elstaffe’s Reviews > A Gap in Nature: Discovering the World's Extinct Animals > Status Update

elstaffe
elstaffe is on page 7 of 192
"Steller wrote that ... '[the sea cows] play the Venus game in June...The female flees—slowly—ahead of the male with constant detours...But when [she] tires of this mock fight and the vain enticements, she lies on her back, and the male completes intercourse in the human way.'" (7)
May 06, 2022 07:54PM
A Gap in Nature: Discovering the World's Extinct Animals

flag

elstaffe’s Previous Updates

elstaffe
elstaffe is on page 139 of 192
"In [1970] an experienced bushman deposited some equipment in a cave west of the Canning Stock Route in the Western Australian outback. He covered it with a tarpaulin, and when he returned several weeks later he found a large, attractive rodent living under it. "(139) hello, Lesser Stick-nest Rat
Jun 02, 2022 06:27AM
A Gap in Nature: Discovering the World's Extinct Animals


elstaffe
elstaffe is on page 117 of 192
"... while these tiny creatures battled for life on land and in the vastness of the sea. What lessons we might have learned from its text we shall never know, for we tore up the missive almost at the moment we became aware of it." (117) oh ffs this is some real Garraty nonsense
May 28, 2022 11:30PM
A Gap in Nature: Discovering the World's Extinct Animals


elstaffe
elstaffe is on page 117 of 192
"'Here's a letter for you, here's a letter for you, for you,' was how a visitor to [Guadalupe] described the cries of the parent [Guadalupe Storm-petrels]. The writing in that letter (if we allow the bird's DNA and behaviours to be viewed as such) have been shaped by one million or more years of evolutionary struggle ..." (117)
May 28, 2022 11:29PM
A Gap in Nature: Discovering the World's Extinct Animals


elstaffe
elstaffe is on page 83 of 192
"The lonely lighthouse-keeper, David Lyaall, decided that he must have a cat, and over a year or so that solitary feline exterminated the entire species bracket [of the Stephens Island Wren]." (83) major takeaway from this book so far is do not ever have an outdoor cat. Also, don't land your boat on an island if you might have rats onboard.
May 27, 2022 08:43PM
A Gap in Nature: Discovering the World's Extinct Animals


elstaffe
elstaffe is on page 65 of 192
"The terror skink (following page) is known from just a single specimen, collected somewhere on the Pacific island of New Caledonia by a certain Monsieur Balanza before 1876. Its teeth are long, sharp and curved, indicating that it was a predator, which is unusual for a large skink, most of which are omnivorous." (63-65) ok but that's 1 smug-ass looking skink. You can tell fr the look on its face that it's a predator
May 26, 2022 09:42PM
A Gap in Nature: Discovering the World's Extinct Animals


elstaffe
elstaffe is on page 18 of 192
""For over a century the mysterious starling was known from a single specimen. It was clearly a distinct species, but was accompanied by no information stating when or where it had been collected. Several of the world's most eminent ornithologists travelled to London to examine it, but the bird remained a mystery—hence its common name." (18) I didn't know you could just name a species "mysterious""
May 25, 2022 09:50PM
A Gap in Nature: Discovering the World's Extinct Animals


No comments have been added yet.