Review This is a delightful book that engages and teaches about life in the desert. I initially bought it to read with my ten year old daughter, but when I started to skim through it, I quickly found myself taken with the stories of desert life, and before I knew it had finished the slim volume myself! I was happy to learn that this book is as fun and educational for adults as it is for kids. -- Drew Talley, Professor of Environmental Studies, University of San DiegoWhile it appears to be for kids ... I was amazed to find it chock full of interesting info, just as the title suggests. What I appreciate the most is seeing the interconnectedness in the environment--how plants and animals depend on each other. -- Neva G. Sullaway, Editor, Swift Boats at War in Viet Nam About the Author Renaldo, a Sonoran desert tortoise, lives on the top of Mount Salvatierra, where he has a good view of the changes that happen in his El Pinacate desert ecosystem over several decades. Lacking fingers, a camera and a computer, he recruited Paul Dayton, a visiting biologist, to tell his story. Paul Dayton grew up in the Sonoran Desert, in Tucson, Arizona. He received his B.S. degree from the University of Arizona and his Ph.D. in Zoology from University of Washington. He is a biological oceanographer and ecologist at Scripps Institution of Oceanography in La Jolla, California. Dayton has worked in Benthic Ecology, Marine Conservation & Policy, Evolution & Natural History, and General Ecology. During his 35-year career at Scripps, Dayton has researched coastal Antarctic habitats and rocky-shore and kelp habitats worldwide in order to better understand marine ecosystems. He has also documented the environmental impacts of overfishing, water reclamation, and phenomena such as El Nino on coastal ecology. Among other honors, Dayton is the only person to win both the George Mercer Award (1974) and the WS Cooper Award (2000) from the Ecological Society of America. In 2002 he received the Scientific Diving Lifetime Achievement Award from the American Academy of Underwater Sciences; in 2004 he was honored with the Edward O. Wilson Naturalist Award from the American Society of Naturalists, and in 2006 he was the first recipient of the Ramon Margalef Prize in Ecology, awarded by a jury of scientists representing Catalonia, the European Union, and the international ecology community.
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