Hello all! Those of you who receive the ZSL's electronic newsletter will already have seen this. Bradt Travel Guides, who has published the fantastic book "100 Animals to See Before They Die", have set up a new conservation project on their website. Follow the link below 100 Animals to See Before They Die Just follow the link, and click on one of the five animals on the page. A penny will be given to conservation for the animal you choose with every click (you can only click once a day). Just think, that if all the members here at ZooBeat click once every day, and then send it on to as many people as they can. BTW, I have the book, and I think it's great. A "must buy" for any wildlife enthusiast. Thank you for your time
I won the book in a competition that ZSL was running a couple of months ago! I also agree that the book is a must-have... For Chester people, it is on sale in their gift shops... It's a great scheme that they have set up on their site as well.
i got the book for christmas. Does seeing the animals in zoos count? If we listed the animals in it and got people on the this forum to tick the animals that they have seen in the wild or at zoos i reckon that we would have most of them covered.
I reckon seeing them in the wild is more meaningful. Anybody can just go to the zoo and see them. Is the list anywhere on the web because I don't have the book but would like to see the list...
It says in the books foreword, that they had a bit of a discusion if it should be about animals and are endangered in the wild or in zoos. Eventually, they decided that all these animals should be seen in the wild, even though that would take a lifetime. I say that here on ZooBeat, we can count those we have seen in zoos as well . Otherwise. I'm back to square one All the animals in the book are from the EDGE list, although they are not number 1-100 on the list. I guess you have to buy the book to see .
I'll be clicking on them all!! It's a wonderful idea, and I think that other conservation sites should use this idea.
What did anyone click on? My options were Tiger, Aye-aye, Long-beaked Echidna, Probiscis Monkey and Polar Bear. I went for the Aye-aye.
Yesterday I did the Proboscis Monkey, today the Aye-Aye. I will do the same as Toddy and click them all in turn.
The book "100 animals to see before they die" is terrific, and it was only published in October 2007 so it is up-to-date and relevant to all lovers of wildlife. There are lots of glossy photos, an average of a page for each selected species, and then many maps and facts on the regions of the world where the animals are located. It is 160 pages and features a strong conservation message. It is fun to see how many you've seen, although almost all of my choices have been found in captivity.
Slender Loris, Saiga, Amami Rabbit, Baiji, Ganges River Dolphin, Dinagat moonrat, Palawan Stink Badger, Proboscis Monkey, Bornean Bay Cat, Otter-Civet, Pygmy Hog, Pygmy slow loris, black-spotted cuscus, marsupial mole, New zealand lesser short-tailed bat, Riverine Rabbit, golden rumped elephant shrew, Nimba otter-shrew, Hirola, Falanouc, Fanaloka, Cuban solenodon, Monito del monte, Andean cat... It also has the more well know animals e.g. panda, elephants, orang, gorilla, rhinos, bison, polar bear, indri etc hope that helps