Book review
Pough, F. H., R. M. Andrews, M. L. Crump, A.
H. Savitzky, K. D. Wells, and M. C.
Brandley. 2016. Herpetology. Fourth
Edition. 591 pp. Sinauer Associates, Inc.,
Sunderland, MA, USA.
ISBN-10: 1605352330
ISBN-13: 978-1605352336
Price: USD 88.36
www.sinauer.com
I have owned every edition of this textbook,
and every one has been the best herpetology text
available at the time. This one is the best of the
best.
It starts with a quick introduction to
amphibians and reptiles; much of this is familiar
to anyone who has been studying herpetology
for a while, but with excellent color illustrations
that are well above what was presented in older
texts and should make anyone’s introduction to
the wonders of herps easier and more entertaining
than it would have been.
After an excellent presentation of the basis
for modern systematics, Pough et al. follow with
a presentation of the modern diversity of
amphibians and reptiles. They use taxonomy that
is as up to date as it’s possible to be in these
times of rapid change driven by advancing
statistical and molecular methods. I learned a lot
in this section myself, as I’ve been too lazy to
keep up with those rapid changes. Almost all
taxa are illustrated with a photograph. As a
reviewer I always feel obliged to point out
something that could be improved, and that is
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point out that I suspect it would be possible to
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animals that were either more naturalistic or (e.g.
the white-background images that have become
popular recently) more striking illustrations of
the taxa pictured. Varying image size and
placement a bit more might be useful also. At
any rate, this is truly a minor suggestion—the
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living animals, and that in itself is an achievement.
Phyllomedusa
The introductory section closes with a chapter
entitled The Biogeography of Amphibians and
Reptiles which manages to succinctly cover
historical evolution and biogeography through
modern dispersal and island assemblages.
The next major division of the book covers
how herps work, with particular focuses on how
they way they work differs from the mammals.
The general framework of this has not changed
greatly since my graduate student days (before
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presentation is worlds beyond anything available
then, and much interesting new information has
appeared about every aspect of herps’ functional
biology. As someone interested in thermal and
water relations of amphibians, I was very pleased
to see more information on the fact that many
amphibians do thermoregulate, and that they
face complex tradeoffs while doing so. The
coverage of energetics and how they interact
with behaviour is extensive and fascinating, and
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Alford
forms a solid background for the later sections
on ecology.
This section includes extensive and up-todate discussions of the reproductive biology of
amphibians and reptiles. There has been and
continues to be a great deal of recent work in
this area. Anyone who comes to these chapters
with the belief that herps have simple, primitive
reproductive biology will be astonished by the
sophistication and complexity they reveal.
Neither taxon is by any stretch of the imagination
“stuck” with a primitive life history or
reproductive mode; as these chapters reveal,
there are a staggering array of adaptations, up to
and including viviparity in both taxa, and,
particularly in amphibians, including a huge
variety of strange and wonderful reproductive
strategies and modes of parental care. Finally in
this section, chapters on body support and
locomotion and feeding work through these
aspects of function, showing that although
modern herps might be thought to have relatively
stereotypical body forms, they are capable of a
very wide range of functions.
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what amphibians and reptiles do, divided into
chapters on spatial ecology, communication,
mating systems and sexual selection, diets and
species interactions, and population and
assemblage level ecology.
I was initially curious about the inclusion of
spatial ecology as a separate subject. However,
the chapter covers the very important areas of
movement behaviour, home range size, homing
and territoriality, and dispersal. It is possibly a
bit conservative, with its discussion of
amphibians largely focused on systems in which
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mention of systems in which it appears there is
mass movement among breeding habitats even
by adults. The recent massively developed
literature on the cane toad (Rhinella marina) as a
model invasive species is touched on, but
perhaps necessarily there is much more than is
covered. One more (very minor) criticism; I was
disappointed to see that the book repeats the
poorly documented assertion that the cane toad
has displaced native species; many studies have
failed to demonstrate this. Its greatest effects
seem to be caused by the effects of its venom on
top predators, rather than by direct or indirect
effects on competitors.
The spatial ecology chapter is followed by
communication. This uses graphics very effectively and incorporates the results of recent work
that has emphasized the importance of matches
and contrasts between signals and background,
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Communication leads fairly naturally to mating
systems and sexual selection, one of the most
heavily studied aspects of herp biology and a
subject that could and has served as the focus of
an entire book. The chapter does a good job of
covering the topic (though lightly), including
more recent developments in theory and
discoveries via data, such as the prevalence and
effects of polyandry and sperm competition.
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assemblage structure point out the roles of
amphibians and reptiles as elements of
ecosystems and how they interact with their
resources, each other, and their predators. They
include a fairly extensive discussion of how
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continue to modify, the diversity and distribution
of herps. A great deal of new information is
presently accumulating on many aspects of the
higher level ecology of amphibians and reptiles,
in part because of concern for their conservation
and future survival, which is addressed in the
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handed, documenting and discussing the status
of both reptiles and amphibians, and examining
most of the ideas that have been advanced
regarding both the reasons for their declines and
how to avoid or reverse them. There is a
relatively large section on amphibians and the
chytrid fungi that threaten them, but this is
balanced against the many other sources of threat
that are sometimes forgotten.
In summary, this new edition is certainly a
solid advance on the previous ones. The authors
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Book review
have done well at updating the information and
literature, and modernizing the look and
presentation. Even those who own previous
editions will probably want to acquire this one to
have a handy, relatively current resource on
aspects of herpetology that fall outside their
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read it from cover to cover, and will acquire a
very solid basic knowledge of most aspects of
the diversity and biology of amphibians and
reptiles, and very good introductions to the
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Phyllomedusa
embedded in. If I was still teaching a herpetology
subject, I would certainly adopt this as my
textbook.
Ross A. Alford
College of Science and Engineering
James Cook University
Townsville, Queensland 4811
Australia
E-mail: ross.alford@jcu.edu.au
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