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nissan rogue repair service manualThe 13-digit and 10-digit formats both work. Please try again.Please try again.Please try again. The new edition of this definitive guide reflects 25 years’ worth of changes in our knowledge of reptiles and amphibians. It includes descriptions of 122 newly recognized or recently established non-native species, updated maps, and new figures and photos. Color illustrations and drawings show key details for accurate identification. More than 100 color photographs and 322 color distribution maps accompany the species descriptions. Clear and concise species accounts provide key characteristics, similar species, habitats, and ranges, as well as subspecies, voice descriptions, and conservation status. This edition will be a crucial resource for professional and amateur herpetologists, naturalists, outdoor enthusiasts, and students. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Register a free business account It includes descriptions of 122 newly recognized or recently established non-native species, updated maps, and new figures and photos. Clear and concise species accounts provide key characteristics, comparisons with similar species, and descriptions of habitats and ranges. Some also list subspecies, describe voices, and note conservation status. This edition is a crucial resource for professional and amateur herpetologists, naturalists, outdoor enthusiasts, and students. Sponsored by the National Audubon Society, the National Wildlife Federation, and the Roger Tory Peterson Institute DR. ROBERT POWELL is professor of biology at Avila University in Kansas City, Missouri. The late ROGER CONANT was director and curator of reptiles at the Philadelphia Zoo.He has written hundreds of scientific articles and notes (many with student coauthors) and is coauthor or coeditor of seven books, including A Key to the Herpetofauna of the Continental United States and Canada (1998, 2nd edition 2012; with Joseph T.http://gammatradings.com/userfiles/craftsman-nail-gun-manual.xml
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Collins and Errol D. Hooper). ROGER CONANT was an American herpetologist, author, and conservationist. The late JOSEPH T. COLLINS was the herpetologist with the Kansas Biological Survey and emeritus at the University of Kansas Natural History Museum, where he worked for thirty years. He was founder and director of the Center for North American Herpetology and author of many articles and books, most recently Amphibians, Reptiles, and Turtles in Kansas (2010; with Suzanne L. Collins and Travis W. Taggart). To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness. Please try again later.The previous edition, first published in 1991, included a few recently discovered native species (for example, the Pigeon Mountain salamander) and various established exotics (mainly lizards) not yet known when the 1975 edition was published, and also introduced clearer, more colorful and detailed range maps included with each species account rather than placing them in a section at the back. This latest edition includes all that but also incorporates many recent taxonomic changes, even more detailed range maps, and adds some newly discovered native species (one notable case is the patch-nosed salamander, a small species found in a tiny part of northeastern Georgia that somehow evaded discovery until 2009), and many newly differentiated cryptic look-alike species, as well as many more established non-native species that have been recently recorded, in large part from Florida. I was very excited to see this long awaited 4th edition and the impressive wealth of new information it contains, and so considering this as well as the way I feel about this book in general, I am giving it 4 stars, though I had really hoped to make it 5.http://zabulgaria.org/userfiles/craftsman-national-building-cost-manual.xml One major disappointment for me is that, apparently to reduce the number of pages, many of the old species accounts have been condensed, and some material from the previous edition, like the chapters on field herping, care in captivity, etc., has been omitted. Also, the classic illustrations on the color plates have been reduced in scale for some reason, apparently in order to accommodate the new color tabs along the margins without increasing the number of plates. I am rather puzzled by some of the tinkering that has taken place in this regard, and think some errors were made. For example, on Plate 6, the Yonahlossee salamander, which is the largest of the woodland salamander group, now looks only about the same size as its cousins like the slimy and red-cheeked. (By the way, it should be mentioned that no new illustrations were added to the existing plates, although many of the old illustrations were shuffled around. The newly discovered species are represented under their accounts in photographs.) I personally would have preferred for these omissions not to have been made, even if the book would have been 100 pages longer (as was the 3rd edition). But I still feel that this new edition is a must-have for the library of any herp enthusiast, and heartily recommend it if you want the latest cutting edge information about our herpetofauna, although if you are like me, you will still want to keep the previous edition handy as well.However, the 4th edition has really had the life sucked out of it with 122 less pages than the 3rd edition, all the information on natural history and behavior removed, and the color plates reduced in size. The publisher and layout designers are probably responsible for most of the downgrades rather than the author. Allegedly the behavioral text “fell victim to the huge increase in the number of species and the need to keep this book small enough to take into the field”.https://labroclub.ru/blog/bose-wave-dab-radio-manual However they could add 100 pages of behavioral text and still keep it under 600 pages, shorter that the 3rd ed.Perhaps amphibians and reptiles should be covered in separate volumes in the future allowing for some natural history information to be included. Or maybe the publishers should put substance over style and make more economical use of page space. Error: The two subspecies of the Four-lined Skink (Plestiodon tetragrammus) are confused (page 312). The correct arrangement is - Long-lined Skink or Four-lined Skink, Plestiodon tetragrammus tetragrammus Baird, 1858 in south Texas and Tamaulipas, Mexico (type locality Matamoros, Mexico). Illustrations: This edition has been reformatted from previous editions with amphibians first, followed by reptiles. The classic color plates by Isabelle Conant have been reduced in size to make room for color coded page margins and divided into six groups preceding the species accounts for each order. Although the color coded page margins are admittedly useful, this could have been accomplished with smaller color margins at the bottom like the other new editions of Peterson Field Guides, or a much thinner margin down the side, without reducing to size of the plates. The smaller plates are a significant decline in the usefulness and overall appeal of the book. New species and recent invasive species not in earlier editions are illustrated here with photographs appearing throughout the accounts. Maps: The maps have been updated and revised. Generally they appear more precise and accurate although several seem to be too fussy for such a small scale (e.g. crawfish frogs, page 149; slender glass lizard, page 255). The grouping of different species on one map can often be informative, not just for distribution, but for expediting identifications by quickly ruling out similar species that do not occur in your area.http://www.compass-it.com/images/canon-powershot-sx230-manual-focus.pdf They can also illuminate relationships of closely related species (species groups or sister taxa) when shown together on a single map (e. g. neotenic brook salamanders page 61; American toad with the Houston toad page 118). Several opportunities to map closely related and similar looking species in meaningful combinations were missed and instead appear in seemingly arbitrary combinations with other members of their genus. Examples include the crevice spiny lizard (Sceloporus poinsetti) and the blue spiny lizard (S. cyanogenys), two large, collared, blue bellied lizards, both members of the torquatus species group occurring in Texas, although their ranges do not overlap. A few other errors have been pointed out by other reviewers here. I would not want to underestimate what a monumental undertaking revising a volume like this would be, but it could be better.El libro presenta, en su cuarta edicion, mas de 500 especies, incluyendo especies no nativas. Presenta ilustraciones de gran calidad para cada ejemplar mencionado, donde incluyen en ciertas ocasiones variantes en patrones o variantes por dimorfismo sexual, asi como mapas con distribucion de cada especie. Como su nombre lo dice la guia abarca el centro y este de Norteamerica, refiriendose a Estados Unidos principalmente, sin embargo, tambien incluyen la distribucion de diversos reptiles del noreste de Mexico. Esta sin duda es una de las mejores guias de campo para cualquier biologo u otras personas interesadas en la herpetologia. Lamentablemente el envio por Amazon Mexico me dejo un cierto sabor amargo, el libro venia sin ningun tipo de plastico o envoltura que lo protegiera y debido a eso la cubierta del libro presenta danos muy perceptibles, principalmente en las esquinas dobladas y bordes magullados, no es la primera vez que pasa. The 13-digit and 10-digit formats both work. Please try again.Please try again.Please try again. Used: GoodThe covers are intact with some slight wear. The dust jacket, if applicable, is intact with some slight wear. The spine has creasing. Pages may include notes, folds and highlighting. Thanks for supporting our Mission at GoodwillThe 656 full-color illustrations and 384 drawings show key details for accurate identification. More than 100 color photographs and 333 color photographs and 333 color distribution maps accompany the species descriptions. Then you can start reading Kindle books on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required. Register a free business account The Peterson Identification System has been called the greatest invention since binoculars. He was founder and director of the Center for North American Herpetology and author of many articles and books, most recently Amphibians, Reptiles, and Turtles in Kansas (2010; with Suzanne L. Collins and Travis W. Taggart). ROGER CONANT was an American herpetologist, author, and conservationist. Likely to be confused only with Snapping Turtles. Young (Pl. 3): Brown, shell exceedingly rough; tail very long. A curious pink process on floor of mouth resembles a worm, wriggles like one, and serves as a lure for fish.Full content visible, double tap to read brief content. Videos Help others learn more about this product by uploading a video. Upload video To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. It also analyzes reviews to verify trustworthiness. Please try again later. trishaa 5.0 out of 5 stars I ran across this incredible little book that has come in handy more than once in my search for the correct name of the reptile that scared the begebbers out of me. Last year my Purple Martins were causing such a racket and circling their house and as I was walking within two feet of it, I looked up. I'm here to tell you I let out a screech that could be heard a quarter mile away. My husband, my hero and white knight, came to the rescue, got a ladder and hooked it with the garden hoe and pulled it down. The Martins left the next day as it was time for them to leave anyway. I identified the snake as a bull snake from my trusty little book. I've identified many frogs and lizards with it, too. The book is quite informative on each habitat and colored maps showing where they range. My only complaint, or I should say wish, is that I would have liked to see more colored pictures. But then I would be lugging around a 10 pound book, wouldn't I. I'm waiting to see if the Martins will come back this year or if they were as freaked as I was.I have used that book frequently since then, including using it as a textbook in a college-level herpetology course. This book is an upgrade of the original, and many of the photographs are the same ones used in the original. The original book had mostly color photos but some black and white, and the former black and white photos have been colorized in this edition. This book is organized in a different way, and I especially like that the range maps are placed adjacent to the species descriptions rather than in a separate part of the book as they were in the original. Many of the scientific names have changed since this book was published in 1998, but the animals remain the same, whatever names we think they should have. I will probably still prefer to use my battered original, but I'll use this new one, too.It's rugged: the pages are thick and will withstand repeated thumbing through. Caveat: for a chubby little paperback, it's pretty hefty, about 2 lbs, so it might not be something you want in a fanny pack... Near the front are the familiar comparison pages with illustrations of animals in a given taxonomic group. This is intended to help distinguish one similar species from another related species. It's tried-and-true. It works OK, but if you are new to field guides and haven't seen this sort of illustration, you should be aware that each drawing is a composite, and that individual animals in the wild do have variations--sometimes significant ones. These pages work for me, but might not for a person just starting out. In addition, most of the drawings are necessarily on the small side. However, be aware that in the SA pages, not every animal's essay is accompanied by a photo. Each species account has a map, showing where a species--and its related or subspecies hang out. I like this book--it's the classic sort of field guide that is pretty mindless to use. And, I have always been able to tell one species from another---which means I've been able to leave the poisonous snakes be, and pick up or play with only the others.:)The layout is typical; there are color plates of the species and some written commentary and advice on field herping in the front of the book, followed by species accounts and range maps. Fairly typical layout. However, the way in which subspecies were handled is new, at least to me, and incredibly practical and useful. Those subspecies that are readily distinguishable in the field are given full seperate entries and individual range maps, which is particularly nice with certain large species groups (milk and king snakes, Pitouphis, etc.) My only complaint, and it is minor, is that the taxonomy is old and very conservitive, even given when this book was published. Pitouphis is treated as monospecific genus in the book, whereas it's currently regarded as having several species, and Elaphe is still used for a good many of the colubrids that have since been reassigned. This, however, has little bearing onto the practicality of this field guide, or it's usefullness for ID'ing animals. The layout is logical, the subspecies are handled well, the color plates are excellent, and the book is solid enough to actually be used in the field. This continues the Peterson tradition of great reptile guides, and actually improves on it.Many look so similar but of a different species. So, after looking at the field guides offered on the Amazon site, I decided to give it a try. I like the color spreads and data, of how you can cross reference using colors, shapes and thumb tabs. If you do a like of wildlife photos.you'll NEED these guides for making positive ID's. A worthy purchase, indeed!In this book you find all the species of reptiles and amphibians of the west US and Canada, the keys to their identification as well as the description of amphibians eggs and larvae and sea reptiles. The drawing are beautiful and perfect in details, also the photos are well done and can contribute to identificate the animals. I advice to buy both the Western and Eastern so you can cover the whole North America. The only drawback is in the Eastern book where the plates are sometimes too crowded and the drawings, as a result, are smaller then the western. In conclusion this is a great buy for all the people interested in herps!One of the best on the subject. Well illustrated and accompanied by clear descriptions. Highly recommended for the herp enthusiast.This book is especially useful in identifying snakes, lizards, turtles, etc., and knowing what to do in case of a confrontation (for example, identifying a rattlesnake, and knowing how to be safe around them). Please buy this book, especially those who have a cottage. Even perusing through it every once in a while will really help you understand the environment you live in, and will help you take precautions, stay safe, and learn a LOT!Package arrived within two days of ordering. The new edition of this definitive guide reflects 25 years’ worth of changes in our knowledge of reptiles and amphibians. This edition will be a crucial resource for professional and amateur herpetologists, naturalists, outdoor enthusiasts, and students. He has written hundreds of scientific articles and notes (many with student coauthors) and is coauthor or coeditor of seven books, including A Key to the Herpetofauna of the Continental United States and Canada (1998, 2nd edition 2012; with Joseph T. Collins and Errol D. Hooper). He was founder and director of the Center for North American Herpetology and author of many articles and books, most recently Amphibians, Reptiles, and Turtles in Kansas (2010; with Suzanne L. Collins and Travis W. Taggart). In fairness to the reader, I must begin this review with a confession: I’m a big f an of field guides. I like to identify what I encounter when af ield and, as a visually - oriented learner, I find the heavy reli ance on illustra- tions in field guides particularly appealing. Fu rther, I marvel at an artist’s ability to render realistic drawings or paintings of lifeforms simply using pencil, pen or paint. The drawback to th e little Golden animal and plant identification guides is their limited scope and their expressed focus on common or most-often-encountered species. What happens when one en- counters an uncommon species not included within the guide. The result can be misidentification as was amusingly recounted in Ronn Altig’s enjoyable book, Toads Are Nice People. Most Peterson field guides provide more comprehensive coverage than the little Golden guides by including every species within the geographic range covered by the guide. Exceptions include certain plant and invertebrate groups that are too speciose to permit comprehensive coverage in a regional guide. Accurate identification of species in such large groups, even at the state level, requires capacious tomes. Thankfully, the two vertebrate groups of principal interest to readers of the Bulletin - - - amphibi- ans and reptiles -- - can be covered comprehensively at the geo- graphic level of a Peterson field guide. My first Peterson guide, entitled A Field Guide to Reptiles and Amphibians of the United States a nd Canada East of the 100th Meridian, is a well-worn, hardback, fifth printing of the first edition, copyrighted in 1958 when I was just a toddler. I don’t recall when I got it, but it was certainly sometime during my youth. Later in life I acquired the second and third editions of the Guide. Naturally, my first copy has immeasu rable senti- mental value. The first question that comes to the forefront when a new edition of a book is published is whether it differs sufficiently from the previous edition to warrant purchase. To assist with your decision, I will focus this review on comparing the new edition with the third edition of the Guid e. Please note that I refer to the third edition publish ed in 1991, not the “revised and expanded” version published in 1998. I did not acquire the “revised and expand ed” edition because the text was unchanged from the orig- inal third edition. The first notable change with publication of the fourth edition is authorship. Ro ger Conant was, as perhaps all readers of the Bulletin know, the original author of the Peterson reptile and amphibian field guide and sole author of the first two editions. The third edition was co-authored with Joseph Collins. Both gentlemen have passed away, Roger Conant in 2003 and Joseph Collins in 2012 (Adler, 2004, 2012), so an additional author - - - Robert Powell - - - was recru ited to update the field guide. Dr. Powell teaches biology at Avila University, Kansas City, Missouri, and specializes in the herpetofauna of the West Indies. He previously co-authored Key to Herpetofauna of the Contin ental United States and Canada, uniquely qualifying him for the task of bringing the fourth edition of the Peterson field guide up to date. The d ecision to list Powell as lead author, however, is unexpected. After all, the bulk of the fourth edition is comprised of text originally penned by Roger Conant. I don’t know what thought process resulted in the decision to bump Conant to second author, bu t I would have preferred that he retained primary authorship. Physically (height, width, thickness, and weight), the fourth edition looks and feels much like the third. Open it up, however, and one immediately notices a change in paper (from mat-finish to glossy) and typeface (different font and lighter print). The range maps have also changed, both in location and color. Rather than being assembled together near the end of the book, range maps are now scattered throughout the book and, typi- cally, occur on or near the same page as the corresponding species account. In previous editions, geographic ranges of closely-related taxa that were plotted on the same black and white range map were distinguished from each other by various forms of shading, stippling, cross-hatching, etc. Ranges of different taxa are now shown by the use of different colors. The location of the illustration plates has also been rearranged. They are no longer assembled all together in the center of the book, but are now scattered throughout, organized by order. For exam- ple, all the turtle plates are now grouped together at the begin- ning of the turtle section. Perhaps it’s a conditio n of my aging eyes, but I find the sheen of the glossy paper rather annoying and the faint print exhausting to read. And, althou gh I do prefer the new arrangement of range maps, I do miss the ability to 94 As a general rule, the use of color to exhibit a taxon’s range works well. Different colors are especially usef ul to distinguish the distribution of a limited-range species when completely encompassed by the range of a wide-ranging species. For exam- ple, the restricted range of the Shenandoah Mountain Salaman- der depicted in gray is readily distinguished from the surround- ing range of the Valley and Ridge Salamander depicted in red. However, in cases where numerous colors are required to distin- guish the ranges of multiple species mapped together, the colors used are sometimes difficult to distinguish. The range map of the 13 species of slimy salamanders is a good example; several colors are difficult to differentiate. The first and foremost mission of any field guide is to facili- tate the identification of a specimen at hand, and Peterson field guides do an impressive job. The grouping of similar-appearing animals on the same photographic plate is a hallmark of every edition of the Peterson reptile and amphibian guide and is an outstanding identification tool. Unfortunately, rather than amending the plates with images of species newly added to the fourth edition, these species are illustrated with photographs scattered throughout the text. In some cases, this may render correct identification less likely. Identification of a species using the Guide starts with examination of the illustration plates. Small, slender, yellowish salamanders having a pair of dark dorsolateral stripes are illustrated on Plate 3. Patch- nosed Salamanders are not included on Plate 3 with similar- appearing Two-lined Salamanders. Further, there is no mention of Patch-nosed Salamanders in the Similar Species section of any Two-lined Salamander account. So, unless one flips through the entire salamander section of the book, a Patch-nosed Sala- mander could be misidentified as a Two-lined Salamander. Because newly-established, non-native lizard species are so numerous, merging their illustrations on plates would have greatly enhanced the usability of the Guide. Using the fourth edition of the Guide, a person attempting to identify a lizard may have to leaf through the entire 87-page lizard section to match an image with a specimen. And, in the case of the com- mon house gecko, the reader will have to search the bulk of the book to find the photograph that appears on p age 448. This image is separated from the corresponding species account by an incredible 187 pages. I certainly hope the publisher will con- sider improving the usefulness of the next edition by updating the illustration plates. Several fourth edition plate images are arranged differently from the third edition, some for better, some not. I like, for example, the decision to place all toads together on a single plate. This should facilitate the identification of a toad in-hand. Other new arrangements, however, ma y render species identifi- cation more challenging. Consider the often-confused Mud- puppy and Hellbender. Previously, these two taxa were illus- trated on the same plate allowing for direct comparison. Now, images of Hellbenders are shown on Plate 2, separated from images of Mudpuppies shown on Plate 6, by seven pages. In another example (there are many), Painted Turtles and Red- eared Sliders, two similar-looking species that often bask to- gether and previously were illustrated on the same plate, are now illustrated on different plates, separated by five pages. Illustration rearrangements have, in some cases, also separated closely related taxa on different plates. For example, American Water Frogs (formally “True Frogs”), previously all illustrated on one plate, are now illustrated on two adjacent plates. Those of us accustomed to previous editions of the Guide will require time to acclimate to these new arrangements. Changes have also been made to the text, principally in the form of deletions. Gone are the sections on catching and main- taining amphibians and reptiles in captivity. These were omitted, as explained in the Introduction, “to accommodate accounts of newly discovered or described species” (the number of species covered has increased from 379 to 501; mostly due to the estab- lishment of non-native species and taxonomic rearrangements based on molecular techniques). Considerable script was also deleted from species accounts to save space (as was mourned by Dr. Powell in the Acknowledgm ents section). Personally, I would rather have seen some of the deleted text preserved and extrane- ous photographs left out. Space lost to full-page photo graphs and supplementary photographs of species already depicted on plates could have been used to retain some original language. In the Introduction, it is stated in b old text that an animal that has been kept in captivity, “even for short periods” should never be released. This statement is followed by “This is especially true of non-native species.” I wholeheartedly agree that non-native species should never, under any circumstance, be released. I am also aware of the potential to introduce disease into the environ- ment by the release of a captive animal. I do believe, however, that under certain circumstances, a captive, healthy, native animal can be released back to its place of capture without excessive risk to the environment. The scenario I envision is one where an animal is captured locally, housed separately from other captive animals -- - should there be any -- - cared for prop erly, and then returned to its place of capture, if desired. Kept in isolation, a healthy, temporary captive is highly unlikely to contract a dis- ease that could be introduced into the en vironment upon its release (Mendelson et al., 2009). I believe we have to balance biosecurity with the benefits of ownership (even temporary) of native amphibians and reptiles. Keeping a pet promotes empathy for animals and keeping a native species, in particular, increases concern for local species and local environments. I am proud that my son, Forrest, who has been driving for several years now, actively avoids snakes and turtles on roads, and will some- times stop to move them off the road.