{"title":"书评","authors":"Ahmad AbulJobain","doi":"10.1643/CT2020093","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Dragon Lizards of Australia: Evolution, Ecology and a Comprehensive Field Guide. Jane Melville and Steve K. Wilson. 2019. Museums Victoria Publishing. ISBN 9781921833496. 416 p. AU$49.95/US$35.00 (softcover).— Dragon lizards are iconic reptiles of Australia. Frill-necked Lizards. Thorny Devils. Bearded Dragons. These are some of the well-known stars of the Aussie dragon world, but there is much more to this diverse group than these large or bizarre famous species. Authors Jane Melville and Steve Wilson are well positioned to produce this book on Australian dragons. Melville has focused her research almost exclusively on agamids over the last 20 years, and her research has greatly enhanced our systematic knowledge of these animals. At the time of this volume’s publication, her group had described 20 dragon species (now 25, over half of which are Tympanocryptis), and raised many more from subspecies to full species or revalidated species or genera in synonymy. Her first-hand knowledge of dragons comes through decades of fieldwork that has taken her nearly over the entire continent, searching for new species and collecting specimens and tissue samples for genetic analyses. Steve Wilson is Australia’s most prolific—and arguably the best—reptile photographer. His series with Gerry Swan, A Complete Guide to the Reptiles of Australia (Wilson and Swan, 2017), is about to be published in a 6 edition, and he has other quality publications such as Australian Lizards: A Natural History (Wilson, 2012). With Wilson’s name on the cover, you immediately know you are in for a visual feast. His photographs not only sparkle with clarity and excellent color balance, but they are well-composed aesthetically. Owing to his knowledge of the animals, images have been picked to tell a story and show insightful angles, not just the standard portrait. Even within pages, images seem to have been chosen to show dragons in different postures from different perspectives. Dragon Lizards of Australia is best described as an intermediate-level book that is probably more comfortable on a coffee table than in a rucksack when heading to the field. At just over 400 pages long, it is a bit heavy for only one group of Australian reptiles—after all, where would the room in your bags be for the gecko, skink, and snake books if each were covered in as much detail? The book is available as a paperback only, with a nearly square shape of 19 3 21 cm, and just over 2 cm thick. The size and heavy paper cover function well, as the pages open—and stay open—quite nicely, making it easy to flip back and forth among sections. The burnt-orange color of the frontispiece and leading page of the sections is pleasing to the eye, and it evokes the arid zone where dragons are plentiful. The orange also mirrors the background of the stunning front cover featuring a Thorny Devil (Moloch horridus). Even the little rectangle of orange in the upper corners of the pages was a nice touch, although perhaps different colors might have been used for each of the sections. An orange dotted line appears in the Quick Guide to Genera and Field Guide sections, which connects the generic or species name with the correct photos of the dragons. This element was not terribly functional in the field guide but did serve to break up the white background. Plus, the right-angle shape also somehow evoked the northeastern corner of South Australia and the Lake Eyre Basin—not a bad thing owing to all the interesting dragons there. The first 75 pages are titled Evolution, Ecology and Biology, and they present introductory chapters on diversity, behavior, physiology, and other overarching topics that apply to all dragons. In the very first pages of the introductory sections, some text appears in irregularly shaped orange blobs, giving these pages a playful look, and it suggests that the audience includes diverse naturalists and enthusiasts comfortable with material presented at an intermediate level, vs. an academic tome. But the blobs are not seen again until the Glossary, where they serve as figure-caption backgrounds, making these appearances seem like an idea that was simply abandoned. The first sections introduce agamid lizards, and Australian agamids (subfamily Amphibolurinae) specifically, including a nice series of colored maps that show where the three main groups occur in the world (p. 4). The difference in dentition between agamids (acrodont) and iguanians (pleurodont) is explained, as well as general features of their morphology (e.g., well-developed limbs with five digits, long tails, and non-glossy scales with keels, spines, and tubercles). The many photographs in these sections of iguanians and agamids from around the world put the Australian radiation in perspective. The chapter on Origins and Diversification largely concerns the timeline of the major events of how agamids got to Australia and then the major evolutionary branching events once they arrived, which were coincident with changes in climate and environments. Most of the groups reviewed here are at the genus or species-group levels. Some of the main patterns are touched upon, such as most of the basal taxa residing along the Great Dividing Range in the east, and the highly distinctive monotypic genera Moloch and Chelosania also being basal taxa but at the tips of long branches with no surviving congeners. Of all the chapters in the introduction, I thought this section might have benefited from a longer, more detailed treatment. For example, why is it that of the three large agamid genera, Ctenophorus shows the most morphological and ecological diversity, Diporiphora less so, and Tympanocryptis remained a relatively monomorphic assemblage of similar-looking species? Furthermore, are the genetic distances among species within genera or species groups the same, or have some species within genera only recently diverged compared to more ancient lineages? Although most books pitched at an intermediate level do","PeriodicalId":10701,"journal":{"name":"Copeia","volume":"108 1","pages":"701 - 708"},"PeriodicalIF":2.6000,"publicationDate":"2020-10-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"BOOK REVIEWS\",\"authors\":\"Ahmad AbulJobain\",\"doi\":\"10.1643/CT2020093\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Dragon Lizards of Australia: Evolution, Ecology and a Comprehensive Field Guide. Jane Melville and Steve K. Wilson. 2019. Museums Victoria Publishing. ISBN 9781921833496. 416 p. AU$49.95/US$35.00 (softcover).— Dragon lizards are iconic reptiles of Australia. Frill-necked Lizards. Thorny Devils. Bearded Dragons. These are some of the well-known stars of the Aussie dragon world, but there is much more to this diverse group than these large or bizarre famous species. Authors Jane Melville and Steve Wilson are well positioned to produce this book on Australian dragons. Melville has focused her research almost exclusively on agamids over the last 20 years, and her research has greatly enhanced our systematic knowledge of these animals. At the time of this volume’s publication, her group had described 20 dragon species (now 25, over half of which are Tympanocryptis), and raised many more from subspecies to full species or revalidated species or genera in synonymy. Her first-hand knowledge of dragons comes through decades of fieldwork that has taken her nearly over the entire continent, searching for new species and collecting specimens and tissue samples for genetic analyses. Steve Wilson is Australia’s most prolific—and arguably the best—reptile photographer. His series with Gerry Swan, A Complete Guide to the Reptiles of Australia (Wilson and Swan, 2017), is about to be published in a 6 edition, and he has other quality publications such as Australian Lizards: A Natural History (Wilson, 2012). With Wilson’s name on the cover, you immediately know you are in for a visual feast. His photographs not only sparkle with clarity and excellent color balance, but they are well-composed aesthetically. Owing to his knowledge of the animals, images have been picked to tell a story and show insightful angles, not just the standard portrait. Even within pages, images seem to have been chosen to show dragons in different postures from different perspectives. Dragon Lizards of Australia is best described as an intermediate-level book that is probably more comfortable on a coffee table than in a rucksack when heading to the field. At just over 400 pages long, it is a bit heavy for only one group of Australian reptiles—after all, where would the room in your bags be for the gecko, skink, and snake books if each were covered in as much detail? The book is available as a paperback only, with a nearly square shape of 19 3 21 cm, and just over 2 cm thick. The size and heavy paper cover function well, as the pages open—and stay open—quite nicely, making it easy to flip back and forth among sections. The burnt-orange color of the frontispiece and leading page of the sections is pleasing to the eye, and it evokes the arid zone where dragons are plentiful. The orange also mirrors the background of the stunning front cover featuring a Thorny Devil (Moloch horridus). Even the little rectangle of orange in the upper corners of the pages was a nice touch, although perhaps different colors might have been used for each of the sections. An orange dotted line appears in the Quick Guide to Genera and Field Guide sections, which connects the generic or species name with the correct photos of the dragons. This element was not terribly functional in the field guide but did serve to break up the white background. Plus, the right-angle shape also somehow evoked the northeastern corner of South Australia and the Lake Eyre Basin—not a bad thing owing to all the interesting dragons there. The first 75 pages are titled Evolution, Ecology and Biology, and they present introductory chapters on diversity, behavior, physiology, and other overarching topics that apply to all dragons. In the very first pages of the introductory sections, some text appears in irregularly shaped orange blobs, giving these pages a playful look, and it suggests that the audience includes diverse naturalists and enthusiasts comfortable with material presented at an intermediate level, vs. an academic tome. But the blobs are not seen again until the Glossary, where they serve as figure-caption backgrounds, making these appearances seem like an idea that was simply abandoned. The first sections introduce agamid lizards, and Australian agamids (subfamily Amphibolurinae) specifically, including a nice series of colored maps that show where the three main groups occur in the world (p. 4). The difference in dentition between agamids (acrodont) and iguanians (pleurodont) is explained, as well as general features of their morphology (e.g., well-developed limbs with five digits, long tails, and non-glossy scales with keels, spines, and tubercles). The many photographs in these sections of iguanians and agamids from around the world put the Australian radiation in perspective. The chapter on Origins and Diversification largely concerns the timeline of the major events of how agamids got to Australia and then the major evolutionary branching events once they arrived, which were coincident with changes in climate and environments. Most of the groups reviewed here are at the genus or species-group levels. Some of the main patterns are touched upon, such as most of the basal taxa residing along the Great Dividing Range in the east, and the highly distinctive monotypic genera Moloch and Chelosania also being basal taxa but at the tips of long branches with no surviving congeners. Of all the chapters in the introduction, I thought this section might have benefited from a longer, more detailed treatment. For example, why is it that of the three large agamid genera, Ctenophorus shows the most morphological and ecological diversity, Diporiphora less so, and Tympanocryptis remained a relatively monomorphic assemblage of similar-looking species? 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引用次数: 0
摘要
澳大利亚龙蜥蜴:进化、生态学和综合野外指南。简·梅尔维尔和史蒂夫·威尔逊。2019年,维多利亚博物馆出版社。是9781921833496。416页49.95澳元/35.00美元(软封面)龙蜥蜴是澳大利亚的标志性爬行动物。流苏颈蜥蜴。荆棘魔鬼。胡子龙。这些是澳大利亚龙界的一些著名恒星,但这个多样化的群体比这些大型或奇异的著名物种要多得多。作家简·梅尔维尔和史蒂夫·威尔逊有能力撰写这本关于澳大利亚龙的书。在过去的20年里,梅尔维尔的研究几乎完全集中在龙舌兰上,她的研究极大地增强了我们对这些动物的系统了解。在本卷出版时,她的团队已经描述了20种龙(现在有25种,其中一半以上是Tympaocryptis),并将更多的龙从亚种提升为完整物种或重新验证的同义物种或属。她对龙的第一手知识来自于几十年的实地调查,这些调查几乎带她走遍了整个大陆,寻找新物种,收集标本和组织样本进行基因分析。史蒂夫·威尔逊是澳大利亚最多产,也可以说是最好的爬行动物摄影师。他与Gerry Swan合作的系列《澳大利亚爬行动物完整指南》(Wilson and Swan,2017)即将出版6版,他还有其他高质量的出版物,如《澳大利亚蜥蜴:自然史》(Wilson,2012)。威尔逊的名字出现在封面上,你马上就知道你将迎来一场视觉盛宴。他的照片不仅清晰、色彩平衡,而且构图优美。由于他对动物的了解,人们选择图像来讲述故事,并展示有洞察力的角度,而不仅仅是标准的肖像。即使在页面中,图像似乎也被选择来从不同的角度展示龙的不同姿势。《澳大利亚龙蜥蜴》最好被描述为一本中等水平的书,当它去野外时,放在咖啡桌上可能比放在帆布背包里更舒服。这本书只有400多页,对于一组澳大利亚爬行动物来说有点沉重——毕竟,如果每本书都有同样多的细节,你包里的壁虎、石皮和蛇书会放在哪里?这本书只有平装本,形状接近正方形,长19 3 21厘米,厚度刚刚超过2厘米。大小和厚重的纸张封面功能良好,因为页面可以很好地打开并保持打开状态,可以很容易地在各个部分之间来回翻转。章节首页和首页的焦橙色令人赏心悦目,让人想起了龙出没的干旱地带。橙色也反映了令人惊叹的封面背景,封面上有一个荆棘魔鬼(Moloch horridus)。即使是页面上角的橙色小矩形也很好看,尽管每个部分可能使用了不同的颜色。一条橙色虚线出现在《龙属快速指南》和《野外指南》部分,将龙的属名或种名与正确的龙照片联系起来。这个元素在现场指南中并没有太大的作用,但确实有助于打破白色背景。此外,直角形状也在某种程度上唤起了南澳大利亚东北角和艾尔湖盆地——这并不是一件坏事,因为那里有很多有趣的龙。前75页的标题是进化、生态学和生物学,它们介绍了多样性、行为、生理学和其他适用于所有龙的重要主题。在介绍部分的第一页,一些文本以不规则形状的橙色斑点出现,使这些页面看起来很有趣,这表明观众包括不同的博物学家和爱好者,他们对中等水平的材料和学术巨著感到满意。但直到《词汇表》(Glossary)中,这些斑点才再次出现,它们充当了人物说明的背景,使这些出现看起来像是一个被抛弃的想法。第一节介绍了龙舌蜥,特别是澳大利亚龙舌蜥(两栖纲),包括一系列漂亮的彩色地图,显示了世界上三个主要类群的分布(第4页)。解释了无齿龙(Acrondon)和鬣蜥(胸膜齿龙)之间的齿列差异,以及它们形态的一般特征(例如,发育良好的四肢有五个手指、长尾和带有龙骨、脊椎和结节的无光泽鳞片)。来自世界各地的鬣蜥和龙舌蜥的许多照片使人们对澳大利亚的辐射有了正确的认识。
Dragon Lizards of Australia: Evolution, Ecology and a Comprehensive Field Guide. Jane Melville and Steve K. Wilson. 2019. Museums Victoria Publishing. ISBN 9781921833496. 416 p. AU$49.95/US$35.00 (softcover).— Dragon lizards are iconic reptiles of Australia. Frill-necked Lizards. Thorny Devils. Bearded Dragons. These are some of the well-known stars of the Aussie dragon world, but there is much more to this diverse group than these large or bizarre famous species. Authors Jane Melville and Steve Wilson are well positioned to produce this book on Australian dragons. Melville has focused her research almost exclusively on agamids over the last 20 years, and her research has greatly enhanced our systematic knowledge of these animals. At the time of this volume’s publication, her group had described 20 dragon species (now 25, over half of which are Tympanocryptis), and raised many more from subspecies to full species or revalidated species or genera in synonymy. Her first-hand knowledge of dragons comes through decades of fieldwork that has taken her nearly over the entire continent, searching for new species and collecting specimens and tissue samples for genetic analyses. Steve Wilson is Australia’s most prolific—and arguably the best—reptile photographer. His series with Gerry Swan, A Complete Guide to the Reptiles of Australia (Wilson and Swan, 2017), is about to be published in a 6 edition, and he has other quality publications such as Australian Lizards: A Natural History (Wilson, 2012). With Wilson’s name on the cover, you immediately know you are in for a visual feast. His photographs not only sparkle with clarity and excellent color balance, but they are well-composed aesthetically. Owing to his knowledge of the animals, images have been picked to tell a story and show insightful angles, not just the standard portrait. Even within pages, images seem to have been chosen to show dragons in different postures from different perspectives. Dragon Lizards of Australia is best described as an intermediate-level book that is probably more comfortable on a coffee table than in a rucksack when heading to the field. At just over 400 pages long, it is a bit heavy for only one group of Australian reptiles—after all, where would the room in your bags be for the gecko, skink, and snake books if each were covered in as much detail? The book is available as a paperback only, with a nearly square shape of 19 3 21 cm, and just over 2 cm thick. The size and heavy paper cover function well, as the pages open—and stay open—quite nicely, making it easy to flip back and forth among sections. The burnt-orange color of the frontispiece and leading page of the sections is pleasing to the eye, and it evokes the arid zone where dragons are plentiful. The orange also mirrors the background of the stunning front cover featuring a Thorny Devil (Moloch horridus). Even the little rectangle of orange in the upper corners of the pages was a nice touch, although perhaps different colors might have been used for each of the sections. An orange dotted line appears in the Quick Guide to Genera and Field Guide sections, which connects the generic or species name with the correct photos of the dragons. This element was not terribly functional in the field guide but did serve to break up the white background. Plus, the right-angle shape also somehow evoked the northeastern corner of South Australia and the Lake Eyre Basin—not a bad thing owing to all the interesting dragons there. The first 75 pages are titled Evolution, Ecology and Biology, and they present introductory chapters on diversity, behavior, physiology, and other overarching topics that apply to all dragons. In the very first pages of the introductory sections, some text appears in irregularly shaped orange blobs, giving these pages a playful look, and it suggests that the audience includes diverse naturalists and enthusiasts comfortable with material presented at an intermediate level, vs. an academic tome. But the blobs are not seen again until the Glossary, where they serve as figure-caption backgrounds, making these appearances seem like an idea that was simply abandoned. The first sections introduce agamid lizards, and Australian agamids (subfamily Amphibolurinae) specifically, including a nice series of colored maps that show where the three main groups occur in the world (p. 4). The difference in dentition between agamids (acrodont) and iguanians (pleurodont) is explained, as well as general features of their morphology (e.g., well-developed limbs with five digits, long tails, and non-glossy scales with keels, spines, and tubercles). The many photographs in these sections of iguanians and agamids from around the world put the Australian radiation in perspective. The chapter on Origins and Diversification largely concerns the timeline of the major events of how agamids got to Australia and then the major evolutionary branching events once they arrived, which were coincident with changes in climate and environments. Most of the groups reviewed here are at the genus or species-group levels. Some of the main patterns are touched upon, such as most of the basal taxa residing along the Great Dividing Range in the east, and the highly distinctive monotypic genera Moloch and Chelosania also being basal taxa but at the tips of long branches with no surviving congeners. Of all the chapters in the introduction, I thought this section might have benefited from a longer, more detailed treatment. For example, why is it that of the three large agamid genera, Ctenophorus shows the most morphological and ecological diversity, Diporiphora less so, and Tympanocryptis remained a relatively monomorphic assemblage of similar-looking species? Furthermore, are the genetic distances among species within genera or species groups the same, or have some species within genera only recently diverged compared to more ancient lineages? Although most books pitched at an intermediate level do
期刊介绍:
Founded in 1913, Copeia is a highly respected international journal dedicated to the publication of high quality, original research papers on the behavior, conservation, ecology, genetics, morphology, evolution, physiology, systematics and taxonomy of extant and extinct fishes, amphibians, and reptiles. Copeia is published electronically and is available through BioOne. Articles are published online first, and print issues appear four times per year. In addition to research articles, Copeia publishes invited review papers, book reviews, and compiles virtual issues on topics of interest drawn from papers previously published in the journal.