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Description:
On the northern Pacific coast, from Monterey
Bay to Vancouver Island, zoologist Eugene Kozloff explores
the rich variety of seashore life of the northern Pacific
coast. Hundreds of plants and animals that inhabit the
rocky shores, sandy beaches, and quiet bays and estuaries
are described and illustrated with encyclopedic thoroughness.
Two hundred and ninety-nine color illustrations
and nearly 400 black-and-white photographs and line
drawings show sponges, molluscs, crustaceans, comb jellies,
flatworms, seaweeds, and many other kinds of seashore
life, making for easy identification. The text, cross-referenced
with figures and plates, describes in precise terms
the size, color, activities, and peculiarities of the
plants and animals most likely to be encountered.
This book is a greatly expanded version
of the author's popular "Seashore Life of Puget
Sound, the Strait of Georgia, and the San Juan Archipelago,"
published in 1973. It includes much new material on
marine life along the open coast and in coastal bays,
and extends the coverage to Oregon and northern California.
Years of additional study make this the definitive work
on the common seashore life of the northern Pacific
coast.
Kozloff discusses the geology and geography
of the area, and gives the reader "some instant
zoology and botany" with which to make the most
of seashore exploration. He presents more than 650 species
of plants and animals, each in its individual habitat,
in chapters dealing with "Floating Docks and Pilings,"
"Rocky Shores of the Puget Sound Region,"
"Rocky Shores of the Open Coast," "Sandy
Beaches," and "Quiet Bays and Salt Marshes."
He also explains the laws and customs governing the
collection of biological material and how animals respond
to changes in their environment. Clearly and convincingly,
he communicates pleasure in, and respect for, diverse
marine habitats.
This book is not only for the use of
professional biologists and students; it will add to
the pleasure of all who visit the Pacific seashores,
ranging from secluded inlets in the San Juan Islands
to the magnificent rocky outer coast and tidal estuary
of San Francisco Bay.
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