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Item Details
Title: BUILT BY ANIMALS
THE NATURAL HISTORY OF ANIMAL ARCHITECTURE
By: Mike Hansell
Format: Paperback

List price: £8.99
Our price: £7.87
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12.5% off
You save: £1.12
ISBN 10: 0199205574
ISBN 13: 9780199205578
Availability: Usually dispatched within 1-3 weeks.
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Publisher: OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS
Pub. date: 29 January, 2009
Pages: 288
Description: From vast termite mounds, to elaborate birds nests, delicate shells, and deadly spiders' traps, the constructions of the animal world can amaze and at times humble our own engineering and technology. Mike Hansell reveals the biology behind animal architecture - showing how small brains have evolved to produce complex and beautiful structures.
Synopsis: From termite mounds that in relative terms are three times as tall as a skyscraper, to the elaborate nests of social birds and the deadly traps of spiders, the constructions of the animal world can amaze and at times humble our own engineering and technology. But how do creatures with such small brains build these complex structures? What drives them to do it? Which skills are innate and which learned? Here, Mike Hansell looks at the extraordinary structures that animals build - whether homes, traps, or courtship displays - and reveals the biology behind their behaviour. He shows how small-brained animals achieve complex feats in a small-brained way, by repeating many simple actions and using highly evolved self-secreted materials. On the other hand, the building feats or tool use of large-brained animals, such as humans or chimps, require significantly more complex and costly behaviour. We look at wasp's nests, leaf-cutting ants, caddisflies and amoebae, and even the extraordinary bower bird, who seduces his mate with a decorated pile of twigs, baubles, feathers and berries.Hansell explores how animal structures evolved over time, how insect societies emerge, how animals can alter their wider habitat, and even whether some animals have an aesthetic sense.
Illustrations: 21 halftones, plus full-colour 8pp plate section
Publication: UK
Imprint: Oxford University Press
Returns: Returnable
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