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The ENCHANTED CANOPY: Secrets from the Rainforest Roof

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Libro usado en buenas condiciones, por su antiguedad podria contener señales normales de uso

Hardcover

First published January 1, 1986

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Andrew Mitchell

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Catherine.
189 reviews2 followers
July 12, 2014
This book showed me the beauty, complexity and fragility of the canopy. I learnt more about nature, it's connections, and it's codependency, from this book, than all the other nature books combined. It made me fall madly in love with this planet.

I describe this book as life changing for me. While I was always aware of pollution, wasting water, animals dying out and loss of habitat, this book showed me how everything in this environment was so dependant on all the other parts being there, and working. If the awe inspiring animals and plants in the canopy (or insert any other landscape here) struggle or die out - it is our fault for ignoring the science, putting ourselves first and for mucking around in spaces that don't belong to us.

What I learned from this book has informed and effected every decision I have made since I read it in the early 80s. If I could only save one book from my library - this book is it.
Profile Image for Juliet Wilson.
Author 7 books46 followers
July 30, 2024
Subtitled "Secrets from the Rainforest Roof" this classic from the mid 1980s celebrates the wildlife of tropical rainforests around the world. Mitchell (currently director of the Global Canopy Programme) was a pioneering arboreal naturalist, as such he was influential in developing methods for studying the rainforest canopy, by constructing walkways close to the tops of the trees.

This beautifully written and lavishly illustrated book looks at many aspects of rainforest ecology, from the relationships between pollinators and plants to the sex lives of Orang-utans to the mystery of the Calvaria tree in Mauritius, which were all ageing and unable to produce a new generation because their seeds had originally been eaten and then excreted by the Dodo, it was eventually found that the turkey had a similar enough digestive system and so the Calvaria was saved from extinction.

Mitchell clearly shows how understanding the relationships between different organisms can be of significant benefit, not only to securing the future of the rainforests, but also in enabling local agriculture to thrive: "In the past, tropical Brazil nut farmers wondered why their trees' multi-million dollar crop began to fail, until it was shown that the carpenter bees responsible for pollinating the Brazil nut trees had vanished along with the forest that used to surround the plantation."

It is notable, that even writing in 1986, Mitchell was well aware of the fragility of rainforest ecosystems, writing, for example, that in the USA: "Olive sided Flycatchers and Grey Vireos have dropped about four to eight percent every year since 1966. It seems almost certain that this is due in large part to the destruction of forests in South America, currently estimated at over four million hectares annually." He also expands on the need for arboreal naturalists to fulfil their quest to understand the 'most complex exhibition of life on earth'.

Yet tropical rainforests are still being destroyed across the world....

This is a beautiful and fascinating book that does somehow feel like entering a lost world.
Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews