About This Book
The author offers a series of natural‑history essays based on field observations across the temperate La Plata plains, combining species notes with anecdotal incidents. He surveys mammals, birds, insects, and other fauna, describing habits such as the puma's surprising interactions with humans and livestock, armadillo behaviour toward snakes, and skunk and wasp natural history. Themes include mimicry and warning colours, parental and fear responses in birds, insect life cycles and stormlike swarms, and parasite–host problems involving mosquitoes. The pieces are arranged as discrete chapters that blend careful observation, practical anecdotes, and comparative remarks on animal weapons, instincts, and adaptations.
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