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Thanks to all of our friends, customers and supporters who have helped Randy and I keep Naturally Curious going since his July hospitalization! We hope you'll bear with us while we figure out why he has lost his vision, and if it is permanent or temporary. We have several new titles in stock that I haven't loaded into the store yet, so please email us with any requests! Thanks

Javelinas, Manaster

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By Jane Manaster

Just like in her book, Horned Lizards, Manaster does a great job of presenting the science and the human history of a southwestern icon, the javelina. We see a small herd of these pretty much everytime we go to Laguna Atascosa National Wildlife Refuge, and always enjoy watching their antics at the bird feeders. With this book, we’ll have a great resource to learn more about what they are doing.

From the publisher:

"What looks like a pig, barks like a dog, purrs like a cat, stinks like a skunk, chatters like a rattlesnake, and bites like a badger? The collared peccary, better known in the Southwest as the javelina. . . . [This] is the best, most concise work available."--Santa Fe New Mexican

"Illustrated with outstanding pictures of javelinas at work and play."--McAllen Monitor

The javelina, or collared peccary, is the only peccary species native to the United States and is as much a part of the Southwestern landscape as the roadrunner, armadillo, and horned lizard. Its name is likely derived from the Spanish word for javelin, referring to the animal’s sharp tusks.

Javelinas are mentioned in documents dating back to the seventeenth century, when their range was somewhat larger. Very distantly related to the pig family, javelinas may be found in Texas, Arizona, and New Mexico, where they feast on one of their favorite foods, the prickly pear cactus. Living in herds numbering up to fifty animals, javelinas are generally said to be nearsighted and shy, although they are beginning to turn up as pests in some suburban areas. Due to a dorsal scent gland, you are likely to smell a javelina before you see it.

With colorful and endearing illustrations of this misunderstood animal, Jane Manaster’s natural and cultural history of the javelina is a must for any fan of the little “pig” of the Southwest.

A freelance writer and geographer, Jane Manaster lives in Austin, Texas. She is the author of several works, including Horned Lizards (Texas Tech 2002).”

Paperback, xiv + 85 pages, 12 b/w; 16 color illustrations, 1 map, June 2006.

Javelinas, Manaster
$19.95 $17.96 On Sale!