Are you looking for a light guidebook to the most interesting animals on the planet?


Here you go, just released today.

It’s not exhaustive, but it’s pocket-sized and has pretty pictures, perfect for the next time you walk in the park or hike in the wilderness or visit your basement.

Comments

  1. robro says

    Is there an app version of that or something similar for iOS/iPadOS? I use bird ID apps regularly.

  2. Walter Solomon says

    Would it be wrong to put a few in a jar with cotton soaked in alcohol or acetone to collect them?

    I could pin ’em to a piece of Styrofoam like I did with insects when I was in gradeschool.

  3. lochaber says

    robro@1>
    I had a coworker who used inaturalist a fair bit, and the times I watched them use it, it seemed to work fairly well?

    I haven’t used it myself, mostly because I’m old and cranky and don’t like downloading apps…

  4. StevoR says

    @2. Walter Solomon : “Would it be wrong to put a few in a jar with cotton soaked in alcohol or acetone to collect them? I could pin ’em to a piece of Styrofoam like I did with insects when I was in gradeschool.”

    Wrong from whose perspective & in what ways? The spiders would certainly think its wrong..

    What benefit(s) would be gained by it? Scientific and personal knoweldge I guess, educational use maybe but could that be aquired by other less destructive – at least to the spiders – ways? (E.g. photos and videos, live capture and cultivaton?)

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