cover image 100 Heartbeats: The Race to Save Earth's Most Endangered Species

100 Heartbeats: The Race to Save Earth's Most Endangered Species

Jeff Corwin. Rodale Press, $24.99 (303pp) ISBN 978-1-60529-847-4

Biologist, Emmy Award-winning producer and TV host Corwin discusses polar and panda bears, Florida panthers and Bengal tigers, and other creatures in this valuable, far-reaching look at endangered species and global efforts to save them (published in conjunction with an MSNBC documentary). He begins with recollections of a trip to ""the ice-locked village of Kaktovik, 300 miles north of the Arctic Circle,"" where Corwin joins scientists from the U.S. Geological Survey studying polar bears, the first animals listed as endangered ""due to climate change and the resulting shrinking of sea ice."" Determined but far from didactic, Corwin hops the globe discussing a range of land and sea animals in immediate danger, but also the people who live among them and work for their preservation. He also highlights success stories: the California condor, for example, ""teetered precariously at an estimated 22 birds in 1987,"" but intensive captive-breeding efforts have helped bring the population to more than 300. Proving that smart, concerted conservation can and does work, Corwin manages to dull the hopelessness and build a strong case for continuing efforts now and in the future. 16 pages of color photos.