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This has been x-posted w/ permission.

Stefanie Rixecker
ECOFEM Coordinator

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Ed. Note: This Review has been cross-posted from H-NILAS

H-NET BOOK REVIEW
Published by [EMAIL PROTECTED] (October, 2000)

Gordon L. Miller, ed. _Nature's Fading Chorus: Classic and Contemporary
Writings on Amphibians_. Washington D.C.: Island Press, 2000. x + 249 pp.
Illustrations, bibliographic references, index. $45.00 (cloth), ISBN:
1-55963-793-5; $19.95 (paper), ISBN 1-55963-794-3.

Reviewed for H-NILAS by Jeff Crane, Department of History, Washington State
University

So often when we talk about nature we envision a dramatic landscape of
waterfalls and towering mountains, and during time spent in the wild we
seek a glimpse of an elk or bear, the shadow of a wolf in the forest, or
eagles soaring majestically above forests of dark conifers. All the while,
little eyes watch quietly from the edges of creeks and wetlands, from under
rotting logs or the sides of trees, while peepers sing the song of
returning spring and remind us that nature always remains more complex and
interesting than we ever seem to understand. _Nature's Fading Chorus_, a
collection of writings on amphibians edited by Gordon L. Miller and
published by Island Press, educates the reader on the historical record of
amphibians, the ancient and continuing human fascination with these
creatures, and their ecological importance even as they undergo a deepening
crisis of disappearance and deformities.

The scale of _Nature's Fading Chorus_ is ambitious, surveying the writing
and knowledge of amphibians from antiquity to the increasingly grim story
of decline and deformity in modern times. This book is successful due to
the selection of interesting and informative pieces as well as helpful
introductions providing historical background and scientific explanations
for the periods from which the passages were chosen. The selections
demonstrate an evolving and increasingly sophisticated knowledge of
amphibians over time, while showing that interest and affection for these
frogs, toads, and salamanders has remained a constant throughout human
history.

The book is organized into five sections, beginning with ancient writings
on amphibians by Aristotle, Pliny the Elder, and later more scientific
voices. Particularly fascinating was the belief of Aristotle and several
other ancient writers that salamanders were so impervious to flames and
heat that they could actually extinguish fires. Thomas Brown, in his
_Pseudodoxia Epidemica_ of 1646, demonstrating the scientific love for
direct observation in his refutation of this traditional belief, states
quite simply and convincingly that when salamanders are placed in flames
they "dieth immediately therein"(p. 29).

The second section is titled "Reclaiming Paradise: Pioneering Nature
Writers," and includes pieces from classic naturalists such as William
Bartram and Henry David Thoreau. These pieces reveal the naturalists'
talent for observation and artful, introspective writing along with a
tendency to anthropomorphize nature. Thoreau writes, "are not the wood
frogs philosophers who walk in these groves? Methinks I imbibe a cool,
composed, frog-like philosophy when I behold them"(p. 51). W.H. Hudson
provides a compelling story of a toad's slow journey across a country lane
in a passage from "The Book of a Naturalist." Keeping a close eye on this
toad's dusty odyssey while chasing off possible predators, Hudson described
the traveler's quest: ".the toad was still there, still traveling,
painfully crawling a few inches, then sitting up and gazing with his yellow
eyes over the forty yards of that weary _via dolorosa_ which still had to
be got over before he could bathe and make himself young forever in that
river of life"(p. 61).

Section 3 is subtitled "The Scientific Essayists," as if implying a certain
boring objective analysis, but instead contains some of the more delightful
essays in the collection. The section begins with passages from Darwin's
_The Voyage of the Beagle_ and _The Origin of Species_ and ends with an
essay by David Scott, published in 1998. Scott's "A Breeding Congress"
displays a jaunty prose style that is both informative and entertaining. He
reveals a certain playfulness on the part of his fellow herpetologists when
he writes that in the describing sexual behavior of salamanders a prominent
salamander expert "actually managed to have the term 'spermatophore play'
published in a respected scientific journal"(p. 107). Scott also describes
the sexual dance of marbled male salamanders as similar to "a waltz with a
touch of slam dancing"(p. 107).

The fourth section of the book provides some of the most enjoyable reading,
accessible to even the casual student of nature. Joseph Wood Krutch's
elegant language in "The Day of The Peepers" captures the joy of spring's
rebirth and the peepers' early announcement of winter's inevitable ebb.
"But the peeper seems to realize, rather better than we, the significance
of his resurrection, and I wonder if there is any other phenomenon in the
heavens above or in the earth beneath which so simply and so definitely
announces that life is resurgent again"(p. 131). One of the most
interesting and powerful images from Annie Dillard's powerful _Pilgrim at
Tinker Creek_ is collected here. The story of the giant water bug sucking
frogs dry has remained one of the most powerful images from my long-ago
reading of _Pilgrim at Tinker Creek_, and I felt a certain gratification at
discovering that powerful description of nature in grim action between the
covers of this book.

The final section of _Nature's Fading Chorus_ is the most scientific and
technical, and also the most chilling. These essays detail the
disappearances of frogs and the increasing occurrence of abnormalities
among frog populations. The discovery by a group of Minnesota
schoolchildren of frog deformities in 1995 brought the amphibian crisis
into the media spotlight. Herpetologists had perceived certain problems
before this now legendary story, particularly the mysterious disappearances
of amphibians from seemingly healthy ecosystems around the world. This
concluding section of the book includes passages from papers examining
different causes for the observed amphibian disappearances and deformities.

What emerges throughout this section is that a variety of factors are
contributing to current problems. While a Stanford herpetologist discovered
that trematode parasites provided an explanation for some frog deformities,
other problems are not so easily explained. A reading of the essays in the
final section reveals that the spread of disease is particularly
problematic for amphibian populations around the world. According to
Virginia Morrell in "Are Pathogens Felling Frogs," the chytrid fungus is
suspected in the massive die-offs of frogs, toads, and salamanders in
Australia, the United States, and Central America as well. The
disappearance of amphibians, often quite disturbing in its suddenness,
along with the widespread increase in deformities, serves as a quiet
reminder that the ecology of the planet is under severe stress and the
complete ramifications of pollution, development, loss of wetlands and
other habitats, as well as the increase in ultraviolet radiation, still
remain beyond our complete comprehension.

_Nature's Fading Chorus_ offers something for a variety of readers. The
amphibian lover will be entertained by the different interpretations of
salamanders' and frogs' natures over several hundred years, not to mention
the powerful writing and descriptions of amphibian behavior and
characteristics. Even the casual student of nature and writing can take
much from this book. The fact that the book ends on such a depressing note
is a forceful reminder of the ecological crisis that faces us these days.

Reading this book brought back old memories of long hours wading in creeks
in pursuit of leopard frogs and warm spring days lying on a wooden dock
raptly watching breeding rough-skinned newts floating suspended in a beaver
pond. Maybe once I finish this review I'll find an old pair of shoes for
wading, and with hopeful heart seek out a pair of yellow amphibian eyes
gazing at me from a murky pond.
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************************************
Dr. Stefanie S. Rixecker, Senior Lecturer
Environmental Management & Design Division
Lincoln University, Canterbury
PO Box 84
Aotearoa New Zealand
E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Fax: 64-03-325-3841
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