Trouvez votre prochain audiobook favori
Devenez membre dès aujourd'hui et écoutez gratuitement pendant 30 joursCommencez vos 30 jours gratuitsInformations sur le livre
Gifts of the Crow: How Perception, Emotion, and Thought Allow Smart Birds to Behave Like Humans
De Tony Angell et John Marzluff
Raconté par Danny Campbell
Actions du livre
Commencer à écouter- Éditeur:
- Tantor Audio
- Sortie:
- Jun 5, 2012
- ISBN:
- 9781452677712
- Format:
- Livre audio
Description
New research indicates that crows are among the brightest animals in the world. And professor of Wildlife Science at the University of Washington John Marzluff has done some of the most extraordinary research on crows, which has been featured in The New York Times, National Geographic, and the Chicago Tribune, as well as on NPR and PBS. Now he teams up with artist and fellow naturalist Tony Angell to offer an in-depth look at these incredible creatures—in a book that is brimming with surprises.
Redefining the notion of "bird brain," crows and ravens are often called feathered apes because of their clever tool-making and their ability to respond to environmental challenges, including those posed by humans. Indeed, their long lives, social habits, and large complex brains allow them to observe and learn from us and our social gatherings. Their marvelous brains allow crows to think, plan, and reconsider their actions. In these and other enthralling revelations, Marzluff and Angell portray creatures that are nothing short of amazing: they play, bestow gifts on people who help or feed them, use cars as nutcrackers, seek revenge on animals that harass them, are tricksters that lure birds to their deaths, and dream. The authors marvel at crows' behavior that we humans would find strangely familiar, from delinquency and risk taking to passion and frolic. A testament to years of painstaking research, this riveting work is a thrilling look at one of nature's most wondrous creatures.
Informations sur le livre
Gifts of the Crow: How Perception, Emotion, and Thought Allow Smart Birds to Behave Like Humans
De Tony Angell et John Marzluff
Raconté par Danny Campbell
Description
New research indicates that crows are among the brightest animals in the world. And professor of Wildlife Science at the University of Washington John Marzluff has done some of the most extraordinary research on crows, which has been featured in The New York Times, National Geographic, and the Chicago Tribune, as well as on NPR and PBS. Now he teams up with artist and fellow naturalist Tony Angell to offer an in-depth look at these incredible creatures—in a book that is brimming with surprises.
Redefining the notion of "bird brain," crows and ravens are often called feathered apes because of their clever tool-making and their ability to respond to environmental challenges, including those posed by humans. Indeed, their long lives, social habits, and large complex brains allow them to observe and learn from us and our social gatherings. Their marvelous brains allow crows to think, plan, and reconsider their actions. In these and other enthralling revelations, Marzluff and Angell portray creatures that are nothing short of amazing: they play, bestow gifts on people who help or feed them, use cars as nutcrackers, seek revenge on animals that harass them, are tricksters that lure birds to their deaths, and dream. The authors marvel at crows' behavior that we humans would find strangely familiar, from delinquency and risk taking to passion and frolic. A testament to years of painstaking research, this riveting work is a thrilling look at one of nature's most wondrous creatures.
- Éditeur:
- Tantor Audio
- Sortie:
- Jun 5, 2012
- ISBN:
- 9781452677712
- Format:
- Livre audio
À propos de l'auteur
En rapport avec Gifts of the Crow
Avis
Yeah this time? Not so much. The critics were spot on and I'm sorry I doubted them. The book is uneven with hunks of information about the neurobiology of crows and other corvids, none of which seems to be particularly well integrated into the narrative. It was so scattered that I only got through four chapters before I bailed.
The thing is that the folks who said this wasn't good scientific writing were spot on. It's by turns inaccessible and lightly anecdotal, but solid behavioral information that might have tied those two opposite modes of inquiry together seemed to be lacking.
I was wrong to dismiss the naysayers, and I admit it.
Apropos of the audiobook quality, it's good as is the narrator. It's the material that's rather dull and disappointing.