
John Alcock
In a Desert Garden
Love and Death Among the Insects
An elegant combination of meticulous science and nature reverie that draws its reader into the
diverse, competitive, and even seductive world of
desert plants and insects.
With canny insight and bone-dry wit, John Alcock, a
specialist in the ecology of the American Southwest, introduces us
to the lives and loves of desert insects as they forage through
his backyard oasis. Creating his own desert garden behind
his suburban home in Tempe, Arizona, Alcock scrutinizes
every square inch of soil detailing the exotic plant life he
finds and offering tips on its peccadilloes and preservation.
The true heroes of this story, however, are the bugs
of Alcock's backyard. We are drawn into complex
plots almost biblical in nature of life and love, survival and death.
Two male earwigs caught in each other's pincers battle for a
prized female. A female mantis finishes copulating, beheads her
mate, and cannibalizes his body for its precious protein.
With each detail, Alcock pieces together the entire
ecosystem of his desert paradise. Always amusing and
instructive, and sometimes dramatic, In a Desert
Garden provides an eye-opening meditation on the joys of planting, weeding,
pruning, and, most of all, bug-hunting.
John Alcock is professor of zoology at Arizona State
University.
"John Alcock makes desert biology
pure fun."--High Country News
"The real charm of Mr. Alcock . . . is
that he shows us that scientific cognition isn't the only way to experience a
glorious ecosystem."--New York Times Book Review
1997 / hardcover / ISBN 0-393-04118-2 /
Full-color photographs, black-and-white drawings / 192 pages /
nature/insects
|