Author picture

About the Author

Malcolm Penny is a zoologist, filmmaker, and writer. He was formerly a writer and producer of the award-winning Survival television series. He has written many books on wildlife and ecology for both children and adults.

Series

Works by Malcolm Penny

Giant Panda (Natural World) (1999) 27 copies
Polar Bear (Natural World) (1999) 18 copies
Birds (Cool Facts) (2001) 17 copies
Alligators & Crocodiles (1990) 16 copies
Zebra (Natural World) (2002) 13 copies, 1 review
Bears (Wildlife at Risk) (1989) 12 copies
Black Rhino (Natural World) (2001) 12 copies
Rhinos: Endangered Species (1987) 11 copies
Animal defenses (1988) 7 copies
Birds of Prey (Quest) (1995) 7 copies
Animal reproduction (1988) 7 copies, 1 review
Grasslands (Biomes) (2003) 5 copies
Hunting and stalking (1987) 4 copies
Predators (1995) 4 copies
Bees (Secret World of...) (2004) 2 copies
L'aigle royal (2002) 1 copy

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Legal name
Penny, Malcolm J.
Gender
male
Education
University of Bristol (Zoology)
Occupations
zoologist
television writer
Organizations
Wildfowl and Wetlands Trust
Nationality
UK
Associated Place (for map)
UK

Members

Reviews

4 reviews
Learn about zebras! Okay, first off, I love zebras. The fact that my nearly-two-year-old is selecting zebra books from the non-fiction shelves of the library on her own is exciting enough, but a book on a topic that I enjoy, to boot? Awesome!

This book is really well put together. Informational and interspersed with a ton of colorful photographs, this book would be welcome on a child's shelf as a picture book and easily transferred to their reference shelf thanks to the wealth of common and show more uncommon knowledge used in the writing of this book. I love zebras (did I say that already?), but even I didn't know that they were closely related to rhino's and tapirs, or that Chapman's zebra can be almost completely black.

The books references the Zebras habitats, life cycles, food chains, and threats, and has a helpful glossary in the back. A beautiful, informational book for children of all ages (mamas included!).
show less
Basics: 1974, softcover, 160 pages, 8 color and 4 b&w plates, 73 species, no range maps

As noted inside the book, this is the first field guide to represent the birds of the Seychelles islands. An excellent introduction to the history, habitats, conservation, colonization, and evolutionary tendencies are given in the initial 47 pages.

This field guide covers the endemic and resident birds, but not all the migrants and vagrants (up to 200) that have occurred on these islands. Of the 12 plates, show more four of them are in black-and-white, which depict the seabirds.

Despite its age compared to recent field guides for these islands, the text is still good. It is in-depth, and offers substantial historical, distribution, habitat, and behavioral information on the endemics. Many of the birds receive full 1-2 pages of coverage, which is uncommon in a field guide.

There are better field guides (Skerrett, Sinclair), but this book holds a special place because it was the first, much of itstext is still useful and, it was written while one of its endemic birds (Aldabra Brush-Warbler) was still known to exist, having last been seen in 1983.
show less
This book offers an informative overview of the diverse ways that animals reproduce. Intended for students of middle school and high school age, it contains descriptive text supplemented on each page with color photographs, drawings, and diagrams. Among the topics included are the following: where babies (sic) come from; asexual reproduction; genes, the "vital messengers"; attracting a mate; reproduction outside the body; reproduction inside the body; and the genetics of being male and show more female. Particular groups of animals are featured, including insects, frogs, reptiles & birds, and of course, the live- bearing mammals. The text is accurate, and even a zoologist may find a few facts of which s/he was unaware. A glossary and index are included, along with a short list of resources where additional information can be sought. show less
Many animals become endangered before they had a real existance. Animals should not be killed for fun. Many new laws have been implemented to save animals from becoming extinct.

Awards

You May Also Like

Statistics

Works
63
Members
583
Popularity
#43,004
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
4
ISBNs
154
Languages
4

Charts & Graphs