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The Last Giants

The Rise and Fall of the African Elephant

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Ever since he was young, Levison Wood has been fascinated by elephants and their fight for survival. Whilst trekking the Nile he saw these beasts up close, and in The Last Giants, he finally satisfies his desire to learn more about the majestic African elephant.

These giants trek through some of Africa's most magnificent landscapes as they go in search of life-giving waters and pastures. El Nino's droughts and an insatiable ivory trade have cut African elephant numbers by a third in the last decade. If elephants disappear entirely, Africa's entire ecosystem could collapse. But Botswana has become a safe haven, where one-sixth of the world's elephants now reside. Each year their numbers grow and an incredible migration takes place, which Levison has now witnessed and recorded.

In The Last Giants, he teams up with local trackers to gain insight into how this iconic species survives, camps out in the wild, meets the people and tribes living on the migration's path, and joins the park rangers whose job it is to protect these land goliaths.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 31, 2020
      Wood (Walking the Americas), a photographer, explorer, and British Army veteran, takes a rewarding look at the habits and habitats of the African elephant. He begins by recalling the first time he saw elephants in the wild, as a boy on vacation with his parents in Kenya. Scores of them “appeared as if out of nowhere on their nightly pilgrimage to an ancient shrine,” and “I stood transfixed” at this “wondrous and enchanting” sight. While emphasizing that he is still just an enthusiast, “not an expert in elephant biology, psychology or conservation,” he proceeds to introduce some salient facts and insights from each of these areas. To begin, he discusses the varied uses of one of their most distinctive attributes, their trunks, and their divergent evolutionary path from most other mammals—the elephant’s “closest living relative” today is the rock hyrax, a “furry, rodent-like creature that looks a bit like a guinea pig and isn’t much bigger.” Moving onto psychology, Wood shares observations on how his subjects’ highly developed intelligence and capacity for empathy emerge in interactions with each other. Finally, he homes in on the threats posed by trophy hunting and the ivory trade. Comprehensively yet accessibly conveying Wood’s lifelong fascination with African elephants, his discussion will appeal to anyone keen on learning more about them.

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  • English

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