Extreme Nature
smelliest plant
best water-walker
longest migration
hairiest animal
best surfer
tiniest mammal
longest tongue
fastest swimmer
sharpest sense of smell
strangest society
hottest animal
flashiest males
slimiest animal
fastest digger
loudest bird call
slipperiest plant
stickiest skin
deadliest love-life
largest animal ever
oldest leaves
fattest carnivore
deepest-living animal
sleepiest animal

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Extreme Nature
smelliest plant
best water-walker
longest migration
hairiest animal
best surfer
tiniest mammal
longest tongue
fastest swimmer
sharpest sense of smell
strangest society
hottest animal
flashiest males
slimiest animal
fastest digger
loudest bird call
slipperiest plant
stickiest skin
deadliest love-life
largest animal ever
oldest leaves
fattest carnivore
deepest-living animal
sleepiest animal

19.95 In Stock
Extreme Nature

Extreme Nature

by Mark Carwardine
Extreme Nature

Extreme Nature

by Mark Carwardine

Paperback(Reprint)

$19.95 
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Overview

smelliest plant
best water-walker
longest migration
hairiest animal
best surfer
tiniest mammal
longest tongue
fastest swimmer
sharpest sense of smell
strangest society
hottest animal
flashiest males
slimiest animal
fastest digger
loudest bird call
slipperiest plant
stickiest skin
deadliest love-life
largest animal ever
oldest leaves
fattest carnivore
deepest-living animal
sleepiest animal


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780061373893
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 01/08/2008
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 320
Sales rank: 843,181
Product dimensions: 7.38(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

Mark Carwardine is a zoologist, writer, photographer, consultant, and broadcaster with a special interest in marine wildlife. He has written more than forty books, including several bestsellers, and hosts Nature and a wide variety of other natural history programs on BBC Radio.

Read an Excerpt

Extreme Nature

Chapter One

Most devious plant

Name
ghost orchid Epipogiurn aphllum

Location
North and Central Europe eastward to Japan

Ability
Cheating a fungus

The natural world, as we know it is built on partnerships. But in all societies there are cheats, and plants are no exception. Most green plants would be unable to exist without the help of fungi, which provide them with food-exchange partnerships. In fact, the invasion of the land by plants—algae—was probably only made possible by these types of partnerships. It has even been suggested that early land plants developed roots just so that they could join forces with the fungal roots, or hyphae.

Most plants are real partners, giving the carbohydrates that they manufacture using their chlorophyll. Some—notably orchids—have such a close partnership that they don't even bother to produce food packages to accompany their embryos into the world, instead relying on fungi in the soil to provide the food needed for germination and early growth. This allows an orchid to produce lightweight, microscopic seeds—millions of them.

Some orchids, however, have become cheats: they use fungi that have partnerships with trees, and they never give anything in exchange. Via fungal hyphae, these orchid vampires tap into the trees, siphoning off nutrients. The giveaway is often the fact that they have stopped producing chlorophyll. As a result, they aren't green but a rather sickly pinkish cream, like the ghost orchid, or brown, like the bird's-nest orchid. Some, such as western coralroot, are bloodred or evenpurple. The drawback is that, without the fungus, the orchid will die. And one day a fungus may just evolve a way to even the score.

Extreme Nature. Copyright © by Mark Carwardine. Reprinted by permission of HarperCollins Publishers, Inc. All rights reserved. Available now wherever books are sold.

Table of Contents

Introduction6
Extreme Abilities8
Extreme Movement86
Extreme Growth158
Extreme Families248
Acknowledgments316
Index318
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