"Fifty-nine native mammal species currently live in Indiana, and eight species have been extirpated there. Whitaker (Indiana State Univ.) has produced a handsome, handy field guide for these midwestern mammals. This pocket guide has descriptions of all these species, including color animal and skull photos and distribution maps for each. Photos of habitats, trails, cuttings, burrows, nests, roosts, lodges, dams, mounds, pellets, and food items augment some descriptions . . . . The guide's sections cover landscape and habitats, mammal ecology, scientific names, mammal identification, instructions on using the keys, identification keys, and species accounts (by family). The keys include helpful drawings and photos to illustrate identifying features, though some figures could have been described in more detail in their legends. Each species account covers taxonomy, distinguishing features and measurements, skull, dental formula, habitat, food, reproduction, range, habits, and comments. The guide concludes with a metric measurements conversion table, comprehensive 20-page glossary, extensive citation list, and relatively brief index. The book's stated purpose is to help people identify Indianan mammals, and the combination of text, photos, and maps therein should allow any reader interested in midwestern mammals to do so. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Academic and general audiences, all levels; mammalogy professionals. Choice"
Senior Scientist and Curator of Mammals, National Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution - Don E. Wilson
John Whitaker is certainly the person to write this book! His long career dedicated to study of the mammals in Indiana and his experience in writing books such as this put him in excellent position to author this book.
E. J. Sargis
Fifty-nine native mammal species currently live in Indiana, and eight species have been extirpated there. Whitaker (Indiana State Univ.) has produced a handsome, handy field guide for these midwestern mammals. This pocket guide has descriptions of all these species, including color animal and skull photos and distribution maps for each. Photos of habitats, trails, cuttings, burrows, nests, roosts, lodges, dams, mounds, pellets, and food items augment some descriptions . . . . The guide's sections cover landscape and habitats, mammal ecology, scientific names, mammal identification, instructions on using the keys, identification keys, and species accounts (by family). The keys include helpful drawings and photos to illustrate identifying features, though some figures could have been described in more detail in their legends. Each species account covers taxonomy, distinguishing features and measurements, skull, dental formula, habitat, food, reproduction, range, habits, and comments. The guide concludes with a metric measurements conversion table, comprehensive 20-page glossary, extensive citation list, and relatively brief index. The book's stated purpose is to help people identify Indianan mammals, and the combination of text, photos, and maps therein should allow any reader interested in midwestern mammals to do so. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Academic and general audiences, all levels; mammalogy professionals. — Choice
E. J. Sargis]]>
Fifty-nine native mammal species currently live in Indiana, and eight species have been extirpated there. Whitaker (Indiana State Univ.) has produced a handsome, handy field guide for these midwestern mammals. This pocket guide has descriptions of all these species, including color animal and skull photos and distribution maps for each. Photos of habitats, trails, cuttings, burrows, nests, roosts, lodges, dams, mounds, pellets, and food items augment some descriptions . . . . The guide's sections cover landscape and habitats, mammal ecology, scientific names, mammal identification, instructions on using the keys, identification keys, and species accounts (by family). The keys include helpful drawings and photos to illustrate identifying features, though some figures could have been described in more detail in their legends. Each species account covers taxonomy, distinguishing features and measurements, skull, dental formula, habitat, food, reproduction, range, habits, and comments. The guide concludes with a metric measurements conversion table, comprehensive 20-page glossary, extensive citation list, and relatively brief index. The book's stated purpose is to help people identify Indianan mammals, and the combination of text, photos, and maps therein should allow any reader interested in midwestern mammals to do so. Summing Up: Highly recommended. Academic and general audiences, all levels; mammalogy professionals. Choice