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Nursery Earth

The Hidden World of Baby Animals and the Amazing Ingenuity of Life

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

A first-of-its-kind pop-science journey into the hidden world of baby animals

Entire ecosystems rest on the shoulders (or tentacles, or jointed exoskeletons) of animal babies; it's time we paid them more attention. In Nursery Earth, researcher Danna Staaf invites readers to explore these tiny, secret lives, revealing some of nature's strangest and most ingenious workings. A salamander embryo breathes with the help of algae inside its cells. The young grub of a Goliath beetle dwarfs its parents. Fluffy flamingo chicks delay turning pink for years to let adults know they're not mating rivals and to encourage friendly behavior.

Our bias toward adult animals (not least because babies can be hard to find) means these wonders have long gone under-researched. But for all kinds of animals, if we overlook their babies, we miss out on the most fascinating—and consequential—time in their lives. Nursery Earth makes the case that these young creatures are not just beings in progress but beings in their own right. Our planet needs them all: the maggots as much as the kittens!

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    • Booklist

      May 15, 2023
      There is certainly a cuteness factor here. Who could resist pictures of the almost-extinct flightless baby parrot (kakapo) and the kangaroo's joey? Beyond the oohs and ahs, scientist Staaf (Squid Empire, 2017) shares significant findings about the connections between the environment and human genes. The miracle of life (and developmental biology, Staaf's specialty) is the book's journey, documenting each stage, from egg to juvenile/ teenager, with easy-to-understand research and illuminating analogies. Case study after case study, like those of the 17-year cicada and the one-day mayfly, demonstrates that, despite obvious differences, every creature (humans included) experiences these cycles, and in ways that scientists can learn from: the two-year fertilization of elephant eggs, water births of salamanders and octopus, the internal hatching of seahorses within the father's pouch. Throughout the narrative--often captured as conversations between scientists--is the notion that developmental biology can and will help treat human health issues, whether by examining the impact that ingesting milkweed (often toxic) has on monarch butterflies or via the careful cultivation of the nearly extinct condor.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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Languages

  • English

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