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Blackhearts
Ecology in Outback Australia
Language:
English
Published/Copyright:
2008
About this book
This fascinating book is a firsthand account of the adventures of an ornithological field team studying long-tailed finches in outback Australia. In 1991, Nancy Burley, a noted behavioral ecologist, and her husband, Richard Symanski, went to Australia with their one-year-old son and four American students hired as field assistants and babysitter. The social relationships and problems that developed among these individuals in confined and exotic settings and the scientific discoveries that didand did nottake place form the heart of the book.
Symanski begins by telling how he and his wife set up this elaborate field expeditionincluding the hiring of what seemed to be qualified, compatible, and knowledgeable field assistants. He then describes the harsh realities of their circumstances in Australia: primitive living conditions on an outback cattle station; field sites and subjects for study that were not as expected; and students who were not prepared for the rigors of field life and who became unenthusiastic about the work for which they had been hired. And he tells how he and his wife strove to overcome all the different challenges with which they were confronted. The book provides insight into the demands of professor-student-based fieldwork, particularly when generational conflicts, differing expectations, and culture shock complicate the business” of doing science.
Symanski begins by telling how he and his wife set up this elaborate field expeditionincluding the hiring of what seemed to be qualified, compatible, and knowledgeable field assistants. He then describes the harsh realities of their circumstances in Australia: primitive living conditions on an outback cattle station; field sites and subjects for study that were not as expected; and students who were not prepared for the rigors of field life and who became unenthusiastic about the work for which they had been hired. And he tells how he and his wife strove to overcome all the different challenges with which they were confronted. The book provides insight into the demands of professor-student-based fieldwork, particularly when generational conflicts, differing expectations, and culture shock complicate the business” of doing science.
Author / Editor information
Richard Symanski is professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at the University of California, Irvine.
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
v -
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Acknowledgments
vii -
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Map
x -
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Introduction
1 -
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1. Choosing Family
9 -
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2. The Search for Breeding Redbeaks
30 -
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3. Mysterious Behavior
64 -
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4. The Gulf Widens
83 -
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5. Business as Usual
129 -
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6. Illinois Aftermath
193 -
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Postscript
202 -
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References
209 -
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Index
213
Publishing information
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
eBook published on:
October 1, 2008
eBook ISBN:
9780300128130
Pages and Images/Illustrations in book
Main content:
228
Other:
27 b-w illus. + 1 map