Tinkering with Eden: A Natural History of Exotics in America
Books / Hardcover
Books › Science › Life Sciences › Ecology
ISBN: 0393048608 / Publisher: W W Norton & Co Inc, January 2001
A natural history of non-native species of animals currently living and thriving in America focuses on the various experiments, most well-intentioned, that introduced many foreign life forms to the continent.
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When Europeans arrived in North America they saw, on the one hand, a paradise, and on the other, a place that needed some work. Far from home and seeking to recreate the landscapes they'd left behind, or determined to improve on what they found, they introduced to their new terrain an amazing array of exotics - plants and animals not native to this continent.Take the countless pigeons that flutter around our nation's cities in dirty masses. We can blame their ubiquitous presence on seventeenth-century explorers from France, where the birds were treasured as a sign of nobility. Or take the flocks of starlings that descend on fields of grain and pick them clean. In 1890, Shakespeare enthusiast Eugene Schieffelin decided to introduce every bird in Shakespeare's works to New York City's Central Park, including starlings. Some two hundred million now fly throughout North America, aggressively driving out native birds from coast to coast.Kim Todd brings us these tales and others, portraying their humor, their science, and their hard lessons in brilliant, lyrical prose. More than 4000 exotic birds, insects, fish, mammals, and other creatures live in the United States, sometimes slipping in unnoticed, sometimes causing ecological catastrophe. This book, detailing some of their stories, will entertain, enlighten, and change the way we think about nature.
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