoom," spotlights a general group of animals, or a certain technique that groups of animals have adopted (think: camouflage or schooling). Other sections, like the "Galleries," are fan-tabulous photo essays featuring, for example, hard corals, sponges, sea squirts, sea shells, flatworms, nudibranchs, and the super-intriguing "Strange Reef Creatures." These Galleries strip away the textual descriptions of the animals and provide luscious eye-candy showcasing the color variations found among species (I LOVED the scorpionfish headshots!). The colors are so rich and the details are so amazing in these photos, that you'll wonder if this is a taxonomic guide or an underwater photography how-to. Oh...that's right...it's both!
Underwater photographers will find A Diver's Guide useful for several reasons. First, the photo tips the Ferraris include should help divers increase the quality and size of their personal portfolios. Second, even only a few minutes with the book will provide the underwater photographer with an understanding of what kind of marine life is likely to be found in a given location. This doesn't just mean "in the Red Sea," though; since the Ferraris provide information about where on the reef an animal is likely to be. Third, A Diver's Guide will help photographers label their images correctly. Fourth, some of the tips -- while not directly related to imaging -- may be wise for the underwater photographer to bear in mind anyway. For example, the inexperienced photographer might be less inclined to wag a finger in front of an uncooperative pufferfish after reading that they "are quite capable of severing a human finger."
Inevitably, readers will compare A Diver's Guide to Paul Humann's Reef Fish books. While they're similar in many respects, I think A Diver's Guide is far more beautiful. Frankly, the Ferraris have produced a guidebook that's as much for browsing as it is for referencing. As proof, I submit to you my non-diving wife. As soon as she saw the book on the counter, she grabbed it, sat down, and began leafing through it. Every 20 seconds or so, she'd mutter, "Oooh, have you ever seen a [insert name of fish] before?" She was totally rapt by the images.
Sure, you could buy a local marine life guide covering the specific area you might be diving next Christmas, but no marine guide in the world will excite you with this much color, thrill you with this much variety, and fascinate you with this much information. This is an absolute must-have for any diver who has eyes and plans on using them while diving.



