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The African Wild Dog: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation (Monographs in Behaviour & Ecology)

The African Wild Dog: Behavior, Ecology, and Conservation (Monographs in Behaviour & Ecology)
By Scott Creel, Nancy Creel

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Product Description

With only 5000 surviving, the African wild dog (Lycaon pictus) is one of the world's most endangered large carnivores - and one of the most remarkable. This portrait of wild dogs incorporates scattered information with new findings from a six year study in Tanzania's Selous Game Reserve, Africa's largest protected area. The book emphasizes ecology, concentrating on why wild dogs fare poorly in protected areas that maintain healthy populations of lions, hyenas, or other top carnivores. In addition to conservation issues it covers aspects of wild dog behaviour and social evolution. The autohrs use demographic, behavioural, endrocrine and genetic approaches to examine how and why nonbreeding pack mates help breeding pairs raise their litters. They also present the laregest data set collected on mammalian predator-prey interactions and the evolution of co-operative hunting, allowing them to account for wild dogs' prowess as hunters.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #3194272 in Books
  • Published on: 2002-07-11
  • Format: Illustrated
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 360 pages

Editorial Reviews

Review
The African Wild Dog is a book about a species that is inherently fascinating for a wide variety of reasons. The authors demonstrate how different sorts of data can be collected simultaneously even under difficult field conditions, and they then bring state-of-the-art quantitative analyses to bear on theoretical issues of current interest. As a consequence, the book moves our understanding ... forward in a compelling way. The work is behavioral ecology at its best. -- Tim Caro Science A monument to much that is best in naturalistic field research... For the armchair conservationist it is easy to assume rarity is a man-made evil, but for the wild dog it is natural... The African wild dog may soon have nowhere left to run. -- David W. MacDonald Times Literary Supplement This book is essential for anyone interested in the behavior and conservation of large carnivores. The advanced statistical techniques and in-depth discussions of dispersal, hunting, and sociality should be of interest to most behavioral ecologists, and the smooth integration of behavioral observations and analytical conservation biology serves as a model for future studies of endangered species. -- Theodore Stankowich Ethnology

From the Back Cover

"There is no book like this on wild dogs. It is a valuable, engaging, and well-written contribution to science."--Joshua Ginsberg, Director, Asia Program, Wildlife Conservation Society

"This long-needed monograph on wild dogs fills a major gap in the literature. Containing a mass of new information and arguments that will advance many fields, it is a worthy addition to a distinguished set of books on large African carnivores."--James R. Malcolm, University of Redlands

About the Author
Scott Creel is Professor of Biology at Montana State University. Nancy Marusha Creel is a Research Associate at Montana State University. The Creels have studied wild dogs in Tanzania since 1993.


Customer Reviews

Scholarly but a good read4
The first point to make about this book is that it is a comprehensive study of factors effecting Wild Dog population numbers and survivability complete with study graphs and plots. Its target audience is probably zoology or biology undergraduates.

That said it was comprehensible to this literature graduate and I had to refer to the missus (a mathamatics graduate) only once or twice to tease out the precise meaning of a graph. The bottom line is that it is a good read if you are interested in the subject. I am interested having been lucky enough to see these beautiful creatures in Botswana. An experience that will always stay with me. It certainly sparked a desire to go to the Selous Game Reserve where the study was done.

It is a study in well researched but accessible scientific writing and you will certainly know more about the ecology and lives of 'Wild Dogs' when you finish the book.