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| | | Location: Home » Snakes » Reference » Texas Snakes: Identification, Distribution, and Natural History | |
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| Texas Snakes: Identification, Distribution, and Natural History | 
| Authors: John E., Werler, James R. Dixon Creator: Regina Levoy Publisher: University of Texas Press Category: Book
List Price: $65.00 Buy New: $40.95 You Save: $24.05 (37%)
New (13) from $40.95
Avg. Customer Rating: 12 reviews Sales Rank: 206086
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 544 Shipping Weight (lbs): 3.6 Dimensions (in): 10.1 x 7.2 x 1.7
ISBN: 0292791305 Dewey Decimal Number: 597.9609764 EAN: 9780292791305 ASIN: 0292791305
Publication Date: July 15, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
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Product Description
From the legendary, fear-inspiring Western Diamondback rattlesnake to the tiny, harmless Plains blind snake, Texas has a greater diversity of snake species than any other state in the country. Recognizing the public's need for a complete guide to identifying and understanding Texas' snakes, two of the state's most respected herpetologists have joined forces to create this definitive reference to all 109 species and sub-species of Texas snakes. Well-written species accounts describe each snake's appearance, lookalikes, size, habitat, behavior, feeding, and reproduction. The authors also include color photos and finely detailed line drawings to aid field identification, along with accurate range maps, a checklist of Texas snakes, a key to the species, and a brief discussion of classification and taxonomy. The authors round out this volume with essays on snake myths and misinformation, snakebite and its prevention, conservation, Texas biotic provinces, and a brief history of Texas herpetology.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 7 more reviews...
The best October 11, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
This is by far the best book I have come across pertaining to snakes - specifically Texas snakes. Great bk. for any herp. enthusiast or just a regular person wanting to know what's what. This bk. has plenty to offer. There is detailed scientific info. including range, habitat, reproduction, behavior, etc. of species. The pictures are amazing & thorough for easy identification. I particularly like the range maps.
I highly recommend this bk. to anyone who wants a great reference bk. on snakes. This book will not disappoint you.
Excellent Guide To Texas Reptiles January 5, 2007 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Terrific photos and scientifically up-to-date. Easy to use guide for herpetology student or the causually interested.
The authority on Texas Snakes! November 8, 2004 4 out of 5 found this review helpful
This is easily the most complete and best book on Texas Snakes available. There is an ample amount of photographs with numerous pictures of some species and also rare to see pictures such as Western Diamondback's fighting and a couple pages of leusistic/albino snakes. Each snakes description tells just about everything you'd want to know and then some, enough to satisfy both amateurs and experts. This is an excellent book to keep at home for reference and to study up on Texas Snakes. This book also has more species of snakes in it than other books on Texas Snakes I have read which is a bonus since the others may be excluding something you could run into in the field.
The best book on the snakes of Texas May 25, 2004 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I've encountered numerous books about herps, and this one is one of the best of them all--it is certainly the best book pertaining to the snakes of Texas specifically. The species descriptions are accurate; detailed species information is given with each species. Behaviour, range, habitat, diet, reproduction, are all covered in a fair degree of depth for each species. Despite on reviewers comments, I have no complaint with either the common or scientific names; it uses common names I've heard frequently. In most cases, it will write them in a grammatically corret fashion; Yellow bellied water snake as opposed to yellowbelly water snake, say, but that merely makes the work appear more professional and read much better. The latin names...well taxonomy is always under debate anyway, and I would personally agree with most of thier decisions (although I'm a mere hobbyist). The photos are incredibly well done; I particularly like that the authors saw fit to provide mulitiple photos with locality information for highly variable species (i.e. western coachwhip, bullsnakes, etc.).
Good Enough to Make Your Skin Crawl April 29, 2002 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
This is a wonderful book on Texas snakes. As one who recently had a (noninjurious) run-in with a western diamondback rattler, I can attest that the photography is stunning. This is almost an artwork. This book provides a wealth of information that is easily accessible to the nonspecialist on each species--range, specific habitats within that range, generalized behavior traits, likely reactions upon encountering humans, diet, mating habits, etc. The only real criticisms I have of the book are minor. It would have been nice if the color plates had been interspersed with each species covered, rather being placed all together. As it is now, one reads up on the snake and has to thumb through the book to find the picture. Also, as many of us buy this book to be able to identify snakes we are likely to encounter in normal activities, more information pertaining to where one is likely to encounter each species (e.g. in leaf litter, under rocks, inside ranch buildings) would have been helpful. This is a book that every Texan who wanders outside should have, as well as those interested in herpetology or snakes. As a librarian I have encountered numerous books on Texas snakes. This one is far and away the best.
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