Apex Predators: The World’s
Deadliest Hunters, Past and Present. By Steve Jenkins. Houghton Mifflin
Harcourt. $17.99.
Amazon Adventure: How Tiny Fish
Are Saving the World’s Largest Rainforest. By Sy Montgomery. Photographs by
Keith Ellenbogen. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. $18.99.
One of Steve Jenkins’ most
intriguing books, Apex Predators is
fascinating not only because of the information but also because of the
presentation, in which brief discussions of modern-day predators are juxtaposed
with ones about predators of the distant past – with every creature discussed
being shown in Jenkins’ clear, anatomically accurate drawings, and with a scale
comparing it with the size of an adult human. One thing this does is make it
clear that when it comes to hunting, size does not always matter: African wild
dogs are only about three feet long, but because they hunt in packs and have
the endurance to pursue their prey over long distances and for lengthy periods
of time, they are successful in 90% of their hunts – an extraordinary
statistic. On the other hand, size can
matter, as it does for the world’s largest lizard, the Komodo dragon, which can
grow to a length of 10 feet. For each animal, tab-like boxes at tops of the
pages indicate whether a particular predator is modern-day or extinct; in the
latter case, the boxes say how long ago it lived. This lets Jenkins show the
heads of a Siberian tiger and Tyrannosaurus
rex facing each other, the former on a left-hand page facing right and the
latter on the opposite, right-hand page facing left, with both heads appearing
to be the same size – but the scale at the bottoms of the pages shows just how
much bigger the dinosaur was than the tiger. Many predators here will be
familiar to young readers, but not all, by any means. For example, the Teratorn, believed to be the largest
bird able to fly, had an amazing 23-foot wingspan and went extinct six million
years ago, while the 20-foot-long predatory amphibian called Mastodonsaurus dates to 250 million
years in the past. As readers go through the book, they are inevitably going to
wonder how today’s apex predators stack up against those of much earlier times
– so Jenkins concludes with a few imaginary matchups between predators of
roughly equal size: Siberian tiger and Utahraptor,
and great white shark and Dunkleosteus
(an armored fish from 400 million years ago). The “who would win” question is
of course speculative, and Jenkins takes it an interesting step further by
showing two matchups in which the same modern predators would not stand even
the slightest chance: Spinosaurus,
the largest land predator known, could probably swallow the tiger in a bite or
two, while the marine reptile Tylosaurus,
whose jaws were 10 feet long, would
make short work of a great white shark. The final note in the book is the most
thought-provoking of all: the deadliest apex predator of all time is Homo sapiens, since humans, although individually
much weaker than the animals shown in Apex
Predator, have created weapons that could kill any of them, and in fact
have driven many of these hyper-powerful creatures to extinction.
Humans nowadays do not mean to cause extinctions, but human
activity endangers many animals and even whole ecosystems, such as the Amazon
rainforest. Then humans try to preserve what they have endangered, which is the
point of Sy Montgomery’s Amazon
Adventure. In fact, one apex predator mentioned by Jenkins, the electric
eel, appears in Montgomery’s book as well, but from an entirely different perspective:
Jenkins says the eel “lurks” in rivers and streams and “zaps” its prey, but
Montgomery notes that the eels generally “emit a low-level charge, less than
ten volts, which doesn’t hurt,” while hunting, and deliver painful shocks only
if bothered. And this is scarcely the only unexpected element in Amazon Adventure. The whole book starts
with a misconception to which scientist Scott Dowd readily admits: there is an
annual harvest of 40 million tiny tropical fish, caught by natives for shipment
to public and home aquarium tanks worldwide, and Dowd initially thought removing
them from their natural habitat was a terrible thing. Readers will likely think
so, too, until Montgomery – aided by many as-wonderful-as-usual photographs by
Keith Ellenbogen – shows that this harvest may be crucial to the long-term
survival of the Amazon and its environs. “Nearly ninety percent of the small
fish here are stranded, doomed in drying puddles” in the dry season every year,
Montgomery explains, unless they are caught and shipped out. When that happens,
they live two to three times as long in aquariums as they would in the wild,
and the commerce in the fish – which, remember, would otherwise almost
certainly die – is the major means of support for 40,000 people. Those people
are so respectful of the river that gives them the fish that they very
carefully release other species caught by accident – and protect the river and
nearby areas so the fish harvest remains abundant year after year. This is more
than an unusual story, more than a typical tale from the “Scientists in the
Field” series, of which this book is a part. It is the flip side of the ugly,
thoughtless anti-human campaigns of organizations such as PETA, which want
animals left alone and believe that somehow a lack of contact between people
and other species on Earth will make people more appreciative and supportive of
those other species. Exactly the opposite is the case: remove animals completely
from contact with humans and humans will soon lose interest in them, which
means that when the animals are threatened, it will be that much harder to
enlist human help (financial and otherwise) to preserve them. This already
happens: less-known endangered animals, including many deemed ugly by human
standards, garner far less monetary and scientific support than “marquee”
animals such as koalas and polar bears. The piabeiros,
the fishers whose life is discussed and shown in Amazon Adventure, have a far better relationship with the natural
world than this: they live and interact with the fish and other denizens of the
river constantly, and in so doing gain respect for the place within the
rainforest of human and nonhuman beings alike. The perspective that young
readers will get from Amazon Adventure
is quite different from that in headlines about pressure groups’ “successes” in
destroying the connection between human beings and other animals. This is a
thoughtful book as well as an interesting one, and its exploration of a
lifestyle that readers are unlikely ever to experience firsthand may help them
gain meaningful appreciation of the nuances of human-animal interaction and the
positive environmental effects that can result when people are thoughtful
rather than political and virulently dogmatic about our relationships with
other species.
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