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The Better to Eat You with: Fear in the Animal World [BETTER TO EAT YOU W/]

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At dawn on a brutally cold January morning, Joel Berger crouched in the icy grandeur of the Teton Range. It had been three years since wolves were reintroduced to Yellowstone after a sixty-year absence, and members of a wolf pack were approaching a herd of elk. To Berger’s utter shock, the elk ignored the wolves as they went in for the kill. The brutal attack that followed—swift and bloody—led Berger to hypothesize that after only six decades, the elk had forgotten to fear a species that had survived by eating them for hundreds of millennia. Berger’s fieldwork that frigid day raised important questions that would require years of travel and research to Can naive animals avoid extinction when they encounter reintroduced carnivores? To what extent is fear culturally transmitted? And how can a better understanding of current predator-prey behavior help demystify past extinctions and inform future conservation? The Better to Eat You With is the chronicle of Berger’s search for answers. From Yellowstone’s elk and wolves to rhinos living with African lions and moose coexisting with tigers and bears in Asia, Berger tracks cultures of fear in animals across continents and climates, engaging readers with a stimulating combination of natural history, personal experience, and conservation. Whether battling bureaucracy in the statehouse or fighting subzero wind chills in the field, Berger puts himself in the middle of the action. The Better to Eat You With invites readers to join him there. The thrilling tales he tells reveal a great deal not only about survival in the animal kingdom but also the process of doing science in foreboding conditions and hostile environments.

Unknown Binding

First published November 1, 2008

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Joel Berger

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Nancy Lewis.
1,652 reviews57 followers
September 24, 2017
A really lengthy way of saying that prey animals retain residual memories of predator behavior in their genes, even after several generations without the pressure of predation.
Profile Image for Yichen.
164 reviews3 followers
September 3, 2016
The premise promised interesting results, though I'm not sure I'm completely satisfied by the end delivery that some animals seem to be adapting to the reintroduction of top predators while others are adapting less well.
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