Macrochelys Makeover

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    13 November 2006

    Classic Book Revised
    THE ALLIGATOR SNAPPING TURTLE

    by Peter Charles Howard Pritchard

    Pritchard’s monograph on the Alligator Snapping Turtle, one of the world’s most impressive, dangerous, and celebrated turtles, was first published in 1989. The initial small print run quickly sold out, and the book has become a valuable "rare book." This reprint edition duplicates the text of the original, but also includes a major new section outlining progress that has been made on the science and conservation of this species in the last 17 years.

    Krieger Publishing Company
    Specifications: 152 pages
    Softbound (ISBN: 1-575-24275-3)
    $42.00

    Available from:

    Krieger Publishing Company
    P. O. Box 9542
    Melbourne, Florida 32902-9542
    http://wwww.krieger-publishing.com

    To order this book, call:

    1 (800) 724-0025 (toll free Mon-Fri 8am-5pm EST)
    1 (321) 724-9542 (Mon-Fri 8am-5pm EST)

    or email them at

    info@krieger-publishing.com

    Pritchard, Peter Charles Howard. Krieger Publishing, Melbourne, Florida. 152 pp.
    ISBN 1-575-24275-3. $42.00.

    Alien Herp Analysis

    CNAH ANNOUNCEMENT
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    2 July 2009

    New Book
    ALIEN REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS. A SCIENTIFIC COMPENDIUM AND ANALYSIS

    by Fred Kraus

    Springer-Verlag
    2009
    xii + 564 pages with CD-ROM
    Hardcover
    ISBN: 978-1-4020-8945-9
    Online version available
    $169.00

    The conservation threat posed by invasive alien species has become well-recognized over the past two decades, even as the problem continues to increase rapidly in scope. Research and management attention to this issue has, however, been taxonomically biased toward groups having large, obvious impacts, and the invasive potential of other organisms with subtle or cryptic impacts remains largely unassessed. Alien reptiles, turtles, and amphibians, although providing a few of the better-known examples of severe invasion impacts, have never been scientifically assessed as a group for their potential invasiveness.

    This book examines the means by which alien reptiles, turtles, and amphibians are transported by humans; surveys their ecological, evolutionary, economic, and health impacts; reviews the management responses taken against them; and summarizes the immediate research and management efforts needed to mitigate the threat posed by these organisms. It also provides a comprehensive database of herpetofaunal introductions worldwide and a bibliography of supporting literature; the database is also provided on CD-ROM so as to facilitate use of the data by researchers. The purpose of the book is to summarize our current understanding of herpetofaunal invasiveness and stimulate additional management and research activities needed to reduce the impacts of these species.

    Written for scientists and students studying invasive-species biology, scientists and students studying herpetology, invasive-species managers, environmental organizations, and herpetoculturists.

    Keywords:

    Alien Species
    Amphibians
    Invasive Species
    Reptiles
    Turtles

    To order:

    Email: SCSC-books@springer.com
    Telephone: +49 6221/345-4301
    Web Site: http://www.springer.com/life+sci/ecology/book/978-1-4020-8945-9

    CNAH Note: An excellent book; well-organized with great attention to detail and a superb bibliography.

    Fred Kraus. Springer-Verlag. xii + 564 pp.
    ISBN 978-1-4020-8945-9. $169.00.

    Amphibian Systematics

    NEW SYSTEMATIC VOLUME ON AMPHIBIAN BIOLOGY

    The latest volume of the Series "Amphibian Biology" has just been published. It is volume 7 (Systematics), edited by Harold Heatwole and Michael Tyler.

    The book contains eight chapers: (1) The Evolution of Amphibian Taxonomy: An Historical Perspective by W. Duellman and K. Adler, (2) Soft Tissues in Phylogenetic Studies of Anurans by T. C. Burton and M. J. Tyler, (3) Comparative Morphology and Amphibian Taxonomy: An Example from the Osteology of Discoglossoid Frogs by B. T. Clarke, (4) Speciation, Species Boundaries and Phylogeography of Amphibians by M. Vences and D. Wake, (5) Molecular Systematics of Amphibians by J. Plötner, F. Köhler, T. Uzzell, P. Beerli and C. Spolsky, (6) Karyology and Cytogenetics by D. M. Green and S. Sessions, (7) Amphibian Life Histories: Their Utilization in Phylogeny and Classification by W. Duellman, and (8) Contributions of Bioacoustics to the Taxonomy of the Anura by H. Schneider and U. Sinsch.

    Previous volumes in the series were: Volume 1 – The Integument (Co-editors G. Barthalmus and A. Heatwole) 1994. Volume 2 - Social Behaviour (Co-editor B. K. Sullivan) 1995. Volume 3 - Sensory Perception (Co-editor E. M. Dawley) 1998. Volume 4 – Palaeontology (Co-editor R. L. Carroll) 2000. Volume 5 – Osteology (Co-editor M. Davies) 2003. Volume 6 – Endocrinology 2005.

    There will be about 13 more volumes. Three are now in progress: Volume 8 Conservation and Decline of Amphibians co-edited by H. Heatwole and J. Wilkinson, Volume 9 Development of Amphibians co-edited by H. Heatwole and B. Judge and Volume 10 Biomechanics of Amphibians co-edited by H. Heatwole and D. Wake. Anyone with an interest in contributing to either volume 9 or volume 10 should contact

    Harold Heatwole
    Department of Zoology
    North Carolina State University
    Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7617
    harold_heatwole@ncsu.edu
    (919) 515-3122

    Information about subscription or orders for individual volumes can be placed with

    Surrey Beatty & Sons
    43 Rickard Road
    Chipping Norton 2170, NSW, Australia
    (612) 9602-3888
    (612) 9821-1253 fax
    surreybeatty@iform.com.au
    $168.00 Australian (ca. $143.00 US)

    *****

    For greater accuracy, comprehension, and ease of use, this book generally uses the traditional, standardized common names for North American species maintained by Collins & Taggart (2002. Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition), published by The Center for North American Herpetology (available as a pdf at the CNAH web site), and updated daily online, the only such listing available online worldwide.

    Heatwole, Harold & Michael Tyler. Surrey Beatty & Sons. pp.
    ISBN . $143.00.

    Arkansas Snake Guide

    A product of the skillful pen of state herpetologist Kelly J. Irwin, this publication is a quick and handy reference to Arkansas snakes, and supplements the information appearing in the recently (2004) published "Amphibians and Reptiles of Arkansas" by Stanley E. Trauth, Henry W. Robison, and Michael V. Plummer. Co-sponsored by The Center for North American Herpetology, this 50-page booklet features the exquisite color photography of Suzanne L. Collins (CNAH, Lawrence, Kansas), and includes text and images for all 36 kinds of serpents known to inhabit Arkansas.

    Species included (by common name as they appear in the booklet): Copperhead, Cottonmouth, Western Diamondback Rattlesnake, Timber Rattlesnake, Western Pigmy Rattlesnake, Texas Coral Snake, Scarlet Snake, Milk Snake, Mississippi Green Water Snake, Plainbelly Water Snake, Broad-banded Water Snake, Diamondback Water Snake, Northern Water Snake, Racer, Great Plains Rat Snake, Black Rat Snake, Eastern Hognose Snake, Prairie Kingsnake, Speckled Kingsnake, Coachwhip, Rough Green Snake, Western Ribbon Snake, Common Garter Snake, Mud Snake, Graham's Crayfish Snake, Glossy Crayfish Snake, Queen Snake, Eastern Worm Snake, Western Worm Snake, Ringneck Snake, Ground Snake, Brown Snake, Redbelly Snake, Flathead Snake, Rough Earth Snake, and Smooth Earth Snake.

    An essential addition to the library of any North American herpetologist.

    For greater comprehension and ease of use (both among herpetologists and the general public), this booklet adopts common names as they listed in the recently published (2002) Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition by Joseph T. Collins & Travis W. Taggart (Available gratis from The Center for North American Herpetology).

    To request a copy, call 1-800-482-8845


    Irwin, Kelly J.. Arkansas Game & Fish Commission, Little Rock. 50 pp.
    ISBN None given. $Gratis.

    Boas & Pythons

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    25 May 2007

    EAGLE MOUNTAIN PUBLISHING

    proudly announces

    BIOLOGY OF THE BOAS AND PYTHONS

    Edited by ROBERT W. HENDERSON (Milwaukee Public Museum) and ROBERT POWELL (Avila University & member of the CNAH Board of Directors)

    Foreword by Richard Shine

    Biology of the Boas and Pythons is the product of a symposium (Biology of Boas, Pythons, and Related Taxa) held at the 2005 joint meetings of the ASIH-HL-SSAR and sponsored by the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles. This was the first ever attempt to bring together researchers actively working on some aspect of Boa and Python biology.

    The symposium was a resounding success, and BIOLOGY OF THE BOAS AND PYTHONS represents a current assessment of our understanding of booid biology. Between the diversity of the peer-reviewed contributions and the literature reviews, this volume will become an essential reference for most future Boa and Python research.

    Table of Contents

    Introduction
    Ecology, Natural History, and Evolution
    Behavior
    Physiology, Neurology, and Reproductive Biology
    Conservation

    CNAH Note 1: Highly recommended; will remain the premier source of basic information about Boas and Pythons for decades to come.

    CNAH Note 2: For greater comprehension and ease of use, this book adopted the standard common names for North American species as listed in Collins & Taggart (2002, Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition).

    *****

    Book specifications:
    Published 2007
    x + 438 pages
    30 chapters
    79 authors
    over 200 color photographs, maps, figures, drawings
    ISBN 978-0-9720154-3-4
    Price $100.00 (+ shipping & handling)

    To order the book, please visit:

    http://www.eaglemountainpublishing.com

    or call 1-801-789-4149

    Eagle Mountain Publishing, LLC
    7705 North Wyatt Earp Avenue
    Eagle Mountain, Utah 84043

    Henderson, Robert W. & Robert Powell. Eagle Mountain Publishing LLC. x + 438pp.
    ISBN 978-0-9720154-3-4. $100.00.

    Cheyenne Bottoms Herps

    NEW BOOK
    AMPHIBIANS, TURTLES, AND REPTILES OF CHEYENNE BOTTOMS
    Second (Revised) Edition

    by Joseph T. Collins & Suzanne L. Collins
    with photographs by Suzanne L. Collins

    The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service and Sternberg Museum of Natural History, Fort Hays State University, are pleased to announce publication of

    AMPHIBIANS, TURTLES, AND REPTILES OF CHEYENNE BOTTOMS
    SECOND (REVISED) EDITION

    Cheyenne Bottoms, a nearly 27,500-acre wetlands situated in a relatively dry 41,000-acre lowland in central Kansas, sports a small but fascinating herpetofauna composed of 28 species—one salamander, eight frogs & toads, five turtles, two lizards, and twelve snakes. This delightful guide to the amphibians, turtles, and reptiles of the Bottoms is spiced with humorous anecdotes and asides that provide a sometimes whimsical, sometimes somber, view of these creatures, as well as solid information about their natural history along with the most up-to-date taxonomy backed by scientific evidence. The book is profusely illustrated with 36 images (33 of them in color) by co-author Suzanne L. Collins, a noted wildlife photographer.

    Sponsors of this elegant and informative little book include the U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Manhattan, Kansas), Sternberg Museum of Natural History, Fort Hays State University (Hays, Kansas), Kansas Department of Wildlife and Parks (Pratt), Westar Energy (Topeka), Kansas Herpetological Society (Topeka), Touchstone Energy (Washington, D. C.), and The Center for North American Herpetology (Lawrence, Kansas).

    For greater comprehension and ease of use, this book adopted standard common names for Kansas species as listed in Collins & Taggart (2002, Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition).

    Single copies of the 84-page book are available gratis by writing to the Sternberg Museum of Natural History, Fort Hays State University, 3000 Sternberg Drive, Hays, Kansas 67601-2006. Please include a self-addressed 7x10-inch envelope with $2.07 U.S. postage attached.

    Title: Amphibians, Turtles, and Reptiles of Cheyenne Bottoms
    Authors: Joseph T. Collins & Suzanne L. Collins
    Photographer: Suzanne L. Collins
    Date of publication: 11 April 2006
    Publisher: Sternberg Museum of Natural History, Fort Hays State University
    viii + 76 pages
    softbound, color cover
    32 color photographs, 3 B&W photographs
    1 B&W illustration + 1 map
    Index
    Cost: Gratis

    Collins, Joseph T. & Suzanne L. Collins. Sternberg Museum of Natural History. viii + 76 pp.
    ISBN . $Gratis.

    Common Snapper Book

    NEW BOOK: THE BIOLOGY OF THE [COMMON] SNAPPING TURTLE

    $75.00 hardcover Plus $7.50 Shipping and Handling.

    Out of the U.S. please contact us first at

    asalzberg@herpdigest.org

    February 2008
    240 pp. 15 halftones, 48 line drawings
    John Hopkins University Press

    About The Authors:
    Anthony C. Steyermark is an assistant professor of biology at University of St. Thomas. Michael S. Finkler is an associate professor of biology at Indiana University. Ronald J. Brooks is a professor of zoology at the University of Guelph in Ontario.edited by Anthony C. Steyermark, Michael S. Finkler, and Ronald J. Brooks

    Description:
    The name "snapping turtle" conjures up images of powerful, prehistoric-looking beasts that lurk in the dark waters of local swimming holes. Beyond its status as childhood legend, Chelydra serpentina is one of the most interesting reptiles of the New World. One of our largest turtles, this animal weighs up to thirty-five pounds, lays as many as one hundred eggs and can deliver a nasty bite. Due to its wide distribution, abundance, and large reproductive output, the Common Snapping Turtle has become one of the most extensively studied species of reptiles.

    This volume synthesizes all that is known about the Common Snapping Turtle to provide an up-to-date and comprehensive resource on the species' evolution, physiology, behavior, and life history.

    Anthony C. Steyermark, Michael S. Finkler, Ronald J. Brooks, and a team of experts detail the systematics, energetics, growth patterns, sex determination, and population genetics of snapping turtles and devote special attention to the fossil record of the snapping turtle family Chelydridae.

    The first broad biological treatment of the Common Snapping Turtle, this is the definitive reference for anyone working with or interested in this fascinating reptile. Contributors include: Ralph A. Ackerman, Iowa State University; Abdulaziz Y. A. AlKindi, Sultan Qaboos University; Barbara A. Bell, Drexel University; Ronald J. Brooks, University of Guelph; Justin D. Congdon, Savannah River Ecology Lab; Carl H. Ernst, George Mason University; Michael A. Ewert, Indiana University Bloomington; Michael S. Finkler, Indiana University Kokomo; Matthew K. Fujita, University of California, Davis; Eugene S. Gaffney, American Museum of Natural History; David A. Galbraith, Royal Botanical Gardens; Robert E. Gatten, Jr., University of North Carolina at Greensboro; Judith L. Greene, Savannah River Ecology Lab; J. Howard Hutchison, University of California, Berkeley; John B. Iverson, Earlham College; Fredric J. Janzen, Iowa State University; Jason J. Kolbe, Washington University; David B. Lott, Clarion University of Pennsylvania; Ibrahim Y. Mahmoud, Sultan Qaboos University; Don Moll, Southwest Missouri State University; Scott A. Reese, Kennesaw State University; Todd A. Rimkus, Marymount University; H. Bradley Shaffer, University of California Davis; James R. Spotila, Drexel University; David E. Starkey, University of Central Arkansas; Anthony C. Steyermark, University of St. Thomas; Gordon R. Ultsch, University of Alabama; Nigel H. West, University of Saskatchewan.

    Remember, the book will not be out until sometime late in February. But you can reserve your copy now, and help HerpDigest. And since you were going to buy the book anyway, why not help some herps?

    How To Order:

    By check- Make out the check out to Herpdigest, and send it to HerpDigest/A. Salzberg/67-87 Booth Street ˆ5B/Forest Hills, NY 11375

    PayPal, Our account is asalzberg@herpdigest.org

    Credit card ˆWe only accept Master or Visa card. Send us you cc number, expiration date and of course billing address, and if different shipping address. (For safety sake, split the credit card number in two and send in different emails.)

    We will not charge your card or cash your check until we have the books.

    Anthony C. Steyermark, Michael S. Finkler & Ronald J. Brooks. John Hopkins University Press. 240pp.
    ISBN . $75.

    Dictionary of Herpetology

    New Book
    DICTIONARY OF HERPETOLOGY

    Dr. Harvey B. Lillywhite
    Published 2008
    Hardback
    viii + 376 pages
    ISBN 1-57524-023-8
    List price: $112.50

    Following the historical precedent of the late James A. Peters (1964), this new updated DICTIONARY OF HERPETOLOGY provides a comprehensive, single-volume tome, with selected cross-referenced entries to clarify the many technical terms and concepts that pertain to herpetology. The DICTIONARY contains a complete collection of words that are central to understanding the biology of amphibians, reptiles, turtles, and crocodilians, and offers concise and easy-to-use readable definitions in an A-to-Z format. This invaluable reference is essential for academic herpetologists or anyone who is interested in herpetology and its many ancillary aspects. This new DICTIONARY emphasizes terminology related to anatomy, physiology, systematics, evolution, and other disciplines, including newly-emerged fields that are relevant to the study amphibians, reptiles, turtles, and crocodilians.

    CNAH is pleased to note that retained in this comprehensive volume are the traditional common name usages and spellings, such as PIGMY RATTLESNAKE (Sistrurus miliarius), GROUND SKINK (Scincella lateralis), BLACKTAIL RATTLESNAKE (Crotalus molossus), and NORTHERN WATER SNAKE (Nerodia sipedon). It is very important to use standardized common names; this creates an historical trail through time and maintains a stability in the present as we embrace the turbulent taxonomic changes of the future.

    Also . . . from the Dictionary:

    "Partners in Amphibian and Reptile Conservation. (PARC) An inclusive and diverse partnership between public and private organizations dedicated to the conservation of herpetofauna and their habitats. PARC is a national (U.S.A.) and international conservation network and resource."

    "[The] Center for North American Herpetology. (CNAH) A non-profit organization founded by J. T. Collins in 1994 for the purpose of promoting research on the preservation and conservation of North American amphibians, crocodilians, reptiles and turtles through education and dissemination of information. Headquartered in Lawrence, Kansas, the CNAH maintains an online list of current scientific and standard common names for North American herpetofauna."

    "Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles. (SSAR) A nonprofit society established in 1967 to advance research, education, and conservation related to amphibians and reptiles. The Society was founded by J. T. Collins, C. J. Hirschfeld and K. Adler as an outgrowth of the Ohio Herpetological Society and publishes the scholarly Journal of Herpetology, Herpetological Review, Catalogue of American Amphibians and Reptiles, and various other publications that are issued at irregular intervals."

    "Herpetologist's League. (HL) An international organization of people devoted to the scientific study of amphibians and reptiles (traditional usage; see reptile). The society was established by Major C. Grant in 1936."

    "American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists. (ASIH) A scientific society, established in 1913 by J. T. Nichols, dedicated to the study of fishes, crocodilians, turtles, reptiles, and tuataras. The Society publishes the journal Copeia."

    Highly recommended by CNAH; an absolutely essential volume that should be on or close by the desk of every herpetologist.

    To order this book, call:

    1 (800) 724-0025 (toll free Mon-Fri 8am-5pm EST)
    1 (321) 724-9542 (Mon-Fri 8am-5pm EST)

    or email them at

    info@krieger-publishing.com

    *****

    CNAH Note: For greater accuracy, comprehension, and ease of use, the DICTIONARY OF HERPETOLOGY uses the traditional, standardized common names for North American species proposed by Collins & Taggart (2002. Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition), published by The Center for North American Herpetology (available as a pdf at the CNAH web site), and maintained and updated daily online, the only such listing available on the internet worldwide.

    Lillywhite, Harvey B.. Krieger Publishing Company, Malabar, Florida. viii + 376 pp.
    ISBN 1-57524-023-8. $112.50.

    Exotic Herps of Florida
    March 2004
    THE EXOTIC AMPHIBIANS AND REPTILES OF FLORIDA

    by Walter E. Meshaka, Jr., Brian P. Butterfield, and J. Brian Hauge

    Florida contains more exotic amphibians, turtles, reptiles, and crocodilians than any other U.S. state. Illustrated species accounts detail the history and nature of each, the mode of dispersal, natural history, and present-day habitat and geographic distribution in the state. The impact of these animals is measured by their presence in natural systems of Florida and predator-prey interactions with native and other exotic species. The authors update the list of the documented exotic species in Florida and provide a progress report on new and published natural history information for each established species. An afterword examines the role people have played in the success of these species. The forty taxa that have established breeding populations in Florida and that are covered in this book consist of 32 species of lizards (including 11 geckoes and 8 anoles), four species of frogs and toads, two species of snakes (including the Indian or Burmese Python), one species of turtle, and one species of crocodilian.

    This excellent book is an essential addition to the library of any herpetologist.

    For greater comprehension and ease of use, this book adopts the standard common names for exotic species as they appeared in the "Peterson Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America Third Edition & Third Edition Expanded" by Roger Conant and Joseph T. Collins, and as recently published and maintained by The Center for North American Herpetology (Collins & Taggart 2002, Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition).

    To order this book, call:

    1-800-724-0025 (toll free Mon-Fri 8am-5pm Eastern Time)
    or
    1-321-724-9542 (Mon-Fri 8am-5pm Eastern Time)

    Walter E. Jr., Meshaka, Brian P. Butterfield, J. Brian Hauge. Krieger Publishing Company, Malabar, Florida. 166 pp.
    ISBN 1575240424 . $34.50.

    Fort Riley Herp Book

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    13 December 2005

    NEW BOOK
    THE SNAKES, LIZARDS, TURTLES, AND AMPHIBIANS OF FORT RILEY AND VICINITY
    Second (Revised) Edition

    by William H. Busby, Joseph T. Collins & Gibran Suleiman, with photographs by Suzanne L. Collins

    The Fort Riley Military Reservation is a 101,000-acre tract in the northern Flint Hills region of north-central Kansas that sports a diverse herpetofauna composed of 52 species—one salamander, ten frogs and toads, seven turtles, nine lizards, and twenty-five snakes. For that reason, the Kansas Biological Survey at the University of Kansas is pleased to announce the publication of a new edition of "The Snakes, Lizards, Turtles, and Amphibians of Fort Riley and Vicinity" by Bill Busby, Joe Collins, and Gib Suleiman. Originally published in 1996, this completely revised edition is profusely illustrated with 72 exquisite color images, most by noted wildlife photographer Suzanne L. Collins of Lawrence. This book reveals the natural history of the amphibians, turtles, lizards, and snakes that abound in and around the Fort Riley Military Reservation in the beautiful Flint Hills of north-central Kansas. A must for all Kansans interested in wild places and the creatures that roam them. 84 pages, 72 color photographs, one map, and a bibliography. Published 12 December 2005.

    For greater comprehension and ease of use, this book adopted the standard common names for Kansas species as listed in Collins & Taggart (2002, Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition).

    Single copies of the 84-page book are available free by writing to the Fort Riley Conservation Office, Building 1020, Huebner Road, Fort Riley, Kansas 66442. Please include a self-addressed 7x10-inch envelope with $2.00 U.S. postage attached.

    *****

    William H. Busby is an Associate Scientist with the Kansas Biological Survey and Courtesy Associate Professor in the Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology at the University of Kansas. At the survey, he serves as Zoologist with the Kansas Natural Heritage Inventory and conducts research on animals of conservation concern.

    Joseph T. Collins is the state’s most prolific author about Kansas wildlife. His fourteen Kansas books include Amphibians and Reptiles in Kansas (three editions), Natural Kansas, Kansas Wildlife (with Suzanne L. Collins, Bob Gress, and Gerald J. Wiens), and Kansas Wetlands: A Wildlife Treasury (with Suzanne L. Collins and Bob Gress). He has written or co-written nine other books, including the third edition of the Peterson Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America. Collins is the Director of The Center for North American Herpetology, a non-profit foundation based in Lawrence, Kansas, and the largest and most prestigious such entity worldwide.

    Gibran Suleiman is a Threatened and Endangered Species Biologist in the Conservation Division of the Directorate of Public Works at Fort Riley, Kansas, where he primarily focuses on compliance with the Endangered Species Act and conducts inventories of rare or sensitive species that occur on the installation. He was recognized as Conservation Educator of the Year by the Kansas Wildlife Federation in 2002.

    Suzanne L. Collins is an author and wildlife photographer, with credits in the Peterson Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America, Peterson Field Guide to Venomous Animals and Poisonous Plants, Natural Kansas, Kansas Wildlife, and Kansas Wetlands: A Wildlife Treasury. In January 1999, she was recognized by the Kansas House of Representatives for her photography and books, and was named the Conservation Communicator of the Year for 2000 by the Kansas Wildlife Federation. In 2002, she served as President of the Kansas Herpetological Society.

    Busby, William H., Joseph T. Collins & Gibran Suleiman. Kansas Biological Survey, Lawrence. viii + 76pp.
    ISBN No ISBN. $Gratis.

    Fossil Turtles

    A NEW HERPETOLOGICAL FACSIMILE REPRINT
    sponsored by The Center for North American Herpetology

    FOSSIL TURTLES OF NORTH AMERICA
    by O. P. HAY
    CNAH Facsimile Reprint Number 6
    Original Year of Publication: 1908
    Facsimile Year of Publication: 2006
    iv + 568 pages & 113 plates Softbound
    ISBN: 1-885209-44-4
    Price: $59.95 a copy postpaid via media mail

    THE CENTER FOR NORTH AMERICAN HERPETOLOGY is pleased to present the latest in its facsimile reprint series, produced and published in cooperation with Eric Thiss of Serpent's Tale & Zoo Book Sales. The CNAH facsimiles are designed to make available long out-of-print herpetological works about North America and adjoining countries in order to better serve the academic community. Titles will be issued as they become available to the public domain. Suggestions for future titles on North American herpetology are appreciated; let CNAH know what you want.

    For this newest offering, we are grateful to our sponsors, Touchstone Energy, Westar Energy, and the R. A. Javitch Natural History Rare Book Foundation for their support. Russ Gurley of Living Art and Bob & Sheri Ashley of ECO donated in-kind services as well. CNAH is a non-profit 501c3 foundation devoted to promoting the preservation and conservation of North American amphibians, turtles, reptiles, and crocodiles through education and information. For more information about CNAH, visit our web site at

    http://www.cnah./org

    *****

    NOTE: A discount of 20% per book is offered to all individuals, organizations, and corporations that have contributed a minimum of $25.00 to CNAH (check the CNAH Donors list on the CNAH web site to see if you qualify). Other individuals wishing to qualify for this discount should send their CNAH donation of $25.00 or more (fully tax deductible) directly to Serpents Tale (address and payment methods below).

    To order a copy of any CNAH facsimiles, contact:

    Serpents Tale/Zoo Book Sales
    403 Parkway Avenue North
    P. O. Box 405
    Lanesboro, Minnesota 55949-0405

    Telephone: (507)467-8733
    Webpage: www.zoobooksales.com
    E-mail or PayPal to: zoobooks@acegroup.cc
    Personal checks, money orders, Visa , Mastercard, or Paypal accepted as payment.

    Hay, O. P.. CNAH. 568pp.
    ISBN 1-885209-44-4. $59.95.

    Georgia Herp Book

    NEW BOOK: AMPHIBIANS AND REPTILES OF GEORGIA
    Edited by John B. Jensen, Carlos D. Camp, Whit Gibbons, & Matt J. Elliott

    Amphibians and Reptiles of Georgia makes accessible a wealth of information about 170 species of frogs, salamanders, crocodilians, lizards, snakes, and turtles. Throughout, the book stresses conservation, documenting declines in individual species as well as losses of local and regional populations. Color photographs are paired with detailed species accounts, which provide information about size, appearance, and other identifying characteristics of adults and young; taxonomy and nomenclature; habits; distribution and habitat; and reproduction and development. Typical specimens and various life stages are described, as well as significant variations in such attributes as color and pattern. Line drawings define each group's general features for easy field identification. Range maps show where each species occurs in Georgia county by county, as well as in the United States generally. State maps depict elevations, streams, annual precipitation, land use changes, physiographic provinces, and average temperatures. The book includes a checklist, a chart of the evolutionary relationships among amphibians and reptiles, a list of the top ten most reported species by major group, and a table summarizing the diversity of amphibians and reptiles in the state's five physiographic provinces. Amphibians and Reptiles of Georgia is an authoritative reference for students, professional herpetologists, biologists, ecologists, conservationists, land managers, and amateur naturalists.

    About the editors: CARLOS D. CAMP is a professor of biology at Piedmont College. WHIT GIBBONS is a professor of ecology at the University of Georgia and the former Head of the Environmental Outreach and Education Program at the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory. MATT J. ELLIOTT is a program manager for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Wildlife Resources Division, Nongame Conservation Section. JOHN B. JENSEN is a senior wildlife biologist for the Georgia Department of Natural Resources, Wildlife Resources Division, Nongame Conservation Section.

    2008
    Paper
    7 1/2 x 10 inches, 478 color photos, 3 tables, 182 maps, 1 figure, 24 line drawings

    Available from University of Georgia Press by calling:

    1-800-266-5842

    *****

    CNAH Note: For greater accuracy, comprehension, and ease of use, this book uses the traditional, standardized common names for North American species maintained by Collins & Taggart (2002. Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition), published by The Center for North American Herpetology (available as a pdf at the CNAH web site), and updated daily online, the only such listing available online worldwide.

    John B. Jensen, Carlos D. Camp, Whit Gibbons, & Matt J. Elliott. University of Georgia Press, Athens. 575pp.
    ISBN 0820331112. $39.95.

    Gopher Tortoise Book

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    13 February 2008

    New Book
    THE NATURAL HISTORY AND MANAGEMENT OF THE GOPHER TORTOISE (GOPHERUS POLYPHEMUS DAUDIN)

    Ray E. Ashton & Patrica Ashton
    Published 2008
    Hardback

    This handbook is the first book on tortoise management and research techniques that can be applied to any species. It is designed to be the manual that can serve for certification for various institutions and State and Federal agencies. Many tricks of the trade on how to count burrows, excavate, and trap tortoises are given based on the 20 years of experience of the Ashtons. No other publication currently exists that brings together all the methods and techniques for tortoise management which can be used with other tortoises and turtles. Students and environmental consultants working with gopher tortoises and other upland species will find this handbook indispensable.

    Available from:

    Krieger Publishing Company
    P. O. Box 9542
    Melbourne, Florida 32902-9542
    http://wwww.krieger-publishing.com

    To order this book, call:

    1 (800) 724-0025 (toll free Mon-Fri 8am-5pm EST)
    1 (321) 724-9542 (Mon-Fri 8am-5pm EST)

    or email them at

    info@krieger-publishing.com

    Ray E. Ashton & Patricia Ashton. Krieger Publishing Company, Melbourne, Florida. 288 pp.
    ISBN 1575241625. $66.50.

    Herp Habitat Management

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    13 October 2006

    Partners in Amphibian and Reptile Conservation has just completed production of the new

    HABITAT MANAGEMENT GUIDELINES FOR AMPHIBIANS AND REPTILES
    OF THE SOUTHEASTERN UNITED STATES

    now available in hard copy.

    These guidelines provide information on suggested practices that can facilitate the construction or preservation of southeastern habitat for native reptilian, crocodilian, chelonian, and amphibian populations. The guides were developed in collaboration by several regional herpetological experts and land managers and provide practical information on the different southeastern habitat types and species requirements. Additionally, they include ways of maximizing the compatibility of land use with habitat preservation as well as identify ideal habitat management methods that can best benefit herpetofauna.

    This book can be obtained from the publisher for $10.00 at:

    High Cotton (ATTN: Ms. Delinda Franklin)
    2901 Alton Way
    Birmingham, Alabama 35210
    ph. 877-838-2345
    fax 205-836-5587
    dfranklin@highcottonusa.com

    *****

    For greater accuracy, comprehension, and ease of communication, ca. 90% of the common names in this book adhere to the long-standing, traditional, standard names for North American species maintained by Collins & Taggart (2002. Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition), published by The Center for North American Herpetology (available as a pdf at the CNAH web site) and updated daily online by the CNAH staff.

    Bailey, M., J. Holmes, K. Buhlmann & J. Mitchell. High Cotton, Birmingham, Alabama. 84pp.
    ISBN . $10.00.

    Kansas Snake Guide

    A POCKET GUIDE TO KANSAS SNAKES
    by Joseph T. Collins & Suzanne L. Collins
    with photographs by Suzanne L. Collins and Bob Gress

    Sponsored by the Kansas Department of Wildlife & Parks (Pratt), Westar Energy (Topeka), The Center for North American Herpetology (Lawrence), and the Great Plains Nature Center (Wichita).

    This pocket guide covers the 38 kinds of snakes found in Kansas, all illustrated with stunning color images. Pocket guides are a great way to get people involved with wildlife conservation, because the more people become familiar with a fauna, the more they have invested in it. In this guide, Joe and Suzanne Collins reveal the diverse serpent fauna of the Sunflower State, with sections on size, range in Kansas, description, and habits.

    Contains information on all Kansas serpents and organizes them in the Family Leptotyphlopidae (Slender Blind Snakes), Family Colubridae (Harmless Egg-laying Snakes), Family Dipsadidae (Slender Rear-fanged Snakes), Family Natricidae (Harmless Live-bearing Snakes), Family Xenodontidae (Robust Rear-fanged Snakes), and Family Crotalidae (Pitvipers).

    CNAH highly recommends this pocket guide. Although the initial press run was a robust 23,000 copies, they won't last long.

    For greater accuracy, comprehension, and ease of use, this book adopted the long-standing, traditional, standard common names for North American species maintained by Collins & Taggart (2002. Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition), published by The Center for North American Herpetology (available as a pdf at the CNAH web site) and updated daily online.

    Publisher: Great Plains Nature Center, Wichita
    Date of Publication: August 2006
    69 pages, softbound

    To obtain a gratis copy of this pocket guide, send a check for $1.50 to:

    Snake Pocket Guide
    Great Plains Nature Center
    6232 East 29th Street North
    Wichita, Kansas 67220

    Collins, Joseph T. & Suzanne L. Collins. Great Plains Nature Center, Wichita, Kansas. 69pp.
    ISBN none. $1.50.

    Kentucky Snake Book
    05/01/2005
    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    6 September 2005

    New Kentucky Snake Book by Leslie Meade (Limited Edition)

    The Kentucky State Nature Preserves Commission, in cooperation with Touchstone Energy and The Center for North American Herpetology (CNAH), were pleased to announce publication of

    Kentucky Snakes: Their Identification, Variation, and Distribution
    by the late Leslie Meade

    Of the initial printing of only 100 copies of Les Meade's excellent book, none remain available.

    According to John R. MacGregor, noted Kentucky herpetologist, "this authoritative and highly technical work is the most comprehensive treatment of Kentucky snakes that has ever been produced. County-level distribution maps and black-and-white photographs (both dorsal and ventral views) are provided for each species that occurs in Kentucky; thousands of museum records are cited in the text and a set of color photographs appears as a series of plates following page 323. I highly recommend this book to any serious student of Kentucky snakes."

    For greater comprehension and ease of use (both among herpetologists and the general public), this book adopted the standard common names as they are listed in "Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition" by Joseph T. Collins & Travis W. Taggart (2002).

    *****

    Title: Kentucky Snakes: Their Identification, Variation, and Distribution
    Published May 2005
    323 pages plus 17 color plates
    Spiral binding; laminated cover; size 8 1/2 x 11
    Out-of-Print September 2005

    Leslie Meade. Kentucky State Nature Preserves Commission. 323 pp.
    ISBN None. $Out-of-Print.

    Louisiana Snakes

    New Booklet: Snakes of Louisiana (Revised Edition)

    by Jeff Boundy

    This is a concise 40-page 8.5 x 11-inch booklet on the snakes of Louisiana. Snake hunting is a great way to get people involved with snake conservation, because the more people become familiar with these reptiles, the more they have invested in them. In this guide, Jeff Boundy covers the diverse serpent fauna of Louisiana and the forty-six kinds of snakes that inhabit it. The booklet is well written and very informative on the subject, and contains 76 excellent color photographs. It would have been nice if the booklet included a section on how to improve habitat for snakes (i.e., create sheet metal fields and woodpile den sites), but the lack of such a habitat improvement section in no way detracts from the usefulness of this tidy tome.

    Minor corrections to this booklet: Readers should be aware that the Common Water Snake featured in this splendid title is the more aptly-named Northern Water Snake (which is uncommon in Louisiana and has a very restricted range in the state north of the Mississippi River compared to the more widespread and common Southern Water Snake, Nerodia fasciata, found statewide) and that "Pygmy" Rattlesnake has been spelled Pigmy Rattlesnake for half a century (also, for nearly a decade there has been an excellent and extensive web site under the name Pigmy Rattlesnake administered by Stetson University). Also, the correct spelling of Pantherophis guttata is P. guttatus and for Pantherophis obsoleta, P. obsoletus (all published changes involving emendations of this sort for North America are posted immediately on the CNAH web site -- a good place to check for them). But these corrections are very minor and in no way lessen the value of this excellent offering. In keeping with the Evolutionary Species Concept, the allopatric Scarlet Kingsnake (Lampropeltis elapsoides) and Texas Coral Snake (Micrurus tener) are considered distinct species. Other taxa of interest, also recognized as distinct species, are Slowinski's Corn Snake (Pantherophis slowinskii) and the Midland Rat Snake (Pantherophis spiloides).

    CNAH highly recommends this publication. Add it to your library.

    With but two exceptions (noted above), the primary or alternate standard common names used throughout "Snakes of Louisiana" are those recommended in Collins & Taggart (2002 Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition. Publication of The Center for North American Herpetology, Lawrence. iv + 44 pp.).

    *****

    To obtain this booklet postpaid, send $8.50 to:

    Librarian
    Louisiana Dept of Wildlife and Fisheries
    P. O. Box 98000
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70898-9000

    Boundy, Jeff. Louisiana Department of Wildlife & Fisheries. 40 pp.
    ISBN . $8.50.

    Mean & Lowly Things

    New Script for that Special Someone
    A Perfect Gift for the Winter Solstice

    MEAN AND LOWLY THINGS
    Snakes, Science, and Survival in the Congo

    by Kate Jackson

    49 color illustrations, 2 maps, 336 pages
    Hardcover edition
    Published: April 2008
    Cost: $27.95
    ISBN 13: 978-0-674-02974-3
    ISBN 10: 0-674-02974-7

    In 2005 Kate Jackson ventured into the remote swamp forests of the northern Congo to collect reptiles, turtles, crocodilians, and amphibians. Her camping equipment was rudimentary, her knowledge of Congolese customs even more so. She knew how to string a net and set a pitfall trap, but she never imagined the physical and cultural difficulties that awaited her. Culled from the mud-spattered pages of her journals, MEAN AND LOWLY THINGS reads like a fast-paced adventure story. It is Jackson’s unvarnished account of her research on the front lines of the global biodiversity crisis—coping with interminable delays in obtaining permits, learning to outrun advancing army ants, subsisting on a diet of Spam and manioc, and ultimately falling in love with the strangely beautiful flooded forest.

    The reptile fauna of the Republic of Congo was all but undescribed, and Jackson’s mission was to carry out the most basic study of the amphibians, turtles, crocodilians, and reptiles of the swamp forest: to create a simple list of the species that exist there—a crucial first step toward efforts to protect them. When the snakes evaded her carefully set traps, Jackson enlisted people from the villages to bring her specimens. She trained her guide to tag frogs and skinks and to fix them in formalin. As her expensive camera rusted and her Western soap melted, Jackson learned what it took to swim with the snakes—and that there’s a right way and a wrong way to get a baby Cobra out of a bottle.

    Kate Jackson is an Assistant Professor of Biology at Whitman College.

    Available from:

    Harvard University Press
    79 Garden Street
    Cambridge, Massachusetts 02138

    or visit

    http://www.hup.harvard.edu/catalog/JACMEA.html

    or call

    Toll-free Telephone
    Within the United States and Canada: 800-405-1619
    Monday-Friday, 9:00 am-5:00 pm (eastern time)

    Telephone
    Outside of the United States and Canada: 401-531-2800
    Monday-Friday, 9:00 am-5:00 pm (eastern time)

    or fax

    Toll-Free Fax
    Within the United States and Canada: 800-406-9145

    Jackson, Kate. Harvard University Press. 336 pp.
    ISBN 0-674-02974-7. $27.95.

    New Cornell Snake Book

    SNAKES: ECOLOGY AND CONSERVATION

    Edited by Stephen J. Mullin & Richard A. Seigel
    Cloth 978-0-8014-4565-1
    392 pages
    6 1/8 x 9 ¼ inches, 10 tables, 26 charts/graphs, 5 maps, 2 line drawings, 2 halftones
    June 2009
    $60.00

    Destruction of habitat due to urban sprawl, pollution, and deforestation has caused population declines or even extinction of many of the world's approximately 2,600 snake species. Furthermore, misconceptions about snakes have made them among the most persecuted of all animals, despite the fact that less than a quarter of all species are venomous and most species are beneficial because they control rodent pests. It has become increasingly urgent, therefore, to develop viable conservation strategies for snakes and to investigate their importance as monitors of ecosystem health and indicators of habitat sustainability.

    In this, the first book on snakes to be written with a focus on conservation, editors Stephen J. Mullin and Richard A. Seigel bring together leading herpetologists to review and synthesize the ecology, conservation, and management of snakes worldwide. These experts report on advances in current research and summarize the primary literature, presenting the most important concepts and techniques in snake ecology and conservation. The common thread of conservation unites the twelve chapters, each of which addresses a major sub-discipline within snake ecology. Applied topics such as methods and modeling, and strategies such as captive rearing and translocation, are also covered. Each chapter provides an essential framework and indicates specific directions for future research, making this a critical reference for anyone interested in vertebrate conservation generally or for anyone implementing conservation and management policies concerning snake populations.

    Stephen J. Mullin is Associate Professor of Biological Sciences at Eastern Illinois University. Richard A. Seigel is Professor and Chair of Biological Sciences at Towson University and the author, editor, or co-editor of several books, including Snakes: Ecology and Behavior, Snakes: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, and The Garter Snakes: Evolution and Ecology.

    TO ORDER:

    All individuals receiving this announcement from CNAH can obtain a 20% discount on the book. All you need to do is visit the book's web site at

    http://www.cornellpress.cornell.edu/cup_detail.taf?ti_id=5307

    and then when ordering enter the Special CNAH Promotion Code, CAU6, to get the 20% discount.

    *****

    "Snakes: Ecology and Conservation is an important and excellent book. The choice of topics is timely and each chapter offers something novel."—Harry W. Greene, Cornell University, author of Snakes: The Evolution of Mystery in Nature

    "Yet another authoritative and cutting-edge volume on the biology of snakes, organized and written with the same attention to detail and scientific accuracy as its predecessors, Snakes: Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Snakes: Ecology and Behavior. Add this alongside them on your library bookshelf; it is an essential tome for all researchers interested in serpents."—Joseph T. Collins, Director, The Center for North American Herpetology, and Herpetologist, The University of Kansas

    "This timely compilation by Stephen J. Mullin and Richard A. Seigel, with contributions by the world’s top experts in snake biology, will rapidly become the foundation for future herpetological research and management involving snakes. In addition to being an indispensable source for every professional herpetologist and anyone else interested in snake ecology and conservation, this book will serve as a cornerstone reference for land managers and conservation biologists anywhere snakes occur."—J. Whitfield Gibbons, University of Georgia

    *****

    Contributors to this excellent volume are:

    Omar Attum, Indiana University Southeast
    Steven J. Beaupre, University of Arkansas
    Xavier Bonnet, Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique
    Frank T. Burbrink, College of Staten Island, The City University of New York
    Gordon M. Burghardt, University of Tennessee
    Todd A. Castoe, University of Colorado
    David Chiszar, University of Colorado
    Michael E. Dorcas, Davidson College
    Lara E. Douglas, University of Arkansas
    Christopher L. Jenkins, Project Orianne, Ltd.
    Glenn Johnson, State University of New York, Potsdam
    Michael Hutchins, The Wildlife Society
    Richard B. King, Northern Illinois University
    Bruce A. Kingsbury, Indiana University-Purdue University
    Thomas Madsen, University of Wollongong (Australia)
    Stephen J. Mullin, Eastern Illinois University
    James B. Murphy, National Zoological Park
    Charles R. Peterson, Idaho State University
    Kent A. Prior, Parks Canada
    Richard A. Seigel, Towson University
    Richard Shine, University of Sydney
    Kevin T. Shoemaker, State University of New York
    Patrick J. Weatherhead, University of Illinois
    John D. Willson, University of Georgia

    Stephen J. Mullin & Richard A. Seigel (Editors). Cornell University Press, Ithaca. 392 pp.
    ISBN 978-0-8014-4565. $60.00.

    New Florida Herp Book

    Amphibians and Reptiles: Status and Conservation in Florida

    Edited by Walter E. Meshaka, Jr., and Kimberly J. Babbitt

    For the first time a broad cross-section of distinguished researchers come together to address the conservation of Florida's rich but imperiled herpetofauna. The 27 contributions by 37 authors represent original research, essays, and reviews that identify contemporary threats to amphibians, turtles, and reptiles and to the system that supports them. Splendidly augmented by 44 tables and 41 figures, this volume is a fundamental primer for anyone wishing to understand the Florida herpetofauna.

    In the Synthesis of the book, Meshaka and Babbitt draw from these works and from prior discussions with the contributors to provide a consensus regarding the most important threats facing the conservation of Florida's herpetofauna and proffer clear courses of action to ensure a viable future for this segment of Florida's natural legacy.

    Ultimately, the reader will see convincingly that conservation of Florida amphibians, turtles, and reptiles can be achieved at several levels. Readable in style, contemporary in subject matter, this is a snapshot of the present and a blueprint for the future of conservation action in Florida.

    Contributors to the book: Patricia S. Ashton, Ray E. Ashton, Jr., Kimberly J. Babbitt, Matthew J. Baber, John D. Baldwin, W. James Barichivich, Laura A. Brandt, Pablo R. Delis, C. Kenneth Dodd, Jr., Kevin M. Enge, Michael R. J. Forstner, Richard D. Franz, Cathryn H. Greenberg, Marian L. Griffey, Tommy Hines, Dale R. Jackson, Howard L. Jelks, Steve A. Johnson, Frank Jordan, Wiley M. Kitchens, Kenneth L. Krysko, Lindsay A. Latino, Frank Mazzotti, Brian K. Mealey, D. Bruce Means, Ryan C. Means, Walter E. Meshaka, Jr., Henry R. Mushinksy, Greta M. Parks, Mike A. Perez, Fred Punzo, Kenneth G. Rice, Daniel J. Smith, Kevin G. Smith, Lora L. Smith, Kristina Sorensen, and George W. Tanner.

    This excellent book is a must addition to the library of any serious herpetologist.

    For greater comprehension and ease of use, this book adopted the standard common names for Florida species of Collins & Taggart (2002, Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition).

    To order this book, call:

    800-724-0025 (toll free Mon-Fri 8am-5pm Eastern Time)
    or
    321-724-9542 (Mon-Fri 8am-5pm Eastern Time)

    Meshaka, Walter E., Jr. & Kimberly J. Babbitt (editors). Krieger Publishing Company, Malabar, Florida. 334 pp.
    ISBN 1-57524-251-6. $66.50.

    New Herpetology Text

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    18 February 2009

    NEW BOOK

    HERPETOLOGY (Second Edition)

    by Laurie Vitt & Janalee Caldwell

    The second edition has been thoroughly revised. The text has been reorganized, new chapters have been added, new text references have been inserted. All this plus new color systematics sections will maintain this book as the leading textbook on the biology of amphibians, turtles, reptiles, and crocodilians. The book will also showcase amphibians, turtles, reptiles, and crocodilians as model systems in conceptual areas of biology. Such a text will help integrate herpetology as a discipline into conceptually oriented undergraduate programs. The book should also appeal to a large audience of sophisticated lay people interested in amphibians, turtles, reptiles, and crocodilians.

    Hardbound
    720 pages
    Publisher: Elsevier
    Publication date: October 2008
    ISBN 13: 978-0-12-374346-6
    Price: $79.95

    TO ORDER, Contact:

    Elsevier
    Customer Service Department
    11830 Westline Industrial Drive
    St. Louis, Missouri 63146
    usbkinfo@elsevier.com

    US Customers:
    Toll Free: 1 (800) 545-2522
    Fax: 1 (800) 535-9935

    Customers Outside US:
    Toll Free: 1 (800) 460-3110
    1 (314) 453-7010
    Fax: 1 (314) 453-7095

    *****

    CNAH Note: Adopts the generic taxonomy for North American amphibians as proposed by Frost et al. (2006. The Amphibian Tree of Life). In this book, the North American True Toads are placed in the genera Anaxyrus, Ollotis, and Rhinella, the North American True Frogs are placed in the genera Lithobates and Rana, and Barking Frogs are placed in the genus Craugaster. Among reptiles, the genus Plestiodon replaces Eumeces for nearly all North American skinks, the genus Aspidoscelis replaces all native North American members of the genus Cnemidophorus, and Pantherophis replaces all members of the genus Elaphe.

    *****

    Vitt, Laurie & Janalee Caldwell. Elsevier. 720 pp.
    ISBN 13: 978-0-12-374346-6. $79.95 .

    New Rattlesnake Book

    CNAH ANNOUNCEMENT
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    12 May 2009

    NEW RATTLESNAKE BOOK

    Tricolor Books is pleased to announce its new book, A GUIDE TO THE RATTLESNAKES OF THE UNITED STATES. Written by Brian Hubbs and Brendan O'Connor, this is the first guide of its type, covering all species of rattlesnakes native to the United States. This 5 1/2 by 8 1/2 inch guide will be informative and intriguing for those who know nothing about snakes, and handy and entertaining to members of the herpetological community.

    This full color book includes:

    All species and subspecies of rattlesnakes native to the U.S. and Canada
    101 photos of rattlesnakes
    31 range maps
    Natural history, rattlesnake myths, protected or non-protected status of each rattlesnake

    Publisher: Tricolor Books
    96 pp.
    Soft cover
    Publication Date: April 2009
    ISBN: 978-0-9754641-2-0
    LCCN: 2009902780

    Cost: $20.00 + $3.00 shipping (European orders - $20.00 US + $8.00 US shipping), Arizona residents please add $1.62 sales tax. We accept PayPal, money orders, or personal checks. PayPal account can be accessed at:

    tricolorbrian@hotmail.com

    Autographed copies upon request. Please include your mailing address and contact number or e-mail when ordering. Send payments (other than PayPal) to:

    Tricolor Books
    P.O. Box 24811
    Tempe, Arizona 85285
    (480) 456-5202

    Please allow 4-6 weeks for delivery (PayPal orders usually arrive 7-14 days).

    Also available from:

    Serpent's Tale Natural History Book Distributors, Inc. at

    http://www.zoobooksales.com/index.html

    *****

    CNAH Note: This excellent little volume is full of good information, but is inconsistent (and thus possibly confusing) in its use of common names. It correctly uses Diamondback (for both C. adamanteus and C. atrox), but then uses "Black-tailed" instead of being consistent and using Blacktail, a name standardized in herpetology since 1978 (and as it currently appears in the eastern and central Peterson Field Guide). Same for Ridgenose, instead of the inconsistent "Ridge-nosed." But these are easily corrected with a pen in your copy of this fine book. Buy and enjoy. CNAH highly recommends it.

    Brian Hubbs & Brendan O'Connor. Tricolor Books, Tempe, Arizona. 96 pp.
    ISBN 978-0-9754641-2-0. $20.00 + 3.00 shipping.

    New Turtle Book

    TURTLES OF THE WORLD

    A brand new book by Franck Bonin, Bernard Devaux, and Alain Dupré
    Translated by Peter C. H. Pritchard

    Now available for a limited time through Herpdigest.

    Franck Bonin, Bernard Devaux, and Alain Dupré
    2006 Translation by Peter C. H. Pritchard
    $50.00 hardcover, four lbs.
    ISBN 0-8018-8496-9
    416 pp. 300 color photos, 320 color maps

    Description

    From the familiar Northern Painted Turtle basking on a log to the majestic long-lived Giant Tortoises, turtles are among the most fascinating animals on the planet. For many years, Franck Bonin, Bernard Devaux, and Alain Dupré have traveled the world together to study turtles in their natural habitats. In this complete guide to the world's nearly 300 species of turtles, the authors reveal intimate, little-known details about these intriguing animals in their native habitats: what they eat, where they live, how they behave, and when and where they lay their eggs.

    Originally written in French, the text has been translated by one of the world's leading turtle experts, Peter C. H. Pritchard. The result is a beautifully written and illustrated book that belongs on the shelf of every library, public and private. Written for the millions of turtle enthusiasts who will find answers to their questions within its pages, this book is bound to become the standard reference for years to come.

    Author Information

    Franck Bonin is a veterinarian with thirty-two years of specialized experience with turtles. Bernard Devaux is the founder of the French nonprofit organization Village des Tortues. Alain Dupré is an avid turtle enthusiast who serves on the boards of several conservation organizations in France. Peter C. H. Pritchard is the author of hundreds of articles on turtles and the Encyclopedia of Turtles.

    All profits from the sale of this book go to keep HerpDigest a free publication. So why not buy a great book, a book that you would've bought anyway and help HerpDigest at the same time? It's a beautiful book, illustrated using only color photographs placed next to the appropriate text for a species (not in a special section), making identification of a turtle much easier.

    It's only $50.00 (plus $6.95 for shipping and handling), will be sent USPS priority mail, and takes up to seven days to be delivered.

    Payment is accepted by check, Paypal or a Master or Visa Card.

    1) Make out the check to HerpDigest and send it to

    Herpdigest
    c/o Allen Salzberg
    67-87 Booth Street, 5B
    Forest Hills, New York 11375

    2) By PayPal charge the full amount to our account at

    asalzberg@herpdigest.org

    3) By Master or VISA card. Email us your credit card number, billing and shipping address. (I'm told it is safer when using a card to split the number up into two emails to be absolutely safe.) Or you can fax the information to 1-718-275-3307. It's my personal fax, no one but me will see it.

    All profits from the book and the calendars go to help keep HerpDigest A Free Publication

    Allen Salzberg
    asalzberg@herpdigest.org

    *****

    For greater accuracy, comprehension, and ease of use, this book adopted, with minor exceptions, the traditional, standard common names for North American turtles maintained by Collins & Taggart (2002. Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition), published by The Center for North American Herpetology (available as a pdf at the CNAH web site) and updated daily online.

    Franck Bonin, Bernard Devaux & Alain Dupré. . 416 pp.
    ISBN 0-8018-8496-9. $50.00.

    New York Herp Guide

    THE AMPHIBIANS AND REPTILES OF NEW YORK STATE
    Identification, Natural History, and Conservation

    James P. Gibbs, Alvin R. Breisch, Peter K. Ducey, Glenn Johnson, the late John Behler, and Richard Bothner

    Available from Oxford University Press for purchase at a special 20% discount rate (paper $27.60, cloth $59.60). The book is 496 pp. with 48 halftones, 65 maps, and 15 line illustrations, and has benefited from a generous subsidy from the New York State Biodiversity Research Institute to reduce its final purchase price. Further information and ordering forms are available at:

    http://www.esf.edu/efb/gibbs/gibbs.pdf

    An excellent book, highly recommended by CNAH.

    *****

    For greater accuracy, comprehension, and ease of use, this book uses the traditional, standardized common names for North American species maintained by Collins & Taggart (2002. Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition), published by The Center for North American Herpetology (available as a pdf at the CNAH web site), and updated daily online, the only such listing available online worldwide.

    *****

    Gibbs, James P., Alvin R. Breisch, Peter K. Ducey, Glenn Johnson, John Behler & Richard Bothner. Oxford University Press. 496 pp.
    ISBN . $27.60.

    North American Anurans

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    13 February 2009

    Houghton Mifflin Company, publishers of the Peterson Field Guide series, announces

    A Great New Book

    THE FROGS AND TOADS OF NORTH AMERICA

    by Lang Elliott, Carl Gerhardt, and Carlos Davidson with a Foreword by Joseph T. Collins

    "About a hundred species of frogs and toads are found on the North American continent north of Mexico, providing a diversity of seasonal calls that are fascinating to most people but often difficult to sort out. Lang Elliott, Carl Gerhardt, and Carlos Davidson have addressed this situation in an exemplary fashion, with excellent recordings and exquisite photography accompanied by an informative and organized text, all bundled together in a book and compact disc that will provide hours of enjoyment for people who like to spend their time outdoors." – from the Foreword

    The audio compact disc accompanying this book has been carefully crafted to provide the listener with excellent examples of the calls of nearly all the frogs and toads covered in this book. See page 324 for detailed descriptions of the tracks. The recordings for each species are preceded by the standard common names and current scientific names. The tracks on the disc correspond to the species profile numbers in the book.

    This book may be ordered toll free at 800-225-3362

    or from

    http://www.musicofnature.org/books

    $19.95 (paperback)
    ISBN: 978-0-618-66399-6
    Published March 2009
    343 pp.

    *****

    CNAH Note: For greater accuracy, comprehension, and ease in communication, this book uses exactly the traditional, standardized common names for North American frogs and toads proposed by Collins & Taggart (2002. Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition), published by The Center for North American Herpetology (available as a pdf at the CNAH web site), and maintained and updated daily online, the only such listing available online worldwide.

    Further, these are the standard common names used in the third edition (1998 Conant & Collins) of the "Peterson Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America," (also available from Houghton Mifflin), and are the common names that will be used in the fourth edition of the Peterson Field Guide to Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians.

    *****

    Lang Elliott, Carl Gerhardt, and Carlos Davidson. Houghton Mifflin Company, Boston. 343 pp.
    ISBN 978-0-618-66399-6. $19.95.

    Ohio Herp Atlas

    New Book
    OHIO TURTLE, LIZARD, AND SNAKE ATLAS

    by Douglas E. Wynn & Scott M. Moody

    This excellent tome is a modern, basic reference to Ohio turtles, lizards, and snakes, and contains a plethora of information as well as county dot maps for all 43 species found in the Buckeye State. After a detailed introduction, checklists, and glossary, each species account is presented with sections on 1) description and diagnostic characteristics, 2) ecological habitat, 3) geographic distribution, 4) conservation status, and 5) photographic recommendations (for identification and verification of new records). The book concludes with literature cited and an extensive appendix showing the most recent records (by group, county, and township) since Roger Conant's 1951 compilation.

    An essential addition to the library of any North American herpetologist.

    For greater comprehension and ease of use (both among herpetologists and the general public across the United States and Canada), this atlas adopted the common names as they are listed in "Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition" (2002) by Joseph T. Collins & Travis W. Taggart.

    Editor-in-Chief: Brian J. Armitage
    Cost: $10.00 + 2.50 for shipping & handling (Ohio residents add 0.68 cents for sales tax)

    To order a copy, call 1-614-457-8787 (Visa and Mastercard accepted)

    or send a check (US only) or money order (US only) to:

    Ohio Biological Survey, Inc.
    P. O. Box 21370
    Columbus, Ohio 43221-0370

    For orders of two or more, call the OBS.

    Wynn, Douglas E. & Scott M. Moody. Ohio Biological Survey. iv + 80pp.
    ISBN 0-86727-155-8. $$10.00 + 2.50 shipping & handling.

    Piney Woods Herpetofauna

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    22 August 2008

    New Book
    REPTILES AND AMPHIBIANS OF THE SOUTHERN PINE WOODS
    Author: Steven B. Reichling

    6 x 9 inches, paperbound
    Price: $29.95
    Publication date: 2008

    Front cover images by Suzanne L. Collins

    Sponsored by The Center for North American Herpetology

    This book reveals the interconnections among all reptile, turtle, and amphibian species living in the pine forests from Texas to North Carolina. Moving beyond mere species identification, this innovative guide to the reptiles, turtles, and amphibians of the southeastern pine forests emphasizes their interdependent ecologies and the conservation issues facing all pine woods herpetofauna. Written for a spectrum of reptile, turtle, and amphibian enthusiasts, the book is organized by habitat from eastern Texas to North Carolina and south to the Gulf of Mexico and Florida. Included are detailed accounts, range maps, and color photos of the twenty-six native species or subspecies of frogs, salamanders, snakes, lizards, and turtles in the southern pine woods. After describing the habitat from the perspective of each individual species, Steven Reichling demonstrates the various ways in which these reptiles, turtles, and amphibians have become intertwined for mutual survival in what is frequently an environment threatened by development and lumbering. He focuses on shared adaptations, ecological interactions, and dependency on a very distinctive habitat. Many of the threats throughout the southern pine woods require urgent action to ensure the survival of some species. This guide will be of value to southeastern ecologists, herpetologists, state and federal wildlife biologists and park managers, lumber company and pine plantation personnel, as well as herpetology enthusiasts.

    Steven B. Reichling is curator at the Memphis Zoo and adjunct professor of biology at the University of Memphis.

    *****

    "This book should be read by all who care about the earth's diversity, conservation, and natural history. It is a pleasant must-read for those with interests in the southeastern United States and especially the herpetologically inclined." -- from the cover jacket, by Max A. Nickerson, curator of herpetology, Florida Museum of Natural History

    "A compelling and absorbing read, filled with information but written in a style that makes normally stale data fresh." -- from the cover jacket, by Joseph T. Collins, co-author of the Peterson Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America, director of The Center for North American Herpetology, and curator of herpetology, Sternberg Museum of Natural history, Hays, Kansas

    *****

    Orders can be made directly from the University Press of Florida at

    1-800-226-3822

    Visa, Mastercard or American Express accepted.

    *****

    CNAH Note: For greater accuracy, comprehension, and ease of use, this book uses precisely the traditional, standardized common names for North American species maintained by Collins & Taggart (2002. Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition), published by The Center for North American Herpetology (available as a pdf at the CNAH web site), and updated daily online, the only such listing available on the internet worldwide.


    Steven Reichling. Publisher: University Press of Florida, Gainesville. xxi + 252 pp.
    ISBN . $29.95 .

    Rattlesnake Raconteurs

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    8 September 2006

    BOOK REVIEW

    New Book
    RATTLESNAKE ADVENTURES: HUNTING WITH THE OLDTIMERS
    by John William Kemnitzer, Jr.

    Contrary to popular belief, rattlesnakes are generally quiet animals; thus, becoming unexpectedly aware of the presence of one of these silent serpents in close proximity to yourself will often get you wet or religious. Probably the greatest herpetological writer that ever lived, Archibold Fairly Carr, Jr. (1909-1987), put it this way:

    The thing to listen for is the slight, hissing whisper of the unhurried snake in dry brush or leaf litter. It is a sound not many people know, but one all their ancestors knew, and one likely to stir ancestral juices when suddenly you know you hear it. . . . © Archie Carr (1965)

    John Kemnitzer has gathered together a nice collection of essays in this tidy volume, all with Crotalidae as a common theme. He did a good job of it. The chapters are interesting, entertaining, and often exciting, particularly for younger herpetologists. The inclusion of Ditmars and Kauffeld in his book was to be expected, though I'm not certain whether Dick Bartlett thinks he's an oldtimer yet.

    But this book joins a long list of those devoted exclusively to venomous snakes, whether field guides, monographs, hunting adventures, or those with a specific geographic perspective. What about the lizards? And turtles? Not to mention those nocturnal creatures of moist places, the amphibians.

    Kreiger's next volume of collected works might encourage some author/editor to take a broader approach, gathering authors (both past and present) whose writing skills and experiences would make for stories (original or previously published) further afield and of (hopefully) unpredictable aspect; such herpetological writers as Darrel Frost and Ellin Beltz (frogs), Archie Carr (sea turtles), Whit Gibbons (anything that moves), Harry Greene (venomous snakes), Lee Grismer (Baja beasts), Kelly Irwin (river animals), Walt Meshaka (exotic lizards), and Jim Murphy (the always exotic zoo crowd), folks who know how to turn a phrase in a way that makes the stale fresh and the mundane exciting. Maybe include Corson Hirschfeld (co-founder of the SSAR), who now writes tremendously funny novels, but grew up with snakes and salamanders, and knows his way around them (and herpetologists). And what about Gary Larson? I'll bet there are some stunning serpent stories in his reptilian repertoire.

    This collection of essays by Kemnitzer is worth adding to your library. Get it and enjoy. And encourage the publisher to think about a second selection of writings, one that will tickle the humor bone and feature the rest of the fauna we live for.

    -- © Joseph T. Collins, 1502 Medinah Circle, Lawrence, Kansas 66047.

    *****

    Title: Rattlesnake Adventures: Hunting with the Oldtimers
    Date published: 2006
    234 pages
    Hardcover
    ISBN: 1-57524-278-8
    Price: $32.50

    Available from:

    Krieger Publishing Company
    P. O. Box 9542
    Melbourne, Florida 32902-9542
    http://wwww.krieger-publishing.com

    To order this book, call:

    1 (800) 724-0025 (toll free Mon-Fri 8am-5pm EST)
    1 (321) 724-9542 (Mon-Fri 8am-5pm EST)

    or email them at

    info@krieger-publishing.com

    John William Kemnitzer, Jr.. Krieger Publishing Company, Melbourne, Florida. 234pp.
    ISBN 1-57524-278-8. $32.50.

    Snake Shed Skin Guide

    A NEW HERPETOLOGICAL MONOGRAPH SERIES sponsored by The Center for North American Herpetology

    THE SERPENT'S CAST: A GUIDE TO IDENTIFICATION OF SHED SKINS FROM SNAKES OF THE NORTHEAST AND MID-ATLANTIC STATES
    by Brian S. Gray
    CNAH Monograph Number 1
    Publication Date: April 2006
    Softbound
    Price: $19.95 a copy postpaid via media mail

    Addressing a topic long-ignored in the herpetological literature, Brian Gray skillfully demonstrates methods by which the shed skins of snakes can be identified when discovered in the field or examined in the laboratory. The ability to make such identifications may greatly increase the number of vouchered records of snakes throughout the eastern United States and adjacent Canada, and may provide a source for additional tissue samples for molecular research on these reptiles, all without the necessity of removing a serpent from its natural environment.

    For greater comprehension and ease of use, this book adopted the standard common names of Collins & Taggart (2002, Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition).

    *****

    With the publication of this title, The Center for North American Herpetology is pleased to initiate its monograph series, produced and published in cooperation with Eric Thiss of Serpent's Tale & Zoo Book Sales.

    The CNAH monographs are designed to make available herpetological work about North America and adjoining countries in order to better serve the academic community. Titles will be issued as they become available for printing.

    For this initial offering, we are grateful to our sponsors, Touchstone Energy, Westar Energy, and the R. A. Javitch Natural History Rare Book Foundation for their support. Russ Gurley of Living Art and Bob & Sheri Ashley of ECO donated in-kind services as well. CNAH is a non-profit 501c3 foundation devoted to promoting the preservation and conservation of North American amphibians, turtles, reptiles, and crocodiles through education and information. For more information about CNAH, visit our web site at

    http://www.cnah./org

    *****

    NOTE: A discount of 20% per book is offered to all individuals, organizations, and corporations that have contributed a minimum of $25.00 to CNAH (check the CNAH Donors list on the CNAH web site to see if you qualify). Other individuals wishing to qualify for this discount should send their CNAH donation of $25.00 or more (fully tax deductible)along with their order directly to Serpents Tale (address and payment methods below).

    To order a copy of this CNAH monograph, contact:

    Serpents Tale/Zoo Book Sales
    403 Parkway Avenue North
    P. O. Box 405
    Lanesboro, Minnesota 55949-0405

    Telephone: (507)467-8733
    Webpage: www.zoobooksales.com
    E-mail or PayPal to: zoobooks@acegroup.cc
    Personal checks, money orders, Visa , Mastercard, or Paypal accepted as payment.

    Brian S. Gray. The Serpent's Tale/ZooBook Sales. 88 pp.
    ISBN 1-885209-42-8. $19.95.

    Snakes of Southeast U.S.

    Snakes of the Southeast
    by Whit Gibbons & Mike Dorcas

    Fifty-two kinds of snakes can be found in the southeastern United States, almost half of all species native to North America. Filled with more than 300 color photographs and written by two of the region's most renowned herpetologists, this is the most comprehensive educational guide to the snakes of the southeastern United States.

    At the heart of the guide are its heavily illustrated, fact-filled descriptions of each species and its habitat. Also included is a wealth of general information about the importance of snake conservation and the biology, diversity, and life cycles of snakes. Useful information about the interactions of humans and snakes is also covered: species that are likely to be found near houses, snakes as pets, what to do in case of a snake bite, and more.

    Clearly written, well designed, and fun to use, the guide will promote a better understanding of the habitat needs of, and environmental challenges to, this fascinating group of animals.

    About the Authors: Whit Gibbons, an ecologist at the Savannah River Ecology Laboratory, has written over a dozen popular and scientific books and booklets on the reptiles, turtles, crocodilians, and amphibians of the United States. Mike Dorcas, a biologist at Davidson College, is author of "A Guide to the Snakes of North Carolina." Gibbons and Dorcas are coauthors of "North American Water Snakes."

    For greater comprehension and ease of use (both among herpetologists and the general public), this booklet adopts the common names as they are listed in "Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians (Fifth Edition)" by Joseph T. Collins & Travis W. Taggart (2002).

    CNAH highly recommends this book.

    To order the book, contact:

    University of Georgia Press
    Toll Free: 1-800-266-5842

    Published May 2005
    7.5 x 10 in.
    335 photos; 1 table; 52 maps
    ISBN 0-8203-2652-6 paperback
    $22.95

    Gibbons, J. Whitfield & Michael Dorcas. University of Georgia Press, Athens. 253 pp.
    ISBN 0-8203-2652-6. $22.95.

    Southeast US Anurans

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    4 December 2008

    New Salientian Script

    FROGS & TOADS OF THE SOUTHEAST

    by Mike Dorcas & Whit Gibbons

    250 color images, 45 maps, vi + 238 pages
    Published: September 2008
    Cost: $22.95 US
    ISBN 08 203 2922 3 paper

    With more than forty native and introduced species of frogs and toads occurring in the southeastern United States, the region represents the heart of frog and toad diversity in the country. Renowned herpetologists Mike Dorcas and Whit Gibbons provide us with the most comprehensive and authoritative, yet accessible and fun-to-read, guide to these sometimes wet, sometimes warty, wonders of nature.

    Dorcas and Gibbons enumerate the distinguishing characteristics of frogs and toads, including how they are different from other amphibians and the differences between a frog and a toad. Also discussed are the morphology of frogs and toads, the main groups to be found in the Southeast, and their habitats. Individual species accounts contain a physical description of the species plus information about distribution and habitat, behavior and activity, food and feeding, predators and defense, calls and vocalizations, reproduction and description of eggs and tadpoles, and conservation. Accompanying each account are photographs illustrating typical adults and variations and distribution maps for the Southeast and the United States.

    Given the recent worldwide decline in amphibian populations and increasing scientific and popular concern for what these declines mean for all other organisms, Frogs and Toads of the Southeast will appeal to people of all ages and levels of knowledge interested in natural history and conservation. The guide will help foster the growing interest in frogs and toads as well as cultivate a desire to protect and conserve these fascinating amphibians and their habitats.

    Available from:

    University of Georgia Press
    330 Research Drive
    Athens, Georgia 30602-4901

    or email

    books@ugapress.uga.edu

    or call

    1-800-266-5842

    Mike Dorcas & Whit Gibbons. University of Georgia Press, Athens. vi + 238pp.
    ISBN 08 203 2922 3. $22.95.

    Stalking the Serpent

    STALKING THE PLUMED SERPENT
    by D. Bruce Means
    ix + 238 pages, Hardbound, ISBN 978-1-56164-433-9
    $23.00 (shipping and handling included)
    Pineapple Press, Sarasota, Florida

    Bitten by an Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake while alone on a Florida barrier island
    Wrestling a monster Alligator Snapping Turtle 20 feet deep in the Apalachicola River

    These are but a couple of the adventures in herpetology that Bruce Means has encountered, indeed welcomed, in his life as a naturalist. Based on his more than 40 years of field research, Bruce reveals the biological complexity and exquisite beauty of animals that he has studied all over the world. Most people loathe reptiles, turtles, crocodilians, and amphibians, but Means paints stories of his love and admiration for creatures that go bump in the night. The author is the world expert on the Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake, which he calls the "Gentle Ben" of venomous snakes, as it prefers to hide and not rattle. We learn that the Alligator Snapping Turtle is a big, hulking turtle intent on luring fishes with its wormlike tongue. We find out that though many Southern woodsmen have reported the Cottonmouth chasing them, this behavior is actually just a snake’s version of bluffing. A little further from his Florida Panhandle home, in Costa Rica, Means manages to find the rare and deadly Bushmaster, but his adventure is further heightened by the eruption of a volcano -- where his two young sons are hiking. In Australia, he searches for a breeding pair of "roughies," the rare Rough-scaled Python, as well as the "fiercey," reputed to be the world’s deadliest terrestrial snake. In Mexico, he stalks the rattlesnake that might have served as the model for the mythical "plumed serpent" of Mayan art, always shown with rattles on the tail. Through his eyes and experiences, Means hopes that readers will gain a new appreciation for animals without fur or feathers—animals called herps, or creeping-crawling things. This book is about his love for herps, i.e., herpetophilia, a subdivision of E. O. Wilson’s biophilia.

    Four distinguished biologists have this to say about Stalking the Plumed Serpent:

    Bruce Means is a scientist -- the real thing. His painstaking (and on occasion, painful) studies on the natural history of the eastern diamondback rattlesnake have made him the leading expert on that important species. He is more than a scientific natural historian, however, He is an adventurer of the old school. Means’s career, like that of other master naturalists, has been a collage of what he refers to as ‘small experiences of the magnificence of nature.’ To read his essays and examine his photographs is to understand how much of the living world remains to be discovered, and how exciting the effort will continue to be for those who choose to join him. -- from the Foreword by E. O. Wilson.

    From the opening paragraph describing the author’s own venomous snake bite in a remote area to the Australian Outback, this is a very compelling book, hard to put down once you are into it. Bruce Means lives life the way all of us wish we could, traveling in search of unusual (and sometimes dangerous) creatures in all the right and wrong places. Making discoveries is the stuff of a biologist’s career, and Means made many of them, the best of which are detailed in this wonderful book of stories about the natural environment and the exciting beasts that are found therein. -- from the cover jacket by Joseph T. Collins, Director, The Center for North American Herpetology, Lawrence, Kansas, co-author, of the Peterson Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of Eastern and Central North America, and Herpetologist with the Kansas Biological survey, University of Kansas.

    These captivating stories, based on the personal experiences of Bruce Means, bring the many worlds of wonder found in wildlife adventures to a premier level. His firsthand accounts highlight the inherent value of our natural heritage, including the non-cuddly, from Alligator Snapping Turtles to salamanders to earthworms. Told by a true naturalist, the book will be persuasive, even to the timid, that even the Eastern Diamondback Rattlesnake is a national treasure worth having around. -- from the cover jacket by Whit Gibbons, Professor Emeritus of Ecology, University of Georgia, and author of Their Blood Runs Cold: Adventures with Reptiles and Amphibians.

    As a true field scientist, Bruce Means has escaped the lure of our almost irresistible anthropomorphic tendency to be only interested in animal life that is considered "popular" to humans. To him, frogs are as important as pandas. As you follow his adventures in some of the most remote parts of the world, you’ll know that he has contributed to one of the most important missions of humanity. He is a rare scientific spokesperson for the natural world, helping people care about its continued existence. -- from the cover jacket by Jim Fowler, Honorary President of the Explorer’s Club, former Co-Host of Mutual of Omaha’s Wild Kingdom.

    *****

    Personally inscribed and signed copies (hardback) can be purchased from the author for $23.00 (shipping and handling included). Checks should be made out to Bruce Means and sent to 1313 Milton Street, Tallahassee, Florida 32303.

    Stalking the Plumed Serpent also can be purchased in bookstores and online through

    amazon.com

    *****
    CNAH Note: For greater accuracy, comprehension, and ease of use, this book generally uses the traditional, standardized common names for North American species maintained by Collins & Taggart (2002. Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition), published by The Center for North American Herpetology (available as a pdf at the CNAH web site), and updated daily online, the only such listing available on the internet worldwide.

    D. Bruce Means. Pineapple Press, Sarasota, Florida. ix + 238 pp.
    ISBN 978-1-56164-433-9. $23.00.

    Texas Snakes A Field Guide

    NEW BOOK: Texas Snakes. A Field Guide

    James R. Dixon & the late John E. Werler
    Drawings by Regina Levoy

    From the legendary Western Diamondback Rattlesnake to the brightly-colored Texas Coral Snake to the harmless New Mexico Blind Snake, Texas has a greater diversity of snake species than any other state in the country. Recognizing the need for a complete field guide to identifying and understanding the snakes of Texas, two of the state's most respected herpetologists wrote this definitive reference to all species of Texas snakes.

    "Texas Snakes: A Field Guide" has all the resources you need to identify snakes in the wild and in your yard: 110 full-color, close-up photos that show every snake, as well as 39 detailed line drawings; 110 range maps; up-to-date species accounts that describe each snake's appearance, look-alikes, size, and habitat; a checklist of all Texas snakes and a key to the species; reliable information on poisonous snakes and preventing and treating snakebites; concise guides to snake conservation, classification, and identification.

    The late John E. Werler retired in 1992 from the Houston Zoological Gardens, where he served for 36 years, first as general curator and later as general manager. James R. Dixon is Professor Emeritus in the Department of Wildlife and Fisheries Sciences at Texas A&M University.

    For greater comprehension and ease of use (both among herpetologists and the general public), this booklet generally adopts common names as they are listed in "Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians (Fifth Edition)" by Joseph T. Collins & Travis W. Taggart (2002). A quick perusal of the new Texas book shows that nearly 80% of the common names used are exactly as they appear in Collins & Taggart; the remaining 20% primarily retain the awkward and unnecessary hyphen and -ed endings abandoned by most herpetologists over a quarter century ago. But above all, traditional names such as Rat Snake, Coral Snake, and Blind Snake remain two words, as they always have been and should be.

    CNAH highly recommends this book.

    To order this book, go to:

    http://www.utexaspress.com

    Dixon, James. R. & John E. Werler. University of Texas Press, Austin. 384pp.
    ISBN 0-292-70675-8. $19.95.

    Threatened Amphibians

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    3 November 2008

    THREATENED AMPHIBIANS OF THE WORLD

    Edited by Simon N. Stuart, Michael Hoffmann, Janice S. Chanson, Neil A. Cox, Richard J. Berridge, Pavithra Ramani and Bruce E. Young

    Publisher: Lynx Edicions, Barcelona, Spain
    2008
    xv + 776 pages
    $124.00
    ISBN 10: 84-96553-41-8
    ISBN 13: 978-84-96553-41-5

    Amphibians are facing an extinction crisis, but getting to the facts has been difficult. Threatened Amphibians of the World is a visual journey through the first-ever comprehensive assessment of the conservation status of the world's 6,000 known species of frogs, toads, salamanders, and caecilians. All of the approximately 1,900 species known to be threatened with extinction are covered, including a description of threats to each species and an evaluation of conservation measures in place or needed. Each entry includes a photograph or illustration of the species where available, a distribution map, and detailed information on range, population and habitat and ecology. Introductory chapters present a detailed analysis of the results, complemented by a series of short essays written by many of the world's leading herpetologists. Appendices include annotated lists of lower risk species and a country-by-country listing of threatened amphibians.

    *****

    Available in Canada and the United States from:

    Lynx Edicions
    c/o Postal Express and Fulfillment Center, Inc
    265 Sunrise Highway Suite 1 #252
    Rockville Center, New York 11570
    lynx@hbw.com
    http://www.hbw.com/lynx/en/lynx-edicions/

    Simon N. Stuart, Michael Hoffmann, Janice S. Chanson, Neil A. Cox, Richard J. Berridge, Pavithra Ramani and Bruce E. Young. Lynx Edicions, Barcelona, Spain. xv + 776 pp.
    ISBN 10: 84-96553-41-8. $$124.00.

    Timber Rattlesnake Book

    NEWS RELEASE
    The Center for North American Herpetology
    Lawrence, Kansas
    http://www.cnah.org
    14 February 2008

    TIMBER RATTLESNAKES IN VERMONT AND NEW YORK
    Biology, History, and the Fate of an Endangered Species

    JON FURMAN

    Paper, 12 color illus., 8 halftones

    The fascinating, definitive chronicle of the Timber Rattlesnake and its fate in the northeastern U. S.

    Soundly anchored in the latest scientific data, Furman proffers an accessible and engaging account of contemporary fieldwork and first-person interviews with herpetologists and old-time bounty hunters. For expert and lay readers interested in snakes, northeastern fauna and natural history, conservation, and endangered species, this volume clearly explicates the Timber Rattlesnake's biology as well as what happens and what to do when one bites. It also explores the troubling decline of the northeastern population caused by bounty hunting between the 1890s and the early 1970s, other past and present threats to the species' survival, and what measures are being taken—and additional ones that must be taken--to ensure that Timber Rattlesnakes survive and thrive in the northeastern United States. Historical and contemporary illustrations bring these reptiles and their world to life. Timber Rattlesnakes in Vermont & New York shines a new light on a maligned and misunderstood species.

    "All in all, I found the book interesting and entertaining; the author highlights the critical intersections of rattlesnake conservation with human psychology and politics. This book will be an important contribution outlining the regional evolution of social and political attitudes- involving changes that may, or may not, come just in time to save these magnificent animals."
    -- JAMES H. HARDING, Instructor/Herpetology Specialist, Department of Zoology, Michigan State University Museum

    *****

    To order a copy of this excellent work, contact:

    University Press of New England
    One Court Street, Suite 250
    Lebanon, New Hampshire 03766

    sherri.l.strickland@dartmouth.edu
    (800) 639.6102 ext. 238
    (603) 448-9429 fax

    http://www.upne.com

    *****

    For greater accuracy, comprehension, and ease of use, this book uses the traditional, standardized common names for North American species maintained by Collins & Taggart (2002. Standard Common and Current Scientific Names for North American Amphibians, Turtles, Reptiles, and Crocodilians. Fifth Edition), published by The Center for North American Herpetology (available as a pdf at the CNAH web site), and updated daily online, the only such listing available online worldwide.

    *****

    Furman, Jon. University Press of New England, Lebanon, New Hampshire. 248 pp.
    ISBN 978-1-58465-656-2. $24.95.

© 1994-2009, CNAH - Director - Joseph T. Collins Programmer/Webmaster - Travis W. Taggart
Accessed at: 7/4/2009 7:36:15 PM CST.