| 
A Key West Bed and Breakfast....
Boasting an incomparable location at the midpoint of Duval Street, The Tropical Inn is a quiet and private island compound. You might walk down Key West's most famous promenade a hundred times and not notice this romantic hideaway, tucked unassumingly away just steps from all the bustle and excitement |
|
|
| Reef Fish Identification - Tropical Pacific | 
enlarge | Authors: Gerald Allen, Roger Steene, Paul Humann, Ned Deloach Publisher: New World Publications Category: Book
List Price: $45.00 Buy Used: $25.99 You Save: $19.01 (42%)
Avg. Customer Rating: 14 reviews Sales Rank: 54091
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 457 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2.4 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.3
ISBN: 1878348361 Dewey Decimal Number: 031 EAN: 9781878348364 ASIN: 1878348361
Publication Date: October 2003 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Condition: WE SHIP TWICE DAILY! Mild wear. Clean pages. Offering exact book as shown CHOOSE EXPEDITED SHIPPING FOR EVEN FASTER DELIVERY! INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING AVAILABLE!
|
| Similar Items:
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description Finally, a comprehensive fish identification guide covering the fish-rich reefs of the Pacific. It contains 2,500 underwater photographs of 2,000 species from four of the best marine life authors/photographers in the business. Their collaboration makes it possible for underwater naturalists to identify fishes from Thailand to Tahiti with a single, compact, easy-to-use, no-nonsense reference. 108 fish families are presented in one of 20 Identification groups based on a family's related visual or behavioural characteristics, such as Large Oval / Colourful or Sand/Burrow Dwellers. Likewise, every effort has been made to group similar appearing species together.
|
| Customer Reviews: Read 9 more reviews...
My first choice for IDing fish January 4, 2009 I just came back from a dive trip to Bali and spent a week, off and on, IDing the fish I'd photographed. This book turned out to be the most useful. It includes photos of a lot of color/sex/age variations that proved invaluable. This book also puts little arrows in many pics to point out features that help differentiate a fish from otherwise similar ones--I found that to be very useful.
However, though it's the best book for tropical Pacific fish IDing, I did find that I needed to cross-reference it with several others in ambiguous cases (and many cases were ambiguous!)--particularly one Aussie book that uses paintings instead of photos: "Marine Fishes of South-East Asia" by Gerry Allen (though this book often uses different common names, so you'll have to go by scientific names in many cases to correlate it with American texts). Sometimes a painting can highlight features a particular photo won't show clearly. And this book shows some interesting fish that aren't strictly coral reef fish, which nevertheless you might see on a trip (think mahi-mahi, flying fish etc.).
Lastly, you should also have a general underwater guide, for 3 reasons: (1) this is what you should actually bring with you on a trip, leaving larger, heavier, more specialized books like the one being reviewed here at home (especially with current luggage weight restrictions). (2) A general guide, such as "Indo-Pacific Coral Reef Guide" by Dr. Gerald R. Allen & Roger Steene, also has everything from corals to sea snakes. (3) Any given fish you see is probably a common one; a general guide will only show common fish. So you'll generally want to look here first.
The book I'm reviewing here is organized for identification rather than scientifically. It uses 20 ID groups, such as "disk-shaped/colorful" and "odd-shaped bottom dwellers." This is appropriate since it's a fish ID book.
If you dive in Pacific/Asian waters--and that's the best diving on Earth in my experience--and you'd really like to know what the heck you saw--get this book.
Fantastic Resource November 23, 2008 This book is filled with clear, colorful photos to help the diver to easily identify the various fish. It also has helpful information regarding common habitat, size and specific markings. It is definitely worth the money!
Reef Fish Identification for the fish watcher October 31, 2008 I am a fish watcher, which is to say that I keep careful track of the species of fish that I see on my trips. My wife and I are headed to Bali for a month. This guide was recommended to us. Reef fish of the Tropical Pacific pictures lots of species and covers a very large area. The pictures are fairly good for the purposes of identification. The ranges given for the fish are fairly helpful, but we find it difficult to interpret exactly when a species might occur in our area. Distribution maps would be an improvement. Having said that, this guide may be about the best available for areas of the tropical Pacific for which a specific guide does not exist. jeff
Lots of Fish Photos from the Pacific April 15, 2008 My wife and I are avid divers and this Reef Fish ID book is good. However, it is not quite the quality of Paul Humann's other reef guides. On the plus side, there aree hundreds of photos. On the minus side, the photos are rather small.
Additionally, the booklet does a decent job of describing the fish but provides little information about fish behavior.
most comprehensive tropical pacific fish book March 11, 2008 i have yet to find a fish book that has it all. but from all the fish id book i own this is the most comprehensive one. although there are a few fish found in hawaii thats not in the book.
|
|
| Powered by Our Keywest | |