Victoria and Melbourne

Victoria and Melbourne

Incredible Lizards

One hundred species from around the world

$59.99
ISBN
9781925546989

Please check with your local bookstore for availability.

More Information
By Steve K. Wilson
Format Hardback
Page Extent 216
Book Size 215 x 240 x 1000 mm (H x W x D)
Imprint Reed New Holland
Release Date 6/11/2023
Subject Classification Biology, life sciences / Zoology & animal sciences / Zoology: Vertebrates / Reptiles

This book is a celebration of lizard-hood. It salutes a diversity of form and function unparalleled among terrestrial vertebrates, from apex predators capable of swallowing goats to limbless subterranean insectivores.

In equal measure they thrive in a tropical paradise, a waterless terrain so bleak one wonders how anything survives, and the human domain, including domestic gardens and the ruins of past civilizations.

The book ventures into how lizards exploit those disparate places, and author and photographer Steve Wilson’s attempts to document them around the world.

This book is born from journeys of discovery by the author. Quests for lizards and other reptiles have taken him to some of the world’s extraordinary biodiversity hot-spots in Borneo, Madagascar, Costa Rica and the Galapagos Islands.

He has also crisscrossed his native Australia many times, searching for lizards in deserts, rainforests and even peoples’ back yards. From mighty Komodo Dragons in Indonesia to tiny anoles in the Americas, every lizard has a tale to tell, making this a must-read title for anyone who is passionate about reptiles or about wildlife in general.

Steve Wilson

Steve lifelong love affair with reptiles has taken him to some of Australia most remote places. For the past 30 years he has been working to compile a comprehensive photographic documentation of Australia reptiles. He has authored/co-authored more than 5 books, including A Field Guide to Reptiles, What Snake is That, and What Lizard is That and has written many magazine articles on reptiles. For the past 20 years Steve has worked at the Queensland Museum, educating the public, identifying their specimens and (hopefully) instilling a desire to conserve our unique biological heritage.