Book Description and Contents
Rattlesnakes of Arizona
Volumes 1 and 2
Rattlesnakes of Arizona (2-volumes) is a multi-authored, peer-reviewed book (1256 pp.) that is intended for both professionals and laypersons. Each volume stands on its own in content yet they are complementary. This book was inspired by scientific and creative approaches to form, function, and context. Our main goal was to create a collaborative fusion of art, natural history, and science that enlightens and inspires. Early ancestors of humans understood the linkages between observation, understanding, and depiction. Their spectacular murals on cave walls in France, and their petroglyphs and art throughout the United States and Mexico, are a testament to the significance of these connections. As we labored toward a mature capacity for reason and science, these connections were forgotten for a time; but we have come around to better understand our own brains and behavior, and ironically we find it easier to understand those ancient activities in the 21st century.
Rattlesnakes of Arizona
Volume 1 – Species Accounts and Natural History
This stunning and large volume (736 pages) on Arizona's rattlesnakes in landscape format has 17 chapters by 22 leading authorities covering in-depth aspects of natural history, behavior, evolution, and conservation. A special chapter is on art and rattlesnakes. Original art is by the acclaimed and award-winning wildlife artist Tell Hicks, who was commissioned by the Chiricahua Desert Museum and Eco Publishing for this project. Hicks' breathtaking art of rattlesnakes and other animals graces the pages throughout the book. This volume is especially intended for anyone interested in rattlesnakes and their role in the southwestern deserts and other ecosystems. There are hundreds of beautiful color photos (many are full-page in size) of rattlesnakes in situ, as well as attractive figures (graphs) and tables.
The Foreword is by Bayard H. Brattstrom, a leading American authority on rattlesnakes and other pitvipers. The attractive dust jacket is based on Hicks’ award-winning painting titled, New Mexico Ridgenose Rattlesnake (in situ). (www.ecouniverse.com/product/302/) Carel P. Brest van Kempen, wildlife artist and author of the widely acclaimed wildlife art book, Rigor Vitae: Life Unyielding, writes of Tell Hicks:
His paintings of snakes in their habitats are extraordinary. I especially love his New Mexico Ridgenose Rattlesnake, which is one of the most beautiful animal paintings I have seen.
Table of Contents
FOREWORD
BAYARD H. BRATTSTROM
DEDICATION
INTRODUCTION
GORDON W SCHUETT, TELL HICKS, AND BOB ASHLEY
ART AND RATTLESNAKES
RANDALL S. REISERER
SPECIES ACCOUNTS
The Western Rattlesnake Complex: 200 Years of Intrigue and Change
MARK A. DAVIS
Grand Canyon Rattlesnake (Crotalus abyssus)
MARTIN J. FELDNER, GORDON W. SCHUETT, AND JOHN M. SLONE
Arizona Black Rattlesnake (Crotalus cerberus)
MARK A. DAVIS, MARTIN J. FELDNER, AND GORDON W. SCHUETT
Midget Faded Rattlesnake (Crotalus concolor)
MARTIN J. FELDNER, GORDON W. SCHUETT, AND JOHN M. SLONE
Great Basin Rattlesnake (Crotalus lutosus)
MARTIN J. FELDNER, GORDON W. SCHUETT, AND JOHN M. SLONE
Prairie Rattlesnake (Crotalus viridis)
MARK A. DAVIS AND MICHAEL E. DOUGLAS
Western Diamond-backed Rattlesnake (Crotalus atrox)
GORDON W. SCHUETT, ROGER A. REPP, CAROL L. SPENCER, KENT R. BEAMAN, AND CHARLES W. PAINTER
Sidewinder (Crotalus cerastes)
RANDALL S. REISERER
Rock Rattlesnake (Crotalus lepidus)
DAVID B.PRIVAL AND JOHN P. PORTER
Black-tailed Rattlesnake (Crotalus molossus)
TREVOR B. PERSONS, MARTIN J. FELDNER, AND ROGER A. REPP
Twin-Spotted Rattlesnake (Crotalus pricei)
DAVID B.PRIVAL
Southwestern Speckled Rattlesnake (Crotalus pyrrhus)
JESSE M. MEIK
Mohave Rattlesnake (Crotalus scutulatus)
MICHAEL D. CARDWELL
Tiger Rattlesnake (Crotalus tigris)
MATT GOODE, MICKEY RAY PARKER, MARTIN J. FELDNER, AND ROGER A. REPP
Ridgenose Rattlesnake (Crotalus willardi)
DAVID G. BARKER
Western Massasauga (Sistrurus tergeminus)
MARTIN J. FELDNER, GORDON W. SCHUETT, AND CHARLES F. SMITH
Reviews of Volume 1
The content is unparalleled in sheer volume of information. I know of no other work that includes so much information about these animals in one book, and it is easily accessible and relevant to the academic and the casual hobbyist alike. It is obvious that all of the authors left no stone unturned in order to provide the most current and relevant information. – Diego Oritz
If you have an avid interest in rattlesnakes, you will reread and utilize this book for a lifetime. If you have only a passing interest in rattlesnakes, this book is a good way to end up with an avid interest. Highly recommended. – Kelly Chabak
Absolutely fantastic – up there with classical works like FitzSimons' Snakes of South Africa, Pitman's Snakes of Uganda. Next year I have to drive to Arizona to search for all these Rattlesnakes. I like Hicks' illustrations which add tremendous scientific and artistic value. – Thomas Hakansson
I just received my copy of the brand new book, Rattlesnakes of Arizona, Vol. 1, edited by Gordon Schuett et al and illustrated by Tell Hicks. It's an exhaustive and beautiful book--736 pages. Here's my reaction to Tell's illustrations: "With his illustrations for Rattlesnakes of Arizona, Tell Hicks has achieved a milestone in the history of nature illustration and animal art. His "field guide" illustrations of the species are as accurate as they come, but what really sets them apart is his innovative way of presenting them, which is not only aesthetically appealing, but it shows all of the important parts of the snake in an economical way that makes them more useful than the approaches others have taken. His paintings of snakes in their habitats are extraordinary. I especially love his New Mexico Ridgenose Rattlesnake, which is one of the most beautiful animal paintings I have seen." Congratulations Tell, Gordon, and everyone else who worked on it. Well done! – Carel P. Brest van Kempen
Volume 2 – Conservation, Behavior, Venom, and Evolution
The second volume of Rattlesnakes of Arizona is a collection of 13 highly focused, synthetic chapters by leading experts, which cover a wide range of topics, from phylogenetics and genomics to reproduction and social behavior. Emphasis is on species of Arizona and nearby areas. Conservation is highlighted in two chapters. Several chapters are dedicated solely to the development and evolution of the rattle itself. No academic book on rattlesnakes would be complete without a chapter on venom, and the one in this volume will not disappoint.
Like its companion, it is replete with beautiful photographs of rattlesnakes, as well as many figures and tables. It issurely to become the new, up-to-date authoritative reference on these iconic animals.
We anticipate Volume 2 to be published in late fall 2016.
Table of Contents
Recent Developments in Rattlesnake Phylogenetics, Phylogeography, and Species Delimitation
WOLFGANG WÜSTER
A Role for Genomics in Rattlesnake Research: Current Knowledge and Future Potential
DREW R. SCHIELD, DAREN C. CARD, JACOBO REYES-VELASCO, AUDRA L. ANDREW, CASSANDRA A.MODAHL, STEPHEN P. MACKESSY, DAVID D. POLLOCK, AND TODD A. CASTOE
Deciphering the Evolution of Venom and the Venom Apparatus in Rattlesnakes
STEPHEN P. MACKESSY AND TODD A. CASTOE
The Hunting and Feeding Behavior of Wild Rattlesnakes
RULON W. CLARK
Rattlesnakes as Models for Reproductive Studies of Vertebrates
EMILY N. TAYLOR AND WARREN BOOTH
Social Behavior of Rattlesnakes: A Shifting Paradigm
GORDON W. SCHUETT, RULON W. CLARK, ROGER A. REPP, MELISSA AMARELLO, CHARLES F. SMITH, AND HARRY W. GREENE
The Origin and Evolution of the Rattlesnake Rattle: Misdirection, Clarification, Theory, and Progress
RANDALL S. REISERER AND GORDON W. SCHUETT
Structure, Ontogeny, and Evolutionary Development of the Rattlesnake Rattle
JESSE M. MEIK AND GORDON W. SCHUETT
The Rattle: A Window on Rattlesnake Life Histories
RANDALL S. REISERER
Novel Tracking, Remote Monitoring Technologies, and Their Application to Rattlesnakes
STEVEN J. BEAUPRE
Rattlesnakes in Syntopy: A Case Study from Arizona
ERIKA M. NOWAK AND GORDON W. SCHUETT
Rattlesnake Conservation in the 21st Century
ERIKA M. NOWAK AND HARRY W. GREENE
A Molecular Perspective on Conservation: Rattlesnakes as Models
HANS-WERNER HERRMANN
Cover Art by Tell Hicks
Discussion Guidelines for Authors
Our review community is comprised of responsible professionals and there is little need to admonish against misuse of this contributors-only forum. The following guidelines are, however, provided in the interest of complete clarity. If you feel that a post violates any of the rules below, please use the "report to moderator" link in the lower right corner of the post.
- Please keep all posts on-topic.
- All discussions should be legal.
- Post your comment/question to the most appropriate place. Any posts deemed to be in the wrong forum will be moved. Do not cross-post the same question or comment to multiple categories.
- Please read a post completely before replying to it.
- The rules of quoting and citing sources should be observed in all forum posts.
- Choose an appropriate subject line. Try to summarize the problem briefly in the subject, and elaborate in the message itself. Repeat the subject in the body if it will make things clearer. Please do not use all caps for entire posts.
- No useless posts please.
- Do not link to any site that contains inappropriate content or might otherwise be considered offensive. Any post containing an inappropriate link will be deleted and the poster will receive a warning.
Signatures:
- Must be setup in your Profile (see top menu) , and not manually added to your messages.
- May NOT contain images.
- May not contain commercial messages.
- May include two non-duplicate clickable links.
- Only exact URLs allowed (example: http://rattlesnakesorarizona.org).
At all times:
- Keep all commentary civil, and be courteous. Constructive criticism is welcome and expected, but insults directed towards other contributors will not be tolerated.
- No commercial advertising is permitted.
- Any posts deemed to be self promotion, advertising, or spam will be removed.
Systems Help
Set up your profile
Your profile is where other contributors go to see your review statistics and view personal details and contact information. Most of the information in your profile is optional. Access your profile by clicking the 'Profile' tab located at the top of the forum page or "Your User Profile" in the 'User Menu." You must be logged in to access your profile or view the profiles of other members. Fill out any information you wish to share with other members.
Editing Your Profile
-
Use the Edit menu (top left in your profile page) to add or change information in all of your profile tabs. These tabs are labeled the same in edit mode as in your profile page.
- The Portrait tab is where you add or change your profile photo. Please use a recent photo of you so other contributors can get to know you visually.
- The Contact Info tab is where you add or change your contact information and manage your user account. You can edit your name, email address, and the username and password that you use to login to the site, as well as address and phone number. If you have site editing priviledges you might want to choose a text editor. This feature is less useful to contributors.
-
The Forum tab is used to change your forum view settings.
- >>>Message ordering - Select whether you want to view the newest or oldest post first in your list.
- >>>Preferred Viewtype - Change forum view settings to either flat or threaded.
- >>>Board Signature - Create a board signature that gets automatically posted at the foot of your entries.
- The About me tab allows you to add information about yourself in a text editor. The text editor provides a lot of functionality and will not be described here. Mouse over the buttons for a tool tip.
Replying to an existing post
To reply to a post, simply click one of the 'reply' buttons and enter your title and text using the controls provided. Your options for replying are listed below.
- >Quick Reply - This button brings up a small text area (without reloading the web page) where you can quickly type a short reply. Press "Submit" when you are finished typing your reply. Tis feature does not supply the boardcode tool bar, but you can type in boardcode if you need some simple markup.
- >Reply - This posting method is the standard for replying to the most recent post. With this method, the subject line of your post will auto-fill with the subject of the post to which you are replying. You can change the subject, of course, but retaining the subject provides continuity to the thread. The text editor allows you to format your text, add links, insert images, etc. (see Formatting Your Post below). Type your response and press one of the 'Preview' buttons in the Boardcode bar if you wish to view your post prior to submitting it. When you are satisfied with your post, press the 'Submit' button.
- >Quote - If you wish to quote someone's post whether in whole or in part, press the "Quote" button located beside the "Reply" button. The Quote button leads into the same editing environment used to edit or create any other post. Type your response to the quote. When you are finished, press the "Submit" button.
- >Reply Topic - This button functions the same as the "Reply" button with the exception that your subject line will auto-fill with the subject of the original post, rather than the most recent post in a thread. This may come in handy if you reply to a long post whose subjects has changed over time but you want to respond to the original post. When you are finished, press the 'Submit' button.
Creating a New Post
To create your own thread, apart from an existing discussion, select a paper from the index tab then click the "New Topic" button. You can select a different paper from the "Category" dropdown. You will use the same text editor available when replying to posts. Type your title and message and press a Preview button or "Submit." You can upload one document per post using the Attachments field.
Subscribing to a Topic
Commenting on a topic automatically subscribes you to new posts from the topic you commented on. You can deselect the checkbox to prevent automatic subscription or unsubscribe later using the "Unsubscribe" button.
Formatting Your Post
You can format and arrange your text for emphasis using Bulletin Board Code (BBcode). BBcode uses "tags" to "mark up" your text. Each "tag" has an opening and closing code element enclosed in brackets. An opening tag will look like this: [ ], and a closing tag looks like this: [/ ]. If you forget the slash in the closing bracket, the forum will interpret your closing bracket as an opening bracket.
The easiest way to "mark up" text is to type it first, select it, and press the appropriate button at the top of the editor. For example, if you wanted to make "some text" bold you would first type "some text", then select it with your mouse, and press the "B" icon in the toolbar located in the message box header. The result will be: [b]some text[/b]. When you preview or submit your message it will be displayed as "some text." Of course, you can type the tags manually or you can use the buttons at the top of the editor to insert the tags then fill in your text.
The BBcode Wiki covers the basic mark up tags, but below we cover some additional functionality.
Lists
There are two types of lists: ordered (numbered) and unordered (bulleted). Two different tags are needed to create a list, the list type tags and the element tags.
First, use the list type tag to create the kind of list you want.
[ul] [/ul] = unordered list [ol] [/ol] = ordered list
Second, use a list element tag for each item in the list
[li] [/li] = each list item.
The code for an ordered list would look like this:
[ol] [li] 1st item[/li] [li] 2nd item[/li] [li] 3rd item[/li] [/ol]
Videos
Video embedding makes use of video sharing websites and other web-deployed video not hosted on our server. This convenience allows video hosted elsewhere to be shown in our discussion threads without viewers having to follow a link to another website. To embed a video, select the filmstrip icon in the Boardcode bar and do one of two things:
- >Simply paste in the URL to the video, adjust the size settings, preview, and click the "Insert video" button beside the URL text field, OR
- >You can specify the size, select a provider, then add the video's unique identifier in the "ID" field and click the "Insert video" button beside the that field.
Explanation: Video sharing websites use a unique identifier for each video. For example, the identifier for the following video from YouTube whose URL is http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VD9fiXWViFM the alphanumeric following the equals sign: VD9fiXWViFM. Using the unique identifier, you can embed the video in your forum post by selecting the video hosting website from the 'provider' drop down list at the top of the editor window or typing the following:
[video type=] [/video]
If you were embedding the ao video from YouTube, for example, the bbcode would end up looking like this:
[video type=youtube]SWMjkxNpl6k[/video]
It's a good idea to preview your post to make sure that the video is visible before submitting.
Editing your own post
There will be times when you make a post and you want to edit a misspelled word, fix a broken link, or clarify a statement. Use the "Edit" button to edit your own posts. It is located at the bottom of your post. Simply press the "Edit" button, use the editor to make changes, and press the 'Submit' button at the bottom of the page.
Visibility and notification of your favorite posts
To become a contributing member of a discussion forum, it is important to keep abreast of new activity in your area of interest. There are two ways to do this: 1) by subscribing to a topic and 2) by setting a topic as a favorite.
Subscribe
At the top and the bottom of every thread you will find the "Subscribe" button. Pressing this button subscribes you to that topic so that any activity under that topic will generate an email notification that gets sent to your email address. The email will contain a link to the new pos and the text of the postt. If you are subscribed to a topic the "Subscribe" button will be replaced by one that reads "Unsubscribe." Pressing that button again will remove your subscription to the topic. You can also manage your subscriptions in your profile.
Favorite
If you do not want email notifications, but would like to mark topics of interest, use the "Favorite" button. This will place an indicator beside the topic name so you can easily identify it in the list. After you select a topic as a favorite an "Unfavorite" button replaces the "Favorite" button and pressing this button will remove the indicator from the topic. You can also manage your favorites in your profile using the Forum tab.