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Lost Frogs and Hot Snakes: Preface

Lost Frogs and Hot Snakes
Preface
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Preface
  2. Introduction
  3. Part I The Thrill of Discovery
    1. 1. The Irreplaceable Role of Nature in Scientific Discovery
    2. 2. The Crawfish Frog’s Jaw
    3. 3. Journey to the Amazonian Rainforest
    4. 4. A Rainy Evening in the Pantanal
    5. 5. Tracking Turtles
    6. 6. Finding the Frog That Sings Like a Bird
    7. 7. Borneo’s Tadpole Heaven
    8. 8. How the Bog Frog Got Its Name
  4. Part II Adventure and Exploration
    1. 9. My First Summit Camp
    2. 10. Down Under
    3. 11. Lessons from the Field: It’s the Journey, Not the Destination
    4. 12. Flying Southward Thirty-Three Degrees to Catch More Frogs
    5. 13. Trip to the Xingu River in the Amazon Forest of Brazil
    6. 14. Wok bilong ol pik
    7. 15. In Search of Wonder: How Curiosity Led Me to Madagascar
  5. Part III Fascination and Love for the Animals
    1. 16. Never Work on a Species That Is Smarter than You Are
    2. 17. The Reality of Giant Geckos
    3. 18. Following the Mole (Salamander) Trail: A Forty-Year Cross-Country Journey
    4. 19. Chance, Myth, and the Mountains of Western China
    5. 20. Dive in the Air beside a Rice Paddy: A Moment to Grab an Eluding Snake
    6. 21. Immersion
    7. 22. Herpetology Moments
    8. 23. Crying in the Rain, in the Middle of the World
    9. 24. Frogs in the Clear-Cut
    10. 25. Once upon a Diamondback: Learning Lessons about the Fragility of Desert Life
    11. 26. SWAT Team to the Rescue
    12. 27. Military Herpetology
  6. Part IV Mishaps and Misadventures
    1. 28. Close Encounters of the Gator Kind
    2. 29. Don’t Tread on Her
    3. 30. A Snake to Die For
    4. 31. Goose on the Road
    5. 32. Lost on the Puna
    6. 33. Lost and Found
    7. 34. The Mob That Almost Hanged Us in Chiapas, Mexico
    8. 35. Adventures while Studying Lizards in the Highlands of Veracruz, Mexico
  7. Part V Dealing with the Unexpected
    1. 36. The Field Herpetologist’s Guide to Interior Australia … with Kids
    2. 37. Troubles in a Tropical Paradise
    3. 38. Island Castaways and the Limits of Optimism
    4. 39. Lessons in Patience: Frog Eggs, Snakes, and Rain
    5. 40. Sounds of Silence on the Continental Divide
  8. Part VI The People We Meet, the Friendships We Forge, the Students We Influence
    1. 41. Why Do I Do What I Do in the Field?
    2. 42. The Captain and the Frog
    3. 43. Exploring the Wild Kingdom with Marlin
    4. 44. Terror, Courage, and the Little Red Snake
    5. 45. Team Snake Meets Equipe Serpent
    6. 46. Ticks, Policemen, and Motherhood: Experiences in the Dry Chaco of Argentina
    7. 47. Adventures in Wonderland
    8. 48. In the Rabeta of the Pajé: An Ethnoherpetological Experience
  9. Parting Thoughts
  10. Acknowledgments
  11. Index

Preface

Perhaps, when looking back to the years and years of fieldwork, we will realize that, albeit sometimes we did not find everything we expected or cherished, for sure we always met the very best version of ourselves. Fieldwork forever!

—Ignacio De la Riva, 2021

Fieldwork is the beginning and the end for many of us. We are addicted to the thrill of discovery, the novelty of exotic landscapes and iconic species, and the allure and magic of the unknown. Fieldwork opens up whole new worlds, often exposing us to new cultures, expanding our perspectives on social and political issues, and increasing our sensitivity to diverse lifestyles, customs, and attitudes. Seeing the world through a different lens helps us to understand ourselves—who we are and who we want to be. Never mind the extreme temperatures, biting and stinging insects, cold showers (or lack thereof), bacterial and fungal ailments, and monotonous diet. We are happiest when we are in the field. It is who we are, a sentiment echoed by the contributors in this collection of essays who portray fieldwork like it really is—the discomforts, frustrations, dangers, failures, successes, inspirations, surprises, exhilarations, adventures, and discoveries.

No doubt many of us will continue doing fieldwork even when we stagger under the weight of heavy backpacks, trip over tree roots at night, and are unable to hear the high-pitched peeps of treefrogs. Perhaps our children or students will carry our heavy backpacks, lead us by the hand down treacherous trails, and encourage us to sign up for those darn hearing aids. Fieldwork is in our blood.

It is most fitting that this book be published by Comstock Publishing at Cornell University Press. Field biologists study nature in nature, and that is exactly what Anna Botsford Comstock (1854–1930) advocated as one of the first educators to encourage teachers to take their students outside to study nature. During the late 1800s, Comstock was a major proponent of the Nature Study Movement, whose mantra was study nature, not books. She found that most New York public schools did not teach nature study and that many teachers felt inadequate to teach the subject. Deciding something needed to be done, in 1909 she began writing a guide for teachers, entitled Handbook of Nature Study. She published the book in 1911, through her husband’s publishing house, Comstock Publishing Company. The book was 938 pages, with 232 planned lessons and suggested field trips and experiments. By 1923 when the League of Women Voters voted Anna Comstock one of the twelve greatest women in America within their chosen fields, the book had already sold over forty thousand copies. The Handbook has gone through twenty-five editions and has been translated into eight languages. Thanks to Cornell University Press, it is still in print and is widely used by teachers, biologists, and laypersons. It is an honor to have this collection of essays in such august company, and I can only hope that the book, like Comstock’s Handbook, serves to inspire the next generation of field biologists.

References

Comstock, A.B. 1911. Handbook of nature study. Ithaca, NY: Comstock Publishing Company.

De la Riva, I. 2021. Fieldwork forever. Herpetological Review 52(3): 559–563.

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