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Viser: Outsider Animals - How the Creatures at the Margins of Our Lives Have the Most to Teach Us
Outsider Animals Vital Source e-bog
Marlene Zuk
(2026)
Outsider Animals
How the Creatures at the Margins of Our Lives Have the Most to Teach Us
Marlene Zuk og David J. Tuss
(2026)
Sprog: Engelsk
om ca. 12 hverdage
Detaljer om varen
- Vital Source E-book
- Udgiver: Princeton University Press (Marts 2026)
- ISBN: 9780691264226
Bookshelf online: 5 år fra købsdato.
Bookshelf appen: ubegrænset dage fra købsdato.
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Detaljer om varen
- Hardback: 312 sider
- Udgiver: Princeton University Press (Marts 2026)
- Forfattere: Marlene Zuk og David J. Tuss
- ISBN: 9780691264240
"This is a truly compelling book, rich with scientific expertise and humor."--Isabella Rossellini
From one of our foremost experts on behavioral evolution, an entertaining exploration of what raccoons, rats, and other animal intruders teach us about intelligence, adaptability, and ourselves
When we think of animals that provide the greatest insights into animal cognition and behavior, primates and honeybees come to mind, or perhaps whales or octopus. What about the raccoons that plunder our rubbish at night, or the coyotes that threaten pets and livestock, or the gulls that divebomb for snacks at the beach? Outsider Animals challenges everything you thought you knew about the overlooked animals that live in proximity to humans, sharing the stories that each has to tell about adaptation and cohabitation on our increasingly crowded planet.
Marlene Zuk gives us a new appreciation for the animals we often shun, explaining why these unpopular creatures have something special to teach us not only about the ways we deal with other species but about our own place in nature and what it means for an animal to belong somewhere. You will discover how coyotes and snakes shed light on our coevolution with predators, what cockroaches tell us about the evolution of pregnancy, how butterflies make us reconsider the effects of roadside pollution, how cowbirds and mynas are forcing ecologists to think differently about invasive species, and much more.
Writing with an infectious blend of humor and curiosity, Zuk invites us to reflect on our relationships with these close-to-home creatures and the ways our lives encroach on theirs, and to draw lessons from their behavior in all its fascinating complexity.


